Sunday, November 1, 2009

Listen to Shock Pilot and the JogTunes Indie Podcast

This morning I am going to go cheer on the runners of the New York Marathon. Hopefully the weather will clear up a bit and it will be a great race for everyone involved. I am looking forward to running it myself next year. Before I go I have a couple things I need to post about:


The past month I've working with some artists through twitter and ReverbNation. It was spearheaded by Jonathan Jones of Linwood Studios. My main contribution was the vocals. Steve Morton was also a key contributer of some eclectic sounds. The intention was to create something entirely collaborative online with feedback from listeners every step of the way, which was immensely valuable. We went through several drafts and I am very excited about the result. What began as an instrumental sketch about flight became a story about a Lara Croft-like flight attendant (undercover spy?) foiling a terrorist plot mid-air.


The project is called Shock Pilot and the first song is called "Smokin' Tasers." Find more information about it here:

http://www.ReverbNation.com/ShockPilot

http://twitter.com/ShockPilot

http://linwoodstudios.blogspot.com/2009/10/shock-pilot-official-release-of-smokin.html


Please feel free to stream, download, or share the song from here:



Quantcast


There is talk about offering a contest for people interested in making a youtube video for it. Contact me for more details.





The other big news I am very excited to announce that my song "Why I Run" was included in this month's JogTunes Indie Podcast! Dr. Bob Marcus guides runners through a 60 minute work out featuring a vast array of unsigned and unknown artists, explaining the different tempos for each song along the way. This podcast was indispensable to me when I started researching the idea running music. I used it to feel out the different tempos. I remember being most comfortable in the 150s and 160s. As soon as the pace climbed into 170 or 180 bpm I wasn't able to keep up. Now here I am nearly two years later touting the benefits of 180 bpm, which proves that cadence is definitely something you can control when you know how. The thing I eventually learned was that the speed of your leg turnover doesn't determine your running speed. If you make your stride smaller you don't have to run faster at the higher tempos. The podcast is a good exercise for trying different stride lengths and cadences as well as discovering unknown artists.


Here is the link to the show podcast:

http://jogtunes.com/jti/jtcbrowsepodcasts.php?x=60&v=ID%20between%20453%20and%20465


A big thanks to Dr. Bob! He is so nice. I am really happy to have a song in the podcast and to be on the website. It's the fulfillment of something I was dreaming about a year ago. If you have not checked it out already, definitely subscribe to this podcast. The website is also a useful resource for finding good running music.


http://jogtunes.com/



3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Anyone tried this ?

http://www.cadenceapp.com

Its being promoted on the jogtunes website and it looks awesome.

jogTunes.com said...

Thanks, Lady Southpaw, for your kind words and major props. I really enjoyed playing your music and featuring you on the show notes. Much success with all that you do!

Dr. Bob
The JogTunes Indie Podcast

Lady Southpaw said...

Thanks Dr. Bob! It's an idea that is continuing to inspire me. I'm still working on refining it and hope to take it to new lengths very soon!