28 March 2007

more lazy post

this is awesome. Here comes the marching band of The Future! make sure to check the videos.

via here.

27 March 2007

lazy post

i'm busy. just to fill the void:



via here.

and I'm listening to rjd2.

15 March 2007

Last.fm is quite okay.

Last.fm stations can now pop out to a separate window, or be embedded elsewhere. Are you underwhelmed?

Bands similar to The Crownhate Ruin:



Music tagged with "mash-up":



Geek note: blogger complains about the sloppy html provided by last.fm, so you have to add </embed> right before </object> for it to work.

12 March 2007

must! buy! music!

My recent bender continued at CD Spins on Newbury St. this weekend. More in keeping with my usual habits, I managed to pick out 5 used cds for $30. The highlights were definitely the Rodan cd (Rusty, their only album, which I've been looking for for a while), and June of 44's Tropics and Meridians, which is in a similar vein (not surprisingly).

Jungle Jim - Rodan (Rusty)
June Leaf - June of 44 (Tropics and Meridians)

I also came across the second cd from Creeper Lagoon, which on first listen is pretty similar to, if a little less adventurous than (i.e. more radio-friendly, i.e. crappier than) their first album. Nonetheless a decent find for $6, and for the special place they hold in my heart from years ago.

Chance of a Lifetime - Creeper Lagoon (Take Back the Universe and Give Me Yesterday)

Then I found a single called Bang the Drum by Railroad Jerk, a mid-90s Matador band. I had one cassette of theirs in high school, and one track of theirs appears on the What's Up Matador compilation that I have. I'm no big fan or anything, but I had to buy it just to hear this cover.

Why Don't We Do It In The Road - Railroad Jerk

To top it off, my order from Dischord - Fugazi, The Argument cd and Furniture 7" - was waiting for me in the mailbox when I got back Monday morning. I feel like Cookie Monster these days. MUUUUUZIIIIIC!!! RA RA RA RA RA!!!!!

I promise more computer-web-music related stuff, as soon as I find the time. Preview: Musicast is asking for money, but still works great. Streampad is busted, but there are other options I hope to try out soon.

06 March 2007

New Royalty Rates Would End Internet Radio

If you like Last.fm, Pandora, Finetune, or any of the other streaming music services, you may soon be out of luck, as newly announced royalty rates would likely put them out of business. Interestingly, this could end up indirectly hurting the merger bid of satellite radio providers Sirius and XM, who argued the merger wouldn't create a monopoly in part because they were competing against internet radio as well as traditional radio.

Rather than regurgitate, I direct you to the following sources:

Consumer Affairs has an article, as does the LA Times. The latter points out in passing that this will put a huge damper on the diversity of music available to listen to online (obviously).

The Radio and Internet Newsletter has details in this post among others.
A legal perspective.
Save Internet Radio
Musick in the Head blog (more informative links)

04 March 2007

2 other places to hang out on teh internets

I've been spending a little time at a couple of other sites lately. First, multiply.com is a community site that makes it really easy to share music & photos, keep a blog/journal, etc. It amazingly offers unlimited storage of your mp3s and everything else, which you can upload and organize into playlists. Then other users (everyone, or just your contacts) can listen and comment. My new page is here.

The other new (to me) hangout is Rate Your Music (RYM). I've been looking around for an easy and useful way to catalog my physical music collection (cds and vinyl). RYM is like a wiki for music, in that anyone can add or edit information on artists and albums. Plus, you can write reviews, rate albums, and most importantly, register which releases you own, and on what format. It looks like there are other features that could be cool, but that I haven't looked into yet, like compatibility with other users' ratings, etc. (Presumably like last.fm's neighbors.) If you want to see what I've entered so far from my collection (definitely a skewed sample), my user page is here.

If anyone has other suggestions on ways to catalog my music collection, please let me know. Delicious Library of course looks awesome, but I don't have an isight or barcode scanner and a lot of my vinyl albums don't even have bar codes anyway. Plus it costs money.