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Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring funny music, all of which has lyrics.Quantum Entanglement (2:36) - The FuMP - BandCampAA Battery Controlled Telescopic Knife (3:33)Love and Romance Game (3:03) - Jamendo - Internet ArchiveYou Might Be (4:29)It's F***ing Cold Outside (edited) (1:29)That was Quantum Entanglement by Glen Raphael, which is available from The Funny Music Project or his BandCamp website. While you're at it check out some of his other songs on his BandCamp site - he's got some really hilarious stuff on there. After that was AA Battery Controlled Telescopic Knife by Look Left, which is available from The Funny Music Project. Then we had Love and Romance Game by Mind Cabaret, which used to be available from Jamendo but is now available at The Internet Archive. Next up was You Might Be by Insane Ian, which is available from The Funny Music Project. Finishing up was a maybe just a wee bit censored version of It's F***ing Cold Outside by Fortress of Attitude, which is available from The Funny Music Project. All five songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.As of right now, when I'm putting this episode together, that song's currently hilariously relatable, however from the weather it's looking like by the time this airs it'll be a bit warmer. Regardless, I don't normally like to play songs that I have to heavily censor, but that song was such a humdinger I figured it was worth censoring anyway. I try to keep this podcast pretty much squeaky clean. Hope you enjoyed it.Kittens for Sale (2:45)Firm Thighs (2:08)Sprinkles On My Donut (4:30)Autocomplete (Featuring Worm Quartet) (edited) (4:43)I Love Doritos (2:05)That was Kittens for Sale by TV's Kyle, which is available from The Funny Music Project. After that was Firm Thighs by Fuzzy Logic, which is available from Jamendo. Then we had Sprinkles On My Donut by Art Paul Schlosser, which is available from The Funny Music Project Sideshow. And, yeah, pretty much all of his songs are like that. Next up was a somewhat edited version of Autocomplete (Featuring Worm Quartet) by Devo Spice, which is available from The Funny Music Project. And finishing up was I Love Doritos by Todd Chappelle, which is available from The Funny Music Project Sideshow. All five songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.Today's app-of-the-day is Mozilla Thunderbird, an e-mail client program. It has functionality for checking, organizing, and sending e-mail from multiple providers and has a ton of plugins available which allow you to add even more functionality to it. One plugin in particular I like is called Lightning, which adds calendar functionality. It's very easy to use, easy to install, and is free and open source. It's available for Linux, OS/2, OpenSolaris and OpenIndiana, BSD, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows. Download it today from mozilla.org/thunderbirdNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors, followed by more music. And as a heads-up, the first song in the next set is a really hard to locate joke that, if you get it, is hilarious, but if you miss or otherwise can't understand the first couple words it won't make any sense. The joke is explained afterward, but keep your ears peeled.The FuMPLorem Ipsum (4:33)Free Water (edited) (4:21)Best Game Ever (edited) (4:31)T.F.O.S. (2:35)The New Me (edited) (3:30)That was an edited version of Podcast Promo by The FuMP, which is available from The Funny Music Project and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Lorem Ipsum by kerrymarsh, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Those of you with design experience may have recognized that they were singing filler text called Lorem Ipsum. Anyway, then we had a slightly edited version of Free Water by Redbox and the Chilipeppers, which is available from The Funny Music Project and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Now, you'd think this'd be common sense, but based on conversations with some people, please don't do that. Someone has to pay for your utility usage, be it water, gas, electricity, or otherwise and if it's not you it's just going to be made up for in your costs somewhere else eventually. Rant aside, next up was a slightly edited version of Best Game Ever by Mikey Mason, which is available from The Funny Music Project and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was T.F.O.S. by Eoghnved Mmrkuudnen, which is available from The Funny Music Project Sideshow and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. And finishing up was an edited version of The New Me by Dino-Mike, which is available from The Funny Music Project and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some steampunk music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring instrumental acoustic music.Buckarooster (2:58)A la Roberto, tema II (Quien fuera) (1:27)Lessons Instrumental (2:41)Joe's Acoustic (3:31)Thursday (2:28)5:4 (1:15)That was Buckarooster by Doug Jamieson, and A la Roberto, tema II (Quien fuera) by clbustos, which are both available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Lessons Instrumental by Mission8, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Joe's Acoustic, which was available from SoundCloud but has since been removed, and was licensed under an Attribution license as of November 25, 2012. Next up was Thursday by Andrew Aycoth and finishing up was 5:4 by shkadarns, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license.I love alternative time signatures like 5:4. I once tried putting together an episode of all songs in alternative time signatures, but they're a little hard to find since most people don't choose titles for songs based on their time signature. I've had the same problem with finding songs which use a particular instrument. So, on that note, if you know of any good open licensed 5:4 or 7:8 songs or anything like that, please let me know.I40 - INTERSTATE (4:52)Learn to Fly (Instrumental Version) (3:24)East Side Bar (Instrumental) (3:15)Five Seconds (instrumental) (2:39)Spanish-ish (3:01)Major12 (2:45)Not A Thing To Be Grasped (1:17)That was I40 - INTERSTATE by Bane Djakovic, which is available from Jamendo. After that was Learn to Fly (Instrumental Version) followed by East Side Bar (Instrumental), both by Josh Woodward (Instrumental Versions) and available from Jamendo. Next up was Five Seconds (instrumental) by The Background Clown, Spanish-ish and Major12 by (c) Jun Sugiyama 2012, and finishing up was Not A Thing To Be Grasped by JohnStuart, which are available from SoundCloud. All seven songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is vim. It's a command-line text editor, and it runs pretty well everywhere, including on my phone. It has a relatively easy-to-learn basic command set with a ton of more powerful commands and the ability to install all kinds of plugins. It's available for Linux, BSD, AmigaOS, OS/2, Android, iOS, Windows CE, MorphOS, MacOS Classic, DOS, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, and many more. Download it today at vim.orgNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors, followed by more music.Around the World in 80 DaysSereno(Acústico) (3:24)Death On The Wind (4:17)4am (3:24)Serenite (5:10)To gather around (3:19)Let Me Be Your Cure (3:49)That was Sereno(Acústico) by clbustos, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was Death On The Wind by Pattanga, and 4am by Bowl Of Ice Cream, which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Serenite by Oursvince, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Next up was To gather around by michele cigna, and finishing up was Let Me By Your Cure by Pattanga, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some funny music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring chiptunes.Skyball (3:17)BossaNova (1:17)Chairborne Boogie [IT (48K)] (3:22)Asymmetrical Mode; ON (1:54)Itty Bitty 8 Bit (3:13)Spiff Tune - And so it Begins (2:53)Dstort (3:31)Colored Pixels (3:34)That was Skyball by DJ Bouche, BossaNova by 8-BITchin'tendo, Chairborne Boogie [IT (48K)] by ipidev, and Asymmetrical Mode; ON by Claudia Andrea Hermosilla, all four of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Itty Bitty 8 Bit by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Spiff Tune - And so it Begins by Spiff Tune, which used to be available from SoundCloud but has since been removed and was licensed under an Attribution license as of February 1, 2013. Next up was Dstort by ChrisLody, and finishing up was Colored Pixels by 8-BITchin'tendo, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license.This week's another Attribution week, so feel free to reuse this music. Or, for that matter, the parts where I'm talking if you somehow found a good use for it. The Attribution license is a wonderful thing.On that note, since this podcast is all audio, I should mention a few resources for Attribution-licensed visual media:- First, the photo sharing website Flickr. If you use their Advanced Search function, you can limit your searches to only those which are licensed as Attribution or possibly Attribution Share-Alike. They have some excellent photos on there as well as lots of stuff you can use as pieces of things.- DeviantArt is also very good. They don't provide a nice Creative Commons search feature like Flickr, but they do offer Creative Commons licensing choices for works uploaded to their system and there are a few groups dedicated to building collections of CC-licensed works. One such group is Creative-Commons which also has instructions for how to use a search engine to find Creative Commons works on DeviantArt under particular search terms. Bit of a hack, but there is some very nice artwork on DeviantArt which doesn't quite fit on Flickr, though not as much is under pure Attribution licenses.- OpenGameArt is another one. I've mentioned them before and I'll mention them again. They have 3D models, tile sets, sprite sheets, music, textures, sound effects, and much of it under very permissive licenses. With the resources on OpenGameArt, you could truly build a game without having to create any of the artwork from scratch.And, with that, it's high time we get back to music.Darker Waves (1:55)Deathmatch Psycho (2:37)Usual Day (3:01)JRPG_fields_loop (2:01)Some Dealings With The Office Of Magic (3:24)Pure NES (1:03)Strawberry Tea (1:45)Yerzmyey - Ai (4:21)Vectorverse Tier 2 (4:14)Blow into the cartridge! (0:20)That was Darker Waves by Zander Noriega, which is available from OpenGameArt. After that was Deathmatch Psycho by Andrey Avkhimovich, which is available from Jamendo. Then we had Usual Day [NSF (Classical)][FCM10] by ipidev, which is available from SoundCloud. Next up was JRPG_fields_loop from the JRPG Collection by Yubatake, which is available from OpenGameArt. After that was Some Dealings With The Office Of Magic by elmusho, Pure NES by Sam Shideler, Strawberry Tea by Tenlki, Yerzmyey - Ai by YERZMYEY, Vectorverse Tier 2 by Nicholas Shooter, and finishing up was Blow into the cartridge! by Nicholas Shooter, all six of which are available from SoundCloud. All ten songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is Audacity. Audacity is a fairly full-featured open-source audio editing and effects program. It's what I used to record my voice and edit this podcast together. One of the features I like about it most is its noise cancelling functionality, which I've been able to successfully use to remove noise even in situations where the noise was about as loud as the signal, and even when commercial solutions have fallen flat. It's cross-platform as well, so whether you're running Linux, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, or I think BSD, you can still use it. Download it today at audacity.sourceforge.netNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors, followed by more music.LibrivoxWrong Kind Of Tea (1:59)Mean Streets (3:00)Kamaria's OP (1:38)JRPG_town_loop (2:14)Yerzmyey - Proof of concept (2:36)Khone - Sirius (1:31)That was Wrong Kind Of Tea by elmusho, Mean Streets by Firage, and Kamaria's OP by Patashu, all three of which are available from SoundCloud. After that was JRPG_town_loop from the JRPG Collection by Yubatake, which is available from OpenGameArt. Then we had Yerzmyey - Proof of concept by YERZMYEY, and finishing up was Khone - Sirius by Khone, both of which are available from SoundCloud. All six songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some instrumental acoustic music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring pirate music and other stuff that's not necessarily pirate music but I think goes well with it. Some of the music this week does have lyrics.Into Aer Cumri (3:28)Polka No. 1 for Accordion in C minor (2:15)Parisian (0:43)Talijanska (1:56)Waltz No. 1 for Accordion in C minor (2:39)Poirot (2:38)That was Into Aer Cumri by Mattias Westlund, which was formerly available from Jamendo and is now available from The Internet Archive, which is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Polka No. 1 for Accordion in C minor by Steven O'Brien, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Parisian by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Talijanska by Balkan Balagan, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Waltz No. 1 for Accordion in C minor by Steven O'Brien, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. And finishing up was Poirot by Michael Lambright, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license.MusOpen's back on KickStarter again with a new project to record more classical music to release as public domain. Most of the classical music out there is public domain due to how old it is, but that's the music itself. Recordings of said classical music are generally newer and are covered by copyright, preventing them from being reused without explicit licensing. Musopen's goal is to change that. Their previous KickStarter campaign successfully allowed them to record a bunch of well-known music which they released to The Internet Archive as public domain. Now their goal is to record the complete works of Chopin, and as of the time of this episode they have almost reached their goal already. To take a look and help out, please visit http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/Musopen/set-chopin-freeVolant (7:25)Gypsy Csardas and Men's Dances from Kalotaszeg (edited) (6:14)Miri's Magic Dance (1:36)Amari Szi (4:37)That was Volant by La Troba Kung-Fu and an edited version of Gypsy Csardas and Men's Dances from Kalotaszeg by MetroFolk, both of which are available from Free Music Archive and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Miri's Magic Dance by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Amari Szi by The Underscore Orkestra, which is available from Free Music Archive and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.Today's app-of-the-day is Synergy. Synergy is a neat little system to let you use one keyboard and mouse to run multiple computers. So, for example, in my normal computer setup I have my desktop running Xubuntu Linux with its two monitors set up with the keyboard and mouse, and I have Synergy set up on my Gentoo Linux laptop so the cursor and keyboard smoothly move right over to it without having to plug in or unplug anything. Basically when my mouse hits the edge of the desktop's screen, it pops over onto the laptop's. And the great thing is that the computers involved don't have to run the same operating system. They have downloads for Linux, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, and iOS for iPad and iPhone devices, though I have little doubt there's a port available for BSD, OpenIndiana, etc. It's available from synergy-foss.org and is very simple to set up.Now for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors, followed by more music.Treasure IslandFrench Blues (2:55)Sailor's Saturday Night B-dur (3:38)The Battle of Gavelburg (4:18)Black Flag Flying (edited) (3:47)That was French Blues by The Joy Drops, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Sailor's Saturday Night B-dur by HEINZ ALMSTEDT, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Then we had The Battle of Gavelburg by Mattias Westlund, formerly available from Jamendo and now available from The Internet Archive, which is licensed under an Attribution license. And finishing up was a slightly edited version of Black Flag Flying by davidrovics, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some chiptunes. See 'ya!Download MP3Download OGG
Just a quick note, because I've had a few people request this. This is not a full list, but here are a few of the places I commonly get music from:ccMixterFreeMusicArchiveFreeSoundIncompetechJamendoOpenGameArtSoundCloudThe Funny Music ProjectZero-ProjectYou can also find this information in the sidebar of the website.- RalphHi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring electronic music.Luceds - Going Steampunk (3:20)Adibudi - Special sounds for special girl (Final version) (3:04)Edge (2:52)Melodia F (1:20)That was Luceds - Going Steampunk by Luceds, which was available from SoundCloud. After that was Adibudi - Special sounds for special girl (Final version) by Adibudi, which is available from Jamendo. Then we had Edge by Mystery Mammal and finishing up was Melodia F by BrunoXe, which are both available from SoundCloud. All four of the songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.There seems to be a lot of confusion about which license to choose when publishing something that you want to open license. Now, right upfront, I'm going to say that I'm not an attorney and this is not to be construed as legal advice. However, wonder no more, because there are a number of good guides out there. If your work is of a creative nature, the Creative Commons licenses are very popular and easy to choose from. Just visit http://creativecommons.org/choose/ to get started. They'll let you choose the terms and conditions under which you want to license your work. And that popularity thing I mentioned earlier? That's one of the big advantages of Creative Commons licenses. Not all licenses can legally have their stuff combined together. Many licenses explicitly state which other licenses they can be combined with. Well, because the Creative Commons licenses are so easy to use and so popular, there's a whole ecosystem of compatible-licensed stuff that, by licensing your work under a Creative Commons license, other people can combine your work with to build more cool stuff.That said, the Creative Commons licenses are generally not recommended for computer programs, with the exception of the CC0 license which is just plain awesome anyway, because there are other licenses which are generally better-suited to licensing code. For a generally easy-to-read guide to available source code licenses, check out the Free Software Foundation's license guide at https://gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html which has a very large list of licenses, the terms they cover, how they can be combined, etc. Personally I'm a big fan of CC0 and the zlib license, but there are a whole bunch of other very good licenses on there for different purposes.Anyway, it's about time I quit yakking and get back to music.Copycat (Sunrise Mix) (ft. Fredrik Wasberger, Shannon Hurley) (5:29)Breathless (ft. Jen Someone) (4:05)Nightmare Night Showdown (5:51)Electronic Engineering (3:15)That was Copycat (Sunrise Mix) (ft. Fredrik Wasberger, Shannon Hurley) and Breathless (ft. Jen Someone), both by Ic3m4n, available from ccMixter, and licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was Nightmare Night Showdown by Sonikkureinbumu, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Finishing up was Electronic Engineering by Katharine Priegues, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is PuTTY, a cross-platform terminal, telnet, and SSH client. It gives you the ability to open terminal windows to many different types of command-line terminal servers, encrypted and not, network and serial. If you've been in IT for very much time, you've probably used this program at one point in time or another, and if you haven't yet, you probably will. What surprised me is that it's also available for platforms other than Microsoft Windows now. I'm used to using command-line ssh from Linux, but apparently now PuTTY is available for Linux, BSD, Symbian, Classic Mac OS, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, and Windows Mobile. It's available for download at www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/puttyNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors, followed by more music.The FuMPSummer Night (3:13)He Is The Pirate Lord (2:58)Barbershop (5:16)IFIF - Dark Carnival (4:54)Dj Goubz - Synth 3 (4:00)the last sunset(versione dance) (3:41)That was an edited version of Podcast Promo by The FuMP, which is available from thefump.com and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Summer Night by Eclectic Electronic, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had He Is The Pirate Lord by Eilios, which was available from SoundCloud and was licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Next up was Barbershop by Rataxes, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was IFIF - Dark Carnival by IFIF, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Dj Goubz - Synth 3 by Dj Goubz, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. And finishing up was the last sunset(versione dance) by Mirco dj, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some piratey music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi folks!Sorry for the lack of updates. Life happened, and it took me a while to catch up. For now, the schedule for this podcast is being changed from once a week (followed by nothing for months...) to once a whenever. At least until I get more of a buffer built back up. Anyway, happy listening!- RalphHi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring pop and rock. Much of the music this week has vocals, so with that out of the way, let's get started.Released.cc - Overture Cello Hardcore (3:16)Mississippi ( The Phoenix Mix ) (5:46)Doing Eurodisco (Overboard) (ft. Shannon Hurley) (3:44)Matter of Time (Mumblemix) (ft. Shannon Hurley) (4:40)Making Me Nervous (2:31)That was Released.cc - Overture Cello Hardcore by Released.cc, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Mississippi ( The Phoenix Mix ) by Loveshadow, Doing Eurodisco (Overboard) (ft. Shannon Hurley) by Ic3m4n, and Matter of Time (Mumblemix) (ft. Shannon Hurley) by Incoherent Mumble Train, all three of which are available from ccMixter and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Finishing up was Making Me Nervous by Brad Sucks, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.I'm a big fan of webcomics, and there are a lot of really good ones out nowadays. But some cartoonists are not only awesome enough to put their work up online, but allow you to share it. For example:- xkcd, a gag-a-day comic covering general geek humor- Enjuhneer, a story comic about the cartoonist's experiences attending a tech college- Spiked Math, a gag-a-day comic about math, with a strong emphasis on horrible puns, and- Skin Horse, a story comic about mad scientists' monsters working in government social work jobsThey make for a very fun read, and the cool thing is they're all open licensed!Don't tell me (edited) (3:30)Shaky Bone Disease Epidemic (3:30)Circus Freak Flattery Drum N Bass Mix (4:19)Falling More In Love (4:46)That was a slightly edited version of Don't tell me by MOPI and Shaky Bone Disease Epidemic by shanel.tv, which are both available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Then we had Circus Freak Flattery Drum N Bass Mix by Kamihamiha, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Finishing up was Falling More In Love by Celestial Grounds, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is Dia, a very nice little diagram drawing and editing program. Basically, you draw in shapes and connect them with lines or arrows. It works great for flowcharts and wiring diagrams. And if you want to change something, you can just drag the shape and the lines connecting it to the other shapes move right along with it. It's available for Linux, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows. Download it today at http://live.gnome.org/DiaNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors, followed by more music.The Memoirs of Sherlock HolmesDrop Down (3:14)The Highlights (edited) (3:41)Che (5:08)lee-dai jones lord he rides ep (3:39)That was Drop Down by Mike Falzone and the Peppermint Trick, a slightly edited version of The Highlights by Sunwill (which I have a hard time hearing the lyrics of, so I'm not entirely sure what it's about, but the music's awesome), Che by Thoola, and finishing up was lee-dai jones lord he rides ep by Lee-Dai Jones, all four of which are available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some electronic music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring celtic music, probably about half of which has lyrics, but much of which is very traditional songs. It's also a bit of a mix of old and new and not limited to Irish music. So let's get started!Whisky in the jar (2:43)Reels: Tom Ward's Downfall / Sligo Maid / Mountain Road (4:17)Up Kilkenny (Instrumental Version) (2:52)Drink It Up (2:07)Whisky You're the Devil (2:48)The king of the fairies/the mermaid (2:33)Achaidh Cheide (2:16)That was Whisky in the jar by Brigan, which is available from Jamendo. After that was Reels: Tom Ward's Downfall / Sligo Maid / Mountain Road by Lon Dubh, which is available from SoundCloud. You actually see that style of playing celtic music quite frequently - traditional celtic songs tend to be a bit on the short side, so by stringing a mix of them back-to-back, you can put together kind of a nice mix. They end up being a bit like building blocks. All of those songs are considered a type of song called a "reel", so they all match and go together well. Anyway, then we had Up Kilkenny (Instrumental Version) by Josh Woodward (Instrumental Versions), which is available from Jamendo. Next up were Drink It Up and Whisky You're the Devil by 3 Sheets To The Wind, which are both available from SoundCloud. After that was The king of the fairies/the mermaid by Brigan, which is available from Jamendo. Finishing up was Achaidh Cheide by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com. All seven songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.Long Road Ahead (2:29)Jigger (Traditional goes Rock) (2:09)Star of the County Down (5:11)Irish (1:20)04 Carousel 2 (4:03)Folk Round (3:06)That was Long Road Ahead by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Jigger (Traditional goes Rock) by vvsmusic and Star of the County Down by Marijanh, which are both available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Then we had Irish by Alas Media and 04 Carousel 2 by Neilhammond, which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was Folk Round by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is Marble, a cross-platform globe viewing program which up until recently I'd never heard of. It's similar to another very popular earth viewing program. It has some nifty features like selectable map graphics for showing satellite vs. road map vs. a map from 1689. It also includes driving directions functionality, though it doesn't seem to be as far along in development. Anyway, it's available for Linux, Maemo, MeeGo, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows. Check it out today at marble.kde.orgNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.LibrivoxIrish Mexicana (2:24)Whisky in the Jar (2:58)sous la pluie (3:48)Skibbereen feat Heydline (4:34)The Voice of Moss (2:17)The Pullet and the Cock (2:11)That was Irish Mexicana by Droxiav, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Whisky in the Jar by 3 Sheets To The Wind, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had sous la pluie by Adragante, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Skibbereen feat Heydline by Marijanh, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was The Voice of Moss by Walid Feghali, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Finishing up was The Pullet and the Cock by duck, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some pop and rock. See 'ya!Download MP3
Durango-Silverton RR Dec 01 | 24 bit (1:33)Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring steampunk music. A bunch of the songs this week have vocals, but there are also a bunch of instrumentals, too. So let's get started!The Watchmaker's Apprentice (5:41)Fig Leaf Rag - distressed (3:29)Battle In The Sky - A Steampunk Orchestra (3:01)Eighteenth Century (1:51)"Epic" Orchestral Piece (3:00)The Clockwork City (12/14) (1:55)Frost Waltz (2:18)That was a chunk of Durango-Silverton RR Dec 01 | 24 bit by BoilingSand, which is available from FreeSound and is licensed under an Attribution license. If you ever get a chance to ride the Durango and Silverton, it is an excellent ride and well worth it to go see. After that was The Watchmaker's Apprentice by The Clockwork Quartet, which is available from their website at clockworkquartet.com and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Then we had Fig Leaf Rag - distressed by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Battle In The Sky - A Steampunk Orchestra by Walid Feghali and Eighteenth Century by Niklas Stagvall, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was "Epic" Orchestral Piece by Steven O'Brien and The Clockwork City (12/14) by David Cordero Chang, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. And finishing up was Frost Waltz by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.Although I'm a big fan of open licensing, I also very much enjoy music from artists who are either independent or are on labels which kind of buck the trend of seemingly the majority of the mainstream music industry and actually like the fact that they have people listening to their music. And with steampunk music, although I can't play it on here, there is a lot of really good stuff either direct published or on small labels. A few songs I can heartily recommend listening to include:- Airship Pirate by Abney Park- Steph(v)enson by The Men That Will Not Be Blamed For Nothing (who actually released a version of that album on wax cylinder)- All Hail the Chap by Mr. B The Gentleman Rhymer- I Want Only You by The Cog Is Dead- Just Glue Some Gears On It (And Call It Steampunk) by Sir Reginald Pikedevant, Esquire- Roustabout by Beats Antique- and Lament for a Toy Factory by Dr. SteelMost of this week's music was chosen more for a mechanical sound than for anachronistic style combinations. Stuff that just sounded to me like it went well with a slow speed reciprocating engine. Not everyone considers the same things "steampunk music", since it's not a particularly well-defined genre, but this kind of thing falls pretty squarely into that category for me.Steam Train Interior (2:16)Railroad (1:42)Atom Hub Toolshed_contextual_demo (0:36)Tim Reed - Four Miniatures for Violin and Cello Duo (excerpt 1) (1:01)Clockwork Symphony (2:30)04 A Garden in Italy - The Archive Box - Stereochemistry (4:10)That was a chunk of Steam Train Interior by allh, which is available from FreeSound and is licensed under the CC0 license. After that was Railroad by Jake Tickner and Atom Hub Toolshed_contextual_demo by Walid Feghali, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Tim Reed - Four Miniatures for Violin and Cello Duo (excerpt 1) by Tim Reed, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Next up was Clockwork Symphony by Psarius and finishing up was 04 A Garden in Italy - The Archive Box - Stereochemistry by stereochemistrymusic, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is OpenTTD, a transportation network simulator where your job is to build a system of road, rail, air, and ship routes to connect together towns and industries to move people and goods around the map in the most efficient way possible. It's a little like if you took just the transportation components of a city simulator and extended it into its own game. For example, not only do you build train stations and tracks, but the terrain of the tracks will slow down your trains if they hit a hill. You also have to do regular maintenance on your vehicles and even build their routes and schedules. I'll admit I'm pretty terrible at playing it, partially due to my propensity to overuse trains instead of other forms of transportation, but I still have a lot of fun playing it. It's available for Linux, BSD, OpenSolaris and OpenIndiana, AmigaOS and MorphOS, BeOS and Haiku, OS/2, RISC OS, Android, PalmOS, Symbian, Nintendo DS, Wii, PSP, Apple iOS, Mac OS X, MS-DOS, and Microsoft Windows. Download it today at openttd.orgNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.20000 Leagues under the SeasTower Bridge old machine room (1:00)CONCERNS (3:36)Monomental (3:20)Prelude No. 7 in A major, Op. 2g on a crappy old, out of tune, upright piano (1:44)Shine On, Harvest Moon (1:55)Ain't Nobody's Business (5:44)Steampunk Girl (3:56)That was Tower Bridge old machine room by The London Sound Survey, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was CONCERNS by AKAJULES and Monomental by aledjones_musics, which are both available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Then we had Prelude No. 7 in A major, Op. 2g on a crappy old, out of tune, upright piano by Steven O'Brien, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Shine On, Harvest Moon by Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth and performed by Bill Kramme singing with himself, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Ain't Nobody's Business by Porter Grainger and Everett Robbins and performed by Cryindtbuffkin, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was Steampunk Girl by John Anealio, which is available from his website at johnanealio.com and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some celtic music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring cartoon music.The Honors March (0:45 @ 0:10)Habanera (4:07 @ 0:51)Divertissement - Pizzicato (from the ballet Sylvia) (1:38 @ 5:01)Hebrides Overture/Fingal's Cave (11:22 @ 6:36)That was The Honors March by John Phillip Sousa and performed by the US Navy Band, which is available from Musopen and is licensed as Public Domain. After that was Habanera from the opera Carmen by Georges Bizet and performed by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Divertissement - Pizzicato (from the ballet Sylvia) by Léo Delibes and performed by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was The Hebrides overture or Fingal's Cave by Felix Mendelssohn and performed by the Czech National Symphony Orchestra for the Musopen project, which is available from Musopen and is licensed as Public Domain.As you've just heard, this week's episode is not all Public Domain like I usually aim for for cartoon music episodes. But it is still Attribution, so there's still plenty you can do with this music.So with that said, let's get back to music.Prelude to act 3 and bridal chorus (from Lohengrin) (6:33 @ 18:54)Home Sweet Home (1:17 @ 25:26)The Messiah, Hallelujah (3:51 @ 26:43)La Cumparsita (3:47 @ 30:36)Canon in D Major (5:55 @ 34:25)That was Prelude to act 3 and bridal chorus from Lohengrin by Richard Wagner and performed by the United States Marine band, which is available from Musopen and is licensed as Public Domain. After that was Home Sweet Home by Sir Henry Bishop and performed by Lucas Gonze, which is available from soupgreens.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. That recording could probably be considered a form of historical preservation - he used not only sheet music but instruments from 1900 and earlier to play it and has the sheet music available on his website if you want to try playing it yourself. Then we had The Messiah, Hallelujah by George Frideric Handel and performed by Orchestra Gli Armonici, which is available from Musopen and is licensed as Public Domain. Next up was La cumparsita by Gerardo Matos Rodríguez, which is available from Wikipedia and is licensed as Public Domain. Finishing up was Canon in D Major by Johann Pachelbel and performed by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is DOSBox, an x86 emulator specifically intended for running old games. For those of you unfamiliar with emulators, when you run DOSBox, it basically boots up a simulation of an old computer inside of your new one, allowing you to run old programs that no longer run properly on modern computers. DOSBox runs pretty much everywhere - there's even a port of it for my cell phone. It's available for Linux, BSD, OS/2, OpenSolaris and OpenIndiana, BeOS and Haiku, Kolibrios, RISC OS, XBox, PSP, Wii, Palm OS, webOS, Symbian, Maemo, BlackBerry Tablet OS, Android, Apple iOS, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, and probably many more. Check it out today at dosbox.comNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.Nonsense NovelsAlso Sprach Zarathustra (1:26 @ 44:03)Rock-A-Bye Baby (5:22 @ 45:25)Pop Goes The Weasel Music Box (0:16 @ 50:46)Sobre las Olas (7:27 @ 51:02)Manhattan Beach (2:17 @ 58:30)That was the Sunrise fanfare from Also Sprach Zarathustra by Richard Strauss and performed by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Rock-A-Bye Baby by an unknown composer and performed by Nexus 6, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Pop Goes The Weasel Music Box, again originally by an unknown composer, performed by cgrote, which is available from FreeSound and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Sobre las Olas by Juventino Rosas and synthesized by, and I'm going to give this my best shot, Alberto Eliseo Méndez Blackaller y orquesta XYZ Antares, which is available from IMSLP and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was Manhattan Beach by John Phillip Sousa and performed by the United States Marine Band, which is available from Musopen and is licensed as Public Domain.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some steampunk music. See 'ya!Download MP3Episode 41: Cartoon Music by Ralph Wacksworth is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring harp music. As a heads-up, this episode is not safe for work. Not for language, inappropriate content, or anything else except one thing: this stuff puts me to sleep. Like, industrial strength lullabies. Absolutely perfect for right before bed, but if you need to stay awake, you might want to wait to listen until another time. So, with that, let's take a listen. Sweet dreams!Dante Axe - Harp Harmony (0:24 @ 0:31)Piece for Flute and Harp (2:13 @ 0:55)Harp Phrase 1 (0:24 @ 3:07)Harp Fantasy (5:18 @ 3:26)星へ (2:25 @ 8:40)Harp Phrase 2 (0:14 @ 11:04)The woman crying on the staircase (1:42 @ 11:16)That was Dante Axe - Harp Harmony by DanteAxeProduction, Piece for Flute and Harp by Steven O'Brien, Harp Phrase 1 by Chino Yoshio, Harp Fantasy by Tom Yeshe, 星へ by ju-nya, Harp Phrase 2 by Chino Yoshio, and finishing up was The woman crying on the staircase by pmiedzinska, all seven of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license.This week's another Attribution episode. There's all kinds of stuff you can do to reuse this music and pass it along for others to enjoy. All of the music this week is also from only one website - SoundCloud - which happened to have a ton of harp music under an Attribution license. Jamendo had a few good ones, but the licensing was more restrictive, so they'll have to wait for another episode. Anyway, with that, let's get back to listening to music.Harp (3:50 @ 13:44)Harp loop (0:32 @ 17:32)SwiftBeats - harp (0:11 @ 18:04)FiskaHarp (1:03 @ 18:13)Another princess of mars (2:10 @ 19:13)medieval boys (1:18 @ 21:22)Memories (4:03 @ 22:41)Celestia's Dusk (2:32 @ 26:44)Guzheng practice (2:22 @ 29:16)Siren ~ Original Song (1:31 @ 31:41)Lalo (6:01 @ 33:12)That was Harp by Chino Yoshio, Harp loop by ruchir-sharma, SwiftBeats - harp by Swift Beats, FiskaHarp by Jonathan Krüger, Another princess of mars by sanefiftyfour, medieval boys by clynos, Memories by Tudor Anghelina, Celestia's Dusk by NightBreeze7, Guzheng practice by Makavox, Siren ~ Original Song by Merryberry, and finishing up was Lalo by Alas Media, all eleven of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is Mumble, an amazingly easy-to-use voice-over-IP solution. It works a little like a conference call - multiple people can join a server and talk to each other. In practice, it feels more like a walkie talkie or like you're in the same room as someone else rather than the formality of a phone call. There is an integrated chat system, and all communications are encrypted. The cool thing is that it pretty much comes with all the defaults to just kind of work, and what there isn't a default for, it walks you through setting up the first time you launch it. It's available for Linux, BSD, Maemo, Apple iOS, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, and probably buildable for just about any other platform supported by Qt. Check it out today at mumble.sourceforge.netNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.LibrivoxThe garden of earthly delights (3:36 @ 40:55)Tο παιχνίδι (The Game) (6:04 @ 44:16)仮歌用 (1:45 @ 50:21)By the Fire (1:59 @ 52:06)Morning Glory (2:43 @ 54:02)That was The garden of earthly delights by pmiedzinska, Tο παιχνίδι (The Game) by CallMeViking, 仮歌用 by ju-nya, By the Fire by Ralf Kleemann - Harpist, and finishing up was Morning Glory by Alphonsin, all five of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some cartoon music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring electronic music.Electron Stack (5:04 @ 0:11)The silent force (5:30 @ 5:15)Midnight Mystery (4:07 @ 10:45)starmann65_A Moment of Silence for Japan (3:35 @ 14:52)RnB Japan (3:47 @ 18:27)That was Electron Stack by Obtuse, which is available from his website at obtusemusic.bandcamp.com and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was The silent force by zero-project, which is available from zero-project.gr and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Midnight Mystery by diabolist, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was starmann65_A Moment of Silence for Japan by ®starmann65 and finishing up was RnB Japan by ADC LEVEL, which are both available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.Parametaphoriquement (ft. Morusque (aka Nurykabe)) (edited) (4:49 @ 22:57)Maybe (ft. AlexBeroza) (4:10 @ 27:02)Steam Train To Mallaig [+pipes] (v2) (2:29 @ 31:08)Drops of H2O ( The Filtered Water Treatment ) (ft. Airtone) (5:15 @ 33:37)That was an edited version of Parametaphoriquement (ft. Morusque (aka Nurykabe)) by gmz, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Maybe (ft. AlexBeroza) by DoKashiteru, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Then we had Steam Train To Mallaig [+pipes] (v2) by djredowl, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was Drops of H2O ( The Filtered Water Treatment) (ft. Airtone) by J.Lang, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is Cube Trains, a neat little puzzle game where you have to route trains to get them from the start to the end without colliding with each other. The red trains and green trains each have two stations you have to build routes between without letting them collide. The challenge comes in that you're building in an urban environment and have limited space between the buildings. So you have to start thinking vertically, adding multiple levels and building bridges to route tracks over the top of each other. It's a very cool game, and one which you should try. It's available for Linux, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows. Download it today at cubetrains.comNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.ccMixter Rap (with Music)Light Patterns (3:44 @ 42:08)Ethereal Space (cdk Mix) (ft. snowflake) (3:58 @ 45:48)(tomorrow's) (2:57 @ 49:43)Barrilada no (1:57 @ 52:39)Ambiphonic (5:06 @ 54:31)That was ccMixter Rap (with Music) by Togora and Light Patterns by morgantj, both of which are available from ccMixter and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was Ethereal Space (cdk Mix) (ft. snowflake) by cdk, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had (tomorrow's) by Sheep Studio~* and Barrilada no by BrunoXe, and finishing up was Ambiphonic by Zeropage, all three of which are available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some harp music. See 'ya!Download MP3Episode 39: Electronic by Ralph Wacksworth is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring chiptunes.Press Start (0:52 @ 0:10)130 Chiptune Lead A (0:07 @ 1:01)Continue 2 (1:19 @ 1:09)16 (1:16 @ 2:26)Close To You (edited) (1:33 @ 3:42)Boss (1:07 @ 5:11)Tasty (3:36 @ 6:16)Snegurochka's Gameboy (0:50 @ 9:51)One Hour Compo: Mechanized Whalesong [Famitracker Chiptune] (2:08 @ 10:41)That was Press Start by Andrey Avkhimovich, which is available from Jamendo. After that was 130 Chiptune Lead A by Rave.Vic Sample Pool, Continue 2 by 8-BITchin'tendo, 16 by bobbobowitz, a slightly edited version of Close To You by Killer Katana, Boss by 8-BITchin'tendo, Tasty by lightsoda, Snegurochka's Gameboy by Brettstuff, and finishing up was One Hour Compo: Mechanized Whalesong [Famitracker Chiptune] by Patashu, all eight of which are available from SoundCloud. All nine songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.This week's another Attribution music week, partially because I love the permissiveness of the license and partially because due to that I'd love to see someone use some of this music to make some more open source games. There are a ton of games already that run on Linux, but open licensed songs are a great way to push a game idea forward without it being quite as difficult.And on that note, I'd like to mention OpenGameArt again. They have all kinds of open licensed resources for making games, including graphics, sound effects, music, and 3D models. If you're interested more in programming or level design than drawing sprites, or even if you just want some stand-in graphics to prototype your game with, this site is a great resource. Check it out at opengameart.orgSo, with that, let's get back to listening to music.Spiff Tune - Jungle Relics (2:52 @ 14:09)Chiptune Playground (edited) (0:44 @ 16:59)Retro (0:44 @ 17:12)Like a Ghost (8Bit Chiptune) (0:51 @ 17:57)Tokyo Escapade (1:37 @ 18:48)Sandra Rosa Madalena - NES Chiptune (2:20 @ 20:22)Nights of Mischief ( 8-Bit Chiptune ) (1:04 @ 22:43)12 04 29 Arms (1:32 @ 23:47)Chance (1:35 @ 25:19)Spiff Tune - The Beach (1:46 @ 26:47)Wot (0:34 @ 28:30)The soundtrack to my happiness last summer (2:40 @ 29:05)That was Spiff Tune - Jungle Relics by Spiff Tune and an edited version of Chiptune Playground by Malyatrax, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Retro by Jensan, which is available from OpenGameArt and is licensed under the CC0 license. Then we had Like a Ghost (8Bit Chiptune) by Holms, Tokyo Escapade by __twc, Sandra Rosa Madalena - NES Chiptune by Sacola Man, Nights of Mischief ( 8-Bit Chiptune ) by MajesticMastermind, 12 04 29 Arms by LestatV3, Chance by bobbobowitz, Spiff Tune - The Beach by Spiff Tune, Wot by Kandit, and finishing up was The soundtrack to my happiness last summer by kinkinkijkin, all nine of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is Numpty Physics, a game where you draw doodles to try to get a ball from its starting point to the star at the end of the level. Everything in the level is driven by a physics simulator, so when you draw a line, it can anchored to something to keep it more solid or not anchored if you want it to fall. So, for example, if you need to get the ball from a high point to a lower point, you might draw a ramp. If you want to launch the ball somewhere, you might draw a seesaw by drawing a triangle for a fulcrum, drawing a lever above it, then drawing a heavy scribble above it to drop on the other end of the lever. It's a cool game concept that's been done multiple times before, but this one happens to be open source. It's available for Linux, BSD, OpenSolaris and OpenIndiana, Maemo, MeeGo, Sony PSP, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows and Windows Mobile. Check it out today at numptyphysics.garage.maemo.orgNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.LibrivoxMorningsteak (2:44 @ 33:49)Chipswing (1:31 @ 36:34)The End (1:09 @ 38:05)Baby's First Chiptune (1:35 @ 39:11)Song 4 (5:06 @ 40:46)Saw Adventure (3:41 @ 45:47)Never Stop Running (8-Bit) (edited) (4:00 @ 49:27)BETA31 (0:17 @ 51:44)You Win (0:52 @ 52:01)Sega Street (0:39 @ 52:54)Boarding in Green Valley (1:59 @ 53:33)That was Morningsteak by tozo, Chipswing by bobbobowitz, The End by 8-BITchin'tendo, Baby's First Chiptune by AndrewFM, and Song 4 by Aeko_, all five of which are available from SoundCloud. After that was Saw Adventure by Andrey Avkhimovich, which is available from Jamendo. Then we had an edited version of Never Stop Running (8-Bit) by FoxSynergy, which is available from OpenGameArt. Next up was BETA31 by Cosmos Computer Music, You Win by 8-BITchin'tendo, Sega Street by Brettstuff, and finishing up was Boarding in Green Valley by Killer Katana, all four of which are available from SoundCloud. All eleven songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some electronic music. See 'ya!Download MP3Episode 38: Chiptunes by Ralph Wacksworth is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Still catching up. Next week's episode will be late as well, but hopefully not quite as late. Enjoy this week's episode!- RalphHi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring music with a bit of a western feel.Western-Time (1:14 @ 0:11)Western last song (1:53 @ 1:23)Saddle Up And Ride, Cowboy (1:48 @ 3:14)Acoustiblues - INSTRUMENTAL VERSION (0:45 @ 5:02)Lookin' at Clouds (1:30 @ 5:47)Blue Grass Stomp (3:06 @ 7:17)That was Western-Time by aledjones_musics and Western last song by Javier Arnanz, which are both available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Saddle Up And Ride, Cowboy by Joe Reichel, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Acoustiblues - INSTRUMENTAL VERSION by Löhstana David, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Lookin' at Clouds by Doug Jamieson, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. And finishing up was Blue Grass Stomp by lucas_gonze, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license.Slide Cowboy (2:17 @ 11:05)19 - Ragtime Annie (4:32 @ 13:16)Brooklet Schottische (3:34 @ 17:49)Untitled Blues (1:18 @ 21:22)That was Slide Cowboy by Oursvince, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was 19 - Ragtime Annie by pbradv, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Brooklet Schottische by The Joy Drops, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. They also have sheet music for it on there if you want to learn to play it yourself. Finishing up this set was Untitled Blues from the album Ben Reynolds at The Nave by ARTSomerville, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.Today's app-of-the-day is Wireshark, which along with libpcap, acts as a packet sniffing and network protocol analysis program. Essentially it captures raw network traffic and allows you to analyze exactly what was communicated, in which direction, and with whom. You need to be careful how you use it so you're not using it to capture data that's not yours, but it's incredibly handy for tracking down network problems. It's available for Linux, BSD, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows. Check it out today at wireshark.orgNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.Around the World in 80 DaysThe Forsaken (4:31 @ 25:34)Western (1:12 @ 30:04)Mission to Moscow (4:49 @ 31:16)Morte Et Dabo (Gift of Death) FINAL VERSION (4:15 @ 35:59)35 - Turkey In The Straw (4:42 @ 40:13)theBigGlitch (ft. panu moon, subdes2) (4:10 @ 44:55)Jumping (5:02 @ 49:04)That was The Forsaken by William J. Le Petomane, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was Western by rangelife_, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Mission to Moscow by Western Swingtones, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Next up was Morte Et Dabo (Gift of Death) FINAL VERSION by DavidNilsson, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was 35 - Turkey In The Straw by pbradv, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had theBigGlitch (ft. panu moon, subdes2) by airtone, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. And finishing up was Jumping by Oursvince, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some chiptunes. See 'ya!Download MP3Episode 37: Western by Ralph Wacksworth is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Hi everyone!Sorry about the lateness this week. Caught the flu something awful and burned through my buffer. Finally starting to get caught up. I'm behind enough now next week's episode might be a bit late as well, but I'm going to give it a try to get it out on time.My advice: don't catch the flu. It's not a good idea.And if you decide to ignore that warning, they say laughter is the best medicine, so enjoy this week's episode!- RalphHi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring funny music. As a heads-up, all of the songs this week have lyrics, and even the things that aren't songs do. So, let's get a'listenin'.Calling All Bars (2:38 @ 0:17)Renderin' (edited) (2:11 @ 2:56)Mwahaha (3:55 @ 5:06)Gorilla My Dreams (1:30 @ 9:00)The CC BY Song (Telecasterized edition) (ft. Loveshadow) (edited) (2:19 @ 10:30)Blue Lego (Steve Jobs Hates Flash) (3:19 @ 12:50)That was Calling All Bars by Mind Cabaret, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was a slightly edited version of Renderin' by Bill Mills, which is available from The Funny Music Project Sideshow and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Then we had Mwahaha by Oookla The Mok and Gorilla My Dreams by Glen Raphael, which are both available from The Funny Music Project and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Next up was a slightly edited version of The CC BY Song (Telecasterized edition) (ft. Loveshadow) by Admiral Bob, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was Blue Lego (Steve Jobs Hates Flash) by John Anealio, which is available from his website at johnanealio.com and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license.Staying Fat (edited) (2:46 @ 17:01)Apple Feast (3:00 @ 19:46)The Sandwich Song Singalong (2:26 @ 22:43)Speed Racer Wannabe (edited) (3:13 @ 25:10)Redesign Your Logo (4:21 @ 28:16)Camera Phone LOL (2:26 @ 32:33)Teach Your Baby Bass Guitar (edited) (4:43 @ 34:56)Bedtime Blues (ft. Admiral Bob) (4:30 @ 39:29)That was a slightly edited version of Staying Fat by Cirque du So What, Apple Feast by TV's Kyle, The Sandwich Song Singalong by Steve Goodie, a slightly edited version of Speed Racer Wannabe by Dino-Mike, which amazingly enough it sounds like he got permission to open license the sound bytes for, and Redesign Your Logo by Lemon Demon, all five of which are available from The Funny Music Project and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Camera Phone LOL by johnnyfoure, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. He also has a music video of it up on YouTube and encourages fans to make their own video. Then we had a slightly edited version of Teach Your Baby Bass Guitar by Flat 29, which is available from The Funny Music Project and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Finishing up was Bedtime Blues (ft. Admiral Bob) by Down With Ben, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is lichess, an open source online chess game. Play against the computer or another human player, or use the included instructions to run a server yourself for your friends to play on. It's apparently written largely in Scala, which I was a little surprised at since it's probably the largest project that I know of in that language. Anyway, check it out today at lichess.org or download the source code at https://github.com/ornicar/lilaNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.The FuMPEmo brand razor fake commercial Phillip J Rhoades 2009 (0:10 @ 47:15)Don't Jump (3:11 @ 47:25)How to prepare instant noodles (0:55 @ 50:28)The Pimple Song (3:00 @ 51:23)Eat More Possum (edited) (2:12 @ 54:23)My Conjoined Twin (2:32 @ 56:36)That was an edited version of Podcast Promo by The Funny Music Project, which is available from The Funny Music Project and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Emo brand razor fake commercial Phillip J Rhoades by phillip-j-rhoades, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had How to prepare instant noodles by Sonaje, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was The Pimple Song by Willie B Poppin, which is available from The Funny Music Project and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was a slightly edited version of Eat More Possum by Bordercollie, which is available from The Funny Music Project Sideshow and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Finishing up was My Conjoined Twin by Todd Chappelle, which is available from The Funny Music Project and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some music with a bit of a western feel. See 'ya!Download MP3Episode 36: Funny Music by Ralph Wacksworth is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring ambient environment sounds.SpringCreekinForest (0:39 @ 0:11)LargeStreamOverLoginForestMarch (1:05 @ 0:49)Stream (2:16 @ 1:53)quiet_stream (0:32 @ 4:06)Stream running out into the sea (0:15 @ 4:36)rollingsurfmix (3:01 @ 4:47)harbor waves calm 01 (7:28 @ 7:42)Ocean Waves (1:14 @ 14:58)Waves in sea (1:32 @ 16:01)Waves (1:28 @ 17:25)That was SpringCreekinForest and LargeStreamOverLoginForestMarch by kvgarlic, Stream by bspiller5, quiet_stream by miregrobar, Stream running out into the sea by kiefspoon, rollingsurfmix by klangfabrik, harbor waves calm 01 by klankbeeld, Ocean Waves by ciccarelli, Waves in sea by Zoom H4, and finishing up was Waves by Beedy. All ten sounds in this set are available from FreeSound and are licensed under the CC0 license.This week's episode is entirely CC0-licensed. You should really check it out - it's a very cool extremely permissive license that I'm a huge fan of which, in my opinion, is very much underused. I've linked to it in the notes for this episode. The artists this week deserve some major kudos for taking open licensing that far.Quiet Spring Woodland Ambience (0:59 @ 19:49)DeepWoodsBirdApril142012 (2:42 @ 20:43)forest spring birds windy 3bft 1pm (9:40 @ 23:19)SummerInsectChorus (1:20 @ 32:54)chimes_part_3 (0:17 @ 34:09)Muchty Chimes x3 (8:16 @ 34:15)That was Quiet Spring Woodland Ambience by ecfike, DeepWoodsBirdApril142012 by kvgarlic, forest spring birds windy 3bft 1pm by klankbeeld, SummerInsectChorus by kvgarlic, chimes_part_3 by dADDoiT, and finishing up was Muchty Chimes x3 by 3bagbrew. All six sounds in this set are available from FreeSound and are licensed under the CC0 license.Today's app-of-the-day is Stellarium, a really nice star map and planetarium program. Set your location, time and date you want to view from, and it'll show you what's visible in the sky and where it is. It can tie in with computerized telescopes to aim them, it can show you where satellites and the International Space Station are, and you can even connect it to projectors if you want to build a full planetarium. It's just a really cool program. It's available for Linux, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows. Check it out today at stellarium.orgNow for a very short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors, which was interesting to try and round up under a CC0 license, followed by more sounds.031_sound_must_be_free_militant (0:02 @ 43:43)freesoundfreesoundfreesound (edited) (0:20 @ 43:45)Thunderstorm Crescendo (3:11 @ 43:47)Thunderstorm, rain and thunder in the french countryside during the summer (2:00 @ 46:53)2009 07 17 Thunderstorm in Berlin (7:20 @ 48:47)That was 031_sound_must_be_free_militant by freesound, a chunk of freesoundfreesoundfreesound by stomachache, Thunderstorm Crescendo by tehspaz, Thunderstorm, rain and thunder in the french countryside during the summer by felix.blume, and finishing up was 2009 07 17 Thunderstorm in Berlin by faruku. All five sounds in this set are licensed under the CC0 license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons CC0 license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some funny music. See 'ya!Download MP3 To the extent possible under law, Ralph Wacksworth has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to Episode 35: Ambient Environments. This work is published from: United States.
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring fantasy adventure music.The White Cube (Kyrie Eleison) (1:27 @ 0:11)City of Dwarves (5:56 @ 1:38)The Death of Magic (3:35 @ 7:30)From Honour To Horror (1:40 @ 11:04)Beyond the Ocean of a Thousand Dreams (3:24 @ 12:44)Disabled emotions suite: Part 6 (2:15 @ 16:05)That was The White Cube (Kyrie Eleison) by jacinda espinosa, which is available from ccMixter. After that was City of Dwarves by xterminal86, which is available from SoundCloud. Then we had The Death of Magic by Mattias Westlund and From Honour To Horror by Christiaan Bakker, which are both available from Jamendo. Next up was Beyond the Ocean of a Thousand Dreams by Aleksandr Kurilov, which is available from SoundCloud. Finishing up was Disabled emotions suite: Part 6 by zero-project, which is available from zero-project.gr. All six songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.I've mentioned it before, but if you haven't seen the short film Sintel, you might want to go check it out. It was made using the open source animation program Blender, and revolves around a girl and her pet dragon. It's licensed under an Attribution license and is available to watch online or download in a variety of formats and sizes all the way up to a 4K format packaged for playing in theaters. Check it out today at sintel.orgDisabled emotions suite: Part 2 (4:09 @ 19:22)Introduction (1:15 @ 23:29)Crusade (3:18 @ 24:45)Avalon (2:59 @ 27:59)Marche de ferrel (trad) (2:37 @ 30:57)That was Disabled emotions suite: Part 2 by zero-project, which is available from zero-project.gr. After that was Introduction by Mertruve, which is available from Jamendo. Then we had Crusade by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com. Next up was Avalon and finishing up was Marche de ferrel (trad), both by Adragante, which are both available from Jamendo. All five songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is MuseScore, a music notation and scoring program that makes it very easy to typeset sheet music. You pretty much just click the staves to add notes to them in whatever lengths you want and it takes care of drawing all the stems and such and generally expressing the music you draw in using normal music notation rules. It's really cool and, due to the number of automatic organization and cleanup features, makes it quite easy to typeset sheet music. Even if you don't know much about musical theory, I'm confident you could still compose playable songs with relative ease with it. It's available for Linux, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows. Download it today at musescore.orgNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.The Lost WorldValley of tears (3:50 @ 37:15)Dragon Ride (5:32 @ 41:04)Constancy Part One (1:05 @ 46:36)Film Score: Upsrise (1:57 @ 47:39)Summon the Wolves (2:13 @ 49:31)Lord, Have Mercy (anonymous) (1:25 @ 51:43)That was Valley of tears by zero-project, which is available from zero-project.gr. After that was Dragon Ride by Aleksandr Kurilov, which is available from SoundCloud. Then we had Constancy Part One by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com. Next up was Film Score: Upsrise by M3XHIPY and Summon the Wolves by Clarence Yapp, which are both available from SoundCloud. Finishing up was Lord, Have Mercy (anonymous) by Dr. Emiliyan Stankov, which is available from Jamendo. All six of the songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some ambient environments. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring jazz and chill music.BlueBossa (2:58 @ 0:10)Las dos buenas hermanas (3:33 @ 3:09)Mount Analogue (4:47 @ 6:42)ocean dream (10:32 @ 11:29)Jazz with G5 (0:59 @ 22:01)That was BlueBossa by Szai, which is available from SoundCloud. After that was Las dos buenas hermanas by Caminos del Sonido, which is available from Jamendo. Then we had Mount Analogue by simonmiles, which is available from SoundCloud. Next up was ocean dream by Bellanger Jacques jbabebel, which is available from Jamendo. Finishing up was Jazz with G5 by Jahro', which is available from SoundCloud. All five songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.Everything's Attribution or compatible again this week, so feel free to reuse it.Beautiful Love - Dan Pincus - Piano, Jim McElhaney - Horn (8:55 @ 23:36)[jazz piano solo] Old World - 懐かしき東方の血 (5:10 @ 32:28)Time Remembered (3:07 @ 37:31)Winter Walk (Silver Trumpet Mix) (ft. donkeyhorsemule) (5:11 @ 40:36)Airport Lounge (5:07 @ 45:47)That was Beautiful Love - Dan Pincus - Piano, Jim McElhaney - Horn by Dan Pincus and [jazz piano solo] Old World - 懐かしき東方の血 by tanigon, and Time Remembered by Mayi, all three of which are available from SoundCloud. After that was Winter Walk (Silver Trumpet Mix) (ft. donkeyhorsemule) by spinningmerkaba, which is available from ccMixter. Finishing up was Airport Lounge by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com. All five of the songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is Javascript Snakes, which is an HTML5 version of the classic Snake game. You play as a constantly-moving snake navigating a rectangular game world in search of fruit. But if you run into yourself, you lose. You've probably played some variant of it before. The general game concept's been around since the 70s. Anyway, check it out today at https://github.com/jakesgordon/javascript-snakesNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.Around the World in 80 DaysCoffee Black (0:59 @ 53:43)El amor y el cráneo (2:47 @ 54:43)Jazz metropolis (3:25 @ 57:30)Sax, Flute, n Glass (3:49 @ 1:00:56)That was Coffee Black by GrimFrenzy, which is available from OpenGameArt. After that was El amor y el cráneo by Caminos del Sonido and Jazz metropolis by Jose Gil, which are both available from Jamendo. Finishing up was Sax, Flute, n Glass by shagrugge, which is available from ccMixter. All four songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some fantasy adventure music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Sorry, folks, for the delay this week. This episode has been queued up since Monday but I couldn't get the file to upload. Just got it to work, though. At any rate, I forgot to mention that the The Internet Archive (which hosts the audio files for this podcast) is doing a fundraising drive. If you could help them out, I'm sure they'd appreciate it! Here's the link.Thanks for listening!- RalphHi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring electronic music.06 - Qvic (3:21 @ 0:11)The New Music (ft. Spinningmerkaba) (instrumental version) (3:36 @ 3:27)Near Death (5:55 @ 7:01)LIT (3:45 @ 12:57)Not too quiet (6:30 @ 16:43)That was 06 - Qvic by snurek_pl, which is available from SoundCloud. After that was The New Music (ft. Spinningmerkaba) by Alex, which is available from ccMixter. Then we had Near Death by DJ Fire-Black and LIT by Sum-1, both of which are available from Jamendo. Finishing up was Not too quiet by zikweb, which is available from ccMixter. All five songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.And again this week, all of the music is licensed under Attribution licenses. So get out there and reuse it!Not many people seem to know about this, but Stanford University released some course materials a while back, including a bunch of videos, under an open license, and what I've seem of them is really quite good. It's called Stanford Engineering Everywhere, and all of it that I've seen has been licensed under an Attribution license, with much of it available via BitTorrent. On a quick side note, I love seeing people using BitTorrent legally, since it really is a cool technology that I'd like to make sure has enough legitimate users for it to survive. Anyway, they have courses in Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence, general mathematics, and even iPhone app programming. Check it out today at see.stanford.eduAmbient Dance (3:48 @ 24:29)Chapstick (2:28 @ 28:13)Memories of the moon (9:28 @ 30:35)That was Ambient Dance by Zeropage, which is available from Jamendo. After that was Chapstick by Bradley27, which is available from ccMixter. Finishing up was Memories of the moon by zero-project, which is available from zero-project.gr. All three songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is JavaScript Racer, which unbelievably is a racing game written in JavaScript. It has a very classic arcade game look to it and is pretty simple but put together well. Triggers nostalgia well and runs smoothly in modern browsers. It also comes with a very good explanation of how it's put together, so if you're curious you can not only read the code but basically a math tutorial for not only how it works but how it's supposed to work. Check it out today at https://github.com/jakesgordon/javascript-racerNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.The Memoirs of Sherlock HolmesSonar Tuning Electro Track (3:56 @ 41:56)FOG on the Bluff (ft. DJ BLUE) (edited) (3:56 @ 45:52)Ambient Voyager (3:54 @ 49:09)Speed of Mind (7:22 @ 53:01)Soundtrack: burbling synthesizer (0:59 @ 1:00:21)That was Sonar Tuning Electro Track by SouljahdeShiva, which is available from OpenGameArt. After that was a slightly edited version of FOG on the Bluff (ft. DJ BLUE) by DJ BLUE, which is available from ccMixter. Then we had Ambient Voyager by Zeropage and Speed of Mind by Flembaz, which are both available from Jamendo. Finishing up was Soundtrack: burbling synthesizer by Barrettt, which is available from SoundCloud. All five songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some jazz and chill music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring nontraditional Christmas music. You can expect a bunch of songs with lyrics, some familiar and some not, along with many different styles of music that really just don't fit any other time of the year. Some of them, particularly later in the episode, are really fun but a bit harsh. So, without further ado, let's get started.Chiron Beta Prime (2:50 @ 0:25)O Tanning Bed (1:59 @ 3:13)O Come All Ye Faithful (Adeste Fideles) (ft. Admiral Bob) (2:54 @ 5:11)Silent night (1:55 @ 8:00)Wenceslas (2:53 @ 9:48)Sugar Plum Dark Mix (2:05 @ 12:35)That was Chiron Beta Prime by Jonathan Coulton, which is available from his website at jonathancoulton.com and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was O Tanning Bed by Max DeGroot, which is available from The Funny Music Project and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Then we had O Come All Ye Faithful (Adeste Fideles) (ft. Admiral Bob) by unreal_dm, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Next up was Silent night by richjens and Wenceslas by Bad Hat, both of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was Sugar Plum Dark Mix by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.The next set is composed of 11 variations of 4 songs. So, let's take a listen.The Little Drummer Boy (2:37 @ 15:22)Little (Punk) Drummer Boy (3:18 @ 17:58)Wesley Dysart - Little Drummer Bot (2:54 @ 21:14)Carol of the Bells (1:09 @ 24:08)Carol of the Bells (1:54 @ 25:16)Carol of the Bells (1:07 @ 27:11)Angels We Have Heard on High (ft. Sunshine Paul, Bob Sorem, Rocavaco/SackJo22, Morusque) (4:06 @ 28:18)Angels on high (3:50 @ 32:23)Jingle Bells (2:53 @ 36:12)Jingle Bells (ft. SackJo22) (3:13 @ 39:04)Hardcore Jingle Bells (1:26 @ 42:16)That was The Little Drummer Boy by crashcombo, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was Little (Punk) Drummer Boy by MomentaryTrouble, Wesley Dysart - Little Drummer Bot by Wesleydysart, Carol of the Bells by Bill Barner, Carol of the Bells by William M Walker, and Carol of the Bells by Alvin Gao, all five of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Angels We Have Heard on High (ft. Sunshine Paul, Bob Sorem, Rocavaco/SackJo22, Morusque) by texasradiofish, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Next up was Angels on high by gbmusic and Jingle Bells by Harold Morton, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Jingle Bells (ft. SackJo22) by unreal_dm, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Finishing up was Hardcore Jingle Bells by Storyboards, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Some of the songs this week are more nontraditional than others, and that one takes the cake. I really really want to see it worked into some kind of a humorous open source Christmas-themed game. Anyway...Today's app-of-the-day is Trigger Rally Online Edition, a browser-based obstacle course racing game with the same crazy physics I'm used to from racing games of the 90's. Seriously, it's cool. You'll need a very modern browser, I believe only Firefox and WebKit-based browsers and possibly Opera currently support it, and it uses the keyboard for controls. If you have that, which I normally surf the web with anyway, the graphics are amazingly good, though if you play Version 1 you might want to play it without sound right now as they seem to be having some problems with that as of late. Anyway, check it out today at triggerrally.comNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.The FuMPPodsafe Christmas Song (edited) (2:44 @ 47:23)02 Go Tell it on the Mountain (3:00 @ 50:05)11 The Bells (1:31 @ 53:05)Deck The Halls (Elves and Trumpets Mix) (ft. James Edwards) (3:17 @ 54:34)The Headbangin' Christmas Medley (4:35 @ 57:50)Auld Lang Syne (ft. Admiral Bob) (2:31 @ 1:02:18)That was an edited version of Podcast Promo by The FuMP, which is available from thefump.com and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. After that was an edited version of Podsafe Christmas Song by Jonathan Coulton, which is available from his website at jonathancoulton.com and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. The cool thing about that song is that a few years ago it was very accurate. I remember looking for open licensed Christmas music and could hardly find anything. Nowadays, as evidenced by this week's and last week's episodes, we have tons of open licensed Christmas music thanks to all of the artists out there who are sharing their music and the websites that support and encourage open licensing. Anyway, next up was 02 Go Tell it on the Mountain and 11 The Bells, both by the_2nd_tenor, available from SoundCloud, and licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Deck The Halls (Elves and Trumpets Mix) (ft. James Edwards) by spinningmerkaba, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was The Headbangin' Christmas Medley by christopian, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was Auld Lang Syne (ft. Admiral Bob) by Benjamin Orth, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some electronic music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring traditional Christmas music. As such, there are a number of songs this week with vocals, but they're pretty well-known ones, so let's get started.Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairies (1:48 @ 0:17)O Holy Night (edited) (6:18 @ 1:59)Deck the Halls B (4:29 @ 8:04)We Wish You a Merry Christmas (0:52 @ 12:21)What Child Is This/ Greensleeves (Duet) (0:48 @ 13:09)That was Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairies by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had an edited version of O Holy Night by Karen Savage for Librivox, which is available from The Internet Archive and is licensed as Public Domain. After that was Deck the Halls B by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was We Wish You a Merry Christmas by the United States Marine Band, which is available from FreeMusicArchive and is licensed as Public Domain. Finishing up was What Child Is This/ Greensleeves (Duet) by TubaChick23, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license.Although I very much appreciate all of the artists who have open licensed their music, I've got to send a special thank you this week to Kevin MacLeod for all the Christmas music he's got open licensed. You'll probably notice his name coming up a lot this week. He's got a ton of very good Christmas music in many different styles which went a long way toward making this episode very easy to put together.I'd also like to thank all of the artists this week for licensing their music under very permissive licenses. All of the music this week is Attribution or compatible, with a lot of it being Public Domain. That's pretty awesome, and really helps resolve the problem from a few years ago where we had close to zero Christmas music recordings which were open licensed. Now there's quite a bit, and it's all thanks to the artists who share their music. So, thank you folks!And with that, let's get back to listening to some more music.Silent Night (2:14 @ 15:21)Oh Christmas Tree (3:56 @ 17:32)It Came Upon a Midnight Clear (4:25 @ 21:21)Carol of the Bells (3:38 @ 25:39)Oh Holy Night (4:02 @ 29:12)Silent night (0:52 @ 33:10)O Come All Ye Faithful (Duet) (0:54 @ 33:59)God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen (3:30 @ 34:49)Away in a Manger (2:04 @ 38:03)That was Silent Night by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Oh Christmas Tree by weihnachtsorama3000, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was It Came Upon a Midnight Clear by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Carol of the Bells by Roger MacNaughton Music, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Oh Holy Night by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Silent night by Phap Man Aaron Solomon and O Come All Ye Faithful (Duet) by TubaChick23, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was an edited version of God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen by Diyan for Librivox, which is available from The Internet Archive and is licensed as Public Domain. Finishing up was Away in a Manger by Chino Yoshio, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is fluid_table_tennis, a really interesting HTML5 game that's a little bit hard to describe. Essentially, it's the classic ping-pong game with the added twist that each paddle can shoot a jet of fluid, creating little whirlpools and other flow patterns that dramatically change the trajectory of the ball. You really kind of have to just try it. It can be played single player or local two player and runs in a browser. Check it out today at https://github.com/anirudhjoshi/fluid_table_tennisNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.A Christmas Carol (dramatic reading)Up on a Housetop (1:10 @ 43:59)Good King Wenceslaus (1:16 @ 45:04)Jingle Bells (1:44 @ 46:18)Here We Come A-Wassailing (1:43 @ 47:58)Silent Night (2:29 @ 49:29)WeWishU (0:44 @ 51:56)The First Noel (2:32 @ 52:40)Auld Lang Syne (2:16 @ 54:55)That was Up on a Housetop by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Good King Wenceslaus by the U.S. Army Band, which is available from Wikipedia and is licensed as Public Domain. After that was Jingle Bells by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was an edited version of Here We Come A-Wassailing by Claire Goget and a few others for Librivox, which is available from The Internet Archive and is licensed as Public Domain. Then we had Silent Night by the U.S. Army Chorus, which is available from Wikipedia and is licensed as Public Domain. After that was WeWishU by DanHarderVO, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was an edited version of The First Noel by Claire Goget and a few others for Librivox, which is available from The Internet Archive and is licensed as Public Domain. Finishing up was Auld Lang Syne by the United States Marine Band, which is available from Free Music Archive and is licensed as Public Domain.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some nontraditional Christmas music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Carica05 (0:04)music box loop 29 (0:15)Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring steampunk music. We've got a few songs with vocals this week, but without further ado, let's get started.The Doctor's Wife (5:47)London, 1856 - A Steampunk Orchestra (3:41)Remember The Name (Fort Minor) (Sinister Strings Mix) (4:52)Rom Bart-Insomnia [Soundtrack] (1:36)Wooden Rocks (1:05)steam engine at museum (0:59)wrenches_thrown_or_dropped (0:21)Ratchet1 (0:20)construction metal lumber (0:56)Metal Hammer on Metal on Wood Impact Collision Bang 44.1kHz (0:52)So, starting out the episode were two sound effects from FreeSound - Carica05 by melarancida and music box loop 29 by klankbeeld, which are both licensed under the CC Zero license. After the introduction was The Doctor's Wife by The Clockwork Quartet, which is available from their website at clockworkquartet.com and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Then we had London, 1856 - A Steampunk Orchestra by Walid Feghali, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Next up was Remember The Name (Fort Minor) (Sinister Strings Mix) by tekp, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was Rom Bart-Insomnia [Soundtrack] by Rom Bart, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Wooden Rocks by Christiaan Bakker, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was a mix I put together of a few industrial sound effects from FreeSound: steam engine at museum by 3bagbrew, which is licensed under an Attribution license, and wrenches_thrown_or_dropped by vibe_crc, Ratchet1 by orestes910, a chunk of construction metal lumber by cognito perceptu, and Metal Hammer on Metal on Wood Impact Collision Bang 44.1kHz by qubodup, all four of which are licensed under the CC Zero license.I've been a big fan of steampunk for years. I love the visual style, I love the dedication to craftsmanship, learning different construction techniques, and in general making things that not only function but look nice doing what they do. As long as I can remember, I've been a big fan of steam-powered devices and gears anyway, mainly because you can see how things work, and steampunk brings those together into an awesome aesthetic. Plus there's the element of classic literary influences mixed in, and as I'm sure you can probably tell from the audio books advertised on this podcast in the noncommercial breaks, I'm quite fond of that. It's just an all-around cool movement, and I'd love to see more people really taking part in it in not just a trend way, but in a paradigm way. Do what you do with quality to last. Fix things if you can. Take a pass on the throwaway society we've developed and learn the cool stuff your ancestors and predecessors knew.With that said, with the wide variety of people who have gotten into steampunk over the last few years, there's quite a bit of variation in what people do and do not consider steampunk music. I tend to think of it more as music that sounds very mechanical or which blends elements of old and new musical styles, and there's plenty of open licensed music out there which fits that. So much that I had to split the episode up so I could keep this at about an hour and do another episode later. Speaking of which, this episode's going to be long enough as is, so let's get back to things.traction engine x2 (1:31)Getaway (otra vez rmx) (voiceless mix) (4:19)BEAUTY FULL - sidecar tommy (3:06)Jester's Tear (2:43)That was another sound effect from FreeSound named traction engine x2 by NLM, which is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. The first song in the set was Getaway (otra vez rmx) (voiceless mix) by gmz, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was BEAUTY FULL - sidecar tommy by sidecartommy, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was Jester's Tear by Celestial Aeon Project, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.Today's app-of-the-day is Emberwind, an HTML5 side-scroller game where you play as a gnome and run around helping people and whacking things with a stick. Pretty much a basic classic side-scroller, but it runs in a browser, and runs quite well. Try it out today at http://operasoftware.github.com/Emberwind/ with a capital E or take a look at the source code from https://github.com/operasoftware/Emberwind/ with a capital E.Now for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.20000 Leagues under the SeasUntitled 4 (ft. The3amAssociation, audiotechnica) (6:22)Pieza pequeña (1:01)Conjuring Steam (3:02)Roll Jordan Roll (2:19)The Guava Rag (1:04)Spirit of St. Louis (3:18)Live recording of In the jail house now (4:08)End of a story (2:29)That was Untitled 4 (ft. The3amAssociation, audiotechnica) by teru, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was Pieza pequeña by BrunoXe, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Conjuring Steam by MLucas, Roll Jordan Roll by The Joy Drops, and The Guava Rag by Brettstuff, all three of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. Following that was Spirit of St. Louis by Lena Selyanina, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Live recording of In the jail house now by Sid Qualls, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was End of a story by zero-project, which is available from zero-project.gr and is licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some traditional Christmas music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring instrumental acoustic music.La pêche au thon - INSTRUMENTAL VERSION (2:58)A la Roberto, tema I (1:37)Ragtime Guitar (0:36)Slightly On The Mash (version 2) (1:18)Austerity Rag (3:20)Cama Plana (2:04)That was La pêche au thon - INSTRUMENTAL VERSION by Löhstana David and A la Roberto, tema I by Clbustos, which are both available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Ragtime Guitar by Sean Davoust, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Slightly On The Mash (version 2) by lucas_gonze, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under the CC-Zero license. Following that was Austerity Rag by The Naughty Step and finishing up was Cama Plana by mpintar, both of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license.This week's music is all Attribution or compatible again. You may also notice that a lot of the music this week is from SoundCloud. That's because, although there's a lot of good acoustic music on other sites, I ran into a lot of it that was either Attribution Noncommercial or Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike, and since I wanted to do an Attribution-only episode, I ended up cutting a bunch of it. It'll probably make it into a future episode, though - some of it's really good.And for all of you folks that just happen to have a 4K display already, apparently the short film Sintel is available for download in 4K resolution, or 4096x1744 pixels. I find this rather fascinating, since we now have open media at the forefront of technological advancements in commercial display resolution. By making this available, they're giving early adopters and anyone playing around with the technology free media to test it with, which benefits not only the general public and the open content community but the commercial media distribution companies as well. The 4K version of Sintel is available from the Xiph Test Media site at media.xiph.org and is licensed under an Attribution license.Anyway, let's continue with some more music.Entertainer part 1 (1:19)Sad (3:07)Imposto (3:36)A Night Of Stars (4:50)Grünes Land VIIb (4:44)Camila - Instrumental (2:37)Primavera (4:19)Amy Waltz (0:53)Acoustic theme (2:10)Juba Breakdown (1:10)That was Entertainer part 1 by mikefilonov, Sad by eshmatov, Imposto by mpintar, and A Night Of Stars by Acoustic Size, all four of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Grünes Land VIIb by Still Playing Guitar, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. Then we had Camila - Instrumental by mpintar, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Primavera by Distimia (España), which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Amy Waltz (Nov 12 2012) by lucas_gonze and Acoustic theme by Korgluva, which are both available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was Juba Breakdown by lucas_gonze, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under the CC-Zero license.Today's app-of-the-day is Agent 008 Ball, a neat little HTML5 open source billiards game. The object of the game is to get all of the pool balls scored as fast as possible. It's quick loading and easy to try, has nice graphics and sound, runs very smoothly, and is licensed under an MIT license. Try it out today at agent8ball.comNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music, and although this book is filled with really terrible and outdated stereotypes, it has some really clever puns and wordplay, and as such, I very much enjoy it.The Foolish DictionaryCerises - INSTRUMENTAL VERSION (3:40)Ratty's return (3:02)1001 Rag (3:46)Telling a Repetitive Anecdote (Instrumental) (3:39)That was Cerises - INSTRUMENTAL VERSION by Löhstana David, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Ratty's return by The Naughty Step, 1001 Rag by HeatherEnidWells, and finishing up was Telling a Repetitive Anecdote (Instrumental) by Geoff Bennett, all three of which are available from SoundCloud and are licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some steampunk music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring trance music. As a heads-up, many of the songs this week have vocals. So with that, let's get started.Trance Guitar (5:08)Ghosts and Monsters (4:04)Lift me up (3:28)Randos - Mystery (6:40)That was Trance Guitar by Centralsoft, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Ghosts and Monsters (ft. eshar46) by George_Ellinas and Lift me up by tkdsky, which are both available from ccMixter and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. Finishing up was Randos - Mystery by Ranzor, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license.At this point, you've still got a few more days for the Humble Bundle. They added another five games which you get if you pay more than the average. I haven't tried them all yet, but I can tell you that I very much like Splice, Eufloria, and Cogs. They're nice peaceful settings that lend themselves well to picking them up and playing for a few minutes, provided you can pry yourself away from them. I believe all of the games in this bundle are available for Linux, Android, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows, though I think one or two do not work on smaller Android devices like phones due to the small screen sizes. Check it out today at humblebundle.comTrance (7:39)Face to face (3:35)return to the future (3:10)That was Trance by Kaerus, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license. After that was Face to face by GenDy, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was return to the future by Sekula Wieslaw, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.Today's app-of-the-day is Audacious, the music player I use to organize my playlists. I didn't realize this until recently, but it's available for platforms other than Linux. Audacious is just an incredibly simple and basic music player. Not many bells and whistles, and that's why I like it. When you're working with different playlists as much as I do for this podcast, the stability of that functionality becomes a hugely important feature, and unlike other music players Audacious delivers on that point. They have downloads on their website for Linux and Microsoft Windows, and it looks quite easy to compile for Mac OS X. Check out the podcast website for a link to a howto for compiling it for Mac OS X, or to download the official version for Linux or Microsoft Windows, check out audacious-media-player.orgNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors, which this week is also a song, followed by some more music.CCmixter.org (6:36)Behind Fantasy (4:15)Infinity (7:05)[www.electrobel.it]felixjd800 - you_bite_and_scratches (7:03)That was CCmixter.org by Nitropox@CCmixter, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license. After that was Behind Fantasy by CORIN-Music, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license. Next up was Infinity by zero-project, which is available from zero-project.gr and is licensed under an Attribution license. Finishing up was [www.electrobel.it]felixjd800 - you_bite_and_scratches by Felixjd, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website. Listen in next time for some instrumental acoustic music. See 'ya!Download MP3
Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music. I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring mystery and spy music.La Prima Noche Versus Carmão 1 Pulmão EP 2009 (2:36)Noir - 01 (2:19)I Knew a Guy (2:46)Vicenzo Bosa - Jazz (1:24)Noir guitar soundtrack samples (1:25)café connection (Instrumental) (3:12)That was La Prima Noche Versus Carmão 1 Pulmão EP 2009 by Avante Royale and Noir - 01 by grimorio, which are both available from SoundCloud. Then we had I Knew a Guy by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com. After that was Vicenzo Bosa - Jazz by vicenzobosa and Noir guitar soundtrack samples by Stevies Amp Shack, which are both available from SoundCloud. Finishing up was the instrumental version of café connection by morgantj, which is available from ccMixter. All six of them in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.This week's another "at least as permissive as Attribution" week. As usual, I'm a big fan of the more permissive licenses sine there's so much more you can do with them. While I understand the position of people wanting to restrict their works to noncommercial or something like that, I tend to be more of the opinion with my own works that if you're going to give people the freedom to reuse your works, you might as well give them the freedom to build whatever kind of cool stuff they want with them. No sense in making them redo what you've already done just because they want to use it in a way you didn't anticipate. That's why I like doing these episodes. If I use anything more restrictive, I have to place restrictions on the whole episode. This way, you've got a nice collection of stuff to easily reuse for just about anything. I'd love to see one of you listeners use this music for an open movie or a new game. That would be truly awesome. And if you do, please let me know. I'd love to see what you did and try it out!Speaking of games, the Humble Bundle folks are back again with another bundle of games for Android, Linux, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows. There a number of really fun-looking games that I'm looking forward to trying when I get some time. Pay what you want, and depending on your pricing level there's a bonus game. Plus, they come with soundtracks. Check it out today at humblebundle.comNow, back to music.Thoughtful Spy (2:27)Escape From Tridion (2:02)Fast Talkin (1:01)Desert Spy (2:09)Rain & Mystery (2:50)Soundtrack: solo electric blues guitar (1:14)Long Note Three (edited) (3:15)Interloper (4:25)Soundtrack (edited) (5:37)That was Thoughtful Spy by Reality Catcher, which is available from SoundCloud. After that was Escape From Tridion by Pirato Ketchup, which is available from Jamendo. Then we had Fast Talkin by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com. Next up was Desert Spy by KrugerKnight, Rain & Mystery by Royaltyfree, and Soundtrack: solo electric blues guitar by Barrettt, which are available from SoundCloud. After that was a slightly edited version of Long Note Three followed by Interloper, both by Kevin MacLeod and available from incompetech.com. Finishing up was an edited version of Soundtrack by nathanschlawin, which is available from SoundCloud. All nine of the songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.Today's app-of-the-day is Ri-Li, a game where you have to route toy trains around a track without letting your train collide with itself. It's a lot like the classic snake game where as you collect items from the track, your train gets longer. The catch is that, unlike a snake game, you're limited to running on the existing tracks instead of having a whole field of open space to use. Makes for some interesting strategy. It's available for Linux, AmigaOS, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows. Download it today at ri-li.sourceforge.netNow for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.The Adventures of Sherlock HolmesCovert Affair (3:14)Night Surfing (2:56)Agent Orange (edited) (1:36)Speed Surfer (edited) (1:43)Los impresionistas (2:38)That was Covert Affair by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com. After that was Night Surfing by Bogstomp, which is available from SoundCloud, an edited version of Agent Orange (ft. Colin Mutchler) by Sawtooth, which is available from ccMixter, and a slightly edited version of Speed Surfer by Pirato Ketchup, which is available from Jamendo. Finishing up was Los impresionistas by LOS SEDIENTOS SURFISTAS, which is available from SoundCloud. All five of the songs in this set are licensed under an Attribution license.So, that's all for today. Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction. So don't pirate it - replace it with something better. Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies. Support artists where your support actually counts.This episode was made using Gentoo Linux, Xubuntu Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies. Links to the songs in this podcast areavailable on the website. Listen in next time for some trance music. See 'ya!Download MP3
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