Free Tunes

From This Might Be A Wiki
Richard Nixon

tmbg.com's Free Tunes was a service that ran from 2003-07 where a new, rare, or live song would be released from the band periodically as a free MP3 download.

Free Tunes (2003-2007)

Here are all of the songs known to have been featured on the Free Tunes page. The MP3 links required a username and password (tmbg / thespinesurfs), which was viewable after signing up for TMBG's mailing list.

theymightbegiants.com Free MP3s

2002-2003

These songs were available on the free MP3s page on theymightbegiants.com between 2002 and 2003:

2006

In 2006, theymightbegiants.com posted a few more free MP3s:

Early Dial-A-Song Online

DASdial.gif

Shortly after the creation of the original tmbg.com in 1996, up until 2000 when dialasong.com spun off into an interactive streaming site, TMBG ran a Dial-A-Song page that was updated every few months with some new (and old) music.

QuickTime MOV era

Songs featured on the pre-Flash version of www.dialasong.com:

WAV era

Songs featured on the old www.tmbg.com/dial/ page:

Original Dial-A-Song Online

The earliest online Dial-A-Song service was run by Bo Orloff from 1994 to 1996. Orloff was the former executive vice president of The Hornblow Group and was the 'assistant manager' of They Might Be Giants from 1989 to 1993. In 1994 he launched a semi-official website dedicated to the band (www.dnai.com/~obo/tmbg). This was one of the first websites devoted to a rock band. In January 1994 a private beta version of the site was launched,[1] and by April it was public.[2] The site had a 'Dial-A-Song Online' service from the outset. The band supplied Orloff with songs to feature on his site, including some exclusive material.[3] The website also featured the John Henry HyperCard stack, and gave current information about the band. In October 1995 it became the band's official website and Orloff was hired to create the upcoming tmbg.com site. Orloff's site shut down in February 1996, and the design business OVEN was chosen to create tmbg.com instead. A fanmade bootleg titled The Low Fidelity Experience was compiled in May 1996,[4] and it collected many of the Dial-A-Song recordings that had been featured on the site.[5]

Songs known to have been featured on Orloff's site (www.dnai.com/~obo/tmbg/Dial-A-Song_Online.html):

This list is likely incomplete and the chronology of these tracks release is not known. Most of the songs were AU file downloads. Some of the tracks were re-released, unaltered, on the later Dial-A-Song Online services.