http://www.myspace.com/pogotracks
The track is composed of a sine wave bass, custom drum sequences, and sounds recorded from the Disney film ‘Mary Poppins’. Play the MP3 below:
http://www.myspace.com/pogotracks
The track is composed of a sine wave bass, custom drum sequences, and sounds recorded from the Disney film ‘Mary Poppins’. Play the MP3 below:
John Morris: The Elephant Man Theme (from The Elephant Man - performed by the National Philharmonic Orchestra)
Sarah McLachlan: The Rainbow Connection
From the album Mashed in Plastic http://www.mashedinplastic.co.uk
Mashup and video by The Reborn Identity http://www.rebornidentity.com
Via The Future of Music Distribution - a new tumblelog sharing notes on music distribution issues in the 21st century. Handy for tracking digital music news and developments.
"A Room Without You" also available in Musical Box format from Moto Boy.
More info via Songs I Wish I Had Written. Listen at Last.fm.
Embedr let’s you take your favorite videos from all over the web and make them into a playlist. It’s compatible with most of the top video sites like YouTube, MySpace, Vimeo, Dailymotion, and Blip.Tv. (Full list)
The site is clean and simple to use, giving you two ways to build a playlist; Standard Playlist or Smart Playlist. You can add up to 100 videos to a standard playlist and 50 to a smart playlist.
To build a Standard Playlist, videos are added one at a time, simply enter the URL or Embed code from the video’s location, for example a YouTube page.
You can build a Smart Playlist (YouTube only) by searching for keywords or by YouTube Username. The content in smart playlists changes dynamically as new videos are found. Select the number of videos you want to show in the playlist, and sort by Relevance, Published Date, View Count or Rating.
Embedr lets you create multiple playlists. You can easily change the order of videos by dragging them into position. You can also edit various parameters before and after you create a playlist. This is ideal for building a pool of content associated with your user profile.
Once you’ve created a playlist you have a ready made widget that you can customize and embed on webpages. The width of the widget determines it’s height proportionately. It’s simple and very effective, making it a breeze to create and distribute video content in an attractive and functional format.
I built the Guitar Players Spotlight above using a standard playlist from hand-picked sources on YouTube. Here’s my Embedr Profile
A mashup by Totom of Smashing Pumkins and Mulholland Dr by David Lynch - Video by Titus Prime for the Mashed in Plastic project.
Version 1 has a shorter intro and different video cuts than Version 2 shown on the Mashed in Plastic site.
Here’s the YouTube Video Playlist for Mashed in Plastic - The David Lynch mashup album.
Reblogged from iamdanw:
This is what happens when Death Cab For Cutie put a video up on their site and their own record label takes it down with the DMCA
Weapons of Mass iGnorance… pop eats itself to death … when everything is false, nothing is permitted… meet the new bo$$, same as the old bo$$… the world is(n’t) watching… or listening.
You can grab the list in widget form, add to it, or subscribe to the RSS feed for updates.
From the album Mashed in Plastic
Mashup by Wax Audio
Video by The Reborn Identity
Read the screen narrative via the YouTube page
TARDIS: Back in time - What if The Beatles had used Creative Commons Licenses?
A new book by author Steve Knopper (Rolling Stone, Wired, Esquire) chronicles the record industry’s relentless rise to riches during the CD era to its dramatic demise in the post Napster digital age - Appetite for Self-Destruction: The Spectacular Crash of the Record Industry in the Digital Age.
There’s a review at the New York Times - When Labels Fought the Digital, and the Digital Won that begins - “You can’t roll a joint on an iPod,” the singer-songwriter Shelby Lynne told The New York Times Magazine early last year…
…No, but you can snort cocaine. No doubt the excesses of the music industry played some small part in its downfall and yes, the times they are a-changin’.
Regarding the Music Industry, I refer you to the Einstein quote in the post prior to this one.
(P.S.I like vinyl too Shelby!)