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Post by The Escapist on May 4, 2019 15:39:23 GMT -5
When Noel says the next EP is “Mancunian”, what does that mean? (Yank here). Does he mean something like Columbia? More traditional guitar-based? Or something else entirely? He's probably referring to the kind of dance-influenced "Madchester" rock sound from the late 80's. Columbia is probably a good reference for it, yeah. Stuff that makes you almost want to unironically wear a bucket hat, basically.
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Post by discworld on May 4, 2019 15:50:38 GMT -5
Seems like this must be the touring band thing, since Jess and YSEE are both on it. Maybe Gem's even on the guitar solo? Hard to say, but since Noel produced this song (and presumably the rest of this EP) himself, then it can't be the Sardy or Holmes projects. Maybe Sardy is EP2 and Holmes is EP3? I dont know if you read this live4ever.proboards.com/post/1565743
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Post by fartpanic on May 4, 2019 16:23:55 GMT -5
One last go at a no.1 single for Noel Nothing like chart manipulation. Can't blame a man for trying
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Post by The Escapist on May 5, 2019 10:36:33 GMT -5
I reserve the right to add any and all of the EP songs to my WBTM playlist, or to create a new seven-track Wyoming album out of them. Thanks.
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Post by discworld on May 5, 2019 11:08:05 GMT -5
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Post by fabulousbakers on May 6, 2019 2:13:59 GMT -5
Is there a digital or CD release of this EP or is it only vinyl again? There'll be a digital release of the whole EP. So far only the lead single is available. Why only vinyl again? There are nearly no NGHFB vinyl only releases... Well I'm confused then because I used to buy all of Noel's singles on CD so I had at at least one version of each b-side or remix. I gave up because I can't play vinyl and I thought the last four "b-sides" (instrumental versions of It's A Beautiful World, Holy Mountain, She Taught Me How to Fly and Love Is The Law) plus the Wait And Return EP were only issued on vinyl. There were CD or digital releases of all of those?
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Post by MONO on May 6, 2019 3:15:43 GMT -5
There are digital releases (download/streaming) of all of them. CD singles are dead.
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Post by mossy on May 6, 2019 16:33:47 GMT -5
It's kinda depressing to think it will be three years before new music comes around again. Wrong! X
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Post by Lennon2217 on May 6, 2019 16:43:17 GMT -5
There are digital releases (download/streaming) of all of them. CD singles are dead. Neither of my cars or laptop have CD players. It’s becoming a struggle to even play a CD anywhere.
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Post by fabulousbakers on May 6, 2019 21:20:54 GMT -5
There are digital releases (download/streaming) of all of them. CD singles are dead. Ok thanks - I thought a few of them were vinyl only! I spent ages looking for rips for a few of those and I'd have bought them if I known there were official digital releases.
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Post by MONO on May 7, 2019 2:13:37 GMT -5
There are digital releases (download/streaming) of all of them. CD singles are dead. Neither of my cars or laptop have CD players. It’s becoming a struggle to even play a CD anywhere. I still prefer CDs to downloads as you end up paying basically the same plus you get a free backup and a nice booklet/packaging but all I do is ripping them once and never listen to them again. There are digital releases (download/streaming) of all of them. CD singles are dead. Ok thanks - I thought a few of them were vinyl only! I spent ages looking for rips for a few of those and I'd have bought them if I known there were official digital releases. Check Qobuz and 7digital for lossless downloads.
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Post by mossy on May 7, 2019 3:40:27 GMT -5
I have to be careful with CD purchases now.
I only have enough shelf space for approx 100 more.
Got to make them count.
X
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Post by Deleted on May 7, 2019 4:23:31 GMT -5
I have to be careful with CD purchases now. I only have enough shelf space for approx 100 more. Got to make them count. X You could always buy more shelf space... 🤔 😁
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Post by Deleted on May 7, 2019 4:25:04 GMT -5
There are digital releases (download/streaming) of all of them. CD singles are dead. Neither of my cars or laptop have CD players. It’s becoming a struggle to even play a CD anywhere. CD's are alive and well in my house 😁😎👍
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Post by Deleted on May 7, 2019 4:33:46 GMT -5
Regarding CD's and vinyl vs. digital purchases and cloud storage...
So of course after I spend several years uploading over 26,000 songs to Google Play Music (including purchasing a few choice "albums" from the service) now the service will be discontinued later this year in favor of crappy YouTube Music (which I have absolutely NO interest in). Still no definitive answer from Google about what will become of all of the music purchased from Google Play, but the general consensus from the tech websites is all the stuff you've uploaded yourself will vanish.
That's another reason why I love CD's and vinyl. Sure they take up physical space but when purchase a record or CD and you hold it in your hands or put it on your shelf, YOU control the media, instead of having it float in a cloud someplace.
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Post by andymorris on May 7, 2019 5:06:13 GMT -5
I still buy CDs. You can't trust streamers, one day they can decide to erase all your stuff or simply got out of business. + you're paying for stuff you dont own.
A CD, a CD player that's like 15 bucks now, and computer, and you're good to go with your own library with lossless files.
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Post by glider on May 7, 2019 5:23:21 GMT -5
Regarding CD's and vinyl vs. digital purchases and cloud storage... So of course after I spend several years uploading over 26,000 songs to Google Play Music (including purchasing a few choice "albums" from the service) now the service will be discontinued later this year in favor of crappy YouTube Music (which I have absolutely NO interest in). Still no definitive answer from Google about what will become of all of the music purchased from Google Play, but the general consensus from the tech websites is all the stuff you've uploaded yourself will vanish. That's another reason why I love CD's and vinyl. Sure they take up physical space but when purchase a record or CD and you hold it in your hands or put it on your shelf, YOU control the media, instead of having it float in a cloud someplace. Wait, what? So what becomes of the songs I've uploaded?
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Post by mimmihopps on May 7, 2019 5:51:26 GMT -5
Regarding CD's and vinyl vs. digital purchases and cloud storage... So of course after I spend several years uploading over 26,000 songs to Google Play Music (including purchasing a few choice "albums" from the service) now the service will be discontinued later this year in favor of crappy YouTube Music (which I have absolutely NO interest in). Still no definitive answer from Google about what will become of all of the music purchased from Google Play, but the general consensus from the tech websites is all the stuff you've uploaded yourself will vanish. That's another reason why I love CD's and vinyl. Sure they take up physical space but when purchase a record or CD and you hold it in your hands or put it on your shelf, YOU control the media, instead of having it float in a cloud someplace. Couldn't agree more. In my house we still have loads of CD's and LP's. Especially my better half's LP's which he has since his teenage years. He sold a lot LP's in past, but still there're at least 100 or more of them in our house. He's been telling me "I should sell them on ebay" for years, but I don't see it will happen anytime soon.
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Post by rorymcbride on May 7, 2019 8:03:07 GMT -5
There are digital releases (download/streaming) of all of them. CD singles are dead. Neither of my cars or laptop have CD players. It’s becoming a struggle to even play a CD anywhere. Hark at Johnny Two-Cars there...winking face.
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Post by The Escapist on May 7, 2019 8:13:17 GMT -5
I'm perfectly happy paying £10 a month for all the music I could possibly listen to, with the option to change album's tracklistings, all on one phone - and I don't have much anxiety about Apple suddenly going out of business. In fact, I imagine that an unexplained house fire destroying all your CDs is much more likely than Spotify and Apple suddenly just disappearing.
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Post by MONO on May 7, 2019 8:22:06 GMT -5
The problem is not Apple going out of business but music not being available for streaming or vanishing after some time. -> Streaming PLUS physical media.
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Post by schorman on May 7, 2019 8:48:01 GMT -5
There'll be a digital release of the whole EP. So far only the lead single is available. Why only vinyl again? There are nearly no NGHFB vinyl only releases... Well I'm confused then because I used to buy all of Noel's singles on CD so I had at at least one version of each b-side or remix. I gave up because I can't play vinyl and I thought the last four "b-sides" (instrumental versions of It's A Beautiful World, Holy Mountain, She Taught Me How to Fly and Love Is The Law) plus the Wait And Return EP were only issued on vinyl. There were CD or digital releases of all of those? The instrumental tracks are vinyl only, but Wait and Return is available digitally.
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Post by The Escapist on May 7, 2019 8:49:56 GMT -5
The problem is not Apple going out of business but music not being available for streaming or vanishing after some time. -> Streaming PLUS physical media. Has that ever happened to you? I've honestly never found anything (save Bandcamp music) that isn't on the main streaming services, nor has anything ever disappeared out of my library. The only plus I can think of for physical music is getting Jay-Z's The Blueprint, but you may as well just get that from the Apple Store.
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Post by Deleted on May 7, 2019 8:55:32 GMT -5
Regarding CD's and vinyl vs. digital purchases and cloud storage... So of course after I spend several years uploading over 26,000 songs to Google Play Music (including purchasing a few choice "albums" from the service) now the service will be discontinued later this year in favor of crappy YouTube Music (which I have absolutely NO interest in). Still no definitive answer from Google about what will become of all of the music purchased from Google Play, but the general consensus from the tech websites is all the stuff you've uploaded yourself will vanish. That's another reason why I love CD's and vinyl. Sure they take up physical space but when purchase a record or CD and you hold it in your hands or put it on your shelf, YOU control the media, instead of having it float in a cloud someplace. Wait, what? So what becomes of the songs I've uploaded? Read it and weep: www.androidauthority.com/download-google-play-music-library-934020/Unfortunately downloading over 26,000 tracks is no longer practical for me since I no longer have a laptop, only a phone. According to the author of this article, even if you have the best equipment and a fast connection at your disposal, downloading your entire library can be a downright time-consuming bitch, so if you have a sizable library worth saving, you'd better get cracking. Thanks Google! This is the last time you fuck me. Luckily most --- not all--- of what I had on Google Play Music I have hard copies of, either on vinyl, CD, or both. I have uninstalled Play Music on my phone and have given the free version of Pandora a go. I dig it so far, I might upgrade to the $5 a month version soon.
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Post by mossy on May 7, 2019 10:00:25 GMT -5
I'm perfectly happy paying £10 a month for all the music I could possibly listen to, with the option to change album's tracklistings, all on one phone - and I don't have much anxiety about Apple suddenly going out of business. In fact, I imagine that an unexplained house fire destroying all your CDs is much more likely than Spotify and Apple suddenly just disappearing. Ive got loads of deep cuts that aren’t on streaming services. You’re clearly just very mainstream. X
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