Music Archive

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Sony Launches Cloud-based Music Streaming Service In The US

I want to pooh-pooh this, but I’m still kind of in awe that Sony beat both Apple and Google to getting a cloud-based unlimited music streaming service up and running. Granted, the only thing different it’s really bringing to the table is home theater functionality with the Playstation 3 and various internet-enabled TVs and Blu-ray players, but still, it’s interesting that this launched yesterday to almost no fanfare whatsoever.

Let’s just hope that the only reason Apple and Google are taking this long to put out their streaming music services is that they’re really making it something compelling to users.

From Playstation Blog:

In addition to PlayStation 3, you may also enjoy Music Unlimited on your network-enabled BRAVIA TV, Blu-Ray Disc player, Sony VAIO or other PC and coming soon to Sony’s other mobile devices, including PSP. Music Unlimited will be available later this afternoon Pacific Standard Time (PST) for 30-day free trial of the Premium service, with monthly subscriptions of Premium at $9.99 or Basic at $3.99. For more information about Music Unlimited, check out the press release.

via Access Millions of Music Tracks on PlayStation Network with Music Unlimited – Available Today – PlayStation Blog.

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Every Band on Tour Needs HelloGoodBye’s Magic Gaming Box

We always think of rock stars as having every luxury accommodation imaginable when they tour, but this obviously isn’t the case for bands that aren’t U2.

Joseph Marro, keyboardist/guitarist for the band HelloGoodBye wrote a guest piece for Kotaku talking about their tour setup for video games:

The remainder of the year, we’re in a trusty 15 passenger van towing a trailer full of gear. In said trailer are guitars, amps, merchandise, various cables, and the most importantly, the Mobile Gaming Unit.

The unit is comprised of a roadcase housing an Xbox 360, a 22-inch TV, a power conditioner, four controllers, and plenty of games. So precious, that it is the first piece of gear to be loaded out and the last to be loaded in. All one needs to do is flip up the top and plug it in. Perfect for dressing room gaming.

Also, I once played Halo in the back of the band Kill Hannah’s tour van.

They kicked my ass.

Read on Kotaku: Every Band on Tour Needs HelloGoodBye’s Magic Gaming Box.

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New Strokes Single Is Available To Some People

I was going to use Sony’s embedded code to share the sign up form to download the new Strokes single, “Under The Cover Of Darkness,” but the damn site doesn’t work. If you can even log onto http://www.thestrokes.com/download/ to try to sign up for it, a suspicious-looking login box pops up asking you for login credentials to Sony’s back end servers.

So I’m just going to direct you to your favorite torrent site or this convenient YouTube stream:

PS: It’s a fun little song, sounds like Is This It era Strokes if you were into that sorta thing.

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New Airborne Toxic Event Single – “Changing”

I gotta say I’m a little nonplussed by the Airborne Toxic Event’s new single, “Changing.” A couple of years ago, “Sometime Around Midnight” really connected with me. It had the perfect blend of melody with emotional gravitas and an amazing climax. (“then you walk under a streetlight…”) I still get chills listening to that song today. “Changing” just makes me think of a generic mid-nineties modern rock band.

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Brochella 2011

I love how Clap Your Hands Say Yeah is randomly on this list.

Fuck that band.

Fountains of Wayne deserve better, though. They’re actually good.

memecore:  Best thing on the Internet today.

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Coachella Lineup 2011

It’s up.

When the hell did the Kings of Leon become festival headline material?

Lots of good bands that are not headlining. Unfortunately, the DJ list looks a bit barren this year.

Also, no Daft Punk is always a huge disappointment.

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Turn It Up: Black Keys’ breakthrough year: Here’s how they did it

Black Keys drummer, Patrick Carney:

“We felt the album was the best we’d done, but there wasn’t a single,” the drummer says. “Everyone, including Brian (Burton, aka Danger Mouse), told us that there is nothing that will change your career more than getting a record played on radio. You can make all the great records you want, but your audience will stay basically the same. There is a limit to how far you can go without a radio hit. So we spent 14 hours total over two days working on one song; we’ve made whole records in that amount of time.”

How much did they want to change their career, though? Many mainstream pop radio artists have a very short shelf life and even fewer have successful touring careers. It just seems kind of odd that a band that has slowly grown a genuine following over 8 years of touring would suddenly want to manufacture a “radio hit.”

They do have a point about live hip-hop, though. I can count on one hand the number of hip-hop acts I’ve seen that actually are worth the price of admission. Other than the acts with lots of familiar catalog material to draw from, the genre just doesn’t have a compelling live experience for the average fan.

Carney says he and Auerbach are hip-hop fans, but he fears for the genre’s survival. “It is an art form that is totally at risk of dying,” he says. “With the decline of record sales, that genre is exposed. There never really was a live hip-hop scene. When you think about rock ‘n’ roll, you think concerts. With hip-hop, you think albums. Other than Jay-Z, hip-hip shows aren’t big business. I feel bad for a lot of rappers we work with because they have a hard time making a living. Promoters don’t want to put on hip-hop shows because a few (unreliable) rappers have screwed things up for a lot of other rap artists.”

Read: Turn It Up: Black Keys’ breakthrough year: Here’s how they did it.

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Patton Oswalt On Geek Culture

Patton Oswalt writing for Wired magazine:

Everyone considers themselves otaku about something—whether it’s the mythology of Lost or the minor intrigues of Top ChefAmerican Idol inspires—if not in depth, at least in length and passion—the same number of conversations as does The Wire. There are no more hidden thought-palaces—they’re easily accessed websites, or Facebook pages with thousands of fans.

I can’t argue with his observations on how pretty much anything is grounds for any number of people to “geek out” on these days. Talk to the millions of “twihards” or “gleeks” and you have enough proof you need.

The last half of the piece gets a little loopy ridiculous, though his point is made. I remember designing Zelda dungeons on notebook paper as a kid after school. If I had access to all the content I do now as a kid, I would have probably spent that time consuming content rather than doing that. After all, nothing’s more discouraging than seeing other people do things way better than you.

Read: Wake Up, Geek Culture. Time to Die | Magazine.

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Free Yeasayer Concert Bootleg Download

I’m disappointed I missed Yeasayer at Coachella this year, but found solace in the fact that the band is giving away a free download of one of their live shows from Brussels back in October. It’s not entirely guilt free, though, as they do offer you the choice to donate for the concert bootleg if you wish. You can get the concert in your choice of formats from 320kbps MP3 to FLAC to Apple Lossless  and more.

I still can’t get over how awesome of a single O.N.E. is – it might just be my single of the year despite being leaked last December…

Download: Live At Ancienne Belgique.

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Bootlegged: Aloe Blacc and The Grand Scheme @ Echoplex, Los Angeles 12/3/10

I don’t know what was more surprising – the fact that Soul music is being revived in an age of autotune and chillwave indie music or the fact that most of the crowd at the Echoplex was of the decidedly hipster variety.

Scratch that, it’s Echo Park, of course it’s going to be full of hipsters.

But the neo-soul movement is definitely in effect with artists like Mayer Hawthorne gaining a sizable audience. It’s not surprising that both he and Aloe Blacc are on LA-based independent label, Stones Throw.

You may know Mr. Blacc from the theme to HBO’s How To Make It In America. It’s one of the more memorable introduction sequences in recent television history. His 1 hour set at the Echoplex didn’t disappoint either. I’m no expert on soul music, but I had a great time at Aloe’s show. With an entertaining and talented backing band, The Grand Scheme, Aloe Blacc played cuts from not only his own album, Good Things, but also injected quite a few covers into his set as well. It’s as if he knew his mainly white audience needed to hear some comfort songs to help them ease into the genre. Songs like Hall & Oates’ “Maneater” or Green Day’s “Basket Case.” He also did a Velvet Underground song and a haunting cover of Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean.”

Check out the Green Day cover clip and another video after the break.

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