If Music Be...
Sep. 15th, 2014 02:21 pmHow can music exist in a cloud? No, it's far too mystical for me. Give me something I can hold.
I was reading a piece by Douglas Coupland the other day. He says that those of us who grew up before there was an internet have our brains configured one way and those who grew up in the internet age have theirs configured in another. That's just the way it is. Us oldsters are capable of re-programming ourselves but we can't forget how things were. As Coupland puts it, we will always miss our pre-internet brains.
So, no, I don't have music on my computer. I have music boxed in jewel cases- on a shelf.
I was listening to a disc of Vivaldi's Four Seasons while I made lunch. There's a tune in there that was used by the BBC in the set of plays about Casanova that Denis Potter wrote for them in the early 70s. I can't hear it without seeing Frank Finlay chasing girls in pannier skirts. It goes dum-dee-dum dum, dum dee dum dum.
I wrote "chasing", but what I really meant was "bonking".
I was reading a piece by Douglas Coupland the other day. He says that those of us who grew up before there was an internet have our brains configured one way and those who grew up in the internet age have theirs configured in another. That's just the way it is. Us oldsters are capable of re-programming ourselves but we can't forget how things were. As Coupland puts it, we will always miss our pre-internet brains.
So, no, I don't have music on my computer. I have music boxed in jewel cases- on a shelf.
I was listening to a disc of Vivaldi's Four Seasons while I made lunch. There's a tune in there that was used by the BBC in the set of plays about Casanova that Denis Potter wrote for them in the early 70s. I can't hear it without seeing Frank Finlay chasing girls in pannier skirts. It goes dum-dee-dum dum, dum dee dum dum.
I wrote "chasing", but what I really meant was "bonking".
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Date: 2014-09-15 02:30 pm (UTC)People who didn't grow up learning this method missed it. It simply doesn't exist for them.
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Date: 2014-09-15 03:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-09-15 04:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-09-15 04:38 pm (UTC)I'm six years older than you. Possibly this makes a difference. Also I've always been slow to adopt new technologies.
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Date: 2014-09-15 05:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-09-15 06:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-09-15 07:20 pm (UTC)I didn't understand it then either.
It's magic, isn't it?
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Date: 2014-09-15 08:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-09-15 11:19 pm (UTC)Me too, even though they sit there unused, mostly for my peace of mind. I enjoy the digital record collection on my computer/phone/music player.
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Date: 2014-09-16 08:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-09-16 11:28 pm (UTC)The benefits, of course, are significant - digital comics are cheaper, and don't involve growing trees just to be felled, processed, and shipped around the planet. Even the few CDs I have are only read once, to extract their data, thereafter held on the local network, and probably the iPad and Hazel.
The gains are noticeable enough with music, but for an extreme example, consider Grzimek's Superlative Animal Life Encyclopedia: in print, some 17 hefty volumes. Digitally, under 1GB, out of the iPad's 128GB. It's fairly wonderful. ^_^
Appropriately enough, I'm composing this to Studio Killers' recent live set at a Finnish festival, made available by them purely as a Kickstarter backer download, though they will be sending out signed DVDs. A virtual band makes it into RL - much as I intend to bring my SL self into RL. ^_^
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Date: 2014-09-17 09:10 am (UTC)