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chris

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Posts posted by chris

  1. I've not seen any Laufey Tik Tok videos...or really any Tik Tok videos at all. Just listened to her on Spotify or Tidal.

    On 9/11/2023 at 1:55 PM, JSngry said:

    And whatever else it is, it's not jazz, unless it is, in which case, I don't need any jazz in my life.

    I don't really see how some of her tracks aren't jazz, but I lost interest in the classifications and gatekeeping battles a long time ago since they don't really matter. My initial post wasn't about classification, just the music, and I'm pretty sure I know how you feel about it :)

  2. 12 hours ago, sgcim said:

    She uses all maj7, maj9. min7th and min9 chords and sus chords, she has an actual musical melody going on, something very rare these days. The music business in the US only cares about the kids. and the kids will say "OLD SCHOOL" and turn it off after five seconds. She does put the guy down. so maybe the Swiftian element will appeal to that crowd. Maybe Iceland's different. The music in their movies is listenable.

    It's Tik-Tok!

    Interestingly, the forum where I learned about her is a Discord group devoted---deeply devoted---to pop music of all sorts, so perhaps she is really making some headway. I'm all for it, especially if it brings more listeners to related jazz music and, ultimately, to the dark side 😆

  3. I recently learned of the 1975 PBS tribute concert for John Hammond (some of you were there, I gather) and, after watching a YouTube clip of Goodman and Benson, saw a comment that Benny asked George to play a couple of gigs with him, which he did, but when asked to be a permanent band member,  Benson refused and Goodman threatened him in “You’ll never work in this town again” style.

    Curious if there’s truth to this and where it might have been written about?

    Also, was this concert released anywhere? I can only find a few clips and references to it existing in some library archives.

  4. Is there a resource (podcast, video series, streaming, DVD, whatever!) that focuses on teaching about individual songs based one or more performances? I'm thinking something that delves into the composition, history, aspects of the performance to look for, ideally even digging into individual parts of the performance, references to other sings, important riffs, all of it.

    If you are familiar with Strong Songs, Song Exploder, or Tape Notes, I'm hoping for something along those lines, but given the type of music particularly akin to Strong Songs. I have a limited knowledge of music theory, nor am I a musician, so things that focus on learning songs are less interesting.

  5. Hmm. I downloaded the Yusef/Von album a while back on iTunes (I believe). I don't know if its still there.

    Sadly, it doesn't look like it is! But the album with Ricky Ford is, so I might as well spring for that one :)

  6. The situation on the mac is difficult (I vastly prefer it and don't know why I switched, but this is a weak area for the platform). There doesn't seem to be a decent Access-like (in terms of being a consumer product) option in general (this includes reviewing most of the suggestions on a Stack Exchange thread I started..Filemaker is a pseudo-SQL db, other options are very "proprietary" in their approach).

    That has left me with, for building my own, a bunch of MySQL based tools...which is fine, but I'm OK with leaving my developer/programming days behind in exchange for a few missing features. I just don't have it in me to build my own system right now (and if I did that, I'd need to do one for my fountain pen collecting...and then one that indexed and had photos for my origami book collection, etc).

    Ultimately, building something myself would certainly meet my needs for customization, but since I'm just one man I am evaluating products that already exist :) Beyond Category is interesting and I may go that way. Music Collector remains a decent product.

    Nothing is going to take the pain away from the cataloging, so who knows...maybe I'll just continue to let perfection remain the mortal enemy of the good!

    PS "Cataloging" is a common American-Englishism. I can't win...when I use British English terms (whether they really are or whether they just seem to most to be), I get accused of being pompous. So it goes. I highly recommend David Crystal's astounding book _The Stories of English_ if you think about such things at all, though I warn you that you'll likely come out of the experience a changed person when it comes to how you think about such linguistic divergence and evolution, including in the form of constructions "those damn kids and their texts and tweets" use. I know I did!

  7. While I own a number of discs featuring Yusef Lateef, it was only after his passing that I read much about him. Is his idea of "Autophysiopsychic" music one that has gained traction among musicians? It's the first time I've heard of it.

     

    Based on my reading about it at <http://www.yuseflateef.com/read-yusef-lateefs-essays>, I'm not sure I completely understand it (for instance, the notion that saying a musician was really "cooking" being a statement that is "at best ... a way of saying that the musician and his music be given no aesthetic or intellectual admiration" doesn't work for me, generally), but it does make me wonder if Lateef if ever read anything about the psychological concept of "flow states," which might have alleviated some of the skepticism of descriptors like "cooking."

     

    Anyway, I was just curious about this idea!

  8. I am wondering if any of you have recommendations for good software for cataloging my CD (and a few LPs) collection on a Mac? I am not a historian looking to capture and create discographies. My primary reason for the catalog, beyond just knowing what I have and browsing (which iTunes and other music playing software with library capabilities does fine), is to be able to find performers across discs/tracks.

    I once used Music Collector from collectorz.com -- it worked OK and I might go back to it -- but I want to weigh my options first!

  9. I'm a fan of both the old Ben Folds Five (which was a trio, as noted) and Ben Folds solo work. His last solo disc (Songs for Silverman) wasn't as strong as his first... my favorite of Ben Folds Five has to be Whatever and Ever Amen...

    I describe him as piano-pop-rock in the style of Elton John meets the Barenaked Ladies :)

  10. Again, as in another thread, the problem is conceiving of intellectual property as exactly the same as physical property. Copying a CD is not just a physical replication of an object, but an act that effects the valuation of a piece of intellectual property. There's no reason that we HAVE to treat the two kinds of property as if they are the same, even if the physical property metaphor is the nearest to hand when we talk about it...

    The problem is that in the digital age, the two rights are so obviously different and so unbound from one another that what has always been an issue obscured by other factors is now an obvious issue on its face.

    We've ALWAYS been, essentially, renting intellectual property when we "purchase" it-- it just hasn't been so obvious...

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