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FLAC Downloading Trends

Journal | April 29, 2009 | Updated: May 7, 2009 | Posted by Basilisk

FLAC Logo

About a year ago I posted an entry about the RAR and ZIP file formats used to package whole releases available from Ektoplazm. In the ensuing discussion, several visitors indicated a strong interest in FLAC, a lossless audio format that is rapidly becoming the industry-standard alternative to the antiquated WAV format. FLAC files are smaller than WAV files (without losing any quality) and they can be tagged (with information such as artist, title, and BPM). This is very useful for digital DJs and collectors who have moved away from storing music on physical media. Seeing the value of the idea, I began posting FLAC versions of all new releases starting in August of 2008.

Today I had a look at downloading trends by format. I compared download counts for 30 releases going back to Journey Of The Turtle and discovered that approximately a quarter (23.2%) of all downloads are lossless (FLAC or WAV). Overall, FLAC accounts for 7.8% of all downloads and 31.4% of all lossless downloads. FLAC appears to be getting more popular—newer releases tend to show a higher proportion of FLAC downloads—but this is just a casual observation.

Of course, some visitors download individual releases more than once—for instance, after trying out a release in MP3 format some visitors probably come back to leech the lossless version. Likewise, I can conceive of situations where listeners return to download MP3 versions for use on portable devices. Such patterns are sure to skew the results but I haven’t been able to puzzle out the appropriate database queries to get to the bottom of it. Maybe next time!

For now, it is enough to get a general idea of the popularity of this new format. If the numbers seem a bit low, don’t worry about it. FLAC is now my standard of choice and I don’t plan on giving it up!

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SoulCraft – Zen Spirit EP

Free Music | April 29, 2009 | Released by Soul Spirit Records | Posted by Basilisk

SoulCraft – Zen Spirit EP
01 :: Moog Navigator (143 BPM)
02 :: Zen Spirit (144 BPM)
03 :: All About You (146 BPM)
04 :: Requiem For A Moog (146 BPM)
05 :: Electrons (144 BPM)

SoulCraft is the latest project from Mario Sounoglou, a Greek psytrance producer already known for his work as DarkShiRe and Septagram (a collaboration with Dark Elf). The Zen Spirit EP showcases another facet of Mario’s sound: smooth and uplifting morning trance with a psychedelic edge. This release is made by Soul Spirit Records, a new imprint of Helicon Sounds Music, and mastered by Dark Elf at K.G.B. Labz, Athens, Greece.

MP3 Download | FLAC Download | WAV Download · Download count: 10,953.

Released under a Creative Commons licence for noncommercial usage.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars Rated 82.56% / 78 votes.
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T.O.U.C.H. Samadhi 001

Free Music | April 25, 2009 | Released by  | Posted by Basilisk

T.O.U.C.H. Samadhi 001
01 :: Annunaki - Seven Stars (Bastard Rework) (146 BPM)
02 :: Annunaki - From Nibru (145 BPM)
03 :: Blue Spectral Monkey - Futurescope (146 BPM)
04 :: Fuzz - Dark And Light (142 BPM)
05 :: Bastard - Rotted (150 BPM)
06 :: Dragon - Ritual Of Fire (150 BPM)
07 :: Primordial Ooze - The Piper (150 BPM)
08 :: MediMonkz - Clad Romper (Medisin Remix) (150 BPM)
09 :: Axis Mundi - Break Allotment (159 BPM)

T.O.U.C.H. Samadhi is based in Asheville, North Carolina, a small, sleepy town nestled between the woody slopes of the Appalachian Mountains. Behind the scenes, Asheville is home to one of the most vibrant psytrance subcultures in America. This wide-ranging compilation showcases a stellar line-up of American psytrance producers whose vibrations have been the source of countless smiles, stomps, and sacred experiences for over a decade. Expect to hear sizzling leads and swampy grooves with a psychedelic edge; this is music for all the wandering freaks and fairy folk of the magic forest! Mastered by Kri at Audiovalve.

MP3 Download | FLAC Download | WAV Download | Buy It On CD! · Download count: 13,824.

Released under a Creative Commons licence for noncommercial usage. This compilation is also available on CD; purchase it from the T.O.U.C.H. Samadhi web site. Donations are also welcome; using the button below, your donation will go direct to T.O.U.C.H. Samadhi!

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars Rated 82.37% / 59 votes.
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Kris Andersen Freebies

Journal | April 24, 2009 | Updated: November 2, 2009 | Posted by Basilisk

Kris Andersen

Kris Andersen is sharing lots of free music in lossless WAV quality on his brand web site. He is perhaps most known for his work as Elysium, a tribal trance project founded in the misty prehistory of the psychedelic trance movement. Andersen has posted the seminal album Celestial Sounds & Tribal Beats as well as some unreleased material in addition to several classics by Sheyba, Kaaya, and Kailash. Finally, you are also welcome to dive into Andersen’s later productions in the progressive house and techno scenes under the names of Rymdfunk and Holm & Andersen. I’ve taken a real shining to the Hidden Place bootleg; be sure to check that one out if you like it deep.

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No Culture So Far Discovered Lacks Music

Quotation | April 19, 2009 | Posted by Basilisk

Neurons

“No culture so far discovered lacks music. Making music appears to be one of the fundamental activities of mankind; as characteristically human as drawing and painting. The survival of Paleolithic cave-paintings bears witness to the antiquity of this form of art; and some of these paintings depict people dancing. Flutes made of bone found in these caves suggest that they danced to some form of music. But, because music itself only survives when the invention of a system of notation has made a written record possible, or else when a living member of a culture recreates the sounds and rhythms which have been handed down to him by his forebears, we have no information about prehistoric music. We are therefore accustomed to regarding drawing and painting as integral parts of the life of early man, but less inclined to think of music in the same way. However, music, or musical sounds of some variety, are so interwoven with human life that they probably played a greater part in prehistory than can ever be determined.”

— Anthony Storr, Music and the Mind, 1992

Photo credit: thelunch_box.

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