Have A Very Unhappy Harvest Moon
9/10
Feeling bad feels good
Moderators: mdg, Mexicola, 2020k, Fredd-E, Aesthetics
outhudd wrote:What would be interesting to see (actually from any artist) is a digitally released album/EP that slowly changes over time.
Say there's one track on the album that ends in a fadeout after 4 minutes. Slowly, it grows to 5 minutes over the space of a year, by about a second a week that's barely noticed.
Another track subtly changes the mix every day, not noticable day to day, but over the course of a year its quite a different track to the one it was on release day one.
Maybe another track with lyrics (OK, maybe not for BoC) would change one word every week until there's a totally different narrative a year later.
Other tracks change and evolve slowly in other ways.
With no announcement that this is what's going on, it would take a while for people to notice.
Maybe it's been done already, I dunno.
outhudd wrote:What would be interesting to see (actually from any artist) is a digitally released album/EP that slowly changes over time.
hexagonFox wrote:Have A Very Unhappy Harvest Moon
9/10
Feeling bad feels good
hexagonFox wrote:Have A Very Unhappy Harvest Moon
9/10
Feeling bad feels good
outhudd wrote:What would be interesting to see (actually from any artist) is a digitally released album/EP that slowly changes over time.
Say there's one track on the album that ends in a fadeout after 4 minutes. Slowly, it grows to 5 minutes over the space of a year, by about a second a week that's barely noticed.
Another track subtly changes the mix every day, not noticable day to day, but over the course of a year its quite a different track to the one it was on release day one.
Maybe another track with lyrics (OK, maybe not for BoC) would change one word every week until there's a totally different narrative a year later.
Other tracks change and evolve slowly in other ways.
With no announcement that this is what's going on, it would take a while for people to notice.
Maybe it's been done already, I dunno.
Burning Shadow wrote:The Queen died so basically the uk has ground to a halt. Potentially could have made Warp decide to delay a big release.
Davism wrote:In two days it'll be two weeks since they changed their HI FB profile and banner pic. The longer it goes with no drop or activity, the weirder it seems.
Echelon wrote:Davism wrote:In two days it'll be two weeks since they changed their HI FB profile and banner pic. The longer it goes with no drop or activity, the weirder it seems.
I kind of like the unintentional metaphor of the black profile pic: "we're all in the dark."
However, now that we know that a release is coming officially. It's only a matter of time.
Davism wrote:But at this point, it just seems trollish considering that we are starving for something.
Are you following what is written online about you, especially in these fan forums? The people there are mad for you.
Mike:
"We get indirect feedback from our record company, and other people around us, but we really try hard not to read things about our work because it can be quite a damaging thing. Even positive comments can give you a false sense of what’s good about your work, so it’s really better to try to ignore it."
Orbited insanitarium wrote:Are you following what is written online about you, especially in these fan forums? The people there are mad for you.
Mike:
"We get indirect feedback from our record company, and other people around us, but we really try hard not to read things about our work because it can be quite a damaging thing. Even positive comments can give you a false sense of what’s good about your work, so it’s really better to try to ignore it."
tumuli_stump_jumper wrote:From an article in Digital Music News. July 2022.
“ It’s challenging to open a new pressing plant because only a handful of companies exist that make record-pressing machines, and none of them are in the US. Additionally, supply chain disruptions of raw materials such as vinyl polymers have led to a backlog for existing manufacturers, who are already swamped with orders.
No one can accurately predict the ceiling for record growth due to the constrained supply, says Chris Brown, vice president for finance at Bull Moose Records, a New England record store chain. New releases often fail to meet demand, while reorders can take even longer, leaving little room for lesser-known “eclectic” albums.”
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