Lady Gaga hit Google on Tuesday for an interview with questions from fans on YouTube and Google employees — at least a few of which seem to be Little Monsters.
Glenn Morrissette orchestrates scores for TV and film from his recording studio on wheels — a recreational vehicle he calls home as he meanders around the U.S.
It looks through your iTunes, and then suggests replacements…
reblogged via woozy-:
I love to see people using their phones for more than talking and being a blackberry man myself I never see creativity on a large scale, simply blogging, texting and calling, etc.
I play the piano in real life, along with a couple of other instruments, and these videos have inspired me to become an apple man.
Californication, California love, going to California, leaving California, and going back to Cali… it’s all here.
reblogged via nprfreshair:
Some Music For Your Monday: KQED picks 88 Songs Inspired By The Golden State
We saw the post below, regarding listening to music at work, and got to wondering — how many people can do this at their respective workplaces?
reblogged via myloveforphotography:
Self-Portrait for 19jan2011 - “Work and Play” Being able to listen to my podcasts, audiobooks, and music is a life-saver. I love the quietness but when at work I rather hear wisdom than gossip all day.
Do you (can you?) listen to music at work? (With earphones/earbuds, of course).
Tell us about your use of music in the workplace at go@latimes.com.
Yesterday we asked about road trip songs. Here are a few songs you clamored for:
“End of the Line” by the Traveling Wilburys
“Radar Love” by Golden Earring
Bruce Springsteen’s “Born to Run”
These are great, but we want to know more. Road trips aside, what’s the song you played most during 2010? Doesn’t matter if the song came out in 2010 or not - we just want to know what song you repeated on your computer, iPod, Shuffle, etc. the most.
Tell us: What was your anthem this year?
Share here or at go@latimes.com. Once we hear from a bunch of you, we’ll compile a playlist.
The OK Go GPS Parade through the streets of Los Angeles.
The band used the Range Rover’s Pulse of the City app to check-in and spell out the words “OK GO” on the 8.5-mile parade route.
As reported by the Times’ Technology section today, Willie Nelson apparently still tops many travellers’ lists, when they take a road trip.
In a poll by Pioneer Electronics USA, Nelson’s “On the Road Again” grabbed 27% of the votes. Surprising? Or fitting?
The rest of the rankings were, as follows:
2. “Born to be Wild,” Steppenwolf
3. “Take it Easy,” The Eagles
4. “I Get Around,” The Beach Boys
5. “Highway to Hell,” AC/DC
6. “Free Falling,” Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
7. “Riders on the Storm,” The Doors
8. “I Wanna Rock and Roll All Night,” Kiss
9. “Wanted: Dead or Alive,” Bon Jovi
10. “Free Bird,” Lynyrd Skynyrd
We love road trips, so please tell us… if you are traveling this holiday season, who will you be listening to?
Tell us here or at go@latimes.com
A break from mobile to remember Lennon.
reblogged via rollingstone:
During the last years of his life, John Lennon and wife Yoko Ono lived in New York City—where they spent much of their time in Central Park, in the recording studio and with their young son Sean.
Rolling Stone’s gallery of Lennon and Ono offers a glimpse into those final years, including photos of the couple posing in front of their home, filming video to promote the album Double Fantasy and showing off John’s green card the day he received it in 1976.