New Slow Dancing Society Release Set for November

Slow Dancing Society Hidden Shoal Recordings has announced that Drew Sullivan, better known as Slow Dancing Society, is set to release a new record November 6, 2007. The title is The Slow and Steady Winter and apparently it's the first half of a double album, the second half of which will arrive sometime in 2008.

There's a preview track available via the Slow Dancing Society MySpace profile, and you can learn a bit more about the new record via the announcement at Hidden Shoal Recordings.

Ambient Music Links, October 2nd

There's more where this came from at del.icio.us/ambientmusicblog.

The Prepared Piano, Hauschka

The Prepared Piano, Hauschka The Prepared Piano from German artist Hauschka is quite a nice bit of piano music. Melodic and then dissonant in equal parts, it works as background music and still rewards close listening. From Hauschka's official site:

Hauschka is the alias of Dusseldorf?based pianist / composer Volker Bertelmann, whose work is based upon an exploration of the possibilities of the 'prepared' piano - a playfully disruptive intervention into the preconceived idea of the piano as a pure-toned, perfected instrument waiting for a gifted virtuoso to play on it.

Worth a listen, regardless of whether your taste in ambient tends towards the electronic or the "natural."

Related Haushcka MySpace profile Official Hauschka Web site

iPod Classic, 80gb Review

About two years ago, I bought a first generation 4gb iPod Nano. At the time, it was exactly what I needed: something small that would carry the small amount of music I was currently listening to. I was growing tired of carrying around my heavy 2G 10gb iPod. For about about 20% of the size and weight of the iPod, I got about 50% of the capacity. That seemed like a great trade off at the time.

Fast-forward a few years, and I found the Nano, which still works perfectly, not to be serving my new needs. For the past few months I had been considering purchasing yet another iPod, and the reason was capacity. My 4gb and 10gb iPods, regardless of their physical size, just weren't cutting it.

In short, here's why I was looking for more capacity:

  1. I download around a gigabyte of music a month, and if I don't listen to it all regularly enough, I don't have enough iPod capacity to keep it on hand. That means good music gets buried and not heard.
  2. Because I like to listen to rock music at the gym, I was employing a 2 iPod rotation policy. Nano for new stuff, mostly ambient, and 2G iPod for the gym. It gets old pulling headphones off of one iPod to wrap them around another at 5:45 a.m.

Just before the new iPod lineups were announced, I had considered upgrading to the 80gb size, which at the time was the largest. I have a reasonable amount of music, but I'm not one of these people with 100's of gigabytes in their collection. 80gb would serve my needs for probably another couple years, assuming I don't get into watching video, which I don't see happening. Unfortunately, the physical size of the old 80gb iPod was a turn off. It was just too bulky. So I waited.

But when the new iPod lineup was announced last week, and when I saw that new, slimmer 80gb model in Steve Jobs' hands, the decision was made.

I've been living with the iPod Classic 80gb for a week now, and here's the verdict:

  1. The physical size is great. It's slimmer than an iPhone, and the metal face has quite a nice feel. It's maybe a touch on the heavy side, but when you figure that it has the same hard drive capacity as the PowerBook I'm currently typing on, it doesn't seem all that bad.
  2. The 80gb capacity means I can have every ambient music track in my library on hand. This means in the last week I've listened to some old favorites I'd forgotten about, and discovered some old downloads I didn't know I actually liked.
  3. The new interface is a touch on the flaky side, but it seems software related and will likely be improved in future updates. Also, I didn't buy the thing for new features, I bought purely for more capacity.
  4. This is my first iPod capable of playing video. I did watch an Arsenal podcast on the subway coming home from class the other night, but otherwise watching video still seems a bit gimmicky to me. This though is coming from a guy who doesn't watch many TV shows or movies. If I could get football matches and/or highlights onto the thing easily, I can see me changing my tune on this.
  5. In all, I'm pleased with my purchase. And for $249.99, 80gb seems almost astonishing sometimes. In the end, an iPod is an iPod is an iPod, and if you have similar capacity needs or listening habits to mine, you'd do well to look at the iPod Classic.

Wordless Music Series Schedule Firmed Up

Wordless Music Series I've posted about this before, but for the New Yorkers reading, you should know that it looks like the fall program for the Wordless Music Series has firmed up. I've got tickets for the November 11th performance of Múm, Hauschka, and Bing and Ruth/David Moore. Quite a few other great performances are scheduled, including shows featuring Colleen and Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood.

Ambient Music Links, September 15th

There's more where this came from at del.icio.us/ambientmusicblog.

Scattered Practices, Ezekiel Honig

Scattered Practices, Ezekiel Honig I mentioned Early Morning Migration a while back, the Ezekiel Honig and Morgan Packard collaboration. Well, lately I've been listening to Honig's 2006 release Scattered Pieces, and it's work of really nice quiet electronic sounds. It sounds like what I imagine a laundromat sounds like at 3am. Just quietly pumping along, and if you listen closely the dryers actually do sound different as the clothes get closer to dry.

Related Ambient Music Blog: Early Morning Migration, Ezekiel Honig & Morgan Packard Ezekiel Honig Wikipedia entry Ezekiel Honig MySpace profile

Air Curtain, Fourcolor

Air Curtain, Fourcolor Speaking of 12k records, Air Curtain by Japanese artist Fourcolor is a superb record. Nice rolling textured melodies which a touch of blips and tech sounding glitch playing subtly in the background. Really quality stuff, especially for those of you who tend to listen to more of the electronic end of things.

Related Fourcolor Profile at 12k records Cubicmusic.com

Parousia Fallacy, bpmf

Parousia Fallacy, bpmf Jason Szostek produces electronic music as bpmf. I recently got a copy of bpmf's Parousia Fallacy, and it's an interesting mix of synthy washes and spaced-out techno sounds. The best way I can describe it is it sounds like what a movie in say, 1984, would depict what a computer would sound like if it produced sound and you could hear it while it worked. And the the computer is maybe evil, or at least kind of weird and brooding. And also it speaks Russian.

Stop by bpmf.us, where you can preview tracks from the record.

Related bpmf MySpace Profile

Last.fm Normalised Rankings

I came across Last.fm normalised rankings recently, an interesting site that takes a look at your last.fm statistics and figures out which artists you've listened to for the most amount of time based on the average track lengths of songs. Perhaps unsurprisingly, I've spent 5,959 minutes listening to Stars of the Lid.

This kind of stuff really excites the info/data/web nerd in me. The more data in the world that's collected, and the more it's released and set free in standard formats, the more opportunities creative people have of finding ways to analyze and visualize it to help people make sense of things in their lives.

If you're a last.fm user, have a look at the Last.fm normalised rankings, it's pretty interesting.