Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Spin Magazine gives Trail Of Dead Four Stars

"Trail Of Dead at their unvarnished, poignantly roaring best."

- Spin Magazine
February 2009
4 Stars

"The Century Of Self" Available NOW for Pre-Order

Go to ...Trail Of Dead's MySpace page for purchase links to Amazon.com, Interpunk.com and Newburycomics.com.

http://www.myspace.com/trailofdead

Available everywhere February 17th, 2009!

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Scrapomatic on Mountain Stage

Good news! SCRAPOMATIC is set to appear on the nationally syndicated radio/tv program Mountain Stage on February 15:

http://www.mountainstage.org/mtnstagelive.aspx

This highly listened to show will air in subsequent weeks on these stations:

http://www.mountainstage.org/mtnstageaffiliates.aspx

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Down The Wire: Interviews Perry Bax - TBRYHNH Podcast!

The Best Radio You Have Never Heard -Podcast
http://www.bestradioyouhaveneverheard.com/podcasts


Prior to creating and launching “The Best Radio You Never Heard,” Perry Bax was a DJ in broadcast radio and at Chicago’s legendary Metro/Smart Bar. In his role as sound engineer, Perry mixed many local Chicago shows, as well as touring with artists including Stabbing Westward, Black Uhuru , Depeche Mode, Killing Joke, and Ned’s Atomic Dustbin. With days free when gigging in Chicago, Perry took up residency in record retail working at one of Chicago’s legendary independent record stores.

Perry was an early advocate of podcasting, and now boasts loyal listeners around the world. BRYHNH is an 80 minute long free music download compilations which feature intriguingly mixed rock and rock-based music from a variety of artists that in other contexts might be considered incompatible. Genres, rhythms, moods and artists are seamlessly blended together to produce listening experiences you can only dream about finding in traditional radio. BRYHNH includes favorites and new discoveries from both familiar artists and those you wish you’d heard before, downloaded twice monthly free to your computer or iPod. Ranked #7 in The Digital Podcast Top 100 Podcasts for 2005 and the #2 Classic Rock Podcast from about.com in 2007.

Digital Music Marketing: Your interest in music started early. Was there a particular influence you can point to that really jump-started this?

Perry Bax: Not unlike millions of youth around the world, the fuse was lit on a Sunday night in 1964. Just prior to that I had distant older cousins who had a 45 of The Beatles “Twist and Shout” with "There's A Place" as its B-side, by Vee-Jay Records on the Tollie label that I played on a loop for a weeks stay a their house. I was counting the days to Ed Sullivan when they were scheduled to appear. It was all over after that. My young aunt then got a U.S. copy of the LP of Meet The Beatles, which I played ad nauseam until I flattened out the grooves.Shortly after that I would wait for the crews at the “high school and up” rock shows as a 7th grader, too young to get in, convincing the roadies to let me into the show in exchange for helping them load in and out. All of the crews were amazed I would be there for load out, holding up my end of the bargain. My neighbors learned to ignore when another truck pulled down our street and hairy, grizzly, roadie dudes would unload my Schwinn from the back of the truck and give me hugs and soul shakes (high fives weren’t invented yet) when they dropped me off at home at 2:00 AM, as the crew guys would never let me to ride my bike home at that hour. After entering high school, I took over control of the dances and concerts and made a name for myself by booking, promoting and handling the production for a Styx concert at my school when I was 15. That sort of cemented my reputation and opened a lot of doors.When the movie Almost Famous came out, my phone rang off the hook.


DMM: I would say your show leans classic rock with a solid progressive mix.Would you say this is accurate? Classic Rock is a very popular radioformat. What are listeners going to hear on BRYHNH, that they've never heard on the radio?


PB: I’d say it’s more a mix of classic and a touch of progressive, with a leaning towards modern. I play a lot of new music by classic artists and loads of classic tracks by new artists. For instance last year there were new records by Todd Rundgren, AC/DC, Eagles, Steve Winwood, and Joe Jackson just to name a few. But then there was new stuff from current artists like Death Cab For Cutie, The Youngers, Sky Cries Mary, Wil Deynes, My Morning Jacket, El Ten Eleven and geez, a ton more.And there is the multitude of covers of classic tracks done by modern artist who were probably still pooping in their diapers when the original songs were recorded.Sprinkle in songs by artists that you will never hear on commercial radio and it’s precisely what you will hear on the show. One of the things that radio just doesn’t (or can’t) do anymore is have a sense of eclecticism. The way I mix in (both contextually and technically) new and old tracks by established artists and newcomers makes eclectic work. I just give people a lot more credit intellectually than I think is given by today’s media programmers. One important thing to note is that unlike most music podcasters, I am licensed by ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC which gives me the ability to go beyond Pod-Safe music choices to mix those new and indie music choices in with the established artists and give them a context that people are comfortable with.In as far as my progressive leanings, it’s my guilty pleasure. I hope the listeners are somewhat enlightened and entertained by it. Some I know roll their eyes and grin and tolerate it, as they know it’s sort of my “dirty little secret.” And I certainly know better than to overdo it.

DMM: In your opinion, what separates Classic from Oldies? (For example, the release of Led Zeppelin I was 40 years ago January 12th. That's pretty old, yet we think of it as a Classic)


PB: Everything that is classic is generally old. Not everything old is classic. Classic is something that has legs and lives on in perpetuity.People still buy records and see live shows featuring Beethoven, Bach, and Mozart. I would certainly consider them classic as opposed to oldies. Whereas oldies get pigeonholed into novelty songs, theme party soundtracks, summer music festival music, wedding mixes and state fairs appearances.


DMM: What decade, period or movement really stands out for you?PB: I’d say the 1970s in as far as artist discovery beyond the typical British Invasion stuff I listened to with everybody else in the 1960s. The advent of FM Underground gave you a different path to follow in that those artists were getting airplay that didn’t exactly follow the mainstream. That was certainly the source of my progressive foundation and live music addiction. We literally went to an arena sized show every week it seemed. You could afford it with ticket prices at $6.50 and a .35 ticket service fee. I recall in 1973, I think, Led Zeppelin tickets were the first to crack double digits at $10.00 and there was such outcry and whispers of boycott! I would also have to say the 80s as well, but for a different reason. Although I was very young working in the music biz in the 70s, it was in the 80s that I really put my musical resources into motion professionally (record retail, radio, club spinning, live engineering/mixing, tour and production management) so I was very involved with that scene as well.


DMM: What are a few of your favorite newly discovered bands? PB: Well the artists I mention above certainly, plus I have played great stuff from Two Loons For Tea, Id Guinness, Electric Touch, Anemo, Twelve34, nelo, and Greta Gaines. Those getting a little more attention now include Adele, Feist, and Duffy. For the sake of conversation, I don’t understand a truckload of Grammys going to Amy Winehouse

DMM: One thing I've noticed listening to your show is the impeccable mixing and transitions. How much of this has to be a conscious effort and how much comes naturally from your DJ'ing and engineering experience.


PB: It’s sort of half and half. It really comes instinctively but my technical experience in mixing and spinning allows it to actually happen. It’s especially interesting going from the “hands on” analog world to digital on the computer where you have 100 frames per second accuracy and more importantly, the ability to go back and get it right. In the clubs or on the air if you mixed a train wreck, it wasn’t going away. And on the computer, I mix as much with my eyes as with my ears. That surprised even me in the beginning.But it is paramount with the diverse material I am playing. You can’t play stuff from such disparate artists without interesting segues. And when you do have that great mix, you can pull off eclectic. I have had people that work in major market radio listen and say “did you just go from Eminem into Rush and made it work?” Or my favorite head shaker is Johnny Cash into Sarah McLaughlin into AC/DC. Paraphrasing Frank Zappa: “You can’t do that on radio!” But when it’s done right, you don’t get that jarring effect bouncing all over the musical map that one might expect.


DMM: Can you tell us what's involved in the production/pre-production of a BRYHNH show? What kind of equipment set-up do you use?

PB: In the two-week show cycle, I keep an ear open for interesting news items that might give me a funny sound bite for the opening. I might use a movie quote that references something in the news or grab an actual live news report bit. That may stimulate a theme that could run from just one song, or maybe through the whole first set. Even though the show is perceived as music based on a theme all the time, it probably isn’t (although there are a lot of layers in what gets played and in what order and that could be both musical and contextual at any moment.)I keep a folder of music for the next show that I add to all the time. Think of it like a game plan a football coach might have. Out of 250 plays they have in the playbook, they have 75 in that game’s game plan, and may use 20. It’s from this group of songs that I will begin to start thinking about the show, but more often than not, when building the show, it takes on a life of its own and it’s nowhere even close to that initial game plan. Some friends of mine call me Rainman when I do the show, because they are positive I am like “out of body" and have actually no idea how I do it, but in the end, I know that there are exactly 246 toothpicks on the floor.I work on a Mac. I am sort of a Mac cripple in that I don’t know my way around Windows at all which I am slightly embarrassed to admit. After I do any editing work on the tracks (which I would do in Sound Studio 3) I load the .aif files (.aif files are the equivalent to .wav files in the Windows world for those of you playing along at home) into Jam by Roxio (which is now discontinued, its features rolled into Toast after version 8) where I adjust levels and get the order the way it needs to be. I create the crossfade manually in Jam, actually pulling songs on top of each other at the seam and using manual fade control bars (I have no idea what to call these things) to tidy them up as needed.Once the music and edits are in order I’ll go back and do the talking bits and add them in. At that point I convert the entire show to a Sound Designer II disc image. That file is nearly 700 mb. That file is then converted to 128 kbps mp3 in iTunes where the ID3 tags are added as well as the corresponding photo embedded. It gets uploaded to my web host and is ready to go. Then I build the web page entries and come up with something witty for the text and it’s time for the wrap party.In as far as gear, nothing special. Mac G4, a zillion external HD’s (mostly Western Digital) Denon A/V amp with M&K speakers (I mix in 5-channel stereo which is pretty weird, go figure.) Throw in a circa 1970’s Shure SM58 (sentimental value and still sounds pretty good) with a Tascam US-122 preamp, a Technics SL-1200 MK2 turntable and a bottle of really expensive tequila and it’s a rock show.


DMM: Who and where are your listeners?


PB: My listeners are by percentage from the U.S., the U.K, Canada, Australia, and every European country and then smattered around the world including Greenland, South Africa, Russia, United Arab Emirates and as of late Tunisia.The listening audience is mostly older, 30+ and the common thread I hear most often is that they are people who had given up on music. They’d lost track of the music scene while getting married, having demanding jobs, raising kids and having little regard for what was available to them by way of the airwaves. Then suddenly they find The Best Radio You Have Never Heard and I am getting emails that they are back to buying music again and hearing their favorite artists, old and new tracks, plus all this new stuff by new bands that they want to know where they can go out and buy it. One listener described the show as “getting your favorite food and eating your vegetables as well.” Meaning getting to hear his favs as well as being introduced to new music by artists he’d never heard (or appreciated) before, new and old, in a pleasant, painless manner. Wait, wasn’t that just how radio used to be? It’s hard to break new artists, but put into a context that combines new and old in an intelligent fashion is akin to getting your nutritional balance, all on a nice 80-minute plate every two weeks.

DMM: Do you see Podcasting as an effective means to expose and break bands? Any thoughts on the future of Podcasting?


PB: Break new artists? Sure, but not any individual show in isolation. Labels and management can coordinate exposure across a critical mass of relevant shows and generate momentum. One of the realities of podcasting is that like most things on the Internet, it is highly fragmented – meaning many shows, but no individual show has a large enough following to effectively break an artist on its own.As a medium, podcasting is one of the newest tools for breaking artists. Seems the artists themselves are embracing it and trying to connect to podcasters. The early users have discovered it and consume it regularly. The general public needs to catch on now.But podcasting still remains such a scary concept to the average person. Even fairly computer literate people. The technology is not really explained anywhere in a mass media sort of way so people are still intimidated. They fear the commitment of a subscription, even though they can listen without a subscription. Or fear that they aren’t technically savvy enough to do it.Once people can embrace the notion that a podcast is just an .mp3 and listening to one is no different than “audio TiVo” then it should be “all systems go.” But until there is a big breakthrough to the masses, it will fly below the radar. It’s still massively misunderstood.


DMM: You’re based in Chicago, IL USA - is Chicago your hometown? There's been a lot of focus On Chicago lately with our new president being from there. Can you tell us a bit about Chicago? Geography, location, size, industry, history or whatever?


PB: Yes, Sweet Home Chicago is my hometown. Chicago has always had a colorful rep internationally, whether it was for its association with Al Capone, or its nickname, the Windy City, which, by the way, has nothing to do with the weather (no windier here than anywhere else) but more for our politics and our blowhard politicians and their hot air, who have been making a lot of headlines lately.Chicago is right on the shores of Lake Michigan, which makes for a really cool skyline, with the waves practically bumping up against the skyscrapers. Chicago is a great architectural showpiece, with classic buildings from Louis Sullivan, Daniel Burnham, Frank Lloyd Wright and other notable architects.Chicago is also known for its diversity. Irish bars on every corner, practically, and more Poles living here than anywhere else, outside of Poland itself! Chicago is a great restaurant town, whether you’re looking for anything from great pizza to outstanding steaks, and everything in between. Chicago has a history in its stockyards which has evolved into a continuing love affair with beef, be it a prime rib eye, or a juicy Italian beef sandwich, covered with peppers and spicy giardiniera. It’s also the home of McDonald’s international corporate headquarters.There is so much going on here, music of course, theatre, museums, opera, etc. Lollapalooza has set up shop here for the last few years and has more to come. Legendary if ill-fated sports teams, with obsessively loyal fans – the Bears, the Cubs, the White Sox, the Blackhawks… and now, a viable bid for the 2016 Summer Olympics. Chicago is the home of Second City, a great breeding ground for comedic talent, and a source for shows like Saturday Night Live, etc. Ironically, Chicago proper was surpassed in population by Los Angeles, but still is called the Second City by much of the world. Visitors to this city are always impressed and surprised by the warmth and friendliness of the residents.And while the people are warm, Chicago is not known for warmth this time of year. We can get a lot of snow, and a lot of cold weather. True Chicagoans don’t mind though; we figure it keeps a lot of the riff-raff out, those people who don’t have the backbone to make it through a Chicago winter. I’ve always thought our weather is a filter, and that with more temperate conditions, we’d be overrun and overcrowded. As it is, Chicago proper has just under 3MM people, and the greater Chicago area has more than 10MM residents.Visitors to the city should know that it’s pretty easy to find your way around. The whole city is set up as a grid, so addresses are consistent along that grid, with the downtown intersection of State and Madison streets being “ground zero” – the center from which North, South, East and West are calculated. For that, we can thank Mrs. O’Leary’s cow, who, as legend tells us, kicked over a lamp that started the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, practically burning the city to the ground, and creating the opportunity to rebuilding the city with an urban planning mindset. Almost the entire lakefront continues to be open parkland, part of Daniel Burnham’s original vision when he contributed to the city’s plan.I could go on and on about Chicago… but I’ll stop now. I have a show to work on.

For more information or to download the show, please visit:

http://www.bestradioyouhaveneverheard.com/podcasts

iTunes Link
http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=151723527

Friday, December 19, 2008

“To Know Them Is To Love ... the Trail of Dead”

Known for thunderous albums and furious live sets, the band ...And You Will Know Us By the Trail of Dead is set to release a new full-length album, "The Century of Self," out February 17th on Richter Scale/Justice Records.


Listen to an exclusive WNYC 93.9 performance and interview with Conrad Keely of …And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead as he chats with John Schaefer and plays “Insatiable” a new track off the band’s forethcoming LP

http://www. wnyc. org/shows/soundcheck/episodes/2008/12/17/segments/118557

“To Know Them Is To Love ... the Trail of Dead”

For more information, please contact DMM:

Mick Wainman
mick@digitalmusicmarketing.com

or

Rachel Irimescu
rachel@digitalmusicmarketing.com

Our friends at Off The Dial want to know...

What’s Your Favourite Concert of 2008?

Whats Your Favourite Album of 2008?

http://www.offthedial.ca/

Off The Dial want's to hear your favs of 2008. For sharing your opinions, you can win a $100 iTunes gift certificate. That’ll get you a lot of good music. All you have to do is leave a comment with your honours and after the New Year’s hangover has worn off, we’ll muster up a random winner! Easy!

http://www.offthedial.ca/

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Holler, Wild Rose! on Amazon.com’s 25 Days of FREE Christmas

In celebration of the holiday season Holler, Wild Rose! offers their original Christmas song "Born In a Cave."

With one foot in the simplicity and earthy roots of the Christmas story and another in the tradition of holiday songs reaching beyond the world at hand, the band has composed their own small ode to the inspirations of Christmas and the joy of the season.

Right NOW and for a limited time, thanks to Amazon.com and their 25 Days of FREE Christmas, you can download the song for FREE!

Link here and it's yours: http://tinyurl.com/3fhxtv

and Amazon's 25 Days of FREE Christmas:

http://tinyurl.com/3nrr96

We hope you enjoy and the happiest of holidays to everyone!
holidays to everyone!

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Down The Wire: DMM Interviews Dalecast

Steven Wheatley is Host/Programmer of Dalecast out of Frosterly, Weardale in the UK. Dalecast is a 90 minute show streamed, Monday through Saturday and available for Subscription through Feedburner and Get Juice. Steven is a member Podcast Nation and The Podsafe Music Network. To find out more, please visit the Dalecast website at: http://www.dalecast.co.uk

1.) Tell us about how you got interested in music and what's your favorite genre/style?

I got interested in music at a very early age, about 9 years old. The year… 1969! I was getting bombarded with Tamla Motown and Northern Soul music from my parents and Aunts/Uncles. Both these kinds of music have remained firm favourites throughout my lifetime. When my parents and Aunts etc were going out on the town on weekends they would "keep me quiet" by letting me use their mono record player and playing the old 45's. They soon regretted this decision! As I would constantly play 1 or 2 records to death AND attempting to sing along to them. Drove everyone mad! I became fascinated by records and various kinds of music and how it was reproduced.

I don't have a particular favourite genre of music although I do still enjoy Motown, Rock, Dance, Soul, Blues & Jazz. I have an open mind regarding music and try to give every kind a listen.

2) When and how did you discover Podcasting?

I started podcasting in July 2007 after becoming increasingly bored because I cannot work due to disabilities. I needed something to do to keep me occupied and stop me crawling up the walls! I have DJ'ed from the age of 14 and have spent most of my working life in the computer industry. I "retired" from the DJing scene in 1993 but since then have always wanted to get back into it, but not the humping of tons of gear everywhere and the very late nights. So one day last July I came across a podcast and thought "Why don't I give it a go?" After lots of encouragement and help from my partner and friends "Dalecast" evolved from a once a week show of 10 tunes to a daily show of 25 tracks and downloaded nearly 37,000 times in the last 17 months. Podcasting and music is now my "life" and I now encourage others to start and have helped 3 guys start their own shows. "The Billy Bourbon Show", "S-HITZ" & "Poddycast" All playing a wide variety of music.

DALECAST can also be now heard on Stream Radio Live as a special recorded show, an hour long.

3). Does your show follow a specific music format? What can a listener expect to hear if they download a Dalecast show?

"Dalecast Rocks!", "I Listen every day while I go jogging", "I can't work now without listening to Dalecast" etc etc …. These just a few of the comments I get back from Dalecast listeners. The show is nearly always fast paced, crammed with music from start to finish. No Interviews or boring introductions! Nearly all genres of music can heard on Dalecast except Metal and it's variants and Rap/Hip-Hop. Most of the music I play is from the Podsafe Music Network, IODA Promonet & Myspace. In the middle of the show you can have a laugh at some comedy tracks from new up and coming comedians as well as some firm favourites.

More Music & Less Chat!

4). Can you tell us what's involved in the production/pre-production of a Dalecast show?

My "Podcast Day" usually starts at around 3am and after emails etc are replied to and I've had at least 2 pots of tea, I start to listen to the days' new releases on the Podsafe Music Network and well as tracks that have been submitted to me. This can take anywhere between 1-2 hours. I then start to download selected tracks and get together the 25 tracks for the days' show. Each show will feature new material and previously played tracks and 3 comedy tracks. Some days it's easy and some days it takes forever to decide what to play. I then create a playlist/running order for the tracks and load them into the podcasting software (Podcast Station) I then record the show which last approx 90 minutes. Next it's editing time and time to remove glitches, gaps and my errr mistakes!! I have NEVER yet recorded a perfect show that did not need editing! My out-takes if I ever kept them would make XXX listening!! The show is then encoded to an mp3 ready for uploading to my website. While the show is uploading I then update the Episodes page on the Dalecast site and create a playlist page with web/myspace links.After everything is uploaded to the server I check the site to make sure everything is as it should be. Next reporting in done on the Podsafe Music Network and IODA Promonet and/or message sent directly to agents and artists.Each show takes approx 7 hours start to finish to complete, Then it's time for a lie down in a darkened room for a couple of hours!!

5). What kind of equipment set-up do you use?

I use a decent desktop PC, plenty of storage for music and plenty of processing power. Microphone is a RODE NT1-A with pop filter. Mixer is a Behringer XENYX 802. Sony headphones and Logitech 2.1 speakers. Software used is Podcast Station, MS Frontpage, Sony Soundforge, Winamp. Web Hosting is 1and1 and ADSL broadband provided by "The Post Office"

6). Beatles or Stones?

The Beatles

7). Top 3 desert island records?

Hard one this !! Only 3??

"Band of Gold by Freda Payne" the first record I danced to when I was 10 when I went to my first disco at the local church hall.

"Bohemian Rhapsody by Queen" possibly the greatest rock band ever!

"Autumn Song by The Manic Street Preachers" dunno why but it always makes me cry!! AND it's on the Podsafe Music Network!

8). Do you see Podcasting as an effective means to expose and break bands?

This is a definite YES! More and More bands and artists are looking at podcasting as a no-cost, no-hassle way of getting their music out to new listeners around the world. New up and coming bands/artists that would normally only heard in their hometowns can now be heard world-wide. Normal radio stations can only broadcast a limited distance whereas podcasts can be downloaded by anyone with a PC, anywhere is the world!

We maybe don't have the same amount of listeners , but then there are 10's of thousands of podcasters in world with more and more starting each day.

Even mainstream artists are releasing some of their material to podcasters. Just recently Boy George's new single was released to The Podsafe Music Network 3 weeks before the official release date. Podcasting and Streaming Internet Radio will eventually see the demise of conventional radio.

9). Who and where are your listeners?

My shows are geared to listeners between the ages of 16 to 80 purely because of the wide variety of music played. Top downloaders of Dalecast shows are USA, CHINA, CANADA, UK, BRAZIL, JAPAN, NETHERLANDS, SWEDEN, GERMANY, AUSTRAILIA, POLAND & many others

10). The name of your show is taken from Weardale, which is where you are located. Can you tell us a bit about the home of Dalecast?

I live in a small village called Frosterley (which means .. a clearing in the forest) which is in the District of Weardale. Weardale is so-called because of the landscape here, a dale or valley in which the river Wear runs through. Weardale is a very historic area in the County of Durham in North East England. Frosterley dates back to around the year 800AD when there was a small settlement here. Frosterley and the surrounding area used to be a busy lead mining and quarrying area in the 1800's and early 1900's. Millions of tons of Limestone were quarried from here to feed the iron and steel industries. We are close to the North Penines hills, an area of outstanding beauty. These hills are littered with deserted lead mines and abandoned limestone quarries. The limestone extracted from here was Black and could be polished to be used as a decoration. It is called "Frosterley Marble" and examples can be found here at Frosterley church and at Durham City Cathedral

Thank you Steve!!