Sunday, December 16, 2007

Popcast #12 - Pop Christmas!



For our last podcast of the year, we got a bit festive and made a very pop christmas mix. Hope you enjoy it and have a very merry holiday time!

The tracklist is:

Aislers set - Christmas song
Pas/cal - Last christmas
Summer Cats - Plastic Christmas
Michaelmas - My gift song
Lucky Lucky Pigeons - Red Santa
The Diskettes - Noel
Bunnygrunt - Blue christmas
Shumai - California Christmas
Rose melberg and Gregory Webster - Merry christmas (I don't want to fight tonight)
The Magic Whispers - Like Christmas
The fireflies - X-mas song
El perro del mar - Oh What a Christmas!
Bobby Baby - Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
Would-Be-Goods - Christmas In Tahiti
Masters Of The Hemisphere - The First Noel
Pocketbooks - Christmas In Your Sights
Red Sleeping Beauty - Christmas
Soda Fountain Rag - Jullåten 2007
Amelia Fletcher and Hit Parade - Christmas Tears

You can download the file here.

Camila and Thor
x

Saturday, December 8, 2007

001collective

Just came across an excellent new torrent based label, although i probably shouldn't call them that - in their faq they say "The collective isn't a label, or an internet distribution site, or an internet label. We like to think of the Collective as a family of artists who help each other out whenever they can, and who make music because they love to make music."

But basically a nice clean website for a really good collection of quality new music, put together by one Luke Morris, an american college student from Louisiana, who also records under the name Secret Owl Society.
At present there are five releases up there, ranging from the lurching shy grandeur of Errand Boy, tinyfolk getting a lot more freak folk than his usual ukulele musings, and the off-beat pop of Secret Owl Society, which kinda sounds like how you imagine Anticon should have sounded. I'm still downloading the other two at the moment, but these three releases so far have all been super good.
What really impressed me was their 'Declaration Of Independence'. Its really articulate and accurately describes our changing habits of music dissemination and file sharing, in the positive manner which it should be viewed, seizing the opportunities of the now, rather than the pessimistic gloom we hear perpetuated from the RIAA and majors.
Oh, and of course they have the cutest logo ever!

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