Monday, July 30, 2012

Episode 11: Music from The FuMP

Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music.  I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring music from The Funny Music Project.

Eatin' Paste (2:28)
Les's Morgue (squeaky clean edit) (2:28)
Operation: Desert Storm (squeaky clean edit) (3:59)
Dragon With ADHD (0:12)

That was Eatin' Paste by TV's Kyle, slightly edited versions of Les's Morgue by Steve Goodie and Operation: Desert Storm by Tom Smith, and finishing up was Dragon With ADHD by Rhubarb.  All four of them are available from The Funny Music Project at thefump.com and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

This episode is about music from The Funny Music Project.  Why?  Because I've subscribed to their podcast of songs for years now and it occurred to me the other day that, oh yeah, it's all open-licensed!  And on top of it, it's awesome music.  They have a combination of parodies and original music, the latter of which we'll be listening to today, though the former is usually just as hilarious.  Their website is at thefump.com, and they have a few different ways you can get their music.  You can subscribe to their song podcast (and the Sideshow podcast, which is also very good), buy individual songs, donate, sign up for a subscription where you can listen to and download any song in their archive, sign up for a better subscription where you also get CDs sent to you...they give you lots of ways to get their music.  The neat thing is their licensing policy at the bottom of their site, which is why I'm able to build this podcast - it's all open-licensed.

And just so you know, I have no affiliation with them.  I just think they're awesome.

So, anyway, let's listen to some more of their music.

I Have a Tuba (squeaky clean edit) (4:04)
Multi-Tasking (2:24)
There's a Llama Inside My Fridge (2:53)
Not Dead (edited) (3:02)

That was I Have a Tuba by Kobi LaCroix, Multi-Tasking by Drew Jacobs, There's a Llama Inside My Fridge by TV's Kyle, and finishing up was a slightly edited version of Not Dead by Tony Goldmark.  All four of them are available from The Funny Music Project at thefump.com and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

A quick reminder: how long has it been since you've backed up your computer?  I run backups of my stuff to other computers and to drives which I make sure are disconnected from power in case of power surges.  Having an off-site backup in case of a major disaster like a fire, flood, or tornado is a good idea as well. Fortunately I haven't had any major problems recently where I've needed my backups, but I read an article recently about the lengths someone had to go to to get their data back, and although it was interesting, it's a little saddenning to think that their backup strategy (or rather lack of one) failed so badly.  So remember: back up your files.

Enough of serious.  Let's get back to silly:

The Happy Song (4:32)
307 Ale (squeaky clean edit) (3:35)
Grumbledy (2:30)
A Song For Worm Quartet To Sing With TV's Kyle (2:17)

That was The Happy Song by Fox Amoore and Rhubarb, a slightly edited version of 307 Ale by Tom Smith, Grumbledy by TV's Kyle which he decided to do because we was sick at the time, and finishing up was A Song For Worm Quartet To Sing With TV's Kyle by Worm Quartet and featuring TV's Kyle.  All four of them are available from The Funny Music Project at thefump.com and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

There are a number of songs from The Funny Music Project like that last one that kind of poke fun at themselves.  Kyle, Are You Ian? and was a very good one, and then Devo Spice and Worm Quartet parodied it as Devo, Are You Shoebox? which was hilarious.  How To Speak ShoEboX was another of my favorites, but I like to try to keep this podcast clean enough for work environments and it has a few swear words in it where it would lose part of its comedic value if I edited them out.  So I'm not playing it here.  But it is on The Funny Music Project's website if you want to check it out, and it is very worth listening to if you get a chance.

Another thing to check out this week: The Humble Music Bundle from the same people as the Humble Indie Bundle for games.  They have five albums for purchase for a price of your choosing.  If you pay more than the average price, you get a sixth album.  And you can choose how much of your payment goes to different places, with two of the choices being charities.  The downloads are available as either MP3 or FLAC, and there's some awesome music in there.  It's only up for a few more days at this point, so check it out today at humblebundle.com.  And, as usual, I have no affiliation with them - it's just a cool concept with good music.

Today's app-of-the-day is FreeCAD.  FreeCAD is a very cool parametric CAD program that allows you to construct parts and assemblies in 3D.  Basically, you draw your blueprints for various things in 2D using the geometry and constraint tools it has, then you take those and extrude or lathe them into a 3D part.  After you turn it into a 3D part, you can then go back and change your drawing and the model will recalculate.  It's pretty cool, and with the latest few versions they've really come a long way toward making it usable and stable.  It's available for Linux, I think BSD, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows.  Download it today at
free-cad.sourceforge.net

Now for a short noncommercial break for a couple of our nonsponsors followed by more music.

ccMixter Rap (with Music) (1:54)
Renaissance Fair (1:35)
Turtle Riding a Dog (3:26)
The Twelve Signs Of Swine Flu (2:03)
Pirate Song (2:17)
We Are the Vikings (3:27)

That was ccMixter Rap (with Music) by Togora, available from ccMixter and licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license.  After that was Renaissance Fair by Morning Sidekick, Turtle Riding a Dog by TV's Kyle, The Twelve Signs Of Swine Flu by Steve Goodie, Pirate Song by Jonah Knight, and finishing up was We Are the Vikings by Kobi LaCroix.  The five of them are available from The Funny Music Project at thefump.com and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

So, that's all for today.  Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction.  So don't pirate it - replace it with something better.  Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies.  Support artists where your support actually counts.

This episode was made using Xubuntu Linux, Gentoo Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies.  Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website.  Listen in next time for various styles of music with a bit of a western feel.  See 'ya!

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Monday, July 23, 2012

Episode 10: Japanese

Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music.  I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring music in Japanese.  And to preface this for any of you who speak Japanese, this episode does have vocals, and my Japanese is not good enough to know what all of them say.  So consider yourself warned if you're listening in an environment where vocals are offensive.

MICROCOSMOS (6:00)
Sunday Morning (3:29)
REDSHiFT ft. Megurine Luka - Lucid Dream (4:03)
#006 Nanairo Kimiiro Atashiiro TechnoDanceVersion featVOCALOID / vocal: VOCALOID (4:11)

That was MICROCOSMOS by NoMode and Sunday Morning by Naivepop or petitfool, which are both available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  After that was REDSHiFT ft. Megurine Luka - Lucid Dream by REDHiFT Vocaloid Works, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license.  Finishing up was #006 Nanairo Kimiiro Atashiiro TechnoDanceVersion featVOCALOID / vocal: VOCALOID by Songs to Save You.  That's got to be about the longest named song I've played on here.  Anyway, it's available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

I love the sound of the Japanese language.  The grammatical structure has got to be about the coolest I've seen in any human language I've studied.  I've only really studied it enough that I can catch a few words here and there but not well enough to fully grasp the meanings of what they're singing.  I also very much like the synthetic quality of music sung by a voice synthesizer, which works out well, since the latter often appears in the category of the former.  I've run across a bit of voice synth music in other languages, but by and large it's mostly in Japanese.

But, my love for the language extends just as much to humans' use of it, so without further ado, let's continue with more music.

kibako (4:23)
I ♥ JAPAN!ウクレレで弾き語ってみた…【遠い世界に】 (1:09)
Perfect Daydream (Japanese Version) (1:53)

That was kibako by higashi-tonden-street FACTORY, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  After that was I ♥ JAPAN!ウクレレで弾き語ってみた…【遠い世界に】 by hiikotori, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license.  Finishing up was Perfect Daydream (Japanese Version) by Oblivious, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

A side note if you're looking for open licensed music in Japanese - it's hard.  As often happens, I had to drop a bunch of my normal Japanese music for license incompatibilities to the point where I had about a half hour of music, so as usual I went looking for more music to fill out the playlist.  There seemed to be very little music out there that was in Japanese.  Many of the ones with Japanese titles were either in English or instrumental, which I'm not opposed to but would be filed into another episode.  I was also very unpleasantly surprised by how many of the songs I found were labelled as covers, and since they're most likely based on some commercial music I don't know, I can't very well include them in this podcast.  But yet they were still labelled as open licensed.  Made things quite difficult and time-consuming, since I had to go research whether or not songs *were* in fact based on something else and filter them out.

So, with that, let's continue with more music:

Vacation (5:12)
SLKP by Grünemusik (3:25)
Round & Round, Merry-Go-Round of Hate (reprise, a lullaby) by To-Den (4:14)

That was Vacation by NoMode, SLKP by Grünemusik by Grünemusik, and Round & Round, Merry-Go-Round of Hate (reprise, a lullaby) by To-Den by Grünemusik.  All three of them are available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

Today's app-of-the-day is Mozilla Thunderbird, an e-mail client program.  It has functionality for checking, organizing, and sending e-mail from multiple providers and has a ton of plugins available which allow you to add even more functionality to it.  One plugin in particular I like is called Lightning, which adds calendar
functionality.  It's very easy to use, easy to install, and is free and open source.  It's available for Linux, OS/2, OpenSolaris and OpenIndiana, BSD, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows.  Download it today from mozilla.org/thunderbird

Now for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.

The FuMP
ハッピィケンキュウジョ (5:16)
[Vocaloid3 Megpoid]Hikari (1:02)

That was a slightly edited version of Podcast Promo by The FuMP, which is available from thefump.com and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  After that was ハッピィケンキュウジョ by MenT@i, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  Finishing up was [Vocaloid3 Megpoid]Hikari by Chino Yoshio, which is available from SoundCloud and is licensed under an Attribution license.

So, that's all for today.  Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction.  So don't pirate it - replace it with something better.  Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies.  Support artists where your support actually counts.

This episode was made using Xubuntu Linux, Gentoo Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies.  Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website.  Listen in next time for some music from The Funny Music Project!  See 'ya!

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Monday, July 16, 2012

Episode 9: Cartoon Music


Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music.  I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring cartoon music.

Washington Post (2:39)
Flight Of The Bumblebee (1:19)
Hungarian Dance No. 5 (0:45)
Overture to The Marriage of Figaro (4:42)

That was Washington Post by John Phillip Sousa and performed by the the United States Marine Band.  It's available from Wikipedia or from the US Marine Band's website at marineband.usmc.mil.  After that was Flight of the Bumblebee by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and Hungarian Dance No. 5 by Johannes Brahms, both performed by the US Army Band and available from musopen.org.  Finishing up was Overture to The Marriage of Figaro by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and performed by the NTNU Chamber Philharmonic.  It's available from Wikipedia by permission from the orchestra.  All four of them are licensed as Public Domain.

Just like the last Cartoon Music episode, each of the artists in this episode have graciously dropped just about any kind of restriction from this music and released their recordings to the public domain.  I still want to make sure they're credited - I feel they deserve it even more for not forcing people to do so.  For many years now the public domain has not grown like it used to due to the ways the copyright laws changed near the end of the 20th century, so it's nice to see some new stuff entering it.  It's a pretty awesome thing for them to do.  I really think that a lot of the reason so much of this is so recognizable is that, since the original
music for these is now public domain, they're used more, and I'm very much looking forward to the future where some of the currently-copyrighted music's copyrights will expire so it'll be reusable the same way.

This is a pretty good long episode, so let's listen to some more music.

Overture to William Tell (11:01)
Night on Bald Mountain (12:13)

That was Overture to William Tell by Gioacchino Rossini and performed by the United States Marine Band.  Finishing up was Night on Bald Mountain by Modest Mussorgsky and performed by the Skidmore College Orchestra.  Both of them are available from musopen.org and are licensed as Public Domain.

Today's app-of-the-day is Synergy.  Synergy is a neat little system to let you use one keyboard and mouse to run multiple computers.  So, for example, in my normal computer setup I have my desktop running Xubuntu Linux with its two monitors set up with the keyboard and mouse, and I have Synergy set up on my Gentoo Linux laptop so the cursor and keyboard smoothly move right over to it without having to plug in or unplug anything.  Basically when my mouse hits the edge of the desktop's screen, it pops over onto the laptop's.  And the great thing is that the computers involved don't have to run the same operating system.  They have downloads for Linux, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, and iOS for iPad and iPhone devices, though I have little doubt there's a port available for BSD, OpenIndiana, etc.  It's available from synergy-foss.org and is very simple to set up.

Now for a short noncommercial break from one of our non-sponsors.

The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
Grand Fantasie from Die Walkure (14:59)
Overture to the Light Cavalry (6:59)

That was Grand Fantasy from Die Walkure by Richard Wagner and performed by the United States Marine Band.  It's available from musopen.org.  Finishing up was Overture to the Light Cavalry by Franz von Suppé and also performed by the United States Marine Band.  It's available from Wikipedia.  Both are licensed as Public Domain.

So, that's all for today.  I still have more cartoon music lined up for another episode.  Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction.  So don't pirate it - replace it with something better.

This episode was made using Xubuntu Linux, Gentoo Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Public Domain license, thanks to all of the music being available as Public Domain from musopen.org and Wikipedia.  I would much rather distribute these episodes under more permissive licenses and will be doing so when I can.  At any rate, feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies.  Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website.  Listen in next time for some music in Japanese!  See 'ya!

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Monday, July 9, 2012

Episode 8: Electronic


Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music.  I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring electronic music.

dreamer (3:51)
Cosmic Cafe (3:24)
Arp-Ego 1 (8:16)

That was dreamer by Sekula Wieslaw, Cosmic Cafe by Fortadelis, and Arp-Ego 1 by Loomeer, which are available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

Again, this week's episode is very long, so in the interest of brevity, let's get right back to music.

Vocoda Evening (8:17)
Galaxie (4:10)
New Trance (inc stems) (ft. mind map that) (5:56) (edited)

That was Vocoda Evening by Loomeer, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  After that was Galaxie by SIRIUS, which is also available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license.  Finishing up was an instrumental-edited version of New Trance (inc stems) (ft. mind map that) by stellarartwars, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license.

There are a couple other songs I've got that feature mind map that (also known as Kara Square), one of which in particular probably is one of my most played songs in the last few months, but vocals just don't quite fit this episode.  That song will certainly feature in a future episode, though, once I find a coherent category it
fits into.  Right now it's kind of in my Misc. Cool Stuff, Head Sticker, and ccMixter lists.  May even just do an episode with some of those in the future since a lot of the stuff that's on them is unique enough to kind of fall into a category of its own.

So, with that, back to electronic music.

Aksjomat przemijania (Axiom of going by) (9:05)
Another Moment Beside Reality (7:59)
The lovers (6:13) (appears to have since been removed from Jamendo - also available from archive.org)

That was Aksjomat przemijania (Axiom of going by) by Dieter Werner, followed by Another Moment Beside Reality by EXperience... and The lovers by Wojciech Wszelaki.  All three of them are available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

Today's app-of-the-day is Pidgin, a multiprotocol chat client.  By my count, it supports at least 17 different protocols and/or providers, including AIM, Google Talk, IRC, and XMPP.  It's a well-built program, there are all kinds of plugins available for it, and it runs on Linux, BSD, AmigaOS, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows.  Download it today at pidgin.im

Now for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors.

Librivox
Looking Forward (Radio edit) (6:44)
synthetic (3:55)
Smoke & Lights (8:30)

That was Looking Forward (Radio edit) by ED3-STUDIO and synthetic by _voice, both of which are available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  Finishing up was Smoke & Lights by boomaga, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license.

So, that's all for today.  Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction.  So don't pirate it - replace it with something better.  Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies.  Support artists where your support actually counts.

This episode was made using Xubuntu Linux, Gentoo Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies.  Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website.   Listen in next time for some more cartoon music!  See 'ya!


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Monday, July 2, 2012

Episode 7: Mystery and Spy Music


Hi, and welcome to the Open Licensed Music Podcast, the show where we highlight music from artists who let you share their music.  I'm Ralph Wacksworth, and today's episode is featuring mystery and spy music.

Sneaky Snitch (2:16)
Gloomy (1:45)
The Snow Queen (3:40)

That was Sneaky Snitch by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.  After that was Gloomy by J.C.Vogt, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  Finishing up was The Snow Queen by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.

This is a long episode, so I'm going to just continue on with some more music.

Déjà tout bu (1:51)
Inspector Thenard (1:49)
Intro (0:29)
Constancy Part Two (1:04)
Conspirando (0:25)
Matar al Detective (0:27)

That was Déjà tout bu by Löhstana David, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution license.  After that was Inspector Thenard by Butterfly Tea, and Intro by Balkan Balagan, which are both available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  Following that was Constancy Part Two by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.  Finishing up were Conspirando and Matar al Detective, both by Pedro Amoros, which are available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

I know a good portion of my current listeners are from my local Linux Users' Group.  I don't have a whole lot of listeners right now.  But in case you've stumbled across this podcast from outside of me telling you about it, have you looked into joining any specialized local groups?  We have quite a number of them in my town, to the point that one of our Linux group members put together a website to aggregate a bunch of the similar groups' schedules together into one nice handy little calendar.  There are almost certainly some groups in your area for things you're interested in.  We even discovered the other day that there's a regularly meeting FoxPro group in town.  So get out there and socialize - there's lots of cool stuff to learn.

And now for you spies and just generally cool detectives, here's some more music.

03-Hassan's Dream (5:41)
Peninsule (11:24)

That was 03-Hassan's Dream by Luc Bartoli and Peninsule by AdHoc, which are both available from Jamendo and are licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

Now, how about some actual real-life spy stuff?

Numbers Station--6949 kHz

That was a chunk of a track called Numbers Station--6949 kHz by SWLing.com, which is available from archive.org and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  It's a recording of something called a "numbers station", which are a type of shortwave radio station that started popping up around the world sometime in the early to mid 1900's.  At least a few of them have definitely been used by actual spies, so what you're hearing is probably an encoded message being transmitted to an undercover spy somewhere in the world.  Pretty cool if you ask me.

So, let's continue with some more music.

Umbrella Pants (1:10)
Detective entra a la casa (1:49)
Sneaky Adventure (1:13)
A Dwarf's Tale (4:31)
Our Story Begins (1:24)

That was Umbrella Pants by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.  Then we had Detective entra a la casa by Pedro Amoros, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  After that was Sneaky Adventure by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.  Then we had A Dwarf's Tale by Marc Teichert, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license.  And finishing up was Our Story Begins by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.

Today's app-of-the-day is Dia, a very nice little diagram drawing and editing program.  Basically, you draw in shapes and connect them with lines or arrows.  It works great for flowcharts and wiring diagrams.  And if you want to change something, you can just drag the shape and the lines connecting it to the other shapes move right along with it.  It's available for Linux, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows.  Download it today at http://live.gnome.org/Dia (with a capital D).

Now for a short noncommercial break from one of our nonsponsors followed by more music.  And although I mention Librivox books on here quite a bit because of the fact that they have audio versions of books, many of the books they record come from a website called Project Gutenberg.  If you have an ebook reader, you really need to go check out their site right away.  They have thousands of books and periodicals, almost all of which are in the public domain.  And to go a bit further, a lot of the material on Project Gutenberg comes from a site called Distributed Proofreaders.  They take scanned books and convert them from image formats to text, and it's set up so you can very easily hop on there and help them out by proofreading and correcting their progress.  The whole system is pretty cool, but these audio books are the result of many hours of volunteer time, and if you get a chance, I'm sure any of the projects in the chain would be happy to have another volunteer to help out.

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
Inspector Thenard Returns (0:54)
Investigations (1:33)
Infiltration-Spy Edit (5:17)
A Moment Of Twilight (1:05)
A por las Armas (0:37)
Remanence Halo (4:50)
Vals de los Sonámbulos (1:45)

That was Inspector Thenard Returns by Butterfly Tea, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  Then we had Investigations by Kevin MacLeod, which is available from incompetech.com and is licensed under an Attribution license.  After that was Infiltration-Spy Edit by DJ Psyonik, which is available from ccMixter and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license.  Next up was A Moment of Twilight by Marc Teichert, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial license.  The fifth song in the set was A por las Armas by Pedro Amoros, which is available from Jamendo under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  Next up was Remamnence Halo by Julien Boulier, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  And finishing up was Vals de los Sonámbulos by Andrés P. Estrada, which is available from Jamendo and is licensed under an Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.

So, that's all for today.  Remember - piracy of commercial music only proves your dependence on that model and justifies further censorship and restriction.  So don't pirate it - replace it with something better.  Listen to open licensed music, donate to the artists behind it, go to concerts, and buy music from artists whose record labels don't see you as their enemies.  Support artists where your support actually counts.

This episode was made using Xubuntu Linux, Gentoo Linux, Audacity, Audacious for organizing playlists, and Leafpad for notes, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share-Alike license.  Feel free to give it to your friends, or if you didn't like it, your enemies.  Links to the songs in this podcast are available on the website.  Listen in next time for some more electronic music!  See 'ya!

Download MP3