i am an unrequited astronomer, pretend patient, gentle adventurer, pedal enthusiast, recovering calligrapher, occasional thespian and unfinished poet living in portland, oregon. contacting me via email is usually a good idea.
2:03 AM:
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the nytimes has a list of the most under and overrated ideas of 2003. my favorite underrated idea, i think, is this one (and not just because it's about itunes!):
Curatorial Culture
In all the hype over Apple Computer's online music store, one fascinating new feature included in the latest version was strangely overlooked: the celebrity playlist. The digital age version of the venerable mix tape, playlists have been a central selling point of the MP3 music revolution, since creating a brand-new mix of your favorite tunes is now as easy as dragging files into a folder on your desktop. Apple's new Celebrity Playlist area in its store features collections of music assembled — with liner notes — by famous musicians: Sting, Ben Folds, Wynton Marsalis and many others.
What's potentially revolutionary here is the ability to buy a compilation of music handpicked by another individual, as opposed to the official compilations released by record labels. No doubt Apple will soon offer a feature that enables ordinary music fans to create public playlists engineered around every imaginable theme (the post-breakup collection, the happy Nick Drake songs, the underappreciated recordings of Miles Davis) and then sell those compilations via the online store. Historically, the world of commercial music has been divided between musicians and listeners, but there's long been a mostly unrewarded group in the middle: people with great taste in music — the ones who made that brilliant mix for you in college that you're still listening to. They're curators not creators, brilliant at assembling new combinations of songs rather than generating them from scratch.
Steven Johnson, author of the forthcoming "Mind Wide Open: Your Brain and the Neuroscience of Everyday Life."
i noticed this when it first came out but didn't comment on it, though if i had, it might have been similar to the above. process/documentation & curation are some of my favorite things in art.
speaking of itunes, i can't find the lyrics to david byrne's "great western road," which i've developed a fondness for. when do you think you'll be able to search for the lyrics of a song in itunes? (*sighs* not that itunes carries that song, either. they've carried hardly anything i've wanted. and i love them anyway.)
the only ones i've been able to gather so far:
"The man sticks his fingers inside of his mouth / The words are stuck in there, he fishes them out / Whispers and mumbles, statements and verse / Curses and love songs for nobody else / Man takes his pencil and puts down his thoughts"
...
"How they dance -- in a trance / where the river bends / here we go -- don't cha know / that it never ends / some who ride, some who slide / everyone you know / travels on -- that great western road."
and speaking of music, sven came over and alphabetized the big cd mess in front of the bookshelves. yee! it was like sven's xmas gift to michael. :)