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Emerging models for new music: Illius Rock

January 26, 2009

illius-rock

We’ve spent a bunch of time here at z=z discussing different models for the future of music. Here’s an interesting one. Boston-based Illius Rock runs ‘campaigns’ for artists. Emerging artists ask their fans to make contributions, typically for studio expenses, to shoot videos, touring and the like. In exchange, fans get treats, like exclusive songs, parties, cameos in music videos and the like. Interested in learning more? They’re throwing a launch party tonight (Monday, January 26th) at the Middlesex Lounge in Cambridge, featuring z=z faves The Main Drag.

MP3: The Main Drag – A Jagged Gorgeous Winter

[via Bradley’s Almanac]

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Economic effect of downloading a net win

January 23, 2009

graph

A new report, commissioned by the Ministry of Economic Affairs of the Netherlands, to look at the effects of downloading was just released (here; it’s in Dutch, of course). Some of the findings were not entirely unexpected – for example, 35% of the Dutch population has downloaded content (music, movies, games) without paying for it, but they pay for content as much as those that haven’t ‘freeloaded.’

But the most interesting point was the following (it’s quoted from Ars Technica, who posted about the report):

The study concludes that the effects are strongly positive because consumers get to enjoy desirable content and also get to keep their cash to buy other things. Because the consumers save much more money than the producers lose, the net economic effects are positive. The report also reinforces the truth that unpaid downloads do not translate into lost sales in anything close to a one-to-one ratio.

It’s refreshing to see downloading considered in the context of society as a whole, rather than just in terms of money lost by corporations.

If anyone reads Dutch, I’d be interested in the rest of the report. Feel free to e-mail me or to share in the comments.

[via Ars Technica]

MP3: MC Lars – Download This Song

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Read: The Pitchfork 500

January 22, 2009

pitchfork-500

The Pitchfork 500, subtitled “Our Guide to the Greatest Songs from Punk to the Present,” is an excellent example of the upstart music criticism website using its powers for good, not for evil. Covering the period from 1977 to 2006 (with a few late-breaking tracks from 2007 snuck in, including z=z faveAll My Friends“), the book presents capsule reviews of each of the chosen songs. As lists go, five hundred is quite large enough to include many songs that you’d agree with, and as well as bunch that you wouldn’t, and some of the choices were surprising but inspired – for instance, Duran Duran get Rio‘s tense and disturbing closer “The Chauffeur” and not either of the megahits, “Hungry Like the Wolf” or the title track.) Unsurprisingly, the list is a bit American-centric (the omission that jumped out at me was the band Squeeze, who were much bigger in the UK and Canada than in the US). But the beauty of the format is that the writers get to enthuse about the songs they love – even a casual perusal of the book rewards with a new appreciation of songs that you’re familiar with, and an urge to go and search out the unfamiliar ones. Being Pitchfork, they couldn’t quite leave out the snark entirely, and the book is peppered with sidebars focusing on specific genres, ranging from grime to ‘post-Fugazi emo,’ to ‘yacht rock’ (yes, songs about sailing).

The Pitchfork 500: Our Guide to the Greatest Songs from Punk to the Present: website amazon

MP3: Buzzcocks – Ever Fallen in Love? (1977)

MP3: Animal Collective – Grass (2006)

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“Why are Germans so mad about techno?”

January 21, 2009

[embedded YouTube link: if you can’t watch it, click here]

Deutsche Welle, Germany’s international broadcaster, has a show called The Truth About Germany, and on this four-minute segment, they consider the question: “Why are Germans so mad about [techno]?” The clip is  pretty fun to watch, although I think there might be some people in Detroit who would take issue with the assertion “Germans invented techno.”  There’s a brief interview with Sven Väth, but mostly it’s pretty high on the self-mockery scale (not a trait that is stereotypically associated with Germans), including bits like “let’s get some Germans to hum their favourite techno tunes!” and “let’s see how creative techno dancers can be with their light sticks!”

[via Passion (the enemy of love)]

MP3: Ellen Allien and Apparat – Turbo Dreams (original mix) [buy]

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Listen local: The Crocodile Cafe returns!

January 20, 2009

071217_crocodile_cafe

Word on the street (well, actually, in the coffee shop) is that the Seattle’s famed Crocodile Cafe, which closed abruptly nearly a year ago, is on track to re-open. While the Croc is still pretty mum and the website is still under construction, The Ting Tings are scheduled to play on April 12th. zed equals zee didn’t relocate to Seattle until after it closed, so I am really looking forward to checking it out.

(thanks to Peter for the tip!)

MP3: The Ting Tings – Great DJ

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Listen local: Hey Marseilles

January 19, 2009

hey-marseilles-2

Hey Marseilles nearly made me miss a flight. I saw them at the Three Imaginary Girls holiday party, and they were so good that I decided to catch their headlining show at the Tractor Tavern in Ballard last week, even though I had a 4:45 am wake-up call for a 5:15 am cab to the airport the next morning. Unfortunately, the late night meant that I slept through my alarm and only woke up when the cabdriver called my landline.

It was totally worth it, though. The Tractor show started with a procession by the band through the crowd, and I do mean ‘procession’ – with seven members, the band is quite a crowd themselves. Matt Bishop’s appealing voice is backed by viola, cello, trumpet and accordion, in addition to the more conventional rock instruments. They sound like a rather less fey version of The Decemberists – more grounded and earthy.

myspace website

MP3: Hey Marseilles – Rio

Image: Hey Marseilles by Flickr user Tyson L, reposted here with permission.

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Canadian music for Obama

January 16, 2009

49-banner Like pretty much the rest of the world, Canadians are excited about the new US president, and apparently they get to convey this excitement by collectively making a mixtape.  CBC Radio 2 is soliciting votes for a 49-song playlist, to showcase Canadian music for President-Elect Barack Obama. You can go here and vote for your favourite Canadian song in one of four categories: rock, classical, French-language, and jazz. While they’re calling it ‘Obama’s Mixtape,’ it’s really more in honour of the inauguration. But who knows – Obama has confirmed that his first foreign trip, as is traditional for US presidents, will be to Canada (his predecessor broke with tradition and went to Mexico instead – big surprise there), so maybe they’ll present him with  a shiny new red-and-brushed-aluminum iPod preloaded with CanCon. Or something.

As would be expected, Wonkette has a snarky take on it: “This thoughtful gift shall represent the very essence of Canada, distilled into 49 beautiful songs about being polite, speaking passable French, and having depressoid sex under a pile of blankets 10 months of every year.”

If you want to get in on it, hurry – voting closes at 8 pm EST on Friday, January 16th. I don’t think you actually have to be Canadian to vote (I did fine with my IP address 100 miles south of the border), but it probably helps to have some familiarity with the songs. Vote.

(thanks, Tim!)

MP3: The Weakerthans – One Great City!

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Freezepop on NPR, and weekend posts

January 16, 2009

freezepop

Over the course of last weekend, Justin at Anti-Gravity Bunny complained about music blogs not posting on weekends, and my friend Matt at Sub Ubi teasingly gloated that he  scooped me about z=z fave Freezepop being on NPR (and Matt alludes to why).

If you’re actually interested in my non-z=z activities and why I don’t post on weekends, you can always follow me on Twitter or try my Flickr photostream.

MP3: Freezepop – Pop Music is Not a Crime (buy)

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Neko Case puts the ‘good’ in ‘good publicity’

January 15, 2009

neko

Okay, how could any blogger with a heart (or pets) resist this? In support of her new album, Middle Cyclone (out March 3 on Anti-), Neko Case has released a free MP3 single. So far so ordinary. But get this – for every blog that posts the MP3, she and her label will donate $5 to animal welfare charity Best Friends Animal Society. If you’re not a blogger, but you still want to get involved, they’ll make a $1 donation for every user who adds the track to their iLike profile. Full details here. And the song’s pretty good too!

MP3: Neko Case – People Got A Lotta Nerve

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Indie bands and OC creator’s new web serial

January 14, 2009

oc-mixes

The creator of The OC, Josh Schwartz, has a new project, Rockville, which is a web-based serial centered around a music club, presented in four-minute chunks. Unsurprisingly, given the setting and Schwartz’s history of launching new bands with The OC, he’s announced that he plans to showcase indie bands in each webisode, if ‘showcase’ is the right word for ’15 second cameo.’ More interesting, however, is what he plans to do with the rest of the footage – Schwartz plans to put the full live performances online, with possible plans to release a DVD. Here at z=z, we’ve spent a bunch of time thinking about music in advertising and in TV shows, so it’ll be interesting to see how well it works in this mostly untried medium.

Reuters

MP3: The Futureheads – Decent Days and Nights (featured on OC Mix 4; more Futureheads)

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The Buttless Chaps are soon to be no more

January 13, 2009

[embedded YouTube video; if you can’t watch it, click here]

I’m sad to have to report that Vancouver-based The Buttless Chaps are calling it quits after nearly a decade. As well as having one of the best band names ever, it’s not like we had a surfeit of electronica-country bands. They’ll play at the Dawson City Music Festival (yes, in the Yukon) this summer, and the word is that there’ll be one last hometown show, but then it’s the end of the line.

MP3: The Buttless Chaps – Master and Commander

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Coverage: Buffetlibre’s Rewinded and Rewind2

January 12, 2009

rewind-v-0

Guest blogger Scott writes:

Buffetlibre has just released the second half of their epic compilation of new artists (many of whom I’ve never heard of) covering 70s, 80s, and 90s (but mostly 80s) songs. I had a few tracks from the first half, but hadn’t sat down and dug through it carefully. This release gave me the opportunity to really look at both parts. There’s the odd dance remix track and a lot of more tribute-y tracks that don’t distinguish themselves from the original to any great extent, but I’ve found a few real gems. I won’t offer too much commentary here, because part of the enjoyment for me was plowing through the list and stumbling across covers of songs I haven’t thought about in at least a decade. For those who might prefer a faster approach than song-by-song, there’s a single (large) downloadable archive with all the files in the right-hand sidebar on the front page. The sidebar claims that they have a similar downloadable archive for Part 1 on their MySpace page, but I couldn’t find it.

MP3: Freezepop – Only You (Yaz/Yazoo cover)

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The changing economics of touring

January 9, 2009

madonna

Two recent articles, one in the Economist’s culture magazine (link) and one in the Independent (link) both take the recently released 2008 concert revenue figures as a starting point to discuss the future of touring musical acts. Unsurprisingly, the Economist gives a deeper historical perspective (I’m impressed by their ability to work in a reference to Tom Stoppard), whereas the Independent’s article focuses more on the numbers, including a list of the highest-grossing tours of 2008, with Madonna (pictured) at the top of the heap. The Independent reports that music sales have fallen in the last five years due to, among other factors, “the corrosive effects effects of piracy.” They also note that concert revenues are up by 13%. While they fail to connect these two things, both articles quote David Bowie:

The absolute transformation of everything that we ever thought about music will take place within ten years, and nothing is going to be able to stop it. …Music itself is going to be like running water or electricity…you’d better be prepared for doing a lot of touring because that’s really the only unique situation that’s going to be left.

Even more remarkable is that it’s from an interview with the New York Times in 2002.

MP3: David Bowie – Hang on to Yourself [buy]

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Jeffrey Lewis, “My 2008 in a Nutshell”

January 8, 2009

jeffrey-lewis-may

Musician and comic book artist Jeffrey Lewis did a funny-but-heartbreaking cartoon for the New York Times’ music blog, headlined A Year in Love and Music. Click on the image to check out the whole thing.

More about Jeffrey Lewis: website myspace videos

MP3: British Sea Power – Waving Flags

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Upcoming: Dark Was the Night

January 7, 2009

the-national

So looking forward to this. Bryce and Aaron Dessner, of The National, curated a 2-CD release called Dark Was the Night. It’s being released by the “Red Hot” organization, who’ve put out about a dozen or so albums to benefit AIDS research and related causes. The lineup looks amazing – as well as an unreleased National track, it includes a collaboration between Feist and Ben Gibbard, Spoon, the New Pornographers, the Kronos Quartet, and more. The release date is set for February 17th on Beggar’s Banquet.

MP3: Kirsty MacColl and the Pogues – Miss Otis Regrets [from Red, Hot and Blue]

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Apple is removing DRM from iTunes

January 6, 2009

apple-logoIt’s official – Apple announced today that it will no longer use digital rights management on songs from iTunes, taking effect before the end of the quarter. This goes hand-in-hand with a change in the pricing structure, with song prices ranging from 69 cents to $1.29. In case you’ve ever wondered why z=z only linked to eMusic, Beatport, and Amazon – this was why. I still listen to CDs that I bought twenty years ago, and Apple had no interest in making sure I can do this with their protected songs – why should they care, after all, since I’ve already paid them? So I’m delighted to see Apple take this move away from the dark side.

Reuters article: link

(thanks to Scott for the heads-up!)

[trivia note: Propellerheads’ “Take California” was the first song  used to advertise the iPod, way back in 2001.]

MP3: Propellerheads – Take California

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Octopus Pie nails z=z

January 6, 2009

musical tastes

The music of z=z in a nutshell. Go check out Octopus Pie, a narrative-style webcomic following the adventures of a crew of Brooklynites, created by Meredith Gran. She’s a resident of Northampton, MA, which seems to be the epicentre of a webcomics cabal.

(whiny indie pop trash) MP3: The Airborne Toxic Event – Sometime Around Midnight [buy]

(obnoxious ADD noise) MP3: Dominik Eulberg – Potzblitz und Donnerwetter [buy]

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Threesome: Alt-rock continuity

January 5, 2009


[embedded YouTube video; if you can’t watch it, click here]

I was at the Ted Leo concert with someone who was much younger than me, and she didn’t really know who The Waterboys were. With the Clear Channel-ization of commercial radio, the dearth of good independent and alternative stations, and the general decline of radio listening, it occurs to me that we are losing a certain musical continuity. I grew up with Toronto’s The Edge, and it exposed me to a lot of music that came out before I was too young to hear or appreciate it, but was still in occasional rotation. It meant that everything new that I listened to fit into a context of decades of college and indie radio. If you’re mostly listening to bands from their Myspace pages, you might not be getting exposed to these bands or sounds of yesteryear.

So here are  three songs that are all lost classics from the 1980s – brilliant, emotionally-moving songs. As well as the Waterboys, here’s Australia’s Hunters and Collectors (a live track is below; you can hear the canonical version in the video above). I heard Squeeze‘s “Tempted” coming out of a car parked on my street a few days ago and it reminded me how much I loved it (thank you, whoever you are!).

MP3: The Waterboys – The Whole of the Moon (1985)

MP3: Hunters and Collectors – Throw Your Arms Around Me (live) (1986)

MP3: Squeeze – Tempted (1981)

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2008: Best and worst songs in ads

January 2, 2009

[embedded YouTube video; if you can’t watch it, click here]

Following up on some previous posts about music and advertising, and doing one last wrap-up for the year that’s just ended…

Ad Age magazine did a nice little roundup of the ten best songs in advertisements in 2008, together with the ten worst (which makes for much more entertaining reading, as you might imagine). Some interesting artists in there, ranging from Ennio Morricone through the Kinks through Liars. The article includes links  to video of all the ads.

(above, a mashup of Esurance ad and a video for Cloud Cult’s “Lucky Today”)

Book of Tens: Ad Songs of the Year

MP3: Liars – Clear Island [buy]

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2008 roundup

January 1, 2009

river burst

Now that 2008 is actually over, time for a quick round-up of some music highlights. This is a highly idiosyncratic list: it’s not comprehensive, it’s not definitive, and it’s not scientific. It’s really just about what I liked enough to spend a lot of time listening to this year. I hope that there’s some stuff in the list that you missed, and that it encourages you to check out something new.

If the artist had a 2008 release, it’s given in parentheses. Links are to z=z posts, most with MP3s. List is in no particular order.

Head Like A Kite (There is Loud Laughter Everywhere) This album is one of my favourite of the year, up there with Massive Attack’s Mezzanine as the perfect music for three am listening.

The Mountain Goats (Heretic Pride): An excellent album, with several standout songs (“Autoclave,” “Heretic Pride”). But my 2008 Mountain Goats experience was mostly about their fantastic live shows.

Destroyer (Trouble in Dreams): I love Dan Bejar, among other reasons, because he strays enough from traditional pop structures that his songs have added interest, but not enough that they become unmemorable or unlistenable.

The Faint (Fasciination): Omaha’s most unlikely musical export. They were really fun live, except for the few minutes where their setup died and the lead singer told terrible jokes.

Billy Bragg (Mr. Love & Justice): While this was his 2008 album, its most important quality was that it gave Billy Bragg a reason to tour. He’s perfected the art of the one-man-with-a-guitar live show.

Freezepop (Futurefuturefutureperfect, 2007): Voted Boston’s Best Live Act, with justification – their March show was one of my peak concert experiences in 2008.

Passion Pit (Chunk of Change): Local band ‘most likely to succeed’ in the brave new world of indie-electro.

Hot Chip (Made in the Dark): The year’s electrorock album, and the raw material for a slew of great remixes, including one of “One Pure Thought” by Dominik Eulberg and most recently (about 24 hours ago) of “Ready for the Floor” by Jesse Rose (a bit of a cruel joke at 1:45 am, a few minutes before last call).

British Sea Power (Do You Like Rock Music?): This album renders its title rhetorical.

Electric Laser People (Straight Talk on Raising Kids, 2007): This is the album that I was listening to when I reached the Lake Washington bridge; I suspect that it’ll always be emotionally time-stamped with my elation at completing the four-and-a-half day drive, solo, from Cambridge to Seattle.

Mother Mother (O My Heart): Missed two opportunities to see them live, once in Seattle and once in Vancouver, and I hope I get to remedy that in 2009.

New Faces (Two Years): My first intro to local Seattle music – I heard about them from a friend before I even arrived.

The Gaslight Anthem (The ’59 Sound): I came to this band late in 2008, but it’s in heavy rotation on my personal playlists.

The Hold Steady (Stay Positive): This album grew on me; I liked it much more by the end of the year than when I first heard it, in June. Two live shows (at the Pitchfork Music Festival and here in Seattle) probably helped with the process.

I Am Kloot (I Am Kloot Play Moolah  Rouge): I am a sucker for Johnny Bramwell’s voice; if The Gaslight Anthem are a homage and throwback to an earlier time in American music, I Am Kloot plays the same role for British music.

Bishop Allen (The Broken String, 2007):  Quirky, charming and infectious.

Good Night, States (Short Films on Self-Control, 2007): They also get bonus points for having my favourite artist website this year.

Now it’s your turn! What are some of the songs and bands that you spent a lot of time listening to in 2008? We’d especially love to hear about lesser-known music, not bands that everyone seems to love (Fleet Foxes, I’m looking at you). Share your suggestions in the comments.

Image: river burst by Flickr user mudpig, posted here under its Creative Commons license.

MP3: Electric Laser People – Yer So Confident [buy]