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Jan 10

Thesixtyone

Posted on Sunday, January 10, 2010 in News

We’ve been fans of thesixtyone.com for some time now. It’s a great music site that combines music, social networking, and a game aspect all in one unique package. It’s a free site for listening to artist-submitted music, and users control what songs rise to the top by ‘hearting’ songs they like.

Beat Concrete reflection logo

Beat Concrete reflection logo

If you’re already on thesixtyone, you can hear us by going to our new band account at thesixtyone.com/#/beatconcrete. We’d love to see you there—if you enjoy our music we can use your support, and it’s a fun place to share music and interactions while discovering tons of really cool bands.

Unlike MySpace, there are filters on T61 for finding new music you like–whether by genre, popularity, mood, or by what your friends like. It’s a very democratic process and there are thousands of rabid music fans you can make friends with through listening to each other’s radios, sharing comments, hyping bands you like, etc. If you just want to listen to free music, you can do that to, but it’s really designed for people who want to interact with artists and listeners in a more active fashion.

“One Quarter Full” is the first song we posted, and it’s up now at thesixtyone.com/#/beatconcrete.

Peace.

Jun 17

Three Cheers for Fleet Foxes

Posted on Wednesday, June 17, 2009 in News

Some days you read stuff that makes your heart feel good. That’s what we felt today when we read Hypebot’s article on Fleet Foxes. Singer Robin Pecknold definitely hasn’t let success go to his head, saying among other things that illegally downloading songs helped his musical growth and that Fleet Foxes would never, ever sign with a major label.

Fleet Foxes bringing light to the indie music world

Fleet Foxes bringing light to the indie music world

Here’s a quote from his blog that Exclaim picked up:

“Fleet Foxes will never, ever, under no circumstances, from now until the world chokes on gas fumes, sign to a major label. This includes all subsidiaries or permutations thereunder. Till we die.

“I just don’t see the point. Most major labels seem anti-music. We’ve pursued no such deal with Virgin (or been pursued to my knowledge, I think it was just a bit of news they reported) and would be idiots to be unhappy with our fam of label folks. It is true though that all copies of the CD LP will now include a free copy of the EP (like it is currently with the vinyl), but that’s not a ’special limited edition,’ it’ll be that way in perpetuity, no extra cost or packaging change.”

Unlike other successful artists (cough, cough, Metallica) Fleet Foxes say they don’t give a fig if fans download their songs illegally:

As much music as musicians can hear, that will only make music richer as an art form,” singer Robin Pecknold told the BBC. “I think we’re seeing that now with tons of new bands that are amazing, and are doing way better music now than was being made pre-Napster.”

“I’ve downloaded hundreds and hundreds of records – why would I care if somebody downloads ours? That’s such a petty thing to care about,” says Pecknold. “I mean, how much money does one person need? I think it’s disgusting when people complain about that, personally.”

This makes us glad that we bought their first album and makes even more excited for the next one (which, BTW, they are recording now in a northwest home studio). We’re all for legal downloading and use our Rhapsody subscription to listen to tons of new bands, but honestly, if you don’t have the money why should you be deprived of hearing new music? Support artists as much as you can but keep listening by any means necessary.

We’ll leave you with a clip of Fleet Foxes video for White Winter. Funnily enough, tried to put a link to their appearance on SNL but NBC had blocked the video–kind of makes the case for them being better off on Sub Pop rather than working for a major media conglomerate, doesn’t it? Peace.