.. only words will remain when the $h!t hits the fan.
It was a quote from an older song I wrote [Terrestrial Epitaph In Shortwave], and I felt the need to develop it further here.
It amazes me how much free advice there is out there etched…
Alternate name: The Post-Mortem Pitchman
We live in an age nowadays where a celebrity can endorse a product or service long after they meet with the proverbial reaper.
Has anybody bothered to ask the dead guy if he wants to endorse half…
Alternate name: The Post-Mortem Pitchman
We live in an age nowadays where a celebrity can endorse a product or service long after they meet with the proverbial reaper.
Has anybody bothered to ask the dead guy if he wants to endorse half…
Alternate name: The Post-Mortem Pitchman
We live in an age nowadays where a celebrity can endorse a product or service long after they meet with the proverbial reaper.
Has anybody bothered to ask the dead guy if he wants to endorse half…
Alternate name: The Post-Mortem Pitchman
We live in an age nowadays where a celebrity can endorse a product or service long after they meet with the proverbial reaper.
Has anybody bothered to ask the dead guy if he wants to endorse half…
This is one of the tracks that ties into the theme from my RPM 2009 album [Like A Dark Mirror Keeping Its Secrets].
A fall from grace. Every up has its down. Every down has its up. There's definitely a "ying and yang" thing at work here.
Alternate name: The Post-Mortem Pitchman
We live in an age nowadays where a celebrity can endorse a product or service long after they meet with the proverbial reaper.
Has anybody bothered to ask the dead guy if he wants to endorse half…
Alternate name: The Post-Mortem Pitchman
We live in an age nowadays where a celebrity can endorse a product or service long after they meet with the proverbial reaper.
Has anybody bothered to ask the dead guy if he wants to endorse half…
Alternate name: The Post-Mortem Pitchman
We live in an age nowadays where a celebrity can endorse a product or service long after they meet with the proverbial reaper.
Has anybody bothered to ask the dead guy if he wants to endorse half…
Alternate name: The Post-Mortem Pitchman
We live in an age nowadays where a celebrity can endorse a product or service long after they meet with the proverbial reaper.
Has anybody bothered to ask the dead guy if he wants to endorse half…
This is one of the tracks that ties into the theme from my RPM 2009 album [Like A Dark Mirror Keeping Its Secrets].
A fall from grace. Every up has its down. Every down has its up. There's definitely a "ying and yang" thing at work here.
This was based off "After Nothing" by Synaptic Disturbance. It was from their 2009 RPM Challenge album entitled "Aplysia Californica"
He had put the root tracks up for remix, and this is what I came up with -- as an experiment, I purposely made…
This is a redo of "I've Made Myself A Wall", from the 2009 24 hour challenge on Alonetone.
I thought the original version was a little bland, so I wanted to take a stab at breathing some fresh life into it.
For my last RPM Challenge album…
Toughest thing to mix on the entire album. Synthesizer music for the attention-impaired.
If you don't like the current melody, wait five seconds.
Song name comes from my workplace addiction - I was going through a bag of cough drops weekly…
Even the cosmos needs system maintenance. When its IT department decides to delete something, sometimes that something doesn't want to go without a fight. Even computer viruses will do what they can to avoid the reaping hand of a virus checker…
"In a reformatted world with deleted people, there are still enough dead links that some individuals might indirectly be aware of the existence of those deleted. To everybody else, they'd seem either spiritual and/or mentally imbalanced…
"In a reformatted world with deleted people, there are still enough dead links that some individuals might indirectly be aware of the existence of those deleted. To everybody else, they'd seem either spiritual and/or mentally imbalanced…
This is a redo of "I've Made Myself A Wall", from the 2009 24 hour challenge on Alonetone.
I thought the original version was a little bland, so I wanted to take a stab at breathing some fresh life into it.
For my last RPM Challenge album…
This is a redo of "I've Made Myself A Wall", from the 2009 24 hour challenge on Alonetone.
I thought the original version was a little bland, so I wanted to take a stab at breathing some fresh life into it.
For my last RPM Challenge album…
This is a redo of "I've Made Myself A Wall", from the 2009 24 hour challenge on Alonetone.
I thought the original version was a little bland, so I wanted to take a stab at breathing some fresh life into it.
For my last RPM Challenge album…
This one was inspired by Wen's mom; and is therefore dedicated to all those musicians doing RPM, and all musicians who toil away at home to make their music despite what their friends & co-workers might think of their efforts.
That didn't stop her.
Main vocals/bleeps by Shreya, keys and backing vocals by me. Actually, my baby daughter was in my arms while I was doing those vocals and she started crying. Even though I cropped that part, I didn't use any noise reduction…
I like how you work the snare drums and bass in around the 1:30 mark. You scared the crap out of me, though.
I was standing in my bathroom wearing stereo headphones, and I thought my pipes had exploded or something.
This is well-assembled. The production is fantastic, as are the vocals. I like the atmospheric background sounds - it takes it up to the next level, IMHO.
First day back from the jungle in Central America, remixed this tune. Had to start off the new year in the U.S.A reminding myself that captivity will keep me returning to the jungle forever.
24 hours of music making for 2008.
Yup. This is a "Gaiman variation" which means that I stopped at 24 hours and this is what I've got. Not 24 min, but it is a "Noble Failure"
You can see my 2007 album [here](http://alonetone.com/sudara…
Fantastic production on this one.. Very immersive, and it makes good use of both the left and the right channel.
The only thing you may want to do is use noise reduction on the track to remove the background hiss.
Imagine that you are that lump of enchanted wood on the workbench.... and instead of Pinocchio you can be anything... maybe even a stratavarious... thanx to my friend Dave Edwards for the real violin trax
This is a song I wrote with Lisa Purdy (who sings the harmony vocal) about the experience of depression. Jim Bouchard plays lap steel - I'm playing/singing the rest.
This little ragtime number began life as just a snippet, written as background music for a home movie years ago. For the hard core ragtime buffs, I know this is not quite syncopated enough to be true ragtime, but hopefully its fun and bouncy…
Comments on AMUC's stuff
This reminds me of Hawkwind in places dig it very cool.
Like it, clean and clear sounding, refreshing with retro touches, nice one! :)
good mix
pretty damn good! i like the way it whirls with some cool sounds and the rhythm is tight.
Very cool
I love the atmosphere you create with your work. This one particularly. Great work!
Nicely done great mix.
Oh yea!! Danceable dynamite. Nice, clean production.
:)
Very clever! Love the vocal and synthy goodness, as always.
heavy breathing- captivating.
something very soothing about your songs....the bass guitar, very cool!
interesting piece, panning and the click voice was cool.
LOVE, LOVE, LOVE the synth sounds here. Well done.
You got any good theories on what "Lost" was supposed to really be about. You seem to have some kinda deep insight here with your music. I like it.
Mind=blown at this concept of yours. Brilliant I say.
i always love your lyrics
well done...AGAIN :)
FNG!
dats neat.
Comments made by AMUC
The background dialogue is great. =)
I like how you work the snare drums and bass in around the 1:30 mark. You scared the crap out of me, though. I was standing in my bathroom wearing stereo headphones, and I thought my pipes had exploded or something.
Kind of hypnotic.. The voice has a droning effect - it works well with the song.
Nice.. This really reminds me of Vangelis.
This is well-assembled. The production is fantastic, as are the vocals. I like the atmospheric background sounds - it takes it up to the next level, IMHO.
This is catchy.. I like the way the percussion, breath instruments and vocals play off each other..
Great harmonization. You don't hear much of that anymore.
Very interesting. I think you're onto something here.. Some of the synth sounds remind me of ELP.
This is jaw-droppingly good. It's somewhere between Tangerine Dream/David Arkenstone-esque electronica and old school progressive rock.
This is pretty catchy. I like the horns.
I like what you do with the Brian Eno dialogue here - it fits right in to the music.
This flows nicely - lots of different elements that balance each other out well.
Fantastic production on this one.. Very immersive, and it makes good use of both the left and the right channel. The only thing you may want to do is use noise reduction on the track to remove the background hiss.
I'm a big fan of number stations - I like this trippy tribute.
Very haunting.. It paints a scene well.
Heh. This is clever. You could probably put a horror twist on it - any tree turned into an instrument would have to be cut into pieces first. =)
This is godly. What software did you use to make this?
(ROFL) I'm jealous. This actually sounds good. (Was that one of the requirements of the 24 hour challenge? Oops - missed that one.)
This is really catchy. I like the dueling vocals at work here.
Nice piano -- very catchy.