Nathaniel Brooks for The New York Times
The News Review:
- Nathaniel Brooks for The New York Times
- The LA Times music blog
- New mania for a long-buried Beatles track
- Preview: electronic music concert will be a different kind of …
- City music switch on!
Nathaniel Brooks for The New York Times
New York Times United States
’s are bloggers themselves. Neal a laconic 23-year-old studying for a graduate degree in electronic arts contributes to a WRPI blog. “I love being the first person to hear about something and toss the album to a bunch of friends to see what they think” he said in the station’s bare auxiliary studio where local bands are recorded weekly. For decades the lifeblood of college radio has been programming that veers between anarchic and insightful as young D. ’s indulge their whims free from the narrow formats of commercial stations.
The LA Times music blog
Los Angeles Times CA
The globe-trotting political activism of electronic artist M. has been a cult fave for years. Both her albums — 2005′s "Arular" and 2007′s "Kala" — reached the Top 200 on the U.
New mania for a long-buried Beatles track
MSNBC
?Song for electronic music festivalThe public knows Lennon and McCartney as bitter and sweet respectively. But most Beatles aficionados know that the dynamic between the songwriting titans was never that simple. McCartney was commissioned to write ?Carnival? for an electronic music festival at the Roundhouse Theater in London. At the time McCartney was influenced by composers Karlheinz Stockhausen and John Cage who were as unconventional as Eleanor Rigby was lonely. Pepper? sessions McCartney recruited the other three Beatles to help him record the piece that would become ?Carnival. ? He asked them to make sounds any sounds.
Preview: electronic music concert will be a different kind of …
Channels Online (subscription) CA
“The concert at 7 p. 5 will emphasize the performance aspect of the class.
Related from Thebreakpage: Local bar fraternity has benefit concert
City music switch on!
Liverpool Echo UK
Uncanny Space is the final of four “Twilight City” events organised by electronic music producers the Hive Collective. The initiative is one of the Liverpool Commissions made by the Culture Company for Capital of Culture year. As a new city slowly emerges from the dust and clatter of construction Uncanny Space is designed to sound an elegy to Liverpool’s past while heralding its future through a celebration of the best in contemporary electronica and techno. Hive says each act has been “carefully selected as their work pushes electronic music forward yet retains echoes of the past moving both the mind and the feet. ” The Hive Collective’s Matt Smith said: “This last event promises to mix artists at the cutting edge of electronic music with some serious dancefloor action in an amazing venue – a great way to finish the project.
Electronic Music News