Posts Tagged ‘internet’

A Stream of Music and Pictures

Saturday, July 5th, 2008

Myplaylist is a service that compiles a playlist of available music and pictures on the internet. You type in a name of a band and then you can chose from one or more already created playlists of songs and images. A playlist will be automatically created for you on the spot if you are searching for something new. While you are listening to music, you can watch a slideshow of flickr images based on the search. I like the use of flickr images playing to music.

Myplaylist has a fairly basic function and that’s great. Beyond this function there is a little more fun to be had. I’ve discovered a lot of random awesome remixes by well known artists, stuff I didn’t know existed. The results of my search have been unexpected which has been a pleasant surprise.

Fun experiments

For those that like mashups: you can open up multiple myplaylist ’sessions’.

For those that are interested in the tagging phenomena: type in a random phrase or number and a playlist will be generated. I was just listening to a playlist of ‘untitled’ songs and it was pretty cool.

Remixing Today

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

The following is a quote from ccmixer, a community music remixing site featuring remixes and samples licensed under Creative Commons licenses. This snippet works as a fine English translation of the type of contest rules (legal contracts) that typically accompany legal remixes of material under copywrite.

Most sampling or mash-up contests on the Internet stipulate that you will never own the samples you use in the contest and that after the contest is run you forgo your rights even to the new song you created.

After the contest has been judged, all entries that are not commercially published are essentially useless because rights to the song are given up upon entry and access to files. Typically in these contests there is one winner who has the chance to get the remix published alongside the original track, whether that be on vinyl or on iTunes. Every other contest entry, whether that be 5 or 5,000, belongs to whoever is issuing the competition and are never released.

In using material featured at remixing sites like ccmixer, the products of the material can be used in many other ways, provided that it is for noncommercial purposes. You could, for example, create a remix and enter it into a contest, and then feature the remix on your website or play it on your internet radio station.

So there are alternatives. Remix culture does not have to be a stark white wall. One downside to the creative commons direction, however, has to do with why remixes are desirable in the first place. It’s nice to be able to identify a remix on first listen and to know what is being remixed. This would be an unlikely occurrence with CC material because it doesn’t have the same sort of airplay that other music does. The stuff people know about and would be able to identify is protected by 10,000 armies.

image: ©2006 morguefile.com

Will’s Meekly Brought Presents

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

On the subject of internet radio. The traditional model is that a show is broadcasted at a certain time each week or day. This poses a problem for the potential listener who can’t make it to their computer at the designated time slot.

Having previous show archives available at all hours of the day help the situation. This way no one will leave unsatisfied who makes the effort to visit the website for the show. If, however, the show broadcasts commercial material then all of the restrictions that apply to the live broadcasts (Digital Millennium Copyright Act) apply also to the archives.

One way around all this is to create mixes that link to music that is already available for free. This could be tunes under a copyleft license, ‘legal music downloads’ like the ones discussed in the previous post, or anything in the public domain. Here I would like to present one of these playlists. Each track will need to be downloaded separately and will involve two clicks (sorry) — you are also welcome to stream these songs first.

“The Best of Will’s Meekly”

1. Radio Citizen - The Hop

2. Unagi - Sacred Music

3. Steve Spacek - Dollar

4. MF Doom - Live From Planet X!

5. Beat Chemist - I Wanna Tell The World

6. Foreign Exchange - All That You Are

Will’s Meekly: A Retrospective

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Will\'s Meekly

Will’s Meekly was a radio program I hosted that ran for 25 weeks. The show was created from a love for beatboxing and good production. It was broadcasted live online via Free Radio SAIC and operated on a annual budget of zero dollars. Although no longer with us, Will’s Meekly had a good run. Thanks everyone for supporting! There may be some ‘never before seen’ content lying around that would be appropriate to publish on starschreck.

After hosting the show for a while it began to morph into something unexpected. Finding quality tunes each week, after I had already played everything that I had initially intended to, began to require more resources. The show survived with the help of recommendation services (like Pandora and Amazon), intersecting playlists (iTunes, Download.com, UGHH.com, etc.), and user recommendation and feedback.

Ultimately it came to a point where I realized that internet radio sucks so the show went off the air. There was, however, a lot of good research and strategies that came out of it.

It turns out that a lot of commercial music is available online for free. It has now become even more of a standard part of marketing. Singles are available on artist websites and also on sites specifically devoted to that purpose. If you are interested in some of these sites check out: download.com, better propaganda, and epitonic. For a lengthy and complete discussion of this topic visit Links to Tens of Thousands of Legal Music Downloads.