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Iio: Kiss You (Orkan & Teemu Ninth Grade Remix)

Come on, when is their album going to get released over here? Hmm?

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Flicker Flicker

Just a note. Ayria’s second album Flicker is released on 10 October 2005. You can buy it here.

It’s days like today that I also discover there’s a beauty magazine for gothic fashion. (Jenn mentions it on her Ayria news page, if you’re wondering.)

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Seize: The Other Side of Your Mind

Number 7 of 2004 – Seize: The Other Side of your Mind

Seize are another band I discovered on the Belgian Alfa-Matrix label. Started in 1995 by Sandrine Gouriou, and later adding Steven Young, Seize released their debut EP Blades in 1999. In 2001, their debut album Lunacy was released to critical acclaim in all areas EBM. A mix of trip hop and electronica.

The Other Side of Your Mind was released in 2003. Now with Rosie Harris on board, this anglo-french trio took their style more towards breakbeat. Indeed, their website states ‘breakbeat electronica’ on their strapline. With this album, we have a more electronic, danceable version of first-album Kosheen – perhaps their closest comparison.

Musically and lyrically, things are all a bit on a downer. Opening track The Other Side launches with “One single word. Can change everything. Try to make it work. For you and me.” And it doesn’t get any better from there. The crunching dub-break of 100 Years is all obsessive devotion: “I’m locked in a cell. Since the day you left. I won’t try to escape. Just for you I’ll wait.” It’s also a track that exhibits the lovely, exotic nature of Sandrine’s voice, which sounds vaguely eastern european.

Fortunately there are ups. Unbreakable has gated pads which bring the song into trance territory. However, there are thumping bass drums which take the song slightly off the commercial line. That said, the entire album has many aspects which are commercially attractive. Too Good to Be True, my personal favourite, launches with electronic handclaps, moves seamlessly between euro-pop to trance, and successfully takes the band away from it’s breakbeat formulae.

But they really do need to tidy up couple of the arrangements. For example, the awfully amateur synth backing to the chorus of Eyes Water should have been rewritten. And there are songs which simply outstay their welcome. Astute editing of the endings of some tracks would have made this twelve track album more attractive and certainly shorter than its 60 minute running time.

One area that Seize have spot on is intros. They know how to write intros. It’s not simply straight into a song. Seize use intros to set or change a mood, or to introduce elements of a track which get recalled or reworked later. Much like classical music does. There are some delightful melodies hidden away. Similarly, there are inventive breaks and drops. The aforementioned 100 Years diverts briefly from its intentional strident breakbeat backing for a foray into jungle.

Lost in Space has a good example of an intro that takes the listener into a spacey, ambient environment, which after what has gone before it, is a useful trick.

Weird Dreams is one of the two tracks that bring the album to a close. This is full of swirling dubbiness, leading into the beautiful string-laden Who Am I, which is all sad, sleepy, but strangely uplifting. Maybe it’s just me?

Seize have just released the debut album of their O.V.N.I. side project (that’s Objet volant non identifié, by the way), and there’s some shock news that they are now all members of the recently relaunched Visage. Strange indeed!

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Excuse me while I

Read on last.fm:

“Maybe off topic, but does it send all songs that I listen to or only those where I listen through the whole song? Because most often I only listen to the first 3 min of the song and then skip to the next one.”

Ah.. all those unfinished books, half-cooked meals, destinations never reached, films with unknown endings.

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Musical Snapshots

‘On The Go’ iPod playlists, have, until yesterday passed me by. I usually create these playlists as a shortcut way of creating a set of albums I want to listen to so that I don’t have to fiddle around with my iPod between albums. With an On The Go playlist I can listen to one album straight after another.

But yesterday whilst I was visiting my dad, and watching the rain fall at The Oval I decided to create an On The Go playlist. A quick few minutes scroll up and down to bash in 28 songs, then onto shuffle mode. Bingo! A playlist of where my head was at yesterday.

Which brings me onto Musical Snapshots: a collection of dated playlists reflecting my mood on that day, or what I fancy listening to. They are half random; half intentional. And with folders in iTunes 5 I can hide them away as a musical archive.

Furthermore, with AppleScript I can grab an On The Go playlist from an iPod and put it back into my iTunes library.

So what about the iPod nano? Well, like the iPod shuffle, it’s great for mix albums since there’s no skipping and no extra battery drain. But I now have a list of three types of content:

  • DJ Mixes – I have a iTunes genre specifically for these things
  • Notable albums – mainly ones I’ve just bought that I want to listen to
  • Musical snapshots

..leaving my larger iPod more as a general music library.

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Emm Gryner: Billy Hang On

Okay, so this is the third day I was thinking of making this my Track of the Day. Now I have. And yes I am a sucker for female vocals and piano.

Taken from the currently ultra-exclusive, home made, hand made Great Lakes CD.

Well, it was either this or Star/Crossed.

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Na New Nano

Kerklunk.

That’s the sound of my iPod shuffle hitting my waste basket.

Now that there’s the gorgeous pouting black iPod nano.

iTunes 5 has folders, which means I can dump all my ‘working’ playlists into one place. Folders can also be used in Smart Folders as ‘Playlist’ criteria. So make sure you name folders differently from any playlist, otherwise you’ll get mighty confused.

There’s also a Smart Shuffle feature which I’ve just employed.

Seems all is cool in the world of Apple, apart from ugly stick alert in iTunes 5. Open it and you’ll see why :-(

I didn’t mention the phone, did I? Quite right too.

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Freesat

Many months ago, if not a year or so, Sky launched a much under publicised service which allowed you to buy a satellite box from them and a card which gave you free, unsubscribed access to all the free to air/view satellite services. It’s called Freesat.

Today, I learn that the BBC and ITV are to launch a free-to-view satellite TV service to cater for viewers unable to receive Freeview digital coverage, carrying all the BBC and ITV digital TV, interactive and radio services, plus ‘other channels’. The BBC’s Director General said the announcement ‘paved the way’ for nationwide free digital television. They’re calling it Freesat.

The BBC have always owned the Freesat name, but until now have done nothing with it. Personally, I can’t see the point, unless it makes Sky publicise their version. In which case – spot the difference.

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