Cemoy Clarke: "Me and J at the Studio" Video
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David Reeves: "You're So Special"
Watch Dave's first home-made music video done in his apartment. This is Dave's first amateur music video filmed himself with a digital camera and no experience or background in video production whatsoever, although he has been a musician and songwriter for many years. Please don't expect professional big-screen movie type quality, but you might find it interesting if you like metal or rock. The visual content was made with a sub-$100 camera and Ulead Video Studio v9 software.
Western Digital My Passport Studio
About the same size as a real passport, just thicker, the WD My Passport Studio boasts a very nice design, nifty capacity gauge, and comes with a sleek velure purse that's well-suited for frequent travelers.
The grainy video of this rocker was filmed in the studio.
"Office Space" meets "Risky Business." Facing a financial crunch that could cost his home, a beleaguered corporate filmmaker decides to use the company video studio at night to produce an adult version of the sexual harassment training video he's shooting during the day. "Clever...funny...guaranteed to be a crowd pleaser." -- Providence Journal
The Bird and the Bee: "Again and Again"
Over the course of 3 years, Inara George and Greg Kurstin, alias the bird and the bee, whiled away scattered afternoons in Greg's home studio in Echo Park, California, sequestered in a little world of their own making, and creating the ten sunshine-drenched, semi-psychedelic ditties you hold before you. Were these compositions intended for public consumption? Inara and Greg never gave it any thought; they made music together simply for the joy of it. ? with no real goal for the music except to enjoy the journey of making it. As casual as this sounds, the backgrounds of Inara George and Greg Kurstin are nothing to scoff at? Multi-instrumentalist Greg was a jazz piano prodigy by the time he started shaving; he moved to New York specifically to study with leftist Jaki Byard, a jazz icon best known as Mingus' pianist. He returned to Los Angeles and became one of the city?s most well respected musicians, lending his skills to the likes of Beck and Robert Moog, as well as writing with and/or producing The Flaming Lips, Peaches, and Lily Allen, to name a few. Inara George is the daughter of Lowell George, frontman of the eclectic ?70s Southern rock band Little Feat. For several years she was in different bands in the LosAngeles area until she began her solo career releasing 2005's critically acclaimed All Rise. During the making of that record was when Greg and Inara first met.
The music video for "Smile" by Junobot (R9 records.) Enjoy!!! Shot in Folsom, California and various Junobot live performances in Sacramento, Donkeytron studios has captured the 80's vibe and feel of the Junobot sound. From the album "The Nature of Technology," Smile features lyrics contemplating what to do with life's opportunities and a coffeehouse crush. The dance-beat formula and synthesizer hooks have made Smile one of Junobot's more popular tracks.
Dan Ackerman talks about the Dell Studio XPS 1640 at CES 2009.
Dell's first release from its new Studio line, the Studio 15, sits between the Inspiron and XPS lines and offers a good mix of features for the price.
Making of da grava??o de voz de Vicios Imortais. Dentro do home studio de Danilo Castro, o AP162, entre colch?es e muita inspira??o Patr?cia Fox (vocalista) "tenta" gravar as ultimas vozes da m?sica "v?cios imortais" da banda de pop-rock DAFNE... captado tudo por uma camera fotografica?!?! hehehe
Radio 4: "Packing Things Up On The Scene"
It only takes a few seconds of Enemies Like This, the title track to Radio 4?s new album, to realize that the Brooklyn-based band has returned with all cylinders fired up and with a rejuvenated sense of purpose. Radio 4 have never been ones to shy away from making a loud noise or issuing a firm statement, but on Enemies Like This, they?ve both streamlined and stretched their sound, they?ve cut the fat, trimmed the filler, and focused on the meat that makes the music, not the spices that can bury it. Enemies Like This is the album long awaited by all those who know that, up to now, Radio 4?s strongest impression has been made from the stage. To this end, Radio 4 stayed out of big studios for Enemies Like This. They recorded the backing tracks in December 2005 in an industrial section of Williamsburg (Headgear Studios), and added overdubs in the basement of a converted factory in Park Slope (the sarcastically named Seaside Lounge). For production, they brought over from London Jagz Kooner, a founding member of The Aloof and Sabres of Paradise known also for his radical mixes for Primal Scream, Kasabian, Soulwax and others. Radio 4 had struck up a friendship with Kooner on their travels, noting his innate understanding of how rock music can groove without getting all cerebral or convoluted about it. Enemies Like This came in ten songs and 43 minutes long like albums used to be back when they were spread over two sides of vinyl and there was no space to bury your mistakes. As much as these ten songs are devoid of filler, they?re also thrillingly diverse. Try and spot the influences ? Anthony Roman is about to openly cop to some of them but dont presume to peg this band. Radio 4 are proud of the scene from which they emerged, but with Enemies Like This, they?ve become very much their own entity.
