Another One
#151 posted by
Blitz on 2004/10/23 04:09:32
I've been getting alot of good feedback (including someone saying "it sounds like Martin Galway meets Suicide meets Olivier Messiaen) about this one on some other channels and messageboards so for those of you who haven't heard this, check it out.
I made it a few weeks ago just to test out some sounds on a C64 emulator (note: this track is different from the one in #148)
Enjoy
http://home.comcast.net/~teh_blitz/blitz/Blitz_09_30_live_C64emu.mp3
I'm Lovin' It
#153 posted by
cyBeAr on 2004/10/23 07:30:09
Isis' Panopticon that is!
Hey Blitz...
#154 posted by
distrans on 2004/10/25 21:52:53
...played that track you DCC'd a while ago on the radio show (theme was Integrity and Music). Well received by the dudes in the studio and no one fell offline while it was playing. The ex-drummer from 28 Days (now tech-percussionist with K-Oscillate dug it a lot.
Goa/Psy And Chillout
#156 posted by Spirit of 85 on 2004/10/27 11:39:57
A Sad Day For Music.
#157 posted by
Shambler on 2004/10/27 17:57:32
25/26th October 2004: John Peel, veteran radio DJ and legendary music afficiando, died from a heart attack whilst on a working holiday in Peru, aged 65.
He had been working in broadcasting for over 40 years, and presenting an extremely highly-regarded show on Radio1 for over 30 years.
During this time he championed all genres of music from the mildest and most accessible to the most esoteric and extreme. He brought a huge number of influential bands to the British public's attention including New Order, The Smiths, The Fall, Pulp, Nirvana, PJ Harvey, and many others, and in recent decades became one of the earliest promoters of electronic music on national radio. He also presented a listener-orientated show called Home Truths on Radio4, and as well as his unparalleled love of music, his warm, intelligent, and "fatherly" nature stood out in an era of brash, arrogant presenters falling over themselves to be cool. No-one who heard his show could underestimate just how good it was as a genuine and true music show.
I've been a fan of Peely for many years, from when I was into metal and he introduced me to the delights of Carcass and Bolt Thrower as well as many good indie bands, to when I got into dance music and ended up recording no less than 26 cassettes absolutely packed with brilliant drum'n'bass and techno he played. At any time I always appreciated his open-minded and ultra-broad music tastes. I met him when I won a place at a live Lab4 set played on his show, and he was a genuinely nice and witty guy. Unfortunately I'd lapsed from listening to his show in the last couple of years....and now I no longer can.
RIP to a true music legend.
Agreed
#158 posted by
starbuck on 2004/10/27 23:54:06
I have a great amount of respect for Peely and all he achieved, and I was really quite upset when I heard the news.
You really can't overestimate the amount he single-handedly affected the music scene; just looking at the tributes that bands and artists have been sending in shows how much he and his shows were respected and loved.
RIP indeed, I really will miss his show
Damn...
#159 posted by
distrans on 2004/10/28 00:07:37
I have very fond memories of the Peel Sessions.
...missed indeed. Let's hope at least another as good steps into the breach.
Oh, Rock!
#161 posted by
Blitz on 2004/11/17 20:12:53
Perfect...
#162 posted by
distrans on 2004/11/17 20:29:29
...I'll run that under the third leg of the discussion. That way it definitely won't be edited out of the archived show.
Aw
#163 posted by
Blitz on 2004/11/17 21:29:13
I listened to the whole show but it got cut out? Oh well.
Damn...
#164 posted by
distrans on 2004/11/17 22:19:47
...I asked Simon not to cut it. Bleh! Heads will roll.
Was the reference to it in there at least?
Hey!
#165 posted by
pushplay on 2004/11/17 22:57:03
How did Blitz get away with a super long url?
Distans
#166 posted by
Blitz on 2004/11/18 00:32:10
No, no reference either. If it's not too much trouble, is there anyway you could get the clip of it + some before and after talk just so I could see the context in which you were playing it?
I really enjoyed the show and the topic of conversation...and allthough I accepted that it was cut out of the archive that's there, I couldn't help but wonder how my song played into the inegrity debate.
DVD Project Idea Question
#167 posted by
. on 2004/11/28 02:06:04
1. If a new artist, or a familiar artist that maybe you haven't gotten into - released a DVD that in theme essentially was a collection of music videos but with a central focused theme... (basically a DVD album), in surround-sound or not, would you buy it?
2. What if it was a re-release of the original album, but with video content, and you had the original CD?
Hmmm
#168 posted by
HeadThump on 2004/11/28 04:09:28
I have The Wall on Cd, but I didn't find the movie to be interesting, so a no in that case.
I have soundtracks to several movies but not the movies themselves. I often find one viewing of a good movie per decade enough so I dont see the point in buying them.
There are of course exceptions to that if the movie has a complex plot like Momento, Blade Runner, Usual Suspects, or Goodfellas or the like where multiple viewings reveal greater detail.
The musicaly oriented film that I most liked was Igmar Bergman's version of The Magic Flute. Don't be put off if it sounds too artsy fartsy, compared to Japanese anime it is not at all pretentious. It is just a simple story with good music and very likeable characters and that is all.
Phait
#169 posted by
R.P.G. on 2004/11/28 09:00:59
1. Probably not. Especially not if it was "a familiar artist that maybe you haven't gotten into." I'd be more likely to do it for a new artist if I heard/saw some sort of preview and liked it.
2. That depends entirely on the band, album, etc. I own several CDs that I haven't listened to in years. But if it was some album that I'm totally into, then sure.
Music DVDs
#171 posted by
pushplay on 2004/11/28 14:06:23
For me, The Wall as an album makes no sense at all without the movie. Mother and Run Like Hell are good enough songs on their own, but the movie adds a sense of progression to it and turns it into a cohesive work. Without it songs like Young Lust come out of left field and make no sense at all.
Interstella 5555 adds a progression to Discovery where I didn't think one was needed. It's a cool movie of course. I think the difference is I associate Pink Floyd with concept albums more than Daft Punk.
I do have a few concert dvds (Pink Floyd, Underworld, Fatboy Slim, DJ Shadow) and documentaries (Scratch), but Chemical Brothers is the only collection of music videos I own. Though I would consider getting The Works Of Michel Gondry. I think this just represents the esteem in which I hold the concerts and music videos of these people. For the average group I like I probably wouldn't want to pay for a collection of their music videos. Also, what I like doesn't get played on Much enough for me to possibly get sick of it. Especially now that Much Music is a 24/7 Pimp My Ride station.
The Work Of Director *
#172 posted by
czg on 2004/11/28 16:40:10
That enitre series should definately be viewable, although I've only got the Chris Cunningham one.
http://www.directorslabel.com/
Blitz...
#173 posted by
distrans on 2004/12/07 18:01:14
...and anyone else who might be interested.
http://www.subfm.org/vampiresdeathandburial
Dimebag Darrel Dead?
#174 posted by
. on 2004/12/09 00:51:38
Woah...
#175 posted by
Shambler on 2004/12/09 05:40:43
Serious shit, sounds nasty.
I was a big Pantera fan some years ago (when Dimebag was still called Diamond, no less)....