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archives
Check out DJ Urban Kobbb’s favorite tunes:

May 14 – What a Brawl!
May 7 – Top 10 Mama Songs
Apr 9 – Blind Boys
Mar 26 – Band Brawl
Mar 19 – Karaoke Night
Mar 12 – Vampire Weekend
Feb 20 – Lenny Kravitz
Feb 13 – Lew’s Love Songs
Feb 6 – Cat Power
Jan 16 – Pandora’s Box
Jan 9 – Old-School Vinyl
Jan 2 – White Stripes
Dec 26 – Best of 2007
Dec 12 – Wynonna
Nov 14 – Plant & Krauss
Nov 7 – Radiohead
Oct 10 – iPod Songs
Sept 26 – Kaiser Chiefs
August 22 – iPod
August 15 – Mark Bryan
August 8 – Suzanne Vega
August 1 – Fiction Plane
July 25 – Prince
July 18 – iPod Update
July 11 – Live Earth
July 4 – Beastie Boys
June 27 – Cornelius
June 20 – The Postal Service
June 13 – Gym Class Heroes
June 6 – Andrew Bird
May 30 – Michael Franti
May 23 – Happy Birthday
May 16 – Lily Allen
May 9 – Stereo MC’s
May 2 – Röyksopp
April 25 – St. Germain


archives
Check out Chef Alben Parsley’s favorite foods:

Apr 30 – StoneFly Vineyard
Apr 23 – The Stranded Cow
Apr 16 – Elkhorn Peak
Mar 5 – Girl Scout Cookies
Feb 27 – Oven BBQ Chicken
Jan 30 – Turkey Roll Ups
Jan 23 – Wine Tasting
Dec 26 – Best of 2007
Dec 19 – Christmas Sushi
Dec 5 – Cornish Hen
Nov 28 – Limoncello
Nov 21 – Turkey Talk
Oct 24 – Ro Morse
Oct 17 – Distillers Dinner
Oct 3 – Bananas Foster
Sept 19 – Vodka
Sept 12 – Smørrebrød
Sept 5 – Chicken
August 29 – Pizza


archives
October 31 – Costumes!


Have a favorite singer or band that you think DJ Urban Kobbb should hear? Send him an email and he'll have a listen!

iList PlayList
By DJ Urban Kobbb
Businessman by Day... Aspiring DJ When the Mood Hits Him

Name Your Price For Radiohead


Longtime Radiohead fan DJ Urban Kobbb plunked down $16 for In Rainbows. Listen to a sample of Videotape (playing now) absolutely free!
When a band becomes really self-confident and successful, they might eschew the mainstream music business and form their own label. If a band really wants to seem avant-garde, they might make their music available only via download. However, super-successful alternative rockers Radiohead have gone one better.

Their new release, In Rainbows, is only available via Radiohead’s extremely cool and extremely simple and straight-forward Web site. And it has no set price. That’s right, you pay what you want to pay!

How do you go about deciding what to pay? Well, the download is not really as valuable as a CD (no cool album art or liner notes), so maybe you pay less than a typical CD. The download is worth more than an iTunes download, because it is in MP3 format. iTunes sells MP4s, which have limited portability.

So, somewhere between a typical CD and $.99 per song seems about right. The problem is that I buy almost all my music online, and can’t remember what a CD actually costs.

Then there’s math and exchange rates. The download sites asks how much you want to pay in Pound Sterling. In my first attempt, I tried to pay in Pounds, but left the Pence column blank. The site didn’t like that. In the end, I paid 8 pounds and no pence (about $16).

Had I read my Wall Street Journal this morning, I would have paid 6 pounds ($12). I am accustomed to the Pound being worth about $1.50, so the weakening US dollar really nailed me on this one.

The main question is: At $12 or $16, is the album worth it? I can honestly say that had I heard In Rainbows before I purchased it, I would have gladly paid what I did. Radiohead fans will not be disappointed when they listen to the familiar minimalist and melodic songs, led by falsetto voices.

Listening to a Radiohead album for the first time is like seeing a portrait by one of the masters – the beauty is in the detail, or sometimes, lack of it. Radiohead has never been one to clutter an album with anything that doesn’t add to the experience and beauty of their songs. No Trip hop here, In Rainbows is very straightforward, powerful and everything you would expect from one of the most original bands of the last decade.

So, I’ve convinced you to go online and by In Rainbows. What’s to keep you from paying $1 for your new Radiohead album? Your conscience. If you are really a fan, you don’t want to rip off your band. If you don’t like Radiohead, you probably won’t go to the site in the first place. If you really hate Radiohead and want to stick it to them, you won’t. There’s no marginal cost to the band of downloading that song to you.

So, maybe you don’t trust downloads, have to have album art or just like to hold things. You can have that, too. You just have to wait until December 3 or so before In Rainbows comes out in what is referred to as a “discbox.”

The discbox contains the In Rainbows CD, a bonus CD from the recording sessions, In Rainbows vinyl LP and a hardcover book. Before you get excited about naming your own price for this collection, just cool it. It will cost about $84.

Radiohead has long been known for their musical genius, but this is true economic genius. It’s costly to manufacture and distribute CDs. So, Radiohead is pushing folks to the download site with an inexpensive alternative. For those who have to have the CD, they will get much more and pay a healthy price.

Radiohead nuts like me will download the CD now and pre-order the discbox, which will arrive just in time for the holidays. Vinyl records are just too cool.



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