The top 10 posts for the last 30 days are as follows, grouped here for the sake of comparison:
Again, free MP3s were the major draw, though the second most popular post of the month was … (1) the list of the most popular posts of March (which included material on DJ /rupture, Langston Hughes, David Foster Wallace, Marina Vendrell Renaut, and others).
The two other non-MP3 entries to make the top-10 list were (2) an Image of the Week of a small instrument used at a Nicolas Collins/Hans Koch concert in Chicago, and (3) Twitter-based riffs on Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt‘s Oblique Strategies by science fiction author Richard Kadrey (which provided a Quote of the Week).
The remaining seven most read entries of April included (4) Buddha Machine-infused music by Terge Paulsen, (5) the first single of the new Moby album (with a video by David Lynch), (6) a full set of tunes created on the Nintendo Korg DS-10 cartridge (plus some thoughts on the new Nintendo DSi, which has some promising sound tools built in), (7) an experiment in 3D sound, (8) a live noise performance by Fognozzle, (9) Justin Hardison‘s sound journal, and a (10) video-game-inspired three-track release from the Surreal Madrid netlabel.
Just over 20 years ago, Nintendo released Super Dodge Ball for the NES system. Not only have gaming consoles evolved since those 8-bit times, but so too have the passions of gamers. There are entire online communities devoted just to outdated tech like the NES, something Nintendo has acknowledged by packaging classic games, and putting titles like Super Dodge Ball up on its virtual Wii store for inexpensive downloadable fun.
About a year ago, Thomas Park, who records as Mystified, released a five-track collection of atmospheric synthesis, titled Altered Signals, all of it sourced reportedly from broadcast sound, and then transformed by Park’s musical alchemy. The music was meditative and rich; seemingly quiet, but when played loud it revealed serious depth. Now Park has updated the collection, adding beats to each of the five tracks, which makes for an entirely new listening experience, and for a study in contrasts.