Case Studies/Pocketclock Music
When I found Creative Commons, it reinforced that idea and allowed us to stop working in the traditional way: In some ways I think by licensing the music under CC, for me, serves more to say “It's actually OK to give this to your friends” than anything else. — Rowan Mcnaught, Pocketclock Music
Overview
Pocketclock Music is a small, independent record label based in Melbourne, Australia. Established in 2003 to represent the ‘sound of young Melbourne,’ Pocketclock’s focus is distinctly experimental pop. Pocketclock is currently home to the artists Talk Show Boy (TSB), Poland, and Pompey, and has had previous associations with Lakes, Oh! Belgium, and Cine-milky/Sienmilki. Each featured musician offers free downloads on the site under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 licence, alongside the occasional promotional video. Pocketclock also provides artists with a mobile recording facility to ‘convert your sound to golden impulses,’ and has supported several local mastering/editing and production projects.
Talk Show Boy (aka Adrian K-Sahara) is a 22 year-old musician who hails from Melbourne. In his own words, ‘He plays intense and complicated electronic new pop songs about love, being tuff, and how people act towards one another.’ In November 2007, TSB released a new record TESTOSTERONE. Over 19 tracks, TSB ‘pushes the romantic, aesthetic and political agendas to the sounds of cute majorchordal breakbeats, tiny melodic cut-ups and anemic blastbeats.’
Poland plays primitive DSP pop music with ‘loops as long as your arm’ (http://pocketclock.org/artists.html). Informed by the folk and pop traditions, Poland takes her influences from outsider music, house, abstract jazz, video games, and storytelling, amongst other places. Poland’s self-titled EP consists of four tracks, culminating in ‘Random Pop,’ which featured on Brothersister’s international experimental pop compilation titled A fifty gallon drum of savage customs fresh flesh and random pop.
Also featuring on the Brothersister release with the title track ‘Fifty gallon drum,’ Pompey pitches himself as a ‘young man making noisy, polyrhythmic pop and sounds, steeped in arch sentimentality and linked in ways to environmental sounds, girl groups, primitive music, 'studio'- as-instrument, etc.’ Pompey has three releases, all with Pocketclock Records: the thirteen-track Fifty gallon drum (2007), Pompey by the ring of rocks (2005), a single 18-minute track recorded live in Pompey’s house and made for listening whilst cooking or driving, and Pompey vs. Vesuvius (2006), an EP of 40 minutes and 16 tracks.
News of the label’s latest releases can be found here.
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