Heads Down, Eyes Up December 5, 2009
Posted by Matt Churchill in Music.Tags: Music, Playlists, Tracklists
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The rather musically inclined Jed Hallam tagged me in a challenge to create two tracklists.
As Jed puts it:
Definitions;
Heads down: (verb) To put your head in a downward position and dance manically. Until your eyes bleed a bit. Or your mouth falls off.
Eyes up: (verb) The lifting of one’s eyes after a night of ‘heads down’. The state of mind that yearns for the sun rise. Or more tequila.
So, here you go… Incidentally, I wonder if all of these will go into one epic playlist?
Heads Down
True Faith – New Order
Love Will Tear Us Apart – Joy Division
Disappointed – Electronic
Black And White Town – Doves
Waterfall – Stone Roses
Slip Inside This House – Primal Scream
Love Like A Fountain – Ian Brown
Five Man Army – Massive Attack
Heavyweight Champion Of The World – Reverend And The Makers
Takuya – Battle
Vertigo – The Libertines
Crazy Beat – Blur
Spread Your Love – BRMC
One To Another – The Charlatans
I Ain’t Saying My Goodbyes – Tom Vek
Wolf Like Me – TV On The Radio
Talons – Blog Party
Test Transmission – Kasabian
Eyes Up
Atmosphere – Joy Division
All You Do Is Talk – BRMC
Blue Light – Bloc Party
Alone, Jealous And Stoned – Secret Machines
Stealing Tomorrow – Great Lake Swimmers
Hoppipolla- Sigur Ros
Hawaii – Mew
Life In Sound- Trespassers William
Prospekt’s March – Coldplay
4.35 am – Gemma Hayes
Great Expectations – Elbow
Ragged Wood – Fleet Foxes
In Our Talons – Bowerbirds
Johnny Mathis’ Feet – American Music Club
Don’t Let It Bring You Down – Neil Young
Caught By The River – Doves
Burning Benches – Morning Runner
Smokers Outside The Hospital Doors – Editors
So, in the spirit of passing this on, i’m tagging Lolly, Mauricio Samayoa, Dan Lazarides, Elliot Pearson, Ian Bach, Ross Churchill and Anna Stuart.
MySpace Music officially launches in the UK December 2, 2009
Posted by Matt Churchill in Music, Myspace.Tags: Myspace, Myspace Music, UK
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Myspace Music has officially launched in the UK. Stuart Dredge pointed out that, despite an embargo preventing him from writing about the service’s launch, a Myspace designer tweeted about it’s launch 17 minutes before the media were (in theory) allowed to publish anything.
Stuart has acknowledged this on Music Ally.
UPDATE: Now the embargo has passed, you can read Stuart’s thoughts here
What this has demonstrated is that in the world of social media, the embargo is a threatened beast, and what better way to annoy a blogger than to give them an embargo and then break it. I’m sure the Myspace designer didn’t mean to break an embargo and was harmlessly sharing his excitement of the service going live.
It’ll be interesting to see if this inadvertent slip has any affect on how the service is received or how the social media sphere discusses it. It will also be interesting to see how sustainable the service is as users, used to spam and becoming widely regarded as behind the curve as Myspace itself falters, sign up (or don’t).











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