Oggy Live Today vol. 100 Special Program

July 12th, 2020
Oggy Live Today 100th Special Program
Oggy Live Today (the online live) is about to reach the 100 times!
Extended one hour session to reflect about the live and life.
Guest welcomed to jump in!
Enjoy the jazzy guitar and songs 🙂

 

Topics

  • 100th Live
  • What’s up today
2020/7/12 (Sun) 22:00 – 23:00 JST

Official Facebook Page ready

June 14th, 2020

Oggy Official FB Page

The Official Facebook Page is ready.
Thank you for your support.
Please Like it!

https://facebook.com/hiroshi.oggy.ogino

Oggy Live Today (online)

May 16th, 2020

Dear friends,
How are you doing under the COVID-19 situation?
I hope everyone’s health and safety.
Oggy is doing online live everyday.

Date: & Time: Everyday

  • Japan: 22:30 – 23:00 (JST)
  • California: 6:30 – 7:00 (PDT)
  • Chicago: 8:30 – 9:00 (CDT)
  • NewYork: 9:30 – 10:00 (EDT)
  • London: 14:30 – 15:00 (BST)
  • As long as online, other regions should be OK. (ネットが繋がっていればその他の地域も可能)

Place: Eveywhere (Online) 

Oggy has been performing music at online live show since I need to refrain from physical show due to the emergency declaration in Japan.
Actually I have been doing the online live everyday since April 4th, so I just would like to officially? announce about it here.
Please join at your convenience. Guest performance is always welcomed! A few people kindly joined already.
I may show up some media besides Facebook, too, which I will announce too.

Online Music Day

June 29th, 2008

As a deep music-lover, I spent my time rebuilding my computer environment for music today.

  • Purchased “Cliffs of Dover”, a guitar instrumental tune by Eric Johnson, at iTunes for $0.99. This is probably a long-tail kind of song picked up by not so many people, but it is a great one.
  • Played Miles Davis at an online radio station I ‘created’ at Pandora.com. This is what I couldn’t try in Japan because of the area restriction for the sake of content copyrights.
  • Visited and played with Dotomi.com. This is a cool music recognition technology.
  • Renewed my account at Playlog.jp (an online music society in Japan), and installed its  iTunes plug-in, which keeps track of song list I play on PC and shares the list in the community.
  • Created song list (i.e., a playlist) of jazz guitar tunes to share at the community of Mixi.jp, the largest SNS in Japan. Installed “Mixistation” software, which, again, keeps track of songs I play on the PC.
  • Played with Last.fm, a large online music society that also distributes its own music player software.
  • Installed two applications (Pandora and iLike) on Facebook. It seems that iLike is more broadly used than Pandora in the Facebook community.
  • Backed up my 25,000 iPod-songs onto the PC. The PC hard drive that contained the songs had been dead. So I ran CopyTrans (a shareware) to restore all the songs in my old iPod back to my PC, after trying three other freewares, all of which failed. I found CopyTrans a easy-to-use and reliable s/w! (e.g. The other freewares collapsed the Japanese song names imported from the iPod.)

I have been familiar with most of these online music services or software for long time, but recently I could not allocate my time to enjoy music deeply and to catch up the latest tech scene of what is going on in this area. So it has been a good chance for me to revive my hands-on spirit and refresh my mind in this kind. All of these services are very cool and most of the functions are much more easy to use and reliable than before. At the same time, using these is still somewhat time-consuming and inanimate to me though.

In particular, this April I had a chance to join the speaker event of the founder of Pandora, Tim Westergren, the event hosted by the Entrepreneurship Club at Kellogg. He said Pandora is (and will be) focusing on the internet radio and its competitor is Clear Channel, the largest radio network in the US. (I will talk about the club some time later.)