Tagged: Music RSS

  • Dave 10:43 am on February 19, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Music,   

    No wonder people share files 

    I love watching films and I love listening to music. I work for a living and have no problem buying films and music.

    It’s taken a very long time for the big companies to finally realise how to deal with music – make it good quality, usable anywhere, good value and easy to get at. I love MP3 shops like Bleep where you can get very high quality tracks at a price that seems reasonable given that there isn’t somebody producing discs, shipping them across the country or even around the world then having the overhead of a physical shop to sell them in.

    These days there are streaming services like Napster and Spotify which are good enough so that you can listen to pretty much anything for less money per month than it used to cost to buy a CD in a shop. Because of the good value of these, I pay for one of them and enjoy using it (Napster, mostly via a Squeezebox in my case).

    Movies on the other hand are a completely different kettle of fish – it seems like music was when the original Napster first arrived. The movie companies doing their best to sell you a crippled piece of crap with your film in it. Because films are sold in a variety of formats with various kinds of rights management attached to them, I’m wary about buying anything because I don’t know if I’ll be able to play it in the future. I already know I won’t be able to enjoy it out of the confines of whatever the seller thinks it should be used in.

    iTunes movies are a complete no no. Tied to the computer or one of their own devices. Apple still get away with this kind of behaviour with music too, iTunes really being a shop that you have to install software to buy from and that software only really working well with devices sold by Apple. Until it’s all opened up for any device by any manufacturer I won’t use it.

    It should be possible for me to buy a film and watch it on anything I want to watch it on and not have restrictions like this.

    I would buy more films if they weren’t crippled.

    TV again is behind the times and suffering as a result. If a TV show is made anywhere in the world, usually the rights to distribute it are carved up in to different territories and people in these territories can’t view content that originates from a different one. The end result of this is that a TV show is made, appears on some companies online TV service and everyone not in that country sees a message saying they can’t watch it. It’s not the 1970’s any more.

    So how about a TV programme shop, selling TV programmes from across the world for reasonable amounts of money in an open format so that people can choose to watch what they want where ever it comes from.

    The actions of these companies to try and protect their media is driving proper customers away – a lot of people don’t download music and movies because they don’t want to pay – they do it because it’s easier and you don’t feel like they’re being screwed by buying some strange format thing that only works on a device they tell you it should run on in an area of the planet that they have also dictated.

     
  • Dave 11:13 pm on October 19, 2009 Permalink
    Tags: album, Music, weatherall   

    A Pox On The Pioneers 

    Since it was released on the Rotters Golf Club web site about a month ago, I’ve been listening to Andrew Weatherall’s album, A Pox On The Pioneers quite a lot. There’s something there that just does it for me!

    You can hear it on Spotify, preview the tracks here (a minute or two per track), or buy it for a fiver from Rotters Golf Club – which is a massive bargain – and 3 quid cheaper than 7digital ;).

    I’ve liked Andrew Weatherall’s stuff for a very long time – I loved The Sabres of Paradise and Two Lone Swordsmen – but I remember buying a Two Lone Swordsmen album from HMV (this was a long time ago) and expecting more of the electronic stuff that I was used to from the earlier albums and instead finding something very different – with singing on it and everything! I think I was quite horrified at the time and thought they’d chucked everything away.

    In retrospect, I like the stuff after that change more than the earlier stuff. In particular their Wrong Meeting II album.

    I think The Pox On The Pioneers is my favourite piece of Andrew Weatherall’s work though (and I had plenty of favourites before!). Not a low moment or filler to be found – it’s just lovely – and such a breath of fresh air.

     
  • Dave 3:35 pm on April 3, 2009 Permalink
    Tags: brass, electronic, Music, röyksopp, video   

    Röyksopp – Happy Up Here (Brass) 

    I saw an interview with Röyksopp on Channel 4 recently which ended with a brass band playing a version of their last single, Happy Up Here. I really liked it. Mind you, I really liked their original version too…

     
  • Dave 9:04 pm on December 28, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: , Music, playlist   

    Most listened to music in 2008 

    I looked at my last.fm chart for the most played tracks during the last 12 months and created this playlist using the 8tracks web site. Where an artist appeared more than once I omitted it so that the 8 tracks are different artists to give it a bit more variety.

    I’m really in to the Bluebob album at the moment – which is by David Lynch and John Neff. This has been around a few years but I only got my hands on it this year. There was one track on the Mullholland Drive soundtrack album by them that I loved. The album is better so I’m glad I managed to track it down.

    The rest of this playlist is a mixed bag – I’m not sure I could describe it as being a certain type of music at all – just stuff I’ve listened to a lot this year.

    If you can’t see the embedded player in your feed reader, you can click straight through to the 8tracks page here.

     
  • Dave 11:04 am on August 23, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: bubonique, Music   

    20 Golden Showers – Bubonique 

    bubonique

    I spotted this album again today after not hearing it for a few years. The album was a collaboration between Sean Hughes, the comedian and Cathal Coughlan who used to be in Fatima Mansions. The overall effect was to produce an album that was in parts funny, in parts quite good and in parts a lo-fi mess. It had an impact on me though when I bought it. There are still several
    things on this album that have stuck in my brain and will probably
    never be forgotten.

    After a quick search I discovered the album was available for download here. Note that the CD is a single 55 minute track, and the download is a single file as a result.

    One thing that I should point out, is that when I originally went in to a record shop in Newark in the early 90’s and bought this, I was unaware what the title meant. I don’t recall if I had come to any of my own conclusions at the time – I just remember thinking the comedy wink on the cover was funny.

    Highlights for me: Nice T doing Gangsta Rap about tea parties in Chigwell and Release the Bats -  a cover of a Birthday Party song, although, I don’t remember the lyric ‘Release the bats, those furry little creatures, release the bats with their translyvanian features’ in the version Nick Cave sang back in the day!

     
  • Dave 9:39 pm on April 5, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: , Music   

    Muxtape 

    muxtape

    I’d seen Muxtape recently and it looked interesting but I didn’t really pay that much attention to it. This evening though I listened to the full tracklisting of this one by BennehBoy. I really enjoyed listening to it and decided to have a go myself.

    There is a very nice feature that isn’t immediately apparent – you can subscribe to people’s pages using RSS. That means these things don’t have to stay the same – you can swap the songs on them and hopefully your friends or contacts will get notified and be able to listen to the new tracks you’ve added – or indeed visit the page again and listen to the mix in it’s entirety.

    All in all very nicely done. You can hear mine by clicking on the image.

    By the way, I don’t normally use Internet Explorer – my Twitter client insists on launching it when I click on a link instead of my default browser (Firefox). This seems to be common with all applications build on top of Adobe’s Air. So there you are!

    Anyway, if you make one, please post a link so I can have a listen.

     
    • Primed Minister 10:23 am on April 9, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      Nice one, nice little site that. I like the way it’s presented, dead easy to use too. I think my fave track from your list was Yello’s Planet Dada which is more of the electronic persuasion (my cup of tea), great track, love all those stuttered Kraftwerk-esque vocoder vocals.

      Anyway, I’ve done a playlist, enjoy!

      http://primedminister.muxtape.com/

    • publicenergy 10:59 am on April 9, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      I think I could easily swap this over and over with all sorts of different styles of music because my taste is fairly wide. I had a quick look at your tracks and recognise over half of the tracks as stuff I like.

      The 10Mb file size limit is a problem for me though because a lot of my music is encoded at quite high rates, so some of my first choices were too big.

      It all depends on what mood I’m in and what I like at the time though.

      I do really like the fact that they’ve incorporated RSS feeds – it makes it really easy to see when friends have updated their page and listen to the new stuff.

      I’ll have a proper listen to yours this evening :)

    • Primed Minister 11:09 am on April 9, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      I knew you liked Autechre so I had a feeling we could have similar tastes. My own tastes vary quite wildly although I do tend to prefer electronic stuff. I might put a more eclectic playlist together next time or go more ambient, depends on the mood like you say.

      I had to convert some mp4s to mp3 and at a lower quality for some of the tracks over 10Mb. Like yourself I have a lot of stuff encoded at high rates. The RSS feed is good too. Cheers for letting us know about muxtape, I’ve already told a few friends about it who are now making lists.

  • Dave 9:20 pm on April 2, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: Music, reggiewatts   

    Reggie Watts 

    Popcast from Reggie Watts on Vimeo.

    I discovered Reggie Watts the other day after seeing him appear on Rocket Boom.

    I find the performances I’ve seen so far mesmerising.

     
    • Primed Minister 10:18 am on April 3, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      Cool how puts a ‘full track’ together like that. I wonder what Simon Cowell would make of him? “What was that? That was just pathetic.” LOL :)

  • Dave 9:56 pm on January 22, 2008 Permalink
    Tags: Music   

    Fake album covers 

    Troubled about the particle by Quantum Waveform Generator

    The Leeds Group on Flickr has a thread about making fake album covers using source material from Wikipedia and Wikiquote (selected at random).

    More images and instructions here.

    You can click on the image to find the source of the words used in this one.

     
    • Roger B. 10:16 pm on January 22, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      Sounds like fun.

    • brendadada 10:24 pm on January 22, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      If it really is an extractor fan, that is VERY funny.

    • greywulf 12:27 am on January 23, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      What would be //really// cool would be to create your own fake album cover then use it to make a post on the Flickr LP Portraits group at http://www.flickr.com/groups/lp_portraits/pool/

      Tempted?

    • Joe Lencioni 4:39 pm on January 23, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      Haha, you got an awesome combo.

      And what would be really cool is if a yet-unnamed band decided to do this for real and put out a real big time album.

    • kate routledge 1:06 pm on January 24, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      i had to do a fake album cover for the gcse in art
      i used film
      and made it about the presures of looking good in places like london ect
      Realyyyy fun but hard work!

    • brendadada 9:39 pm on February 19, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      Love the new look! And a very cool little favicon, too. Impressive.

    • publicenergy 9:54 pm on February 19, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      @brendadada – it’s a work in progress – I used to have that icon before trying wordpress.com to host for a few months (I thought I’d like the simplicity of that, but it doesn’t leave enough room for manoeuvre).

  • Dave 11:27 pm on December 11, 2007 Permalink
    Tags: cd, Music   

    Burn 

    Burn [53/365]

    My daily photo as part of the 365 set is just a photo of a DVD-R. To spice it up, I photographed it using the Ixus placed directly above it on a Gorillapod, put it in a fairly dark room so that I could have a long exposure. I then had a couple of light sources to move around to get various reflections during the exposure.

    Overall it turned out quite strangely I think, but I like it.

     
  • Dave 10:19 pm on December 17, 2006 Permalink
    Tags: Music   

    Laibach – Volk 

    I’ve been a fan of Laibach for many years and on more than one occasion they have announced a new album with details that have made me think ‘Oh god no – that sounds awful’.

    I can remember the first time I heard of them, I was watching The Chart Show when it was still on Channel 4 and hadn’t been ruined by ITV. The video they played was Life is Life. I couldn’t believe what I was seeing – or hearing! I’m not sure if they played the entire song or it just appeared as a snippet during the indie chart run down – either way, it definitely made an impression!

    After that I don’t think I really got in to them until the mid 90’s when I stumbled across In the Army Now and again I couldn’t really believe what I was hearing – a Status Quo cover version! That song was taken from the album NATO which I still really like now. Their cover version of Pink Floyd’s Dogs of War is great but I don’t think staunch Pink Floyders will like it much :)

    At this point I heard about their next project – Jesus Christ Superstars. This was the first time I thought “Oh god no – that sounds awful”. I heard the single – Jesus Christ Superstar – and it was an ok cover, but as the saying goes, you can’t polish a turd*. The album however was great so my fears were unfounded. I still love their cover version of Juno Reactor’s God is God which was released before the original! Later they released an album called W.A.T. which I also loved and it was around this time that I finally got to see them live at The Astoria in London which was a great night out.

    So far so good, then I heard about Volk which was described as “a collection of interpretations of national anthems”. Oh God no – that sounds awful. I’m happy to say that I’m wrong again though. I was imagining some almost straight covers of national anthems but thankfully it’s nothing like that.

    The video for the first single from the album, Anglia is embedded at the top of this post. Anglia is the one about good old Blighty!

    * – oh yes, you can actually polish a turd – there have been a few cover versions of songs that I thought were awful but the cover version turned out to be a great – but the daddy of them all has to be the Bryan Adams song Everything I Do (I do it for you) done by Fatima Mansions –>

     
    • Roger B. 12:57 pm on December 18, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      Hmm… I think I prefer The Sex Pistol’s interpretation!

    • Leigh 2:59 pm on December 18, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      LOL@ you can’t polish a turd! (That’s got me!)

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