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WebMaster Media Maker.Create Streaming Audio and Video with Media players that do not require a streaming media server. read more:
Microsoft media does not play on Microsoft's deviceDRM/DMCA checkmate: 'Microsoft's Zune will not play protected Windows Media Audio and Videopurchased or 'rented' from Napster 2.0, Rhapsody, Yahoo! Unlimited,Movielink, Cinemanow, or any other online media service. That's right - themedia that Microsoft promised would Play For Sure doesn't even play onMicrosoft's own device.' read more:
How to disable a Media Center add-inJason over at Digital Media Thoughts sent me an email about his new article on The Powers and Perils of a Platform. Jason talks about the trouble he had when a Media Center 'plugin' went bad and couldn't be uninstalled. It's not clear if it was an HTML application or a managed code add-in, but based on the description I'm assuming it's the latter. He ran into problems when trying to manually uninstall the application so I thought I should post something on what to do when an add-in goes bad... In Media Center 2005 add-ins can do pretty much what they want to do without restriction, if one starts to misbehave the best thing you can do is to disable it: - Start Media Center
- Click on Settings
- Click on General
- Click More Programs Options
- Click Edit More Programs
- Deslect the app to disable and click Save
This will disable the app from starting and hide anything entrypoint it's registered throughout Media Center. It won't uninstall the app, but it will prevent it from running. read more:
Media Brewfest!The annual brewer festival is coming to Media this weekend. (Last year’s post) Me, Brian and Marc will be there. Will you? If you are going, you can buy your ticket online and save $5 ($25 online, $30 at the door). Should be fun.... read more:
MSN Remote RecordMSN Remote Record is live and out of beta. In simplest terms it's a way of browsing the same TV guide as your Media Center PC uses and then remotely instructing your Media Center PC to record something. Pretty clever stuff. There's a small download for your Media Center PC and then it looks pretty easy to use. Try it and let me know what you think. read more:
Thoughts on “Thoughts on MCE beta feedback”Matt Goyer, a Program Manger for Microsoft’s Windows Media Center (motto: “Before we were a Vista feature, we were an entire operating system!”) recently posted that he’s frustrated by people who say that Vista’s Media Center capabilities offer no compelling improvements over Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005 (a.k.a. MCE 2005).In response, Matt posted a [...] read more:
Back from @media 2006The trip to London and @media 2006 was a real success, for me at least. I had so much fun and listened to so many great people and talking to many interesting people. It was simply a blast to be there.Me and my colleague came to London the evening before the event started. We [...] read more:
Leaving for @media 2006Today I´m leaving for London and @media 2006. I´ve been waiting for this event for such a long time now. Last year I had a ticket but changed work so I couldn’t go. But this year it’s really happening. Me and my colleague (Swedish) are going from Skatteverket. (Swedish tax authority).So “everyone” is going to [...] read more:
Play Windows Media files with QuickTime Player (free!)Today, two more signs of the forthcoming apocolypse.(1) Apple announces the first Macs with Intel Inside, as Steve rubs “man, can you believe how friggin’ slooow the PowerPC was?” salt into our collective wounds several times during the keynote. (Wouldn’t want to be Kottke right now…)(2) With somewhat less fanfare, Microsoft delivers Windows Media Components [...] read more:
Media Center keyboard shortcutsAll the keyboard shortcuts for Media Center for those times when you just don't want to use a remote control are documented here. Update: If the page doesn't display, try again later, it's propagating around servers or something like that I'm told read more:
Media Center PC's are getting cheap!Betanews reports that Gateway/eMachines will be offering a new Media Center PC for $599! The specs are pretty impressive for such a cheap computer: - AMD Athlon 64 3400+
- 1GB DDR SDRAM
- 200GB hard drive
- ATI Radeon Xpress 200
- 8 in 1 media reader
- Rewritable dual-layer DVD drive
- CD-ROM drive
Wow. No mention of a TV Tuner, monitor or remote though... I've never bought an eMachines computer before, but that seems like a great deal for a pretty powerful system. read more:
Losing the rights to your musicMicrosoft is tightening its DRM and generating a lot of heat in users: - Microsoft Media Player shreds your rights: 'Think DRM was bad already? Think I was joking when I said the plan was tostart with barely tolerable incursions on your rights, then turn thethumbscrews? Welcome to Windows Media Player 11, and the rights get chippedaway a lot more.'
- Microsoft DRM To Get Even Tighter: 'I think I'm going to wait for Windows Media Player 12 to come out, whichreportedly will include DRM that doesn't let you listen to your music atall. All the major recording labels are on board with this format, so we mayfinally get a realistic alternative to iTunes without the clumsy Mac-likeinterface. Plus, it won't cost much more per track than the average iTunessong now. There will also be more visualizations included to help youimagine what the music you're playing actualy sounds like.'
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Questions answeredI've had a couple of questions by email that I should answer (note I've paraphrased some of these): What fonts should I use for my HTML Media Center application and can I use Flash? The SDK is where to go for design guidelines for HTML applications (the short answer is to use a sans serif font). Yes, Flash can be used in HTML Media Center applications - Napster and MSN Music both use Flash. How can I add an application to the Start Menu? You can't. Well OK, you can, but we recommend that only OEMs use this functionality as there is a limit to how many applications can appear on the start menu and adding a new app will stomp on existing applications. If you intend to distribute your application you shouldn't do this, but if you really want to know, the details are in the SDK here. I've seen the Media Center software for sale online is it OK to buy it? I'm no lawyer so I'm not going to comment on this. Media Center is an OEM product and only available with new PCs is the official answer though. read more:
Dlguard - File Download Protection.Protect your time and your money: stop download thieves and build customer lists. Every serious seller needs this! read more:
How Is The FairUse4WM Patch Being Delivered?Bruce Schneier suggested that it was folded into Patch Tuesday security patches, but he didn't cite a source. I have a Windows XP box, and these are the updates I was sent this week. None of them appear to be Windows Media related. Are the updates coming through Windows Media Player, and not the normal Windows Update process itself? Perhaps my version of Windows Media Player is one of the versions they couldn't patch for? Are systems like Napster 2.0 pushing out the patch (Rhapsody didn't push me an update)? Or is there something else going on here? Or is the patch being sneaked in with these unrelated security updates? If anyone has determined exactly how the patch is being pushed out (and why FairUseWM 1.2 could apparently get around it), I would be interested to know. read more:
Revoking the First AmendmentThis article by Paul Waldman at Media Matters was published on the web June 30. It is timeless, extremely important, and is loaded with substantiating links. I would go as far as to say this article outlines the demise of what remained of our democracy. In fact, reading it reminded me in an awkward way of Jeff Cohen's words in, Go to Venezuela. You Idiot! ' If Venezuela is a dictatorship, it must be the first in world history in which the opposition controls most of the media.' ...For nearly five years, George W. Bush and other members of his administration have been proclaiming proudly that they have been tracking terrorist financing through international financial institutions.
...The House of Representatives passed a resolution saying it 'expects the cooperation of all news media organizations.' Cooperating they are. Media Matters also cites a few of the talking points echoed loudly in our media: * Republicans are 'pro-military' and 'support the troops,' while Democrats are 'anti-military' and 'attack the troops.' * Democrats want to 'cut and run.' * Iraq is the central front in the war on terror. * Democrats are 'divided' or 'weak' on national security. * The Republicans will always win debates on national security. * The Republicans won the Iraq debate. Unfortunately, Bush Is Not Incompetent ' Unless conservative philosophy itself is discredited, Conservatives will continue their domination of public discourse, and with it, will continue their domination of politics.' ~Lakoff read more:
EMI hit by EU rethink on Sony/BMG mergerMedia.guardian.co.uk - Sat Jul 15, 03:33 pm GMT read more:
Mod_auth_mysqlAs part of implementing ETD-db, I needed to password-protect several folders that are part of the ETD-db system. The installation instructions for ETD-db suggest you do this using an .htpasswd file that contains several users and give different users different rights. Reading this I realized that probably one user will serve for several people, [...] read more:
See you in London at @media 2006?In a few days I'm leaving for London to attend the @media conference. I hope it will be as much fun as last year was, but it's a bit different for me since this year I am one of the speakers. I'll only be sitting in on a panel (Strategic CSS Project Management), not holding a full presentation of my own. I'm still a bit nervous about the whole thing, and looking at the names of the other speakers gives me a surreal feeling. If you're going to @media and see me standing in a corner trying to make myself invisible, come and say hi. I promise I won't bite. Well, unless you start talking about alt tags ;-). I am a very approachable kind of person most of the time, but I do tend to be a little shy among people I don't know. In other words, don't wait for me to start any conversations. Read full post and comments…Add this to del.icio.us, Digg this, or Seed this. Add 456 Berea Street to your Technorati favorites. Posted in: read more:
IE expressions ignore CSS media typesA client recently reported that there was a problem with their print stylesheet causing content to be cut off at the right margin. I had a look at it and couldn't see a problem until I tried printing from Internet Explorer. There was a problem alright. It was really puzzling since all the print CSS for that site does is basically hide parts that are irrelevant when printing. There shouldn't be any conflicts with other style sheets either since the screen style sheets use a different media type. But I was wrong - in some cases IE will apply CSS that it shouldn't. Read full post and comments…Add 456 Berea Street to your Technorati favorites. Posted in Browsers, CSS.  read more:
This weeks questions - always on top and registering add-ins and HTML togetherI've decided to take all the questions I get by email and answer them on Fridays in one post, so do please continue to email me any questions you have. That said, here's this weeks questions: How can I keep the Media Center window on top so I can work on other things? In Media Center go to SettingsGeneralStartup and Window Behavior and select 'Media Center window always on top'. How can I associate an HTML application with an add-in? Register both the add-in and the HTML page together. Instead of registering the HTML app and the add-in you need to register them both as a single application with multiple entrypoints - one entrypoint for the add-in and one for the HTML page. This will make them both part of the same application and so from a background add-in a call to ApplicationInfo.IsForeground will return 'true' when the HTML page is currently being displayed. read more:
MSN Video DownloadMSN Video Download apparently went live today with a choice of two membership types Premium and Basic. Premium is $19.95 a year and has more content than the free Basic membership. Not wanting to commit myself to a membership yet I signed up for the Basic membership, thinking I could load some videos on to the miniSD card in my smartphone.... Sign up was easy, I used my passport account, agreed to the terms and installed the download software. The download status page showed content was downloading from Fox Sports. In order to sync content to my phone I needed a smart playlist so I followed the instructions to download one. This was the first problem, the instructions used Windows Media Player 9 and I'm using Windows Media Player 10, a little strange, but not a huge problem. With the smart playlist in place I thought I'd be good to go... That wasn't going to be the case though. I started by trying to play a video in Media Player directly and got prompted for a username and password which was being requested by 'admin.theplatform.com' not 'msnvideodownloads.com'. I tried my Passport email address and password which might not have been a great idea, but it didn't work anyway. Meanwhile I could see that Activesync had been trying to sync the content to my phone so I checked the Sync page in WMP. Nothing had been synced, instead there was an error message 'Windows Media Player can not synchronize the protected file. Protected files can not be converted to the required quality level or format'. Now I have almost half a gigabyte of content (and it's still getting downloaded) and I can't watch any of it. If anyone gets this working I'd love to know how. read more:
Living Can Kill YouBits of a life in Canadian new media - from online journalism to Web building read more:
Ron Pomerantz becomes executive creative director at Disney ChannelMedia Life Magazine Jul 16 2006 1:12PM GMT read more:
Many questions - MSAS, playing WAV files and what to develop Media Center apps withI've had lots of questions recently and no time to really get answers and post them up here. If I haven't answered you question it's because I don't know the answer and haven't had enough time to get to the bottom of it yet. First of all I had a couple of questions on MSAS which I don't know that much about. Can I tell which tuner is being used when a recording takes place using MSAS? No, you can not. What you can do, which may or may not help is use OnTVRecordStateChange from a background add-in which will give you a GUID and you could track which was in use - this won't help if a tuner is being used for live TV though. Here's a code snippet on how to use OnTVRecordStateChange: void IAddInEntryPoint.Launch(AddInHost host) { host.Television.OnTVRecordStateChange += new Microsoft.MediaCenter.AddIn.TVRecordStateChangeDelegate(TvRecordStateChangedHandler); ...
} public void TvRecordStateChangedHandler(object obj, Microsoft.MediaCenter.AddIn.TVRecordStateChangeArgs TVArgs) { if (TVArgs.Started)mcHost.HostControl.Dialog('Recording started on tuner ' + TVArgs.Tuner, 'TV Recording',1,10,false); else if (TVArgs.Stopped) mcHost.HostControl.Dialog('Recording stopped on tuner ' + TVArgs.Tuner, 'TV Recording',1,10,false); }
Can I use remote desktop to connect to a Media Center PC? Yes. You can even use Media Center, but it won't play video over a RDP connection Can I use animated backgrounds in an HTML page? Not really a media center question, but I don't see why not, use an animated gif. Could I create an add-in that played a selection of WAV files with a gap between them? Yes, using Playmedia and Playrate you could contstruct an addin to do this - waiting until the playrate was stopped, then wating however long you want before playing the next file. You could also use More With This to make this work with any folder of audio files. Can I use ASP.NET for development? Yes. You can use any web technology that outputs HTML. Can I use WinForms for development? Yes, but if you're running as a .exe you won't have access to Media Center APIs. If you're running as a .NET applet in a webpage you'll have access to the Media Center APIs from the HTML page and will have to communicate between the page and the .NET applet to use the Media Center APIs - non-trivial to do, but not hard. read more:
Summer Lovin’The rumours are not true! I haven't abandoned my blog - far from it. I have been in secret talks with some very well known media giants who want to syndicate my writing in their publications... read more:
Overnights Sinking feeling: 'Master of Champions' ABC reality contest pulls a 1.2 in 18-49s, behind all but the WB and UPN and well down from debut. 'Dance' boogies to a win.Media Life Magazine Jul 16 2006 1:11PM GMT read more:
BBC signs former STV newsreaderSHEREEN Nanjiani, one of the best-known faces on Scottish television, revealed yesterday that she is making a media comeback just a month after bowing out at STV - as a radio news presenter for BBC Scotland. read more:
Do hackers hijack your search engine listings?Are your search engine rankings still yours? Other people might hijack your search engine rankings and they might steal your web site visitors. The worst thing is that you might not even notice it. This article explains how you can protect your web site. read more:
Maximizing Email Security ROI: Part III - No More Mr. Nice Guy: Enforcing E-Mail PolicyAn effective email policy should be all-encompassing, helping organizations comply with federal regulations, protect intellectual property and prevent offensive materials from being transmitted across their networks. This article details the issues involved in corporate email policy enforcement, and provides real-world examples of compliance issues faced by corporations every day. read more:
Zune-PlaysForSure Reax: 'This Can't Be True.'Skim the Digg commentary and you'll find many users who can't believe that Zune won't Play For Sure. It's so bizarre, they assume the report is inaccurate, despite citations to numerous press reports and MS' own release. Even CrunchGear refused to believe it. I think most media reports were so confused, that they didn't report on it -- better to avoid the subject altogether than to write an erroneous report. (That, and the media got spun hard on the wireless sharing feature.) To be fair, I was pretty shocked too. Sure, I can understand the possible business rationale, but the simple fact remains: Microsoft developed a player that can't play protected Windows Media content from all services providers except the Zune Marketplace. Hell, that even includes the MSN Music Store. On its face, that just doesn't seem to make sense -- until it was official, I couldn't believe any of the rumors. Kudos to Wired's Eliot Van Buskirk who did report this early and often, before the official Zune announcement this week. read more:
TurtleDate Announces Dating Site Profile Approval Policy ChangeIn a recent move, the little dating site www.TurtleDate.com made some big changes in their profile approval policy. TurtleDate has implemented aggressive action to protect the privacy of its members by thwarting contacts via profile approvals from scammers, spoofers and spammers who attempt to use the sites service to proliferate advertising and money phishing schemes. (PRWEB Jul 9, 2006) read more:
CSS Cheat SheetDesigned for printing and storing near your desk, this handy quick reference includes a properties list, CSS syntax, selectors and pseudo selectors, media types (for linking), units, the box model, and inheritance and the cascade. read more:
<i>NYT</i> review of <i>Talking Right</i> by Geoffrey NunbergDemocrats, he says, should shore up their position on religion not by arguing for secularism but by explaining that secular values protect freedom of religion by not allowing a particular sect to occupy the entire religious space. That's not a bad argument, and it's a familiar one in judicial debates about the First Amendment's religious clause, but it won't fly in the political arena, if only because, as Nunberg says of a feeble Democratic slogan, 'you have to do a little mental stutter step' to understand it." read more:
Microsoft's Zune Won't Play Protected Windows MediaIn yesterday's announcement of the new Zune media player and Zune Marketplace, Microsoft (and many press reports) glossed over a remarkable misfeature that should demonstrate once and for all how DRM and the DMCA harm legitimate customers. Microsoft's Zune will not play protected Windows Media Audio and Video purchased or 'rented' from Napster 2.0, Rhapsody, Yahoo! Unlimited, Movielink, Cinemanow, or any other online media service. That's right -- the media that Microsoft promised would Play For Sure doesn't even play on Microsoft's own device. Buried in footnote 4 of its press release, Microsoft clearly states that 'Zune software can import audio files in unprotected WMA, MP3, AAC; photos in JPEG; and videos in WMV, MPEG-4, H.264' -- protected WMA and WMV (not to mention iTunes DRMed AAC) are conspicuously absent.
This is a stark example of DRM under the DMCA giving customers a raw deal. Buying DRMed media means you're locked into the limited array of devices that vendors say you can use. You have to rebuy your preexisting DRMed media collection if you want to use it on the Zune. And you'll have to do that over and over again whenever a new, incompatible device with innovative features blows existing players out of the water. Access to MP3s and non-DRMed formats creates the only bridge between these isolated islands of limited devices. The real culprit here is the DMCA -- but for that bad law, customers could legally convert DRMed files into whatever format they want, and tech creators would be free to reverse engineer the DRM to create compatible devices. Even though those acts have traditionally been and still are non-infringing, the DMCA makes them illegal and stifles fair use, innovation, and competition. May this be a lesson to those who mistakenly laud certain DRM as 'open' and offering customers 'freedom of choice' simply because it is widely-licensed. With DRM under the DMCA, nothing truly plays for sure, regardless of whether you're purchasing from Apple, Microsoft, or anyone else. Take action now to support DMCA reform and to stop the government from mandating more DRM. [Postscript: In an interview with Engadget, Microsoft Zune architect J Allard pointed out that Zune has sufficient video format support, in part because there's 'Lots of DVD ripping software out there that encodes to those formats, so the most popular formats out there, whether it's MPEG-4 or H.264, we'll support those.' Gee, he isn't suggesting that his business model benefits from customers using tools like DeCSS or Handbrake to evade the DRM on DVDs, right? Especially since Microsoft is furiously trying to squash the FairUse4WM tool, that would seem rather hypocritical.] (Cross-posted at DeepLinks) read more:
No-One Looks at the ScreenOne of the most fundamental factors in designing for screen-based media is: No-one likes looking at a computer screen. Hunt, Benread more:
Whats the deal with web 2.0Like all developers I take a keen interest in what’s happening in the industry in general. Recently it's been the 'web 2.0' buzz, the 2.0 is geek talk for the next iteration of web applications. The general theme surrounds web applications such as gmail, digg and other social networking applications like myspace. These web applications typically take advantage of the modern features in web browsers, so usually they are easier to use. The emergence of google adsense and the increased uptake of online advertising has had the effect that online companies can now offer applications free of charge, the advertising revenue can in most cases offer a good revenue stream, so ultimately the end user benefits. My concern is with this particular revenue model and how much revenue can be sustained from it, for example myspace was recently bought by news corp for $500 odd million, another company Bebo offering the same sort of application turned down $550 million looking for a $1 billion takeover. It might just be me, but how can these companies pay so much, can you really turn a billion dollar investment into something more (or even recoup) before the application's shelf life expires? I mean lets face it, I can't really see myspace being the same powerful force in say 8 years, how many other social networks have come and gone (friendster, facebook), can news corp recoup the $500 million in that time and can they use myspace to propel it into the future? To me these old media companies are looking around at whats happening online with blogging, podcasting and video casting (look at the popularity of rocketboom) and see that if they don't react they will become less relevant. Then they consult the old school business books and go out and acquire the current big name applications without really thinking about what they could offer in this new business environment. Personally I think the big media companies aren't going away any time soon, I do however think that they will become smaller and more focused on a particular niche (maybe the older generations?). But these companies have had a monopoly for too long and want that to continue for as long as possible. Ultimately I think all this money being thrown around is a waste, but the effect it will have on the average person is positive, the big media companies will waste a fortune now for little gain, which just means they will get smaller sooner rather than later. The media companies seem to be following the lead of companies like Google and yahoo who have a vested interest in getting more eye-balls onto screens. Isn't it great to be around in such an interesting time, but if I had any long term investments in news corp, via-com, time-warner etc,I would be seriously considering my options.
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My LegendThe new PodShow+ site, unleashing pretty darn soon, has a personal bio feature called 'The Legend of me'. I just filled mine out. Here's what I wrote: I'm a programmer with an apetite for timeshifted media. That pretty much sums it up. In 2000, before I'd heard of RSS, I was using Voquette Media Manager to record Real streams of This American Life, which I'd lovingly burn to CD and listen to on long car trips. Later, in the days of 'audio blogging', I used the Radio Userland news aggregator to automatically pull MP3 files from enclosure-bearing RSS from Dave Winer, Chistopher Lydon and Doug Kaye. I'd then locate these on my hard drive and drag them, one at a time, into the media management software for my Neuros MP3 player. It worked, sort of, but was too much effort, and there was still too little content (especially after Chris took a break) for practical daily use. Adam Curry switched me back on in 2004 with a steady stream of daily content, developer feedback, feature ideas and a critical insight that made the medium: we needed automatic sync to the listening device. The early innovations in podcasting were nearly all Mac-only, which as a Windows user drove me nuts. Erik de Jonge's 'iSpider' project had a decent command-line Python/Applescript codebase, and were up for doing a cross-platform GUI product, which is where I wanted to go. Bringing in some modest COM knowledge that Pieter Overbeeke's 'i-podder' javascript helped me learn, I joined the iSpider team and Lemon was born. Nearly two years and one Ceast and Desist later, Lemon is now known as Juice and has accumulated over 2 million downloads. Along the way, Martijn Venrooy and I built the GigaDial 'podstation factory' (October 2004), and in Fall 2005 I joined PodShow and moved my family from Boston to San Francisco. At PodShow I do a mix of engineering (DGAP, Golden Tickets), developer relations (developer.podshow.com, DevCasts), technical reviews of potential partners and, when anyone will listen :-), talent scouting. I'm bullish on New Media and on the lookout for cool new stuff to build, to make listening and viewing better. Pretty verbose --- it fills the alotted space on my profile page --- yet it barely scratches the surface. read more:
The Lack of Interactivity and Hypertextuality in Online MediaThe main focus of this article is related to the forms of mediated content that are offered in online space. Oblak, Tanjaread more:
StoriesAboutGod.org UpdatesFirst, there is a new story posted on the site today - be sure to go read His Canopy Protect Me by SAG newbie Nickelle.Second - I've decided to try an experiment: Starting January 2007, once a month I will pay $25 for a 'Story About God'. I'll be formalizing this idea between now and New Year's, but in general the approach will be: I will accept story proposals via email for the first week of the month, then (if there are more than one), one story will be randomly choosen and the author sent $25. Authors of non-winning entries can choose whether they still want their story posted to the site.Comments/thoughts/links appreciated. read more:
Email Security Governance: Email Encryption and AuthenticationWhile recent government regulations vary in scope and purpose, the need to protect and ensure the integrity of information is universal. Much of the information germane to business today is assimilated and communicated over messaging platforms such as email. As a result, the need for a comprehensive approach to the secure delivery of email affects almost all organizations, regardless of industry or size. As with many management challenges, the unknown is the most significant cause for concern. In the case of email and messaging security, the most ominous threat is often the lack of ability to measure information flowing in and out of the corporate email network. read more:
U.S. Programmers Thriving Due to OutsourcingAndrew Binstock of BZ Media's Software Development (SD) Times advised U.S. programmers to profit from the outsourcing wave, (rather than fighting against it "in a losing struggle") using RentACoder.com. [PRWEB Jul 12, 2006] read more:
New Wellness Portal Emphasizes Collaboration and CommunityA new collaborative, interactive, multi-media health, wellness, and fitness portal, OptimumHealthClub.com, is now live on the Internet. (PRWEB Jun 21, 2006) Trackback URI: http://www.prweb.com/dingpr.php/U2luZy1aZXRhLVByb2YtU2luZy1JbnNlLVplcm8= read more:
New Releases for February 15thFive for February 15thAs catbirdseat has already stated, it's tough concentrating on this week's releases when next week looks so massively promising. Here are a few notables though. If none of them catch your eye, check out the Rutles 2 DVD giveaway we just kicked off (for those of you who are reading this via RSS, you're gonna need to open the website in an actual browser - sorry). - Camper Van Beethoven - Discotheque: Live Chicago I'm not really sure why I chose this disc to link. Most of their stuff is available for download via archive.org.
- Dread Leppelin - Chickens And Ribs I know the joke should be old by now, but it still cracks me up. It features a guest appearance by Billy Zoom.
- Mahi Mahi - Remove Your Body This came out a few weeks ago and I forgot to mention it. I always bitch about the music scene in Providence, but when someone releases an album, I forget to write about it on the site. Sorry about that.
- They Might Be Giants - Here Come The ABCs Speaking of children's music, have you seen the Pancake Mountain site? I've probably already linked it, but the Fiery Furnaces "Mouse House, Moose Hoose" clip is too crazy to not mention several times.
- Wedding Present - Take Fountain I wanted this album to be absolutely amazing, but I'm having trouble getting into it. I'm gonna give it a few more tries - I can sense that there's some great material hidden in there.
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