Valhalla digital-LP Now Available to Purple Room in Emily's Listening Lounge
Finally - the digital-LP for Valhalla is done! It's only taken me a year (but what a crazy year - sorry for the delay Alex!)......
Anyone can listen and preview for free so enjoy! If you want to download, join my Listening Lounge (Purple Room - it's dark with hot purple black lights in there-haha!).
The recording of each song on the album created such great memories for me. Like Fire of Lonely at DrumRoll Studios where John Jones recorded us all live (we added Clay's flute later). And recording Ralf's drums with Sean at Juscat.
If you join the Purple Room, you'll the download for all of my digital-LPs (11 albums). I know it might seem expensive at $69 bucks, but you get at least $110 worth of music and merch, and receive an Executive Producer Credit on 'One or Ten' CD (environmentally friendly CDs made from potato of course!) set for summer release.
Thank you for your continued support and for listening!
Here's a kiss for your love!
Peace....
Feb. 23, 2010 at 11:07 a.m. (#)
hilarious alex! i take no issue with people sharing my music in any method and would never sue a listener for ripping, copying, etc. music is meant to be shared (potato or plastic!) :D
Feb. 23, 2010 at 2:52 a.m. (#)
Worth the wait.
I'm looking forward to the Tasty Tater CD as well.
But I have to ask, just how durable can a potato disk be? CD longevity is already much shorter than most realize/expect (particularly 'burned' CDs due to the organic nature of the dyes lasting only 5-10 years in good conditions) The limiting factor for longevity of pressed plastic CD's is the time it takes for the aluminum substrate to oxidize (10-20 years, ~100 under absolutely ideal archival conditions) so maybe it wouldn't really have much practical effect to the overall longevity.
Of course plastic disks will sit around without biodegrading for hundreds of years past their usefulness as a data-medium. So potato disks are likely a good idea for most purposes. So long as ripping them to backup isn't seen as a crime ;-)