Monday, February 16, 2009

All Get Out Daytrotter session

Charleston's All Get Out recently recorded a session with the ever-cool Daytrotter, offering up four cuts--one of which, "Let Me Go," is exclusive to Daytrotter.

All Get Out is--as is customary for the road warriors--bringing its dynamic and effervescent pop-rock cross-country, with dates booked well into March, listed below. The band will return to the Carolinas at the beginning of next month for dates at the Music Farm in Charleston and Local 506 in Chapel Hill.

Feb 17 2009 8:00P
The 5th Quarter Greenville, Texas
Feb 19 2009 8:00P
The Boiler Room Denton, Texas
Feb 20 2009 8:00P
The Parlor Austin, Texas
Feb 24 2009 8:00P
Luna’s Bar & Grill - Mardi Gras Lake Charles, Louisiana
Feb 25 2009 8:00P
The Circle Bar New Orleans, Louisiana
Feb 28 2009 8:00P
The Handlebar Pensacola, Florida
Mar 5 2009 7:00P
Cox Capitol Theatre w/ Sequoyah Prep School & Harrison Hudson & Jetadore Macon, Georgia
Mar 6 2009 8:00P
Jack Rabbit’s Jacksonville, Florida
Mar 7 2009 8:00P
Music Farm Charleston, South Carolina
Mar 10 2009 8:00P
Local 506 w/ Lydia Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Mar 11 2009 8:00P
Drunken Unicorn w/ Lydia Atlanta, Georgia
Mar 12 2009 8:00P
Proud Larry’s w/ Lydia Oxford, Mississippi
Mar 13 2009 8:00P
One Eyed Jacks w/ Lydia New Orleans, Louisiana
Mar 15 2009 8:00P
Rubber Gloves w/ Lydia Denton, Texas
Mar 17 2009 8:00P
White Rabbit w/ Lydia San Antonio, Texas

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

On the demise of Ruckus, and the un-commodification of recorded sound

Ruckus, the free music portal for college students, owned by TotalMusic, LLC, has ended its operations. A visit to Ruckus.com reveals only the above image with no links, explanations or contact information provided. The DRM-laden download service was ad-supported, but worked primarily with Windows-supported computers, leaving many Mac users out in the cold. As Macs gained popularity, Ruckus lost potential consumers, says a PC World article published earlier today. Also, since the files were so heavily encrypted, they couldn't be transferred to portable devices, such as the ubiquitous iPod.

TotalMusic's Vice President of Product Management, Jason Herskowitz, offered some insight to the demise of the major-label-backed enterprise on his blog.

One of the more than 80 campuses that partnered with the service, UNC-Chapel Hill, adopted Ruckus in 2006 to give students an alternative to illegal file-sharing networks, and in turn, relieve the University from RIAA pressures.

In a story published in The Daily Tar Heel yesterday (full disclosure: I served as Diversions Editor for the DTH for the 2007-2008 school year), students offer a largely unanimous opinion: music should be free.
“I was pretty upset. Actually, really upset,” said Shenise Gilyard, a first-year chemistry major.

“I don’t use iTunes because it’s a dollar a song. Ruckus was great because I didn’t have to buy songs I was just interested in.”

Rob Stewart, a junior environmental studies major, echoed Gilyard’s concern about costs.

“It’s unfortunate,” Stewart said. “That was a sweet deal we had, not having to pay for music.”
In a landscape where the prevailing public opinion is that music no longer has a monetary value, what hope is there for the already sinking music industry?

Herskowitz sums it up rather nicely early into his blog post:
I only hope that someone else figures out how to crack this music-on-the-web nut in a way that is a win for everyone in the value chain. The problem is that to make a music service a win for everyone, then they all of the famished participants have to sit at the table - and be content to let all the others have a little bit to eat, even though they are still hungry themselves.
But it seems awful pessimistic to concede that the only way everybody wins is by agreeing to lose a little bit less.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Kooley High documentary hits the Web


One Day - Introducing Kooley High from BECAUSEUS on Vimeo.

"One Day: Introducing Kooley High" was directed by Napoleon Wright II, and tracks the up-and-coming rap group in its members' day-to-day lives. Spencer Griffith's report of the film's theatrical debut ran in The Independent Weekly and can be read here.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

New song from Embarrassing Fruits

"Corner" is the first single from Embarrasing Fruits' follow-up to last year's The First Time EP, their long-playing debut, Community/Exploitation, on the way from Trekky Records. Its Sebadoh strum-n-mumble gets a boost from some well-placed horns and promises good things to come from the Chapel Hill trio.

Download "Corner" here.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Sparklehorse/Fennesz collab to be issued in March.

Pitchfork is reporting new updates on the Sparklehorse/Fennesz collaboration for Dutch label Konkurrent's "In The Fishtank" series, which is slated for a March release and will also see the two artists joining forces for a Feb. 8 show in Knoxvile, Tenn. at the Bijou Theatre for the Big Ears Festival.

Free mixtape from Juan Huevos


Triangle MC and producer Juan Huevos has released a free digital mixtape, Fliptape, comprising 15 tracks of Huevos' pop-song re-imaginings. He writes in a Myspace blog post, "While it functions as a "mixtape" in design, it has been noted as a fliptape for the nature of the animal that it is: these are not so much songs constructed from samples, rather, actual songs re-arranged to have either the same vibe or a different one and then blessed by myself." Artists "flipped" include Masta Ace, Wolf Parade, Prince, M.I.A., Pinback, Radiohead, Kelly Clarkson and Depeche Mode, among others.

You can download Juan Huevos' Fliptape by clicking here.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Benji Hughes sings on the televesion

Benji Hughes, the Charlotte-based crooner who released his double-album debut last year andgraced the cover of Shuffle #3, will make his television debut with a performance tonight on Jimmy Kimmel Live on the ABC network.