

We love Hoodie Allen at Independent Clauses, largely because of his way with samples. Visitors can browse the song selections there by genre, tempo, and era-to find the music that best fits with their particular workout routine.
#HOODIE ALLEN NO INTERRUPTION GIRLS HOT FREE#
To find more workout songs, folks can check out the free database at. Gotye & Kimbra – Somebody That I Used to Know (Tiesto Remix) – 129 BPM LMFAO – Sorry for Party Rocking (Wolfgang Gartner Remix) – 130 BPM Pitbull – Back in Time (Play-N-Skillz Remix) – 128 BPMĬarly Rae Jepsen – Call Me Maybe (Coyote Kisses Remix) – 124 BPM Owl City & Carly Rae Jepsen – Good Time – 126 BPM

Pitbull & Shakira – Get It Started – 129 BPMĬalvin Harris & Ne-Yo – Let’s Go – 130 BPM
#HOODIE ALLEN NO INTERRUPTION GIRLS HOT FULL#
Here’s the full list, according to votes placed at Run Hundred–the web’s most popular workout music blog. And, the year’s two biggest hits (“Call Me Maybe” and “Somebody That I Used to Know”) were both reinvented as club tracks. Pitbull turned up twice-once in a remix and once with Shakira. In this month’s top 10, running favorites LMFAO, Flo Rida, and Pink all made appearances. If you were working on a workout music time capsule-trying to show future generations what folks listened to in the gym in 2012-the highlights from August alone would nearly do the trick. And RunHundred is there for me, with its monthly Top 10. I’m getting back into running (it’s always more fun to be a runner than to turn yourself into a runner), so I need music. Soundsupply Drop 4 from Soundsupply on Vimeo. This one includes IC faves I Used to Be a Sparrow, Mason Jennings, and Mansions from the clips in the video below, I’m super-excited about La Dispute and Talons. Soundsupply, the music-discovery service whose creators I interviewed recently, is back with a new 10 albums for 15 bucks. I’m stoked to finally see Hoodie live IC has been covering him for a long time. Hoodie Allen and G-Eazy are going out on tour together! The indie-rock-flipping rappers will be traveling all over the East Coast and Midwest in September I’ve already got tickets to the Atlanta date. His weary tenor voice is in full glory in that atmosphere, evocative to a heartbreaking point. If you’ve got 18 minutes to experience some beautiful tunes, Adam Remnant (of rambunctious alt-country outfit Southeast Engine) debuted four brilliant new acoustic songs on a front porch in the middle of the woods.

Kina and Hoodie also covered “Anna Sun” by Walk the Moon, which was pretty legit too.ĭresses is from Portland, which explains why the video for jubilant indie-pop tune “Sun Shy” could be called “How to Hipster, 2013 Edition.” I love everything about the song and the video.

Furthermore, the Mets get a shout-out, so I’m automatically in love with the track. This track is a collaboration with acoustic singer/songwriter Kina Grannis, and it’s pretty awesome. Hoodie Allen has largely graduated from the indie-rock-flipping beats that made me fall in love with him, so it’s nice to hear him doing stuff that kinda goes in that direction. I’ll have a full rave about it in a few days, but right now, this: If you like singer/songwriters or folk or country or whatever we’re calling it these days, check this out: David Ramirez is winning the game. Swirling, mysterious, and beautiful.ĭavid Ramirez dropped an absolutely mindblowing EP named The Rooster yesterday, and “The Bad Days” is the first cut from the release. And no self-respecting summer mix wouldn’t include a midnight makeout track either, and this Australian indie-folk gem fits the bill perfectly. No summer mix is complete without a lazy, hazy poolside jam.Ĩ. It starts out with voice and acoustic guitar, but it’s a block party by the halfway point (complete with huge horn sample). Hoodie drops the studio version of the track he and Kina Grannis wrote for Fuze. Their tunes come from a deep understanding of how indie-rock works, circa 2013. Hospital Ships plays indie-rock that I immediately recognize but can’t place. Summer mixes can always use more ’80s-inspired electro-pop, especially when it’s as bouncy and charming as Challenger’s.ĥ. My favorite gleeful post-rockers are back, emphasis on the rock … and the violin.Ĥ. This bass-heavy tune reminds me of Titus Andronicus due to the atypical vocal rhythms of the vocalist. Pop-punk is where I’m from, and it’s where I go in summer. Here’s a jaw-dropping fusion of intricate guitarwork, indie-rock bombast, and pop sensibility. So I went running this morning, and it was actually hot.
