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andreasviklund.com

web designer | musician | writer



Category: Music

Listen to the Indigo

26 April, 2007 (01:08) | Music | By: Andreas

The dream of an own Access Virus synth will finally come true! I couldn't afford that Virus TI Polar, but I found something that I actually wanted even more: The original Lagoona Indigo! Björn, who bought the synth when the first Virus Indigo model was introduced more than five years ago, was going to sell it on an Swedish auction site. Luckily I found it before anyone had reserved it, and I'm incredibly happy about that! This is what the beauty looks like:

Access Virus Indigo (original model)

The original Virus Indigo was a limited deluxe edition based on the Virus KB engine. Only 500 examples of the synth were built, and only a few of those were sold in Sweden. Lagoona got number 485 of them, and the synth can be heard in many Lagoona songs from the year 2001 and forward. While it is not as advanced as the newer Indigo 2 and TI Polar models, it is still an amazing synth with an amazing sound. To hear one great example, feel free to listen to the Lagoona song named after the synth:

Listen to Lagoona - Indigo.mp3 at iSOUND.com - a big music site where you will soon find all my music but with streaming capabilities, lyrics, song information, commercial use options, free downloads, ringtone versions and many other features.

The Indigo will be a highlight, and maybe the trigger I need to get started with making music again… Thank you, Björn, this made my day. And thanks to everyone who have supported my work with generous donations, I owe you all a lot…

10 years of free music

20 April, 2007 (00:30) | Internet, Music, Site news | By: Andreas

In a few weeks, it will be 10 years since I released my first own song on the Internet. And in a couple of months, I can celebrate that 10 years have passed since I released the first free MP3 track on the first website I ever had. That is a long time, and the music scene has changed dramatically during that time. When my band, TSEC (which later became Lagoona) released the first MP3 song, we could never have guessed that the MP3 format would have such an impact on the music industry. We realized that it would become popular because of the small file size and the good quality, and we spent a lot of time and energy on promoting ourselves as "MP3 artists" long before the first hardware MP3 players appeared. But I don't think anyone could imagine that online music distribution would become such a big industry back then…

Putting the music where people look for it

Providing legal, non-commercial music through channels that were typically and traditionally used for exchanging illegal copies of commercial music would prove to be a really good idea. We basically placed our music where we knew that people would look for new songs to download, and that helped us reach out to a lot of listeners very quickly. Among the several sites and networks we used in this way, Napster was a top tool for unsigned artists and bands that wanted to get in touch with their listeners and fans. And we got warm and happy reactions since we showed that music could indeed be completely free - and perfectly legal to download and share.

When the commercial music industry forced Napster to close down, it became more difficult for us to find new listeners. And when Napster opened up again, it had turned into a regular commercial music shop! Since we weren't allowed to put our music on the "new" Napster, we moved on to other sites and networks. Among those were the MP3 archive sites that were popular in the end of the 90's - until the commercial music industry sued the webmasters for million-dollar amounts and got the sites closed down, one by one. We also competed in music contests (called "compos"), which were popular until remixes of commercial songs caused angry reactions from commercial record labels and publishing companies. And at times we promoted our music on different IRC networks, but even music trading channels were targeted and blocked by higher powers…

MP3.com - A major success

And then there was MP3.com, the best music site that the world had ever seen at that time. Lagoona signed up on the site in August 2000, when MP3.com was one of the early worldwide community sites that was built completely around user-generated content (free non-commercial MP3 music). It was also one of the first major community sites that shared the incoming advertising money with the site members. It was called the "Payback 4 Playback" program and covered $1.000.000 per month. The more song plays an artist got within the last month, the bigger share of the million the artist would get. It was the same concept that the people at YouTube are planning to introduce now, seven years after MP3.com made it a huge success.

Back in 2000-2001, MP3.com did what websites like MySpace and iTunes repeated many years later. But with the hundreds of thousands of songs that were available on MP3.com at that time it was many times bigger (in terms of song downloads) than iTunes was during its first years. Lagoona alone had more than 2.300.000 song plays on MP3.com during our years there, and we were definitely not alone with that kind of high numbers. Not even among the Swedish artists.

We stayed on MP3.com for a couple of years, until… Well… You can probably guess what happened! The perfectly legal success site MP3.com was closed down after a legal battle with a major record label! One of the listener account features had been abused to spread a number of copyrighted songs to other listener accounts, and even though all the songs from the MP3.com artists were legal and the site was extremely popular - this record label managed to sue MP3.com for an amount so high that the site was sold soon after. The new owner, a large media company, chose to close the site for good. All the members and artists were left in the cold, and the entire song collection was simply deleted. When the "new" MP3.com was launched later, the site had been converted into yet another commercial music store.

History does repeat itself sometimes…

No more talking to the wall

I could write a whole book about the phenomenon that you may notice here, that non-commercial artists are often hit very hard when the commercial music industry fight the "music piracy". I know a lot about that topic since the mentioned examples are only a small part of a much bigger picture. But I won't write anything more about it, it takes way too much energy from more important things.

It was hard to realize that my help and my experience wasn't wanted, that the commercial music industry had known the benefits of free distribution philosophy for a long time - but still spent millions of dollars on fighting the concept rather than becoming an active part of it. It is sad, but instead of discussing the topic further I'll just do what I should have done all the time: Continue to give away my music for free - and hope that the songs find their way to new listeners who like what they hear. The songs on my site are still downloaded in more than 6.000 copies every single day. But since my songs are free, they are of course not listed on the official "download charts" here in Sweden. Non-commercial music still doesn't count, even though there are not too many artists on the commercial music scene in Sweden that can match that number.

Perhaps I should sign the next record contract offer, just for the fun of it! Swedish producer Basshunter did it, so why not? It could be a cool adventure for the summer…

Final words

If you are looking for new musical experiences and you are open-minded and curious, then I recommend you to give the free music a chance. Don't limit yourself to the albums that you can buy in the record stores. Check out unsigned artists, independent labels, alternative styles and experimental music on some of the various free music sites all over the net. MP3.com is dead now, but many new talents can be found on sites like MySpace, Trig, PureVolume and iSound. In many cases the non-commercial music is free to download and perfectly legal to share - so it may definitely be worth giving it a chance.

Feel free to post URL:s to your favorite non-commercial artist in the comments of this thread!

By the way, I need to get in touch with my former Lagoona colleague Björn. Exciting things are happening right now, and I can hopefully make a fun announcement before the end of this month! Until then, here is a photo of the three albums ("Magic Melodies", "The Journey" and "Generations") that Lagoona released through MP3.com back in 2000-2002:

Lagoona MP3.com albums: Magic Melodies and The Journey (2000), Generations (2002)

Listen to Elmo!

9 March, 2007 (21:40) | Music | By: Andreas

My hometown Jokkmokk has never been any big place for upcoming artists. There have been a number of good bands and artists over the years, but very few have reached out to any larger listener base. One of those who have done it is Elmo, a young and talented musician and artist that I've seen live many times when his band performed on the same local events as my band Lagoona. Elmo has recently released his first single "The Anthem" through BD Pop and Bonnier Amigo, and it entered the Swedish singles chart at #19 last week. It is a really nice song, and well worth checking out. You can download the song for free from Jokkmokk.biz or read more about Elmo and his music on his website or on MySpace.

Dear santa…

9 March, 2007 (01:19) | Music | By: Andreas

The last few days have given me a lot of inspiration to pick up the music production again. The only thing that keeps me away from it is the simple fact that I will need a new sound card to get recording capabilities and ASIO support. I would actually want to buy a whole new computer, but I am still dreaming about buying The Perfect Synthesizer to give me the sound I really want. I have asked Santa Claus for it several times, but without any luck. I guess he doesn't like my music very much…

Access Virus TI Polar

PureVolume and Trig.com

6 March, 2007 (01:29) | Music | By: Andreas

February was not a good month for this site, but I'll do my best to catch up with the old tempo. A lot of things have happened, and I have a lot of inspiration which feels great.

But today I'm writing just to remind you about my PureVolume.com artist page. This week PureVolume is listing me among the "PurePicks" on their frontpage, which has resulted in a surprising amount of e-mails today. As always, those of you who come here to download music can find it on my music pages. If you like electronic dance music, give it a try. The music is completely free to download (and free to share!) so you have nothing to lose.

Trying Trig.com - Presenting an exclusive song!

I have also given another music site a try and set up a Trig.com artist page as well. Trig.com is a new community site, basically a really nice mix of MySpace, Digg and PureVolume, aimed at creative people of different kinds. Just like on PureVolume, artists get their own Flash-based MP3-player directly on the artist page. Non-musicians can register as regular members and create playlists with their favorite songs, and whenever you find something you like you can give it a "Trig", basically a Digg-style vote. I am no big fan of these kinds of community sites, but it looked really interesting so I will hang around there for a while just to see how it works.

And as a little bonus to those of you who check out Trig.com, I have uploaded an exclusive song to my artist page - a previously unreleased remix of Lagoona's "Into my dream" that I recorded in 2003. The remix was never really finished, and it is still not what I wanted it to be. The sound quality is bad and the track is unmastered, but it is still perfectly OK to listen to if you like calm and relaxing melodic trance. It is a bit similar to Andact as it is 9 minutes long, but the style is a bit softer and less polished. But it has Ã…sa's beautiful voice and Björn's lovely lead melody from the original song, of course…

The remix can be found here: http://trig.com/av/ (select "Into my dream (Andreas' mix)" in the MP3 player on the right side)

Note: It is not available for download yet, only for streaming through Trig. But if anyone would want to download it I will of course make it available. Feel free to send feedback!