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10 Online Resources for Free, Legal Music. Free stuff. Those two words are enough to make one kick up one's proverbial heels and dance out of pure, plasma-searing joy. And when that free stuff comes in the form of tunes, well, then the dancing becomes quite literal. While we know no one in our illustrious readership would ever steal music (nay! Death before thieving the whiskey and cereal from the gaping maws of those starving musicians!) , we understand that sometimes one just doesn't have the capital to load up on songs on a daily basis. That's why we've gathered 10 resources for scoring tunes online for merely a song. 1). San Francisco-based startup MySpoonful just launched recently, touting itself as “Daily Candy for Indie Music.” It's like having that dude at the record store who always knows about the newest freak folk band in your mailbox — without all the "I can't believe you've never heard of these guys!

" RCRD LBL aims to be the modern version of MTV's 120 Minutes, a show that specialized in new, alternative music. 3). 4). Baroque Music for Concentration - storify.com. Science of Music: Exploratorium's Accidental Scientist. San Francisco Symphony Keeping Score | Monkey Machine - online drum machine. [ INCREDIBOX ] presents [ THE INCREDIBLE POLO ] Dubstep - Mala - Changes. Do fruit enjoy music? Japanese company plays Mozart to its bananas. NOW here's a story with a-peel: A Japanese fruit company has been playing Mozart to its ripening bananas, claiming it produces a sweeter product.

And that's not all - the paper says a wide variety of food and beverages in Japan have been enjoying exposure to classical music, including soy sauce, udon noodles, miso and even sake, the Japan Times said. In fact, the sake is downright picky when it comes to composers. At Ohara Shuzo brewery, senior managing director, Fumiko Ohara told the paper the classical musical experiment began over 20 years ago when the president, Kosuke Ohara, came across a book about brewing with music.

They experimented with jazz, Mozart, Bach and Beethoven, among others. "We found Mozart works best for sake," Mr Ohara said, "and that's why we use only his music. " But back to those bunches of Mozart-loving bananas. A representative from the fruit company, Isamu Okuda, said the company believes it makes the fruit sweeter. Read more at the Japan Times.

Various Modern Electronics. @ddrrnt — Longplayer - The Gift of Slow Time [01Nov10] Tibetan Meditation Music - Tibetan Singing Bowls For Yoga, Massage, Relaxaation And Meditation / Station: Singing Bowls - OM4X / Songza.