👋 If you can see this toot you are on the #Fediverse enjoying #BetterSocialMedia
How flippin' awesome is that!?
In one or two sentences, tell me one thing that stands out for you personally, one of the reasons you enjoy being here.
And if you're ok with me using your answer in promotional material to get more people here, add the tag #TellEveryone 📢
@jaz @Em0nM4stodon I make weird music and learned that it had a name and that a whole bunch of like minded folk were doing that here too. It’s called #BonkWave or #NotBonkWave and these are the finest bunch of new friends that I could hope for. I feel like I am home.
Numerical Hexadecimal Arithmetical Mathematical – NHAM Mixtape 16
Welcome to the 16th edition of a fine showcase of 12 Fedi musicians. Count it in with me: a-one, a-two, a-one, two, three, four…
As ever there’s a radio show version of this mixtape with some chat about the tracks. That can be found on Audio Interface ( @audiointerface) from the first Monday of the month as well as featuring in NHAM Radio‘s Mixtape Mondays and Thursdays slots.
⬇️ Click below to begin playing, and keep the page open to hear the mix in full.
[If viewing from the Fediverse you need to click here to listen to the mixtape on NHAM]
1. Plaits Space II by AmbientSpace
All Rights Reserved
Ambience in the wiggly, wobbly, upbeat sense for take off. Ambient Space is Chris Mills, an electronic music producer from New Zealand, a french horn lover and one of the finest proponents of bonkwave.
@ambientspace
2. Izanami by DebonaireToast
All Rights Reserved
Up and down like a Weston donkey, this groove hits the spot, pausing only for dial up nostalgia. Traditionally a fine artist, a photographer, a graphic designer and video editor, Alabama-based Nadia Purge aka Mandi Cook has in more recent years added music production to her wide skill set, making tunes as “DebonaireToast” inspired by dark, electronic, ambient and electro-industrial dance music.
@debonairetoast
3. Jumpsuit by Humanoid No More
All Rights Reserved
Rave piano. Need I say more? Nope. Never. But also: cut vocal shouts, airy sweeps, darkened tones, bass beats. Mega blend! Creating beats loosely between hip-hop and house, Humanoid No More are a duo based in British Columbia. “Jumpsuit” comes from their recently released Tropical Moon EP.
@dtronic
4. ١٠٦ by she hacked you
CC BY-NC 3.0
I just can’t get hacked enough. Delightfully dancey, wonderfully wistful. Representing Cairo at it’s hottest, she hacked you is a comatose day–dreamer, night-timer and party–crasher also known as ekis.
@ekis
5. One Thread by Shannon Curtis vs control
All Rights Reserved
One Fedi star remixes another. Damned if I won’t survive. A superb example of the remix work available from control.org, who is always open to donate-what-you-can sound design commissions. For anyone wanting a remix you can find all of the info at control.org where there is also news of a covers album, an original album, and a remix EP all dropping at the back-end of the year. Now that’s control.
@shannoncurtis @controlfreak
6. Say What You Wanna Say by C.Circo
All Rights Reserved
Take my arm and bounce with me. Now kick. More delicious dance from Ottawan electronic music producer C Circo. The track is from his brilliant “Metamorph” album released this year after a period of downtime, having found renewed energy to do so by the Fedi Scene and in particular the bonkwave community.
@CCirco
7. Mr. Decimal by Blix Byrd
All Rights Reserved
This just grabs and pulls with textures finely layered and vocals strongly piercing. And the break down, oh the break down. Blix Bird represents the most recent adventurous, experimental, intelligent sounds from Alison Wilder, and Mr. Decimal comes from her LP “IX” – an album that demands your attention and asks you to climb with the composer over a barbed-wire fence and in to a world probably not quite like your own, full of stinging and prickly things, where there is a freedom but perhaps little love.
@alisynthesis
8. Rejection by Lorenzo Miniero
All Rights Reserved
Turns out there’s a beauty to be found in the vast open space carved out by rejection. The movie sample at the end is actually an introduction to the next song (Resentment) on the album. -Each song on “R U There?” has the same, forming a narrative through the mind and its emotions as you listen through the progressive rock journey from start to finish. Lorenzo himself is an open source software developer and accomplished musician from Napoli.
@lminiero
9. Continuity by Chris Harris
All Rights Reserved
A gorgeously crafted track. Continuity is a homage to Vangelis (electric piano at start), David Gilmour (lap steel in middle) and Mike Oldfield (Squier Strat at close), with even a very quick nod to John Williams hidden in there. It was written at a time of physical pain from kidney stones, which Chris says may have contributed to it sounding more melancholy than he’d expected. That and the cellos (from Spitfire Audio’s “BBC SO” and “Abbey Road ONE” orchestral plugins)! Chris, from my old stomping ground in Bristol, is an extremely prolific musician who utilises all manner of instruments and produces a wide scope of musical output.
@headfirstonly
10. Seventeen Carrots by sideSister
All Rights Reserved
Look who’s back! Discerning and fun as ever. Combining some of the lesser-spotted instruments and oozing originality. Seventeen Carrots is the opening track to their brand new album, “Space For You”, which is out this month! The third Kiwi act in this mixtape, Sidesister are dynamic mother and daughter duo Leigh and Aelyth, who fret that modern life has little room for the undisciplined in “Seventeen Carrots”. “Space For You” is a ten track LP which takes a look at our world and considers ways they can make it into a world they’d prefer to live in.
@elsemusic
11. Artifiko by Camilo Bravo
All Rights Reserved
More expert combination of rhythms, sounds and textures, this time out of Quito in Ecuador. A programmer by day and musician by night, Camilo hosts the musicians.today Mastodon instance as a community for musicians of all levels, instruments, regions, languages, and genres. “Artifiko” comes from his 2023 album “Volatil”, for which he captured himself recording and editing every sound put in to all 16 songs of the album. Quite remarkable. Although I did see some daylight in the videos so I reckon the programming may have taken a bit of a backseat in 2023!
@cambraca
12. Juliregn by RYA!
All Rights Reserved
Wow. What a way to finish a mixtape full of beauty and intelligence. No matter when or where you’re listening you’re sure to leave this session feeling the refreshing warmth of rain in Northern Hemisphere July. Thank you RYA! The 8-piece band from Umeå take inspiration from nature, Swedish folk, jazz and electronic pop. Described as a song for people who continue to hope despite having doubts, “Juliregn” is from their latest album, “Mareld över Kvarken”.
@rya
#Bandcamp #bonkwave #Faircamp #FediMusic #Hot #mixtape #music #NHAM #NHAMmixtapes #playlist
Numerical Hexadecimal Arithmetical Mathematical – NHAM Mixtape 16
Welcome to the 16th edition of a fine showcase of 12 Fedi musicians. Count it in with me: a-one, a-two, a-one, two, three, four…
As ever there’s a radio show version of this mixtape with some chat about the tracks. That can be found on Audio Interface ( @audiointerface) from the first Monday of the month as well as featuring in NHAM Radio‘s Mixtape Mondays and Thursdays slots.
⬇️ Click below to begin playing, and keep the page open to hear the mix in full.
[If viewing from the Fediverse you need to click here to listen to the mixtape on NHAM]
1. Plaits Space II by AmbientSpace
All Rights Reserved
Ambience in the wiggly, wobbly, upbeat sense for take off. Ambient Space is Chris Mills, an electronic music producer from New Zealand, a french horn lover and one of the finest proponents of bonkwave.
@ambientspace
2. Izanami by DebonaireToast
All Rights Reserved
Up and down like a Weston donkey, this groove hits the spot, pausing only for dial up nostalgia. Traditionally a fine artist, a photographer, a graphic designer and video editor, Alabama-based Nadia Purge aka Mandi Cook has in more recent years added music production to her wide skill set, making tunes as “DebonaireToast” inspired by dark, electronic, ambient and electro-industrial dance music.
@debonairetoast
3. Jumpsuit by Humanoid No More
All Rights Reserved
Rave piano. Need I say more? Nope. Never. But also: cut vocal shouts, airy sweeps, darkened tones, bass beats. Mega blend! Creating beats loosely between hip-hop and house, Humanoid No More are a duo based in British Columbia. “Jumpsuit” comes from their recently released Tropical Moon EP.
@dtronic
4. ١٠٦ by she hacked you
CC BY-NC 3.0
I just can’t get hacked enough. Delightfully dancey, wonderfully wistful. Representing Cairo at it’s hottest, she hacked you is a comatose day–dreamer, night-timer and party–crasher also known as ekis.
@ekis
5. One Thread by Shannon Curtis vs control
All Rights Reserved
One Fedi star remixes another. Damned if I won’t survive. A superb example of the remix work available from control.org, who is always open to donate-what-you-can sound design commissions. For anyone wanting a remix you can find all of the info at control.org where there is also news of a covers album, an original album, and a remix EP all dropping at the back-end of the year. Now that’s control.
@shannoncurtis @controlfreak
6. Say What You Wanna Say by C.Circo
All Rights Reserved
Take my arm and bounce with me. Now kick. More delicious dance from Ottawan electronic music producer C Circo. The track is from his brilliant “Metamorph” album released this year after a period of downtime, having found renewed energy to do so by the Fedi Scene and in particular the bonkwave community.
@CCirco
7. Mr. Decimal by Blix Byrd
All Rights Reserved
This just grabs and pulls with textures finely layered and vocals strongly piercing. And the break down, oh the break down. Blix Bird represents the most recent adventurous, experimental, intelligent sounds from Alison Wilder, and Mr. Decimal comes from her LP “IX” – an album that demands your attention and asks you to climb with the composer over a barbed-wire fence and in to a world probably not quite like your own, full of stinging and prickly things, where there is a freedom but perhaps little love.
@alisynthesis
8. Rejection by Lorenzo Miniero
All Rights Reserved
Turns out there’s a beauty to be found in the vast open space carved out by rejection. The movie sample at the end is actually an introduction to the next song (Resentment) on the album. -Each song on “R U There?” has the same, forming a narrative through the mind and its emotions as you listen through the progressive rock journey from start to finish. Lorenzo himself is an open source software developer and accomplished musician from Napoli.
@lminiero
9. Continuity by Chris Harris
All Rights Reserved
A gorgeously crafted track. Continuity is a homage to Vangelis (electric piano at start), David Gilmour (lap steel in middle) and Mike Oldfield (Squier Strat at close), with even a very quick nod to John Williams hidden in there. It was written at a time of physical pain from kidney stones, which Chris says may have contributed to it sounding more melancholy than he’d expected. That and the cellos (from Spitfire Audio’s “BBC SO” and “Abbey Road ONE” orchestral plugins)! Chris, from my old stomping ground in Bristol, is an extremely prolific musician who utilises all manner of instruments and produces a wide scope of musical output.
@headfirstonly
10. Seventeen Carrots by sideSister
All Rights Reserved
Look who’s back! Discerning and fun as ever. Combining some of the lesser-spotted instruments and oozing originality. Seventeen Carrots is the opening track to their brand new album, “Space For You”, which is out this month! The third Kiwi act in this mixtape, Sidesister are dynamic mother and daughter duo Leigh and Aelyth, who fret that modern life has little room for the undisciplined in “Seventeen Carrots”. “Space For You” is a ten track LP which takes a look at our world and considers ways they can make it into a world they’d prefer to live in.
@elsemusic
11. Artifiko by Camilo Bravo
All Rights Reserved
More expert combination of rhythms, sounds and textures, this time out of Quito in Ecuador. A programmer by day and musician by night, Camilo hosts the musicians.today Mastodon instance as a community for musicians of all levels, instruments, regions, languages, and genres. “Artifiko” comes from his 2023 album “Volatil”, for which he captured himself recording and editing every sound put in to all 16 songs of the album. Quite remarkable. Although I did see some daylight in the videos so I reckon the programming may have taken a bit of a backseat in 2023!
@cambraca
12. Juliregn by RYA!
All Rights Reserved
Wow. What a way to finish a mixtape full of beauty and intelligence. No matter when or where you’re listening you’re sure to leave this session feeling the refreshing warmth of rain in Northern Hemisphere July. Thank you RYA! The 8-piece band from Umeå take inspiration from nature, Swedish folk, jazz and electronic pop. Described as a song for people who continue to hope despite having doubts, “Juliregn” is from their latest album, “Mareld över Kvarken”.
@rya
#Bandcamp #bonkwave #Faircamp #FediMusic #Hot #mixtape #music #NHAM #NHAMmixtapes #playlist
Numerical Hexadecimal Arithmetical Mathematical – NHAM Mixtape 16
Welcome to the 16th edition of a fine showcase of 12 Fedi musicians. Count it in with me: a-one, a-two, a-one, two, three, four…
As ever there’s a radio show version of this mixtape with some chat about the tracks. That can be found on Audio Interface ( @audiointerface) from the first Monday of the month as well as featuring in NHAM Radio‘s Mixtape Mondays and Thursdays slots.
⬇️ Click below to begin playing, and keep the page open to hear the mix in full.
[If viewing from the Fediverse you need to click here to listen to the mixtape on NHAM]
1. Plaits Space II by AmbientSpace
All Rights Reserved
Ambience in the wiggly, wobbly, upbeat sense for take off. Ambient Space is Chris Mills, an electronic music producer from New Zealand, a french horn lover and one of the finest proponents of bonkwave.
@ambientspace
2. Izanami by DebonaireToast
All Rights Reserved
Up and down like a Weston donkey, this groove hits the spot, pausing only for dial up nostalgia. Traditionally a fine artist, a photographer, a graphic designer and video editor, Alabama-based Nadia Purge aka Mandi Cook has in more recent years added music production to her wide skill set, making tunes as “DebonaireToast” inspired by dark, electronic, ambient and electro-industrial dance music.
@debonairetoast
3. Jumpsuit by Humanoid No More
All Rights Reserved
Rave piano. Need I say more? Nope. Never. But also: cut vocal shouts, airy sweeps, darkened tones, bass beats. Mega blend! Creating beats loosely between hip-hop and house, Humanoid No More are a duo based in British Columbia. “Jumpsuit” comes from their recently released Tropical Moon EP.
@dtronic
4. ١٠٦ by she hacked you
CC BY-NC 3.0
I just can’t get hacked enough. Delightfully dancey, wonderfully wistful. Representing Cairo at it’s hottest, she hacked you is a comatose day–dreamer, night-timer and party–crasher also known as ekis.
@ekis
5. One Thread by Shannon Curtis vs control
All Rights Reserved
One Fedi star remixes another. Damned if I won’t survive. A superb example of the remix work available from control.org, who is always open to donate-what-you-can sound design commissions. For anyone wanting a remix you can find all of the info at control.org where there is also news of a covers album, an original album, and a remix EP all dropping at the back-end of the year. Now that’s control.
@shannoncurtis @controlfreak
6. Say What You Wanna Say by C.Circo
All Rights Reserved
Take my arm and bounce with me. Now kick. More delicious dance from Ottawan electronic music producer C Circo. The track is from his brilliant “Metamorph” album released this year after a period of downtime, having found renewed energy to do so by the Fedi Scene and in particular the bonkwave community.
@CCirco
7. Mr. Decimal by Blix Byrd
All Rights Reserved
This just grabs and pulls with textures finely layered and vocals strongly piercing. And the break down, oh the break down. Blix Bird represents the most recent adventurous, experimental, intelligent sounds from Alison Wilder, and Mr. Decimal comes from her LP “IX” – an album that demands your attention and asks you to climb with the composer over a barbed-wire fence and in to a world probably not quite like your own, full of stinging and prickly things, where there is a freedom but perhaps little love.
@alisynthesis
8. Rejection by Lorenzo Miniero
All Rights Reserved
Turns out there’s a beauty to be found in the vast open space carved out by rejection. The movie sample at the end is actually an introduction to the next song (Resentment) on the album. -Each song on “R U There?” has the same, forming a narrative through the mind and its emotions as you listen through the progressive rock journey from start to finish. Lorenzo himself is an open source software developer and accomplished musician from Napoli.
@lminiero
9. Continuity by Chris Harris
All Rights Reserved
A gorgeously crafted track. Continuity is a homage to Vangelis (electric piano at start), David Gilmour (lap steel in middle) and Mike Oldfield (Squier Strat at close), with even a very quick nod to John Williams hidden in there. It was written at a time of physical pain from kidney stones, which Chris says may have contributed to it sounding more melancholy than he’d expected. That and the cellos (from Spitfire Audio’s “BBC SO” and “Abbey Road ONE” orchestral plugins)! Chris, from my old stomping ground in Bristol, is an extremely prolific musician who utilises all manner of instruments and produces a wide scope of musical output.
@headfirstonly
10. Seventeen Carrots by sideSister
All Rights Reserved
Look who’s back! Discerning and fun as ever. Combining some of the lesser-spotted instruments and oozing originality. Seventeen Carrots is the opening track to their brand new album, “Space For You”, which is out this month! The third Kiwi act in this mixtape, Sidesister are dynamic mother and daughter duo Leigh and Aelyth, who fret that modern life has little room for the undisciplined in “Seventeen Carrots”. “Space For You” is a ten track LP which takes a look at our world and considers ways they can make it into a world they’d prefer to live in.
@elsemusic
11. Artifiko by Camilo Bravo
All Rights Reserved
More expert combination of rhythms, sounds and textures, this time out of Quito in Ecuador. A programmer by day and musician by night, Camilo hosts the musicians.today Mastodon instance as a community for musicians of all levels, instruments, regions, languages, and genres. “Artifiko” comes from his 2023 album “Volatil”, for which he captured himself recording and editing every sound put in to all 16 songs of the album. Quite remarkable. Although I did see some daylight in the videos so I reckon the programming may have taken a bit of a backseat in 2023!
@cambraca
12. Juliregn by RYA!
All Rights Reserved
Wow. What a way to finish a mixtape full of beauty and intelligence. No matter when or where you’re listening you’re sure to leave this session feeling the refreshing warmth of rain in Northern Hemisphere July. Thank you RYA! The 8-piece band from Umeå take inspiration from nature, Swedish folk, jazz and electronic pop. Described as a song for people who continue to hope despite having doubts, “Juliregn” is from their latest album, “Mareld över Kvarken”.
@rya
#Bandcamp #bonkwave #Faircamp #FediMusic #Hot #mixtape #music #NHAM #NHAMmixtapes #playlist
Numerical Hexadecimal Arithmetical Mathematical – NHAM Mixtape 16
Welcome to the 16th edition of a fine showcase of 12 Fedi musicians. Count it in with me: a-one, a-two, a-one, two, three, four…
As ever there’s a radio show version of this mixtape with some chat about the tracks. That can be found on Audio Interface ( @audiointerface) from the first Monday of the month as well as featuring in NHAM Radio‘s Mixtape Mondays and Thursdays slots.
⬇️ Click below to begin playing, and keep the page open to hear the mix in full.
[If viewing from the Fediverse you need to click here to listen to the mixtape on NHAM]
1. Plaits Space II by AmbientSpace
All Rights Reserved
Ambience in the wiggly, wobbly, upbeat sense for take off. Ambient Space is Chris Mills, an electronic music producer from New Zealand, a french horn lover and one of the finest proponents of bonkwave.
@ambientspace
2. Izanami by DebonaireToast
All Rights Reserved
Up and down like a Weston donkey, this groove hits the spot, pausing only for dial up nostalgia. Traditionally a fine artist, a photographer, a graphic designer and video editor, Alabama-based Nadia Purge aka Mandi Cook has in more recent years added music production to her wide skill set, making tunes as “DebonaireToast” inspired by dark, electronic, ambient and electro-industrial dance music.
@debonairetoast
3. Jumpsuit by Humanoid No More
All Rights Reserved
Rave piano. Need I say more? Nope. Never. But also: cut vocal shouts, airy sweeps, darkened tones, bass beats. Mega blend! Creating beats loosely between hip-hop and house, Humanoid No More are a duo based in British Columbia. “Jumpsuit” comes from their recently released Tropical Moon EP.
@dtronic
4. ١٠٦ by she hacked you
CC BY-NC 3.0
I just can’t get hacked enough. Delightfully dancey, wonderfully wistful. Representing Cairo at it’s hottest, she hacked you is a comatose day–dreamer, night-timer and party–crasher also known as ekis.
@ekis
5. One Thread by Shannon Curtis vs control
All Rights Reserved
One Fedi star remixes another. Damned if I won’t survive. A superb example of the remix work available from control.org, who is always open to donate-what-you-can sound design commissions. For anyone wanting a remix you can find all of the info at control.org where there is also news of a covers album, an original album, and a remix EP all dropping at the back-end of the year. Now that’s control.
@shannoncurtis @controlfreak
6. Say What You Wanna Say by C.Circo
All Rights Reserved
Take my arm and bounce with me. Now kick. More delicious dance from Ottawan electronic music producer C Circo. The track is from his brilliant “Metamorph” album released this year after a period of downtime, having found renewed energy to do so by the Fedi Scene and in particular the bonkwave community.
@CCirco
7. Mr. Decimal by Blix Byrd
All Rights Reserved
This just grabs and pulls with textures finely layered and vocals strongly piercing. And the break down, oh the break down. Blix Bird represents the most recent adventurous, experimental, intelligent sounds from Alison Wilder, and Mr. Decimal comes from her LP “IX” – an album that demands your attention and asks you to climb with the composer over a barbed-wire fence and in to a world probably not quite like your own, full of stinging and prickly things, where there is a freedom but perhaps little love.
@alisynthesis
8. Rejection by Lorenzo Miniero
All Rights Reserved
Turns out there’s a beauty to be found in the vast open space carved out by rejection. The movie sample at the end is actually an introduction to the next song (Resentment) on the album. -Each song on “R U There?” has the same, forming a narrative through the mind and its emotions as you listen through the progressive rock journey from start to finish. Lorenzo himself is an open source software developer and accomplished musician from Napoli.
@lminiero
9. Continuity by Chris Harris
All Rights Reserved
A gorgeously crafted track. Continuity is a homage to Vangelis (electric piano at start), David Gilmour (lap steel in middle) and Mike Oldfield (Squier Strat at close), with even a very quick nod to John Williams hidden in there. It was written at a time of physical pain from kidney stones, which Chris says may have contributed to it sounding more melancholy than he’d expected. That and the cellos (from Spitfire Audio’s “BBC SO” and “Abbey Road ONE” orchestral plugins)! Chris, from my old stomping ground in Bristol, is an extremely prolific musician who utilises all manner of instruments and produces a wide scope of musical output.
@headfirstonly
10. Seventeen Carrots by sideSister
All Rights Reserved
Look who’s back! Discerning and fun as ever. Combining some of the lesser-spotted instruments and oozing originality. Seventeen Carrots is the opening track to their brand new album, “Space For You”, which is out this month! The third Kiwi act in this mixtape, Sidesister are dynamic mother and daughter duo Leigh and Aelyth, who fret that modern life has little room for the undisciplined in “Seventeen Carrots”. “Space For You” is a ten track LP which takes a look at our world and considers ways they can make it into a world they’d prefer to live in.
@elsemusic
11. Artifiko by Camilo Bravo
All Rights Reserved
More expert combination of rhythms, sounds and textures, this time out of Quito in Ecuador. A programmer by day and musician by night, Camilo hosts the musicians.today Mastodon instance as a community for musicians of all levels, instruments, regions, languages, and genres. “Artifiko” comes from his 2023 album “Volatil”, for which he captured himself recording and editing every sound put in to all 16 songs of the album. Quite remarkable. Although I did see some daylight in the videos so I reckon the programming may have taken a bit of a backseat in 2023!
@cambraca
12. Juliregn by RYA!
All Rights Reserved
Wow. What a way to finish a mixtape full of beauty and intelligence. No matter when or where you’re listening you’re sure to leave this session feeling the refreshing warmth of rain in Northern Hemisphere July. Thank you RYA! The 8-piece band from Umeå take inspiration from nature, Swedish folk, jazz and electronic pop. Described as a song for people who continue to hope despite having doubts, “Juliregn” is from their latest album, “Mareld över Kvarken”.
@rya
#Bandcamp #bonkwave #Faircamp #FediMusic #Hot #mixtape #music #NHAM #NHAMmixtapes #playlist
Good morning Fedi friends!
Next week I will have the honor of being featured on the podcast « Libre à vous ! » by @aprilorg on the radio station @CauseCommune .
There will be 3 musical breaks and I've been asked to provide 3 songs that have Creative Commons CC BY or CC BY SA licenses.
Do you have any Fedi musicians to recommend that fit this profile? Ideally in the style of Cat Power / First Aid Kit (melancholic indie folk)?
Update: I found the songs, all good! ✅
@_elena
I don't know if #bonkwave fits stylistically, but I'll suggest this one by @sknob: https://music.bonkwave.org/the-four-seasons-of-bonkwave-a-midsummer-bonks-dream-1/3/#more
NHAM Update Opus 9 (Teaser Edition)
By @sknob
You could easily be fooled into thinking that August was slow and uneventful on the indie-fedi music front, especially after such a RFFF25-rocket-fueled July.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
Summer Bonk Wave
The bonkwavers were busy preparing the The Four Seasons of Bonk Wave, A Midsummer Bonk’s Dream, and the release dates have finally been announced! So mark your calendars and come join the launch parties on party.bonkwave.org:
– Disc 1: Thursday, September 11 at 19:00 UTC/20:00 BST/21:00 CEST
– Disc 2: Thursday, September 18 at 19:00 UTC/20:00 BST/21:00 CEST
I could tease some surprises about both releases, including a NHAM-adjacent one, but…I won’t.
NHAM 1.0
If you listened to the NHAM RFFF25 livestream, you know that an updated version of NHAM is in the works. It will be version 1.0, because we’ve unilaterally decided that the current version is a beta version. Be that as it may, we’ve been hard at work trying to get the update out the virtual door, but you know how these things go.
While NHAM 1.0 will stay true to the original vision, it will include some new features and make the site more inviting to the greater music-loving public.
I could be more specific, but…I won’t.
Ambitious Project That I Can’t Wait To Tell You About
But I don’t know if I can, so for now…I won’t.
Releases, Releases, and More Releases
If you needed any more convincing that August was anything but slow, check out the new Releases in a vast array of genres by the following fine artists:
@anne
@bedlamsteps
@berndkorz
@bestiaexmachina
@bjouvin
@CCirco
@chloedefector
@cpacaud
@dtronic
@ekis
@FastGhost
@flockofnazguls
@gavcloud
@jaypeach53
@lynnsmadmon3y
@mahlon
@on_idyl
@pohokolius@tube.tchncs.de
@pumiquxt
@robcorp55
@robertc
@rybson
@SamanthaJaneSmith@lgbtqia.space
@SeaFury
@socool
@stefan
@thisoccasionalsociety
While You Wait
Some reading perhaps? How about:
– What Community Looks Like – RFFF25 Review
– Or @andijah’s reviews of every track off of @stephan’s magnificent album, Malers Hüs
Or maybe hop over to our podcasts page to watch @firesidefedi’s great interview with @benpate of bandwagon.fm fame?
Stay Tuned
Pending further announcements, see you online during the upcoming Bonkwave listening parties, and start or keep listening to fedi music, including NHAM Radio and the latest NHAM Mixtape!
And keep spreading the word to get more regular folks on board the fedi-music express! We also exist to help you do it!
NHAM Update Opus 9 (Teaser Edition)
By @sknob
You could easily be fooled into thinking that August was slow and uneventful on the indie-fedi music front, especially after such a RFFF25-rocket-fueled July.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
Summer Bonk Wave
The bonkwavers were busy preparing the The Four Seasons of Bonk Wave, A Midsummer Bonk’s Dream, and the release dates have finally been announced! So mark your calendars and come join the launch parties on party.bonkwave.org:
– Disc 1: Thursday, September 11 at 19:00 UTC/20:00 BST/21:00 CEST
– Disc 2: Thursday, September 18 at 19:00 UTC/20:00 BST/21:00 CEST
I could tease some surprises about both releases, including a NHAM-adjacent one, but…I won’t.
NHAM 1.0
If you listened to the NHAM RFFF25 livestream, you know that an updated version of NHAM is in the works. It will be version 1.0, because we’ve unilaterally decided that the current version is a beta version. Be that as it may, we’ve been hard at work trying to get the update out the virtual door, but you know how these things go.
While NHAM 1.0 will stay true to the original vision, it will include some new features and make the site more inviting to the greater music-loving public.
I could be more specific, but…I won’t.
Ambitious Project That I Can’t Wait To Tell You About
But I don’t know if I can, so for now…I won’t.
Releases, Releases, and More Releases
If you needed any more convincing that August was anything but slow, check out the new Releases in a vast array of genres by the following fine artists:
@anne
@bedlamsteps
@berndkorz
@bestiaexmachina
@bjouvin
@CCirco
@chloedefector
@cpacaud
@dtronic
@ekis
@FastGhost
@flockofnazguls
@gavcloud
@jaypeach53
@lynnsmadmon3y
@mahlon
@on_idyl
@pohokolius@tube.tchncs.de
@pumiquxt
@robcorp55
@robertc
@rybson
@SamanthaJaneSmith@lgbtqia.space
@SeaFury
@socool
@stefan
@thisoccasionalsociety
While You Wait
Some reading perhaps? How about:
– What Community Looks Like – RFFF25 Review
– Or @andijah’s reviews of every track off of @stephan’s magnificent album, Malers Hüs
Or maybe hop over to our podcasts page to watch @firesidefedi’s great interview with @benpate of bandwagon.fm fame?
Stay Tuned
Pending further announcements, see you online during the upcoming Bonkwave listening parties, and start or keep listening to fedi music, including NHAM Radio and the latest NHAM Mixtape!
And keep spreading the word to get more regular folks on board the fedi-music express! We also exist to help you do it!
The bonkwave community has been working hard this summer to bring further obfuscation to what is #bonkwave or #NotBonkwave. The results of these efforts will be revealed with two compilation album, the first one this coming Thursday (or Friday, if that's your timezone). As usual there will be a release party at https://party.bonkwave.org/
What Community Looks Like – RFFF25 Review
It’s always the way when you go to a festival, isn’t it? – That it takes a good while to acclimatise back in to normality again. Well now that the dust has settled and we’re back to at least some sense of normality let’s look back on the amazing month of July, the whole of which was set aside for Radio Free Fedi Fest 2025.
We must begin by showing our gratitude to @radiofreefedi for coming back from the sunset to galvanise the community once more, and again being a beacon for highlighting the depth of talent in the Fedi music scene. Huge appreciation to the Hamster for powering that wheel all month long.
The Festival kicked off way back on the first of July with a typically outstanding performance from @shannoncurtis and @hilljam in which they performed their 80’s Kids live show especially for us. Fresh off touring the show they recreated the set from their basement, including the full light show and treating us to insights in to their workings with a Q+A after the set. The pair are without doubt masters of their crafts, and they combine those crafts perfectly to give us maximum joy. The 80s Kids tour is going on the road again soon. Check out the 80skids.live tour dates page to see if they’re coming to a town near you!
Speaking of Q+A, the next day was our turn to get on the stage. @sknob and I ( @ethicalrevolution) answered some of your questions in between presenting my 13th NHAM mixtape, which was put together as a showcase of RFFF25 – 12 songs from 12 of the artists that were to perform over the month. I was so grateful to sknob for his expertise in putting together the technical and aesthetic aspects of the show, and of course for the moral support. If you missed it we did manage to record the show which you can catch up on here.
On the third day of the event Damon Thomas ( @ruralgloom) performed with spoken word. I was still backstage chatting to all the groupies that had assembled from our show so I missed it but Deb was there and she said, “Damon Thomas read excerpts from his Southern Gothic written works, in his gentle understated style, a thoroughly relaxing vignette of small-town life and growing up in the US South. We were left with images from a delightful time capsule of little people looming large in little places.”
Next to perform was @fluffy and it was a performance the likes of which I’d never seen before: A fully blown VR performance in which the Fluffy that we saw was an animated critter on an animated stage in an animated venue with an animated guitar! The set is available on demand and you can follow Fluffy to be notified of future live performances, as we were informed that this critter from Seattle performs relatively regularly.
Then came @lislegaard who was an absolute delight. Kristoffer totally took us down in to full relaxation zone before belting us out with the booms and glitches in a really epic performance which combined amazing sounds and visuals. You can catch the show again on Kristoffer’s Hyper8 page. And he’s another to keep an eye on for future streams.
Next up was my NHAM co-conspirator @sknob. The master songwriter’s gig from the Rugged Scrublands somewhere in the South of France is also available on demand. In it he opened up by playing through his current EP, “Cities” before going through a rendition of some of his bonkwave tracks and playing covers of other Fedi musicians including @futzle, @keefmarshall and even 8 year old me!
The baton was then passed to Fedi superstar and regular streamer @meljoann who combined wit, wizardry and wickedness (in the good sense!) despite having to take a call from her therapist (former talk show host, Dr Synergy Myers) during the show. This set wasn’t recorded but Meljoann is prolific when it comes to livestreaming. Just follow @relay to keep in the loop with future performances.
On July 12th Pulu ( @ahihi) put on a show-stopping performance of beautiful sounds and quality beats in an incredible method of performing via multi-computer set up on a balcony by some woods in Helsinki. Rather than try to go in to the detail of the music production, for which I still can’t quite fathom, you can check it out for yourself via the recording of the stream. One particularly incredible moment in the show for me was when the bird song samples were being played and outside my own window behind me real birds were echoing the same calls to give me proper surround sound!
The next night @jimpurbrick defrosted his Moogs for Remember Glaciers’ first 100% solar powered telling of Duncan Porter’s tale of two visits to the Rhone glacier. An eye opening storytelling of the demise of glaciers for many in the lobby. While this particular show was not recorded, there is a version available from his Gravitons Festival 2024 set.
As we came towards the middle of the month Grüezi Sexgott ( @DePemig) moved their weekly live streamed jam session over to the Radio Free Fedi stage as we dimmed the lights, heightened the haze and mellowed in to a smooth and funky improv set from the accomplished four-piece. They play every Tuesday at 9pm Swiss time.
Then came @alexglow. What a performer. Alex was so relaxed; at times moving; always fun; with quite beautiful playing; and being very clever – all rolled in to one concert. She played covers and originals, taking requests too, of any song so long as it was about space. It’s something she does on Sunday’s over on spacesongsunday.com
I tried but largely failed to tune in to @axwax whilst on a coach. Fortunately it was made available to catch up on. With graphics that bounced in time with the music and an impressive rack of machines, synths and a big red button AxWax powered through some classic acid, techno, hip-hop and of course bonkwave. Donning his 80s Kids t-shirt in the sweltering Spanish heat, the ever delightful Axel played an encore of 20 minutes or so after the main set while we awaited the second act of the night…
Back home by this point I was able to enjoy @Jazzaria from the comfort of my own sofa. We watched an animated keyboard playing the notes that were improvised from prompts given in the lobby which included 80s sitcoms, nightly news, small mammals in fancy hats, tramping cats and 80s detectives. It was quite something seeing vague concepts being brought to life by the sounds of a keyboard.
Then on July 23rd we witnessed @conniptions being brilliant with a large 4-stringed instrument, brilliant with a small 8-stringed instrument, brilliant with a regular 6-stringed instrument and even being brilliant on the magic trumpets. All on his actual birthday – inviting all of us festival goers to his party of left-field anti-folk – as we bopped along and celebrated with him. More from the creations of Fit and the Conniptions can be found here.
Next came ‘A Christmas in July Wasted’ with Deb Pickett ( @futzle). The set up was as smooth as the performance as Deb beamed across the globe from Victoria, Australia. With lyrics and chord progressions often too clever for me Deb went down like a plump chap in a red suit down a chimney – with a bang and full of treats and gifts!
With the month drawing out we turned our gaze over to Toronto in Canada where @bgm performed from a basement with a low ceiling. Sadly he was too good that the hour whizzed by in an absolute flash. A highly accomplished musician and video maker, bgm did not disappoint.
What was disappointing, however, was that this was to be my last show. I had to leave the festival early for other commitments so I hand you over to sknob to run through the final three events…
Thanks Sam. Well, I’m not used to this exercise, but I’ll try to do the artists justice.
After a few words of introduction, Calin Dica aka @akash literally blew our socks off as soon as we heard the first notes of his spectacular guitar playing. Expertly jumping from his guitar to his electronic gizmos with dizzying precision and grace, and even surprising the audience with some epic guitar solos, Calin Dica/akash treated us to a barrage of pure energy in song form. I think it’s safe to say we were all flabbergasted when he told us this was the first time he’d ever performed his music in a solo set. Catch up on demand.
What can I say about nightmother aka @alisynthesis. I discovered her music only recently thanks to Sam, and to say that I’m a fan would be the understatement of the year. In fact I probably shouldn’t be allowed to review her set at all, but here we are, and here we were, teleported into her beautiful studio filled with too many knobs and dials to count (and a couple of totally oblivious dogs on a comfy looking couch). If you think you know synthesizers and electronic music, think again. The sounds that Alison conjures out of her machines is glorious, as is her singing. In fact, the chat which is usually full of wisecracking banter was stunned into silence on several occasions. I do have one complaint though. The set was way too short. Alison, we want more! Catch up on demand.
Synth music can also be gloriously harsh and furious. Just ask @controlfreak. Sorry, I don’t speak genres, but this absolutely ferocious set (showcasing the darker side of oontz as he eloquently puts it) was exceptional not only for its stunning and sometimes disturbing visuals, but also for its uncompromising original pieces old and new, its spectacular remixes of @shannoncurtis, and for its real drums played on an actual, real, physical drum kit! And when you thought you couldn’t be any more delightfully surprised, controlfreak got up and actually sang for us, well, beautifully (if he’ll pardon the expression), bringing RFFF25 to a perfect conclusion. Back to you Sam.
We’ve said it before, we’ll say it again, and again. We’re forever grateful for Radio Free Fedi and this month was a perfect exemplifier as to why. It’s about the @music and the artists but it’s not just about the music and the artists, it’s about the community. And this, THIS, showed just what community looks like.
#bonkwave #community #FediMusic #LiveStream #music #RFF #RFFF25
What Community Looks Like – RFFF25 Review
It’s always the way when you go to a festival, isn’t it? – That it takes a good while to acclimatise back in to normality again. Well now that the dust has settled and we’re back to at least some sense of normality let’s look back on the amazing month of July, the whole of which was set aside for Radio Free Fedi Fest 2025.
We must begin by showing our gratitude to @radiofreefedi for coming back from the sunset to galvanise the community once more, and again being a beacon for highlighting the depth of talent in the Fedi music scene. Huge appreciation to the Hamster for powering that wheel all month long.
The Festival kicked off way back on the first of July with a typically outstanding performance from @shannoncurtis and @hilljam in which they performed their 80’s Kids live show especially for us. Fresh off touring the show they recreated the set from their basement, including the full light show and treating us to insights in to their workings with a Q+A after the set. The pair are without doubt masters of their crafts, and they combine those crafts perfectly to give us maximum joy. The 80s Kids tour is going on the road again soon. Check out the 80skids.live tour dates page to see if they’re coming to a town near you!
Speaking of Q+A, the next day was our turn to get on the stage. @sknob and I ( @ethicalrevolution) answered some of your questions in between presenting my 13th NHAM mixtape, which was put together as a showcase of RFFF25 – 12 songs from 12 of the artists that were to perform over the month. I was so grateful to sknob for his expertise in putting together the technical and aesthetic aspects of the show, and of course for the moral support. If you missed it we did manage to record the show which you can catch up on here.
On the third day of the event Damon Thomas ( @ruralgloom) performed with spoken word. I was still backstage chatting to all the groupies that had assembled from our show so I missed it but Deb was there and she said, “Damon Thomas read excerpts from his Southern Gothic written works, in his gentle understated style, a thoroughly relaxing vignette of small-town life and growing up in the US South. We were left with images from a delightful time capsule of little people looming large in little places.”
Next to perform was @fluffy and it was a performance the likes of which I’d never seen before: A fully blown VR performance in which the Fluffy that we saw was an animated critter on an animated stage in an animated venue with an animated guitar! The set is available on demand and you can follow Fluffy to be notified of future live performances, as we were informed that this critter from Seattle performs relatively regularly.
Then came @lislegaard who was an absolute delight. Kristoffer totally took us down in to full relaxation zone before belting us out with the booms and glitches in a really epic performance which combined amazing sounds and visuals. You can catch the show again on Kristoffer’s Hyper8 page. And he’s another to keep an eye on for future streams.
Next up was my NHAM co-conspirator @sknob. The master songwriter’s gig from the Rugged Scrublands somewhere in the South of France is also available on demand. In it he opened up by playing through his current EP, “Cities” before going through a rendition of some of his bonkwave tracks and playing covers of other Fedi musicians including @futzle, @keefmarshall and even 8 year old me!
The baton was then passed to Fedi superstar and regular streamer @meljoann who combined wit, wizardry and wickedness (in the good sense!) despite having to take a call from her therapist (former talk show host, Dr Synergy Myers) during the show. This set wasn’t recorded but Meljoann is prolific when it comes to livestreaming. Just follow @relay to keep in the loop with future performances.
On July 12th Pulu ( @ahihi) put on a show-stopping performance of beautiful sounds and quality beats in an incredible method of performing via multi-computer set up on a balcony by some woods in Helsinki. Rather than try to go in to the detail of the music production, for which I still can’t quite fathom, you can check it out for yourself via the recording of the stream. One particularly incredible moment in the show for me was when the bird song samples were being played and outside my own window behind me real birds were echoing the same calls to give me proper surround sound!
The next night @jimpurbrick defrosted his Moogs for Remember Glaciers’ first 100% solar powered telling of Duncan Porter’s tale of two visits to the Rhone glacier. An eye opening storytelling of the demise of glaciers for many in the lobby. While this particular show was not recorded, there is a version available from his Gravitons Festival 2024 set.
As we came towards the middle of the month Grüezi Sexgott ( @DePemig) moved their weekly live streamed jam session over to the Radio Free Fedi stage as we dimmed the lights, heightened the haze and mellowed in to a smooth and funky improv set from the accomplished four-piece. They play every Tuesday at 9pm Swiss time.
Then came @alexglow. What a performer. Alex was so relaxed; at times moving; always fun; with quite beautiful playing; and being very clever – all rolled in to one concert. She played covers and originals, taking requests too, of any song so long as it was about space. It’s something she does on Sunday’s over on spacesongsunday.com
I tried but largely failed to tune in to @axwax whilst on a coach. Fortunately it was made available to catch up on. With graphics that bounced in time with the music and an impressive rack of machines, synths and a big red button AxWax powered through some classic acid, techno, hip-hop and of course bonkwave. Donning his 80s Kids t-shirt in the sweltering Spanish heat, the ever delightful Axel played an encore of 20 minutes or so after the main set while we awaited the second act of the night…
Back home by this point I was able to enjoy @Jazzaria from the comfort of my own sofa. We watched an animated keyboard playing the notes that were improvised from prompts given in the lobby which included 80s sitcoms, nightly news, small mammals in fancy hats, tramping cats and 80s detectives. It was quite something seeing vague concepts being brought to life by the sounds of a keyboard.
Then on July 23rd we witnessed @conniptions being brilliant with a large 4-stringed instrument, brilliant with a small 8-stringed instrument, brilliant with a regular 6-stringed instrument and even being brilliant on the magic trumpets. All on his actual birthday – inviting all of us festival goers to his party of left-field anti-folk – as we bopped along and celebrated with him. More from the creations of Fit and the Conniptions can be found here.
Next came ‘A Christmas in July Wasted’ with Deb Pickett ( @futzle). The set up was as smooth as the performance as Deb beamed across the globe from Victoria, Australia. With lyrics and chord progressions often too clever for me Deb went down like a plump chap in a red suit down a chimney – with a bang and full of treats and gifts!
With the month drawing out we turned our gaze over to Toronto in Canada where @bgm performed from a basement with a low ceiling. Sadly he was too good that the hour whizzed by in an absolute flash. A highly accomplished musician and video maker, bgm did not disappoint.
What was disappointing, however, was that this was to be my last show. I had to leave the festival early for other commitments so I hand you over to sknob to run through the final three events…
Thanks Sam. Well, I’m not used to this exercise, but I’ll try to do the artists justice.
After a few words of introduction, Calin Dica aka @akash literally blew our socks off as soon as we heard the first notes of his spectacular guitar playing. Expertly jumping from his guitar to his electronic gizmos with dizzying precision and grace, and even surprising the audience with some epic guitar solos, Calin Dica/akash treated us to a barrage of pure energy in song form. I think it’s safe to say we were all flabbergasted when he told us this was the first time he’d ever performed his music in a solo set. Catch up on demand.
What can I say about nightmother aka @alisynthesis. I discovered her music only recently thanks to Sam, and to say that I’m a fan would be the understatement of the year. In fact I probably shouldn’t be allowed to review her set at all, but here we are, and here we were, teleported into her beautiful studio filled with too many knobs and dials to count (and a couple of totally oblivious dogs on a comfy looking couch). If you think you know synthesizers and electronic music, think again. The sounds that Alison conjures out of her machines is glorious, as is her singing. In fact, the chat which is usually full of wisecracking banter was stunned into silence on several occasions. I do have one complaint though. The set was way too short. Alison, we want more! Catch up on demand.
Synth music can also be gloriously harsh and furious. Just ask @controlfreak. Sorry, I don’t speak genres, but this absolutely ferocious set (showcasing the darker side of oontz as he eloquently puts it) was exceptional not only for its stunning and sometimes disturbing visuals, but also for its uncompromising original pieces old and new, its spectacular remixes of @shannoncurtis, and for its real drums played on an actual, real, physical drum kit! And when you thought you couldn’t be any more delightfully surprised, controlfreak got up and actually sang for us, well, beautifully (if he’ll pardon the expression), bringing RFFF25 to a perfect conclusion. Back to you Sam.
We’ve said it before, we’ll say it again, and again. We’re forever grateful for Radio Free Fedi and this month was a perfect exemplifier as to why. It’s about the @music and the artists but it’s not just about the music and the artists, it’s about the community. And this, THIS, showed just what community looks like.
#bonkwave #community #FediMusic #LiveStream #music #RFF #RFFF25
Fellow Mastodonians just a note to say that my album Metamorph is now available via @mirlo
Check it out here: https://mirlo.space/ccirco/release/metamorph
Special thanks to all those on here who have provided an awesomely supportive community to be able to be creative and provide venues for expression.
#Musodon#Mirlo#MultiGenre#GenreFluid#BonkWave#NotBonkWave#ElectronicMusic#NewMusic
Fellow Mastodonians just a note to say that my album Metamorph is now available via @mirlo
Check it out here: https://mirlo.space/ccirco/release/metamorph
Special thanks to all those on here who have provided an awesomely supportive community to be able to be creative and provide venues for expression.
#Musodon#Mirlo#MultiGenre#GenreFluid#BonkWave#NotBonkWave#ElectronicMusic#NewMusic
I should add that Bonk Wave is a genre-agnostic style that welcomes all levels of skill and styles. We are a global collective of enthusiastic folk that make periodic releases on https://bonkknobrecords.bandcamp.com
Don't forget, tonight at 19:00 UTC is the release party for The Four Seasons of Bonk Wave: Bonks of Spring 2 at https://party.bonkwave.org
More info and links to part 1 at https://bonkwave.org/board/index.php?topic=187.0
I've been really enjoying some episodes of the podcast for Lorenzo's Music. As a band they're champions of CC licensing and Free Code audio production tools, and recently they've done a number of interviews about community-hosted music platforms, fediverse projects and platform cooperatives.
* Simon Repp of #FairCamp: https://www.lorenzosmusic.com/2025/01/simon-repp-faircamp-self-hosted-music.html
* Simon Vansintjan of #Mirlo: https://www.lorenzosmusic.com/2025/02/simon-vansintjan-of-mirlo.html
* Ben Pate of #BandWagonhttps://www.lorenzosmusic.com/2025/04/ben-pate-of-bandwagonfm.html
(1/?)
- Keith Marshall on the FairCamp #WebRing and BonkWave: https://www.lorenzosmusic.com/2025/05/keith-marshall-of-key13-music-and.html
* Gabe Kangas of #OwnCast: https://www.lorenzosmusic.com/2025/05/gabe-kangas-owncast.html
Not about any of the topics I listed, but honorable mention;
* AxWax on how #BonkWave emerged on the fediverse: https://www.lorenzosmusic.com/2025/04/axwax-from-community-radio-to-bonk-wave.html
Through posting about some of these I learned about a network working to created a unified, artist-centric social network for music discovery
https://the.socialmusic.network/t/what-we-offer/157
(2/2)
Google's new live voice AI is insane, I just had an long conversations with it. You can ask it to speak in different accents and languages and it responds on the fly. I asked it to give me a recipe for something in Farsi "Ghormeh Sabzi" and it understood it and started responding with a recipe for a "Gorbe" Sabzi instead (that means Cat) and when I pointed that out it corrected its mistake and apologized profusely, then I asked it to give me an actual recipe for a cat...