Posted by 3o5 | Posted in Art, Entertainment, Music, Photography | Posted on 31-05-2009
Wish I could have gone =( looked like fun.
SNEAKER PIMPS MIAMI 2009 DERICK G / THE305.COM from DERICK G on Vimeo.
Wish I could have gone =( looked like fun.
SNEAKER PIMPS MIAMI 2009 DERICK G / THE305.COM from DERICK G on Vimeo.
The Nokia Comes With Music subscription service provides users with unlimited access to Nokia’s Music Store catalogue. That’s a nifty two million songs on your phone, anytime. Now, the mobile giant has built a load of park-bench-shaped MP3 players to promote the service, and save our derrieres?
The benches will be placed at ’secret locations’ ? namely parks, streets and town squares ? all over the UK. Each bench has three Nokia handsets and headphones installed into the arm rests.
The available playlist differs depending on where you are. Nokia surveyed the nation to find its favourite songs, and tailored the list to fit each region’s favourites. Whether Liverpool’s list is chock full of The Beatles and Birmingham’s with Black Sabbath remains to be heard.
Take a seat
Before you think about stealing one for your garden, each bench will be accompanied by a live performer and, presumably, a security guard. One different appearance will be made each day between now and Christmas – check out the Comes With Music site to find out where.
via. MusicRadar
Kanye West – Coldest Winter [CD Quality]
DOWNLOAD: Mos Def – Life In Marvelous Times

Listen up, Beatles fans — your holiday gift has just been located, and it’s on aisle 17 in Bloomingdale’s. The somewhat janky limited edition collector’s box is a dream come true for fanatics of the Fab Four, packing 13 original Beatles’ CDs, an engraved guitar pick, two masters and the “Love” CD — none of which are available via the iTunes Music Store, mind you. Just 2,500 of the $795 sets are available, but — humorously enough — you’ll be stuck ripping and transferring every last disc onto your individually numbered, etched-with-a-Beatles-logo 120GB iPod classic. Ah well, at least this scenario lets you choose your own bitrate, right?
via. Engadget