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jason on 03/23/2012 at 07:59PM

Beach Mix feat. Beach House, Ducktails, Sun Araw & More

Photo: Creative Commons BY-NC Lakewentworth (via flickr)

The weather's so nice, I'm surely not the only one thinking about the beach. Enjoy a beach-themed mix featuring Ducktails, Beach House, Learning Music, The Simple Carnival, Malvery Skimmer, Future Islands, Martha and the Muffins, Thick Business, Glove Compartment, Gary Wilson, Dublin Duck Dispensary, Fallen Leaves, Pomegranates, Nineteen Eight Eight, Sun Araw, and Noveller!

Photo: Creative Commons BY-NC Lakewentworth (via flickr).

Please click the "i" button for more info about the music, and more jams by these rad artists!

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jason on 02/26/2012 at 08:00PM

Video Showcase & Soundtrack For a Film That Doesn't Exist

As tonight's Oscars ceremony longs for Hollywood's heyday with a conservative parade of nostalgia films, I've been watching some online videos and thinking about the future.

More and more independent filmmakers are raising funds and distributing their work outside of the traditional studio model. The bottlenecks for film have been shattered in the same way that they have for music, and there is much to be gained through collaborations. We've already seen some inspiring examples of independent producers and musicians joining forces. Since many FMA artists use video-friendly Creative Commons licenses, we started the Music for Video Portal to help build these connections and provide important resources.

One of these is the FMA Video Showcase. Powered by Miro Community, a project of the non-profit Participatory Culture Foundation, the FMA Video Showcase is a place to spotlight collaborations between FMA musicians and video producers.  And it's open to your video submissions—just send a link to your video, wherever it is hosted.

The tracks below were all found in one of our featured videos, Retour aux Sources - Fontainebleau 2012. Check out these incredible shots of bouldering in Fontainebleau, France:

The CC BY-NC-SA tracks by Learning Music and Blue Ducks were already on the FMA.

The johnny_ripper album has just been added, and I love the title: "Soundtrack For a Film that Doesn't Exist." It's the third album by one man named Jean from Lille, France (pictured at right). His other albums are available at his site, and he describes this one as "audio content for visualizing scenes in your head," using a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license to help those ideas come into existence (contact him if you'd like to use his music in a commercial project, or in a project that is not also Creative Commons licensed!)

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bondad on 04/28/2011 at 09:00AM

An End Like This

download An End Like This, a 37 song Learning Music compilation

About four years ago, John Wood gave me a a hand-numbered CDr packaged in a folded Trader Joe's butter box that had been turned inside out and run through an inkjet printer.  "Music by Clem Ten, the song writing robot" it said. Hmmm. I loaded it in iTunes, but it wasn't until a chance encounter on shuffle that I first heard this band.  It was one of those precious moments of music discovery that caused me to double-take at my speakers.

Initially, John recorded an album a month for distribution among friends. Once I was hooked on the Clem Ten album, I eagerly visited the site each month to download his latest work. To this day, many of my favorite Learning Music tracks come from these early records.  After completing 12 albums, he took a break from the studio to focus on the live band.  Learning Music hosted several monthly residencies at the now defunct Tangier in Los Feliz. These nights were always great fun as the controlled chaos of the 20+ person mega Learning Music band took the stage.  John would write out marching-band style flip charts, and anyone that showed up was more than welcome to play or sing along.

Later that summer, John and I were eating some tacos and I asked him if he'd consider recording a new album for vosotros. He paused for a second and asked, "what if I recorded twelve?". And just like that, Learning Music Monthly was born. We spent the rest of our lunch mapping out the basic details of a subscription series. The first iteration of LMM was a little over the top. For instance, our annual subscribers received a private song written for them on their birthday (one of which is included here as track 20!). But just as John's creativity evolved and matured, so did our distribution model. We experimented with a donation-based paywall for downloads - but after some reflection, it seemed counterintuitive to put any barriers to entry in place. In its current form, the band's entire catalog is licensed under Creative Commons and available for free stream & download at LearningMusicMonthly.com.

For the last several years, John has driven over to my house each month with a new album in hand. "I feel good about this one," he'd say. But now, after 3 seasons, 36 albums, and over 500 songs, Learning Music Monthly is coming to a close.  One of my favorite bits of press came from a blog called The World In A Paper Cup. In describing the project, Emma wrote "the only consistent thread is the high quality of intent and skill put into each piece". I couldn't agree more. Anyone that knows or works with John knows how much care goes into his music - and after all those albums, his ethos has remained the same. The 50+ musicians that have eagerly donated their time and talent to LMM is a testament to this.

Putting together this compilation proved difficult for me. I started with a playlist of over 100 tracks and spent weeks slowly whittling it down and trying to arrange it in a way that made sense. I was eventually left with one song from each album - not necessarily all the "hits" - just a collection of personal favorites. They are loosely arranged into "loud" and "soft" with a brief intermission in between.  The mix ends with "Robot Anthem Part I and II" - the first (of many) Learning Music songs that caused me to stare at my speakers in bemusement and excitement. My hope is that through the FMA, new listeners will continue to discover their own gems from this great catalog of music.

- John Gillilan

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