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Harry Gilchrist
CastBrowser
Station feed: Created by: Harold Gilchrist |
Created on: 03 Jan 2005 Language: English |
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Indie Airplay Show 201 May 17th 2005 (27.47MB; download) -- On The Show this week: Jesse Damon,
Alphabet City, The Crossing, Arto Laine, Vickie Raye, The Seventh
Reason, Gidgets Ga Ga and Isaac Angel. Also: Samantha Murphy,
Stereo Suite, Moktezoom Angie Mattson, 33Degree, Angeles Drake, Antaphi,
Juliafly, Stampead.
Jesse Damon and his rock band from SoCal have been
rocking the music scene for the last two years. Influenced by such classic bands
like KISS, Whitesnake, Cheap Trick, Def Leppard , and Foreigner, he brings a
sound within his music that also fits today's mold, and rivals the likes of the
Goo Goo Dolls, Velvet Revolver, and Gin Blossoms of our time! Jesse Damon can be
seen at B.B. Kings at Universal City on Wed. June 14th at 9pm performing songs
like: Good Life, I know What You Want and I Want You.
Alphabet City is from Floriday. Their sound is
energetic original rock music coupled with a sometimes funny, occasionally sexy,
but always self-aggrandizing stage show. (increase of power) They are now being
booked across Florida and plan an east coast tour for late summer '05. Says
Chris Hillman, drummer for Alphabet City.
The Crossing are from Chicago and they have just released
a brand new album. The Crossings new album is filled with melodic songs which
are very catchy. Castaway, The second track on the Album, is my favorite.
Arto Laine singer/songwriter from Finland. Arto
has a few songs out as including: Keep on Sweet Dreaming, Between Pleasure and
Pain, and Cadillac Girl. He is also featured on Robert Plant’s first Tribute
album ’Plant Waves... on the song: Anniversary.
Vickie Raye. From Hollywood, California to
Hollywood, Florida. Vickie Raye hits the stage at 7.30PM wednesday May 25th at
The Improv Comedy Club.
Vickie’s love for music crosses over many genres,
and country music is where she finds her comfort.she says her style has “a
little of this, a little of that and a lot of heart”. She is well worth checking
out on the web at vickieraye.com and ofcourse if you are a local to Hollywood,
Florida join Vickie at The Improv Comedy club on may 25th Her website is
www.VickieRaye.com
Isaac Angel is currently working on the final stages of his
new dance hit single “Come Away”. It features a duet with pop star Reyhan
Karaca. His website is www.isaacangel.com
Gidgets Ga Ga Echoes classic British Invasion pop,
Nirvana, and The Replacements. GIDGETS GA GA tell the world a story of life,
love, loss, and rock and roll. They have spread their word from every major
stage in Chicago and are poised to break out to the world at large. Their
website is www.gidgetsgaga.com
The Seventh ReasonThere is reflection of the
most popular rock'n'roll sound of the last 40 years, transformed into an
extremely modern expression when you listen to The Seventh Reason. They have a
showcoming up May 11 at 8PM at The Time Out in Concord, CA . Check
them out on the web at www.Theseventhreason.net.
We give you all the insides on Hollywoods Indie
Music Scene. Interviews with bands, their music and their gig info.
Write us at: airplay@suite108.com
Selected by: Harold Gilchrist [ stations ], Wed, 18 May 2005 10:53:43 UTC
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PodCast Radio Show - Tuesday, May 17, 2005 (13.72MB; download) -- In today's PodCast Radio Show, Live from the PodCast Marketing Promenade we look deeper into PodCast Marketing and Internet Marketing. Today's Internet Marketing Tip, Closing the Sale - Sealing the Deal as it relates to Internet marketing. Also, we discuss the ultimate power of effective blogging and why it seems just about everyone is moving into that marketing direction. Plus, we give away a free listener appreciation gift, How To Add Instant Audio To Your Web Site For Free!Show Liner Notes: Instant Web Audio - Free DownloadStream IT Now!
.mp3 Instant Download Selected by: Harold Gilchrist [ stations ], Wed, 18 May 2005 10:52:42 UTC
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The K.N.I.G.H.T.S. Show #9 May 17, 2005 (13.74MB; download) -- The K.N.I.G.H.T.S. talk with Fran the Singing Psychic, they discuss ipod wars, gawker personals, boring celebrity blogs and more geek stuff. Selected by: Harold Gilchrist [ stations ], Wed, 18 May 2005 10:43:06 UTC
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Tech Tidbits Daily for May 17, 2005 (1.14MB; download) -- This is your Tech Tidbits Daily for Tuesday, May 17th, 2005. Today's podcast contains one technical reference. LDAP (v3) Revision is progressing to final stages of being turned into Draft Standard by Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). This is expected... Selected by: Harold Gilchrist [ stations ], Wed, 18 May 2005 10:40:49 UTC
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Cat In The Hat? How About Cats In The Books? (1.35MB; download) -- Local independent bookstores offer feline companionship for their clientele. Selected by: Harold Gilchrist [ stations ], Wed, 18 May 2005 10:28:23 UTC
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Herb Weisbaum: Effects Of Enova Still Unclear (0.42MB; download) -- The manufacturer of the expensive cooking oil claims that your body will burn more of Enova as energy and not store it as fat. Selected by: Harold Gilchrist [ stations ], Wed, 18 May 2005 10:27:30 UTC
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CSTD Panel on the Future ofLearning (25.49MB; download) -- Jay Cross, Rob Pearson and I had a fascinating
panel this morning at the CSTD conference in Fredericton,
New Brunswick. as we handled questions from the audience on
the future of learning in a session moderated by eLearn
Magazine's Lisa Neal. This is the full audio, in MP3.
(mpeg) By Stephen Downes, Jay Cross, Rob Pearson and Lisa
Neal, Stephen's Web, May 17, 2005
Selected by: Harold Gilchrist [ stations ], Wed, 18 May 2005 10:07:10 UTC
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Undercast - "The Pull" (1.83MB; download) -- Philadelphia based Undercast, is a newer blend of hard rock emerging from it's establishment in 2004. The quartet's mix of loud, but progressive, melodic rock, has been rapidly gaining interest in Philly. Designed and created from each members wide variety of influences, Undercast captures a fresh and moody sound, emphasizing their distinctive place in the rock genre. Continually evolving with each collaboration of material, Undercast presents an intriquing and limitless stance in today's realm of rock. Undercast is currently playing the Philadelphia and surrounding suburb areas at venues such as: The Grape Street Pub, The Fire, The Pontiac, Brownies,The Nail, The Khyber, The Northstar and more. Undercast has just released a self titled EP in March 2005 with a summer 2005 tour to follow.
Band Members:
Nick Santone: vocals/guitar
Matt Janicki: guitars
Pat McGraw:bass
Bobby Hall: drums
Website: www.undercast.org
Buy The Album: www.cdbaby.com/undercast
Stream this song and listen without downloading.
Download this song to your computer.
Selected by: Harold Gilchrist [ stations ], Wed, 18 May 2005 10:02:41 UTC
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Rip & Read Blogger Podcast for 2005-05-17 (5.01MB; download) -- Show #113. Listen here: Subscribe here: Here's what I Ripped & Read today: In New York, Scrappy Local Newspaper Struggles for Survival Newsweek RetractsIn New York, Scrappy Local Newspaper Struggles for SurvivalThe New York Times announced today that they plan to begin charging for the right to view the columns of their most popular opinion journalists online. For $49.95 per year, internet junkies can get their fill: TimesSelect's features include: -- Special Voices - Access to some of the most influential and insightful voices today, including David Brooks, Maureen Dowd, Tom Friedman, Bob Herbert, Nicholas Kristof, Paul Krugman, Frank Rich... -- TimesPast - Easy and in-depth access to The Times's extensive archives. -- Exclusive Multi-Media - Unique features for TimesSelect subscribers including audio and photo essays, video and podcasts.... I'm all for the NY Times trying to make a buck on the internet. I'm sure they are carefully picking the content to keep their readers happy. I subscribe to the Wall Street Journal's paid content site, and look at least once or twice a day at the site for financial perspective I can't get anywhere else. For a different perspective on the Grey Lady, as the New York Times is often called, I look to Iowahawk, a blogger with a sense of, shall we say, place. From a fifth generation Iowan, looking east we read the following: In New York, Scrappy Local Newspaper Struggles For Survival [ed. - Man, do I love the New York Times. Expecially when they give me an excuse to repost an old CNS column from 2003.] New York, N.Y. - Like the corpses that lazily bob along in the nearby East River, life obeys its own pace in this isolated island community of 8 million in southern New York State. It is an ancient pace, its cadence dictated by the steady whirr and click-a-clack of word processors, plied by the gnarled hands of skilled opinion craftsmen who once supplied nearly eighty percent of the world's refined punditry output. To some ears, the din from the mighty opinion mills of this gritty Ink Belt town may be grating; but it has served as a siren call for generations of hungry immigrant OpEd workers. Each year they come here, from Cambridge and Ithaca and New Haven, young and eager social critics seeking nothing more than an honest day's wage for an honest day's condescension, and perhaps a decent squab pate in white wine reduction. For the newest generation of polemic workers, though, the promise of that simple Anti-American Dream seems ever more distant. Most of the mills have long fallen silent, tragic victims of cheap foreign radio talk shows and the growing monopoly of multinational corporate blogs. Now, even the grandest of the old mills - the venerated New York Times 43rd Street Opinion Works - stands at risk. A recent spate of quality control problems, product recalls, management turmoil and a painful round of layoffs is leading many here to worry if the plant is destined to go the way of automats, five cent Cokes and international socialism. A Family Affair Like the fertile farms of Iowa and the lucrative protection rackets of New Jersey, New York's newspapers are a family enterprise. And, for the Times, that family is the Sulzbergers. The family dynasty dates back to 1896, when financier Adolf Ochs purchased the struggling Times for $70,000. Defying his many skeptics, Ochs soon built the Times into a powerhouse. He introduced such innovations as the words 'esne' and 'ern,' which made possible the first crossword puzzle. In 1903 the Times published the first illustrated corset advertisement for Gimbles, creating an awkward sensation among 13-year old boys. Under Ochs, the Times carefully honed a market niche as purveyor of progressive opinions to New York's growing upper class. Many well-heeled townsmen valued the paper's growing heft, which proved a useful tool for fending off pleading gutter urchins and ragged little match gir Selected by: Harold Gilchrist [ stations ], Wed, 18 May 2005 09:57:01 UTC
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WWR - Podcasting Thoughts And Tips 008 - How I Make An Audio Magazine (Podcast) - Jim Kloss (3.82MB; download) -- WWR - Podcasting Thoughts And Tips 008 - How I Make An Audio Magazine (Podcast)
I always get excited when I think about writing entries like this but then when I do it I get frustrated because there's no way I can include everything. I get lazy and don't even provide links but just say "Google it". I have no idea who's reading this but it's probably everyone from beginners to experts which makes it difficult to satisfy everyone.
There are some very good hints in this ... especially in the audio-post-processing section. I basically give away one of my secrets for creating audio that has a lot of clear 'shine' to it. But I can't take you by the hand and teach you everything. Sorry. And if you want to see any photo fullsize, just click on it.
Let's get ready to record an audio magazine...a cool hat from Hideous Harpy helps.
Coffee helps too.
This is the microphone I use but the brand name came off a long time ago. I think it's Australian. Notice the pop-filter (foam) to stop plosives like the letter "P". The gold dot marks where you're supposed to talk because this is a directional microphone. Although choice of microphone is important, basically anything other than a cheap $10 mic will probably work well. You can get a usable mic for $75-100 at any music store.
This is the mixer that the microphone plugs into. Mixers are great because they let you adjust the tone of your recording before it's even recorded on disk. I did a detailed entry about mixers that has more information.
These are my headphones. Headphones are fairly essential because they allow you to hear what you sound like and if you're getting too loud or too quiet.
This is where my setup is drastically different than any of yours. I record from our live webcast stream instead of recording using audio editing software. But I'm going to show you what I do anyway. This is the plugin I use for webcasting. It has an encoder that lets me record the webcast to an MP3 file live. I record the MP3 at 128kbps and 44kHz. (If I weren't webcasting, I'd be recording directly to a .WAV file in my audio editing software.)
Just the setup screen for recording our webcast direct to disk as an MP3.
Okay, since I'm now recording (and webcasting at the same time) it's time to say something profound. Notice that I'm listening to myself as I record so that I can move the microphone if I get too loud or too soft. Esther almost never does this and it drives me nuts.
Okay, I'm done recording. In my case, I've created an MP3 file that is 68,758 megabytes for about an hour of the daily rant.
Now it's time for me to leave the machine I recorded on and go over to The Wheat Hole to do post-processing. It's the post-processing that adds a lot of the audio quality and fixes our bad mic technique and other screwups. I'm taking my coffee and avoiding Esther's yogurt pee containers.
Maybe I should take a few of these with me ... oh, no, they've already been opened and are frozen and flat.
Over to The Wheat Hole being careful not to walk under the snow that's ready to fall off the eaves.
I need to go to the outhouse but don't want to get caught in snow up to my thighs so I skip it for now.
I sneak into The Wheat Hole without Esther knowing it. Thank goodness there's coffee on the woodstove.
I climb up the ladder to the loft where the computer I use to post-process audio is.
I gotta step carefully over CDs received this week for airplay ... and a few beer bottles.
This is the computer I use to post-process audio. It's fast. I dunno, Pentium 4 or something. It's extra-fast cuz I leave the cover off and let the drives hang out free.
This is the little mixer I use over in The Wheat Hole. No big deal.
Okay ... let's start. First thing I have to do (which you shouldn't because you recorded directly to a .WAV file right?) is convert my MP3 into a .WAV file. Audio editors are designed to work with Selected by: Harold Gilchrist [ stations ], Wed, 18 May 2005 09:54:14 UTC
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