Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Can't Take Any More
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Unchained - Album Release - Funding Campaign - Launched Today
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Occupy Earth
Earthlings --
Congratulations. You've finally done it. You've joined hands across the nations and bound the world as one. Now let's get down to business.
The People of the Wider Universe
~ Alien signal ~
~ origin unknown ~
Congratulations. You've finally done it. You've joined hands across the nations and bound the world as one. Now let's get down to business.
The People of the Wider Universe
~ Alien signal ~
~ origin unknown ~
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Occupy Wall Street
I'm extremely moved each day by what I see and hear coming out of Occupy Wall Street. Here's a voice I haven't heard, but I'd expect to hear more of.
Monday, July 25, 2011
Today's Must Read
A fascinating op-ed on the effects of execution on attorneys and the family of the executed by Sylvia Clute. It includes this paragraph:
For the families of the executed, the period of bereavement begins before the death. The trauma includes shopping for a casket for a loved one who is going to be murdered - before it happens. The exact date and time of their death is known. If a stay of execution is granted at the last minute, there is joy over the victory that is often followed by the execution that was merely delayed. Then there is the death certificate that describes the cause of death as homicide. We ambiguously identify the perpetrator of this murder as "the state." Who killed their son, daughter, brother or father for "the state"?
For the families of the executed, the period of bereavement begins before the death. The trauma includes shopping for a casket for a loved one who is going to be murdered - before it happens. The exact date and time of their death is known. If a stay of execution is granted at the last minute, there is joy over the victory that is often followed by the execution that was merely delayed. Then there is the death certificate that describes the cause of death as homicide. We ambiguously identify the perpetrator of this murder as "the state." Who killed their son, daughter, brother or father for "the state"?
Saturday, July 23, 2011
On Norway
From the moderator of the Bob Dylan Fan Site, ExpectingRain.com:
The attack at Utøya was an attack on Norway's future. This island has been the site of yearly political summer camps for socialist youth from all over the country for decades. Half of our Prime Ministers since WWII got part of their political schooling there.
Among the kids that were killed or survived the attack many were and are likely to become future leaders of our country. What they went through yesterday will be a backdrop to the rest of their lives and political careers. This experience will color politics in Norway for decades to come.
Had the perpetrator turned out to be a foreign fundamentalist group, the risk of a wave of hate would have been even greater.
It is now important that we find a way to react that can preserve our principles of democracy, openness and freedom, and refuse to let this turn us on the road to becoming a police state. All signs indicate that we will be able to build on our strengths and continue developing our democracy, humanism and multiculturalism.
Thank you for your condolences, they are appreciated.
The attack at Utøya was an attack on Norway's future. This island has been the site of yearly political summer camps for socialist youth from all over the country for decades. Half of our Prime Ministers since WWII got part of their political schooling there.
Among the kids that were killed or survived the attack many were and are likely to become future leaders of our country. What they went through yesterday will be a backdrop to the rest of their lives and political careers. This experience will color politics in Norway for decades to come.
Had the perpetrator turned out to be a foreign fundamentalist group, the risk of a wave of hate would have been even greater.
It is now important that we find a way to react that can preserve our principles of democracy, openness and freedom, and refuse to let this turn us on the road to becoming a police state. All signs indicate that we will be able to build on our strengths and continue developing our democracy, humanism and multiculturalism.
Thank you for your condolences, they are appreciated.
Friday, July 15, 2011
Serendipidous Science Puzzle of the Day
Here are a couple cute videos, first - I believe- from someone who accidentally discovered if he put his iPhone in his guitar and shot the strings, that it made a really cool effect.
And then there's this example, too:
There's a whole long discussion here about why this is happening, but it seems to have something to do with how the iPhone camera works without having much relation to the frequency of the string vibrations. Still, it is cool.Monday, July 04, 2011
Happy Interdependence Day
It's 235 years since the 13 colonies declared independence from the England of George III and the East India Company. I think it's time we got over it.
Instead, let's make a Declaration of Interdependence of, for and by the peoples of the world - all of them. Let's recognize human connectedness and declare ourselves a single human race, beyond national borders, religious and ethnic divisions, and all the other mental barriers we put in place to separate ourselves one from another.
Today let's sing a song for Interdependence!
Instead, let's make a Declaration of Interdependence of, for and by the peoples of the world - all of them. Let's recognize human connectedness and declare ourselves a single human race, beyond national borders, religious and ethnic divisions, and all the other mental barriers we put in place to separate ourselves one from another.
Today let's sing a song for Interdependence!
Thursday, June 16, 2011
SFnal Heresy of the Day
Deep Hot Biosphere: The Myth of Fossil Fuels by Thomas Gold
I'm not sure how this slipped through the cracks - for me, at least... Alexander Cockburn has mentioned Tommy Gold's work a number of times at Counterpunch.com, but I'm just reading this now. It's a pretty compelling tale...
Gold says HydroCarbons were part of the primordial structure of the earth. They continue to seep upwards and are probably more plentiful than we currently imagine. They fueled chemical life deep in the oceans near deep methane vents -- including microbes as well as worms, clams and other chemo-synthetic creatures. Gold conjectures the entire "deep hot biosphere" contains as much mass of life (microbial, mostly) as the entire surface of the earth. In fact, he theorizes that surface life evolved _from_ that deep hot life, and not the other way around. And if all this is true, there's a lot more life in the universe -- and even just our solar system -- hidden deep beneath the ice, gas, chemical oceans and rock on the surfaces of the known planets, than we've been prepared to acknowledge.
Update:
Cory Panshin sends along these articles about worms called Nematodes that live a mile down.
I'm not sure how this slipped through the cracks - for me, at least... Alexander Cockburn has mentioned Tommy Gold's work a number of times at Counterpunch.com, but I'm just reading this now. It's a pretty compelling tale...
Gold says HydroCarbons were part of the primordial structure of the earth. They continue to seep upwards and are probably more plentiful than we currently imagine. They fueled chemical life deep in the oceans near deep methane vents -- including microbes as well as worms, clams and other chemo-synthetic creatures. Gold conjectures the entire "deep hot biosphere" contains as much mass of life (microbial, mostly) as the entire surface of the earth. In fact, he theorizes that surface life evolved _from_ that deep hot life, and not the other way around. And if all this is true, there's a lot more life in the universe -- and even just our solar system -- hidden deep beneath the ice, gas, chemical oceans and rock on the surfaces of the known planets, than we've been prepared to acknowledge.
Update:
Cory Panshin sends along these articles about worms called Nematodes that live a mile down.
Monday, May 16, 2011
Library of Congress Opens the Vaults
Looks like the Library of Congress is going to make it easy to hear old recordings that have gone into the public domain. Here's the story from the Pittsburg Post-Gazette. And here's a link to the National Jukebox. The first song that came up for me when I hit play is the "Temptation Rag." If you're tempted, go listen!
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Imagine There's No Labels
Here's an informative and creative article written by Noël Ramos, the founder of the IMC – Independent Music Conference. The original story is posted on Facebook. The article notes some of the key moments in the development of music as a commercial business, and posits the question, could an alternate future have developed at any of these key moments to have changed music history?
Imagine There's No Labels
--------------------------------------
Imagine there's no Labels
It's easy if you try
No contracts to hold us
Our limit is the sky
Imagine all the artists
Living to create
You may say that I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the industry will be as one
- with thanks to John Lennon
Has anyone here or elsewhere ever written anything wherein they postulate what might have been if the Record Labels had never come into existence?
It's 1877, Edison announced the phonograph, and the accompanying phonograph cylinder, or "phono-cylinder." Over the next 60-70 years the phono-cylinder would give birth to the major record label industry, but what if another type of market had sprung up instead? What other possible business models might have taken root, and allowed musicians to record and sell their compositions and performances?
It's interesting to note, that in the earliest days of the market, mass-production was only possible on a rudimentary scale. Only about 25 copies of a phono-cylinder could be made by playing one into another machine. After a small number of duplicates were recorded from the original cylinder, the grooves degraded, and so artists had to perform, and perform, and perform again, sometimes hundreds or thousands of times, to supply consumer demand. That means many cylinders were unique from one another in that they were a record of the same song, but an entirely different performance.
The first major African-American recording star, George Washington Johnson had to perform “The Laughing Song” literally thousands of times in a studio during his recording career. Sometimes he would sing his hit song more than fifty times in a day, at twenty cents per rendition. The average price of a single cylinder in the mid-1890s was about fifty cents. By 1895, Johnson's two tunes "The Whistling Coon" and "The Laughing Song" were the best-selling recordings in the United States. The total sales of his wax cylinders between 1890 and 1895 have been estimated at 25,000 to 50,000, each one recorded individually by Johnson.
In 1892 Emile Berliner began commercial production of disc records, and "gramophones" or "talking-machines." His "gramophone record" was the first disc record to be offered to the public, and thus began the industry's very first format war. The phono-discs were five inches in diameter and recorded on one side only. Seven-inch discs followed in 1895. Berliner's early records had poor sound quality, but later Eldridge R. Johnson improved the sound fidelity to a point where it was as good as the cylinder. By 1901, ten-inch records were marketed by Johnson and Berliner's new merger, the Victor Talking Machine Company. Victor may sound familiar, and you're correct, it would eventually become RCA Records.
Another interesting note is that the record business faced near-extinction early on. The 1920s brought improved radio technology and radio sales, bringing many phonograph dealers to near financial ruin. After great efforts to improve audio fidelity, the big record companies succeeded in maintaining their business through the end of the decade, but then record sales plummeted during the Great Depression. Many companies merged, or went out of business.
Sound familiar?
One last interesting tidbit regarding the production of phono-discs as opposed to cylinders... A novelty variation on the standard format was the use of multiple concentric spirals with different recordings. That way, when the record was played multiple times, different recordings would play at random. That's one cool little marketing idea that I never had the pleasure of experiencing firsthand.
Perhaps in order to ponder on what might have been, we need to go back even further in musical history, and examine briefly, the very beginnings of the modern music industry. It might be said that Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was a pioneer of what we now call the music business.
Until the 18th century, the processes of formal composition and of the printing of music took place for the most part with the support of patronage from aristocracies and churches. In the mid-to-late 18th century, performers and composers such as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart began to seek commercial opportunities to market their music and performances to the general public.
From 1782 to 1785, seeking to expand beyond the confines of church and court, and find new, more commercial sources of revenue, he mounted concerts with himself as soloist, presenting three or four new piano concertos in each season. Since space in the theaters was scarce, he booked unconventional venues: a large room in the Trattnerhof (an apartment building), and the ballroom of the Mehlgrube (a restaurant). The concerts were very popular, Vanguard Records founder and musicologist, Maynard Solomon writes that during this period Mozart created "a harmonious connection between an eager composer-performer and a delighted audience, which was given the opportunity of witnessing the transformation and perfection of a major musical genre."
This direct connection with his fans, and the unconventional ways he found to market and perform his music, may qualify Mozart as the very first "indie." With substantial returns from his concerts and elsewhere, he and his wife Constanze adopted a rather plush lifestyle. Eventually, in 1787 Mozart "got signed" and obtained a steady post under aristocratic patronage. Emperor Joseph II appointed him as his "chamber composer." After Mozart's death, his wife Constanze continued marketing his music and image for financial gain. Her business skills proved impressive, as she obtained a pension from the Emperor, organized profitable memorial concerts, and embarked on a campaign to publish her husband's works. These efforts made Constanze financially secure, and perhaps even wealthy. She sent her sons to Prague to be educated by Franz Xaver Niemetschek, with whom she collaborated on the first full-length biography of Mozart.
Was the enterprise created by Constanze a precursor to the "record company?"
In the United States, as we entered the 19th Century, music publishers and songwriters dominated the popular music of the time. When a number of music publishers set up shop in the same district of Manhattan, it became known as Tin Pan Alley. Said to have been named that because of the noisiness in the area created by the thin, tinny tone quality of cheap upright pianos being played simultaneously in many music publisher's offices, Tin Pan Alley ruled the music business of the era. Eventually the nickname came to describe the whole U.S. music industry in general.
Interestingly enough, the main consumers targeted by Tin Pan Alley were not professional musicians! Their efforts were oriented towards producing songs that amateur singers or small town bands could perform from printed music. Quite the contrast to the highly professional status of today's music superstars. Although the beginnings of Tin Pan Alley can be pinpointed at around 1885, the end of their reign is less clear cut. Some say Tin Pan Alley wound down at the start of the Great Depression in the 1930s when the phonograph and radio supplanted sheet music as the driving force of American popular music. Others believe it continued into the 1950s when earlier styles of American popular music were upstaged by the rise of rock & roll.
During their heyday the music houses in lower Manhattan were hectic places, with a constant stream of songwriters, vaudeville and Broadway performers, musicians, and "song pluggers" coming and going. Aspiring songwriters came to demonstrate tunes they hoped to sell. Established producers of successful songs were hired as staff writers by the music houses. The most successful of them, like Harry Von Tilzer and Irving Berlin, went on to found their own publishing firms. "Song pluggers" were pianists and singers who made their living demonstrating songs to promote sales of sheet music. Most music stores had song pluggers on staff. Other pluggers were employed by the publishers to travel and familiarize the public with their new tunes. One such song plugger was a 15 year old George Gershwin. When vaudeville performers played New York City, they would visit various Tin Pan Alley firms to find new songs for their acts. Lesser known performers often paid for rights to use a new song, while famous stars were given free copies of new numbers or were paid to perform them, because the publishers knew it was valuable advertising.
Tin Pan Alley music houses formed associations, and attempted to lobby the government for legislative change that would benefit their businesses. One such association, The American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) which was founded in 1914, is still active and widely recognized today.
Did the business model created by the "music houses" of Tin Pan Alley steer the industry toward the creation of "Record Labels" as phono-cylinders started to become widely popular?
Looking at any of the "jumping off points" briefly described in this article, can you theorize an alternative universe, a divergent time-line in which a different business model took hold?
What might that industry be like?
Imagine There's No Labels
--------------------------------------
Imagine there's no Labels
It's easy if you try
No contracts to hold us
Our limit is the sky
Imagine all the artists
Living to create
You may say that I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the industry will be as one
- with thanks to John Lennon
Has anyone here or elsewhere ever written anything wherein they postulate what might have been if the Record Labels had never come into existence?
It's 1877, Edison announced the phonograph, and the accompanying phonograph cylinder, or "phono-cylinder." Over the next 60-70 years the phono-cylinder would give birth to the major record label industry, but what if another type of market had sprung up instead? What other possible business models might have taken root, and allowed musicians to record and sell their compositions and performances?
It's interesting to note, that in the earliest days of the market, mass-production was only possible on a rudimentary scale. Only about 25 copies of a phono-cylinder could be made by playing one into another machine. After a small number of duplicates were recorded from the original cylinder, the grooves degraded, and so artists had to perform, and perform, and perform again, sometimes hundreds or thousands of times, to supply consumer demand. That means many cylinders were unique from one another in that they were a record of the same song, but an entirely different performance.
The first major African-American recording star, George Washington Johnson had to perform “The Laughing Song” literally thousands of times in a studio during his recording career. Sometimes he would sing his hit song more than fifty times in a day, at twenty cents per rendition. The average price of a single cylinder in the mid-1890s was about fifty cents. By 1895, Johnson's two tunes "The Whistling Coon" and "The Laughing Song" were the best-selling recordings in the United States. The total sales of his wax cylinders between 1890 and 1895 have been estimated at 25,000 to 50,000, each one recorded individually by Johnson.
In 1892 Emile Berliner began commercial production of disc records, and "gramophones" or "talking-machines." His "gramophone record" was the first disc record to be offered to the public, and thus began the industry's very first format war. The phono-discs were five inches in diameter and recorded on one side only. Seven-inch discs followed in 1895. Berliner's early records had poor sound quality, but later Eldridge R. Johnson improved the sound fidelity to a point where it was as good as the cylinder. By 1901, ten-inch records were marketed by Johnson and Berliner's new merger, the Victor Talking Machine Company. Victor may sound familiar, and you're correct, it would eventually become RCA Records.
Another interesting note is that the record business faced near-extinction early on. The 1920s brought improved radio technology and radio sales, bringing many phonograph dealers to near financial ruin. After great efforts to improve audio fidelity, the big record companies succeeded in maintaining their business through the end of the decade, but then record sales plummeted during the Great Depression. Many companies merged, or went out of business.
Sound familiar?
One last interesting tidbit regarding the production of phono-discs as opposed to cylinders... A novelty variation on the standard format was the use of multiple concentric spirals with different recordings. That way, when the record was played multiple times, different recordings would play at random. That's one cool little marketing idea that I never had the pleasure of experiencing firsthand.
Perhaps in order to ponder on what might have been, we need to go back even further in musical history, and examine briefly, the very beginnings of the modern music industry. It might be said that Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was a pioneer of what we now call the music business.
Until the 18th century, the processes of formal composition and of the printing of music took place for the most part with the support of patronage from aristocracies and churches. In the mid-to-late 18th century, performers and composers such as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart began to seek commercial opportunities to market their music and performances to the general public.
From 1782 to 1785, seeking to expand beyond the confines of church and court, and find new, more commercial sources of revenue, he mounted concerts with himself as soloist, presenting three or four new piano concertos in each season. Since space in the theaters was scarce, he booked unconventional venues: a large room in the Trattnerhof (an apartment building), and the ballroom of the Mehlgrube (a restaurant). The concerts were very popular, Vanguard Records founder and musicologist, Maynard Solomon writes that during this period Mozart created "a harmonious connection between an eager composer-performer and a delighted audience, which was given the opportunity of witnessing the transformation and perfection of a major musical genre."
This direct connection with his fans, and the unconventional ways he found to market and perform his music, may qualify Mozart as the very first "indie." With substantial returns from his concerts and elsewhere, he and his wife Constanze adopted a rather plush lifestyle. Eventually, in 1787 Mozart "got signed" and obtained a steady post under aristocratic patronage. Emperor Joseph II appointed him as his "chamber composer." After Mozart's death, his wife Constanze continued marketing his music and image for financial gain. Her business skills proved impressive, as she obtained a pension from the Emperor, organized profitable memorial concerts, and embarked on a campaign to publish her husband's works. These efforts made Constanze financially secure, and perhaps even wealthy. She sent her sons to Prague to be educated by Franz Xaver Niemetschek, with whom she collaborated on the first full-length biography of Mozart.
Was the enterprise created by Constanze a precursor to the "record company?"
In the United States, as we entered the 19th Century, music publishers and songwriters dominated the popular music of the time. When a number of music publishers set up shop in the same district of Manhattan, it became known as Tin Pan Alley. Said to have been named that because of the noisiness in the area created by the thin, tinny tone quality of cheap upright pianos being played simultaneously in many music publisher's offices, Tin Pan Alley ruled the music business of the era. Eventually the nickname came to describe the whole U.S. music industry in general.
Interestingly enough, the main consumers targeted by Tin Pan Alley were not professional musicians! Their efforts were oriented towards producing songs that amateur singers or small town bands could perform from printed music. Quite the contrast to the highly professional status of today's music superstars. Although the beginnings of Tin Pan Alley can be pinpointed at around 1885, the end of their reign is less clear cut. Some say Tin Pan Alley wound down at the start of the Great Depression in the 1930s when the phonograph and radio supplanted sheet music as the driving force of American popular music. Others believe it continued into the 1950s when earlier styles of American popular music were upstaged by the rise of rock & roll.
During their heyday the music houses in lower Manhattan were hectic places, with a constant stream of songwriters, vaudeville and Broadway performers, musicians, and "song pluggers" coming and going. Aspiring songwriters came to demonstrate tunes they hoped to sell. Established producers of successful songs were hired as staff writers by the music houses. The most successful of them, like Harry Von Tilzer and Irving Berlin, went on to found their own publishing firms. "Song pluggers" were pianists and singers who made their living demonstrating songs to promote sales of sheet music. Most music stores had song pluggers on staff. Other pluggers were employed by the publishers to travel and familiarize the public with their new tunes. One such song plugger was a 15 year old George Gershwin. When vaudeville performers played New York City, they would visit various Tin Pan Alley firms to find new songs for their acts. Lesser known performers often paid for rights to use a new song, while famous stars were given free copies of new numbers or were paid to perform them, because the publishers knew it was valuable advertising.
Tin Pan Alley music houses formed associations, and attempted to lobby the government for legislative change that would benefit their businesses. One such association, The American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) which was founded in 1914, is still active and widely recognized today.
Did the business model created by the "music houses" of Tin Pan Alley steer the industry toward the creation of "Record Labels" as phono-cylinders started to become widely popular?
Looking at any of the "jumping off points" briefly described in this article, can you theorize an alternative universe, a divergent time-line in which a different business model took hold?
What might that industry be like?
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Why Mono Is Better
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Microtonal Guitars
Here's a company that makes and customizes guitars with virtually any number of frets per octave, which means a lot more or fewer notes than normal, and up to 9 or 10 strings. Check it out here and click on the "Photo Gallery" and "Electric Guitar" links for more pics. I'd like to hear the music people are making on these wild things.
Wednesday, June 02, 2010
Another Dancing Bird
This bird dances even better than the other, and the song's a lot better:
Tuesday, June 01, 2010
The Neuroscience of Music
Here's an interview with Aniruddh D. Patel who gives some insight into how the study of music and the mind has become a legitimate science. He talks of Snowball the dancing bird and suggests maybe dolphins and chimps can boogie, too.
Video below of Snowball:
Video below of Snowball:
Archives
- June 2006
- August 2006
- September 2006
- October 2006
- November 2006
- December 2006
- January 2007
- February 2007
- April 2007
- May 2007
- June 2007
- July 2007
- August 2007
- September 2007
- October 2007
- November 2007
- December 2007
- January 2008
- February 2008
- March 2008
- April 2008
- May 2008
- June 2008
- July 2008
- September 2008
- October 2008
- November 2008
- December 2008
- January 2009
- February 2009
- March 2009
- April 2009
- May 2009
- June 2009
- July 2009
- August 2009
- September 2009
- October 2009
- April 2010
- May 2010
- June 2010
- July 2010
- October 2010
- January 2011
- May 2011
- June 2011
- July 2011
- September 2011
- October 2011
- January 2012
