New stuff from Evan

Evan Gross dropped in on my place Saturday night and recorded a few songs in my “little studio”. Zac Craig came by and added in a drum track, which was a very hard thing to do given the circumstances.

All songs are Evan Gross originals, except for “Church Wax America” which is his own personal mutation of Weezer’s “Surf Wax America”. (Unfortunately the vocals cut out on this track and I didn’t notice until I was mixing everything.)

My personal favorite is “Maria”. It’s incredibly catchy. Of course, so is “Each Day”, which rocks. “This is the Day” is a good start to what will be a great song. (Evan left his original lyrics at home in Seattle so he improvised these right before we recorded.) Really, they’re all pretty fun songs.

Here’s the goods:

  • Maria [with Drums]
  • Maria [no Drums]
  • Each Day
  • This is the Day
  • mathcaddy mix: June

    I was about to put together a mathcaddy radio session, but I decided instead to kindly give you a gift: 10 wonderful songs. If this irritates you, please let me know. [a@mathcaddy.com]

    How did I come up with this list? I listened to and bought a whole lot of music this month and these were among the top 25 songs I played in the month of June on my iPod and in iTunes. They got played a lot for a reason.

    math|mix: June 22

  • Sufjan Stevens – Casimir Pulaski Day
  • Sufjan Stevens is probably at this point my favorite artist. Ever. (Really! I mean it.) I was anxiously awaiting his forthcoming album, Illinois and happened to visit the amazon.com page for the album, which had two advance mp3s for download. This is an exceptionally incredible song, um, like most of his songs.

  • Mountain Goats – Palmcorder Yajna
  • I first discovered both this band and this song on The Big Ticket’s 2004 Mix, The Big Ticket is a wonderful little mp3blog I enjoy. The Mountain Goats kick folk into a kind of twitchy ADD overdrive. Thankfully, it’s good stuff. (And it is.)

  • Simon & Garfunkel – The Only Living Boy in New York
  • I have had this song sitting in my record collection for nearly three years and I never listened to it until I heard Steven Garrity introduce it on his latest session of Acts of Volition Radio.

  • Ray LaMontagne – Trouble
  • “TwoEyes” Tony recommended this album and it definitely is a great pick! My friend Evan had good things to say about Ray after catching him in concert the Sasquatch Festival at the Gorge a couple of weeks ago.

  • Coldplay – Fix You
  • Yeah, you’ve probably heard this album everywhere. And some of it is formulaic Coldplay. But who cares if the album includes a song like this? I first heard this track in Seattle’s EasyStreet Records on Queen Anne. I was soaring by the time it finished.

  • Luke Temple – Make Right With You
  • Speaking of EasyStreet Records, I spent some serious cash when I was there. I got some birthday money and I used all of it on new music. It was very fun. (Thanks, mom! Thanks, grandma and grandpa!) Luke Temple’s album was one of the ones I picked up.

  • British Sea Power – Please Stand Up
  • I first heard this in the listening booth at EasyStreet Records and decided to buy it after hearing only this track.

  • Over the Rhine – Born
  • A funny thing happened on the way to the checkout stand: I stumbled upon this album and added one more to the stack.

  • Spoon – Everything Hits at Once
  • This song’s from a cd that I bought and then forgot that I owned until recently when I was digging through a box and realized I had never opened it, which says something about how much money I used to spend on music: I bought stuff I didn’t even know I bought! Crank this track while driving at night.

  • Eels – Hey Man (Now You’re Really Living)
  • Best album of the year thus far in my opinion is Blinking Lights and Other Revelations Just go buy it already!

    I hope you enjoy these songs as much as I do!

    musikCube: “iTunes without the suck”

    I dove into iTunes as soon as it was available for Windows. It’s really a great program. Nevertheless, it has some limitations:

  • Purveyor of DRM [see rant]
  • System Resources hog extraordinaire
  • Brainless library system
  • iTunes’ integrated library and playlist tools contributed the most to my original move from Winamp to iTunes as my default music player, but the limitations of the app’s database started to drive me crazy. Any iTunes user with a large music library has probably experienced frustrations with the way iTunes manages files. You can choose to either let iTunes index the locations of files and their filenames or you can give iTunes complete management of your files, in which case it copies each file into its own massive system of folders. Either way, adding music to your iTunes library can become a painful process.

    As someone who is constantly tweaking his computer as well as its contents, iTunes’ forced structure was painful for me. It wasn’t rare for me to shout out loud at Apple’s music player. I desperately wished for an integrated player and library that would do everything iTunes did when it comes to the library but would be smart enough to notice changes I made to my own files, among other things.

    A few weeks ago, I stumbled upon an open source project called musikCube, an offshoot of wxMusik. (From what I understand, wxMusik is no longer under development by its core creator, Casey Langen, who moved on to create musikCube.)

    What makes musikCube so great?

    It really is “iTunes without the suck” as one musikCube user put it.

    Like iTunes, musikCube incorporates integrated static and dynamic playlists, drag-and-drop file management, and an indexed database allowing users to search their music on the fly. But musikCube accomplishes all this with a memory footprint easily one quarter that of iTunes’. musikCube, which relies on an embedded SQL database, further adds folder “synchronization”. Just tell it where you put your music and it will track any changes you make to your music’s filenames, tags, or locations. This feature of course overcomes iTunes’ database limitations. But more than that it’s great for folks like me who just have unending “junk drawers” of music stashed here and there on about four different hard drives.

    Because musikCube uses SQL, the queries for dynamic playlists are very customizable. Want a playlist of just songs you’ve never played? Or double files? Or songs most skipped? No problem for musikCube. The included “example” dynamic playlists are pretty cool. More than identifying your most played tracks, musikCube “learns” your favorite artists and albums over time using advanced SQL queries.

    Of course, musikCube is not complete. There are a few key items missing from musikCube, including:

  • No plugin for Audioscrobbler… yet! (It’s coming soon.)
  • No iTunes-like support for iPods. (You can map your iPod or any other player as a “device” instead)
  • No skinning functions or eyecandy UI (It won’t ever feature this and that’s fine with me – musikCube is the self-described “vanilla” music player)
  • No integrated CD burning tool, which is irrelevant for me since I always drag my music to Nero to burn it anyway.
  • Regardless of these shortcomings, I am greatly enjoying this wonderful new app!

    MP3 Blogcasting

    So, Podcasting is great. It’s just plain fun to have great radio shows to go at your own leisure. And most folks who enjoy music podcasts also love MP3 blogs.

    But one thing I have wondered for a long time: Why aren’t there RSS enclosures in mp3 blog feeds?

    Now there are, thanks to FeedBurner, a tool that allows you to customize and rebuild any RSS feed, including add enclosures for multimedia links.

    Just take your favorite MP3 weblog’s RSS address and plug it in at FeedBurner, then select the SmartCast customization. (Don’t pick the SmartFeed add-on or it won’t work in your podcast software.) Then pick a name for your new feed and plug the address into your favorite podcast software.

    New Ipod?

    While searching for ways to increase the range of my new iTrip, I ran across an interesting post that claims that Apple will be unveiling a new breed of iPod on Monday. Sounds exciting.

    I am leaving for cross country camp tomorrow morning until Friday afternoon. I am looking forward to running myself to death. It will be loads of fun.

    On another note, I saw Anchorman today. I thought that it was an extremely funny movie. Has anyone else that has seen Will Ferrel screaming in a phone booth with a fake moustache thought that he looks a lot like Scott Sanders? If I am able to get a picture of that part in the movie I will try and show everyone the comparison.

    Stuff

    I was bored today and I was looking through the Mathcaddy Statistics and I stumbled upon a super neato cool thing! I found the super searching phrase for downloading things. It is: parent directory mp3 (artists name) -xxx -html -htm -php -shtml -opendivx -md5 -md5sums. Just put that phrase into google and replace the (artists name) with which ever artist you are looking for (be sure to get rid of the parentheses and “google” it. Google then returns parent directorys chock full of all your favorite artists music which then download at super high speed rates! Either that or you get a mean message asking you for a password to get into the directory. Just remember to leave in the most important part of the phrase, which is the “-xxx.” That part keeps porn stars from singing your songs.

    Rebirth of an iPod

    After my old 10 GB iPod broke and I sent it in, I received a voucher in the mail for a new $299.99 iPod. It is really just a shame that not only do I get a shiny scratchless new iPod, but that Apple also discontinued their 10 GB model. Convieniantly, now the 15 GB model costs the same as the 10 GB model used to cost so I got a replacement iPod and an extra 5 GB for practically free. When I say practically free I mean that the price was actually $2 less than it had cost me before. So I got $2 back, and then paid $40. You see, while purchasing the $40 2-year replacement plan for my original iPod, the retailer forgot to inform me that if I were to actually call the number in the pamphlet that it would automatically void the insurance plan from carrying on to my replacement. They also did not tell me this when I called that number. I did not like the idea of my iPod breaking again, so I bought a new insurance plan. It looks like the Best Buy insurance plan has its own dirty little secret.

    Adventures in Guitaring

    It was a dark and stormy night. Suddenly, a thief appeared on the horizon. But this was no ordinary thief. This was the thief who stole my guitar amp off of the stage at church. Lightning flashed all around the thief.

    “Wow! A guitar amp!” Said the thief.

    “Holy crap! That dude’s gonna steal me!” Said the guitar amp.

    And the rest is history.

    And, in fact, here’s the history:

    I play guitar. Actually, I should modify that sentence, because what I really mean is I “play” guitar. I pretty much suck since I’ve played it so inconsistently over the past 8 years. Truth be told, there was about two years where I didn’t even touch a guitar. I might have taunted a guitar out of the corner of my eye, but I didn’t touch it. I swear.

    I started playing guitar the summer after my junior year of high school. I think 3/4 of all guys “play” guitar or drums at some point in their life. I happened to do it right about the same time most of my friends did. (Strange coincidence, right?) Well, some of them were actually good. And a few of them kept playing. One of them, Evan Gross, is now a great guitarist and songwriter. (You can hear some of his stuff here.)

    I remember my first guitar. In fact, I remember it because I have it sitting here. It was (and is) a cherry red Lotus strat copy. Not a bad guitar, at all, but very cheap. I picked up a little Marshall Mini-Stack with it – just like the one Jack Black walks around with clipped to his belt in School of Rock. That thing was great! But I wanted more. I wanted an amp that would destroy my hearing! Not some little cute thing.

    So I went for the Fender Performer 650, which was a very cheap floor model. I spilt my blood to get that amp. No, really, I did. My brother and I got offered a one-day job cutting down Russian Olive trees, which have very stout thorns about two to five inches long. My amp was on layaway, and my brother wanted me to get it just as much as I did, so he could play drums with me. At the end of the day, we had pierced all of our duct-tape armor, had at least three thorns through our feet apiece, and we were covered in blood. But we had just enough to go get the amp. The only downside would be that I would owe Ryan 200 bucks for his share of the work. No problem, I thought.

    I loved that amp. I played my guitar day and night for months and months. My brother and I would have “jam sessions” late at night and sometimes we’d invite other friends to come play with us. It was a good time.

    I had problems with my Lotus. Not surprising given how cheap it was. It sounded fine, but the darn thing would not stay in tune for five minutes. I kept having Ted Brown’s music store adjust it, but even afterward, I couldn’t play it for five minutes without going out of tune. After a while, they said that it was the difference in humidity between where it was made (humid Japan) and where it was played (arid Tri-Cities). I was told it could take several years of regular adjustments before it would stay in tune. Ouch!

    As you can imagine, it becomes increasingly frustrating to play a guitar that won’t stay in tune. So I started looking for a new guitar. I stumbled into a deal and a half! My friend Beau had a friend who was selling his guitar about the time I graduated from high school. It played great – plus it had a locking Floyd Rose tremelo and it stayed in tune practically for EVER by comparison to the Lotus.

    Now, this guitar was a real find. It turns out it was a prototype model that Gibson made in the 80s. It’s an American Gibson strat. But it’s really thin and light. It has three knobs, four switches, and four pickups. The finish was thrashed because the guy I bought it from covered it with stickers which stripped the paint. I sold my Lotus and bought the Gibson. Then I took some graduation money and had it repainted. It looked awesome and played fantastically.

    Eventually, things about it started to go wrong. The wiring was very flaky. (And when I fixed that, it buzzed like crazy.) The Floyd Rose tremelo that got me so excited was rusting and some of the tuners wouldn’t turn without pliers! And then I locked the case and forgot the combination. Shortly after, my brother demanded that I give him the money for his share that he paid for my amp. I didn’t have it, so I told him he could have my amp and give me 100 bucks, thinking I would just go buy a newer bigger one I had my eyes on. Ryan thought that sounded fine, so he took the amp and gave it to a friend of his. When that happened, I didn’t play the Gibson for almost two years!

    When my father in law loaned me a little old guitar amp, I started playing again (I somehow remember the combination.) I then discovered that my brother’s friend had sold my old amp to another friend, who wanted to sell it again. I ended up very excited to be buying back my old amp. I was back in business!

    But pretty soon, the crusty tremelo got to me and I became sick of the guitar. I borrowed my old Lotus from Eric and started playing it with my amp (I still have it and it’s like six months later!) I had a friend from church who was interested in buying my Gibson. I was so sick of it, I sold it to him for a song. He says he did a bunch of work on it and now he loves it and says it’s his favorite guitar. I feel a little sad about selling it because it was so unique, but at least he’s very happy with it.

    So I was back with my old amp and my old guitar. It was just like I was in high school again. Except I’m not in high school. Having my old amp back was wonderful, but it was a little too loud for our apartment, so I took it to church where some of our musicians could use it instead of dragging theirs to and from church all the time. I had the cool old Kalamazoo Model 2 tube amp that my father in law gave me, so I was happy with that as an amp. And my wife gave me a great little acoustic for Christmas.

    And then it happened. Well, not then, a couple months later. It was late February. There was a massive break in at the church, and one of the things they stole was my good old original Fender Performer 650. I sobbed for days. Okay, I didn’t. I shrugged my shoulders and figured it wasn’t meant to be. We were too different, he and I. I was a person. He was a guitar amp.

    Anyway, a few weeks later, I show up at church, and there’s a huge package from my in-laws. They had said they were sending something for Kristi’s birthday. But this was a gigantic box! And it had my name on it! It turned out to be an Ampeg Reverberocket Reissue. Almost totally brand new! My father in law got it and decided he wanted something different, so he sent it my way instead of selling it. It’s an amazing amp! It’s a tube amp with two 12′s. The sound is very clean. The drive channel has a It has excellent And it weighs more than my car.

    I figured that was it. But last month, when my in-laws rolled into town, they handed me a birthday card with little paper guitar in it. Then they tell me they picked out a Fender American Deluxe that they think I would like. I’m sort of dumbfounded. And then they tell me that it will be here when I get back from California. So, as you might guess, I was a little excited.

    And my excitement was justified. This is one great guitar. I have been playing it like crazy and there isn’t a thing I don’t love about it. It was in tune out of the case and I have only needed to tune it once! It has a modified switching system called “S-1″ that gives you double the number of settings available on choosing pickup selection. It plays so quiet! Not a bit of buzz, not an ounce of static, not a touch of noise. The clean is great. It sounds like a dream with reverb. It’s not hard to get that great “crunch” from the drive. And it’s gorgeous.

    Now if only I could play…

    Death of an iPod

    Today I noticed that my iPod wouldn’t turn on and that there was a strange rattling sound coming from inside it!. I was very worried that it would be broken forever and that I would never again be able to listen to its sweet sweet sound through my blown out ear buds. I got home and charged it up hoping that it would just be running on an empty battery. Luckily it was. Unluckily, none of my buttons worked. I noticed that the hold button was engaged so I disengaged it. I guess that the hold button broke and was wandering around freely inside. Anyways now I get a new shiny iPod from customer service.

    Internet Archive: Music? Music!

    Thanks to Chris Pirillo pointing out the Internet Archive’s Live Music Archive, I’m now sitting here listening to “The Fools We Are as Men” from an incredible live performance of Ryan Adams in Paris with indescribable recording quality. There are a huge number of bands and shows available in the archive, but most of the best ones are done in “lossless” audio, so these are some big files, which is a bit of a downside. There are some MP3s, but most of them are Shorten files.

    Shorten is an attempt to make high-quality lossless audio recordings available without needing a ton of bandwidth. (Just a half-ton of bandwidth.) From the little experience I have, a typical SHN file is about two to three times smaller than its counterpart WAV original.

    You’ll notice right away if you compare the Live Music Archive’s selection of MP3s vs. its selection of Shorten files. Most of what’s there is not in good ole MP3. At first, I you might feel a little disillusioned by this. But don’t let a new file format keep you from enjoying a ton of wonderful live recordings from bands and artists like Ben Kweller, Spoon, Ryan Adams (21 shows), Jack Johnson (89 shows), Guster (131 shows!), Howie Day (185 shows!!), and much, much more. Plus, you’ll get our exclusive collecti– oh. Sorry. I thought I was doing an infomercial.

    Anyway, if you like music, you probably enjoy (well recorded) live music. I know that I do. I have over 6 GB of MP3s of live recordings from Ben Folds /Five, Dave Matthews, Weezer, and a few others.

    What you need to enjoy sonic liveness:
    For playing the SHN files and/or converting them to MP3, you have two reasonable options: (1) Install ShnAmp, which will allow you to play them in Winamp upon download, or (2) [My recommendation] Download and install MKW Audio Compression Tool (mkwACT) to have a two-step drag-and-drop conversion from SHN to MP3 files. If you choose this route, note the additional installation instructions (primarily, you need to first install the binaries and not click “OK” when finished installing them until after completing the program installation, as well as check the options settings in MKWACT after you’ve installed it.)