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Chop Suey in Rock Band 2 on Real Drums with the Omega GM-1

Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros live on Letterman

Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros live on Letterman

rosekat says...

>> ^robbersdog49:
Great music, great energy, it's a shame they performed it to themselves, not to us. They didn't engage the audience in any way, in fact seemed to go out of their way to turn their backs or make it very clear they were singing to each other rather than the audience. They made it feel like you were interrupting something by watching. The best live acts are the ones that engage the audience, these guys looked like they were using over the top energy to make up for extreme nervousness.
They get an upvote for the music, but not the performance.


Performing on a television show has got to be one of the most foreign and bizarre experiences for 99% of musicians. My friends saw them play in Toronto last month, they were floored by what they could described as a near-spiritual experience (pretty upset I opted-out of that evening). The band are very engaging in an actual live music venue, even walking into the crowd and making physical contact.
Damn I love going to shows!

Expiration Date - Pomplamoose

choggie says...

It's great, and live, but not "live music" now, innit?

These folks are gonna make it if they keep up the diversification in their marketing...eventually, they will have to start doing live shows outside of their comfort zone.....Keep at it kids!

Michael Jackson - Beat It covered by Pomplamoose

Pomplamoose - Little Things

G20 Pittsburgh Protests - Students Trapped and Attacked

Fjnbk says...

Alright, people. One of my best friends goes to the University of Pittsburgh and he was in the middle of the whole thing. Most of the "protesters" were just students curious about what was going on. He wrote this about it all:

"This note is for my friends who are not in Pittsburgh and have not yet been given a fairly comprehensive version of what has been going on here. If you have been seeing my wall posts, you'll know that something bad happened in Pittsburgh, but if you want my story, here it is...

On Thursday and Friday September 24-25, the G-20 World Leader's Summit occurred in Pittsburgh. The summit involved the leaders of the United States, Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Russia, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Spain, Turkey, and the United Kingdom. The purpose of the summit is to have a forum for the major world leaders about the global economic crisis. Pittsburgh was chosen to be the location for the summit in order to highlight its economic recovery after the city's manufacturing industry collapsed about 40 years ago.

The G-20 is always met with protesters for various causes, including global warming awareness, socialism, peoples' rights in other countries, anti-free-trade, and anti-war, and anarchy. The city of Pittsburgh was required to bring in police forces from all regions of the state of Pennsylvania and other nearby states.

On the evening of the 24th, the summit began with a dinner in the Phipps Conservatory, a plant exhibition hall (really quite a nice place) just under a mile from my dorm in the borough of Oakland. The University cancelled classes after 4:00 PM that day in order to ensure that students did not have to be outside if they did not wish to. During the day of the 24th, several protests had been broken up by riot police. At about 7:00 PM a small protest began at the Schenley Plaza. (from this point on, I will be referring to locations on campus, please refer to the map I posted at:< http://photos-b.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc1/hs209.snc1/7620_178174626232_559501232_4081545_8066324_n.jpg>)

I went there to investigate myself at about 8:00 PM. The protest itself was fairly small, only about a hundred or so people total, with only a handful of protesters. There was some live music and dancing, courtesy of the Hare Krishna. Despite the fact that the protest was fairly small and peaceful, there were several hundred police forming a perimeter around the plaza, which is under a quarter-mile from the Conservatory. All of the Police were in riot gear, which covered any form of identification they may have had; they were also all armed with lethal and non-lethal weapons.

Around 9:00, I decided to return to my dorm. At 10:15, I overheard someone saying that they saw fire on Forbes Avenue. I decided to go out and investigate. At this point, the street had been flooded by curious students, and would remain that way until the police removed them. Several dumpsters had been pushed into the intersection of Forbes and Atwood by anarchist protesters. The next intersection had a overturned dumpster with flaming garbage spilled on the street. Several shop windows had been broken by a protester from California, however the media initially implicated that it had been students who were responsible.

I reached the lawn of the Pitt Union, and at about 10:45 the police began to multiply rapidly. They also brought in several scary-looking trucks with large dish-shaped things on them. This turned out to be a Long-Range Acoustic Device (LRAD), which emits a loud, scary noise which is physically disabling within a certain radius. At 11:00 PM, the trucks began playing a pre-recorded message declaring that the people in the streets had become an "illegal gathering" and that the crowd was to disperse, or they could be subject to arrest or attack with "less lethal" weaponry (does that mean you're less dead when you get hit?)

At this, I decided to retreat to Forbes Hall. Other people were not fortunate enough to get out of there as quickly as I did, and became exposed to a hail of "OC" gas, rubber bullets, mace, LRAD blasts, and nightsticks. The University unfortunately decided to lock down the residence halls as the police approached, giving the retreating students nowhere to go to escape from the police. One of my friends was arrested while holding open the doors to the Litchfield Towers residence hall lobby so that escaping students had somewhere to go. She was dragged outside of the doorway, beaten to the ground, not given any rights, held for five hours, and released without any charge as of yet.

At the time, I was unaware of this, but I watched the police advance through the lower campus (residential area, mainly between Forbes and Fifth avenues) via the live feed on the local news. When I noticed that they were three blocks away from Forbes Hall, I went to the patio on the second floor of the hall (out of reach of anyone who didn't live there or have a friend there). At about midnight, the cops were in front of the hall, still chasing a small group of protesters despite being nearly a mile from the original protest ground and being practically at the end of the campus. Without any real warning, they threw several canisters of "OC" gas onto the patio. Unknown to me at the time, several also entered the lobby and threatened to mace several students who were unable to enter the hall due to the lockdown.

OC gas is for all intents and purposes the same as tear gas. When you inhale it, your lungs and throat itch and you can't do anything but cough. If it gets in your eyes, you become partially blind and it feels like your eyes are melting. I was several feet away from a grenade and was directly exposed to it for several seconds as my fellow students and I tried to escape. I ran to my bathroom on the sixth floor and flushed my eyes and choked for five minutes. The third floor had window open out of which the students had been looking, it was filled with gas, and the students living on the third floor became refugees for several hours while it cleared.

Shortly after passing Forbes hall, the police attack ended. They left Oakland with 42 arrests (most were let go that morning), and a large number of unfairly treated, assaulted, and pissed students. The university itself has yet to make any statement regarding Thursday night, but the Mayor of Pittsburgh and Chief of Police have stated that they are "proud of how well the police handled the situation". They are apparently not fans of students either.

I will save my personal commentary and descriptions of the aftermath for another note. However, here are a few links that you will find interesting.
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNeD4rHUF4A> a compilation of student-made videos from 9/24.
The videos are of varying quality and contain some harsh language and violence. These will give you an idea of what the students here experienced (I know the person being dragged away at 2:35)
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6aRrQz7224> This video was not taken by me, but it was taken from my vantage point when Forbes Hall was attacked
<http://www.pittnews.com/> Pitt's student newspaper, featuring independent coverage of the G-20 (and some rather good photography, the ones I took came out terribly)
<http://www.pittbriefly.com/> A blog on which many videos of the G-20 'riot' have been posted. Some of these cannot be found on Youtube.

Thank you for reading this,
......."

The Viking Blues

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'guitar, blues, norway, prodigy, rocknroll, music, live music' to 'guitar, blues, norway, prodigy, rocknroll, music, live music, viking blues' - edited by EndAll

Sam Tsui - Amazing Michael Jackson Medley (Acapella)

maatc says...

>> ^Sagemind:
Sam Tsui(s)? This is an arrangement all sung by one person.
Great job, Great visuals, - but not "Live Music" - how could it be?
Sam Tsui - Vocals
Kurt Schneider - Arrangement, Production


True. Took it out of livemusic, tempted to put it in engineering

Sam Tsui - Amazing Michael Jackson Medley (Acapella)

Sagemind says...

Sam Tsui(s)? This is an arrangement all sung by one person.
Great job, Great visuals, - but not "Live Music" - how could it be?

Sam Tsui - Vocals
Kurt Schneider - Arrangement, Production

100 Famous Rock Guitar Riffs, all done in 1 take

Hawkinson says...

As someone who doesn't make a habit of visiting guitar shops (bought some drum sticks for Rock Band, once, which I'm off to play right now), or listening to live music at all, that was a neat bit of trivia/nostalgia.

Phil Ochs - I ain't marchin' any more

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'live, music, phil, ochs, vietnam, war, protest, peace, united fruit' to 'live, music, phil, ochs, vietnam, war, protest, united fruit, peace, treason, love, reason' - edited by calvados

Smoking in the Boys Room - Jon Bon Jovi & Vince Neil (live)

Dude plays all parts of Boston's Foreplay/Long Time

deathcow says...

Touchy issue... as Lord Of The LiveMusic channel, I have decreed that non-live music can be submitted if it predominantly shows the artists playing and singing. If the rules were too strictly carried out, it would be impossible to post any live Milli Vanilli.

Michael Jackson Staples Center Rehearsals 2009: "This Is It"

westy says...

Whats funny is here it looks like some average west end musical.


not a bad thing if u like musicals but personally if i was going to see live music id want something like say pink Floyd has done in the past planes flying into the stage, granted its hard to know what he would have done for the actually show as MJ has sometimes had pretty decent stage performances and this was just a rehearsal.



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