Categories
Geek Music

Tucows Ready to Rock With .eu Domains [Updated]

The MP3 included with this entry is no longer available.

EURid, the European registry of

internet domain names, has accredited Tucows to sell .eu (as in

“Europe”) domain names. The countdown has started: we’ll be offering it

later this year.

I suppose I will be expected to learn how to play Europe’s rock anthem, The Final Countdown on accordion. Or maybe on that old Korg Poly 800 synth that Steph gave to me for my birthday.

I’m gonna have to draw the line at growing ’80’s metal hair, though.

Categories
It Happened to Me Music

Busybusybusy / Music for You!

They’ve got me doing a lot of computer-y stuff on the internets today…

Photo: Computer programming, as depicted in 'Space: 1999'.

…but that doesn’t mean you’re going to leave this site empty-handed.

I give you Hayseed Dixie (the band known for doing AC/DC covers in a

bluegrass style) doing their special countrified version of The

Darkness’ I Believe in a Thing Called Love! [4.7MB MP3]

Categories
Accordion, Instrument of the Gods It Happened to Me Music

Because This Blog’s Been a Little Lacking in Shameless Self-Promotion Lately

Photo: Joey deVilla plays accordion at the OPML meetup on Tuesday,

  August 2, 2005.

Click the picture to see the video (26MB,

QuickTime)

Brian McKechnie pointed me to this video [26MB,

QuickTime] that he shot of my Baby One More Time performance at the end of

last week’s OPML

meetup.

Thanks, Brian!

The accordion and I will be at Thursday’s TechTV

Meetup, which takes place at No Regrets, deep in “the dingy alleys of Toronto’s Porn

District”, Liberty Village

Categories
Music

On Heavy Rotation

Like the great John Peel,

I’m not letting advancing age (I am a good sight closer to 40 than 30)

turn my iTunes library into a time capsule from my youth. Although you

won’t find much evidence on MTV, MuchMusic or standard radio, the world

of music is bigger than ever. Luckily, the ‘net lets you find the music

that’s just too quirky, too offbeat and just not generally palatable in

that pop pablum way that big hits are to get played on video stations

and standard radio.

You’ll find a list of the albums getting a lot of play on my iTunes

below.  I “discovered” some of them by listening to internet

radio, where the selection is much wider and the programming less pusillanimous

than commercial media. Others were sent to me by friends and blog

readers with a “Hey! Thought you might like this!” message tacked on.

Aside from Beck and The Bravery, most of what’s on heavy rotation on my

iTunes won’t be found on standard radio, but it’s great music. I highly recommend them all.

Eels: Blinking Lights and Other Revelations

Vitalic: OK Cowboy

Polysics: Polysics or Die

Beck: Guero

The Decemberists: Picaresque

Clap Your Hands Say Yeah: Clap Your Hands Say Yeah

Hard-Fi: Stars of CCTV

The Knitters: The Modern Sounds of the Knitters

Danger Doom (that is, Danger Mouse and MF DOOM): The Mouse and the Mask (Not out yet. I got…er, an advance copy. Yeah.)

The Bravery: The Bravery

Sigur Rós: Takk (Also not yet released. It…um, fell from an Einstein-Rosen bridge that linked my current position in space-time to Penguin Music on the release date.)

Art Blakey: The Definitive (Okay, so this one’s not that current. But I hadn’t heard it in a long time, and it’s jazzalicious.)

Platinum Pied Pipers: Triple P

American Analog Set: Set Free (To be released September 20, when I plan to buy it.)

JR Ewing: Maelstrom (Available everywhere…in Norway!)

The Boy Least Likely To: The Best Party Ever

Ratatat: Ratatat

Architecture in Helsinki: Fingers Crossed

Based on this set of albums, is there anything you think I’d like? Feel free to make your recommendations in the comments.

Categories
Accordion, Instrument of the Gods In the News Music

An Accordion World Record

Photo: World-record accordion playing crowd in St. John's, Newfoundland.

David Akin emailed me about this earlier today: yesterday in St. John’s, Newfoundland, almost 1,000 people gathered to play accordion simultaneously, breaking the previous world record of 644, set in Kimberley, British Columbia.

Photo: World-record accordion playing crowd in St. John's, Newfoundland.

To qualify for the world record, you can’t just have a large number of accordion players gathered in one spot: according to this page

on the St. John’s Folk Festival site, they have to all play the same

orchestrated piece for a minimum of five minutes. The designated piece

is an old Newfoundland folk tune called Mussels in the Corner.

A number of the people in attendance were accordion owners but not

accordion players — many learned how to play the piece just days or

hours before the event.

Photo: World-record accordion playing crowd in St. John's, Newfoundland.

Congratulations, folks! I would’ve loved to have been there.

[Thanks to David Akin for emailing me about this story!]

Categories
Accordion, Instrument of the Gods In the News Music

R.I.P. Myron Floren

[Thank to abnu for the heads-up!] Back when we lived together during our stay at Crazy Go Nuts

University, George and I would stumble across a channel playing a rerun of The

Lawrence Welk Show while watching TV. Rather than quickly flip to

another channel, we’d sit there transfixed, watching this strange

little bit of Americana fixed in amber, and I suspect one of the

reasons was the gentleman pictured below, Myron Floren:

Photo: Myron Floren.

I am the polka king! I can do anything! In the heyday of The Lawrence Welk Show, he was mobbed by fans, just like a rock star!

Myron got his big break in the late 1940’s when he and his wife 

attended a Lawrence Welk performance at the Casa Loma ballroom in St.

Louis. Welk invited him onstage to perform a number, and Floren chose

Lady of Spain which wowed the crowed. Impressed with the enthusiastic

reaction and Floren’s playing, Welk invited him to join the band that

night, and in 1950, Floren started a 32-year run on Welk’s show.

Even though polka isn’t really my thing, I am an admirer of Floren’s excellent

playing technique. The man’s fingers were a blur over the piano

keyboard and chord buttons, and he played a mean version of Beer Barrel Polka

(which you might know better as “Roll Out the Barrel”, which is

actually the first line of the chorus). He was also regarded as an

excellent conductor; it’s said he did a better job conducting with his

elbows (since his hands were occupied with the accordion) than most

bandleaders did with a free hand and a  baton.

Floren is probably behind one of the major reasons that the accordion

is considered an old folks’ instrument. He cemented its reputation in

his three decades of bandleading on The Lawrence Welk Show,

which got cancelled in 1982 not because of flagging ratings, but

because it was considered “too old” for advertisers. In spite of this,

I owe Mr. Floren a debt of gratitude, for without the image of the

accordion that he firmly implanted in the minds of generations of North

Americans, my own approach to the accordion — as well as those of “Weird Al” Yankovic, They Might Be Giants, Tom Waits or The Arcade Fire — wouldn’t be as special. Without him, we’d be players of yet another ordinary instrument, such as drums, bass and guitar.

Myron Floren died last Saturday at the age of 85 at home in Los Angeles County.

He is survived by his wife, five daughters and seven grandchildren. May

the bellow action be smooth and the reeds be true whereever you are,

Mr. Floren!

Categories
Music

Music Video of the Week

Oh. My. God. This can’t be

real [-link to QuickTime movie]…

Photo: Still image from the 'Pizazz' video.

The video is safe for work, except for the fact that your co-workers

will think that you’ve gone off your rocker.

The site also has links to a couple of tunes in MP3

format:

At it least it’s nice to see that the “Where’s

Waldo?” guy found some work…