Blogs with 320kbps vinyl rips?
cardova
743 Posts
I know this was covered a few months back, but the game is changing all the time so I guess we can discuss this again. Eli's Outside Broadcast and U-Tern's One Day Later have been killing it, but what else is there? All styles of music appreciated, but high bitrate is a must. Those who haven't yet can check mine at www.djanonymous.fi, i've got a bunch of rips some of which I've been posting to real headz as well.
Comments
your page aint up anymore. but can you put me up on some of these blogs?
http://www.djanonymous.fi/
Since I'm not a Gold Club Member in the "real headz give head section" at SS, I just heard those reggae 45's until now, boy they are sweet - "East of the Nile River" -
http://thirdfloormusic.blogspot.com/ Bollywood galore...
Anyone know some other good ones to check for?
http://onedaylater.blogspot.com/ disco, boogie, electro
http://outsidebroadcast.blogspot.com/ disco, new wave, house, hip hop
http://cortez.wordpress.com/ brazilian, reggae, funk from holland
http://monsieurwillyworld.blogspot.com/ french dj blog with a little bit of everything.
DOR thanks for fixing the link.
http://loronix.blogspot.com/
and Sabadadadadadadabba's site:
http://www.sabadabada.com/index.htm
What exactly are you looking for?
Those are both all Brazilian music.
For Latin music try:
http://revolucionno.wordpress.com/
Although Latin music is not necessarily Brazilian, Brazilian music IS Latin.
How do these blogs get around the file share issue? I know most of these blogs don't host the files on their servers but they point to a site like zshare, divshare, rapidshare, megaupload or yousendit which, I guess, gets them around the hole filesharing hosting issue.
I was thinking about starting my blog back up recently but I didn't want to deal with the whole filesharing issue. Have any of you with blogs gotten hit with cease and desist letters or threats of lawsuits?
School a nonlaw knowing mug. Thanks!
Brazilian music is not latin, it's brazilian music. When they start speaking spanish you can call it latin music.
If you're going to attempt and drop knowledge, make sure you're correct before you open your mouth.
Lat??in /ˈl??tn/ ???noun
4. a member of any of the Latin peoples, or those speaking chiefly Romance languages, esp. a native of or ??migr?? from Latin America.
Portuguese is a Romance language, by the way.
Or from Wikipedia if one source doesn't do it for you:
Latin America is the region of the Americas where Romance languages ??? those derived from Latin, namely Spanish, Portuguese[/b] and French ??? are officially or primarily spoken.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_music
"Latin music is very diverse, with the only truly unifying thread being the use of the Spanish language, or the Portuguese language, in Brazil."
Call me sonned!
You can definitely make an argument that Brazilian music is 'Latin' because Brazil is in Latin America. It's true in an academic sense.
Day-to-day, though, most people who call Brazilian 'Latin Music' are buying world music comps in the checkout line at Starbucks. For everyone else Latin means the Spanish-language genres - cumbia, salsa, merengue, whatever.
Do a quick search for 'Latin' on eBay and see how many Brazilian LPs come up.