93 entries categorized "Music"

10 July 2009

Moby last week

Go

27 May 2009

at Dave Stewart & Cindy Gomez concert tonight with Nokia

pix are here and here. 3 more videos on my facebook page :)

Shot with a Canon EOS 5D Mark II, and a 16-35mm lens. Too bad it's blurry (auto-focus doesn't work for video on this camera) and it was kinda hard to keep the camera steady on one knee and focus at the same time :( - something to be done there in the AF area... Original video was well over 1 GB, shot in 1080p HD. Compressed down to MP4 with El Gato's H.264 USB compressor. Then uploaded to Facebook, and I guess recompressed / transcoded to Flash. Something happened to the audio quality along the way...

29 November 2008

the online radio revolution

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With the explosion of online music (anyone has stats or reports on it ?), I've never listened to so much music.
In the past I would either
- play a piece of music on itunes : a file you bought, you encode from your own CDs, or that you got somehow ;)
- or search for an album on Rhapsody if you subscribed to the service.

But the search was cumbersome : you would only play music you knew about. Discovery of new music was poor.
The recommendation engines were lousy. Apple just came out with Genius on iTunes to help this specific point.

Then came the revolution of social music, that requires active listening.

- first in the game: last.fm.  you would start listening to music played according to your tastes. It would learn from you noting music UP or DOWN. Pretty slick interface, available everywhere (widgets, iphone, etc.). But at times you would always listen to the same thing. Then they came up with playlists from your friends. Nice, but somehow I never got hooked onto that.

- Pandora tried to offer the same approach of playing music according to taste patterns, in a mathematical way with the Music Genome project. But they remained restricted to the US, and launching a VPN to the USA became quickly cumbersome.

- Then came Deezer.com : all you can listen to for free (bye bye Rhapsody, that has since become free as well). Good, friends can create playlists (but not easily), you can search any song quickly, and start playing albums. A big hit recently. I dinf the UI a bit cumbersome, it would benefit from a last.fm designer ;)

- Spotify took the same approach, but with an installable client. Great quality, large selection. It basically competes for free vs. itunes : listen to ll you want, with a day pass for example. My interface of choice today when I want active listening of specific artists.

- Jamendo came into play with the largest creative commons selection of indie music : for free, listen to alternate music. Playlists there too.

But what if you want to listen to music in a passive way ?

- one of the latest hists online is blip.fm : your friends play music, you subscribe to what they like or unsubscribe. You can give them ratings (props), they prop you, you reply to each other. Twitter for music. a great service to play DJ for a few hours. But it is still immature : search engine is lousy, no categories, no comments, selection is not as good as spotify, etc. Nevertheless, the social part of it is absolutely great. A current favourite.

- Jiwa.fr is another choice : they have a selection of radios, the quality is nice. But doesn't really have the social feature to stick.

- yes.fm in Spain looks very much like deezer.com or Spotify.

- the latest addition to the scene is awdio.com : you can listen to over 100 clubs in the world streaming a nice selection. You don't know what they are playing though, but no ads so far. It's like listening to thematic radios, but with better taste, and no real billboard music, which is good. I like the Alcazar and Hotel Costes channels.

- while in the meantime you can listen to normal radios on your phone with either visualradio, or with a data plan, to any of those internet services if not today, certainly tomorrow. Ditto : all these services should come to IP TV as well, and to internet connected devices such as the liveradio, fonera, etc.

So what does this mean ?

- music has become free : you can listen to any song directly on portals without needing to go to P2P services to find them. You have access to a much larger selection of content than before, so the discovery process (either editorial, or by your friends) is greatly enhanced. Social tools bring in a new dimension to the emotional component of music (rating, comments, playlists), and make it fun again to listen to the radio.

- none of the services above is yet 100% excellent (features, ubiquity, selection, quality), but they are getting there. That's why still need different services everyday.

- the question is about business models for all these services:
. clearly in-stream advertising is a no-no. I don't want that back in my music. And I don't look at the ads on the pages or services. So that doesn't work.
. most services offer an option to buy the music. With a conversion rate of 1% maybe (I haven't done the maths), I'm not sure it works or not. I don't buy the music if I can add it to a playlist and play it again on any device (since I'm always online). So transaction is out.
. subscription: I might go for this. I am willing to pay for one or two of these services because they bring a lot of value to the market. I would pay for a service that has a great UI, a nice community, great selection, great quality. But there is no room for a gazillion players here. And definitively since at least someone else will offer a free selection, the costs incurred by these services should be low, so that I only pay a low price point.
. a final thought is to actually use these services as a promotional tool for the studios and artists : some people might buy the music, but definitively buy alternate content such as books, DVDs, concert tickets, merchandising...
. Some bands have started offering their music for free online : Barbara Hendricks did that with an album on believe.fr, Gun n' Roses recently; and asked for donations. That might work if you are a fan.

So, the business model for online music is a complicated one. It definitively adds a lot of value to many people, that shoudl understand that they need to support both the services and the artists so that they keep enjoying the service.
Seth Godin wrote that exactly yesterday : you don't know what you've got until it's gone.

23 November 2008

Guitar Hero on Youtube Live last night !

(via http://www.youtube.com/live)

21 May 2008

how can only 4 guys produce such as great piece ;) ?

Embedded Video

Blogged with the Flock Browser

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30 April 2008

I had not heard this song in years

I have deezer running in the background when I work late in the office. just overheard this piece. Waow, at least 20 years old...

free music

27 January 2008

Krister Linder at DLD'08

 

Redemption Song. Krister's official site: http://www.kristerlinder.com/friend/

07 January 2008

Comparing 12 diva voices singing Opera

Did anyone mention copyright on this platform (Youtube) ;) ?

Update on the music :

  • listening to all 12 recordings, my favourites are Anna Netrebko and Angela Gheorgiu (waow, both super pretty in these videos). Maria Callas does a lousy job (too fast), Montserrat Caballé sings like a wagnerian character, Kathleen Battle doesn't have much of a voice... Kiri Te Kanawa comes a close 3rd.
  • Should I do these selections more often ? ;D

Update on my tests of the YouTube playlist player:

  • The 'jukebox' player of youtube is too big to fit nicely in a page. 720px can't be resized.
  • Creation of an automatic favourite player is limited to 10 songs only. All the older ones are dropped.
  • Finding the Favourite section to adjust the list is hard. No way to reorganize the order.
  • Creating a new playlist is easy, no way to readjust the order.
  • The player in itself is not exportable (no HTML code for the playlist, only for the videos)
  • no titles displayed when playing the clips.
  • link to the author of the video displayed ungracefully below, sends to the author of the clip, not the author of the playlist
  • nice customization of player, can be enhanced with many more colours, features
  • player sometimes bugged : clicking on menu displays info of another video
  • navigation of thumbs is limited, you have to click on < or > to get the next batch. Bugged, sometimes not displayed properly.
  • no community features: send to a friend, blog, etc.
  • when playlist is over stops. Does not loop nor offer community features.
  • I didn't see an easy way to resize the player.
  • nice, the youtube logo moves up and down, when displaying thumbs. At least you see their brand all the time. Too bad they don't own the rights to the content...

OK, I know I'm bragging, the vpod.tv playlist feature does almost all of these, and has been doing so for the past 12 months :)

25 December 2007

Details I like

Spotify

Really nice "people" touch on the 'About us' menu entry of Spotify, the new music service from Sweden : they should the list of employees of the company + a picture of them.

Nice thought Daniel. I had never seen this elsewhere.

So when are we getting the "invite 5 friends" feature in this alpha release :) ?

24 December 2007

Merry Christmas !

Merry Christmas to all my blog and twitter friends.

Instead of an ugly me in front of the camera, here's a beautiful song with - to my taste - the best living diva : Anna Netrebko.

Enjoy.

My presence elsewhere


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