BOSE: Better Profits Through Marketing
Here’s a nice takedown of the BOSE Acoustimass system. The short version: save your money and spend less on a better product from a reputable company.
Here’s a nice takedown of the BOSE Acoustimass system. The short version: save your money and spend less on a better product from a reputable company.
Cracked.com have hit it out of the park with their list of inspirational 80s songs. It’s amazing how those songs can make anything seem powerful and profound; I was eating an apple when I started listening to Europe’s The Final Countdown, and now I’ve rescued by mentor from a North Korean prison, Mia Sara’s wearing my letter jacket and my dad just bought me a Corvette. Cool dude!
A bit off-colour, but absolutely hilarious.
Last night I went with John & his girlfriend Gen to see Dolores O’Riordan (former lead singer for The Cranberries). It was an incredible show!
The opener was singer/songwriter Jessie Baylin. Unfortunately, we missed much of her set, but what I heard was just amazing. Her voice is beautiful, and she’s not too hard on the eyes either:
Keep an eye out for great things to come from her in the future. I got her five-song EP part of You (appropriately titled, since the songs are part of her forthcoming album You!…), and every song is wonderful. Quirky & fun, with just enough sexiness to tie everything together.
O’Riordan’s set was great. She alternated old favourites
like Linger and Zombie with stuff from her
solo album, and all was worth hearing. Her new stuff is
much rockier
than the earlier, poppier Cranberries
work—but it was all quite enjoyable. Listening to the older
songs made me feel as though I were back in college again, always a
fine feeling.
Hopefully I’ll be able to catch both these talented singers passing through Denver again.
Take your top 20 artists. For each of these artists, collect the top 5 similar artists. The resulting number of unique artists is your eclectic score. If the score is small (extreme = 5) your musical preferences are very limited, and if it is large (larger than 80, extreme = 100), then you have an eclectic musical preference. You can compute your own score.
My eclectic score is currently 84/100
The 84 related artists for my profile are:
I always knew I'd eclectic tastes, in music as elsewhere.
And on this the final day of May, here’s the May mix from DrFaustus:
Yet another fun monthly mix. I’ll be sad when December arrives and I’ll have heard them all. Of course, that just means I can turn around & queue ‘em up again!
RIAA Radar provide a cool indie top 100 list based on non-RIAA CDs and Amazon sales figures. Pretty nice tool and a way to get your music without supporting the RIAA.
Continuing my tradition of posting monthly mixes from epinion’s DrFaustus, here’s the April mix:
Yet again, a fine mix for a fine month.
And here’s the March Mix, to go along with those from December, January and February.
A very nice little mix. I’m coming to dread November, when I will have finished the monthly mixes.
Sorry to have not posted the February Mix to go with my previous articles on the December and January mixes. This one is:
Once again DrFaustus delights the ears.
I’ve earlier written about the December Mix; now I’m listening to the January Mix. This month’s songs are:
While not quite as perfect as the December Mix, it’s still a great listen—check it out.
From Epionons.com comes DrFaustus’s December Mix. Read the entire article (which has comments on each piece), but here’s the list of titles:
I’m downloading the songs now, but just from the familiar ones and the mix notes it sounds like DrFaustus knows his stuff. I first discovered his January Mix, which sounds just about perfect for that month, and can’t wait to move forward through the rest of the year.
My old friend Lara posted a link to this cool collection of 80s music videos. Al I can say is that the art form was under-developed then. There’s really no excuse for it. But the music still rocks…
There’s an excellent radio station a co-worker introduced me to: Radio Nigel. Just point your streaming audio tool at stream.radionigel.com, and Bob’s your uncle.
I don’t believe that I’ve pointed this out before, but 80s new wave really is the pinnacle of musical development. Thousands of years of years of musical development starting with the first caveman to hit two rocks together to get a beat going, and it peaked with synth-pop. Everything after that has been just…sad.
Recently I had to put together a list of essential new wave for a friend. The final playlist—formed after much consultation with my co-workers, all of whom were young men two decades ago—was:
Anyone who doesn’t like these songs is that much less than human.
There’s now a way to find the top Billboard&tradem; song on any day; the day I was born it was With a Little Luck by Wings. On my second birthday it was Blondie’s Call Me–which makes me feel very, very young indeed.
Music-Map offer a neat service: you tell ’em a band you enjoy, and they draw you a map of the artists similar to them. Already I’ve a few bands I need to try...
Whilst I was over at my folks’ house yesterday for Christmas dinner, my kid brother introduced me to Trespassers William, a truly superb band in the same vein as Splendid and The Sundays—in other words, a band which would have fit in great on a Buffy the Vampire Slayer soundtrack. And in fact, that’s exactly what they did. Say what you will about Buffy the show and it philosophical underpinnings (and there are valid criticisms of both), but it had some excellent music; indeed, some of the best in recent memory.
Anyway, Trespassers William are a great band, and you need to hear their stuff. Also, anyone whose name comes from Milne’s Winnie the Pooh (which is not to be confused with the horrid Disney version) can’t be all bad:-)
And many thanks to Stephen, for bringing them up.
Some years back the Music Genome Project was started in an attempt to classify as many songs as possible; Pandora is the culmination of that effort. One simply tells it a few musicians or songs one likes, and it uses fairly significant human analysis of the songs in its database (over 300,000, I believe) to predict some more in the same style which you might like. Pretty cool—cool enough to get me to spring $36 for a year’s membership.
last.fm provides music-tracking and Internet radio. You install a plug-in for your music player, and last.fm can figure out folks who listen to music you like, and check out their tunes. You install their free player, and you can listen to a custom radio station which they believe you’ll like. One’s friends can even listen to a radio station customised to one’s own preferences. It’s pretty sweet.
I’m eadmund there.
I was just listening to the Eagles tonight. The DVD of Hell Freezes Over is absolutely incredible. I remember back in college an acquaintance had the CD; it’s nothing compared to the DTS surround-sound experience.
It’s odd to think that it was nearly a decade ago that I first heard Hell Freezes Over. I was much younger, and happier, then.
I went and saw The Wallflowers with my youngest brother this evening. Wow! I hadn’t realised how many truly great songs they’d released: One Headlight, of course; Sixth Avenue Heartache too; but also Heroes and The Difference. I also didn’t realise that the lead singer is the son of Bob Dylan (which would explain why I thought he sounded like a cross between Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen at various points). They know how to handle a crowd (their opener too had this down pat)—at one point, the lead singer grabbed a fan’s cell phone and sang into it!
Also, I got to talk to a girl, so all in all it was a nice evening.
Listening to Rebel Rouser this evening, it occurred to me what a fine tune it is. Like November Rain or In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida, it has he quality that it could be played for an hour or two and not seem amiss.
Check out Black Box Recorder, a band out of England with an amazing, hard-to-describe sound: a kind of retro-pop-sophistication which wouldn’t sound at all out of place in a cocktail lounge, except for its often bitter subject matter. I can’t say that I agree with their politics, but I can say that any man who can remain unmoved by Sarah Nixey’s vocals is no man at all. I highly recommend The Facts of Life.
I recently got myself a membership at emusic, a legal MP3 download service. They have a large number of indie/college bands (like Black box Recorder, Dressy Bessy, 16 Horsepower &c., but they also have mainstream artists like Otis Redding, Green Day, Bush, Violent Femmes, Willie Nelson and so on. The deal is that when you sign up you get 50 free downloads; after that it’s $10/mo. for 40 songs/mo., $15/mo. for 65 songs/mo. and $20/mo. for 90 songs/mo. You can always redownload a song you’ve gotten before without affecting your monthly cost. It’s also possible to buy additional one-time downloads for a price. The deal isn’t quite as good as used to be (a few years back, I believe it was one price for unlimited downloads), but it’s pretty good, and a lot cheaper than buying a CD which will just sit on the bookshelf, and at 22–25¢/track, cheaper than the other online music stores.
If you decide that you’d like to use the free trial (imagine: 50 legal, high-bit-rate MP3s), let me know so I can invite you: I get 10 free tracks with each successful referral.
When Pulp needed to make a video of their song Bad Cover Version (which is all about a former girlfriend’s new boyfriend being a poor reprise of oneself), what else could they do but hire a bunch of bad singer-imitators to make a cover version of their song? The video of Bad Cover Version is absolutely hilarious, albeit two years old.
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This is my blogchalk:
United States,
Colorado, Englewood, Centennial, English, , Robert, Male, 21–25, Free
Software, Society for Creative Anachronism.