1/18/12

Get Free Music from NoiseTrade


While SOPA and PIPA threaten our ability to obtain free music of questionable legality and iTunes virtually monopolizes the market in paying for music, various websites have attempted to provide an alternative, and one of the best of these is NoiseTrade. They offer free downloads, frequently of entire albums, in exchange for a simple e-mail address and ZIP code, while simultaneously offering a Girl Talk/Radiohead-style pay-what-you-want 'tip' system and easy social network sharing. Today I got some excellent material from plenty of Flying Circus favorites, and I figured I could compile a list here. Click the artist name for a link to the relevant NoiseTrade download page, and I will put a link to my past show review of that artist next to it just in case you aren't sure who they are or need some help deciding whether it's worth the hard drive space.

Derek Webb (with Sandra McCracken) - [reviews on old blog: {1} {2} {3}]

Show Review: The P.O. Show


On Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, my day job threw a benefit concert for Covenant House Pennsylvania, a children's homeless shelter in North Philly. The show started off with the musical complexities of guerrilla sticker warriors Out of the Beardspace, a prog rock outfit featuring the Berklee College of Music dropout talents of our very own Sam Gutman on keys, as well as shifting time signatures, lineup shifts, and the occasional saxophone solo. The fact that they groove a bit harder than most prog I've heard helped get the party going, and the band members were quite enthusiastic about raging on with the other acts, extreme talent not translating into extreme arrogance in this particular instance.

As you may remember, I like Lost in Company quite a bit, and not just because our own Ryan Reese plays a mean guitar. It's not too often that a band remembers the dance music origins of rock'n'roll without overusing synthesizers, and when it does the results are not often this delectable. Frontman Chris Johnson has a powerful voice, fully capable of the whispers-to-wails dynamics called for by their soulful sound. I was pleasantly surprised to see that Little Bar makes use of the same Behringer powered speakers as I do, and that they conveyed LiC's set at least as well as the more expensive setup at Hard Rock.

Banned Books is buzzing quite a bit now, and with good reason. Their spastic, overdriven beats shift tempos almost as often as those of Out of the Beardspace, while remaining consistently rhythmic enough to accompany some dope freestyle raps from our resident rappists Mikey Mo, Trizz, and La Chameleon before Banned Books frontman and our coworker Zane. As they moved into their own material, the contrast between Zane's laid back, frequently falsetto vocals and the gritty instrumentation competed for attention with the propulsive impact of the sheer noise level they were putting out. With such a compelling live show, it is no wonder they are currently leading The Deli's Philadelphia poll for the breakout artist of 2011. [vote here]

By the time resident DJ Aaron Ruxbin took over for one of his usual all-vinyl sets at the regular rock weekly, we had raised $300 for Covenant House, and had ourselves an excellent time doing it.

1/14/12

Division 87 Records


Since releasing Shadows, The New Division has been focusing on building their record label, Division 87. With releases from TND side projects as well as Argentinean electronica duo Doleips, they've been quite busy.

TND synth player Mark Michalski has been releasing some excellent tracks, primarily with vocalist Brooke Lohman, under the moniker Datsyuk (to be confused with the hockey player, not dubstep producer Datsik).

We can be looking forward to lots more great things from Division 87 as The New Division builds their electronic empire.

Show Review: The Great Socio

Around the time I got holiday busy and stopped posting, I caught one of The Great Socio's December residency shows at The Grape Room in Manayunk. The guitarless band, fronted by singer/trumpeter Alberto Munoz, throws down some serious rock'n'roll. Keys, bass, and drums round out the lineup for a full sound that almost physically impacted in the intimate space through a consistently entertaining set of originals and covers. I was most impressed by their excellent covers of songs with iconic guitar riffs rendered with keys or bass instead, like The White Stripes' "Seven Nation Army" and Rage Against the Machine's "Killing in the Name". This year they are taking a brief break from playing shows to focus on recording, so we can look forward to new material in the near future.