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2 posts tagged “Fountains of Wayne.”

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May 12, 2005
Good News for Power-Pop Fans

Posted by Andrew Hearst

Fountains of Wayne

Power-pop deliciousness is on the way: Fountains of Wayne is releasing a two-disc collection of B-sides, non-album tracks, and other rarities next month. From the band’s e-mail newsletter, which was sent out yesterday:

Fountains of Wayne’s Out-of-State Plates, a specially priced two-CD collection of non-album tracks and previously unreleased songs spanning the band’s entire career, will be released in the US on June 28th. The first single, the brand new song “Maureen,” will be at radio stations in mid-May.

Here’s a tracklisting. I have copies of about a third of these tunes. A few of them are clunkers, but most of them are great. The collection will include the band’s fabulous 1999 cover of Britney Spears’s “…Baby One More Time.” It’s basically a straight cover, not an ironic takedown, and it uncovers the great pop song that Spears and her producers buried under layers of elaborate production.




January 24, 2005
Drowning in mp3s

Posted by Andrew Hearst

At the moment, my iTunes collection contains 12,383 songs culled from 949 albums by 413 artists. I listen to perhaps 50 of these albums regularly, and maybe another 50 somewhat less regularly. There are hundreds of albums in my collection that I listen to rarely, if ever. Because the Main Library window in iTunes has a built-in bias toward songs, as opposed to albums, I’m always having to scroll past dozens or hundreds of tracks I rarely listen to but nevertheless want to keep in my permanent iTunes collection. For example, I own five Frank Sinatra albums from his classic mid-to-late-1950s period. I love those albums, but I don’t listen to them much—and yet I often have to scroll past two screens’ worth of them when I’m poking around iTunes to figure out what I want to listen to next. Likewise with the albums I do listen to a lot: Why should I always be forced to scroll through a screen and a half of Fountains of Wayne songs when I always have those tracks turned on and synced with my iPod? I’d rather just activate all my Fountains of Wayne songs and forget about them.

I could lessen the load on my Main Library window by visiting Doug’s AppleScripts for iTunes and plunking down $5 for iTunes Library Manager, a shareware program that allows you to maintain several separate iTunes libraries. There are lots of excellent free iTunes scripts at Doug’s iTunes site, including several that do batch edits of song titles to get rid of awkward capitalizations, extraneous song data, and the like. But I don’t want to have to chop my iTunes collection into parts to make it manageable. I want to keep everything in the same place. So iTunes Library Manager is not the answer to my dilemma.

Fortunately, there’s a simple and elegant solution to the problem of the unwieldy iTunes collection, if only Apple would implement it: iTunes should allow you to collapse an entire album or an artist’s entire oeuvre into one line in the Main Library window, and it should put a checkbox next to each line allowing you to activate or deactive the contents of that line with one click. What if you could control-click on any song in the Main Library and pull up a menu like this, which is a Photoshop-altered version of the actual control-click menu in iTunes 4.7:

iTunes example 1

[Continue reading "Drowning in mp3s"...]






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