Tag: rdio (page 1 of 1)

My Favorite Music of 2014

“When everything’s clear like cold water go feel better.“Little Dragon, Klapp Klapp

I rather enjoyed music this year. As I spent time re-listening to albums and songs in preparation for this post, I realized how much music I heard that I thought was genuinely good and interesting. In the midst of all the cotton candy confection on terrestrial radio and vine—a place that increasingly became where I discovered new to me sounds and artists and songs, some of which I actually liked—there were a lot of artists releasing confident and risk-taking songs and albums.

It almost seems anachronistic for artists to attempt to put out complete and connected albums with strong thematic ties or storytelling flourishes today. We live in the age of the eternally shuffled on streaming services like Spotify and Pandora and Rdio (my personal fave). The music video (even if it’s just lyrics or a static image) and soundcloud dominate the young ear. So why put together an album whose songs work better together? Especially with the standard being about 10 songs and 45 minutes these days? I don’t know but I’m glad folks did.

My Favorite Albums of 2014


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  1. Nabuma Rubberband – Little Dragon
  2. Art Official Age – Prince
  3. Piñata – Freddie Gibbs & Madlib
  4. Black Messiah – D’Angelo & The Vanguard
  5. Tough Love – Jessie Ware
  6. A Love Like Ours – Dominique Toney
  7. Sylvan Esso – Sylvan Esso
  8. Jungle – Jungle
  9. Oxymoron – Schoolboy Q
  10. With Metropole Orkest. – Laura Mvula

Some notes: D’Angelo did me dirty like Beyoncé did last December and put out an album that’s impossible to deny but that I haven’t had the time to sit with like I have with other albums. In fact, Black Messiah’s inclusion bumped Mary J. Blige’s The London Sessions—another late in the year entry—out of my top ten but you should really cop that one too. You’ll also have to forgive the nepotism but my sister’s album is good y’all. 

Little Dragon, Prince, and Freddie Gibbs with Madlib on the production produced the albums I kept coming back to this year, though. Every time I hear just one song from their releases I want to hear the whole collection. Art Official Cage is a revelation. I haven’t enjoyed the purple one this much since the Batman soundtrack.

Like Pusha T’s album last year, Piñata was the get hyped soundtrack for 2014. I bumped that in the car on road trips, in the morning on the ride to work, on the way home to take the edge off (or get it up). I was Thuggin’.

Ultimately, though, there’s a certain sound and sensibility that gets to me (gets me) more than everything else. Little Dragon is one of those bands and Nabuma Rubberband is one of those albums. Love it.

Other albums worthy of considerationMichael Jackson’s XSCAPE;  Kelis’s Food; alt-J’s This is All Yours; FKA Twigs – LP1; Sam Smith’s In The Lonely Hour; Jóhan Jóhannsson’s The Theory of Everything soundtrack; The Juan Mclean’s In A Dream; and, Nicki Minaj’s The Pinkprint

The Top Songs of 2014


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Rdio helpfully made a playlist. It’s pretty accurate although last.fm notes a few differences. Klapp Klapp was the song I went back to the most this year though less so in the last quarter of 2014. Drake’s 0 to 100/The Catch Up and D’Angelo’s Sugah Daddy deserve mention for the back 90 of this year.

Two important musical notes for me at the end of 2014 came out 22 and 25 years ago but seemed especially relevant for the complex ways I was/am feeling about the world. The hope and clarity of Janet Jackson’s Rhythm Nation 1814 and the anger and obstinance of Ice Cube’s The Predator were what my soul needed as America in the Fall of this year felt more like Los Angeles in the Spring of ’92. Rage and sadness and uprising and the knowledge and power to the people. 

We are a part of a rhythm nation and 20 years after Rodney King we’re still asking “when will they shoot?” and so we’re going to make it rough.

My Desktop, My Mind

“People should see how we’re living.”Lorde, Buzzcut Season

I made this revelation on twitter today:

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I was sure this was a boring tweet. A meaningless little victory of efficiency for me that had no bearing on anyone else. I was wrong. It sparked a conversation for the rest of the morning about mac setups and app choices and the approach to work.

It was sparked, for me, by this MacWorld article. I was surprised to see how many people don’t use things I use on the regular and how unique our setups are. This line was the most fascinating:

I sort the apps in my Dock by color, because my brain remembers where things are by where they fall on the color spectrum.

— Faith Korpi

What?! Perhaps our desktops are windows into our minds.

So, here, let me open the blinds…


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I’m currently using a 13 in. Macbook Air. At work, I have a large monitor that I use as a second screen. At home, I mostly stick with just the laptop screen although, occassionally, I use my iPad as a second screen using Air Display and, once in a blue moon, I’ll use our gigantor HDTV just because I can but that’s just me being silly.

As of today, I have my dock exposed and mounted to the left side. Previously it was docked at the bottom and hidden. So far, I like this new placement.

My dock is sorted by apps in order of usage and only features apps I use regularly. I use Chrome, Rdio, my mail program (as of today, trying out postbox), iCal, tweetbot, and evernote most. I just recently bought the MS Office suite after tiring of having to convert my beloved Keynote presentations into less awesome powerpoints that I couldn’t fix after conversion without opening a different laptop. When I’m at work, these all are open on the laptop screen.

My desktop stays pristine. I do not leave files up here.

On the second monitor, I place my browser windows. Usually a standard chrome window and a chrome incognito. If I’m testing something, firefox and safari will go over here, too.

I use full screen apps on both monitors (thanks Mavericks) and do a lot of swiping.

I use Launchpad a lot, too. I’m learning to use Spotlight more but it doesn’t come to mind first.

I use a program called EVE to remind me to use keystrokes over mouse strokes. This is a habit I’ve found hard to break.

Wallpaper is by Sam Ellis and from The Desktop Wallpaper Project.

So, that’s me.

What’s your brain, uh,  desktop like?

 

Out My Mind, Just In Time

“Round and Round I seem to go.”Erykah Badu, Out My Mind, Just in Time 

Some random thoughts that I need to get out of my head… 

Tiffany wrote a book called Jump Start HTML5 Basics that’s available for digital download. It’s the first in a series about the wonders of HTML5. I wasn’t allowed to read it before it was published so be like me and spend a few bucks to see what’s ticking in her mind.

I made a few updates to Louisville is for Lovers. Here’s a picture:


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I’ve become hooked on Rdio. A friend hipped me to a feature I wasn’t using (Play Later) which is simple yet awesome way to collect music for future listening without having to generate your own playlist like I had been doing. The music service also launched a recommendations feature recently that I’m already digging. Rdio is encouraging me to be more of an album listener than a shuffler. I still love my stations but I’m quicker to jump out of them and go listen to a full album than I have been in the past. I’m going to go broke buying albums that I’ve discovered there.

I’ve added red and burgundy into my closet for fall. I realized yesterday as I checked out my new henley in the mirror, that this is the first time I’ve worn red regularly in maybe 25 years. Old middle school fears about Crips and Bloods turn into habits that die hard. Even as I walked around Miracle Mile at lunch today, it lingered in the back of my head that maybe somebody would roll up on me and ask, “What set you claim?” Silly. (It probably didn’t help that I listened to Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City this morning, though).

TV. I don’t know if this is a fleeting feeling or representative of a meaningful shift in my life but, I’m tending towards turning the telly off and turning my kindle on more often this season. I still love my shows but, I’m loving fewer of them. Meanwhile, words—mine and yours—are proving endlessly interesting. If only there were enough time for them all.

Well, all of them, and Marvel Avengers Alliance on Facebook. I fear I’ll be on my death bed still trying to acquire the latest hero and complaining about PvP.

Add me. LVL 197.

 

A Couple Updates

“They call us dirty cause we break all your rules down.”Janelle Monáe, Q.U.E.E.N.

One Year After “The Red Wedding”

My friend and colleague Kim also wrote about last week’s odd anniversary. Also, it was nice to hear from some folks I hadn’t talked to in awhile and reminisce. There was something comforting in all the calm, and peace, and uncertainty in many of our hearts and minds. Nothing wrong with change if you know when to roll and when to push.

Turn Your Rdio Up

After a little over a week with rdio, I have thoughts:

  • Community features are awesome. There’s something elegant about how it tracks and showcases user/friend behavior. Informative without feeling voyeuristic.
  • Rdio’s apps are way strong. And being able to pick up right where I left off listening from my laptop to my iPad to my phone is a spectacular feature that I didn’t know I was missing.
  • Getting used to the radio features of rdio. I think I like them but am having to train my personal station a little more than I expected.
  • I wish you could start radio based on a playlist. I used this all the time on Spotify because sometimes even my regularly updated workout playlist feels stale.
  • I miss the last.fm app inside of spotify as a way to easily capture recommended albums.
  • I’m listening to Electric Lady on it right now.

Turn your Rdio Up

“Round and round, round in circles.”Myron & E, Going in Circles

I’m listening to Heavy Rotation radio on Rdio this morning as I write this post. A track from Shigeto’s latest album is playing. The Heavy Rotation radio station plays music that is being played regularly in my network of friends on the streaming music service.

I dig it.

I’ve been a hardcore Spotify user for, at least, the past two years. I tried both it and Rdio a couple summers ago and found Rdio lacking at the time. If I remember correctly, Rdio didn’t have a library as large as Spotify’s and didn’t have the user penetration that Spotify had so the social features, which were and still are, better, didn’t do it for me.

But the music heads amongst my friends have stuck with Rdio over that time and have been increasingly singing it’s praises so, for the month of September, I’m giving the service another go ’round.

First Thoughts:

  • The apps and interface are really elegant.
  • The social aspects are much stronger than Spotify’s and put in your face a lot. I like that. One of my favorite things is knowing what my friends are really listening to in charts and such. This is something Spotify has started to bury with their new discover tab. I appreciate this difference here.
  • I miss the ability to “star” tracks but maybe I don’t need that here
  • This isn’t Rdio’s fault but re-creating playlists is a pain in the ass anytime you switch music services. So is the process of getting these services to learn your changing musical peculiarities. Familiarity is a powerful reason to stick with something even if better options are out there.

You can find me on Rdio.

Any tips for the newbie?