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The Sound Board #30: Kickstart Out the Jams, Hasenfeffer!

By JM Tuffley - posted 06.23.12 @ 10:35 pm
Amanda Palmer on Kickstarter

This podcast generally covers music and other transgressions. This month's episode stars Prof. Tuffley in the chair with Rob Levy in the sidecar working the turret and Widge being dragged behind as always.

This episode's central topic is...Kickstarter. Is it the future? Is it already on its way to being the past? Should we fear it, embrace it, or simply buy it a latte and remain friends? Plus: a discussion of upcoming festivals.

We also discuss the loss of MCA, Donna Summer, Bob Welch and Robin Gibb.

Special thanks to Hyperbubble for our lead-in music. Show them love and buy their stuff.


If you have music you want to bring to our attention, ping us at sound board at (this domain).

To find Tuffley's Randomizer and other Spotify playlists, go here. And you can find him on Twitter here.

And to find Rob Levy at KDHX, go here. And his personal blog is here. And his Twitter is here.

BTW, you iTunes subscriber types can nab our overall podcast feed here. If you like us, why not rate us? We don't bite. Mostly. Or if you want to do something else with it, the feed feed is here.

For those just wanting to subscribe to The Sound Board, you can do that here. iTunes feed is here.

To download this episode directly, The Sound Board #30: Kickstart Out the Jams, Hasenfeffer!, then do that thing. Previous episode can be found here.

Read More About:

JM Tuffley is a writer, blogger, and podcaster with occational forays into internet radio. You can follow him on Twitter. Sorry about the loud music, he does that. He has written 26 posts. See them all here.

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A Lone Voice in the Wilderness
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    1. 

    Gentlemen. The major reason, that the Beastie Boys evolved is that they grew up. Adam Yauch also became a Buddhist and found inner peace through his religious discoveries and led to the Beastie Boys' commitment to the Free Tibet movement. Being almost 50 (sigh), I appreciate the fact that the Beastie Boys were not afraid of change, but embraced it as a by product of their maturity.

    Comment by Kevin Olson — June 26, 2012 @ 9:58 am

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