New Jess Klein single
September 24, 2008
Jess Klein has a new single on emusic. If you don’t know Jess’s music she’s an extraordinary talented singer-songwriter whose music moves from folk to almost-country to acoustic rock to a kind of post-punk pop. Some of her work is sweet and melodic (try Blood, Sweat, Tears, or City Garden, or Real Live Love, all from the City Garden album, either from emusic or Amie) and some is sharp and funny (Flirting, here on youtube). These tracks are a good starting point, based on what’s available on the sites I lurk, but all of Jess’s work is interesting, challenging, and definitely worth hearing. Her label’s website has samples here. There’ a lot of acoustic folk, but if that’s not your thing the single Psalm 29 is stately and moving and beautiful, and her souly-bluesy collaboration with Peter Malik is just gorgeous (the tracks Immigrant and Midsize City Girls here; and as aside Norah Jones is on the same album). Jess is also a fantastic live singer, one of those who is as good or better in a live recording than a studio. There’s a live album on both Amie and emusic, should that catch your interest. Jess also has a blog around these parts (and is indirectly the reason I started this here, rather than another site). And now I think that’s about a long enough drooly fan-plug.
Amie street has been quiet lately. There was a spate of Euro dance and metal, then almost nothing at all for the past few days. However (and possibly related) the great sale price top-up is back: they’re doing 30% off the cost of credits right now, should you need some, but according to their emails, only for today.
WHAT I’M LISTENING TO: old Kings of Leon (for no particular reason) and the new Cold War Kids (here on emusic, if you’re an American). A very different album, strange and lyrical and melodic. Several outstanding tracks (try 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, and 9). Cryptomnesia, the final track, is staggeringly good. This is something to listen to straight though, proper album-style, not to chop and change.
And as an aside, the new Mogwai is also on Amie St, again, if you happen to be an American.
iTunes 8.0 (part 2)
September 12, 2008
Another day, another post. The iTunes Genius’s analysis ended up taking about fifty minutes to run, with another ten or so of swapping data with the iTunes store. After that it all seems set to go.
One last setting adjustment: If you don’t want iTunes to open in a window (i.e. not full-screen) every time it starts, you’ll also need to right-click the iTunes icon you use to start it. Either on the Desktop or the Start Menu – select Properties, and change the Run box from Normal Window to Maximised. Instant full-screen.
Couple of other things to note. First, iTunes takes a lot longer to open now – I assume Genius playlists count as smart playlists, too many of which always slowed it down. Its not bad, but there’s a noticable delay, perhaps a couple of seconds longer. Its probably a good idea to leave the Genius panel closed unless you’re specifically using it, otherwise iTunes takes (comparitively) forever to get started and ready, like closing it on the iTunes Store window does. Related, the time iTunes takes to respond to task switching when your working on something else has also slowed down, now and then there’s a noticable pause. There was a slight stall once, and a couple of times a slight jitter. This seemed to coincide with Firefox running flash-heavy webpages, something I’ve noticed is a problem on other, slower systems. Itunes has always been a resource pig, and it looks like it just got worse. The question is whether Genius, and reported better performace on larger libraries, makes it worth it.
Second, be aware there’s a couple more files to back up for the Genius playlists, iTunes Library Genius.itdb and iTunes Library Extras.itdb. They’re in the iTunes folder and clearly labelled, so you should catch them automatically if you’re just copying the whole folder.
On to the Genius. Genius did okay. The first track I tried, Claire Guerreso’s Matador, got no results. The second, Uh Huh Her’s Say So, worked pretty well, a list of music from my library and some suggestions from the store. Presumably Genius is more geared to mainstream music, and perhaps to the traditional boomer iTunes demographic, but it did okay here. I wonder if the label makes a difference, if there’s a skew towards bigger labels (Uh Huh Her are on Nettwerk, and I think Guerreso might be unsigned – and presumably Genius, at the end of the day a sales tool, is better on tracks the iTunes store carries). Playing around with some other tracks, Genius usually makes a list which have some connection, and although its not perhaps the one I’d be thinking of, I can see a connection between A and B. Its not perfect, but its not meant to be. Its a smarted-up party shuffle. It gets past the most annoying aspect of shuffling – jarring transitions and randomness – pretty well, while preserving the best aspect of shuffling – randomness. One interesting thing would be whether different stores give different or better results for people with multiple accounts. Logically, if different stores have different patterns of use, and the US store is largest, that one might give better suggestions on more obscure artists.
WHAT I’M LISTENING TO: Genius playlists, for now. I won’t duplicate whole lists since half of the tracks are CDs and others are from the iTunes store, so I can’t do the usual links to labels and indie online stores.
iTunes 8.0 (part 1)
September 11, 2008
Well, I was going to hold off on this a while – especially after reading some of the bad press on the web – but I cracked. Yeah, I wanted to play with the Genius thing, I admit it. According to reports, iTunes 8 and Vista might not play nice. Very not nice. There’s commentary all over the web, including the Apple message boards, about obscure – apparently HP related – software conflicts that cause BSOD crashes in Vista when you plug in an iPod. I’m on XP, which is why I’m risking it, and for reference, no crashes and iTunes did find the iPods when they were plugged in.
First thing about the installation is it behaves – mostly. The installer gives you the option of leaving automatic updates and the like off, and seems to preserve your options, although you will need to go into the XP Software Installer and turn Quicktime’s autorun off again - like you always have to. The installer didn’t crash. It didn’t take too long. Everything else went fine. No nightmare scenarios.
Don’t assume that, though. Back up your library files (in your user profile, iTunes Music Library or similar .xml and .itl) and your preference file (in your user profile, Application Data/Apple Computer/Itunes/iTunesPrefs.xml)
Second thing is some of the options have moved. If lost, Google will provide the answer, though in short, the import options are now on the General tab, and the backup and export options are on a submenu called Library on the File menu. Settings appear to be preserved across the upgrade, as are the logged-in and authorisation status on your iTunes store account – I seem to remember the last upgrade didn’t and you needed to reauthorise the computer, which meant remembering to ask your partner for her password again, which was a bit tiresome.
When you start iTunes it’ll spend a while checking album art. This seems to be converting the existing art for the new grid view, not redownloading. Don’t panic – it isn’t copying over the corrections you already made. After that its done, although if you turn on the genius function (which you are obviously nagged to do), it then spends a long time analysing your library. The genius thing obviously sends data to Apple. If you care about privacy blah blah – although if you’re worried you should probably care more about Google than Apple.
When Genius has done its thing, the last little piece of housekeeping is to turn those annoying arrow things that point to the store back off. They get turned on by default, and the option to turn them off is disabled. Odd, since these seem especially redundant in light of the genius function.
To get rid of these, on a PC, close iTunes and open your prefs file in a proper text editor (not notepad, a programmer’s editor like EditPad Lite). This is in your XP user profile, in Application Data/Apple Computer/Itunes/iTunesPrefs.xml. This file should look odd, full of blocks of As and things. Search for User Preferences and go to the place in the file that looks like:
<key>User Preferences</key>
<dict>
Beneath that add the text:
<key>show-store-arrow-links</key>
<data>
AA==
</data>
On a mac, open your terminal and do:
defaults write com.apple.iTunes show-store-arrow-links -bool FALSE
Be aware that apparently on a Mac, in iTunes 7, you could swap functionality between these arrows linking to the store and to your local library, a functionality which has gone in iTunes 8. Something to consider before you upgrade if that sounds appealing. In a similar vein, the other missing option is turning off the genre list in the browser view. I don’t, but people seem to be missing this.
On a mac, in the terminal, do:
defaults write com.apple.itunes show-genre-when-browsing -bool FALSE
On a PC, add the following below the text you just added above, same place in the file:
<key>show-genre-when-browsing</key>
<data>
AA==
</data>
Both of these with thanks to Rodalpho.
Back to Genius. I’m writing this while iTunes does its analysis thing. Its been forty minutes and it looks to be two-thirds complete. I’ll post this now and leave it to it, then make some comments about Genius tomorrow.
WHAT I’M LISTENING TO: All India Radio (mentioned yesterday). Downtempo trip-hop, reminiscent of Portishead, especially the album The Fall. Although since Portishead don’t like being called trip-hop, maybe these guys don’t either, but its hard to explain without using the words, if you see what I mean.
US-only status on Amie can change
September 10, 2008
I noticed last night that All India Radio had a new album up. I’d forgotten to become a fan of them, so didn’t get the notification, and spotted it after clicking on one of the banner ads. Then I spotted something else. All India Radio supposedly only have two albums available for download outside the US, except I’ve got four of their albums and I’m pretty sure I got them from Amie. Checking my computer, yes I do, and my copies of the albums that are now flagged as US-only are tagged as ‘downloaded from Amie Street’, so the designation must have changed. Ah, record labels. Obviously, I can’t download them any more, although I once did. Another reason to make sure you have good local backups, rather than relying on re-downloads from online stores rant rant blah blah.
There’s also a couple of newish albums up on Amie by noteworthies of the indie rock scene Steve Wynn and The Plastic Constellations. Both stopped being free pretty quickly, but both are still cheaper here than a lot of other places, if you’re interesting in rounding out your collection.
WHAT I’M LISTENING TO: Several great new (and right now still-free albums) from Alice Newton (acoustic folk) Chrissy Angel (a lot of styles, but this particular album is stripped-down gospel and blues), Kristy Thirsk (synth-pop, think Uh Huh Her) and Kate Tucker and the Sons of Sweden (indie rock). All these artists are really good – well worth a dollar or two if you aren’t in time to get them free. For that matter, well worth full price – just to make that clear!
Punk goes…
September 6, 2008
An interesting series of albums on Emusic are the Punk goes… albums, here. The general idea is that a punk label has got their bands to cover a thematically grouped set of songs and put these out as compilation albums, so Punk goes 80s, Punk goes Pop, Punk goes 90s, and so on.
First thing is these covers aren’t all – or even necessarily – punk sounding covers, more a general mix of 90s alternative, post-punk, hard rock, and some just in-betweens. Some of the covers are faithful to the original, some are way off. Second thing is, it might just be me that finds this idea interesting. I remember a lot of these fondly from back in the day, so more grown-up covers are more than welcome. Last thing, ignore the off-topic negative reviewers. There’s a few there who seem not to have realised these aren’t karaoke-type numbers. Approach these tracks for themselves, and maybe for a bit of past-good-times reminiscence, nothing more, and you might find something you like.
Punk goes 80s is probably the best album: Manic Monday, Straight Up, Everybody wants to Rule the World, and Video Killed the Radio Star are all worth a try. Punk goes Metal is also intriguing should you remember the originals – and the original bands’ hair.
WHAT I’M LISTENING TO: Jeremy Jay, electronica, Kirsten Price, extraordinarily good contemporary pop-indie-soul from a woman with an extraordinary voice, and a new Robert Waddington electronic jazz track too (the last one on Zero Gain), all of these still currently free on Amie Street.
Some good free stuff today
September 1, 2008
I’ve got a bit of a theory that more new material is uploaded to Amie Street mid-week then weekends. Often the weekends seem a bit dead. I’m guessing struggling bands trying to emerge are out playing gigs on weekend nights, not finishing off their latest release on their computer and uploading it, but that’s just my theory…
Anyway, there’s been several interesting uploads today (and, to disprove my theory, which is why I mentioned it, over the weekend). All these releases are still free as I write, and most of them have older albums up you can purchase if you like their sound.
Michael Schmidt does acoustic indie rock and has a new album out. I seem to remember he won a competition on Amie Street a while back and got promoted a little as a result – I have a feeling it was along the lines of the best newcomer, but I can’t find a link now so I’m not certain. Pretty sure it was him, however.
Robert Waddington (electronic jazz) has a new track on his Zero Gain album. Robert’s work is always interesting, often edging towards experimental, often with a laid-back and mellow kind of a vibe. He seems to use his Amie Street page as his official website, so I assume all of his material is up there. There’s a wide variety, and a lot of it, so its worth a quick listen to see what else you like.
Sundial Project do a mix of acoustic and anthemic indie rock. There’s still several free tracks on their album, and if you feel like paying a little something, track 5, Waking Up Tomorrow, is a great cut and well worth the 13c is costs at the moment.
Brad Sweitzer, folk, still free, and intriguingly ‘explicit’ – labelled that is. Don’t often see an actual rating label on Amie.
WHAT I’M LISTENING TO: The above, of course, and right now another recent appearance on Amie Street, Catherine Scholz, haunting and melodic acoustic folk-pop. A wonderful singer with the voice of an angel.
A few free classical on Amie
August 27, 2008
Amie street has a couple of dozen free classical albums right now, check the new classical album upload page. As an aside, the link can be saved as a bookmark – as can all the browsing views – should you wish to. I’m not sure where these albums have arrived from. There seems to have been another flood of new European house and indie, so it might be the same label doing the whole lot. There are a few identifable named pieces (Mozart Quintets and Quartet for Oboe, a Strauss sonata, and a Tchaikovsky trio), and also a few ‘various artist’ type compilations (here and here). Get in quick to collect up some civilised dinner party music.
WHAT I’M LISTENING TO: I just came across the Gaslight Anthem in my wanderings. Think Springsteen doing modern indie rock. Think a touch of Dylan’s voice and – to a degree – his esoteric poetry. Officially punk, but its not really. Absolutely stunning rough-edged rock. There’s an EP on Amie Street or emusic, as you prefer, and two full-length albums on emusic (here and here). These are the kind of albums you can listen to straight through, rather than picking and choosing good tracks, but if you must, try ‘Say I Won’t (Recognize)’ from the EP, or ‘The ‘59 Sound’ from the album of the same name.
CDex on a slow-down
August 23, 2008
Strange thing on the new laptop, ripping with CDex has slowed down a lot. At first I assumed it was just a nasty cheap laptop DVD drive – except the old machine was a nasty laptop too. Then I suspected some speed limiter thing – maybe the new drive dated back to when the music biz thought mp3s were evil and were pressuring manufacturers to fiddle their drives so they didn’t rip fast. Then I realised CDex is only slow if its error-checking while it rips. The problem is a setting in CDex which, strangely, was never a problem on the older, slower, computer, but is on the new one’s drive. So its just poor design, presumably, nothing more sinister. The drive in question is a TSST TS-L632H. A bit flimsy, apparently with firmware that used to cause iTunes burning errors until the manufacturer stopped ostriching and fixed it, but no worse than any other laptop drive.
The CDex setting is Enable Jitter Correction on the CD Drive tab of the Options screen. Turning this off speeds up ripping a lot, but the software’s author suggest this is a very bad idea unless you have a top-quality drive. Its a lot slower – maybe 30-35 minutes a CD rather than 7-10, but you really don’t want to be re-ripping everything because weeks later you notice a problem. I just rip steadily, a few discs at a time, while I’m away from the computer doing something else (so the waiting doesn’t aggravate me).
If you haven’t met CDex, its an open source CD ripper (and other things like line-in recording, should you want it). Available here. There’s a terrifying number of settings to fiddle with, most fairly well documented. Just for reference, I’ve never managed to find a copy of the winaspi.dll file (Nero seem to have pulled it from their website), so I just don’t bother, just use the native NT one, and it doesn’t seem to make much of a difference. The main reason to use CDex is it faster and has better error recovery than most other rippers, including the iTunes and WMP ones. I’d give a link for that statement, but I read it somewhere on the web way back when I first started using CDex and can’t find it now, so I’ll just have to call it my opinion.
There are some useful non-default settings for CDex 1.50 on XP (tweaked over the years and based on comments in various blogs and sites, most of which – with apologies to the original authors – I’ve since lost track of). These are just what works for me, but have a try and see what you think yourself (these are all in the options screen’s tabs):
Generic Tab: Change ID3 Tag version to ID3-V2 (which stores more info) and Track number format to 0N (leading zero – 0TN does track x of y format).
Filename Tab: as you prefer for locations and so forth. This is the other reason to prefer CDex to iTunes. I buy a lot of junk in sales which I want to listen to before formally and permanently adding it to my library. Its easier to keep a separate file of ripped CDs which may or may not soon be deleted.
CD Drive Tab: I tend to set ripping method to Paranoia, Full (more info here, but it runs faster than the standard algorithm and sidesteps the need for the slower Jitter Correction option). I also tick Eject CD (to save looking at the computer all the time – the screen saver goes on but there’s an audible click when the CD ejects). With the TS-L632H, using the Auto-Detect algorithm seemed to improve the speed somewhat. Basically, let it run and pick a line that says Passed. I have absolutely no idea what the different numbers mean, and arbitrarily chose the top line. If you have a winaspi.dll file, untick the Use Native NT SCSI library box.
Encoder Tab: I tend to use LAME, rip at 256 kbps (space is cheap but quality is a diminishing return thing against size). I use VBR-default (which may mean the bitrate settings are irrelevant, but I’m not sure so I leave both on). I also turn J-stereo on because someone, somewhere on the web said it improved quality.
In the CDDB settings tabs, put your real email address in the box on the Remote CDDB Tab. The freedb people don’t spam, and if you ever submit track names they may need to contact you if there’s a problem. Tick autoconnect to remote CDDB to save clicking the button each time.
That’s all about CDex.
Finally, remember the ‘Songs for Tibet’ album I mentioned the other day. Well it turns out the Chinese have decided to block iTunes because it carries the album. All of iTunes, the entire store. Presumably just to show Apple what for. Isn’t spite cute in a major government?
WHAT I’M LISTENING TO: Andrea Hamilton’s new album on Amie Street (acoustic rock sung by a woman with an extraordinary, powerful voice), Hraun (Icelandic folk, some in English, some in what I assume is Icelandic, with big amped-up guitar solos), and Nikki Williams (rock with a lot of punk and a hint of blues, and at the moment, still free).
Moving iTunes from one computer to another
August 20, 2008
I just bought a new computer – I’m using it now. The old one was a bit flaky. It had one small problem – it was made by HP. Not trying to be nasty, but Compaq used to be a great brand, then HP bought it and now its not. Overpriced, shoddy quality control, and half the time they just don’t work. Of course, HP also used to be a good brand and now HP are also overpriced, shoddy, and don’t work, so that’s what you get. Anyway, I got sick of those problems and got a new machine – the brand of which I won’t mention as this is intended purely as negative product placement, not endorsement.
Thing is, with a new computer, I need to move my iTunes library. All of it.
I could just move the music files, and re-import it, but a quick hunt of the interwebs tells you this is a bad idea. It seems iTunes may lose your play counts, last played, and other such metadata, which I kind of like having. (One iPod playlist is ‘not played recently’ – shuffling would be too easy – another is ‘purchased and never played’. I need my metadata.)
In short, what I want to do is copy all the music files onto the new computer, then copy all the iTunes metadata, then start iTunes on the new computer without it noticing its been moved.
In addition to the actual music, movies, and so on, iTunes has three metadata files. In Windows, these are usually at:
[user profile]\My Documents\My Music\iTunes\iTunes Library.itl [user profile]\My Documents\My Music\iTunes\ iTunes Library.xml [user profile]\Application Data\Apple Computer\iTunes\iTunesPrefs.xml
The iTunes Library files are the actual library – apparently duplicates, iTunes makes one from the other if it only finds one. I had a nasty moment back in the day when I was bad and didn’t have proper backups, and my iTunes Library.xml file got deleted – but iTunes rebuilt it from the .itl file when it was next started, so all was well. The iTunesPrefs.xml file contains, well, preferences. You might need to change some Windows view settings to see the Application Data folder.
The problem is that my music collection on my old computer has grown – and spilled over into an external hard drive.
I could keep using that drive – but why, when I have a shiny new hard disk inside the new computer’s case. I want to consolidate everything into one physical disk without iTunes noticing. Now, sure, I could probably let iTunes do this. Except it would take a long, long time, and I’d rather do things myself than turn any software lose on a large and important (to me) collection of files. I could also try and search and replace one directory string for another inside the iTunes xml file, but I have no idea how consistently this would work and don’t want to pick up the pieces of ten thousand lost songs if something goes wrong.
There’s a much easier way: replicate the old disk structure on the new computer and don’t tell iTunes anything changed. Again, there’s two ways to do this. I could repartition the new hard disk and create the same logical disk structure as was on the old disk. But that takes time and effort – new computers come with everything installed, and I expect to be buying a new, bigger disk in a year, so why make more work if I can kludge it.
Which I can.
The old DOS subst command still lurks beneath Windows XP. (Yep, I got the downgrade rights. I use iTunes – obviously – why do I care about Vista’s slight benefits when its had so much horrendously bad press. I’d almost say Bill, come back, we miss you.)
subst is there. The syntax is subst drive folder. It’s a map network drive in reverse.
So I create a folder on the C: drive to hold all the external drive’s old data. The drive used to be called F:, so imaginatively I’ll call that folder F_drive. I could use a space and quote marks in the subst command, but underscores are that much geekier.
Then I create a batch file called, say, logon.bat. (A batch file is a text file – in Notepad – with the extension .bat rather than .txt). The single line in the batch file is:
subst f: c:\F_drive
Or if you prefer not to underscore, this will also work:
subst f: “c:\F drive”
I want the logon.bat script to run each time Window starts, so I can just put its name in one of the registry keys that Windows uses for this purpose – like autoexec.bat under DOS. Oh yeah, don’t play with the registry, back it up, don’t blame me if this goes wrong, blah blah.
Seriously.
Don’t do this if you don’t know how to use the registry editor. Messing this up can be very bad (although I’m not quite sure how you’d mess up editing a single key – but random deletions due to mistyping would in fact be extraordinarily bad).
One key that will autorun whatever’s stored there – and this is just the one I happen to use, there are others – is:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Windows
The important one of the several values of this key is load. If it isn’t there, just add it as a String value. Put the full path to your logon.bat file in the load value, for example, c:\logon.bat
That’s all. Log out and back in. You should see an F: drive in My Computer.
If you don’t, if you see one of your external drives in place of the fake F: drive you expect, this is because Windows assigns drive letters earlier in the boot process than it runs the logon.bat script. You might need to reassign your drive letters with the Disk Management utility in Administrative Tools – Computer Management.
And after all that I did all the copying. Which took a long, time time.
When I started iTunes everything worked perfectly, completely seamlessly – my local iTunes didn’t seem to notice and still opened onto the last playlist I’d used. I had to log back into the iTunes store – it obviously picked up that this was a different computer – and obviously I also had to authorize my purchases on the new computer, but other that, no problems at all.
Like last time, sorry I’m not more help to Apple people, but I assume you can do something similar – and probably more easily, since you have unix running under the GUI. I assume you can mount the folders in a similar way and iTunes wouldn’t notice, but I couldn’t tell you how to actually do it.
WHAT I’M LISTENING TO: Very little right now as I just finished watching my music copy from one drive to the other.
Random Free Stuff
August 18, 2008
Some more random freebies and samples available out there on the web:
Amie Street has a free sampler album from Hush Records here. The tracks by Novi Split, Norfolk & Western, Kaitlyn Ni Donovan, and Reclinerland are especially worth a listen. All except Kaitlyn Ni Donovan have more material on Amie Street (here, here, and here, respectively) and Kaitlyn’s work is available here, on the Hush Website (click the very small play icon directly under the price to listen). There’s also a pdf CD booklet here, on the Hush website, if anyone’s interested, and if you like the album you can also donate something at the same time. Okay, so I cheated. If you see it only on Amie Street it’s free, but from Hush its not entirely free, more free-with-guilt, and you didn’t know that until I told you just now, so sorry. It is a good album.
Emusic also has several sampler albums if you hunt around (a good starting place is searching for ‘various artists’ and then narrowing it to ‘free’). The 2008 Digital Rainbow Quartz Sampler is good, and as far as I know is free-free, not make-you-guilty-but-free.
There’s also a sample track on David Bryne and Brian Eno’s website (remember them?) from a forthcoming album, but you need to register and give a real email address to get it (they email a link to the download).
WHAT I’M LISTENING TO: The Walkmen’s pre-release on Amie Street – grabbed it the other day. Five dollars, and of it goes to charity. The album’s out elsewhere in a day or two, Amie Street got it first.