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Buckethead

Blog

12…31Próximo
  • Guess Music Melody (Pack 6) - Join the game!

    Jul 2 2009, 22h25 por VirtuousGod

    Same rules, same game, and I'm back with another 25 track pack.


    PACK 6 (25 tracks) -> Pack 6 download


    Total Scores of all packs here.



    If you have some doubts about the rules or want to see pack 1 songs and score, click here.


    Join, enjoy the challenge and get to know some bands.

    ______________________________________________________________


    PACK 6 (25 tracks) -> Pack 6 download

    This pack contains: progressive metal, heavy metal, power metal, symphonic metal, classic rock, metal, hard rock, progressive rock, instrumental rock


    3...2...1...START!!


    ______________________________________________________________



    Tracks Guessed:


    1- Eden's Curse- The Voice Inside (gordonluckman)
    2- Lordi - Hard Rock Hallelujah (Masterwork2k)
    3- Andy McKee - Common Ground (Masterwork2k)
    4- Circus Maximus (gordonluckman) - ???
    5- Symphony X - Oculus Ex Inferni (Jockelarsson)
    6- Dream Theater - Rite of Passage (Masterwork2k)
    7- Almah - Beyond tomorrow (Jockelarsson)
    8- Stratovarius - Black Diamond (xxX-fabio-Xxx)
    9-
    10- Mastodon - Sleeping Giant (Masterwork2k)
    11-
    12- Scorpions - Deep and Dark (Jockelarsson)
    13- Xutos e Pontapés (Masterwork2k) - ???
    14- Liquid Tension Experiment - Freedom of Speech (gordonluckman)
    15- Stone Sour - Made of Scars (Masterwork2k)
    16-
    17- Dream Theater - Count of Tuscany (Masterwork2k)
    18-
    19- Nightwish - The Islander (Onieo)
    20- G3 - Foxey Lady (Jockelarsson)
    21- Heaven & Hell - Atom and Evil (Jockelarsson)
    22-
    23- Iron Maiden - Caught Somewhere In Time (Jockelarsson)
    24-
    25-



    Tracks Not Guessed:

    ...






    ______________________________________________________________

    Pack 6 Score:

    Masterwork2k - 13 points
    Jockelarsson - 12 points
    gordonluckman - 5 points
    Onieo - 2 points
    xxX-fabio-Xxx - 2 points




    ______________________________________________________________

    (Just connections):
    Dream Theater Sonata Arctica John Petrucci Nightwish Symphony X Metallica Sabaton Led Zeppelin Katatonia Paradise Lost Ayreon Buckethead Iron Maiden Within Temptation HammerFall Disturbed Scorpions Steve Vai Joe Satriani Circus Maximus Epica Ozzy Osbourne Opeth Tool Dire Straits The Old Dead Tree Helloween Threshold Liquid Tension Experiment Pink Floyd System of a Down Queen Led Zeppelin Guns N' Roses Rammstein Ensiferum Disturbed Majesty Megadeth
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  • Bands I've Seen Live

    Jun 28 2009, 15h09 por bRoWsKii

    Tuesday 7 October 2008
    That 1 Guy
    Buckethead

    Saturday 30 May 2009
    On Wings Of Grace
    Modern Hearts Break Faster
    Phone Calls From Home
    These Green Eyes

    Saturday 27 June 2009
    Goodbye Terminal
    Amido Black
    Least We Remember
    Elotheos
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  • Mind, Melody, Mood and Meaning: An Enquiry into Music

    Jun 21 2009, 21h58 por Mobilicorpus

    ‘Without music, life would be a mistake.’
    - Friedrich Nietzsche
    Well, the old dude knew what he was talking about. Although one may question its truthfulness in these troubled times of the 21st century – when artists like Jonas Brothers have gained an unexpected amount of followers and System of a Down have happily overtaken Led Zeppelin in overall play count - the fact remains that music, as a whole, is such an integral part of our lives, of the mind, of our humanity, that we cannot conceive a world without it. One is compelled to ask why: just what is it about music that makes it so necessary, so natural, that we can’t imagine life without it?

    The question is not an easy one to answer, even superficially: nor is it an isolated one, for as soon as you’ve asked it, you’ve asked several other questions as well. How does music transcend the sensory barrier to become what many listeners and composers call a ‘spiritual’ experience? Why does a song you used to listen to as a child bring back memories in all their sharpness, all their vividness – making the experience akin to almost going back in time? Why do some songs make you want to dance, or cry, or, in the case of My Chemical Romance, slash your ears? How are you able to derive comfort and joy from a sad song?

    All those questions are Big Ones, indeed (although I am inclined to think that none of them are more mysterious than the question of why Miley Cyrus is listened to by 239,419 people; a mystery far deeper than them all). Ahem, anyway. So, in this particular journal, I shall try expound on and answer them. To be rather straightforward: I should like to tell you beforehand that this is not going to be one of those dreary, dull, impossible-to-understand ‘theses’- you know, the ones in which folks with balding heads and grimy faces express a few simple truths in grandiose terms, with sentence constructions so complicated they are likely to cause you to rupture a blood vessel or two. No, I intend this to be simply a general study into the matter. Although in some parts I express views that are strongly analytical and hence arguable, I should like to state the scientific parts dealing with it document well-researched facts.

    I do not proclaim to be any kind of ‘authority’ or ‘expert’ on the subject (I despise those terms). I’m any other average eighteen year old girl and therefore do not assert any authority – I only lay claim to general inquiry and curiosity. So, if you’ve any ideas or views of your own on the subject, whether similar or totally opposite, feel free to discuss them in the comments.

    [/end boring preamble]

    If you managed to traverse through that and are not already asleep over your keyboard right now, I shall now assume it safe to proceed. I’m gonna divide the study of music into three main categories, mainly:

    Psychological – in what ways music influences the brain, how different music manages to invoke emotion from the listener, etc.
    Philosophical/Analytical – the need for music, its role in creative self-expression, why it is the most abstract of all arts, etc.
    Social –how music influences the society, cultures, the interaction of music with the listener, the Artist vs the Society, the contemporary music scene and the role of technology, etc.

    I. Psychological


    Hector Berlioz, the famous French composer, once broke down completely during the performance of a Beethoven symphony. He was approached by a fellow-listener, who, seeing Berlioz sobbing uncontrollably, offered consolation: ‘You seem to be greatly affected, Monsieur,’ he remarked gently. ‘Had you not better retire for a while?’ ‘Are you under impression,’ Berlioz snapped, ‘that I am here to enjoy myself?’

    Berlioz’s statement challenges our ordinary conception about music. The commonly held view is that music is a means of sensory pleasure: intended to provide you with enjoyment. While this in itself is true to a degree, no doubt, the whole truth consists of something much deeper. Imagine pleasure, imagine enjoyment, imagine satisfaction – imagine all these, experienced at all times, taken in blindly externally, the edges blunted, neutralised, done away with. They dim the feeling, suppress emotion, flatten the experience, defuse the senses. Something taken in purely for the sake of satisfaction has to wear out sometime and indeed, it does gradually.
    That is why, the music that endures is the music that invokes a deep emotional response. A response that touches a chord of sympathy within the listener. That said, it does not mean that the response should be sad – it can range from sadness to humour to jealousy to happiness. Happinesss, as opposed to pleasure. Jealousy, anger, sadness and joy are all emotions, and it is these emotions that for the listener make music what it is: it goes beyond the gratification of the senses.

    Why Sad Music Makes You Happy, and vice versa

    I would now like to touch on a sub-question: Why does sad music make you happy? To answer it, we must first fully understand what the question really implies – and it is not what it seems. I think I had better illustrate this by contrasting examples.

    Gary Jules’ cover of Mad World is an excellent case in point. Overall, one would be disposed to call it a pretty depressive song. It is gloomy, brooding, lamenting. My Dying Bride’s TocarFor My Fallen Angel , right from the first second, grips you with its opening violin notes and holds you in unimaginable torment and anguish. There are no lyrics – only spoken words come in later in the song, yet from the start, the music itself tends to invoke extreme emotional response in the listener. Further, Keane’s TocarShe Has No Time , Pink Floyd’s Wish You Were Here , Porcupine Tree’s Where We Would Be (that solo!), Muse’s TocarUnintended , Jeff Buckley’s TocarHallelujah , The Beatles’ Yesterday , Beth Gibbon’s Show , Anathema’s TocarOne Last Goodbye (okay, enough examples) – all of them serve as ‘sad’ songs. What ‘sad’ here means is, on a superficial level, the lyrics and on the deeper, the underlying element of emotion expressed in the music, in the voice and the notes. Not in words.

    It is this inherent sadness, this genuine, unadulterated feeling of the artist that bowls us along into living the song, into experiencing that sadness ourselves. We assume the place of the artist – we are able to place ourselves in the picture. This mutual affinity, this connection born out of the genuine feeling makes the song more real to us, and consequently, a part of us. That is why we are able to derive comfort from sad songs. And that is why it makes us ‘happy’ – but it is a different kind of happiness, which I would be foolish to even begin to describe, for it is a happiness that cannot be expressed in words.

    On to the other extreme, I don’t know if there are others who actually feel ‘sad’ over supposed ‘happy’ songs, but I personally do tend to get ‘sad’ over particular songs that are clearly not supposed to be sad. For example, Pink Floyd’s Green Is the Colour , Explosions in the Sky’s TocarYour Hand in Mine , Regina Spektor’s TocarFidelity , Anathema’s TocarTemporary Peace , Johan Sebastian Bach’s Air , Balmorhea’s TocarTruth , Shubert’s Ave Maria , Buckethead’s TocarFor Mom - all of these serve as excellent examples. They do not offer depressive lyrics, they do not contain a sad note. Yet the sadness is there – just beneath the surface. Not in the song itself, but in your response to it.

    Beauty is tremulously attached to fragility, and when confronted with true beauty, true art, art that is as close possible to truth as can be – it makes you feel ‘sad’. That is not precisely the right word: because it’s again a different kind of sadness, something that you only experience when you confront that ideal of art, beauty. The kind that makes you stop dead in your tracks, the one that catches you unawares, the one that holds you, pins you down and simultaneously makes you feel lighter than air, the one that makes you aware of something you knew and yet didn’t realise before. It needn’t be music – it applies to all art – Michelangelo’s Pieta, Vincent Van Gogh’s Lovers, all represent the ideal of that very rare and very wonderful, beauty.

    We can now understand why music works in such strange ways. Why art indeed, works in such strange ways. As general, common-sense proposition, happy music tends to make you happy – perfectly logical. Similarly, sad music makes you sad. Again, perfectly logical. But, when the thought, the experience, the emotion are pursued to their depths, to create a musical experience of such intensity, a creation of such artistry, the experience turns around, art reveals itself, the reflection reverses itself to become the real thing, art no more imitates life, art becomes life.

    Does Music Determine the Personality, or Does Personality Determine the Music?

    The question seems simple enough at first glance: don’t get deceived by it, for it is a curiously cunning one. Consider for one moment, two people, let’s call them….hmm, shall we call them Proton and Electron? (Oh well, in tribute to my love of particles.) Right then, Proton and Electron are both your average teenagers living ordinary lives. Proton is a happy-go-lucky sort, she gets by doing fairly well at school, has enough friends, seems content with her life. Electron is too a person for whom things are average enough, but he feels discontent, unbelonged, betrayed. Nothing seems to satisfy him. The world to him looks like a giant, staged play: full of actors clamouring for roles.

    Now, what music are Proton and Electron likely to listen to? At first you may say Proton is likely to listen The Beatles, or U2 or Muse or the like. Electron, you would be inclined to say, is more likely to listen Windir or Slayer or Type O Negative or Chopin. You may be right, but it is just as well that Proton enjoys Slayer or Electron likes The Beatles.

    The tastes overlap, do the personalities too?

    Now you are in a deadlock; for where do the personalities come in, and where the music? In what way do they respond to each other? The answers to these questions seem elusive because our approach towards them is conventional, limited: we tend to think in genres. Genres do not define everything. Which is not to say they are useless. Genres have their uses, of course.

    You can classify sound. Can you classify music?

    Not in terms of genres, that’s for sure. Take death metal and take classical – opposite ends of the spectrum, completely different in sound – but in music? Who can tell? Can you say Death’s TocarOpen Casket does not express, in its own ways, similar sentiments found in Frederic Chopin’s Funeral March?
    Thus, in order to answer this question completely, without ambiguity, we take not only the psychology of the individual, nor only the nature of music – but the interaction of both. Music can make you feel, it can make you happy or it can make you rage. Your brain responds to a particular music in its own ways.
    Thus, personality of an individual to an extent determines what music they listen to, and similarly, the music too affects the personality to a certain degree.

    Does Music Make You Smarter?

    Studies have shown that the human brain responds to a challenging piece of music in the same way as it does to a complex problem in maths or science. The link between mathematics and music has been previously established, of course. It also commonly agreed by educators that abstract concepts such as ratios, fractions, etc become more concrete when applied in their musical contexts.
    A commonly observed, and particularly interesting, phenomenon is the Mozart Effect: the discovery suggests that students who listen to Mozart for 10 minutes on a regular basis perform better in spatial-temporal tests.

    Among other psychological effects:

    • It is proven that people who sing on a regular basis rank higher on the happiness scale.
    • In a study of music as a painkiller, people listening to happy music reported 20% less pain than other patients under the same conditions with no music.
    • Music is beneficial to people undergoing medical procedures.
    • Children taught the piano at the age of six are more likely to witness an increase in their IQ
    • It is scientifically proven that music helps patients suffering from stroke recover faster.


    The Heavy Metal Connection

    Stuart Cadwallader and Professor Jim Campbell of The National Academy for Gifted and Talented Youth at the University of Warwick came to the conclusion that gifted students who feel the pressure of their ability could be using Heavy Metal music to get rid of negative emotions. The researchers’ conclusion is that the pressures associated with being gifted and talented can be temporarily forgotten with the aid of music.

    II. Philosophical


    Why Music Exists

    Because music has always been around, it is easy underestimate its presence. Just imagine, for one moment, that it did not exist, that folk songs, Pink Floyd, and that annoying ‘HEY HEY, YOU YOU, I DON’T LIKE YOUR GIRLFRIEND’ blasting out of the radio didn’t exist (although you would be grateful for the last one, wouldn’t you?). There would never be a Stairway to Heaven . Nor would anyone sing at weddings and birthdays.

    And then, of course, it all begins to look too unreal. Too implausible. Just as well, because as long there is humanity, there will be music. It is curious that the human foetus, at 16 weeks, starts functioning in the auditory system, which is the first of the brain systems to function. Ten weeks later, it has a functioning brain system around it, which means that you are musically receptive long before anything else.
    One is led to question, why do we need music? Why this inborn need of a melody? Music, above else, is a manifestation of ideas, a means of self expression, a communication of feeling. Humanity owes its sustenance to these very reasons, and therefore music will always be around.

    Music is also our claim to humanity, what connects us with others: a universal channel of empathy. That is true for all art. Every time a person reads a book or picks up a painting or listens to a song, they become a little less lonely.

    Why Music Is the Most Abstract of All Arts

    Music on its own is the most independent and abstract form of art. Its effects are seen on physical as well psychological levels. It is something that exists separately and independently, for neither does it borrow directly from the material world, nor does it reflect a model in nature. Art on it own is a ‘mirror’ of the world which echoes it depth and its scope, but music is not a reflection, it is the thing itself. – For it is, after all, not a mere imitation of anything in nature.

    You can draw a vase or a running stream, or write poems on the most commonplace things but what do you create a melody from? Nothing, it has to come from yourself.

    Perhaps the most strange and wonderful thing about music is that it’s going on. It’s happening! It’s right now, it’s unraveling itself every second, it’s never static – always dynamic, forever changing. The very mechanism of music is constituted that way. Because life itself is a flow, music perhaps is the art form truest to life.

    ‘Becoming One With the Art’ or how the Moonlight Sonata got written

    It is a common experience, for any musician – professional or amateur – when they put their fingers to the keys, unaware of what they are going to play one moment, and the next moment, it just comes to the mind. It’s almost as if the melody writes itself on the canvas of silence. As if the instrument plays itself.

    Where do we draw the line then, between the Artist, and his or her Art?

    One very important, and frequently misunderstood and misrepresented of the whole thing is: Music is identification. Whether as an artist, or as a listener, in response to the notes that flow out of the instrument or the speakers and reach your ears, you place yourself in the picture, you connect with the melody, and thus, as a whole, you identify with the music. You find that something in the song, and that something makes you want to listen to it again and again. You don’t know what it is – you can’t quite put your finger on it, but it’s there.

    This means, music exists because the artist, the composition and the listener unite as one to produce the overall musical experience. It is this interaction between the song and the listener that constitutes music. It follows then, that music can be interpreted in different ways by different individuals. Our response to the song varies and that is why each song is special in its own way.

    There is an interesting story behind how Beethoven came to write his famous TocarMoonlight Sonata. The story goes that, one late evening, while on his way home, he came across a house from which he could hear some of his compositions being practised. He then overheard a girl’s voice, saying that she wished a real artist would play it.

    He went into the house, and noticing that the girl at the piano was blind, offered to play the piece himself. While he played his beautiful music, the moon steadily shone down on the house outside. Beethoven was so inspired, so much ‘into the experience’ of playing the music, he created his Moonlight Sonata on the spot.

    III. Social

    Legend has it that Napoleon Bonaparte took particular care to see that music played while the troops were preparing for war. He was shrewd enough to realise the effect of music on marching troops: it put them in frenzy, it put a spring in their step, it filled them up with a strange sort of enthusiasm.

    The Beatles stopped playing live in ’66 because the noise of the audience was so loud, their excitement so utterly and completely present, that the band couldn’t hear their own instruments over the din.

    In their earliest days, Black Sabbath were denounced and feared by the general public: their new style of distorted music and unconventional lyrics horrified and outraged them. People were terrified of them and their music.

    Bob Dylan’s songs became the anthems of peace in the 60s and 70s, the protest against the war in Viet Nam was a war on the social front, and it has music at its forefront.

    Music is expression of individuality, individuality is originality, originality is resistance. A refusal be brainwashed the conventional modes of thinking, to fit into the mould of the public opinion.

    Is There Too Much Music in the World?

    Modern technology has given way to cheaper, smaller, and easier modes of creating, listening to, and sharing music.

    Artists are in danger of becoming factories. Music is in danger of being made a commodity. Like cereal packets. Manufacture, package, sell.

    Sure, there is good music around – some of the best there has been in decades, post-rock, metal, prog rock. But the rising popularity of ‘indie’ rock is a worrying trend.
    Music is everywhere. It’s ubiquitous and intrusive. In a world where music exists in all places and at all times, its value gets diminished. Silence becomes costly and is paid for by music, music becomes constrained and is paid for by mediocrity.

    Music, Technology and the Future

    There are those who argue against digital music, saying that it isn’t ‘real music’. One can understand where that comes from; but then it is rather like asking, should I write with a pen or a pencil, or should I type it? Do I paint in water colours or oil pastels? Instrument is only the means, melody is the manifestation, music is the meaning. In the end, it’s music that matters.

    There is a resistance against music piracy: I for one think it’s a lost battle. I think it will only get worse with time.

    When you make music, you’re doing something really quite simple: you’re expressing yourself. You have to express it in your own voice so that it’s not lost in the chorus of a billion other voices under the sun. An artist has to place his or her self in the picture, make connections, join the dots.

    If you lose these links, you lose everything. Originality stagnates into repetition. Innovation into imitation. Music into noise.

    Clive Davis once asked John Lennon what sort of music he was listening to, and was stunned by the Beatle's reply: ‘Nothing.’
    ‘Nothing?’ Davis replied. ‘Don't you want to know what's being played?’
    ‘Absolutely not!’ Lennon replied. ‘Did Picasso go to the galleries to see what was being painted?’

    So It All Boils Down To…

    Listen and let listen. That’s it.
    *

    Coldplay Bob Dylan Radiohead BurzumRed Hot Chili PeppersBathoryImmortal Lady GaGaMuse Britney Spears Morbid Angel Dissection Kings of LeonMGMT PlaceboParamoreIron Maiden Lamb of GodQueenKataklysmYellowcardRise AgainstKillswitch EngageCryptopsy Porcupine TreeSteven Wilson Eminem WeezerRotting Christ Death Cab for Cutie Arctic Monkeys Nine Inch Nails The White StripesKaty PerrySatyricon Marilyn MansonVenom Slipknot The Doors Rage Against the MachineCannibal CorpseMassive Attack Amy WinehouseRihanna Avril LavigneTool In FlamesWindirBob Marley Keane Joy DivisionJimi HendrixRegina SpektorJason Becker SlayerDream Theater Bullet For My ValentineSymphony XJames LaBrieVaderBehemothBolt Thrower DeicideNile Within Temptation Job for a CowboyAudioslaveMarduk MayhemUlver Shining Taake FinntrollAmon Amarth Children of Bodom Opeth Suffocation Dimmu Borgir Wolves in the Throne Room Virgin BlackEnrique IglesiasEnslavedNevermore Dark Funeral Emperor Carpathian ForestSiaImpaled Nazarene Anal CuntBruce Springsteen The Mars VoltaJudas Iscariot Akercocke Moonspell Satanic WarmasterAgallochNattefrostGerard Way David Gilmour Roger Waters Syd BarrettLifelover Smashing PumpkinsM.I.A.Devendra BanhartBeirut Amy MacdonaldSufjan StevensJeff Buckley Adolf HitlerKalmahVan HalenRamones PixiesCat Stevens Explosions in the Sky This Will Destroy You Caspian Mogwai God Is an AstronautMono Godspeed You! Black EmperorDo Make Say Think BalmorheaThe Album Leaf65daysofstaticSigur Rós Yndi Halda A Silver Mt. Zion Eluvium Forever the Sickest KidsEric Clapton BucketheadAC/DC Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Deep Purple Machine HeadTiamatJohn LennonFrédéric ChopinBlack Sabbath Lacuna CoilFlёurMadonna Nevermore DragonForce Pain of Salvation Bruce Dickinson SavatageDirty ThreeAtheist Ayreon Anti-Flag Less Than Jake Shape of DespairElvis Presley Frank Sinatra Coheed and CambriaDio Plain White T's Blackfield Nest Cake MotörheadManowarAlice Cooper Ludwig van BeethovenWolfgang Amadeus MozartColdplayCradle of FilthFall Out BoySystem of a DownNirvanaMuseThe BeatlesLinkin ParkMetallicaGuns N' RosesLed ZeppelinFoo FightersMegadethGreen DayPanic! At the DiscoGood CharlotteDeathPanteraParis HiltonMy Chemical RomanceTaking Back SundayThe UsedArch EnemyUnknownCarcassBrand NewAnathema My Dying BrideU2 Johan Sebastian BachPink FloydGary JulesDamien Rice

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  • Drugi rok na last.fm - podsumowanie ogólne

    Jun 7 2009, 13h48 por taivan90

    Po dwóch latach na last.fm mam:
    *ponad 75 tysięcy odtworzonych utworów
    *1998 artystów
    *204 posty
    *13 dzienników
    *72 znajomych
    *276 ulubionych utworów
    *72 utworów w playliście


    Pierwsza 50 wygląda tak:
    01. OutKast 2,284 odsłuchań
    02. O.S.T.R. 1,222 odsłuchań
    03. Korn 1,084 odsłuchań
    04. Jamiroquai 971 odsłuchań
    05. The Roots 967 odsłuchań
    06. A Tribe Called Quest 958 odsłuchań
    07. Michael Jackson 786 odsłuchań
    08. J Dilla 694 odsłuchań
    09. Q-Tip 657 odsłuchań
    10. Cool Kids of Death 654 odsłuchań
    11. System of a Down 639 odsłuchań
    12. Bakflip 627 odsłuchań
    13. Earth, Wind & Fire 591 odsłuchań
    14. Muse 525 odsłuchań
    15. De La Soul 489 odsłuchań
    16. will.i.am 454 odsłuchań
    17. Aerosmith 453 odsłuchań
    18. Republika 449 odsłuchań
    19. Afro Kolektyw 442 odsłuchań
    20. Buckethead 441 odsłuchań
    21. Deftones 423 odsłuchań
    22. Black Eyed Peas 417 odsłuchań
    23. CunninLynguists 416 odsłuchań
    23. Daft Punk 416v
    25. The Foreign Exchange 414 odsłuchań
    25. The Sisters of Mercy 414 odsłuchań
    27. Afront 408 odsłuchań
    28. Busta Rhymes 407 odsłuchań
    29. Queens of the Stone Age 404 odsłuchań
    30. Red Hot Chili Peppers 403 odsłuchań
    31. Common 401 odsłuchań
    32. Prince Paul 398 odsłuchań
    33. Thinkadelic 397 odsłuchań
    34. Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth 392 odsłuchań
    34. Obóz TA 392 odsłuchań
    36. Beastie Boys 390 odsłuchań
    37. Interpol 380 odsłuchań
    38. Zespół Reprezentacyjny 379 odsłuchań
    39. Foo Fighters 377 odsłuchań
    40. Łona 366 odsłuchań
    41. Aaliyah 363 odsłuchań
    42. Juno Reactor 359 odsłuchań
    43. DJ Shadow 357 odsłuchań
    44. Beck 348 odsłuchań
    45. Weezer 346 odsłuchań
    46. Herbie Hancock 340 odsłuchań
    47. eMC 336 odsłuchań
    48. Rage Against the Machine 329 odsłuchań
    49. Pharoahe Monch 328 odsłuchań
    50. Kanye West 323 odsłuchań

    Podsumowanie słowem pisanym:
    Pierwsza piątka mniej więcej utrzymała się na tym samym poziomie i jestem tym w miarę zaskoczony. Jedynie Jamiroqaui i Korn zamienili swoje miejsca, a nastąpiło to niedawno, bo w okolicach marca.
    Dalej zespoły zaczęły się mieszać. Część z nich wypadła nawet z 50. W ciagu teogo roku znikąd wzięły się moje odkrycia zeszłego roku: Q-Tip, Republika, Buckethead, Deftones, CunninLynguists, The Foreign Exchange, Interpol, Beck oraz pierwszy artysta jazzowy w 50-Herbie Hancock. Wypadły moje chwilowe muzyczne fascynacje takie jak: Rob Zombie, Elliott Smith, happysad, L.U.C. i not oraz kilku artystów, którzy gdzieś tam niżej się i utrzymjują swoje pozycje. Po Outlinie wciąż w 50 trzyma się eMC i Pharoahe Monch, który wydaje nową płytę, więc pewnie znajdzie się wyżej.
    W kwestii największej zmiany miejsc na plus to chyba Earth, Wind & Fire oraz Bakflip. Odsłuchań-bez wątpienia OutKast.
    Zmianą jest też to, że mam iPod'a, więc utwory kiedy chodzę po mieście też się pojawiają-to wyjaśnia różnicę w porównaniu do zeszłego roku. No i teraz nie ma u mnie sytuacji, żeby w tydzień jakiś artysta się pojawił w tej 50. Choć i tak mogą w ciągu nabjliższego roku nastąpić dalsze przetasowania. Zależy to tylko od tego jakie płyty wyjdą.
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  • 50 Questions about my top 50 artists

    Jun 7 2009, 13h33 por Cross-eyed

    1. How did you get into 29? (Journey)

    Hearing a couple of their songs on films :P

    2. What was the first song you ever heard by 22? (Michael Jackson)

    Smooth Criminal... I think

    3. What’s your favorite lyric by 33? (Buckcherry)

    I'm sorry I'm bad, I'm sorry I'm blue, I'm sorry bout all the things I said to you.

    4. What is your favorite album by 49? (Brazen Abbot)

    Live and Learn.

    5. How many albums by 13 do you own? (John 5)

    All of them, so that would be 5.

    6. What is your favorite song by 50? (Three Days Grace)

    I Hate Everything About You

    7. Is there a song by 39 that makes you sad? (Helloween)

    Nope

    8. What is your favorite album by 15? (Stratovarius)

    Elements, Part 1.

    9. What is your favorite song by 5? (Buckethead)

    Park Theme

    10. Is there a song by 6 that makes you happy? (Ari Koivunen)

    Yup, most of them do ^^

    11. What is your favorite album by 40? (Black Sabbath)

    Paranoid or Heaven and Hell.

    12. What is your favorite song by 10? (Iron Maiden)

    The Thin Line Between Love and Hate.

    13. What is a good memory you have involving 30? (UVERworld)

    First getting into them from the Anime Bleach :P

    14. What is your favorite song by 38? (Billy Talent)

    Red Flag

    15. Is there a song by 19 that makes you happy? (Avantasia)

    The Scarecrow and I don't believe in your love.

    16. How many times have you seen 25 live? (Lordi)

    None

    17. What is the first song you ever heard by 23? (HammerFall)

    Blood Bound

    18. What is your favorite album by 11? (X JAPAN)

    Dahlia

    19. Who is a favorite member of 1? (Marilyn Manson)

    Either Marilyn Manson or John 5, but he left.

    20. Have you ever seen 14 live? (Survivor)

    Nope

    21. What is a good memory involving 27? (Warmen)

    Hearing the lead singer of Children of Bodom doing a cover of Somebody's Watching Me :P

    22. What is your favorite song by 16? (Trivium)

    That's tough... Either Into the Mouth of Hell we March, Shogun or Dying in my Arms.

    23. What is the first song you ever heard by 47? (Disturbed)

    Down With the Sickness

    24. What is your favorite album by 18? (Jonathan Coulton)

    Thing a Week II, maybe?

    25. What is your favorite song by 21? (Sonata Arctica)

    The End of this Chapter or Gravenimage

    26. What is the first song you ever heard by 26? (The 69 Eyes)

    Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams

    27. What is your favorite album by 3? (Aerosmith)

    Pump or Permanant Vacation

    28. What is you favorite song by 22? (Michael Jackson)

    They don't Care about Us or Smooth Criminal

    29. What was the first song you ever heard by 32? (Bourbon Crow)

    Alcohol Express

    30. What is your favorite song by 8? (Metallica)

    Without a doubt, it must be All Nightmare Long.

    31. How many times have you seen 17 live? (Breaking Benjamin)

    None.

    32. Is there a song by 44 that makes you happy? (Bloodsimple)

    Dead Man Walking!

    33. What is you favorite album by 12? (Bon Jovi)

    Slippery When Wet or These Days

    34. What is the worst song by 45? (Jorn)

    Hmm... probably one of the less powerful ones from Starfire.

    35. What was the first song you ever heard by 34? (Timo Tolkki)

    I think it was The Message.

    36. What is your favorite album by 48? (DragonForce)

    Ultra Beatdown or Inhuman Rampage.

    37. How many times have you seen 42 live? (Elvenking)

    None.

    38. What is you favorite song by 36? (Yngwie Malmsteen)

    Another Time or Alone in Paradise

    39. What was the first song you ever heard by 28? (Creed)

    With Arms Wide Open

    40. What is your favorite album by 7? (Guns N Roses)

    Appetite for Destruction, of course!

    41. Is there a song by 31 that makes you happy? (Mendeed)

    Nope

    42. What is your favorite album by 41? (Mudvayne)

    The New Game

    43. What is your favorite song by 24? (Teräsbetoni)

    Metallitotuus

    44. What is a good memory you have involving 46? (blink-182)

    Them reforming ^^

    45. What is your favorite song by 35? (hide)

    Scanner

    46. Is there a song by 9 that makes you happy? (Lionel Richie)

    Yup, Dancing on the Ceiling.

    47. What is your favorite album by 4? (Alice Cooper)

    Without a Doubt, Trash.

    48. Who is a favorite member of 37? (Cradle of Filth)

    Well that could only be Dani Filth.

    49. What is the first song you ever heard by 43? (Dane)

    He's a comedian, so none.

    50. How many albums do you own by 20? (Bruce Dickinson)

    All 6 ;)




    God, I need to update my charts to more I actually like ><
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  • 2009 Releases

    Mai 22 2009, 17h44 por fuckingsystem

    so far:
    Hoobastank - For(n)ever (27th January)
    Buckethead - Slaughterhouse on the Prairie (30th January)
    Yngwie Malmsteen - Angels of Love (10th March)
    Papa Roach - Metamorphosis (24th March)
    Lipali - Trio (27th March)
    Widescreen Mode - The Hanging Man (9th April)
    Hunter - HellWood (14th April)
    Buckethead - A Real Diamond in the Rough (1st May)
    Buckethead - Forensic Follies (1st June)
    Placebo - Battle For The Sun (8th June)
    Idlewild - Post Electric Blues (11st June)
    Enter Shikari - Common Dreads (15th June)
    Korpiklaani - Karkelo (26th June)

    comming soon:
    Billy Talent - Billy Talent III (14th July)
    Rishloo - Feathergun (July)
    Just Jack - All Night Cinema (17th August)
    Mute Math - Armistice (18th August)
    Chevelle - Sci-Fi Crimes (8th September)
    Muse - The Resistance (14th September)
    Alice in Chains - Black Gives Way To Blue (29th September)
    Paradise Lost - Faith Divides Us, Death Unite Us (September)
    Switchfoot - Hello Hurricane (September)
    Deftones - Eros (October)
    Katatonia - (TBA) (late October)

    DJ-Kicks: Burial (TBA)
    Rahim - (TBA) (TBA)

    What's more, there are two pretty good news:
    return of Guano Apes
    A Perfect Circle is working on new material




    i'm full of hope :o))))


    and let me know if there's something interesting that i should know
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  • More realness

    Mai 20 2009, 23h10 por twIXta



    V/A The Sound Of Wonder!
    The Vampires of Dartmoore Dracula's Music Cabinet
    Raymond Scott And His Orchestra This Time With Strings
    Sunn O))) Monoliths&Dimensions
    Fennesz Black Sea
    Heltah Skeltah D.I.R.T. (Da Incredible Rap Team)
    Khanate Clean Hands Go Foul
    Gnaw This Face
    Peste Noire Ballade cuntre lo Anemi Francor
    Leviathan Massive Conspiracy Against All Life
    Vinterriket Der Letzte Winter - Der Ewigkeit Entgegen
    Vinterriket Kälte, Schnee Und Eis - Rekapitulation Der Winterszeit
    Даниел Спасов/Милен Иванов Благосовен си, Господи
    Abdel Hadi Halo & The El Gusto Orchestra Of Algiers
    I Heart Lung/dwmtg Excstatic Jazz Duos
    Screaming Headless Torsos Live!!
    David Fiuczynski KiF Express
    Rotten Sound Cycles
    Buckethead A Real Diamond In The Rough
    Buckethead Slaughterhouse On the Prairie
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  • Favorite albums for first part of the year 2009

    Mai 9 2009, 11h05 por arctcosinus

    Squash Bowels - The Mass Rotting, The Mass Sickening (2002)
    Napalm dead - Time Waits For No Slave (2009)
    Ludovico Einaudi - Divenire (2006)
    Equilibrium - Demo (2003)
    Azarath - Demon seed (2001)
    Missy Higgins - On A Clear Night (2007)
    Hiromi Uehara - Brain (2004)
    Rodus Merte - Zeitgeist (2009)
    Eros Necropsique - Crise De Lucidité (2003)
    Buckethead - Electric Tears (2006)
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  • bands i've seen live

    Mai 6 2009, 7h00 por arkmay

    updated may '09

    ALL TIME AWESOME

    David Bowie x 6
    Nine Inch Nails x 11
    Prince x 4
    Einsturzende Neubauten x 2
    Devo x2
    Billy Idol
    Tom Waits
    Maceo Parker x 2
    Colonel Claypool's Bucket of Bernie Brains
    Kraftwerk
    Peter Gabriel
    Paul Simon
    Mr. Bungle
    Maimou x 2
    Public Enemy
    Laibach x 2

    I'VE TOURED WITH

    Secret Chiefs 3 x 64
    Estradasphere x 146
    Sleepytime Gorilla Museum x 18
    Les Claypool x 21
    Saul Williams x 12
    Faun Fables x 4

    ROCK AND METAL

    Metallica x 3
    Dimmu Borgir x 2
    Finntroll
    Tool x 2
    King Crimson x 2
    DragonForce x 3
    Judas Priest
    Smashing Pumpkins x 2
    Black Sabbath
    Fantomas
    System of a Down technically x 2
    Bob Dylan
    NRBQ
    Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
    Buckethead
    Loudness
    Papa Roach
    The Rolling Stones
    Blue Oyster Cult
    Bow Wow Wow
    Tony Levin Band

    SUPER WORLD

    Taraf de Haidouks x 2
    Farmers Market x 3
    Dengue Fever x 2

    DARK CLOTHING

    Rammstein x 5
    And One
    Information Society
    Mindless Self Indulgence x 2
    VAST x 3
    Hanzel und Gretyl x 3
    Ministry
    Informatik
    Apoptygma Berzerk
    KMFDM x 3 (including MDFMK)
    Marilyn Manson
    Hole
    A Perfect Circle (technically x 3)
    Bauhaus
    Project Pitchfork
    Front 242
    dresden dolls (technically x 2)
    Skinny Puppy

    WHAT THE??

    Chris Isaak (technically)
    Ween x 3
    Midnight Star
    Man Man
    Justin Timberlake
    Britney Spears
    Pussycat Dolls
    Nelly Furtado
    Pink
    Sunn O)))
    Br. Danielson
    Danielson
    Peaches
    Stovokor
    Handsome Boy Modeling School
    Kool Keith
    The Jazz Butcher Conspiracy
    Soul Coughing
    Mike Doughty
    The Advantage
    Patti Smith
    They Might Be Giants x 3
    The Polyphonic Spree (technically x 2)
    Macy Gray (technically x 2)
    Squirrel Nut Zippers x 2
    The Mermen
    Tenacious D x 2
    Tricky
    Neil Hamburger x 5

    LOCALS AND FRIENDS OR SOMETHING!

    Zip Code Rapists
    Fishtank Ensemble x 3
    Daquiri
    The Stares
    Trigger Renegade x 5
    The Tuna Helpers
    Deepak Ram x 2
    Zeromind
    zonder x 3
    Impaled
    beautiful mutants x 2
    Master Musicians of Bukkake x 2
    The New Thrill Parade x 5
    Sheena
    Giraffes? Giraffes! x 2

    PLAYED IN
    God of Shamisen x 49
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  • Bands/artists I need to see live before they or I die...

    Abr 18 2009, 0h21 por BlisteringDDj

    I'm bored to effin' death, so here's a list of bands I have to see live, or some shit!

    Al Di Meola
    Alice Cooper
    Alice in Chains
    Allan Holdsworth
    Black Sabbath
    Buckethead
    Clutch
    Devil's Slingshot
    Diamond Head
    El Caco
    Extreme
    Faith No More
    Guthrie Govan
    Jeff Beck
    Joe Satriani
    John McLaughlin
    King's X
    KISS
    Lamb of God
    Liquid Tension Experiment
    Mastodon
    Megadeth
    Nevermore
    Opeth
    Ozzy Osbourne
    Paul Gilbert
    Pearl Jam
    Planet X
    Porcupine Tree
    Primus
    Rage Against the Machine
    Rush
    Slayer
    Steve Vai
    Testament
    The Jelly Jam
    Tony Macalpine
    Tool
    Van Halen


    Too late for:

    Audioslave
    Brand X
    Death
    Frank Zappa
    Jimi Hendrix
    Mahavishnu Orchestra
    Mr. Big
    Soundgarden
    Span
    The Clash
    Trouble

    Seen Live:

    Deep Purple
    Dream Theater
    Symphony X
    Dio
    Stage Dolls
    Ian Hunter
    Nazareth
    Primal Fear
    U.D.O.
    Vamp

    I haven't seen many bands yet, mainly because almost all of the concerts here in Norway are 18+, but when I'm 18... Heeell Yeeeaaah!
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