Whether it's your first Bonnaroo or you’re a music festival veteran, we welcome you to Inforoo.
Here you'll find info about artists, rumors, camping tips, and the infamous Roo Clues. Have a look around then create an account and join in the fun. See you at Bonnaroo!!
Post by mindexpansi0n on May 15, 2007 12:02:27 GMT -5
I use both Soulseek main client and the "Test" client - usually at the same time to double my chances of getting the tunes I want. Add "Mind Expansi0n" and "Mind Expansi0n 2" <--- Those are zeros and not O's.
What is your username, and what client do you use?
blazeaway54 said:
mindexpansi0n said:
This sounds very familiar... I'll go on kicks where I download lots and lots of one genre and listen to it religiously for about a month and then switch gears.
Right now I'm on a Led Zeppelin kick big time... along with Ween, Sasha and Digweed, and Paul Van Dyk. I'm up to almost 40 gigs of music - and I am extremely anal about my music collection... must be all full albums, all dated/genre/artist/album in iTunes, and all with album art for the benefit of my iPod.
What's your name on Soulseek? You sound like the kind of fellow I should be associating with. I'm at 55 gigs and am nearly as anal, but I wasn't always so I still have some incomplete albums floating around...
I have become a big modern jazz fan in the last few weeks. I travel a lot so I am always scanning my XM. Lately it has been locked on a channel called Beyond Jazz. I never knew I liked jazz so much! I am looking forward to the jazz artists this year at the roo.
the past week for me has been filled with Queen and Brazilian Girls. i'm not quite sure what that says about me but you better believe i've been loving it. hehe
Post by sweetvirginia on May 21, 2007 10:43:28 GMT -5
its been krautrock the past few days.neu!,can,faust,van der graf generator. and exile on main street. but i always am listening to exile on main street.
Post by stallion pt. 2 on May 21, 2007 20:58:06 GMT -5
I've been listening to a lot of musique concrete and other kinds of early, experimental electronic music. I took a class on electro-acoustic music in college a few years back and I really enjoyed some of the archaic experements that eventually led to more modern synths and electronic music styles.
John: We don't even understand our own music Spider: It doesn't, does it matter whether we understand it? At least it'll give us . . . strength John: I know but maybe we could get into it more if we understood it