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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


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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


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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

Jaunuary 16, 2008

Opening Pandora’s Box To New and Renewed Music


DJ Urban Kobbb requests a Pandora station built around Joe Jackson’s One More Time (playing now). Hit the next button to hear Pandora’s suggested add, This is Not America, by David Bowie.

Sometimes, the hardest part of reviewing new music is simply finding it. Take now, for example. There’s just not much out there being released. A diligent DJ must look to many sources for ideas to feature.

iList Paducah reader, let’s call him K-Fiddy – suggests that we open Pandora, found at pandora.com.

Pandora is the brainchild of the Music Genome Project (MGP). MGP’s idea is that music can be broken down into hundreds of attributes, or “genes.” By analyzing the genetics of the music that Pandora members like, it can suggest other music with similar attributes.

You start Pandora by entering a song or artist that you like. Pandora, then, creates a “station” of music based on your original choice.

OK, so which artist should I choose to start my station?

Joe Jackson has been on my mind a lot lately. This might be because he is set to release Rain, his first album since 2003. Or maybe it’s because his 1979 hit, One More Time, is now used to sell the Taco Bell Cheesy Gordita Crunch. 

However he got there, I enter Joe Jackson, and Pandora starts a station and begins scanning almost 100 years of popular recordings to find songs with similar musical qualities to Joe Jackson.

First song up: King of Pain by The Police. Do they think that I only want ’80s music? Why does Pandora think that I will like this?

Well, if you click on the song, you can see the attributes of King of Pain that match up with Joe Jackson music. Pandora says that both…
  • Use basic rock song structure
  • Have mild rhythmic syncopation
  • Are sung by a breathy male lead vocalist
  • Employ subtle use of acoustic piano
OK, those are some fancy descriptions, so I’m inclined to see where Pandora wants to take this. I click “thumbs up” to tell Pandora to suggest more along this line. (The “thumbs down” and other options tell Pandora to look in a different direction.)

The second song that Pandora suggests is Breaking Us in Two by Joe Jackson. Duuhh, it’s a Joe Jackson station.

Third song: Somewhere Only We Know by Keane. OK, current music. Nice.

Fourth song: This is Not America by David Bowie. I like this song and, quite frankly, I’d forgotten about it. I think that I might want to own it, so I click on its link and buy it from iTunes. I also could have purchased a copy through the same link from amazon.com. I can also create a new station based on this song.

So, my first Pandora effort is pretty successful – I found some music that I had forgotten about. But what about finding new music that I haven’t heard?

I’ll challenge Pandora and plug in a lesser-known band. Nouvelle Vague remakes new wave and punk classics in a down-tempo and bossa nova style. Let’s start a Nouvelle Vague station.

Through Nouvelle Vague, Pandora leads me to Sam Phillips, Club 8 and Erin McKeown. All are down-tempo artists, and the latter two are not in my current collection. I’d have to call this station a success.

Since Pandora tries to use objective measures to recommend something as subjective as musical taste, it’s bound to fail from time to time. That’s OK. In a short period of time it reminded me of some lost music and introduced me to some pretty interesting new music.

That’s not bad for 30 minutes on a Web site.

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