Posts Tagged ‘video’
Big B is signed to indie label Suburban Noize Records. In My City is featured on his latest album, American Underdog.
While the future holds the promise of “total convergence” of media and delivery systems, we’re not there yet, and it takes a little (okay, a lot) of work to get video of your band streaming from your website. Whether it’s a music video à la MTV, or a minimally edited tape of a (hopefully great) performance, your promotional plan is incomplete without it. You need to jump into the Internet river of streaming media, and right now.
Fortunately, you don’t have to navigate the waters by yourselves, and can call on such veteran pixel-pushers as Kevin Bee. Bee is President and co-founder of Uptime Video (uptimevideo.com), and has been prepping video for the Internet since 1999.
Indie Musician had his fans send in photos of them doing every day things and exploring their cities. The photos were they used for a video for a song of his new album, Dear Lover. Check out the final product.
Qu Video Sneak Peek Video #1 – Not Gonna Love
Qu is without a question the band’s most mature album to date and the result of nearly a year of work. Recorded in Los Angeles with renowned producer Brad Wood (Liz Phair, Smashing Pumpkins, Sunny Day Real Estate) the album features 11 original tracks written by all five members. The result is a refreshingly catchy and precise pop record.
Catch the band on a full tour of North America with Hanson, Hellogoodbye and Steel Train that recently kicked off and takes them through November.
- Press Release
The Canadian dance-rockers join forces with rapper Cadence Weapon to start a fiery synth and sin revolution.
What do you get when you take an electro-rock sextet from Edmonton, Alberta, and add a twenty-four-year-old rapper who has been called Canada’s Dizzee Rascal? Flames!
“Coming Home,” the seven-minute track from the Shout Out Out Out Out’s second album, Reintegration Time, showcases Cadence Weapon (aka Rollie Pemberton) rapping about facing one’s demons.
Fantasy of the Lot was recorded in Montréal’s Studio Plateau with Dan Lagace (Stars, Dears, Death from Above) and features 11 new tracks recorded by the five members – Mark Kupfert, Mark Shortt, Richard Yanofsky, David Buzaglo and Ted Suss.
The band experimented with low cost tape recordings, transformed dining rooms into recording studios and wrote music anytime, anywhere and the resulting album is one which has fans and critics alike talking.
Playboy proclaimed “…they are somehow reminiscent of Vampire Weekend. Or Fugazi playing the twee Sarah Records catalogue” and CMJ praised the new record, calling it “dynamic and expressive.”





