Saturday, February 7, 2009

jwz mixtape 067

01 - Thieves Like Us - Your Heart Feels (2008)
02 - Oh No! Oh My! - I Love You All the Time (2006)
03 - Foals - Heavy Water (2008)
04 - Metric - Patriarch on a Vespa (2005)
05 - The Prids - Panic Like Moths (2003)
06 - Bell Hollow - Bodies, Rest and Motion (2006)
07 - Jem - I Always Knew (2008)
08 - Miranda Sex Garden - Serial Angels (1994)
09 - Jill Tracy - Treasure (2008)
10 - Say Hi To Your Mom - Toil and Trouble (2008)
11 - The Spores - Secret Weapon (2007)
12 - A-Trak - Say Whoa (2008)
13 - Republica - Wrapp (1996)
14 - M.I.A. - XR2 (Silverlink v. Kicks Like a Mule) (2007)
15 - AutoKratz - Stay The Same (2008)
16 - Pnau - Come Together (2007)
17 - Emilie Simon - Rose Hybride de The (2006)
18 - Plastic Operator - Singing All the Time (2007)
19 - Love Is All - Give It Back (2008)
20 - Duchess Says - I've Got the Flu (2008)
21 - Shellshag - Kiss Me Harder (2007)
22 - Love and Rockets - It Could Be Sunshine (1986)

discussion
megaupload

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

http://www.laweekly.com/2009-02-05/music/google-39-s-new-killer-app-why-are-music-bloggers-39-posts-disappearing-and-who-is-deleting-them/all

Google's New Killer App? Why Are Music Bloggers' Posts Disappearing, and Who Is Deleting Them?
By Jeff Weiss
Published on February 04, 2009 at 7:37pm

Ryan Spaulding, the proprietor of Boston-based music blog Ryan’s Smashing Life, noticed something odd happening to his archived posts a few months ago. His blog, founded in 2006, has expanded to include four contributors and now rakes in about 25,000 hits a month. Chump change compared to megablogs like Nah Right or Stereogum, which average at least twice that daily, but enough to attract a modicum of ads and a devoted community of readers.

But in November, some of Spaulding’s posts, both recent and older, long-forgotten ones, started disappearing from his site. There didn’t seem to be any rhyme or reason to it. One moment they were there, the next they were gone. Confused, he started comparing notes with other music bloggers, and they noticed a trend. A lot of posts across the Web, on everything from Abba to Zappa, had vanished.