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01/03/2012: BEATS & INSTRUMENTALS, VOL. 1 on iTUNES, AMAZON.COM & GOOGLE MUSIC

Monday, December 19th, 2011

STREET WORK MUSIC™ OFFICIAL YOUTUBE CHANNEL (Click “Show More” for details) THE BEGINNING OF THE HOTTEST MIXTAPE YOU HAVE EVER MADE STARTS TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 2012. STREET WORK MUSIC GIVES YOU BEATS & INSTRUMENTALS FOR DJ’S, YOUR MIXTAPES AND DEMOS. STREET WORK MUSIC BEATS & INSTRUMENTALS, VOL. 1 COMING SOON TUESDAY JANUARY 3, 2012 GOOGLE MUSIC market.android.com iTunes: itunes.apple.com AMAZON.com: www.amazon.com HIP HOP/RAP BEAT INSTRUMENTALS FOR DJ’S, YOUR MIXTAPES AND DEMOS.* *See www.streetworkmusic.com for details FREE & SAFE MUSIC DOWNLOAD OF FEATURED SONG “LOOKIN FOR A CLUB” by Street Work Music ftr Diablo Vazquez. FREE & SAFE MUSIC DOWNLOAD LINKS (MP3) www.mediafire.com NEW LIMITED EDITION BEATS & INSTRUMENTALS COMING SOON AVAILABLE FOR FREE DOWNLOAD. © Street Work Music (All Rights Reserved) “Street Work Music” is a trademark owned by Street Work Music. Inquiries: management@streetworkmusic.com www.streetworkmusic.com http www.twitter.com Hip Hop/Rap Producer, Street Work Music™ is severly instrumental and dedicated to the conception of his clienteles singles, remixes and recording projects. From start to finish SWM’s astonishing singles, albums and mixtape releases display just a sample of his extensive arsenal of original Hip Hop beat instrumentals. Street Work Music has been widely been sought after for its iconic sound on an global scale as well as coveted in american streets as a loyal ally in Hip Hop.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

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Les Paul Google Doodle Gives Us… Google Homepage, The Song, by Tim Exile

Friday, June 10th, 2011

Electronic musician, vocalist, and inventor Tim Exile is back; while the Google Doodle today of an interactive Les Paul inspired lots of people to invest some time fiddling and hacking, in Tim’s case, it inspired a whole song. And, to my knowledge, it’s the first time the homepage of Google got its own ode.

Bet the Googlers didn’t expect this response.

All of this serves as a serious reminder: sometimes simple and ubiquitous is good. It also shows the serious value of silliness. Here, here.

Previously: Les Paul Google Doodle, Animated – and Scripted with SuperCollider


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Les Paul Google Doodle, Animated – and Scripted with SuperCollider

Thursday, June 9th, 2011

Electric guitar pioneer Les Paul is one of the all-time greats in music instrument invention, so the guy clearly deserves an animated Google Doodle of his creation that you can play. Strum chords, pluck with the mouse, and even record phrases on Google’s homepage. (See video, above.) Since Google Doodles are archived – and since you can look at the code by choosing a View Source feature in your browser – these little novelties also have a life beyond their one day of glory. (Note, you may need to visit the US site if you’re in a part of the world that doesn’t have this Doodle, since they’re localized.)

Here’s where things get a little geekier:

Using the free and open source tool SuperCollider (Mac, Windows, Linux), composer and coder Nick Inhofe scripts Google’s interface, using the ability of SuperCollider to talk to keystrokes. You can download SuperCollider for free and try it out – it’s an insanely powerful real-time synth and processing engine – or just hit the Google shortcuts to hear the results. Full details:

Google Doodles with SC [SuperCollider mailing list]

Good, clean fun.


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Google Music Beta Walk-Through: Android Phone, Tablet and Web

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

Google Music Beta Walk-Through: Android Phone, Tablet and Web Noah takes an epic (uh, 20 minutes?) walkthrough of Music Beta by Google on a Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, Samsung Nexus S 4G and a MacBook Pro’s Web browser. Google’s new music service streams tracks from the cloud to your computer or Android device (2.2 or higher). It’s still in Beta, but how does it work so far? Check it out. For more fun stuff, check us out at: www.technobuffalo.com Follow Us on Twitter http Like Us on Facebook www.facebook.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Radiohead – No Suprises Music Video Lyrics: A heart that’s full up like a landfill, a job that slowly kills you, bruises that won’t heal. You look so tired-unhappy, bring down the government, they don’t, they don’t speak for us. I’ll take a quiet life, a handshake of carbon monoxide, with no alarms and no surprises, no alarms and no surprises, no alarms and no surprises, Silent silence. This is my final fit, my final bellyache, with no alarms and no surprises, no alarms and no surprises, no alarms and no surprises please. Such a pretty house and such a pretty garden. No alarms and no surprises, no alarms and no surprises, no alarms and no surprises please.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Q&A: What are some good websites that sell rap beats that work with google checkout?

Saturday, March 12th, 2011

Question by Jamel H: What are some good websites that sell rap beats that work with google checkout?
Most of the websites I know that sell rap beats only work with paypal and my card was banned from paypal because I got sent these codes but none of them had the correct code so they banned my card. I do, however have and account with google checkout. Know of any rap beat websites that use google checkout?
@june 24: Then y did u even bother to answer

Best answer:

Answer by *~June24,2009~*
Idk

–Sorry

@Jamel i wuz bored

What do you think? Answer below!

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Google Translate Beatboxing

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

Google Translate’s pronunciations may or may not impress you, but the thing’s got some beatboxing skills. Reddit user harrichr notes a fun result:

1) Go to Google Translate
2) Set the translator to translate German to German
3) Copy + paste the following into the translate box: pv zk pv pv zk pv zk kz zk pv pv pv zk pv zk zk pzk pzk pvzkpkzvpvzk kkkkkk bsch
4) Click “listen”
5) Be amazed :)

Does it count as beatboxing if the voice is non-human? (Okay, okay, yeah, you could do this on your own with just about anything by slicing off the plosives on words. But if you’re procrastinating on this Monday workday, it’ll seem utterly amazing. And don’t be surprised if Google takes over beatboxing, just like everything else. Thanks, vade!)

More variants: check out comments.


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Google Translate Beatboxing, Mashed Up with YouTube Memes

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Well, it’s official – the fact that you can beatbox with Google Translate has gone completely viral. I’ve even heard it crossing over into mainstream media (like the BBC mainstream). This also says to me that the Web could be fertile ground for creating musical toys that distract people from work. (Hmmm… okay, that may not be the best argument for getting your employer to upgrade their rusty old “vintage” MSIE to a new, HTML5-savvy browser.)

The best evolution of this yet: YouTuber chulini sets the Translate German beatboxing to a mash-up of Internet memes, hip-hop infused. It takes a nation of millions to make us a meme. (Apologies, Public Enemy.) See top.

Here’s what I want to know: has anyone been able to determine who originally came up with the textual incantation for this pattern? And if you could have a Google Translate beatboxer-rapper, what would you want it to do?

Oh, and at the next concert, will someone ask us to stick a fish in our ear? Douglas Adams would surely have loved this.


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HAITI 2010 Monome Community Compilation + Other Efforts to Help in Haiti

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

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Album artwork by Pau Cabruja (www.pauk.org)

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Artists and creators around the world have been moved by the suffering of Haitians in the wake of last week’s earthquake. There are ways we can help, like giving to relief organizations to give them the capacity to respond wherever needed. The next crisis could be halfway across the world or in our own neighborhood.

The monome community is about more than just the button-grid, open-source controller with which they work. They’re an example of the kind of collective spirit that musicians, digital or otherwise, can share internationally (see the map of these artists below). And they’ve put together a really beautiful, Creative Commons-licensed compilation of music.

Artists (including one track from the co-creators of the monome, Kelli and Brian): einpuls, Visinin, The General, Pauk, Glimmertone, Watson, Math Rosen, Lokey, Island Dweller, Oldman Intel, Made By Robot, Auditory Canvas, I Am Genko, Raja The Resident Alien, Samuel and the Dragon, Damien Shingleton, Maersk, The Superorganism, Modulogeek+Shoemucker, Beatpoet, The B-Roll, Hypno|sapien, Kid_Sputnik, The Sweaty Caps, HenderSounds, Dat Niks Klank, Swimming, Kcain/Tehn.

Full album:
http://einpuls.bandcamp.com/

100% of the proceeds go to Médecins Sans Frontières; the 27-track is pay-what-you-wish for $1 or more, downloadable in high-quality MP3, FLAC, and other formats.

And that’s just one way to help; there are others.

From the monome compilation press release:

The monome user base is a collection of people from across the world, brought together via the innovative, open source music production hardware that is the monome, They pride themselves on a tight-knit, proactive, and helpful community (post.monome.org), where collaborations and projects are frequently happening, the outputs of which range from new software patches to share, to Creative Commons track and album collaborations.

When the community came up with the idea of a compilation album to generate charity donations in light of the terrible disaster in Haiti, einpuls started gathering tracks for the album and the monome community answered swiftly with more than 25 tracks being submitted in just a couple of days.

The community teamed up with Summer Rain Recordings to compile the compilation, with the end result being a 27 track album, each track contributed for free. The minimum price for the compilation has been set to $1 with no upper limit. Every penny helps, so please donate what you can.

<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://einpuls.bandcamp.com/album/haiti-2010">Einpuls &#8211; Sugar High by Monome Community</a>

View Monome Haiti 2010 in a larger map

Calls for the Red Cross, More

Ernst Nathorst-Böös, CEO of Propellerhead, noted that they were putting a call for the Red Cross into their newsletter:
propsnewsletter

…and he wondered what other members of the industry might be doing. Do let us know, as perhaps we can share ideas. (This is not an advertisement for Propellerhead; Ernst didn’t even ask me to publish this. I just like the way they did this, and personally find this an opportunity to run with the same idea.)

I’m going to use this as a reminder to do the same with the CDM newsletter, and also seek out ways we can generally devote some space to effective PSAs — not just those that you sometimes see by default from Google, but productive uses of our real estate. I couldn’t figure out whether there are official Red Cross badges to use, etc.; any ideas?

The Red Cross has a fantastic site that explains how you can give money:
http://www.redcross.org/en/givehere/

You can even walk into places like Starbucks and Walgreens and give there; see the full list. The other important thing about The Red Cross is their ability to plan resources for unexpected disasters worldwide. Haiti is a reminder of how fragile and unpredictable our world is.

International Response Fund

The Red Cross does have to approve any fundraisers that use their name, though there is an application process and that doesn’t stop you from sending them money as you wish.

Other ideas for ways of proactively responding not only to this crisis, but others, as well? What are some of the tools we can use as a community to support the work these organizations do?

Read more:
HAITI 2010 Monome Community Compilation + Other Efforts to Help in Haiti

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Blip Festival Handmade Music Opener, and the Sega Mega Drive Meets MIDI + Launchpad

Monday, December 14th, 2009

It’s the most wonderful time of the year. We get to enjoy the sounds and sights made by chips, independent games, and Novation Launchpad-controlled Sega Mega Drives. Blip Fest hits NYC this week in a celebration of vintage and lo-fi chips and the wonderful, blippy music they produce. To get things started right on Wednesday night, we have a special edition of Handmade Music, the DIY music party/science fair/noisy racket series, in a special location — the opening of Babycastles, a new, permanent home for independent games. (Think “indie arcade,” an idea I hope spreads worldwide.)

blipfest

If you’re in the area, come check out some terrific independent games, meet artists, see in person the inventions of Australia’s Little Scale, and more. OPEN CALL FOR STUFF: Visiting Blip artists and NYC-area hackers, if you’ve got a visual or musical creation related to gaming or chip music, we’d love to have you show-and-tell and make some noise with it; this is, as always, an open potluck for the things you make. (Bring cables and, if you can, portable amplification/headphones.) Everyone, if you can make it out a little early, we’ll have a “secret” workshop with Loud Objects to solder a chip music toy, even if you’re a beginner. (Sign up below; we’ll need a very small fee for parts.)

Babycastles

Wherever you are, Sebastian Tomczak from South Australia, aka Little Scale, is a sound artist you really don’t want to miss. For a long list of awesome, look no further than his blog, for Game Boys tuned like Japanese kotos, Max patch sequencers to download, and Game Boy Advance albums. He’s promised to bring his performance-ready Sega MegaDrive and Atari 2600 jr, a 2600 MIDI interface, and the Sega sounds controlled by new tech, the Novation Launchpad, as pictured in the video at top.

http://little-scale.blogspot.com/

Sign up for the “secret” chip music toy soldering workshop with Loud Objects:

Signup for semi-secret workshop

More on the event / map:

The location is in the Bushwick neighborhood. For those of you in from out of town, Google Maps can give you transit directions and time estimates; it’s a pretty easy trip from Manhattan, and we’ll head back there afterward to catch Blip’s open mic night. Official event info:

Babycastles Arcade Kickoff Party feat. Handmade Chiptunes Night

Free, Wednesday, December 16th, 6:00PM – 8:30PM

Babycastles teams up with Handmade Music Night for the inaugural opening of a permanent indie games arcade in Brooklyn.

915 Wyckoff Street, L to Halsey or M to Myrtle / Wyckoff. (map below)

This opening celebrates Adam Atomic’s Canabalt (NYC), Ivan Safrin’s Owl Country (NYC), Tristan Perich’s KillJet (NYC), and Kyle Purver’s Jottobots (NY), which will be playable all night and throughout December. Cardboard lectures by the game developers! High Score Chalkboard Dress by Lara Grant! Chiptunes performance and workshop by little-scale (AU)! Show up extra early for a secret chipmusic toy soldering workshop by the Loud Objects.

Part of an official Blip Festival Pre-Party – 10% discount on Blip Festival tickets available, and a group hug ride to the Tank afterwards!

View Larger Map

Babycastles

Babycastles, New York’s first independent games arcade, is named after bite-size portugese cakes in Japan. As a new function of a legendary all-ages venue for Brooklyn music and other local diy-culture, Babycastles is a wall of six lovingly decorated arcade cabinets that offers a physical place to play games made by amateur and independent game developers. The arcade is open four or five nights a week, during every show at the Silent Barn. The venue throws an opening party every few weeks for a new collection of arcade games, with the game developers present, music, drinks, and plenty of opportunity to get together and love games.

Handmade Music Night

Part party, part mixer, part Science Fair, and part performance, this is an informal chance for geeksters and the geek-curious to come together, relax, and discover new sounds. The evening is a gathering of inventors of new instruments & music technology. Featuring circuit-bent toys, custom software and patches, interactive digital & visual instruments, custom electronics, electricity-powered noisemakers, DIY robots and new acoustic instruments. And it’s open to everyone from hard-core hackers & newcomers to music lovers who want to learn about the DIY music scene.

Read more from the original source:
Blip Festival Handmade Music Opener, and the Sega Mega Drive Meets MIDI + Launchpad

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