Why Music Sounds Worse
NPR on why music sounds worse. Short answer: compression. Horrible. (Via @emmetmatheson.)
NPR on why music sounds worse. Short answer: compression. Horrible. (Via @emmetmatheson.)
In case you’re old and can’t stay up late–Jawbox performing Savory on Jimmy Fallon. Not my favourite song but it’s nice to see them back briefly.
All in all, a great show. Yow was not as drunk as I’ve seen him & he got dropped which cut the set a little short. Denison was, as always, impeccable. Watching and listening to Mac McNeilly was eye-wateringly great. That dude is nuts. Even the lady enjoyed herself. Good company, good sound and good times all around. Not the best video but here’s a taste.
Sufjan Stevens: “I’m starting to get sick of my conceptual ideas. I’m tired of these grand, epic endeavours and wanting to just make music for the joy of making music and having it be immediate and nothing to do with the industry itself, which, y’know is suffering right now of course.” Minus all the academics, this reads: “There is no possible way that I could write 48 more albums about States. It was kind of a stupid idea to begin with. You know how it is, you shoot your mouth off once about this “50 States” thing, the press rolls with it, I encourage it and then realize it’s well beyond what I could ever do. It was a little “art school” to begin with so I’m making up an excuse so I can just move on. It’s about the industry. Yep, the industry. Let’s go with that.”
Dr. Jason Rentfrow’s study on musical taste and personality. Interesting.
Devo will be performing Are We Not Men? We Are Devo! and Freedom Of Choice in their entirety over two nights at selected venues throughout North America in November. I’ll be in Toronto a little over a week before to see The Jesus Lizard so I’m a little pissed that I’m going to have to miss this.
John Gruber links to an article about ASCAP and BMI looking for more money from iTunes and other online retailers. As someone who has some experience dealing with music publishers all I can say is “you are already getting paid.” Nothing about this is an issue of “public performance” payments. That argument is total bunk. iTunes ain’t radio and of the radio that’s on there, the stations are already paying the royalties. For television and film, I’m assuming that the payments are made in the same schedule as the DVD release. Public Performance is exactly what it sounds like. If I arrange to show an episode of 30 Rock on the wall of a building in town, I would have to pay the royalty for that. If I own a club and I play music all night, that’s public performance and I have to pay a certain amount to BMI, ASCAP or SOCAN for that. I’m not trying to argue musicians out of any money but at this point BMI and ASCAP are just grasping at straws. And kind of lying.
They say we’re lazy man, drinkin’ our white wine. We could go right insane. Do you wanna dance? Stroke it, Noel.
"Fixie.js is an open source tool that automatically adds filler content to HTML documents." Neat.
"Gridset is a tool for making grids. It lets you create whatever type of grid you want: columnar, asymmetrical, ratio, compound, fixed, fluid, responsive and more. It serves multiple grids to your site based on breakpoints for different devices. Using it is as simple as embedding a link."
Dan Lyons goes after some folks. Brutal but somewhat truthful I'd guess.
An oldie about some of the hazards of using @import to load stylesheets.
Current thought on the bakery name: Tina Turnovers.
About 10 minutes AgoI'll be opening a bakery beside @jasondfedorchuk's Thunderdome that I'll advertise as being located 'just beyond Thunderdome'.
About 10 minutes Ago@edenthecat Icon-fonts and screenreaders have kept me away from using them. This seems interesting though: http://t.co/TEHCviXJ
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