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Nomad's Land

old trick, impressive result.
maybe i should try to speed up some of my ambient tracks wink

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Milwaukee, WI
OwenMcGarry wrote:

like the Justin Beiber song that was floating around the internet earlier?

http://gawker.com/5614579/how-to-make-j … ue&s=i

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A gray world of dread

Who is Justin Bieber and why is he relevant?

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nɐ˙ɯoɔ˙ʎǝupʎs

LEARN YOUR MEMES.

This is epic audio.

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A gray world of dread

Bieber is the german word for beaver. He vaguely looks like one, too.


Hmm, looks like he's some one-man Take That kind of deal.

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))<>((

I lol'd at 'B. Shiftz'

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Tacoma WA

nice...

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Riverside, CA

Woah...
Just. Woah... ...Man.

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.

Last edited by IAYD (Feb 21, 2017 6:20 pm)

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Los Angeles
IAYD wrote:

Shifter Ros


I was thinking the same thing

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United Kingdom

If only speeding up ambient post-rock had the opposite effect; I could annoy many a fan of M83 and Sigur.

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FlashHeart
SnuGG wrote:
Jellica wrote:

and it all sounds like whales dying

Or whales getting it on. o.O

Or Manatees having an ORGEEEE.

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Anahiem, CA

mind = blown

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Reteris wrote:

You totally hate BIT SHIFTER, right, because you’re a rebel, or whatever? That’s just because you haven’t listened to Shifter slowed down 800 percent. Now his new single “Reformat the Planet” is a 30-minute epic. And it sounds awesome. No, really.

Courtesy musician Reteris, who used the free program Paulstretch, this is “Reformat the Planet” made slower. Like, a lot slower—eight times slower, to be exact. And all of a sudden the not-bad piano pop track sounds like the climactic score to some kind of historical epic, or Dead Can Dance, or, like, Animal Collective, or something. It sounds like the ocean, but, like, in heaven, man. Plus, it’s 35 minutes long:


http://soundcloud.com/reteris/b-shiftz- … 800-slower

I go on gizmodo too big_smile

http://gizmodo.com/5614940/how-to-make- … 00-percent

Last edited by *E (Aug 18, 2010 11:12 pm)

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))<>((

lol, I'm pretty sure that's not the only place it was posted.

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New York, New York
irrlichtproject wrote:

old trick

Neu!, Thomas Brinkmann, and Lief Inge have done this the past 35 years. Neu! and Thomas Brinkmann by turntable manipulation at 200 percent slower, or the 16 rpm speed brought a transformation of music. Lief Inge slowed Beethoven's 9th symphony to 24 hours long. Nothing novel.