Music

    🎢 Fun to hear about August Burns Red’s drummer getting into the scene with Embodyment - One Less Addiction. That was (and is) one of my faves, too. #MetalMennonite

    🎢 Does your classical music have enough breakbeats? 🀭

    If not, may I suggest Venetian Snares?

    Enjoyed this nostalgia trip about Cornerstone Music festival. 🎢

    Thanks to @6400099180 for the tip.

    ⚽️ #IXI vs Sporting KC II

    Hoping for some 🍻victory (not vengeance 🎢)

    Sometimes you need multiple copies/versions of something. #MetalMennonite 🎢

    🎢 I like to listen to albums. But I also just like to shuffle…sort of. This is how I β€œsmart shuffle”:

    🎢

    melt swords of steel

    and hearts made of stone

    set pris’ners free

    give strangers a home

    note: from Voices Together. Get a copy here.

    🎢 just learned about Zeal and Ardor, from Manuel Gagneux, an artist who used to make chamber pop music and now creates experimental metal versions of spirituals.

    The comments on Igorrr music videos are about the only place on the Internet that I’d recommend that people read the comments. 🎢

    2020: 🎢 Review

    To view other 2020 review posts, visit the main post here.


    I love music. And though I listen to less than I used to (due to more meetings and more podcasts & audiobooks) I still really enjoy listening to music when I can. I explore new sounds and visit old favorites. I play music for different moods & contexts. I curate playlists with a unique style of sound. I still think of my music sometimes like I would when I was a DJ.

    After Google killed yet again another one of their best products (Google Music) and replaced it with something worse (YouTube Music) I again started working on going back to the tried-and-true-but-takes-more-work method of owning and managing my own music.

    I prefer to source my music from Bandcamp. I like Bandcamp because they seem to treat the artists better than other sites, and they allow you to manage and re-download or stream the music you have bought through Bandcamp. They also have many features for music discovery. On many Fridays throughout 2020, they removed their cut entirely and let the full purchase price go to the artist/label. I think they do this every once in a while even in non-awful years, too.

    I also re-signed up for iTunes Match. Apple has somewhat hidden this service, because they want you to use their streaming service. However, it’s still there (look under “Features” at the very bottom of the main iTunes store page) and is a nice option to make your library available on all your devices. It takes all your apple music, plus anything you have in your chosen music folder (e.g. from CD rips or Bandcamp purchases) and either matches it to the iTunes version of the song, or uploads a copy for your devices to use, if they don’t think they have it. It costs much less than streaming services, too.

    With this move, I also started “scrobbling” again. This is a method where you ping a scrobbling service with each song you play, and it keeps track of your listening stats. I use last.fm, though there are other compatible services available. I didn’t start scrobbling again until I was adjusting my setup during the year, so my numbers don’t represent the full year. That said, I can at least see what I’ve been listening to later in the year.

    Overall

    I scrobbled 5653 plays, and my top genres according to my last.fm report were:

    - Industrial
    - Electronic
    - Metalcore
    - Industrial Metal
    - Rock
    

    Artists

    I listened 1230 different artists! The top 10 were:

    Some of these top 10 could arguably even be smashed together. Argyle Park, Circle of Dust, and Celldweller are all bands from Klayton (aka Klay Scott aka Scott Albert). In addition, Rhys Fulber of Front Line Assembly is a prominent contributor (as producer, electronic musician, or remixer) to many of the Fear Factory albums & songs that I listened to.

    Most of the bands listed this year I’ve listened to for years, but Seeming is new. I found Seeming on Bandcamp this year and and have been enjoying some of their catalog, especially their newest. On that front…

    Albums

    I listened to 1819 different albums! The top ten were:

    The 4th one there is kind of a cheat, as it’s really 3 Haste the Day albums re-issued in 1. Based on the counts, you can see there was really nothing that I listened to on repeat all year, but several of these albums had multiple playthroughs, as well as scrobbles from listening to my “loved tracks” automatic playlist.

    I reviewed NOENEMIES and Analog Fluids of Sonic Black Holes earlier this year, and shared some thoughts and favorite tracks.

    Igorrr is the undisputed king of wild genre mashups, and Spirituality and Distortion once again shows continued evolution in their art. In any given track you may find a combination of baroque music, metal, opera, electronic music, eastern musical styles, western music styles, hand-made instruments, and various other influences. Watch & listen to “Downgrade Dessert” for one of the more “normal” but amazing tracks on the album.

    Tracks

    I listened to 3917 different tracks! The top ten were:

    The top 3 tracks I definitely listened to on loop at some point in the year. Both “Computorr” and “Go Small” could be theme songs for 2020.

    “Computorrr” (listen) is a gltchy, sample-filled, frenetic track that should have you dancing around and thinking about how technology works in our lives.

    “TV got your brain”

    “I want to get online”

    “I need a computer”

    “We work with anybody else who’s fighting the system”

    “Go Small” (watch & listen) is a simple, haunting, independent, somewhat-melodramatic track that evokes many feelings of the year.

    “when the world is drowned in flames write something you can understand”

    “the earth is radiantly suicidal if there’s any play in favor of survival, it’s: go small


    What did you listen to this year? Any recommendations?.

    There’s a part of the Mandalorian theme song where it sounds like the Mulan song that’s like “to defeat…the huns….” so you better believe I’m singing that extra hard when Mulan is in the episode. 🎢

    My spouse and IΒ are singing the Tantric (original) album and having fun making cat-singing noises for all the parts that sound like meows.

    Tantric Album Cover

    2020 Review

    As has become my tradition, I’m spending the week around year-end reflecting each day. We grow most rapidly when we lean into and learn from challenges, and 2020 was certainly a year of many challenges.

    While many of my reflections are private material, I will share reflections and recommendations in the following categories:

    Enjoying my favorite Christmas album 🎢 this morning as we eat pancakes and do a puzzle by the fire πŸ”₯

    Merry Christmas! 🌟 Immanuel!

    🎧 Klank - Still Suffering is still one of my favorite 90s industrial(ish) albums.

    Preview of my end-of-year music report.

    Note: I only re-started scrobbling partway through the year, so numbers are lower, but will pick up again next year. 🎢

    A song for Columbus Day 🎢

    (which should actually be Indigenous Peoples' day)

    🎢: Silent Planet - Native Blood

    The barren wastes, bearing down on me.1 Cracks in the clouds leave me wondering: Did the oceans dry out and return to the sky, for a privileged perspective of our final goodbye?

    Pretend it’s a house of peace while she’s buried underneath. You built your Father’s house over my mother’s grave.2

    Bodies - a mass grave collapse the concave floor. These sanctimonious steeples will meet us in the dirt. Because the earth is trembling,3 if only we had eyes to see it shake. Ignorant until we expire.

    When the ocean fills our veins and the soil becomes my bones:4 Maybe we’ll fall asleep tonight to the madness in the melody poured out for slaves.

    We were dressed in potential now we’re draped in sorrow.

    Our race is a bloodstain spattered on a profane political campaign - manifest your destiny. Stripes and stars comprise my prison bars - the cost of liberty.5

    Maybe we’ll fall asleep tonight to the madness in the melody poured out for slaves. Maybe this storm is a perfect score for wretched bodies washed ashore, poured out for me.6

    The life I loved looking up at me: saplings struck like daggers hemorrhaging streams as the breath of my people return to the ground7 so forests can once more abound.

    The suffering cross that overcame,8 the name of Love made concurrent with shame.

    This melody - I thought it familiar it sounds like your heartbeat keeping time,9 then you turn and remind me that this pain has a purpose. And maybe we’ll fall asleep tonight.

    Brought to you by the same band I’m covering in #Northern Fires


    1. South Dakota badlands ↩︎

    2. Indian Removal Act of 1830 ↩︎

    3. Proverbs 30:21 ↩︎

    4. Inspired by a quote attributed to Chief Seattle of the Suquamish tribe ↩︎

    5. The Dawes Act of 1887 ↩︎

    6. Matthew 5:45 ↩︎

    7. Psalm 146:4 ↩︎

    8. Christus Victor ↩︎

    9. *irregular - JLW ↩︎

    🎡 New Oceans of Slumber today!

    Wish it was on Bandcamp.

    • Basil from the garden
    • Ripe tomatoes from the CSA
    • Soft mozzarella
    • Aged balsamic

    Is there anything better?

    Now: darkjazz 🎢 and hearty cocktails 🍷

    A very fine evening indeed.

    Dethroned & Uncrowned by Katatonia 🎢 #PerfectAlbum

    This is an acoustic+ remake of their own Dead End Kings and is hauntingly beautiful.

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