I may refer back and tell you about something but you can look through the old episodes, or reload an episode of an ad, and get the information that way. You read, listen to or watch them when you want. The shows, be they text only, audio or video files, are downloaded to your player (PC, Mac, iPod, whatever,) when you go looking for them.
#HAVE A NICE LIFE THE UNNATURAL WORLD ZIP SERIAL#
In the same way, you should be able to download an ad, found through my podcasts or through a search engine, without any interference from my content, like time limitations or conflicting/competing messages.Īctually, podcasting takes serial time right out of the equation. I should/ could /would might/ maybe / perhaps remind you of an ad, (admittedly for some money, after all I have to eat and pay for the cost of this podcast.) and point you to it on the site but it should not interfere with my content in any real way. (On the internet, you can have a hundred such place markers and still have plenty of time for the 'cast.)Įvery ad on this podcast will be on its own and can be downloaded on its own, without any other competing ad, and without having to compete for time, or your atttention span, with the 'cast content. It would help if you thought of them as place markers for ads. I do hope you enjoyed them and are supporting the artists by buying their music. I'm getting everything from democracy (if they didn't get whatever appropriate clearances or permissions, its their problems, I'm just a wire.)Īpart from wrappering them in a different file named for my podcasts' sequencing. This also gets me around some copyright issue.Īlso, if you liked them, good but they're over. It is not meant for me to contribute anything to it or take from it. I'm skipping the episode numbering for the videos on my podcast.Įvery piece of video that I'm putting out right now is on an episode of its own. You're probably asking what is happening to the numbering. Retrieved January 29, 2014.Msb-0066 66? What happened to 59 throught 65? ^ "Have A Nice Life - "Dan And Tim, Reunited By Fate" "."Have A Nice Life and Woods of Desolation streaming new LPs (listen to both)". ^ Sacher, Andrew and Wyatt Marshall (January 24, 2014)."Listen: Connecticut shoegaze band Have A Nice Life's punishing new song, "Burial Society" ". ^ Darville, Jordan (January 22, 2014).^ a b "Listen to: "Have a Nice Life's new tune, 'Burial Society'""."Viking's Choice: This Song Is Literally For Throwing Stuff Out The Window". ^ a b Gotrich, Lars (December 11, 2013).^ a b "Stream New LPs From Have a Nice Life, Bohren & Der Club of Gore, and Jess Williamson Via Pitchfork Advance"."Have a Nice Life - The Unnatural World". ^ Abraham, Barnabas (5 February 2014).^ "Have A Nice Life – Unnatural World".Of the track "Dan and Tim, Reunited by Fate", Tiny Mix Tapes wrote that "the pair cherrypick tropes from a number of bleak traditions: reverb-drenched industrial beats doom-metal sludge shoegaze drones conjured from effects pedals post-punk bass chuggery a plaintive piano+static post-rock crescendo." Tiny Mix Tapes also wrote that the band holds this genre palette together "by matching its compositional ambitions with idiosyncratic recording and production techniques." Track listing Īll tracks are written by Dan Barrett and Tim Macuga. Lars Gotrich of NPR described the track "Defenestration Song" as "the kind of pitch-black, post-punk party-rocker that'd really turn up at any Goth Night dance." He also wrote: "A two-note guitar riff is barely heard above the dank din as warming feedback permeates the whole affair, like the kind that lulls you to sleep just before an icy death" while comparing the song's rhythm and distorted bass line to the works of the gothic rock pioneers Bauhaus. Noisey Vice stated that the song "Burial Society" had "a Nine Inch Nails-meets-post-punk vibe," which "evidenced Have a Nice Life's leanings on the sonic dark side in the record. Andrew Sacher and Wyatt Marshall of BrooklynVegan wrote that "the album falls somewhere between goth, noise, shoegaze and post-punk." They also described the album as "addictively melodic for such dark music."