• 5...4...3...2...fun!! playlist --2009 08 27--

    29 Sep 2009, 00:05 by Hoshwa

    mmmm yah! glad to be back! here is PART 1 of our 2-month tour recaps shows! this part included all the show from Fresno, CA to Seattle, WA. on tour with Backpack! and then i played most of our welcome home show!

    5...4...3...2...fun!!
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    Hop Scotch Heroes - Live @ Cafe Fresno Infoshop: Fresno, CA: June 24th, 2009
    Yesterday's Chonies - Live @ Cafe Fresno Infoshop: Fresno, CA: June 24th, 2009
    Kitchen - Live @ The Crystal Palace: Santa Cruz, CA: June 25th, 2009
    James Rabbit - Live @ The Crystal Palace: Santa Cruz, CA: June 25th, 2009
    Miguel from Oakland - Live @ Big Foot Ranch: San Francisco, CA: June 26th, 2009
    Poppet - Live @ The Pink House: Davis, CA: June 27th, 2009
    Cole Miller - Live @ The Tree House: Arcata, CA: June 29th, 2009
    Foot Ox - Live @ The Tree House: Arcata, CA: June 29th, 2009
    Stephen Steinbrink - Live @ The Tree House: Arcata, CA: June 29th, 2009
    Dustin and the Furniture - Live @ The Tree House: Arcata, CA: June 29th, 2009
    Ylime - Live @ The Tree House: Arcata, CA: June 29th, 2009
    Wabash - Live @ The Tree House: Arcata, CA: June 29th, 2009
    Sally Ford - Live @ The Greenhouse: Portland, OR: June 30th, 2009
    Generifus - Live @ The Northern: Olympia, WA: July 3rd, 2009
    June Madrona - Live @ The Northern: Olympia, WA: July 3rd, 2009
    Jason Clackley - Live @ Dancylvania: Seattle, WA: July 4th, 2009
    Sundance Kids - Live @ Dancylvania: Seattle, WA: July 4th, 2009

    Brando - Live @ Biko Garage: Isla Vista, CA: August 24th, 2009
    Bad Heart Bull - Live @ Biko Garage: Isla Vista, CA: August 24th, 2009
    Iji - Live @ Biko Garage: Isla Vista, CA: August 24th, 2009
    Fishboy - Live @ Biko Garage: Isla Vista, CA: August 24th, 2009
  • Official ANUS.com communique to all scenesters, hipsters and fakes

    4 Aug 2009, 20:40 by asgardsrei666

    You came into this genre, which had an idea of its own.

    Because you are weak, and you can't tell the difference between appearance and reality, you started using it for your own ends. To make yourself seem cool, either blockheaded kvlt or obliviously "open-minded."

    You thought things like Dethklok and brainless faux prog bands were really cool, in that ironic kind of hip way you like.

    Everything you have done has not been about the music. It has not been about art or culture. It has been about you and your failing egos.

    You want to make it a joke so you feel better about being the hopelessly normal and boring people you are. You want to hide how ordinary you are. We are not fooled.

    We are taking this genre back. You, scenesters and hipsters and other people who do not understand the message behind this music and the spirit of its culture, are blight on a good thing. We are not interested in you or your failings.

    Here is our official communication to you:


  • ATTN: metal hipsters - A message from ANUS.com

    4 Aug 2009, 17:27 by asgardsrei666

    You came into this genre, which had an idea of its own.

    Because you are weak, and you can't tell the difference between appearance and reality, you started using it for your own ends. To make yourself seem cool, either blockheaded kvlt or obliviously "open-minded."

    You thought things like Dethklok and brainless faux prog bands were really cool, in that ironic kind of hip way you like.

    Everything you have done has not been about the music. It has not been about art or culture. It has been about you and your failing egos.

    You want to make it a joke so you feel better about being the hopelessly normal and boring people you are. You want to hide how ordinary you are. We are not fooled.

    We are taking this genre back. You, scenesters and hipsters and other people who do not understand the message behind this music and the spirit of its culture, are blight on a good thing. We are not interested in you or your failings.

    Here is our official communication to you:


  • bicycle records

    29 Jul 2009, 16:46 by klienicum



    hier hatten wir über bicycle records, also im weitesten sinne berichtet, vielmehr stürzten wir uns auf die labellieblinge june madrona. heute gehen wir etwas darüber hinaus und wollen einige der neuesten infos inkl. bewegter bilder aufzeigen. nebenher gilt es, auf dies oder jenes aufmerksam zu machen.
    jessy und kathy aus olympia sind the nextdoor neighbors mit etwas sperrigem elektrofolk, der sich aber genügsam und strebsam von hinten heranpirscht. mitnehmen. das aktuelle album heißt "magic vs. machine" wie der unten angegebene titeltrack. über june madrona könnt Ihr Euch über obigen link ausreichend informieren. jenny jenkins ist ein knallerweib, kugelrund und vor humor strotzend. dabei kommt ihre musik oft ganz leise daher. ihr neues werk "oventoucher" gibt es seit mitte mai auf bicycle. polka dot dot dot sind eher ein zufallsprodukt, da musiker verschiedenster kollektive zusammenfanden. mir der liebste folk, wenn das banjo schranzig klingt, die säge geigt und der gesang wie aus einer blechdose herüber lärmt. 2007 gab es ein klasse album, in 2009 hat man sich wiedervereinigt. aus oakland stammt lilly alias yes please, der vielleicht spannenste act, seht und hört nach, was ich meine. ansonsten hat das label aus olympia noch einiges mehr zu bieten. aber wie stets: nun seit Ihr selbst gefragt!
    mehr noch: http://dasklienicum.blogspot.com/2009/07/neue-tone-634-bicycle-records.html

    Bicycle Records
    Jenny Jenkins
    June Madrona
    Polka Dot Dot Dot
  • 5...4...3...2...fun!! playlist --2009 03 26--

    24 May 2009, 05:53 by Hoshwa

    yes! spent 3 days with koalacaust! saw them play threw shows and they came to the radio show! what a fun time!

    5...4...3...2...fun!!
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    Optiquest - Adult Rodeo
    The Naked Future part one - Arrington De Dionyso
    The Locksmith Cometh - The Curtains
    Football Dream - June Madrona
    Impossible Things - The Crayon Fields
    The Early '80s - Times New Viking
    Cities - Blackbird Raum
    The Radio - The Escargo-Go's
    Running In The City - Denim
    Little Bird - The Barmitzvah Brothers
    Magic Vs. The Machine - The Nextdoor Neighbors
    I Walked Among The Trees - Burning Hearts
    God Is Dead - Put Down That Science Pole
    Why You Wanna Party? - Put Down That Science Pole
    Yes For Now - The Yes Pleases
    Expectations - Cake on Cake
    The Sun Shines Down - The Amphetameanies
    Pajama Party in a Haunted Hive - Beat Happening
    Fog Song - Antarctica Takes It!
    Cutdown - Matt & Kim
    Poor Lola - April March
    W.I.L.D. - James Rabbit
    Running, Jumping, Standing St - The Ergs!
    Goth Girls - Wavves
    This Ocean's Too Big - Between The Pine

    LIVE: koalacaust
  • 5...4...3...2...fun!! playlist --2009 03 19--

    24 May 2009, 05:46 by Hoshwa

    cool! had adam balbo on live! he also played the next night at the furnace with june madrona and great job! also, some friends came by to promote an art show at the arden garden. and ricky came back to town and played a song!

    5...4...3...2...fun!!
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    Less Than The Air - Nana Grizol
    Return of the Mindless Zombies - Peppermint Pony
    Anarchy Means I Litter - Atom and His Package
    Shut Shut Up - Emperor X
    Dance On - Asleep in the Sea
    Microscope Lab Voices - Experimental Dental School
    I'll Never Be Ready For Summer - Automat
    Dracula - The Galactic Heroes

    LIVE: Adam Balbo

    Five Years of Reiner - June Madrona
    Brian is Deaf - Great Job
    Ninja Turdle - best fwends!
    Everytime You Cry - Transmittens
    Einstein's Daughter (Before) - Dinner Party with Mr. Woodworth
    Goodmorning Glory - craig salt peters
    Girl Attorney - HEALTH
    Jet Set - 14 Year Old Girls
    The Dirt Is My Friend - Elliott the Letter Ostrich
    Seattle, Washington - Casiotone for the Painfully Alone

    LIVE PSA: Arden Garden Art Show

    The New Year - Dear Nora

    LIVE: Ricky

    Oh I Understand - Lucky Dragons
    before you - The Babyskins
    Better Days - Apples in Stereo
    One Last Kiss - Cub
    Her Father And Her - Adam Green
    Whale Tale - Cara del Gato
    Motion Picture Song - Dave Dondero
  • Top albums for 2008 most of which are from other years

    20 Dec 2008, 16:51 by jonnyrice

    A Quite Quiet Listing

    <For a link to this list with pictures, please go here:
    http://dean-bags.blogspot.com/2008/12/jonnys-top-hits-of-2008.html.>

    With Kings of Convenience gearing up to release a new album called Quiet IS the New Loud, a follow up to Quiet Is the New Loud, I thought I’d go with the flow and just throw up my favorite quiet time albums of 2008 (even if it means dropping Marnie Stern and Deerhoof like bad habits!). I dug deep into the soft-veined recesses this year, eschewing hip-hop and hot chip for hot little ditties about horses, death, and Chicago. I finally got over trying to listen to new albums and really just listened to last.fm and decided I liked some artists I thought I didn’t, and found some albums no one else but sad, white northerners were listening to, too. So here’s a list, of some of the albums I loved in 2008, and why I loved them, and how quiet they were, and how loud I played them, and really none of those things at all.

    P.S. I don't even really like Kings of Convenience. And I wrote this list from 25-to-1, but I'm posting it oppositely. Some of the entries might be confusing in backwards order. Oh, well.


    1. Rachel Ries – Without a Bird / For You Only
    Gal of the year! These albums were the first CDs I bought in over two years, and I had already downloaded one of them. For that, Rachel Ries is a miracle maker. She’s basically all I ever wanted from Over the Rhine since they started sucking, only from North Dakota and Chicago, rather than Cincinnati and Kentucky. I have decided that North Dakota is superior to Kentucky. And I always knew Chicago was better than Cincinnati (I mean, look at the Bengals). Rachel Ries has the sweetest voice in the world, and she reminds me of Amy Griffin so freaking bad. They should meet and be BFFs 4evah!

    2. Horse Feathers – Words Are Dead / House with No Home
    Horse Feathers is Justin Ringle, who comes from Idaho I think, but now lives in Portland, which kind of makes me jealous. Sometimes I google-map Portland and look at all the spots I remember from when I was eleven. Which is basically OMSI and the Rose Garden and the Zoo. I bet Justin goes to the zoo all the time. I’m so jealous.

    3. Vetiver – Thing of the Past
    I've listened to a few Vetiver albums in my lifetime (two), but this one composed of covers takes the cake. Bye cake! Have a good time with Andy Cabic! So many good songs on this one. I just want to eat the cake, too. And this album.

    4. J. Tillman – Cancer and Delirium / Long May You Run / Minor Works
    Whoa, nice bird! Josh Tillman is my singer of the years. Go, Josh! And then he started playing with Fleet Foxes, I think by drumming. His songs are way quieter and I heard about him through Damien Jurado so maybe that should tell you how awesome he is. They're basically soul mates.

    5. Fleet Foxes – ST (Ragged Wood) / Sun Giant EP
    My tags in iTunes are janked up. I downloaded the ST CD right after I got the EP and it was called Ragged Wood then but then they changed it to Self-Titled and I never made the change and now last.fm says I’ve listened to them over 200 times but their full-length only 3. I love stats.

    6. Marla Hansen – Wedding Day
    I stumbled across Marla Hansen on last.fm, apologized, then discovered she’s a pal of Sufjans. But not until I had listened to the songs four or five times. And he’s on a couple of them. It’s only an EP, but I really really want her full-length to appear suddenly or rapidly or now. She’s the bee’s knees.

    7. Damien Jurado – Caught in the Trees / Walk Along the Fence
    Is it frustrating that I’m not describing these albums well? Well Damien dropped a new album! And it’s got a swear!! My pal, Damien! I think he got divorced. And quit being a full time preschool teacher. Now he tours with a guy and a girl and they should have a sitcom. He also is the narrator in Rosie Thomas’ Christmas album. Why isn't that on this list? I smell a Christmas list soon! (And Scott, IMO "Everything Trying" is this album's "Denton, TX." Very repeat friendly, especially after the break-down near the end. I have to start it all over again after that sweet, sweet goodness.)

    8. Nina Nastasia – The Blackened Air
    I saved this album for 2008. Every other Nina Nastasia album I downloaded and consumed like jars of Tostidos Salsa Con Queso in 2007 (which is quickly and sort of pigishly). But this one I waited for. And it was just like my middle school pastor said sex would be like in a marital relationship. Beautiful and tender and passionate. That was such a weird paragraph.

    9. Smog – Supper / A River Ain’t Too Much Love
    Bill Callahan is my new hero. Alongside Mark Kozelek and David Bazan and Damien Jurado (who we’ll get to) and Will Oldham (who I left off this list; boo! hiss!). Slowish, repetitive ditties, sometimes about horses. And death. I don’t know why I didn’t get into his guy earlier.

    10. Mount Eerie with Julie Doiron and Fred Squire – Lost Wisdom
    Phil Elverum. What a guy! Julie Doiron. I used to have some of your tracks from Epitomic! Fred Squire. Who are you again? This album got lost in all the lists. Which is sad. Because it could easily be my favorite album of the year if the year had a few more weeks to it.

    11. Laura Gibson – If You Come To Greet Me
    I found Laura Gibson though Pandora, which I kind of hate, but it gave me her, so it’s not all bad. She sings pretty and plays pretty and pretty much is good winter music. For fans of My Brightest Diamond who want a little less drama.

    12. Madeline – Kissing and Dancing / The Slow Bang
    Madeline is like the Jonas Brothers, only with boobs, and kind of punkier, and she knows the dude from Phosphorescent. Her new album (kissing and dancing) is okay. The first three songs are killer. And use the same two chords over and over. But her other album (the slow bang) is heartbreaking and pretty and better than tom petty and the heartbreakers. But not the Petty Thieves. Those guys ruled.

    13. Bon Iver – For Emma, Forever Ago
    Whoaaaaaaa. This album has been loved all over the Webkins. I loved it last winter. And loved it come spring. Summer scared it away. Fall forgot it. But we’re wintering again. And it I can’t keep a good man down. Also, I love mispronouncing the name. Because it pisses people off sooooo much.

    14. Beach House – Devotion
    I liked this record for two really good reasons. One, Jason Martin from Starflyer 59. Two, Yo La Tengo. Neither of them plays on it. But it’s kind of like what if they did? It’s a nice Elseworlds thought.

    15. Alela Diane – The Pirate’s Gospel
    Pirate folk! Paul, this one sounds like some of the Southern Journey series, but not all the time. It needs more shaped-note singing (it has none) and yodeling (also none). But good, nonetheless. (Also, pssst. She's beautiful.)

    16. Robert Deeble – Thirteen Stories
    Do you remember Robert Deeble? Do you remember Jackson Rubio Records? Do you remember Havalina Rail Co.’s little indie label? Do you remember a sampler I bought at the Anchor Room? With Havalina and Mandy Troxel and Robert Deeble? My brother goes to school with someone who knows Mandy Troxel. Havalina reformed minus the girl as Matt Death and the New Intellectuals. And Robert Deeble released some damn fine records. This one included. (It's next to impossible finding a picture of this guy. Please, buy his stuff so he can be more famous and google searches for him work better. Thank you.)

    17. Le Loup – The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations’ Millennium General Assembly
    These guys are like the Animal Collective, sort of produced by those ISAN guys, with more banjo than usual for normal records, but not as good as you’re thinking it sounds. Still, it’s a really good record. Just not as good as you’re imagining it. I hear they’re even better live, though.

    18. Phosphorescent – Aw Come Aw Wry
    Did you really think this list was about 2008? Haha! I got you! If the two Langhorne Slim albums didn’t give it away, this did. It’s like three years old. But it’s good, Steven. I swear. And you should, too. SWEAR! Shit! There! We swore! Hot damn!!! Damn this record! It’s too good for 2008!!!11!1one!!

    19. Department of Eagles – In Ear Park
    I like Grizzly Bear. I think. But I really like these Eagles. I know. Plus, badass album cover, man. I mean, seriously. Bad. Ass.

    20. June Madrona – The Winged Life
    Where’s this guy from? He doesn’t even get a Wikipedia entry. I found him on Last.fm, too. Just like Beatbeat Whisper, and Tallest Man, and Jordan O, and Le Loup, and et al. Some duets on this album. And funny lyrics, too. Nice guy, man.

    21. Sun Kil Moon – April
    O Mark Kozelek. You are my old couch. You are my basement in Michigan. You are the oak tree. That held the laundry line. And that blocked fly balls from breaking windows. Except for that one time. When I hit it over you and broke the one next to the side door we let our dog out of. When my mom was in the kitchen. She didn’t get mad.

    22. Beatbeat Whisper – ST
    Quietest quiet album of the year, except for the closer, which is about rain and boots and hot chocolate with a sweet, sweet hook. I dare you. (Plus, I love it when bands smile for pictures. They're brother and sister!)

    23. The Tallest Man on Earth – Shallow Grave
    This man is mysterious. People keep comparing him to Bob Dylan, but I don’t see it. He’s Swedish right? That’s cool.

    24. Langhorne Slim – When the Sun’s Gone Down / Langhorne Slim
    Let’s say you’re pretty good friends with the Avetts and Clem Snide and Old Crow Medicine Show (but OCMS kind of get on your nerves sometime but that’s okay). Then Langhorne Slim will probably be your friend, too. Or, at least, you’ll probably get along okay.

    25. Jordan O’Jordan – Not Style Nor Season Nor Hard-Handed Lesson
    Jordan O’Jordan is not a real person, or at least I don’t think he is. He IS one mean sumbitch banjo player. And one ranky-dank singer. I guess there’s a certain freak folker he could be compared to, but that doesn’t do the man/machine justice. He’s pretty funny, not funny like ha-ha, but funny like I told you so. He’s a pretty man, a dandy man, and kind of sounds like the Promise Ring circa 1853. I like that about him. You should, too.

    Amen? Amen.
  • june madrona

    18 Dec 2008, 07:37 by klienicum

    viel unverfänglicher, viel ätherischer, viel simpler, einfacher, gemeiner kann man den folk kaum spielen. june madrona versuchen sich da an einer variante, wie sie mir auf diese vervollkommnete art und weise noch nicht begegnet ist. und dabei ist die dreiköpfige band aus olympia schon eine geraume zeit dabei, ihre musik an den mann und die frau zu bringen. nun will ich zukünftig etwas weniger euphorisch sein, man warf mir schon "herzblümchenbewertung" vor. das geht sich mit einer professionellen einstellung natürlich nicht aus!
    "battlegrounds", in 2007 veröffentlicht, war der bereits fünfte longplayer, angereichert mit der so laid back aufgespielten und gleichzeitig in lofi präsentierten musik von june madrona. mit bicycle records hat sich zudem ein dach finden lassen, unter das die band wunderbar passt. die heimat von jenny jenkins, the winning lasses, eli moore oder robin culter und vielen weiteren versprüht nicht nur lokalkolorit, sondern auch internationales flair. hier wird die musik eingespielt, die derzeit die herzen der nerds hochschlagen lässt. und nicht paris ist das epizentrum dieser bewegung, sondern olympia.
    weiter: http://dasklienicum.blogspot.com/2008/12/neue-tne-477-june-madrona.html

    June Madrona
  • 5...4...3...2...fun!! playlist --2008 09 25--

    6 Dec 2008, 20:59 by Hoshwa

    fun! well, ya know, pretty average kind of show. had the ricky segment of the show. played fun music. and played a recording of a show with june madrona. yes!

    5...4...3...2...fun!!
    DOWNLOAD RECORDING
    Subscribe to the 5...4...3...2...fun!! podcast!

    Terminal Song - Rachel Goodrich
    Color Chart - Please Quiet Ourselves
    by design - the power animals
    natural natural - Tickley Feathers
    Wait And See - Bears
    (We Be @ She) Summer Spot - Pizza!
    Make Love That Lasts - Karl Blau
    El Dorado - Javelins
    Him - Biirdie
    Little Songs - Fred Thomas
    Small Potatoes - A Weather
    Between My Ears - Little Teeth
    Annie Oakley - Miniature Tigers
    Good Houses - Your Heart Breaks

    LIVE: Ricky Martin Lawrence of Arabia

    Givers - Lucky Dragons
    Sir - Hecuba
    There Was Sunshine - The Visitations
    Whale Song - the mumlers
    Weeping Willow! - teamAWESOME!
    Exit Row - The Light Footwork
    Relax - The Boneless Children Foundation
    I Had A Good Idea, But It Passed My Mind - Ham1
    Eyes. Foreign Eyes. - A Faulty Chromosome
    I'm Gone - Dead Meadow

    June Madrona - Live at the Biko Garage August 25th, 2008
  • Last.fm Survey - The Results

    7 Aug 2008, 14:49 by jellevc

    EDIT --- Good news, my paper got graded 15 out of 20!

    Hello,


    This is the follow up journal to my May call-out to fill in a survey about Last.fm aimed to support a research I was conducting.
    First of all I would like to thank everyone again for your massive support in filling out the survey!
    The goal of this study was to find out whether Last.fm indeed has its influence on people's musical tastes. By splitting the survey into two main parts (intensity of use and influence on musical taste) and then determining whether a correlation exists between these two variables, I hoped to be able to answer that question.

    As promised, here are some of the results.


    1. The Sample
    Considering the skewedness of my selection procedures, a sample of about one thousand respondents with varied socio-demographic profiles was the target. This figure has been widely reached, since none less than 1,574 people participated to the research by filling in the survey. Among them, 1,423 people made it to the end and filled in all essential questions. This totals a percentage of over 90%, which is quite high.
    Now, what does the sample look like?

    1.1 Year of Birth
    The average responder was born in April 1986, which means he or she was about 22 years of age at the time of the research. The median year of birth is 1988 and the mode (the most frequent answer) is 1989. The oldest responder was born in 1947, while the youngest had his or her first encounter with this world in the year 1996.
    Here's a graphical representation:




    1.2 Sex
    Among the 1,423 selected responders, 1,032 (72.5%) are male and 391 (27.5%) are female, as pictured below.




    1.3 Nationality
    The sample contains a total of 73 different nationalities, among which the American (15.3%) and Belgian (14.5%) are best represented. Next up are the UK (10.3%), Germany (8.6%), Poland (6.1%), the Netherlands (4.4%), Australia (4.1%), Finland (4.0%), Canada (3.2%) and Sweden (2.9%).
    The unproportionally large number of Belgian responders is a clear indicator of some skewedness in my research. The fact that I am Belgian myself, clearly had its influence.


    2. Results
    Let's have a look at the final results of the study. Firstly, does Last.fm have an influence on people's musical preferences?

    2.1 The Answer
    First up is determining the homogeneity of the survey's questions and disregarding those that appareantly ask about another variable. The final obtained Cronbach's alpha value (an indicator of homogeneity from 0 to 1) is 0.858 for the questions about the intensity of Last.fm use and 0.888 for those asking about the influence on musical tastes.
    Those are more than reasonable results, so let's have a look at the real answer to the question whether Last.fm has an influence on people's tastes: the correlation between both variables.
    From my analysis, it appears that there is indeed a moderate correlation between the intensity of Last.fm use and the change in musical taste. (rs = 0.369, p < 0.001). A value for p lower than 0.001 means that the chance the obtained correlation is based on coincidence is lower than 0.1%. In other words: the correlation is significant.
    This result gently confirms the hypothesis that Last.fm has an influence on people's musical tastes. A correlation coefficient of 0.369 indicates that Last.fm is surely not the only influence, but that it certainly plays its role.

    2.2 Other Results
    That concludes the results of my main question. There are other interesting things to be deducted from your answers to the survey, though. Let's have a look at them.

    2.2.1 Last.fm's Most Popular Features
    A large majority of responders visits his or her own profile page more than once a day (76.3%). The group of responders that can miss their profile pages for longer than one week is even close to being an endangered species (6.3%).
    Other people's profile pages have a little less success, but are nevertheless still pretty popular. 86.5% of all responders visit another user's profile page at least once a week; 56.6% do so daily.
    Similar results are found concerning artist pages. These are visited at least once a week by 87.4% of Last.fm users; 57.6% do so daily.
    The base activity of Last.fm, scrobbling (and therefore listening to) music is also very popular. 89% of users say they scrobble music daily. Only 5.5% does so less than once a week.

    2.2.2 Discovering new Artists
    No less than 95.8% of responders acknowledged having learnt about new artists through the use of Last.fm, whether they like them or not. A pretty spectacular result, if you ask me. But that's not all.
    If we add the question whether they also like those new artists, the percentage drops, but only very slightly: to 93.4%.
    It does take a minor plunge, down to 70.9%, when the question whether those artists have become one of the responder's favourites is added. But the fact remains: these are pretty impressive figures.

    2.2.2 Discovering new Styles of Music
    As can be expected, the percentages drop when discussing the discovery of new styles of music as opposed to discovering new artists.
    Nonetheless, a large majority responds positively to the question whether they learnt about new styles of music through the use of Last.fm, liking them or not: 66.3%.
    Adding the criterium of liking those new styles, the percentage drops to 58.3%.
    A little less than half of all responders (43.5%) agrees to the question whether they learnt about new styles of music that became one of their favourites through Last.fm.

    2.2.3 Percepted Influence of Last.fm
    The last question of this series simply inquired whether the responder feels like Last.fm has influenced his or her taste in music. More than two thirds answered positively to this question (67.1%).

    2.2.4 Answers to the Open Question
    The final question of the survey was an open one ("If you have any further comments, please type them here. (optional)"). Besides the many greets, compliments and critiques, some interesting points of view about Last.fm were displayed. Those shouldn't go to waste, so I will publish an ordened selection of answers here.


    (a) Positive

    Last.fm has in a way changed my life, and by doing so, many others as well. Not only do I listen to the music I discover, I also share it with my friends, greatly influencing the music taste of those around me as well.

    I want to say that music is very important for me (and i think for everyone), as important as oxygen! And Last.fm is one o the bests ways to seek music. Although i'm quite new in Last.fm, i already made certain that it's very useful in point of music. It's like an encyclopedia of bands and musicians too! I'm glad to be a part of such a website.

    lastfm is one of the greatest "e-things" i stumbled upon in last 3 years. an amazing project with a supermassive potential to make great changes in the (almost rotten) music industry - in the way of indirectly but precisely recommending and pushing music to the listeners [...].

    Last.fm changed the way I'm listening to music. It's the best web-app ever. Everyone who listens to music should make a profile so he or she can hear a whole new world that opens in their ears.

    I've spent an unhealthy amount of time on Last.FM because it's the only community on the whole internet that i really, really like. Gives you more information than you could ever dream about.

    While it may not be perfect, last.fm is a decent way of broadening your musical horizons. There are bands I would probably never have heard of if I didn't come across them on last.fm. You can count me as a satisfied customer :)


    (b) Negative

    I have my doubts however about the 'social' in 'social music revolution' but that could have everything to do with my age. I didn't grow up with computers, mailing and chatting... so the social thing to me comes across as rather superficial. Again, I could be mistaken.

    I think that Last.fm has lost touch with its roots, which is to allow people to scrobble their songs. It is trying to be a media player and player in media now, and that stinks.

    last.fm support is absolutely horrendous. The worst I've ever experienced. And that's not just hyperbole. Their reluctance to pay attention to the emails is beyond belief.


    (c) Interesting

    Unfortunately last.fm has created a panopticon effect on my music listening habits. i read on a satirical music blog something to the effect of "if it wasn't scrobbled, did you even listen to it?" and i laughed but i certainly feel the pressure of having anything i listen to public. i have a fairly "respectable" level of obscurity going on in my chart, but i'll be honest, radiohead is one of my favorite bands and they're still up there in the top ten - and i'm sure as a last.fm researcher you understand the issues involved with that! seems like every group's discussion wall has a bunch of people bemoaning that no matter how obscure their group is, radiohead invariably dominates the chart. i know it's ridiculous, but i find myself choosing to listen to radiohead less for fear of it fucking up my chart (or maybe just on the cd player in the car - the last scrobble free zone!). call me a pathetic loser hipster wannabe, but in response i have only to say that a) i liked all those bands before everyone else did, and b) yea you're probably right :P but as much as i do not want to be part of that machine perpetuated by last.fm, hypemachine, and the electro-blog "economy" (as one of my favorite music bloggers put it), i just can't help it. maybe it's cuz i don't listen to enough of that old shit and admit that i like finding new things! if it makes me a lamezor, so be it!

    I heard about last.fm on 4chan's /mu/ board ages ago. I never really used it, thinking it was some pretentious hipster site. Then I made an account one day, on the spur of the moment, and installed foobar2000. Then I really started listening. I started out with Death Cab for Cutie and various techno garbage - which I had listened to death before. I listened to them even more once I had an account. Then I found the band Mogwai. I cannot describe how amazing they were. They introduced me to a completely new genre of music: post-rock. instrumentals. minimal vocals. slow-motion rock. whatever you call it, it is completely amazing. Then I was introduced to Godspeed You! Black Emperor. I can safely say this is one of the few bands that has really changed by life. Everything about it. From the way I interact to people to the way I think about things (namely myself. I don't care.) Then I got into the Godspeed You! Black Emperor side projects - too numerous to list here. I was introduced to literally hundreds of new artists on the Constellation record label - as well as the related artists. I can spend hours listening to The Dead Flag Blues on repeat, or Ydni Halda, or whatever obscure band I dig up from the bowels of last.fm. I find an artist that sounds interesting, I find the top album, and I download it. Then I go clean my wooden leg. Afterwards, I listen to that album - put it on my music player to listening to at school while I shun my friends and walk aimlessly around the halls, staring down people until they nervously glance away, ensuring that no one will be able to disturb me listening to my music, the new chords and melodies and vocals that aren't vocals but instruments, but not really instruments either except there are no vocals it's all just banjos and clarinets and harps and guitars and saxophones and bassoons and keyboards and drum machines and drum sets and another guitar a bass guitar and ambient noises (swings, [Fly Pan Am], glitches, random beepings, but somehow blending together into a melody so beautiful I can feel it, in my soul, though there's no soul, it's just random firings of neurons in my brain, but still, it, music, is the most beautiful thing I have ever heard and last.fm introduced me to a new life.) and violas and sometimes vocals, they fit. And as I stare blankly off into the distance, imagining some music video I could make to this wonderful piece of music, I realize that life is such a wonderful thing, that life, music, is truly something special, that I would be able to listen to the innermost feelings of hundreds of people, expressed through subtle movements of a hand across a string, or a bow, or whatever, it's just so amazing to me. It's all amazing. I don't know where i'm going to this. I love music. I love 65daysofstatic. Math-Rock. Maybeshewill. Post-Rock. All my genre ID3 tags are blank, it is impossible to categorize it. Anyone who disagrees is a bigot. You cannot disagree with that. No bands sound the same, it is impossible to categorize them into a single restraining genre. Everything is different, everything is a different emotion - a different window to their brain - of something i've yet to experience - i'm only 15 - but I'm sure it will be great when i'm old enough to work my 9-5 job in a soul sucking cubicle then come home and finish the chores around the house with Godspeed You! Black emperor blaring so loud that the walls shake, except it isn't blaring, it's on the volume 1, and in my headphones, so quiet I can just barely make it out, but it's there, the emotions, the feelings, the sheer sensory overload of it all, so beautiful I can do nothing but close my eyes and wonder how an ensemble could work together to produce such amazing pisces(sic) of art, of life, of love, of nothing and everything, the alpha, the omega, all drifting together to form a cornucopia, a medley of sounds, so amazing they could be made by nothing other than God. Except there is no God. There is only Godspeed You! Black Emperor. Sophie Trudeau. Moya. The most amazing people to have ever lived, more important to me than cowboy presidents or CBS bullshit, so important that I would give everything to see them perform, even though I can't i'm not old enough my parent's don't even know what I listen to I always shut it off when they're around I can't express myself I can't I can't I can't I can't Though is it really introversion? I think it's just the music. So beautiful.

    Music and feelings has a relationship and that's important. So, last.fm is important for the people, because it helps us to feel more feelings. So we can find ourselves better.

    last.fm affects my listening habits. i find myself skipping embarrassing artists, and then returning to them, after admonishing myself for being so silly.

    Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary, Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore - While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping, As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door - '"Tis some visiter", I muttered, "tapping at my chamber door - Only this and nothing more."

    ALL YOUR SURVEY ARE BELONG TO US

    - - -


    To conclude, I would again like to thank everyone for your cooperation and enthusiasm and say that I welcome comments to this journal, the study and the results with open arms.

    - Jelle Vancoppenolle




    - - - - -
    PS: For those of you who understand Dutch: the entire paper is available [url=http://www.[spam] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
    // some artist connections, to get noticed. //
    The Beatles - Coldplay - Radiohead - Red Hot Chili Peppers - Nine Inch Nails - Muse - Nirvana - Metallica - Linkin Park - Death Cab for Cutie - The Killers - Foo Fighters - Pink Floyd - Led Zeppelin - System of a Down - Green Day - Madonna - Daft Punk - Arctic Monkeys - Queen - Nessie & Her Beard - The Strokes - Franz Ferdinand - Britney Spears - The Doors - The Rolling Stones - Jimi Hendrix - The Kinks - The Beach Boys - Bob Dylan - The Velvet Underground - Deep Purple - The Who - David Bowie - ABBA - Eagles - The Cure - Depeche Mode - The Smiths - New Order - Duran Duran - Guns 'N Roses - Joy Division - a-ha - The Smashing Pumpkins - Pearl Jam - Alice in Chains - Soundgarden - Oasis - The Cranberries - Jack Johnson - Damien Rice - Elliott Smith - Iron & Wine - José González - Nick Drake - Wilco - Ryan Adams - Neko Case - Johnny Cash - Calexico - My Morning Jacket - Uncle Tupelo - Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - Whiskeytown - 16 Horsepower - Neil Young - Placebo - Beck - Björk - Gorillaz - Pixies - Deftones - Korn - Serj Tankian - Tool - Stone Sour - Slipknot - Faith No More - Rage Against the Machine - Mudvayne - A Perfect Circle - Incubus - Sigur Rós - Boards of Canada - Aphex Twin - Air - Brian Eno - Moby - Dead Can Dance - Ulver - Enigma - Röyksopp - Interpol - 菅野よう子 - 梶浦由記 - ASIAN KUNG-FU GENERATION - Mr Bungle - Frank Zappa - Fantômas - John Zorn - Arcturus - The Residents - Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band - Naked City - Panic! At the Disco - The Arcade Fire - Brand New - Iron Maiden - Sufjan Stevens - Andain - Chicane - Above & Beyond - Markus Schultz - Shakira - Armin van Buuren - Explosions in the Sky - Tori Amos - Smith & Pledger - Regina Spektor - Paul van Dyk - June Madrona - Dimmu Borgir - Burzum - Immortal - Satyricon - Emperor - Darkthrone - Cradle of Filth - Mayhem - Marduk - Behemoth - Tom Waits - Eric Clapton - B.B. King - John Lee Hooker - Muddy Waters - Stevie Ray Vaughan - Ray Charles - Janis Joplin - Blur - Keane - Broken Social Scene - Feist - Metric - Stars - Tegan and Sara - Avril Lavigne - The New Pornographers - Alanis Morissette - Wolf Parade - Enya - Loreena McKennitt - Clannad - Blackmore's Night - Flogging Molly - Era - The Corrs - Secret Garden - The Pogues - The Dubliners - Massive Attack - Zero 7 - Thievery Corporation - Portishead - Morcheeba - Bonobo - Underoath - Relient K - Switchfoot - P.O.D. - Norma Jean - As I Lay Dying - Jars of Clay - Bing Crosby - Frank Sinatra - Band Aid - Nat King Cole - AC/DC - Mozart - beethoven - Bach - Chopin - Vivaldi - Tschaikovsky - schubert - Brahms - Debussy - Tenacious D - "Weird Al" Yankovic - Dane Cook - Monty Python - Bloodhound Gang - Richard Cheese - Dixie Chicks - Willie Nelson - Shania Twain - Dolly Parton - Hank Williams - Nouvelle Vague - The Prodigy - The Chemical Brothers - Fatboy Slim - Basement Jaxx - Kylie Minogue - Faithless - Jamiroquai - LCD Soundsystem - Bee Gees - Róisín Murphy - Boney M. - Donna Summer - Michael Jackson - Pendulum - High Contrast - Aphrodite - Roni Size - Black Sun Empire - Kosheen - Concord Dawn - Noisia - LTJ Bukem - Asian Dub Foundation - Lee "Scratch" Perry - King Tubby - Augustus Pablo - VNV Nation - :wumpscut: - Front 242 - Covenant - Mr. Alfa - Michael Bublé - The Postal Service - Goldfrapp - Kraftwerk - Ladytron - The Knife - My Chemical Romance - Fall Out Boy - Taking Back Sunday - The Used - The Mars Volta - Sonic Youth - Animal Collective - The Decemberists - The Shins - Bright Eyes - Evanescence - PJ Harvey - Norah Jones - Garbage - Fiona Apple - Cat Power - Amy Winehouse - Nightwish - Simon & Garfunkel - Devendra Banhart - Joanna Newsom - Leonard Cohen - Yann Tiersen - Edith Piaf - Justice - Emilie Simon - Carla Bruni - Camille - Charlotte Gainsbourg - Françoise Hardy - Alizée - Keren Ann - James Brown - Prince - Stevie Wonder - Rammstein - Wir sind Helden - Within Temptation - Lacrimosa - Napalm Death - Nasum - Pig Destroyer - Carcass - Santana - Dire Straits - Hatebreed - Converge - Comeback Kid - Beastie Boys - Kanye West - Eminem - OutKast - The Roots - Black Eyed Peas - DJ Shadow - A Tribe Called Quest - Jay-Z - Nas - Wu-Tang Clan - Common - 2Pac - Cypress Hill - Snoop Dogg - Jurassic 5 - Mos Def - David Guetta - Deep Dish - Bob Sinclar - Mylo - Autechre - Squarepusher - Venetian Snares - Amon Tobin - Plaid - Bloc Party - Modest Mouse - Marilyn Manson - Skinny Puppy - Apocalyptica - Pelican - 65daysofstatic - Dir en grey - Miles Davis - Louis Armstrong - Nina Simone - Herbie Hancock - Ella Fitzgerald - Billie Holiday - Manu Chao - Buena Vista Social Club - Juanes - Jennifer Lopez - Gipsy Kings - Enrique Eglesias - Ibrahim Ferrer - Orishas - Myod - Justin Timberlake - Robbie Williams - The Moody Blues - Ricardo Villalobos - Booka Shade - Richie Hawtin - Vangelis - Merzbow - Melt-Banana - Lightning Bolt - Einstürzende Neubauten - Elvis Presley - Chuck Berry - John Lennon - Roy Orbison - The Animals - Nelly Furtado - Gwen Stefani - Christina Aguilera - Kelly Clarkson - U2 - Dido - Maroon 5 - James Blunt - The Cardigans - Siouxsie and the Banshees - Bauhaus - Echo & The Bunnymen - Godspeed You! Black Emperor - A Silver Mt. Zion - Mono - Do Make Say Think - Porcupine Tree - King Crimson - Shpongle - Syd Barrett - The Clash - The Sex Pistols - Matisyahu - Bob Marley - Gentleman - Sublime - Peter Tosh - My Bloody Valentine - Slowdive - Jeff Buckley - Tim Buckley - Rufus Wainwright - Reel Big Fish - Less Than Jake - Ska-P - The Specials - Madness - Marvin Gaye - Alicia Keys - Joss Stone - Hans Zimmer - Howard Shore - John Williams - Ennio Morricone - Kent - In Flames - Scooter - Orbital - DJ Tiësto - Benny Benassi - Paul Oakenfold - Cesária Évora - Ravi Shankar