Acecast #016. 28 August 2006.

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acecast #016 aug 2006 Acecast #016 Aug 2006 (MP3, 128Kbps, 33.6MB, 36m:29s).

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If you have an MP3 player you might want to use a “podcatching” application to subscribe to Acecast (RSS 2.0).

Acecast is now also listed in the iTunes podcast directory.

Banking on a bank holiday.

Article coming.

External credits.

Production notes.

Kit: MXL V67 condenser microphone, Behringer UB802 mixer, Hercules DJ Console sound card. Applications: Audacity, iTunes, MP3Gain, MP3 Tag Tools.

Copyrights.

All tracks played are free and legal downloads and were available at the time of production of the podcast. All tracks are copyright the artists and their record labels/music publishers.

Extended tracklisting for Acecast #016, 28 August 2006.

Brief playlist for Acecast #016.

Previous Acecast podcasts.

Initial post: Mon, 29 Aug 2006.

Tue, 29 Aug 2006

Playlist Acecast #016. 28 August 2006.

coming 29 August

Full details and MP3 download Acecast #016.

Initial post, Mon 29 Aug 2006.

Tue, 29 Aug 2006

Acecast #015. 29 July 2006.

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acecast #015 jul 2006 Acecast #015 Jul 2006 (MP3, 128Kbps, 25.7MB, 28m:08s).

Download the MP3 file using the link or icon above.

If you have an MP3 player you might want to use a “podcatching” application to subscribe to Acecast (RSS 2.0).

Acecast is now also listed in the iTunes podcast directory.

The Tunisian-Norwegian combo.

natacha atlas
Natacha Atlas

I had to rush out this podcast, so not much talk from me this month. But more space for music. A long sequence of music with some sort of Mediterranean connection to start with. Zemeken, Checkpoint 303 and Yazan Al Rousan all have some sort of Tunisian connection. Zemeken is a Tunisian collective of amateur musicians, Checkpoint 303 is based around Paris-based SC (SoundCutter?) MoCha and Yazan Al Rousan is Jordanian, but lives in Tunis. Natacha Atlas of Transglobal Underground fame is a Belgian, but with Arabic ties.

I didn’t find enough material for a full podcast while checking the links from Tunizika — so to contrast the lush first 20 minutes, I finish off with a Norwegian double of Lasse Marhaug (of noise duo Jazzkam(m)er) and Serena Maneesh.

External credits.

Checkpoint 303, Zemeken and Yazan Al Rousan found via Tunizika. The Serena Maneesh refix track found via Wikipedia.

Production notes.

Kit: MXL V67 condenser microphone, Behringer UB802 mixer, Hercules DJ Console sound card. Applications: Audacity, iTunes, MP3Gain, MP3 Tag Tools.

Copyrights.

All tracks played are free and legal downloads and were available at the time of production of the podcast. All tracks are copyright the artists and their record labels/music publishers.

Extended tracklisting for Acecast #015, 29 July 2006.

Brief playlist for Acecast #015.

Previous Acecast podcasts.

Initial post: Sat, 29 Jul 2006.

Sun, 30 Jul 2006

Playlist Acecast #015. 29 July 2006.

Zemeken
© Zemeken

  • Teoda — Checkpoint 303
  • Hbiba Forever — Zemeken
  • Close My Eyes (English edit) — Natacha Atlas
  • Trouh — Yazan Al Rousan
  • Rissala Min Qalandia — Checkpoint 303
  • Shamel Janoub (electro) — Zemeken
  • Lava — Lasse Marhaug
  • Sapphire Eyes (Serena-Maneesh refix) — Serena Maneesh

Full details and MP3 download Acecast #015.

Initial post, Sat 29 Jul 2006.

Sat, 29 Jul 2006

Acecast #014. 26 June 2006.

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acecast #014 jun 2006 Acecast #014 Jun 2006 (MP3, 128Kbps, 32.8MB, 35m:44s).

Download the MP3 file using the link or icon above.

If you have an MP3 player you might want to use a “podcatching” application to subscribe to Acecast (RSS 2.0).

Acecast is now also listed in the iTunes podcast directory.

The second SXSW 2006 Special.

jenny owen youngs
Jenny Owen Youngs
©Meghann Lyding

The tracklisting has been ready for a couple of months now, so apologies for being late to market. I blame changing jobs and the World Cup (in soccer). As the previous show these tracks are taken from what I’ve rated top of my “Top 90” of the 941 free tracks from the SXSW 2006 Music Festival.

The show contains electronica from Ladytron, folktronica from Tungg and some female lead rock’n’roll joy from Comanechi and Juliette & the Licks. There’s some quirky stuff from Xiu Xiu (do they sample Billy Mackenzie?) and Jenny Owen Youngs makes sure this podcast is rated expletive. I play some soul-blues from Black Joe Lewis and Canadian talent Cadence Weapon makes a return to Acecast. Cadence seems to have lost his domain name, and can now be found at Cadence Weapon music.

I finish the set with a Norwegian double — new band Serena Maneesh (or is that Serena-Maneesh? Even the band themselves seems confused). While going through the tracks I thought Serena Maneesh were English; it’s only over the last couple of weeks I’ve woken up to the fact that they are from the old country. No such mistake with Thomas Dybdahl though. He was also part of Norwegian supergroup The National Bank (with members from Jaga Jazzist and Bigbang) and I finish this podcast with A Lovestory from Thomas. Enjoy.

External credits.

Only one external credit this time, the 2006 South by Southwest festival site. All tracks on Acecast 14 are taken from the SXSW showcasing artists providing free legal MP3s.

Production notes.

Kit: MXL V67 condenser microphone, Behringer UB802 mixer, Hercules DJ Console sound card. Applications: Audacity, iTunes, MP3Gain, MP3tag.

Copyrights.

All tracks played are free and legal downloads and were available at the time of production of the podcast. All tracks are copyright the artists and their record labels/music publishers.

Extended tracklisting for Acecast #014, 26 June 2006.

All artist links point to their 2006 SXSW showcase page, which have short biographies and links to their homepages.

Brief playlist for Acecast #014.

Previous Acecast podcasts.

Initial post: Tue, 27 Jun 2006.

Wed, 28 Jun 2006

Playlist Acecast #014. Produced 26 June 2006.

the band comanechi
© Comanechi/Heike Schneider-Matzigkeit

  • Destroy Everything You Touch — Ladytron
  • You’re Speaking My Language — Juliette and the Licks
  • Tale From Black — Tungg
  • Fuck Was I — Jenny Owen Youngs
  • You Don’t Love — Black Joe Lewis
  • Black Hand — Cadence Weapon
  • Naked — Comanechi
  • Muppet Face — Xiu Xiu
  • Un Deux — Serena Maneesh
  • A Lovestory — Thomas Dybdahl

Full details and MP3 download Acecast #014.

Initial post, Tue 27 Jun 2006.

Tue, 27 Jun 2006

Updated list of CDs bought under the “Fair podcasting” scheme.

Latest karma CD is for March 2006.

“Fair podcasting” is me giving something back to the artists providing free music. I believe free and legal MP3s are a great marketing tool for new acts (Penny Broadhurst has clocked up over 3000 downloads of a poetry track), they are better than streams (since we can listen to new stuff on the move on our shiny MP3-players) and they give the consumer no legality headaches. Plus there is no DRM.

So what do I give apart from my time and a mention here (and also on the more popular halvorsen)?

Money. I purchase a CD for every month I do a podcast. Not just any CD, but a CD from one of the acts played on my shows. I can’t buy a CD from every artist played (my funds are limited) and some artists have no intention to provide physical product — they are happy to give away their music for free. So there you have it — the symbiotic relationship showing that a free MP3 track can lead to a purchase of a CD. Fair podcasting. Or as Nick Lowe sings, Music for Money.

List of purchased CDs.

Links point to mention on Halvorsen (where the purchases are mentioned as they happen).

Wed, 26 Apr 2006

Acecast #013. 17 March 2006.

Download podcast MP3 file.

acecast #013 mar 2006 Acecast #013 Mar 2006 (MP3, 128Kbps, 35.1MB, 38m:23s).

Download the MP3 file using the link or icon above.

If you have an MP3 player you might want to use a “podcatching” application to subscribe to Acecast (RSS 2.0).

You can also subscribe to Acecast podcasts in iTunes (4.9 or later) — use “Advanced/Subscribe to Podcast” and in the pop-up window enter
http://www.acecast.com/index.rss20 .

The St Patrick’s SXSW Special.

neck psycho-ceilidh band
©Neck/Daniella

I am halfway through listening to the 941 tracks in the two SXSW torrents 2006 (free legal MP3s). Rather than wait until I’ve finished my listening (like last year), I’ve decided to get out some of the top tracks right now.

The show was recorded late on St Patrick’s Day, so what better way to start than with a rock’n’folk track called St Patrick’s Day from Neck. I continue with a couple of modern R’n’B/hip-hop/soul tinged tracks (let’s call it “nu-soul”, shall we). Deep’s lyrics are a bit stereotypical (“bitches” and guns and all), but the delivery is excellent and there’s some mean wah-wah guitar. Stephanie McKay’s Tell Him is just pure class.

I play three tracks that could all be classed as space rock. Lesbians on Ecstasy’s Pleasure Principle start out as raunchy electronica, but then the Lezzies pick up their copy of Hawkwind’s Quark, Strangeness and Charm (1977) to borrow the riff&whispering from Hassan I Sahba. I’ve seen Norwegian band WE live and on telly gigging in India and their full-on space rock (they call it “Cosmic Biker Rock’n’Roll” though) is a treat. I’ve always wanted to feature them on Acecast and now I can, since Catch Electrique is part of the SXSW MP3 showcase. The third galactic track comes from veterans Chrome fronted by Helios Creed (I had no idea they were still going).

If I had to select a favourite track [you’ve just done, Ed] from the 400 or so I’ve been through so far, it would be Gliss’s Blue Sky. Last year I opened with the vocal wonders of Erika Wennerstrom (Heartless Bastards) for my SXSW show. Just like Erika, Martin Klingman’s voice is what makes Gliss stand out from the pack, his sneery drawl sounds like he is the product of a foursome between Marc Bolan, (early) Tom Petty, Peter Perrett (Only Ones) and Courtney Love.

There was an abundance of good trad singer-songwriters in 2005; but so far this year (400 MP3 to go so I might still find some) I’ve struggled to find any. Not to worry, I’m a sucker for steel guitar and good female backing vocals, so instead I’ve dug up some classy country from Mando Saenz (think Lyle Lovett without the big band).

I finish the show with Australian vocal talent Sia. She’s been compared with Dido (ugh), but that’s off the mark. I would place her in better company, somewhere around Des’ree and Tori Amos.

More rock and less electronics&acoustics than normal on this Acecast, but I guess the SXSW festival is the sort of happening where you need to make a bit of noise to make an impact.

Special credits to Mando Saenz for having a good artist website (whoever set up Sia and Stephanie McKay’s flashy nightmares of sites could learn a thing or five from Mando).

External credits.

Only one external credit this time, the 2006 South by Southwest festival site. All tracks on Acecast 13 are taken from the SXSW showcasing artists providing free legal MP3s.

Production notes.

Kit: MXL V67 condenser microphone, Behringer UB802 mixer, Hercules DJ Console sound card. Applications: Audacity, iTunes, MP3Gain, MP3tag.

Copyrights.

All tracks played are free and legal downloads and were available at the time of production of the podcast. All tracks are copyright the artists and their record labels/music publishers.

Extended tracklisting for Acecast #013, 17 March 2006.

All artist links point to their 2006 SXSW showcase page, which have short biographies and links to their homepages.

Brief playlist for Acecast #013.

Previous Acecast podcasts.

Initial post: Sat, 18 Mar 2006.

Wed, 19 Apr 2006

Playlist Acecast #013. Produced 17 March 2006.

WE (the norwegian band)
© WE/tjallkonsult

  • St Patrick’s Day — Neck
  • Lac’n on Dueces — Deep
  • Tell Him — Stephanie McKay
  • Pleasure Principal — Lesbians on Ecstasy
  • Blue Sky — Gliss
  • Catch Electrique — WE
  • Got to Have Someone — Helios Creed/Chrome
  • When I Come Around — Mando Saenz
  • Breathe Me — Sia
  • Night life in Montreal (Spring) — Eldad Tsabary (used as ambience)

Full details and MP3 download Acecast #013.

Initial post, Sat 18 Mar 2006.

Wed, 19 Apr 2006

First year anniversary of Acecast.

It’s almost exactly a year since the first full podcast from Acecast. Just thought I’d mention it. The site itself was set up in late 2004, too bad I did not get faster off the ground, as the birth of Acecast was taking place as early as October 2004.

Sun, 19 Mar 2006

Acecast #012. 26 February 2006.

Download podcast MP3 file.

acecast #012 feb 2006 Acecast #012 Feb 2006 (MP3, 128Kbps, 33.8MB, 36m:59s).

Download the MP3 file using the link or icon above.

If you have an MP3 player you might want to use a “podcatching” application to subscribe to Acecast (RSS 2.0).

You can also subscribe to Acecast podcasts in iTunes (4.9 or later) — use “Advanced/Subscribe to Podcast” and in the pop-up window enter
http://www.acecast.com/index.rss20 .

A long podcast in the shortest month of the year.

sara rumar
© Sara Rumar

Thirty-seven minutes long, a playlist of 13 legal MP3s and my ramblings make Acecast number 12 my longest podcast to date. I open with the Editors’ minor hit Munich, taken from the 2006 South by Southwest roster of showcasing artists. I’ve started filtering the two torrents available for 2006 (940 free MP3s or so) and Munich is the first of many tracks to come from this year’s model (meanwhile you might want to have a look at my 2005 SXSW recommendations).

Sarah Rumar from Sweden keeps up my tradition of playing Scandinavian artists and kindly lends her voice to Acecast to introduce the delightful Euro-pop track Au Monde for her album Stupid Like Me (Warning: contains Swedish laughter).

Magnetix and one-man-one-band Jawbone takes us through some twisted rock, before we explore lusher electronic landscapes in the forms of Jo Jena, Claudio Rocchi and Daniel Lanois (well Shine is at least lush).

I play some proper noisy rock (Godheadsilo and Olneyville Sound System) and contrast the rock with some nu-soul (or R&B?) from Steve Spacek and DJ Come of Age. DJ Come of Age is a fellow podcaster and his Soul Music of the World podcasts will be of interest if you liked the nu-soul tracks played recently on Acecast. I finish with some more electroacoustics from Jo Jena and with a pure acoustic guitar track from the veteran string-wizard Bill Nelson.

Bill is one of the four artists whose fan club I ever was member of and Bill’s Acquitted by Mirrors (a lot of the original content now available online) was excellent — with free vinyl EPs and a good magazine containing writing and artwork by Bill. The three others (as if you were interested) — Durutti Column’s “subscription” service, John Foxx’s “The Service” (both shortliving failures — but I’ll gladly hand over fifteen quid anytime to keep Vini going) and The Cramps’ Legion of the Cramped (which was brilliantly run from Scotland by Lindsay Hutton).

External credits.

Jo Jena’s electroacoustics was found via Disquiet, Sara Rumar’s Au Monde via the Swedesplease blog.

Production notes.

Kit: MXL V67 condenser microphone, Behringer UB802 mixer, Hercules DJ Console sound card. Applications: Audacity, iTunes, MP3Gain, MP3tag.

Copyrights.

All tracks played are free and legal downloads and were available at the time of production of the podcast. All tracks are copyright the artists and their record labels/music publishers.

Extended tracklisting for Acecast #012, 26 February 2006.

Brief playlist for Acecast #012.

Previous Acecast podcasts.

Initial post: Mon, 27 Feb 2005.

Thu, 09 Mar 2006

Playlist Acecast #012. Produced 26 February 2006.

editors (the band)
© Editors

  • Munich — Editors
  • Au Monde — Sara Rumar
  • My Daddy — Jawbone
  • The Whistler — The Magnetix
  • Nr.3.3: De Corpore Saturni — Jo Jena
  • 17 inches — Claudio Rocchi
  • Shine — Daniel Lanois
  • Friend Island — Godheadsilo
  • Immigrantradio — Olneyville Sound System
  • Dollar — Steve Spacek
  • Polar Personified — DJ Come of Age
  • Nr.3.1: Entrance to Gresham — Jo Jena
  • The Light Is Kinder in this Corner of the Corona — Bill Nelson
  • Dalla Finestra — Giuseppe Rapisarda (used as ambience)

Full details and MP3 download Acecast #012.

Initial post, Mon 27 Feb 2006.

Thu, 09 Mar 2006

Acecast #011. 11 February 2006.

Download podcast MP3 file.

acecast #011 Feb 2006 Acecast #011 Feb 2006 (MP3, 112Kbps, 26.9MB, 33m:39s).

Download the MP3 file using the link or icon above.

If you have an MP3 player you might want to use a “podcatching” application to subscribe to Acecast (RSS 2.0).

You can also subscribe to Acecast podcasts in iTunes (4.9 or later) — use “Advanced/Subscribe to Podcast” and in the pop-up window enter
http://www.acecast.com/index.rss20 .

Valentine, bloody Valentine’s Day.

rebels of the flesh
© Rebels of the Flesh

A special Valentine’s podcast; if you are looking for romance this might not be the place … as it contains a classic Mississippi John Hurt murder ballad, the sinister V/VM version of A Lady in Red (V/VM aka James Kirby gave Chris de Burgh a copy of this). There is a possible connection between a lady dressed in red and murder ballads with lyrics like When they heard Louis was dead/All the people they dressed in red (spelling kept as it is),

White folks, accostomed to black being the colour worn both for funerals and for post-funereal mourning, sometimes think that references in blues songs to dressing in red signify a party atmosphere or happiness over a person’s death. Not so. In Africa, and among African-Americans in earlier times, drssing in red has been a funerary custom. As such, it is reminiscent of burial with red ochre pigment, which was used among neolithic poeople (the “red paint people”) the world around. The religious idea behind this custom is that as a baby is born from the mother’s womb through blood, so will rebirth occur (after interrment in Mother Earth) through blood.

Another old blues song with a similar lyric is “Ella Speed” as recorded by Leadbelly (Huddie Ledbetter) circa the mid 1930s.

There is some dirty rock from old punks Rancid and new girls on the (Courtney Love?) block Rebels of the Flesh.

I play an SMS of love from Saalschutz. Hello Saferide (hello Annika, second time on Acecast) takes us through a bit of bile on her Valentine’s Day.

Normally I only play MP3s. On this show there are two exceptions: the Rebels of the Flesh track is played courtesy of the band and their manager. A bit of an exclusive I think, but no free MP3 is available. I make up for the lack of MP3 with that nice picture of the girls. I am happy to be a small cog in (Kim Foley’s?) underground build-up of the band as long as I get sent promo-material like this.

The second non-MP3 track is so old it’s an MP2. The band A Western Front released the album Full Blown Dave for free in 1994. One of the members, David Beach, writes that this was the first album released for free on the Internet. He might be right. The Problem is the standout track from this album, from a band that once warmed up for the Sex Pistols (re-union tour I suspect).

I finish the show with proof that makeovers do work. Thomas Walter has done a tremendous job lifting the Lisa DeBenedictis track Tiger into something otherworldly.

External credits.

The Samarah track was found via Alex Young’s Milieu (a blog tracking netlabels, mostly electronic) and V/VM is via Radio Plus (listing free legal MP3s of tracks from the late John Peel’s shows).

Production notes.

Kit: MXL V67 condenser microphone, Behringer UB802 mixer, Hercules DJ Console sound card. Applications: Audacity, iTunes, MP3Gain, MP3tag.

Copyrights.

All tracks played are free and legal downloads and were available at the time of production of the podcast. All tracks are copyright the artists and their record labels/music publishers.

Extended tracklisting for Acecast #011, 11 February 2006.

Brief playlist for Acecast #011.

Previous Acecast podcasts.

Initial post: Sun, 12 Feb 2005.

Tue, 14 Feb 2006

Playlist Acecast #011. Produced 11 February 2006.

  • SMS D’Amour (High On Heels remix) — Saalschutz featuring Stina Galaxina
  • Pale Honey — Samarah
  • Queen of Pleasure — Rebels of the Flesh
  • Dope Sick Girl — Rancid
  • Louis Collins — Mississippi John Hurt
  • Lady in Red — V/VM
  • The Problem — A Western Front
  • Valentine’s Day — Hello Saferide
  • Below (Acappella Mix) — Thomas Walter/Lisa de Benedictis

Full details and MP3 download Acecast #011.

Initial post, Sun 12 Feb 2006.

Mon, 13 Feb 2006

Over 80 000 downloads for Acecast podcasts in the first year.

I’ve been podcasting proper for almost a year now, so I thought I would have a peek proper at the download statistics. It’s an encouraging look — over 81 000 MP3 Acecast podcasts have been downloaded since I started with proper music podcasts in March 2005 (testing started in late 2004). The total number of downloads is a bit higher (85 000?), since the first combined Marvin Suicide/Acecast show is hosted at the Internet Archive and I have no numbers for this one (note to self: use http redirect the next time around). With ten shows this gives a rough average of 8000 downloads pr show.

acecast year one download stats

There wasn’t much new content in early December and the Christmas show was released on 28 December so that might explain the dip in December and January. A new podcast is ready later today, so hopefully the rot can be reversed.

I am quite pleased by the numbers — they prove a couple of things. One is that an iTunes listing is not that important — produce decent content and your site will be “discovered” (the bulk of content being the music; I am working on my presentation and production skills and would like to think they have improved over the year). Another is that you have to be patient — it takes a while to build an audience. If you are not prepared to stay some distance — don’t start blogging or podcasting. Blogging might be easy; podcasting is not (see “podfading”).

I am fully aware that 80 000 accesses does not equal 80 000 listeners or listens. Some downloads will have been aborted, some will have downloaded a show and never listened to it. But even with a tenth of the numbers I would have been pleased for such a narrowcasted show.

acecast feb 06 stats

Have a look at that pie chart for downloads so far for February. I have said so before — give your listeners a chance to download your latest show directly from a prominent place on your site. A good percentage of your audience will come over the web (acecastlatest.mp3 is not referenced in any RSS feeds).

The reason for this exercise is threefold —

  • it gives me an incentive to go into a second year of podcasts
  • I would like to have an idea what impact iTunes have if I ever get a listing (please do not submit my feed)
  • it might give me some leverage when asking artists to do intros for Acecast (no naming and shaming here — but a handful of artists never delivered on their promise)

Thanks to Stillman and Penny Broadhurst though. Penny has just started her “Instant Classic” podcasts — one to watch (or rather listen to).

Sun, 12 Feb 2006

RedFerret lists one million free tracks.

Red Ferret is a monster resource for free legal MP3s — it claims to indirectly link to one million tracks. Some of the resources have been mentioned here, but there are plenty of sites that are new to me, like GigaTracks.

Mon, 06 Feb 2006

Hippocamp netlabel.

Hippocamp is a netlabel based in Manchester (UK) that releases all its music as free under a Creative Commons licence,

how do i send you music? email single track demos to the above email or send multiple tracks on cd only, data or audio, with your name and email/phone number on the disc itself if possible.

we receive a lot of demos. we do listen to all of them but cannot respond to each and every submission. if we like the demo and feel we can do something with it we will contact you. if you don’t hear from us it probably means we felt your demo was not right for us.

how is the music released? if we like the music we release it in standard mp3 format with no drm all the music is subject to a creative commons licence which means that although it is released for free and you are free to copy it the artist still retains certain rights.

I have not downloaded any tracks from this site yet, but with 156 release numbers already used (not all of them actual releases), there is bound to be something of interest.

Mon, 06 Feb 2006

V/Vm Test Records is releasing a free MP3 every day as a final goodbye.

V/VM Test Records will release a free MP3 every day for the rest of 2006.

Ten years of mouldy old dough has left me in this position where i can no longer move. Trapped by debt accumulated over that time as a result of running a no win label. There has never been a plan afoot at V/Vm it’s all been about instincts from day one. V/Vm 365 will be the last project i undertake. As it’s time to move on once this recycled audio slab is finally completed.

The idea is basically to create and upload free audio for one whole year and leave a massive big mess behind, warts and all for you to digest as you see fit.

There are also some Belgian new beat mixes available for download and a Caretaker microsite.

V/VM is a unit for measure, as well as an alias for James Kirby. A V/VM track will be featured on the next Acecast.

Mon, 06 Feb 2006

Spokane 7’s 300+ list of local legal MP3s.

The Spokesman Review’s Spokane 7 site has a large MP3 directory of local artists (local being Spokane, USA). Slim pickings for me, but do try The Side Project and Ramon 140 for some good electronica.

Thu, 26 Jan 2006