Weathervane Music has a completely free compilation series.
Dumbo Gets Mad: Elephants at the Door Psychedelic rock.
Taking the opportunity to "plug" my own netlabel (I co-run it with a friend). All free of charge electronic music. Various stuff, from ambient to noise to techno... Red Dye
You are standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door. There is a small mailbox here.He's a Witch House / Synthpop musician, he's opened for Crystal Castles a few times. Haunting stuff.
The 5 geek social fallacies. Know them well.Alien Ant Farm's first album is freely (and yes, legally) downloadable from here. Before that, it was actually freely available from AAF's official site, but presumably it got lost when their site was completely redone.
edited 16th Apr '12 10:14:49 PM by DemonSharkKisame
[Sorry, new accounts cannot post external links.]
Spanish voice talent: https://www.locutortv.com/ and https://www.locutortv.esSo, from my toybox, I can recommend:
- Souichi Sakagami of Trial & Error Music. He released a massive pack of free songs for use in various projects. As you can see on his website, one of them is Dzwiedziu's Bizarre Adventure.
- Otis McDonald. Everything before his most recent album People Music is free, you can find it in the Youtube Music Library.
- Ethan Meixsell. If you need heavy metal instrumentals, some of them being clear homages to greats like Metallica and Pantera, look the guy up on Youtube Music Library.
- White Bat Audio. If you need synthwave, mostly.
- Infraction Music. If you need something longer (their tracks are notoriously hard to cut into 30 sec. fragments). Some tracks cost $3 to license.
Literally everything by the experimental hip-hop producer Impossible Nothing is available for free on his Bandcamp, which is literally days worth of material given how long his early releases are.
Also, aside, but it's super weird seeing that the second-to-last post here before an eight-year break is from my ex just before she left this site… and about a year before we even got together.
I'll hide your name inside a word and paint your eyes with false perception.For emo nuts like me:
- Brave Little Abacus - Okumay
- Cloud District
- Coate
- Empire! Empire! I Was a Lonely Estate
- Everyone Everywhere
I listen to a lot of the music from No Copyright Sounds. Elektronomia, Tobu, Jim Yosef, 3rd Prototype, Unknown Brain, Different Heaven, and Electro Light are great music artists.
If you're into indie electronic music, Cacola's A Gift to Us All and Ruby Rose are free to download on Bandcamp (the former is a name-your-price download, but has no minimum).
I cannot recommend A Gift to Us All enough; great mix of Drum and Bass and Progressive Rock, with a beautifully haunting electropop song near the end. I've actually lost count of how many times I've listened to it, but it pays off every time.
Ruby Rose meanwhile is an 81-and-a-half minute mashup album, which isn't really my style, but the skill involved with it is frankly quite impressive. If you're into mashup work, you'll probably get a big kick out of it.