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Keamia – Hope And Fear

Free Music | July 30, 2010 | Released by  | Posted by Basilisk

Keamia – Hope And Fear
01 - Hope And Fear (148 BPM)
02 - Tylopoda (148 BPM)
03 - My Alien Friends (148 BPM)
04 - Mind Control (148 BPM)

Underground Alien Factory Records is back with another debut: Hope And Fear by Keamia (Shahin Babazadeh), an Iranian producer presently living in North Vancouver, Canada. Inspired by outer space and the mysterious elements of the cosmos, Keamia composes spiritual, dreamy, melodic, and emotional music influenced by the classic Goa trance style. Every track is designed to tell a story and touch your soul. Featuring cover design by Imba using the fractal art of CoaGoa and mastering by David Jewer.

MP3 Download | FLAC Download | WAV Download · Download count: 7,246.

Released under a Creative Commons licence for noncommercial usage! Visit the Underground Alien Factory Records discography for more new school Goa trance releases.

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1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars Rated 85.87% / 75 votes.
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Therange Freak – Tales From The Swamp

Free Music | July 29, 2010 | Released by  | Posted by Basilisk

Therange Freak – Tales From The Swamp
01 - Lsd (150 BPM)
02 - Nightshade (150 BPM)
03 - Dmt (150 BPM)
04 - Jazzcid (150 BPM)

Liquid Tune Records presents Tales From The Swamp the debut release from the new Macedonian psytrance project, Therange Freak AKA Jar Jar Binks. Here we have four fresh and unreleased tracks filled with snappy psychedelic hooks and forest atmospheres laced with jazzy influences. This is “deep in the night” dance floor music which will smash your mind! Mastering by DoHm with cover artwork by Mans (Jar Jar Binks/Therange Freak). All tracks written and produced by Mihailo Andric at Binxie Studio, Macedonia.

MP3 Download | FLAC Download | WAV Download · Download count: 11,548.

Released under a Creative Commons licence for noncommercial usage! For booking please email contactliquidtune[at]mail.com. Visit the Liquid Tune Records homepage for more!

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1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars Rated 84.85% / 66 votes.
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Southwild – Granular

Free Music | July 28, 2010 | Posted by Basilisk

Southwild – Granular
01 - Constructive Destruction (144 BPM)
02 - Fonkey Monkey (145 BPM)
03 - Darthavaddah (144 BPM)
04 - Sloppy Floppy (148 BPM)

Southwild is the new side project of Jay from Rastaliens, a veteran psytrance producer from the Black Forest in the deep south of Germany who now resides in Toronto, Canada. Throughout many years of production, mastering, and DJing, Jay has found his own unique style of high-quality ‘twilight’ psytrance: slightly dark, a little twisted, super groovy and spaced out, with a spark of insanity! Granular represents a free taste of Southwild’s upcoming debut album. There will also be several appearances on different labels such as Peak Records, Mind Funk, and many more–so keep your ears open for further releases! All tracks written, produced, and mastered by Jay/Southwild at Trailer Park Studios, Toronto, 2010.

MP3 Download | FLAC Download | WAV Download · Download count: 9,124.

Released under a Creative Commons licence for noncommercial usage. For bookings please contact freakyjay@hotmail.de or find Southwild on Facebook.

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 87.13% / 87 votes.
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Micro Cosmos

Free Music | July 27, 2010 | Released by  | Posted by Basilisk

Micro Cosmos
01 - Modifly - Grenzprominenz (128 BPM)
02 - Wal - Tell More (128 BPM)
03 - Zeitgeist - Geek & The Funk (130 BPM)
04 - Vaeya - Radulimlak (128 BPM)
05 - AVM - Rotary Sander (128 BPM)

Micro Cosmos is a brave new release by the German alternative techno and techtrance netlabel, Glitchy Tonic Records. Featuring an assortment of five experimental tracks by Modifly, Wal, Zeitgeist, Vaeya, and AVM, this mini-compilation integrates aspects of jazz, hip-hop, breaks, electro, and glitch into deep and moody psychedelic techno. The result is an unusual and extraordinary blend of elements that will shake the dance floor and raise more than a few eyebrows around the world. Mastered at Anti Logic Studio, Berlin.

MP3 Download | FLAC Download | WAV Download · Download count: 9,289.

Released under a Creative Commons licence for noncommercial usage. Visit Glitchy Tonic Records for more or check out their discography here on Ektoplazm.

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 85.11% / 90 votes.
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New Music Digest: Summer 2010

Journal | July 26, 2010 | Updated: October 6, 2010 | Posted by Basilisk

Every now and then I gather up some of the more provocative or informative articles I find in my travels in order to compile a digest post such as this one. What follows is an assortment of music-related content I’ve been reading in the last couple of months. You are also welcome to check out the previous digest post from May 2010 for more like this.

Revealing Shakespeare’s Inner Pirate takes a close look at how culture reinvents itself with bits and pieces of the past. Copyright law, if it respects the public good, should allow for meaningful reinterpretation and outright copying of existing cultural products in order to maintain a healthy creative drive.

Paradox or Paradise: Music Choice in the Digital Age explores the psychological implications of the frustrating overabundance of musical options in today’s marketplace. Where do you even begin with all the music available these days? With an insane number of options available to us we often opt out of deciding and prefer to stick to what we already know.

The Free Music Mirage is a strong critique of the idea that music should be free by Jeremy Schlosberg of Fingertips. I emphatically disagree with his sentiment but this is certainly an article worth reading, if only to better hone our arguments for free music. Similar moral posturing can be found in Why You Should Pay For Music.

The State of Internet Music on YouTube, Pandora, iTunes, and Facebook describes exactly that–from a major label perspective. Graphs and figures illustrate the decline of the album format: “We don’t listen to albums now; we listen to collections of songs.” I’d wager that has a lot to do with major label abuse of the album format: wrapping a lot of forgettable fluff around one or two big hits.

Why Music Should Never Be Given Away For “Free” argues that music should always come at a cost to the consumer–even if it is as simple as an exchange of social capital in the form of signing up for an email newsletter and/or agreeing to share content. Bandcamp presently offers this feature but just about every other example I can think of just feels like spam.

The Problem With Music is an older article by Steve Albini that illustrates how bands are liable to become indebted to a major label after signing a contract, producing an album, and going on tour. It is an eviscerating deconstruction of rock ‘n roll mythology–and a warning to any artist still enamored with the idea of “getting signed.”

Torrenting The Future is an interesting speculative rant about the post-scarcity economy–and what that might look like based on our collective experience with music, movies, and other digital media thus far.

How To Solve Royalty Collection Societies outlines an improbable solution to the problem of collection societies failing to redistribute royalties to small-time artists. Seems to me the only way to fix this issue is to do away with collection societies altogether.

Worrying About Monetising Your Music is Holding You Back is a soft reality check for any artist who feels entitled to earning a living from their art. The author asks: what motivates you to create music? It probably isn’t financial gain, otherwise you would be doing something else.

Creative Commons: What Every Self-Publisher Ought To Know is a basic introduction to CC licensing and what it means for artists. It is an oddly difficult topic to explain to some artists; hopefully this will be of some help.

Mr. Tunes skewers a common industry practice in Rethinking The Remix Contest. He’s right: remix contests aren’t innovative. In fact, they are often quite annoying. Can the remix contest be fixed? Creating a barrier-to-entry might raise the quality of these contests, as noted in the article.

A Guide To The Cultural Battle That Is Reshaping The Media Business is an interesting little article by the CEO of Cheezburger Network (who brought you LOLcats) contrasting popular culture with Internet culture. It doesn’t take much to figure out which side I’m on.

Graham St John, the editor of Dancecult, is out with a new edited collection: Local Scenes and Global Culture of Psytrance. If you would like to take a tour of the academic study of psytrance culture this is a great place to start.

I’ve also been brushing up on the details of the freemium business model in preparation for the Ektoplazm redesign. In case this is of interest to anyone you can read more about freemium at The Business Model Database and The Economics of Giving It Away.

DJ TechTools has been busy pumping out an assortment of useful guides in the last few months. Topics covered include mastering, compression, and how to have a glitch-free laptop performance.

Finally, for all the DJs out there, check out this preview of Rapid Evolution 3, an awesome cross-platform DJing database. I use it instead of Mixed In Key for all my harmonic mixing needs.

Like what you’ve read? Follow me on Twitter to hear about this sort of content as I find it.

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