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Unless you depend on the images, you can obtain the sound track by turning off the sound of your PC for four minutes and thirty three seconds.
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Same here
I was wondering if I would be the only one
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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I got the same message, so I just vpn'ed (I use NORDVPN) to the UK and was able to view the performance.
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Not available on the other side of the pond!
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Dream Theater - Scenes from a Memory (using MP)
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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An 80s playlist on Amazon Music.
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So the perfect piece for you is "4:33"!
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Unless someone can find a working link for me, yes.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
Never stop dreaming - Freddie Kruger
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There is a piano version at John Cage's 4'33"[^]. I believe it has unrestricted distribution.
Minimalist music taken to its extreme.
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The Blob by Aesop Rock
Aesop Rock - The Blob - YouTube[^]
I usually just use youtube with an ad-blocker but I have this one ripped to my PC too somewhere (i am using youtube just because it was easy to find)
Edit: Forgot the link
Real programmers use butterflies
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i'm listening to a bunch of songs my band recorded in 1995, played through iTunes.
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While I am working on something I can hear different kind of sounds, but has to be without vocals. Only music fine, people singing and my concentration goes to hell.
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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The black keys, System of a down, Offspring, ACDC, Green Day, The Fratellis, The Hives, Motley Crue, Arctic monkeys, Dire Straits, ...
In the software area use MusicBee (which upgrades automatically and silently) allows playlists and remembers the last played song.
In the hardware area I use a set of KEF EGG loudspeakers with a nice DAC and a set of Beoplay H9 3rd gen headphones from Bang & Olufsen.
All this sounds nice there.
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country!
SiriusXM.
Actually probably the 80's hairbands
To err is human to really mess up you need a computer
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Various Classical instrumental music (no chorus)
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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At work, most of the time it's smooth jazz, some New Age, 70's funk, 80's pop, 90's modern rock. Rick Braun, Waymon Tisdale, Dave Koz, Jeff Golub, Candy Dulfer, to name a few. Usually no vocals, but that's not a requirement. I have a 200GB microSD card in my phone with my entire music library on it. I listen using a venerable pair of Sony MDV-900 studio headphones I paid $240 for 25 years ago. I looked at replacing them a while back, and the contemporary model was >$1000 . I'll keep buying replacement ear pads every 3-4 years, thank you.
Going to and from work I tend to keep music with vocals in the car, where I sing along. My steering wheel is in therapy as a result . I like female singers with big, expressive voices like Oleta Adams, Gladys Knight, Queen Latifah (aka Dana Owens), Chaka Khan. Male vocalists, I'm all over the map - Frank Sinatra to Rick Astley (yes, the rick-rolling guy) to Al Jarreau to Ozzy. I'm also fascinated by a capella groups like Rockapella and Take 6.
Software Zen: delete this;
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I listen to Spotify (free version, I have almost 1000 songs and I add on average, 2 or so a month) playing through an iPad to a Bluetooth speaker I can move around (it lasts almost 2 working days, about 20 hours, and is easy to recharge). I'm currently working from home, but I used it while in the office (and will again, if we ever have to go back). I don't mind the ads, strange as that seems. My collection is a mix of hits that I like: music from the 50s (a few), 60s (more), 70s (majority), 80s (less than or tied with the 70s, I think), 90s (less than the 80s), and so on by decade, diminishing to a few current hits. My collection of artists are all over the place: Barry Manilow, Beach Boys, Monkees, Four Seasons, Queen, Led Zeppelin, Frank Sinatra, Muppets (I like "Rainbow Collection" from Kermit the Frog), and a couple of songs I have a history with that bring back memories ("Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue" was the song I used to audition as a DJ for a local radio station, which helped start my part-time-while-attending-college job, "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go" was the last song I played every Saturday night at midnight when I logged off the local radio station and shut down the transmitter for the night). Music is a background killing "noise" that I've used all through the school years to concentrate. It's served me well and I hope it continues to do the job!
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Jethro Tull using MusicBee.
I also use YouTube, although the frequent commercials get irritating. However, I do find new singers/groups on a regular basis.
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Me too!
Also, Neil Young, the Animals, Eric Burdon and War, Sultans of Swing and anything written by Paul McCartney.
Wonko the Sane
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MyTuner app, playing a local classical music station? However, I'm in meetings so much that I usually forget to turn it back on afterwards.
Bond
Keep all things a simple as possible, but no simpler. -said someone, somewhere
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I am listening to my ripped CD library using Foobar2000 (free, recommended).
Current list has Harry Chapin, Carole King, Marty Robbins, Willie Nelson, ELO, Eagles, Joe Bonamassa, Robin Trower, Merle Haggard, The Kinks, The Cult, The Doobies and The Beatles.
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