Unquiet Desperation

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The Great Music Shift of 2007

A while ago, I launched a new podcast over at the Harping Monkey called Mainstage at the Monkey. On it, I’m playing music that is podsafe, meaning that it is either released under Creative Commons, or that I have permission to play music by those artists from the label (such as the deal that Magnatune makes with podcasters). While I had a small collection of podsafe music, I wanted to expose myself to more. I subscribed to several CC RSS feeds with enclosures, such as CC Hits.

I’ve already found several groups that I really like, and I plan on featuring them on the show. However…the interesting thing was that the more I listened, the less I found myself listening to the music that I’ve purchased from iTunes, or that I’d purchased recently from more mainstream artists. Now, this might just because the music was new to me, and was refreshing…something didn’t sound like everything else that the record companies excrete into our record stores.

This weekend, I got to thinking about that. Yes, my wife and I have three binders full of CDs…and most of them, we just don’t listen to. They’re more like an archive of our youth than something we refer to regularly. In fact, I hadn’t even ripped the majority of the CDs for my iPod. And when I looked at the music I was keeping in my iTunes collection, I realized I was rather sick of all of it.

So, on Saturday, I copied all 15 gigabytes of music to an external hard drive, and started a new iTunes Library, obliterating the old stuff. Then I started loading it up with nothing but podsafe music.

This is something of an experiment…I want to see how long I can go with just CC or Indy music. I find this whole trend of open exchange of art on the Internet to be very powerful…and I want to encourage it, be it music, books, video…whatever.

Two questions for everyone:

1) Would anyone be interested if I put up a page with a list of artists and albums that are in the library?

2) If I were to create an informal podcast of “What Chris is Listening to This Week,” would any of you be interested in listening? (Yes…you can see this in the sidebar, but if you could actually listen to it, would you?)

Update: I’ve found and modified a great set of scripts by Alex King which display reports based on my iTunes library. I’ve included them in my new Music Library page.1




  1. Stick that list in your pipe and smoke it, KJ! Ha! Automatic, buddy![back]

 

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4 Responses to “The Great Music Shift of 2007”

  1. Rae says:

    Oh man…you’re so brave. The thought of ditching my music for the unknown brings me out in a rash! I’d love to know what you’re listening to though…there can never be enough tunes in my ears:-)

  2. Sam Chupp says:

    I am right there with you. Ever since I started combing through the Creative Commons available music, I have found more and more artists that really resonate with me. Artists like Natives of the New Dawn, Cassandra Kubinski, the Lascivious Biddies, Josh Woodward, Brother Love, Adrina Thorpe, Jessica King, Sacred Desire, Rebecca Loebe, and many others have convinced me that this new way of distributing music is not only valid, but pre-eminent.

    I look forward to hearing what you’re listening to!

  3. miniTotoro says:

    To answer your questions: 1) Hell ya! 2) Hells ya!!! :) I know what you mean. I have found lately that I have a bit of a short attention span when it comes to music. There have only been a few artists that have survived my playlist long haul. I have also found that I have been leaning more to the Indy, off the beaten track, music more and more of late. Btw, I have really been enjoying the Mainstage at the Monkey and would LOVE to hear more of what is out there in CC land.

    Good luck with your CC/Indy only playlist experiment. :)

  4. [...] The Great Music Shift of 2007  3 miniTotoro, Sam Chupp, Rae [...]