Saturday, May 31, 2008

Another Hook-Up

Today I get to add another name to people I have met in person that I have met at ccMixter. Meeting Mixters never disappoints. It's always an amazing experience.

I want to thank spinmeister for meeting with me today. My head is still spinning from our 100mph conversation.

We arranged to meet at a music store, which by the way is an excellent place to meet-up because it doesn't matter if you're early or late and it's easy to find people. I only mention this because I met Ran Dumb Dots at a music store on my visit to Seattle last time and that worked out well too. Consider it Tip#1 from teru's Guide to Meeting Mixters. : )

Anyways, after Spin & I totally geeked out at the music store we grabbed a coffee (thanks spin) and then talk, talk, talk, breathe, sip, talk, talk, etc... for about an hour straight I think. We actually forgot to sit down. You know, it's amazing how much conversation you can have when there's no CAPTCHA involved. ; )

One of these days we should all try to meet as a group. Not really to address anything specific but just to meet and get to know each other better. Like a ccMixter party. Of course I'm not talking about physically getting together. But somewhere / something that is more effective that's a bit more interactive than a forum. I guess the closest thing I can think of is Second Life.

I just want to throw that out there. I think it would rock. We could probably find a good DJ too.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

TwoMadsAtOnce used in CBC Show (kind of)

Here's the video trackback for a behind the scenes segment for a CBC show that uses TwoMadsAtOnce for their padding. (the web page they point is broken, I'll be fixing that as soon as I get the proper one from them)

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Music 2.0 MT9

New MP3 Revolutionizes Way You Listen to Music from Korea Times

Korean computer engineers are introducing a new digital music format that has separate controls on the sound volume for each musical instrument, such as guitar, drum, bass and voice -- an ideal tool for music lovers of different tastes as well as karaoke fans.


Here's another perspective from the obviously jaded Guardian. : )

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Monday, May 26, 2008

Fourstones Interview

Do not miss this. An interview with Fourstones at eMXR.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

vo1k1 ft. Kaer Trouz



The Munich Airport Visitors Park.

Video by ibogi. Music by vo1k1 ft. Kaer Trouz

Friday, May 16, 2008

I said "reeeeeeeemix"!

evolved for your viewing pleasure

For those of us who pursue creative avocations, motivation is so often the key. I amuse myself and find myself amused by others who sing the constant refrain "I meant to write x" or "I wanted to do more recording", always followed by an entirely reasonable explanation for why the speaker in fact had time only for drudgery, laundry, needless personal strife (usually with a significant other) and perhaps a stray guilty cigarette or two, but no time for the creative endeavor in question. Slightly off topic, by the way, I am also amused by people who cannot donate five dollars to a musician on jamendo for want of funds, but would not miss the latest installment of Grand Theft Auto,at whatever cost. Prophets without honor, and all that. But I digress.

I like to read about people who do write or compose or create or even build a business. So often they accomplish these things when they have no time, and too much stress. I think, sometimes, that too much unallotted time for anything hinders rather than helps. Leisure is fun, but it can be the enemy--ennui, like a gas in a high school chemistry class, has a way of expanding to fill the available volume.

Last weekend I met up with a poet friend in Pittsburgh. I found this invigorating not only for the fun of seeing a friend, but also for the spur to personal creativity. I've not submitted a poem for potential publication for a couple of years now, and a solid poetry reading by the father of said friend's child along with an invigorating musical display involving a bowed musical saw with fx backing an acoustic guitar got my creative juices flowing. My friend e-mailed me a cool contest by one of those little litmags that's always a pleasure to read but light on circulation because everyone is tapped out buying virtual magic troll-emboldening pellets. I remembered that a goal--a contest, a compilation, a structure, alway helps motivate me. I'll enter that contest, with solid entries created by its July deadline.

I like to find netlabel contests and compilations, too. When I hunt remix compilation and contest opportunities, I frequently find myself with my friend Google, who is a very chatty conversationalist but a bit imprecise.

Yet now I have a new resource to share for those who, like me, like to find new things to remix and different contests to which to submit remixes. It's called:

Reeemix.com

and it's a stylish little weblog of upcoming netlabel contests for the person who likes to participate in remix contests and netlabel compilations.

If your "get up and go" not only "got up and went" but also "became a bureaucrat in the Ministry of Sloth", then get out that guitar (or nose flute), finger out a melody with that harpsichord or Reason 15.0 (or a mouse-connected-to-twenty-five-dollar-shareware), look up an upcoming thing to enter a remix for---
and reeeeemixxxx.

It's hard to learn by doing--unless you actually do. But having lectured enough, I must now find a call for entries, and reeemix.

Monday, May 12, 2008

CalendarGirl Spotlight QA

Thanks once again to spinmeister for another excellent Artist Spotlight Q&A. This time with the lovely Tamara Barnett-Herrin aka CalendarGirl.

Be sure to check it out. And get ready to show some love for Calendar Songs Volume I to be released on May 26th.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Spark CBC Radio = Awesome


From Spark on CBC Radio

Each week on Spark, Nora mentions that the show is made with Creative Commons music. But we've never really talked about what that means. So on the April 30th episode of Spark, Amber Mac will explain Creative Commons in a nutshell: what it is, why it matters, and how it affects you.

FYI, it's because of Creative Commons music that the version of Spark you can download as a podcast is exactly the same show that goes over the air. If we used commercial music in our show, that would be impossible......

Thursday, May 08, 2008

@Lucas: Beware PD

While it seems "Happy Birthday" may not be copyright after all, sadly, it seems even PD derivations ain't what it used to be

Chronic Dreams 2



Top 10 reasons why you should buy the new Four Stones release - Chronic Dreams 2.

10. No DRM.
9. Pay what you like, get what you want.
8. It's not evil, it's Magnatune.
7. You have Chronic Dreams 1 and want to see how it ends.
6. Help prove a Creative Commons licensed work can make money.
5. So he can pay someone to design cover art.
4. Payback. Not only Vic but all the artists featured on the album.
3. Own a piece of internet history. An album from the man behind ccMixter.
2. Victor will be nice to you.
1. It's really good.

Buy, download, license, listen at Magnatune.

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Total Recut - Video Remix Challenge

I saw this over at the CC blog.

TotalRecut.com is hosting a Video Remix Challenge over the next two months and we want you to create a short video using the theme: ‘What is Remix Culture?’ You can you use any footage you can find, including Public Domain and Creative Commons work, but the finished video cannot be longer than 3 minutes or shorter than 30 seconds long....You can find out more information here



Video by totalrecut. Music by Trifonic.

Why ccM works..

From John Pazdan in the forums.

A really good thing happened today..a photojournalist used my piece “The Long Goodbye” in a multimedia article that ran in the International Herald Tribune, as well as the New York Times ....

I cannot say how happy I am about this happening, especially as the music was used for a just cause......
Migrants in Calais, France produced by Ellie Markovitch for the International Herald Tribune. Photos by Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos and Reporting by Caroline Brothers.

Way to go John. : )

Sunday, May 04, 2008

Virtuosos, Rock Stars and Remix Culture

We often hear the truism that "remix culture is not new", and we all know generally that the works of Chaucer and Shakespeare, for example, involve the "remix" of tales in the Creative Commons of their own times, modified for enhanced story-telling and then-contemporary editorial standards.

In music, too, we know that folk music almost by definition is an evolution of remixes and that in classical music borrowing of melodies and ideas is as old as the form itself.

This week, though, the very entertaining radio show Exploring Music featured an entire week of
discussion of the transcription and borrowing in classical music, called "New Wine in Old Bottles". I heard a good bit of several episodes (sadly, not available on a podcast), but one of the featured topics sent me back to the books, because it
reminded me of how vital remix culture was in the era before recording technology. Remixes back then required transcriptions and new performances of the pieces created, to make new pieces. Transcription/remix culture provides a set of parallels that might help us understand that what we are doing is not some odd form of new piracy, but instead a licensed continuation of a tradition that made sense and great music.

Take this fellow Franz Liszt. A piano virtuoso capable of theatrical pyrotechnics,
he was in some ways a pre-20th Century "rock star". He made his living and his reputation by his amazing skill at the piano--and like a more modern celebrity,
lived a life filled with casual relationships with the beautiful and interesting, intense and intriguing religious enthusiasms, and serious debates among his peers about whether anyone so popular could in fact be a great composer.

Liszt's instrument was the piano. However, when he was a young man, he was entirely taken by the work of his era's greatest violinist, Paganini. One could argue that Paganini was among any era's greatest violinists--like Liszt, he had a technical mastery that was three parts genius and one part circus--as if everything that every carnival midway sideshow barker ever said was true.

Liszt at 20 heard Paganini, then 50, perform. He was so swept away that he began to convert Pagainin's violin studies into piano pieces. His remix (technically a transcription) of Paganini's "A minor caprice (Nr. 24)" for piano both caused him controversy in his time and gives us a sense of his piano genius in our time. Liszt demonstrated that, like Paganini had on the violin, he could do acrobatics on the piano that nobody else in his time could do. The piece is simply lovely--and its dexterity and adventure completely accessible even to those of us raised on guitar solos and killer beats.

In Liszt's day, transcriptions of works from the "Creative Commons" of that time was not only done, but often expected. Even after Liszt's time, numerous composers were swayed by the same piece to do transcriptions--including Brahms and Rachmaninoff.

Lest we come to believe that this is all entirely ancient history, I might also point out that Andrew Lloyd Webber's own variations on the Paganini piece reached number 2 in the UK pop charts in the 1970s.

Lately, I see some webloggers write about "remix culture" as if it were a new and unwelcome stepchild utilized only by various undesirables.

But we don't have to rely on generalities to see how "remix culture" predates us--and how it advanced and helped make classical music. We can cite chapter and verse--and the Liszt is one palpable and easy example.

I am indebted to Exploring Music for providing a week of transcriptions from one composer to another, and one form to another. Some, like Aaron Copland's use of the Shaker song "Simple Gifts" in his amazing "Appalachian Spring", were well known--but a number were charming new stories I had not heard before this week.

We all tend to make remixes more than we tend to discuss high-flown concepts--
but my simple premise is that we should never forget that we are part of a conversation about permissive licensing and its virtue in advancing the cause of music. Only one person can be a Liszt or a Rachmaninoff. But each of us in our humble way can work, through voluntary licensing, to create a "creator-safe" zone
for using samples and 'pellas to share culture. Our modes may be hip-hop or electronica or rock (or ambient), but the point is the same--we advance a sharing economy, and the creative weight of history is with us, not against us.