i

issues

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319833 HUNNAFIEDRECORDS - issues




i

Wats Poppin BOMPTON REMIX

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319834 HUNNAFIEDRECORDS - Wats Poppin BOMPTON REMIX




i

Hunnafied records - blood money

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319835 HUNNAFIEDRECORDS - Hunnafied records - blood money




i

ASHY NUXX N COKEBOY BROCK - $100 BILLS

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319836 HUNNAFIEDRECORDS - ASHY NUXX N COKEBOY BROCK - $100 BILLS




i

Coca-Kazi ft. Young Throwback SOUR D

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319838 COCA-KAZI HUNNAFIEDRECORDS - Coca-Kazi ft. Young Throwback SOUR D




i

issues

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319839 COCA-KAZI -HUNNAFIEDRECORDS - issues




i

I Can't Breath

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319840 Marina Litvinova - I Can't Breath




i

Collide

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319841 Death to Neverland - Collide




i

Miss You Boogie

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319842 Tony Sarcozi - Miss You Boogie




i

Coming of the Dawn 320kbps

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319844 kris2009va@gmail.com - Coming of the Dawn 320kbps




i

Someone Like You

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319846 RobertNorbergLejon - Someone Like You




i

BelieveYou_Scratch

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319848 LaramieMusic - BelieveYou_Scratch




i

Haunted (Acoustic)

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319851 Tess - Haunted (Acoustic)




i

I Told You So

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319852 Greg Stone - I Told You So




i

Into The Sea

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319853 Greg Stone - Into The Sea




i

The Legend Of The Pom Pom Kid

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319854 Greg Stone - The Legend Of The Pom Pom Kid




i

szymon folwarczny - forgiveness

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319858 SzymonFolwarczny - szymon folwarczny - forgiveness




i

Cloudy Motion

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319863 Visual Shaman - Cloudy Motion




i

Basis of Knowledge (Mastered Version)

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319864 Visual Shaman - Basis of Knowledge (Mastered Version)




i

Basis of Knowledge

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319865 Visual Shaman - Basis of Knowledge




i

Oh Sunrise

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319867 JohnC - Oh Sunrise




i

cc1premixmp3

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319868 CAROLINA CLAY - cc1premixmp3




i

cc4premixmp3

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319869 CAROLINA CLAY - cc4premixmp3




i

cc5premixmp3

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319870 CAROLINA CLAY - cc5premixmp3




i

My baby{prod.@tmixbeatz}

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319872 TMIX - My baby{prod.@tmixbeatz}




i

My baby{prod.@tmixbeatz}

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319874 TMIX - My baby{prod.@tmixbeatz}




i

Malakai Prez ft Andy - Bones Final Mix Radio Edit

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319875 malakaiprez - Malakai Prez ft Andy - Bones Final Mix Radio Edit




i

Oh Sunrise test mix 2

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319876 JohnC - Oh Sunrise test mix 2




i

running around in circles

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319879 JohnC - running around in circles




i

Luh Guccii - Cant explain this feeling

http://www.musicxray.com/xrays/1319880 Luh Guccii - Luh Guccii - Cant explain this feeling




i

Live Session: TORRES

Before she performed under the name TORRES, she was Mackenzie Scott, a teenager in Macon, Ga. Hear Scott perform three songs off her album Sprinter and talk about what its like to come home in this performance at Capricorn Studio in Macon. Listen above, watch below.




i

Live Session: Brett Harris

Brett Harris writes the sort of crystalline pop songs that hearken back to the days of Power Pop. Plus, he's a really good guitarist who knows better than to upstage his own voice. Between songs from his new album Up In The Air, Harris talks about how he first discovered music he could call his own and about to how adapt songs he wrote for a band to a solo tour. Brett's new album Up In The Air will be released on March, 4. Listen above or watch below.




i

Live Session: Lobo Marino

Lobo Marino is Jameson Price on percussion and Laney Sullivan on harmonium and voice. Together they make atmospheric music that echoes the sounds they've experienced on their global travels. It's world music that asks you to slow down and just be. Produced with the Field Note Stenographers and students from the Mercer University Center for Collaborative Journalism.




i

Live Session: T. Hardy Morris

T. Hardy Morris has moved some molecules in his day as a member of the very loud Athens, GA band Dead Confederate. In recent years, Morris has turned it down a notch with solo work both quieter and more personal. In this Field Session Morris talks about how turning into your Dad isn't so bad, about work life balance for a touring musician with a wife, a kid and a baby on the way and on the difference between a poet and a songwriter. Produced with the Field Note Stenographers.




i

Field Session: Col. Bruce Hampton @ Capricorn Studio

In this session, Col. Bruce Hampton recorded at Capricorn Studio. Col. Bruce is a legend of Georgia music who has been unafraid to wave his freak flag high since the 1960s. In this interview with Chris Nylund and Jared Wright of the Field Note Stenographers music collective, Col. Bruce introduces us to the numerology of Southern humidity and gives us a glimpse of the weird heyday of a late 60s music boomtown called Macon. A note, in this first story, Gregg is none other than Gregg Allman. Tracks include Say Thanks To Chank, Arkansas and Basically Frightened.




i

Tennessee Surf Rock With Repeat Repeat

Repeat Repeat started its life as surf rock from high atop the Cumberland Plateau. East Nashville, Tenn. to be exact. As they get ready for their next album, titled Floral Canyon and tentatively set for a July release, the band is growing past the purely sunny sounds of their debut Bad Latitude, changes you can hear in the Field Session recorded with the Field Note Stenographers. On the track "Mostly", Jared and Kristyn Corder sing about a tumultuous relationship. Chunky, doomy guitar and bass accentuate the drama. On "Plugged In", the band rips through a summer jam that asks us to think hard about the beliefs we hold dear, why we have them and why we try to convince others of their truth. Repeat Repeat is on the road through April, then back in their Tennessee home for a while. They expect to be out again this summer in support of Floral Canyon after its release. You can find their music on Bandcamp. Check out the entire Field Session recorded with the Field Note Stenographers.




i

80s Art Rock With Pylon Reenactment Society

In Athens in the 1980s, they formed one corner of a holy trinity: R.E.M, B-52s and...Pylon. Though they broke up, for the first time, in 1983, Pylon's itchy, dancey influence can still be felt around the world of what we now call Indie Rock. Today, original Pylon vocalist Vanessa Briscoe Hay helms the Pylon Reenactment Society, a crew of like minded Athens musicians who get a kick out of bringing the music of Pylon back to old audiences and introducing it to new ones, too. Look for a Pylon double live LP in July, but for now, enjoy these three tracks from the Pylon Reenactment Society.




i

Billy Joe Shaver: Field Session

Billy Joe Shaver might not be the household name that other country musicians of his generation are but the Texas native who still calls Waco home used to run with Willie Nelson and famously threatened Waylon Jennings to make good on a promise to record his songs. Jennings kept the promise and the album "Honky Tonk Heroes," comprised mainly of tunes penned by Shaver, is a classic of country music. But before that, Billy Joe Shaver was a laborer and a cowboy. It took losing three fingers on his strumming hand at a lumber mill before he made a deal with God to do what he felt he was supposed to do: write songs. In this Field Session from the Capitol Theatre in Macon, listen to Billy Joe Shaver talk about those early days. From the Field Note Stenographers and GPB Music. https://youtu.be/Lu3BfDjbnfA




i

A Punk History Of Otis Redding

Before his album of duets with Carla Thomas, before "Dock of the Bay," even before wowing the crowd at the Monterey Pop Festival, Otis Redding was in a band not as the front man, but mostly because he could drive. That band was Johnny Jenkins and the Pinetoppers, a staple of the Macon music scene in the early days of rock and roll. And yes, guitar ace Jenkins couldn't drive, but he also had the foresight to give Redding the microphone. The partnership led to one of Redding's first singles, the rocker "Shout Bama Lama." In this Songs On Site, the teenage punk rockers of Failing Acts of Society fill you in on the history of the song. With the Field Note Stenographers




i

Heart For Violin, Ear For Pop And Soul

Ashley Pointer says with her violin, she can pretty much do anything the human voice can do. Ironically, she says it wasn't her decision to pick up her bow. But today, as the first violinist to be accepted into the competitive Grammy Camp summer program, she is glad it happened. Ashley's mother Charlita Whitby put a violin in Ashley's hands way back when the junior at Howard High School in Macon was in the first grade. A choral teacher had seen some potential for musicality in Ashley that her mother was convinced she should nurture. For the first two years, mother and daughter went through the Suzuki books together. Whitby said though she loves music, she didn't enjoy making it. But it was the price for keeping Ashley on track. "Well I knew that it was something that I wanted her to do and if she's going to do it I wanted her to do it right," Whitby said Ashley kept at it but admits the violin didn't really click for her until the seventh grade. That summer, at home with the violin




i

Billy Joe Shaver: Field Session

Billy Joe Shaver might not be the household name that other country musicians of his generation are. The Texas native who still calls Waco home used to run with Willie and threatened Waylon to make good on a promise to record his songs. But before that he was just a laborer and a cowboy who had to lose three fingers before making a deal with God to do what he was supposed to do: write songs. From the Capitol Theatre in Macon.




i

TV + mobile = millennial engagement

By Kevin O'Reilly

There is a common misconception that millennials have abandoned traditional television in favor of video streaming, social media and other Web-based activities via mobile devices.




i

Factors reshaping the mobile app economy

By Robert Wildner

Advertisers are starting to invest more in finding quality users for their apps – those who will either make purchases or engage with the app long enough to consume ads.




i

How mobile point-of-sale goes beyond checkout

By Josh Goodwin

Mobile POS solutions can prevent losing a sale by providing endless-aisle capability.




i

GM's OnStar customers can find nearest available parking through mobile app

General Motors’ OnStar service is extending its cooperation with Parkopedia, a service that helps consumers find the nearest available parking spots, through the OnStar mobile app.




i

Buffalo Wild Wings welcomes March Madness with video, Snapchat campaign

Buffalo Wild Wings is looking to capture the attention of lucrative customers attached to March Madness thanks to a new video and Snapchat campaign called “We Do It For You.”




i

Implementing Facebook Analytics for Apps into a retailer’s mobile app strategy

By Marc Biel

Ninety percent of Facebook’s active daily users access Facebook through mobile, making it an ideal platform to capture new app users.




i

Napean sells Mobile Marketer publication, retains events business

Napean LLC has sold its Mobile Marketer and Mobile Commerce Daily publications, but retained the events business comprising conferences, webinars, podcasts and awards, founder Mickey Alam Khan announced today.




i

Mobile Marketer will be back on March 27

Mobile Marketer is taking a short hiatus and will be back better than ever on March 27.




i

In 'Somewhere South,' Chef Vivian Howard Explores The History And Variety Of Modern Southern Cooking

Until she was in her 30s, Vivian Howard was ashamed of being from rural North Carolina, and the food she grew up eating felt embarrassing. Thankfully, a number of influential cooks, critics and restaurants ushered in a revival of Southern food — and Howard is among them. She’s a chef, restaurateur, writer and Peabody award-winning television host. Her new series, Somewhere South , began last month on PBS. Each of the six episodes explores a single dish, and how those foods reflect the history, evolution and people of the region.