Now Playing + What are you listening to?

coldcathode said:
The recording I listen to of Foreplay/It's been a long time is an MP3 ripped from god knows where but at a high bitrate. I would love to know which recording it is ripped from and get it on Vinyl.

And yes I think they put a lot of the "basement" stuff on the early albums. From what I heard the entire original band wasn't even signed.

Check this youtube video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6H57pWC5rvk

This kid is amazing!


thanks for the link, I just spent a hour checking out his numerous videos

this is a still teen aged kid from Langford BC ( what we used to call the "reckneck" part of town), and his buddy's not a bad backup singer, either

check out the radio interview

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2B_a4jDSYTs&feature=related

and, playing your high school concert

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBeLYDdvELg&feature=channel_page

kinda helps when "we've got this little recording studio, so I thought...."
 
Cal Weldon said:
Down the way where the nights are gay
and the sun shines daily on the mountain top
I took a trip on a sailing ship
and when I reached Jamaica I made a stop.

HB covered by JB - live.


the big surprise, Cal, would be if you listened to anything other than JB, except under duress

we'll miss ya, but a little revenue never hurt - take care
 
Cloudkickers new album Portmanteau (FLAC).

This quote is from the liner notes on one of their earlier releases. I downloaded these at work where none of the required or optional equipment is available. 2 inch computer speakers don't cut it!


headphones or very loud speakers are required, drugs are optional

distribute this anywhere and everywhere you see fit. give credit where credit is due.
 
chrisb said:
this is a still teen aged kid from Langford BC ( what we used to call the "reckneck" part of town), and his buddy's not a bad backup singer, either

I hope he has a great future in music. He's certainly off to an amazing start. He's probably way more talented than most of the musicians/artists who make it onto the TV reality shows (i.e. American Idol).

I think it's great an 18 year old can perform, record, mix, edit, produce, publish and market to millions of people, not just a great audio track and performance, but a fairly professional "music video" to go with it--all without leaving his house. That can all be done today for less than the price of a single Sony Betacam camera in MTV's early years.

The ability to be "discovered" virtually overnight on YouTube is amazing when you think about how difficult that would have been even in the 90's. And the 2 guys doing vocals could have been in another country sharing the necessary tracks over the net to collaborate.

We live in some fun times!
 
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