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Archive for June, 2009

Dutch are UFWC champions, but the British are coming

June 8th, 2009

The Netherlands retained the Unofficial Football World Championships title on Saturday with a 2-1 win over Iceland. The next UFWC title match sees the Dutch take on Norway on Wednesday. Depending on the result of that game, the next UFWC title challengers will be England or Scotland.

The UFWC pitches real international football teams into a continuous series of boxing-style title matches. Winners of UFWC title matches become title-holders, and move up the rankings table. UFWC history dates back to 1872, 58 years before the World Cup. I run the website and wrote a book about it.

The Netherlands have won 36 UFWC title matches. Norway have never won in ten attempts. Should Norway manage to win the UFWC title for the very first time, they will defend the title in a WCQ match against Scotland on 2 August. If the Netherlands retain the title, they will take it into a friendly match on 12 August against England. So, whatever happens on Wednesday, the next UFWC match will involve a British challenger.

Football, Websites

The Rocketbelt Caper eBook – download it FREE!

June 5th, 2009

The Rocketbelt Caper is now available as a free download! The eBook contains the full text of the new US edition of the book, which is released in paperback on 29 June.

The book tells the true story of three men who set out to build a real-life Buck Rogers-style flying machine called the Rocketbelt 2000. But their obsession with the rocketbelt shattered their friendship and set in motion an astonishing chain of events involving theft, deception, a bizarre kidnapping, a ten million dollar lawsuit and a horrifically brutal murder.

The eBook is released under a Creative Commons license.

It’s available in a range of DRM-free formats, including ePub, Mobipocket, and custom PDF, and is compatible with Amazon Kindle, Sony Reader, iPhone or iPod Touch, iRex iLiad, Smartphone, PDA, Adobe Reader and more. And, of course, you can read it on your PC screen.

Get FREE Download from Feedbook

The eBook is hosted by and can be downloaded from Feedbooks, and you can also get format advice and help from that website.

If you have an iPhone or iPod Touch you can access the eBook via the Stanza app – just select Online Catalog and access ‘Feedbooks – Free Content’.

Why is it free? In a nutshell, because I want it to be read by as many people as possible. Please download it, read it and – hopefully – enjoy it. If you do enjoy it, you might like to tell your friends, or buy one of the lovely paperback editions, and if you think the eBook is worth paying for, you might even like to make a donation here. Thank you very much in advance. If you don’t enjoy it, well I’m sorry about that, but – hey – at least it was free.

Read more about The Rocketbelt Caper here.

Books, Technology

1989 Spotified – with added Sarah Records

June 3rd, 2009

This week’s Guardian Guide has a cover feature on how 1989 was a momentous year for music. Granted, the vast majority of the population was buying records by Jive Bunny and Jason Donovan, but, for those of us who were less easily pleased, 1989 offered a host of fantastic albums that can be looked back upon 20 years later as true classics.

The Stone Roses, Technique by New Order, Reading, Writing and Arithmetic by The Sundays, Doolittle by The Pixies, Bizarro by The Wedding Present, Paul’s Boutique by Beastie Boys, Three Feet High and Rising by De La Soul… The list goes on.

Here’s a 1989 Spotify playlist featuring tracks by most of the above. As is the nature of Spotify, you can easily click through to many of the full albums.

One of the tracks on the playlist is Sensitive by The Field Mice, who were on much-loved indie label Sarah Records. A whole bunch of Sarah compilations have recently arrived on Spotify, and it’s fascinating to consider how the delivery of these songs has changed in 20 years.

Back in 1989, if you were like me, you’d peruse Sarah’s lovely hand-typeset catalogue lists, complete with evocative dispatches from exotic Bristol written by label co-founder Matt Haynes. If you were lucky you might have heard the odd song on Peel, or read a review in the NME, but largely you made your selection based on the reputation of the label and its bands without having heard a note.

Then you’d send off a postal order – a postal order! – along with your wishlist, and wait 28 days. Eventually, the records would arrive – 7-inch vinyl with folded sleeve slotted into a polybag, usually accompanied by a handwritten note from Matt. And you would place the record on the turntable, blow dust from the needle, and for the first time you would hear the delights of Another Sunny Day, or Heavenly, or Brighter, or The Orchids.

Fast forward 20 years, and if you want to hear The Joy of Living by Blueboy (and you should) you can get it instantly, free, no postal order required, and without even bothering to download it, via Spotify. Part of me thinks that’s progress, but another part realises that we’ve lost something, and that actually hearing the music was just the end part of a bigger, more enjoyable, experience.

Sarah Records closed down in 1995. The label released 100 singles, plus a few albums, and then took out half page ads in the NME and Melody Maker announcing that Sarah was finished: ‘Didn’t YOU ever want to create something beautiful and pure, just so that one day you could set it on fire, and then watch the city light up as it burned?’

So here’s a Sarah Records Spotify playlist. And here’s a complete label search of every Sarah track on Spotify, including five compilation LPs. [Unfortunately the tracks on the Engine Common compilation are all mis-titled.] If you want to get some background info and sample some of the sleevenotes, visit Matt’s blog.

Music, Technology ,