Archive for the 'Music' Category

Life on Mars Soundtrack (again!)

image This post in which I collated (nearly) all the music used in series one of Life on Mars continues to be the most visited and most commented article on my site. The page has turned into a little community of 70s music lovers who have helped each other compile what must be the most complete list of music for the show. Thanks especially to “Sam” and “Mike K” who have contributed so much to the list. The post has proved so useful that I discovered recently that it is referenced on the Wikipedia article for the soundtrack album. Wikipedia fame!

Almost as impressive: there is now a BitTorrent floating around that contains all the series one tracks I originally collated for the page. I had always intended to create an iTunes “iMix” as per Richard’s suggestion - I still might if it hasn’t already been done. I can do the same for series two now my army of helpers has detailed all the tracks used.

Isn’t the web great?

The Almost Complete Life on Mars Soundtrack (Series 1)

Life on Mars has just started again on the BBC - I’ve not got round to seeing the new episode yet (Sky+ has it stored away safely for me) but it seems the new series has provoked renewed interest in my previous post about the excellent soundtrack the first series had. It looks like the BBC have taken down the page I referenced to get the music information, so for the benefit of the many people who have asked for it, here’s The Almost Complete Life on Mars Soundtrack (Series 1). I expect I shall get together the Series 2 music once it’s complete… Continue reading ‘The Almost Complete Life on Mars Soundtrack (Series 1)’

Testing the K800

Bee

I’ve been hankering after the K800i since it was announced some time ago. 3.2MP camera, 3G data, mp3 player, lots of memory and all sorts of other bells and whistles meant it looked like a good replacement for my Samsung D600 and my aging digital camera.

As it happens, I ended up buying a new Canon IXUS 7MP camera before I went to Ascot recently, but since I’d already pre-ordered the K800 there seemed little reason not to entertain a new toy! Vodafone delivered it a couple of weeks ago, and as Richard has commented, we’ve been comparing notes since he has the K750 - this phone’s predecessor.

The photo on this post links to a set on Flickr that I took while wandering around the Longacre’s garden centre this past weekend. Without changing any of the default settings, or moving to macro mode or anything else I just snapped away allowing the camera to auto-focus as necessary. I’m quite pleased with the results, and Phil and Richard both seemed reasonably impressed too!

Technically the rest of the phone is excellent. The menus are responsive, the 3G makes checking email (and RSS feeds) a breeze, and I can even watch TV as long as I’m in a strong 3G signal area. Applications like Google Maps run beautifully - looking great on the K800’s screen, and again loading quickly thanks to the 3G connection. My next challenge is to work out a way to stream my MP3 collection from home to the media player on the mobile. It ought to be possible, I think!

Kudos to the BPI, sort of

At a wedding I attended recently I met a gentleman who for some time had been someone quite important at the BPI who, in a discussion about copyright law, file-sharing and “fair use” threw into conversation the little gem:  “Well of course the BPI are just as corrupt as the file-sharers…”

I was reminded of him today when Phil sent me a link to this article about the BPI’s latest announcement in which they state for the first time, unequivocally that if you are format shifting your own purchased music (that is copying from CD to MP3 or CD to any other format) the BPI will not pursue you.

The headline bullet point in the press release itself is:

BPI reassures consumers: “We will not sue you for filling your iPod with music you have bought yourself”

This is, of course, a Good Thing (capital G, capital T).  Although it is just making clear a right we all knew we should have had!

They also urge Apple to work towards interoperability with other formats, and for iTunes to support non-Apple players.  I’m not a Windows or an Apple zealot: I hate both their DRM with the same passion.  There are very very few DRM-laden tracks on my iPod, and those are mostly the free ones from iTunes.  Everything is beautiful clean unrestricted MP3!

Less good is the information further down the release where they talk about suing AllofMP3.com - the controversial Russian MP3 site.  They’ll seek a judgement against the site itself - not the users of the site.  Phew! :)

The Almost Complete Life on Mars Soundtrack

Gene and Sam (note Vinyl Heaven in background)After a little encouragement from Richard, I finally got round to watching Life on Mars - almost all of it in one sitting. I thought it was great, and not least because of the fantastic soundtrack. The BBC have been good enough to list all the tracks used in each episode, along with a little note that “there are no plans to release a soundtrack CD for Life on Mars”. I imagine the red tape involved in releasing all those tracks for one compilation would be nightmarish, but a notice like that is a red rag to a bull for someone with my kind of music collection.

Half an hour (and several trips to iTunes for missing tracks) later, I have completed my “[Almost] Complete Life on Mars Soundtrack”. I say almost because I’ve deliberately left out the tracks from Episode 7 where Sam hears modern music on the radio… I think my soundtrack can do without Britney Spears and Pulp. Not that I have anything against them - it just ruins the 70s cop-rock aesthetic!

I shall enjoy a 70s cop-rock inspired journey to work tomorrow - although not driving quite like Gene does in the show…

Update (Feb 2007): With the release of the new series there’s a renewed interest in the soundtrack.  Since the BBC have removed the link I used, here’s a track list of my “Almost Complete” soundtrack.

Patriotism

Middle-class Brits don’t really do patriotism, at least not to the same extent that your average American seems to.  And as a rule we tend not to set our patriotism to rock-ballad style music complete with cheesy videos showing heart-warming scenes of children playing, or long haired men carrying flags while walking purposefully across beaches.

Like this guy.

If I didn’t know better I’d swear this was a spoof video.  The entire thing is unintentionally hilarious.  Gotta love the overly literal video too - “I saw the moon….”.  Go and watch it and marvel at the idea that anyone could take themselves that seriously.

Oh, and to top it all I find that this Dennis Madalone guy was the stunt co-ordinator for StarTrek the Next Generation! Magic!

Oh, and I’m not knocking the guy’s intent - he appears to be making a truckload of money for his chosen charities - and I respect that.  It’s just the lyrics and accidental comedy video I find amusing!

Please Explain

Burt Bacharach - At This TimeHow old does one have to be before it’s safe to admit that you listen to Burt Bacharach?  Not only that you listen to him, but that you actively sought his latest album having heard a track on Jools Holland.  The track that brought on my premature aging was Please Explain which is the first track from his latest album At This Time. Continue reading ‘Please Explain’

Faithless

God is a DJ.Maxi Jazz, the maestro behind Faithless, is well titled as “the grand oral disseminator.” I saw Faithless at the Brixton Academy last night. Fantastic. Sound problems on a couple of tracks momentarily killed the vibe, but apart from that it was magic, and besides Maxi Jazz brought the crowd back up again almost effortlessly.

Great stuff. Pictures in the usual place. And big thanks to Phil for organising (and to Mike & Phil for getting me home afterwards, you’re gents, sirs!).

Can you help me discover more music that I’ll like?

To quote Peter Griffin: Holy Crap, this stuff is freaking great…

If you’ve ever had a conversation with someone about music where you’ve said “Oh, if you like them, you should listen to…” then you will love this new service. Borne out of the Music Genome Project, it uses the “DNA of music” to work out which tracks you’ll like based on minimal input from you and then generate your own personal radio station.

Check it out at pandora.com. I gave it Orbital’s “Impact the Earth is Burning” as a starting point, and the playlist it generated gave me a load of fantastic tunes, some I knew, some I’d never heard before - but all were well worth listening to! It started out by playing another Orbital track that had similar themes to Impact, then started jumping around through various interesting artists: Agnelli & Nelson, James T Cotton, Mandalay, Fatboy Slim, Jamiroquai, The KLF and even Depeche Mode.

I just created a second station, giving it Colin Hay’s “Overkill” as the starting point. (Scrubs fans will recognise the track.) It’s first response is to play something other than Overkill - Two-Headed Boy by Neutra Milk Hotel, which also features mild rhythmic syncopation, major key tonality, acoustic sonority, acoustic rhythm guitars and many other similarities identified in the music genome project. It’s next suggestion was Fake Plastic Trees (Acoustic) by Radiohead. Interesting eh?

You’ll often see two artists played next to each other where you would never think they’d go together. This happens because the Music Genome Project takes great care to treat each track individually - they don’t categorise based on the artist, as most artists will cross genres often. It’s surprisingly effective.

This isn’t just generating a playlist for you to search out tunes, or pointing you to iTunes/Amazon for CDs (although it does that too) it streams, via a Flash applet, 128kbps audio. It’s like having a personal DJ available whereever you have a an Internet connection. And if you disagree with the DJ, you can click the thumbs down button and in true Tivo fashion it’ll adjust the entire “station” for you - weighting all future tracks according to what it thinks you didn’t like - and never playing that track again.

They’ll let you play with it for free for 10 hours and then it costs a very reasonably $36 per year. If they can keep up the quality of the service for that then I’ll definitely subscribe!

The Wisdom of George Carlin

George Carlin

I love this quote from George Carlin’s latest audio book (heard on Adam Curry’s Daily Source Code podcast):

Please… save me from people who are told what to like and then like it. In my opinion if you’re over 6 years of age and you’re still getting your music from the radio, something is desperately wrong with you. I can only hope that somehow mp3 players and file sharing will destroy FM radio the way they’re destroying record companies. Then, even though the air will probably never be safe to breathe again maybe it will be safer to listen to.

I think Phil would approve. :)




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