Whether it's your first Bonnaroo or you’re a music festival veteran, we welcome you to Inforoo.
Here you'll find info about artists, rumors, camping tips, and the infamous Roo Clues. Have a look around then create an account and join in the fun. See you at Bonnaroo!!
Hey if you're on ? you should subscribe to Glorybox and evilurges collages. They always put up a lot of great albums/singles/eps and they stay really on top of things.
Hey if you're on ? you should subscribe to Glorybox and evilurges collages. They always put up a lot of great albums/singles/eps and they stay really on top of things.
Post by nodepression on Apr 18, 2012 13:33:22 GMT -5
Click on that Actress link on ?. There should be something down below the bit rate choices that say "This album is in "x" personal collage. Click on the collage and at the top it should have something to subscribe. Then any time they add something to their collage you'll get a little notification.
It might be different on different skins though. I'm not really sure.
Post by awolfthedoor on Apr 19, 2012 13:11:01 GMT -5
Ummm....hype!
The creative catalyst of the trip will feed into his next record this year, Ghettoville, a "sequel" to Hazyville that he's planning to record in Jamaica, where he'll "smoke a lot of weed and see what happens".
I've been thinking recently about the concept of "timeless" music. Not music in the sense of it transcending time, and being just as cool/excellent/relevant now as it was 40 years ago (Beatles, Stones, etc.), but music that is timeless in that you can't really tell when it was created, and could have just as easily been produced last week as 10 years ago. "Since I Left You" is one of those types of albums - they started it in 1998, it was released in 2000, but if you put it in my hand today and said it came out last week, I wouldn't question it.
For the record, the album that inspired this line of thinking was "The Shape of Punk to Come."
You should read this,
Pretty much an entire book about the idea of timelessness and music and how it's getting rarer and rarer. And also how it's almost inevitable.
I've been thinking recently about the concept of "timeless" music. Not music in the sense of it transcending time, and being just as cool/excellent/relevant now as it was 40 years ago (Beatles, Stones, etc.), but music that is timeless in that you can't really tell when it was created, and could have just as easily been produced last week as 10 years ago. "Since I Left You" is one of those types of albums - they started it in 1998, it was released in 2000, but if you put it in my hand today and said it came out last week, I wouldn't question it.
For the record, the album that inspired this line of thinking was "The Shape of Punk to Come."
You should read this,
Pretty much an entire book about the idea of timelessness and music and how it's getting rarer and rarer. And also how it's almost inevitable.