Category: Music Discourse (Page 12 of 14)

How To Discover New Music (Part 3)

Part 1 of “How to Discover New Music” (read it here) was about music podcasts.

Part 2 (here) was about attending concerts.

Part 3 is about interviews and playlists.

Read, listen to (audio), or watch (video) interviews with artists you like, especially interviews that focus on having artists make playlists of music that they like.

Example #1: I discovered the song “Saturday” by Rachael Cantu and “5 Years Time” by Noah and the Whale by listening to Ben Lee’s podcasts and reading a playlist he made.

Example #2: Holly Miranda tweeted a link to “It’s Okay” by Land of Talk. A playlist by Lizzie Powell of Land of Talk featured the song “Re: Stacks” by Bon Iver and “One Man” by Eulogies:

Example #3: An interview with Brian Wilson and Zooey Deschanel led me to discover “This Will Be Our Year” by The Zombies.

How To Discover New Music (Part 2)

Part 1 of “How to Discover New Music” (read it here) was all about good music podcasts.

Part 2 is about attending concerts.

Make sure to get there early to catch the opening acts of bands that you already like. Sometimes, the opening bands are chosen by a band’s record label rather than by the band itself, but seeing opening bands nevertheless exposes you to music you probably haven’t heard before.

I’ve stood through my share of awful and/or boring opening acts, but I’ve discovered some of my favorite artists just because they were the opening band for another band I already liked.

Real life examples: Ben Lee opened for Phantom Planet, Eisley opened for New Found Glory, Brandi Carlile opened for Hanson, and The Bridges opened for Rooney.

On the flip side, say a band you like is opening for a different (bigger) band that you haven’t heard of before. Don’t just leave right after the band you came to see played — stick around for the headlining act, and you just might discover a new favorite band.

Real life example: The Like opened for The Sounds.

How to Discover New Music (Part 1)

Even for music lovers, listening to the same music can get stale. If you feel like your iTunes is repeating the same songs over and over again, you need to update your library!

Keep things fresh. There’s a lot of music out there that’s either plain bad or that you don’t connect with, doesn’t move you, or just isn’t special. But, there are many ways to find new music that you really like.

One word…Podcasts. Some good music podcasts to subscribe to are:

1. KEXP Song of the Day

2. The Interface (Spinner.com)

3. iTunes Celebrity Playlist Podcast


4. KCRW’s Morning Becomes Eclectic

5. NPR: Live Concerts from All Songs Considered

6. XM Weekly Music

7. Suggestions for other good podcasts that you listen to in order to discover new music? Leave them in the comments section, or tweet them to After_The_Show.

Month Songs

ATS featured songs with “June” in the title…What about the other 11 months?

“Here Comes September” by Waikiki (now called Howling Bells):

“November” by Azure Ray:

Others:

“April Skies” by The Jesus and Mary Chain

“August” by Rilo Kiley

“March Ate Me Alive” by Noise Addict

“Mid November” by Johnathan Rice

“7 September 2003” by The Elected

June Songs

Songs that have titles of months are usually interesting. Today’s post features songs about the month of June.

“June on the West Coast” by Bright Eyes (Conor Oberst):

“June Gloom” by The Like:

“June” by Pete Yorn:

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