Radio Active 89FM NZ Music Show Playlist 23 December, 2003
The RadioActive PC decided it didn't like IE last night, so my carefully constructed playlist got wiped out in a horrible 'this program has performed a fatal error' moment about 5 minutes from the end. I'll see if I can reconstruct it from memory (and the pile of CDs sitting in my bag), but first, the 'hippy van'.
I've been off air for a few weeks, what with flu and the roster system, so it took me more than the usual 5 minutes to get my act together at the start and begin to remember what the plethora of knobs and switches on the desk actually do. Having fired off a couple of tracks successfully, I went to my first voice break only moderately nervous, but then, typical, just as I hit the 'live' button, the studio phone starts ringing! Where the hell is the 'hold' key on that thing! (there's about 8 function buttons at the bottom of the phone - none of them looked the business). After discussing my phone problems on air for about 15 seconds, the phone ringing in the background the whole time, I finally just picked up the receiver and dropped it back into its cradle. Problem solved. Or delayed, at least. The moment the next track got under way, the phone went again, and I was able to take it...
"Kia ora, RadioActive."
"Uhhh, hullo? I 'ave lost my [indecipherable]?"
It was vaguely European sounding girl (dutch/danish?).
"You've lost your...?"
"Ummm, cat?"
"You've lost a cat?"
"I think I have lost my cap?"
"I'm sorry, I'm having problems hearing what you're saying, have you lost your cat, or a cap, or something else?"
"Ummm, it is lost. Shall I tell you about it?"
I thought someone might be winding me up, but bugger it, you never know...I persevered.
"Yep, fire away."
"Sorry?"
"Ah, yes, tell me about your cat. Where did you lose it?"
"Wellington?"
"Ooookay. And what colour is it?"
"Hippy."
"Sorry. Happy?"
"Hippy coloured."
"You have a hippy coloured cat?"
"Ah, no, van! We have lost our van!"
Click!
Van. They'd
lost it? Or had it been
stolen? Mine was not to wonder...
"Ah, sorry, VAN! My mistake, you've lost your van. And you say it's what colour?"
"Hippy coloured."
Given the level of mis-communication that had gone on so far, I couldn't really deal with this, so I just plunged on for the denouement.
"And what's the license plate?"
"Sorry?"
"The registration?"
"Ummmm?"
"The numbers on the plates at the front and back of the car."
"Oh! It is..."
And she told me. Actually, from there, we actually seemed to be talking the same language, and I also figured out the make, her name & contact number without too many more false starts. So, at the next voice break...
"Just a quick headsup: Maggie has lost her
hippy-coloured Toyota van somewhere around central Wellington. If you spot the van, license plate [whatever], please call the police and let them know, and give us a buzz here at the station as well - perhaps we can co-ordinate a city-wide van-hunt. Just to repeat, a
hippy-coloured Toyota van. Shouldn't be too hard to spot."
It also transpired that there was no un-chart-ed show this week, so my normal 20 minute rest halfway through the show was out of the question, and I had to actually play a reasonably solid two hours of music without pause. Of course, I made it harder on myself by deciding to play a lot of 2 and 3 minute long pop songs - it was only in the latter stages of the second half of the show that I really started to flag, and dropped in a couple of dub and electronica epics.
Anyway, from memory (and thus with probably omissions aplenty) here's the playlist...
* Conray - Space Dub Jazz
* Sleepers Union - Giant Spheres
* Debris - Stuck in the Middle
* Nouveau Riche - Autumn Girl
* Dead Pan Rangers - Dwarfism
* Blue Set - Hospital Sex
* Shocking Pink - [?]
* Flash Harry - Alright
* P-Bass Expressway - Chester Creeps In
* Verse Two - Gold
* Pitch Black - Speech (White Amolitude Mix)
* 50hz - Longitude Zero
* Trinity Roots - Just Like You
* Age Pryor - Eyes Rarely Meet
* Phoenix Foundation - Sally
* Grusome - Groove is in the Hutt
* Disasteradio - Sparky Chair
* Phelps & Munro - Bounceback
* Twinset - They Call it Chicago Pt. 1
* Poultice - Cotton Wool
* Scattergram - Little Indians
* Aspen - [?]
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nz mp3s and albums. cheap.The nz mp3 site I do a bit of work for -
amplifier.co.nz has recently dropped its mp3 prices. Each track now costs NZ$1.99 (about US$1.25), down from NZ$2.50 per track, and the minimum purchase amount is NZ$5 (down from NZ$10), or, in other words, at least three tracks. So, this compares pretty well with what's probably considered the 'market leader' in paid mp3 downloads -
iTunes - who charge US$0.99 per download. The iTunes downloads have various DRM measures in place, however, that restricts the number of times you can burn a track off, or move it from computer to computer - the amplifier tracks are just old fashioned no-security-measures-at-alll mp3s, which makes them slightly more user-friendly in the long run, and probably worth that extra 25 cents.
The day will come, I'm sure, that all these prices will come down again. As I've pointed out before, if you wanted to download an album's worth of mp3s from either iTunes or amplifier, you'd end up paying more than you would if you just popped down to the shop and bought the CD (and get all the packaging to boot). Of course, that's not really the philosophy behind the online stores, which generally rely on the 'no filler! only get the tracks you want!' attitude, which works fine when you're after the latest hits from some major label artist (who is doubtless guilty of the 'three hits-seven filler tunes' album that has become so prevalent over the last couple of decades), but, increasingly, good indie artists are releasing albums in the old-school sense, releases with an overall feel and, dare one say, vibe, in which the entire album needs to be listened to from start to finish to be fully appreciated. Local acts are increasingly of this ilk: this year the Phoenix Foundation, the Tokey Tones (times two, even) and the Nudie Suits put out decent 'albums', as opposed to a bunch of individual tracks.
Perhaps an mp3 album discount might be in order.
Having said that, amplifier does actually sell albums online as well, at excellent prices - so it may just be a case of paying a little bit more for individual tracks (a la the old 'singles'), or going the whole hog to get your hands on the bona fide physical album. If the latter appeals, I highly recommend these albums for your christmas stockings:
Songbook by the Nudie Suits (only NZ$24.95 = US$16.12),
Holding Hands, Feeding Ducks by the Brunettes (NZ$22.50/US$14.50),
Horse Power by the Phoenix Foundation (NZ$29.95/US$19.35), and
Catepillar and/or
Butterfly by
the Tokey Tones (both NZ$27.95/US$18).
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mp3.com. all goneThey've pulled the plug. The 1.6 million songs that made up the mp3.com music database have been deleted by the new owners of the site -
CNET - who promise that they "...will be launching new and improved artist services early next year at music.download.com. These services will be free and will expose your music to more people than ever before."
So, you know, why delete the whole lot to start with? With storage costs being pretty minimal, it can't have been too hard to drop the whole database onto a few hard drives for storage while they figured out the best way to migrate the old mp3 files across to music.download.com. I mean, at some point, someone has uploaded those 1.6 million songs, filled out the various fields associated with each track, uploaded artwork, created links to band sites and CD sale sites, etc, etc. If, at a conservative estimate, each track took about 15 minutes to get online (that's really conservative, it could take 15 minutes just to upload a track on a dialup, but, anyway, hypothetically...), that's, um, about
45.6 years of labour gone, just like that.
It wasn't for lack of trying by some people. Former MP3.com
CEO Michael Robertson's pleas to save them fell on deaf ears. The request from Archive.org to house all of them for historical purposes was ignored.
Ah well, 99% of the tunes on there were crap anyway. I think I've got a bit of a soft spot for the site because my band
Debris were one of the first bands to get on the site, shortly after it was founded, back at the end of 1997. I'd just read an article about this new audio compression technique called mp3, and decided to find out what I could about it. mp3.com had just started up, and, although originally designed as a news source for mp3 related technology, was asking for bands who had figured out the encoding technology to send them some tracks for downloading to the masses. When I say 'they', I really mean Michael Robertson, who founded mp3.com, and has since gone on to set up
Lindows (the Windows-style Linux OS), and who, as far as I can tell, has become quite rich out of both ventures. He wasn't rich at the end of 1997 though, and I had a bit of correspondence with him at the time with regards to mp3. Once the press started to click onto it, he flicked a few reporters my way for comment (this was at a time when there were only about 20 bands on mp3.com, offering a couple of tracks each). My crowning moment of mp3 internet fame came at the start of 1999, when my imaginary business partner
Natalie Biz got quoted in the New Haven Advocate...
This geographical dispersion is one of the most important MP3 breakthroughs. Natalie Biz, manager of Debris, says via e-mail that "the growth of MP3 has been of great benefit to bands from countries like New Zealand, where artists are basically as isolated as it is possible to be from the rest of the world." Biz says "rarely a day goes by" in which the band doesn't get a few e-mails from "around the planet" praising its music. Debris has attracted interest from radio stations in Italy, Brazil, Siberia and South Korea. Biz acknowledges that purchases of Debris' product have not risen commensurate with the success in getting heard -- every artist who responded to my e-mail inquiries said the same thing -- but she hopes that will change.
She thinks the Web will allow musicians to buck the trends that have been foisted on them in the past.
"For a New Zealand band to have achieved this five years ago would have required a major distribution deal, and the only bands that got those were the ones that already sounded like what was getting thrown at us from the US and UK," declares Biz. Bands will "now have a viable alternative to major label distribution to get themselves heard, and artists will be freer to do exactly what it is they want to do, as they won't be tied down into thinking 'what is it that will be acceptable to the label?'"
Ahahaha. Great stuff. And all that was true as well (except the Natalie Biz bit). Since interest was growing in mp3, but very few bands were onto it at the time, we got heaps of email from interested people. If I'd been clued onto it, we would have replied to a few people, organised a European tour, and established ourselves a nice little offshore fanbase. Ah, if only...
Anyway, at the time, I was having great fun sussing out the technology. This was in the days before the all-in-one packages that create high-quality mp3s at the click of the button from a CD you've just popped in the tray. Oh no. The only mp3 encoder on the block was the original fraunhofer mp3 encoder, which was a DOS command-line driven thing, crippled to encode to only to 96kbps without the registration, which was a nightmare to get hold of. I eventually got a crack from somewhere (alright - it made my copy #000000 - very cool), a CD ripper that didn't disagree with my CD-rom drive, winamp v0.1, and I was away. It took about an hour to encode a tune, and after encoding it, I couldn't even listen to it on my machine in stereo, because my clunky old 486 was so gutless it couldn't process the file quickly enough. Another hour or two uploading it to the site with my 28.8k dialup, and voila, internet fame beckoned.
Obviously, as other bands started to crowd in, and the venture capital took mp3.com from hobby-site to full fledged e-commerce portal, we dropped off the radar as far as the mp3.com crew were concerned. We still managed to scrape a few hundred dollars out of the site out of the pay-for-play and the DAM CDs, and a steady trickle of fanmail still made its way into the inbox because of the occasional random listen. I stopped paying attention about 2001, when Vivendi bought the site and made it a virtual Universal front-end, with all the indie artists buried deep down in the dungeons, and things got even worse when they restricted indie artists to having only three downloads available at any one time). It was also in 2001 (maybe even earlier), that I decided
Garageband.com was the way to go, and I've been logging in there pretty regularly, and, because of their peer-review system, actually hearing a lot of new (mostly bad, some good) music. Debris hover around the alternative top #100 (top rating of #77 of 8028 tracks on 19-Oct-2003, alltime rating of #118 of 17422 total tunes), and the reviews we get (almost all positive) make the site a lot more spiritually rewarding than mp3.com ever was.
Still, sad to see the original go.
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You might also enjoy...
Ahahaha. Customer recommendations at Amazon, for those who bought Michael Jackson's new CD. A few of the recommended titles:
Thank Heaven for Little Boys - 6 Piece Gift Set 4
Identifying Child Molesters: Preventing Child Sexual Abuse by Recognizing the Patterns of the Offenders
Coping With Prison: A Guide to Practitioners on the Realities of Imprisonment
[Note: offline now. Amazon obviously have no sense of humour.]
[via
j-walk]
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