11 posts tagged “mp3”
Okay, this is a good one. I mean, I think they're all good. But this one...this is a good one.
Yes, it's time for another track from Chaos Town, the 1998 CD by my old band The Practical Man. (This track and more are available as free, no-bullshit downloads at Slaw Wagon Records.)
Inspired by The Minds of Billy Milligan by Daniel Keyes, "Always Making Up for Lost Time" tells the story of Billy Milligan, a real guy with multiple personality disorder.
Some tasty guitar work on this one, if I do say so myself.
If you had asked me to choose our one most likely "radio hit" out of all the originals we played, this would've been it.
(This track and more from Chaos Town, the 1998 CD by my old band The Practical Man, can be had for free at Slaw Wagon Records. The CD is also available for an embarrassingly low price.)
And now on to "Side 2" (as it were) of Chaos Town, the 1998 CD by my old band The Practical Man.
This song evolved from a jam with old pal Rick. What you have here is the third version, or perhaps the fourth, depending on which of my fuzzy memories is less misleading.
We were playing this song at the now-defunct Ivory's when someone in the audience shouted to a friend, "THESE GUYS ARE COOL!" The song ended just as he said it, so we all heard it. I think that was pretty much the high point of our performing days. It certainly beat the time in Oxford when a guy came downstairs from his apartment and wanted us to turn down. (Um...you don't like loud music and you live above a fucking bar? Dumbass.)
For the sounds at the beginning, early one morning I stuck a couple of mics out the side door of the little house in Valleydale where we recorded and mixed the CD. (Give yourself a gold star if you know where Valleydale is without looking it up. Give yourself eight gold stars if you know what municipality it's in.)
As always, easy, free, no-bullshit downloads are available at our web site.
If you've been severely depressed about your lack of direction in life, you might want to skip this one. Or at least not dwell on the lyrics.
Dating back to pre-Practical-Man days, this Mark-penned song debuted on our cassette The Book of 1,000 Songs under the band name Mohammed Chang.* What you have here is the full-band re-recorded version from our 1998 full-length CD Chaos Town. Free song downloads are here.
"Nobody else gives a damn if you make it or not before you're gone."** You can take that to the bank.***
*There's an old joke that, since Mohammed is the world's most common given name and Chang is the most common family name, Mohammed Chang must be the most common full name.
**There should probably be a line-break slash in there somewhere. I don't care. Nyah.
***Actually, the bank metaphor is totally inappropriate, seeing as this is indie music and all the bank-related flow was outward, not toward.
Spotted here, an iTunes meme. Or an MP3 meme, if you're not using iTunes. (I won't call it an MP3eme, because someone cleverer than me already used that.) I added a couple of lines. Here we go.
How many songs total: 2,525
How many hours or days of music: 7.3 days
Most recently played: Iverson Minter, "Sittin Here Wonderin"
Longest since played: Sheryl Crow, "Strong Enough"
Most played: The Bravery, "Time Won't Let Me Go"
Most recently added: Mahavishnu Orchestra, "Dream"
Longest since added: Leo Kottke, "The Banks of Marble"
Sort by song title:
First Song: Pearl Jam, "●"
Last Song: The Connells, "'74-'75"
Sort by time:
Shortest Song: "Dante's Lament" (Dialogue from the Clerks Soundtrack) (0:04)
Longest Song: Brian Eno, Thursday Afternoon (1:00:52)*
Sort by album:
First album: Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Abattoir Blues
Last album: Sigur Rós, ( )
First song that comes up on Shuffle: Queen, "Fight From The Inside"
Search the following and state how many songs come up:
Death - 6
Life - 74
Love - 84
Hate - 5
You - 267
Sex - 6
*The longest track in my iTunes (1:44:59) is actually part of a concert bootleg, but since it's a raw recording containing a lot of unindexed songs, I decided not to count it.
Just a few days ago I posted this song as a free-associative response to a mention of a girls' school.
On further reading this evening I learned that guitarist Kelly Johnson (front left in the photo) died last year of spinal cancer at the age of 49.
Ms. Johnson was the hot-in-more-than-one-way guitarist playing the screaming riff on the Les Paul in "Race with the Devil," another of those early-80s MTV vids from back when they played vids.
Just one more reminder that there just isn't that much damn time--and sometimes it's even less than you expected.
Ah, February: time for a sweet, romantic trifle from the catalog of my old band, yes?
No. You're getting a baffling song about the guy who comes to read the meter. (In reality, sometimes it's a woman, which can be embarrassing when you're a dorky guy standing around in a bathrobe, but the song doesn't get into that.) I wrote the lyrics in the Stickies applet on a Macintosh.
I'm now uploading these sound files to Vox, but they'll still be available free on the band's website--that makes it a little easier to save your copy (you DO want to save your copy, right?) and gives you a choice of formats.
One more note: the line says "search my anger," not "search my hangar." It's about a personal residence, not an airport. I just thought I'd clarify that since it could alter the outcome of the US elections or bring about world peace or something.
Since today's Vox Hunt question is "Share your life anthem," consider this my response, as well as the Song of the Month from my old band The Practical Man's 1998 CD Chaos Town.
This is not, mercifully, my life anthem now, but it was once. It's about shitty jobs you take just to pay the bills, jobs where your skills aren't used and your boss doesn't care. It questions the ethic that any work, no matter how asinine, is automatically good for you and the world as long as it pays something. You've gotta eat, but don't let that keep you from looking for something better.
[Updated 2/2/2008: Vox audio file added.]
It's December, and it's time for a Christmas song. It even has sleigh bells.
This is arguably the second crush song on the album, although as with the preceding track, maybe it's more of a lust song. I wrote it about a woman at a Christmas party.
[Updated 2/2/2008: Vox audio file added.]
And now for something completely different: last month's song ("Tale of the Tideland") crashes abruptly into "Crossing the Rubicon," the second track from The Practical Man's 1998 CD Chaos Town.
(The strange split-second of noise at the beginning of the track is actually the end of "Tideland." It makes sense if you hear the tracks in sequence. Maybe one day I'll drop these songs into an editor and move that little blip of noise back into the "Tideland" file where it belongs. Today is not that day.)
This is the first crush song on the album. Or maybe it's just a lust song.
Mark is the alpha singer-songwriter on this track. Be nice, because he may be reading this. Or not. Maybe I'll ask him tomorrow when he comes over to cook us some Indian food.
Enjoy.
[Updated 2/2/2008: Vox audio file added.]