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MMM Day Podcast #2 is up!

🔗Prent Rodgers <prentrodgers@...>

4/8/2006 11:54:49 AM

I've posted the second podcast to celebrate *Make Microtonal Music
Day 2006*. This one includes works by twelve composers.

1. Rick McGowan - 5min-sym-15tet
2. Rosencrantz the Sane - Nothing of any importance
3. Yahya Abdal-Aziz - Bunga Seroja
4. Jon Szanto - Do Something
5. Bill Sethares - Clariphonics Group
6. Prent Rodgers - Trumpet Songs 5 & 6
7. Magnus Jonsson & Jim Redfern - Anticperience
8. Jon Lyle Smith - Wind Rider
9. Gene Ward Smith - Dreyfus
10. Hans Straub - Asimchimsaia - how the heck to you pronounce that?
11. Jacob Barton - Hyperimprovisation
12. Jeff Harrington - Spirale d'Arco for Sax Quartet

This one is 54 minutes long, and 57 MB but it's full of great stuff.

You can download and listen at either my Bumper Music Podcasts site (
http://bumpermusic.blogspot.com/ ) or my Libsyn site (
http://podcast1024.libsyn.com ). The libsyn lets you stream on your
computer, to avoid the time consuming download.

Better yet, subscribe using a tool like iTunes ( http://www.itunes.com
), Juice ( http://juicereceiver.sourceforge.net/index.php ), Doppler (
http://www.dopplerradio.net/ ) or others. Subscribe by copying the RSS
feed for Podcast1024 ( http://podcast1024.libsyn.com/rss ) or Bumper
Music ( http://feeds.feedburner.com/bumpermusic ) to the podcatching
tool, then when new episodes are released, they will get downloaded at
night and just show up on your computer automatically.

You don't need an iPod to listen to a podcast, just a computer and a net
connection.

Prent Rodgers
--
Music that's "Fake but Accurate"!
Web page: http://prodgers13.home.comcast.net
Podcast: http://podcast1024.libsyn.com
Another Podcast: http://BumperMusic.blogspot.com
Music: http://www.soundclick.com/PrentRodgers

🔗Gene Ward Smith <genewardsmith@...>

4/8/2006 4:03:30 PM

--- In MakeMicroMusic@yahoogroups.com, Prent Rodgers
<prentrodgers@...> wrote:
>
> I've posted the second podcast to celebrate *Make Microtonal Music
> Day 2006*. This one includes works by twelve composers.

A lot of stuff new to me on this. The McGowan has grown to three tiny
movements. Rosencrantz the Sane demonstrates something I've mentioned
a few times, that yes, you can produce something which sounds
suspiciously like music from 4-et. Now if I can only get Joe the Monz
or Robert the inventor to incorportate into their programs! Especially
Joe--I envision composing in 3, 4 or 5 equal, and then moulding the
result with a lattice of chords. Oh well.

Jon has someone telling us to "do something". Where does that come from?

I've got as far as Trumpet Songs in the podcast, which I'm looking
forward to hearing in its final version.