Showing posts with label Weather Report. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weather Report. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

The Fireworks are Hailin' over Little Eden Tonight

It's time for our next Surface to Air Full Circle music challenge.

You know the drill. (Connection between our game and the WDET-FM Music Head fundraiser is in our first challenge.) Starting with a particular song, chart a path along associated metadata to create a connected playlist; but at some point, you have to reverse course and return along a different metadata path to arrive full circle back at the starting song, in "about an hour" of running time. Bonus points if you only use songs from your personal library.

[Image: Detroit-Windsor fireworks.]

That bonus may get harder to achieve over time, if the trend continues away from music ownership and personal libraries to music access and personal playlists via streaming services. What is your relationship with music?

To celebrate Independence Day in the USA, our starting/ending song is Bruce Springsteen's "Fourth of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)."

Full-size table here. Annotated table with metadata associations here.

The list clocks in at one hour, seven seconds. Pretty good, I think — close enough to exactly an hour to probably be within the margin of error on the reported running time of the tracks.

Happy 4th of July!

             Vinyl-to-Digital Restoration #37             

Artist: Weather Report
Title: Heavy Weather
Genre: Jazz
Year: 1977



Heavy Weather was the first full album for Weather Report featuring bassist Jaco Pastorius. It registered significant sales upon initial release, and monster numbers for a jazz album. It even produced a hit single "Birdland,"now considered a landmark in the jazz-rock, or fusion, movement of the 1970s. I saw Weather Report on the Heavy Weather tour at the Royal Oak Theater in suburban Detroit. Even though concert start was delayed more than three hours due to a storm-induced power failure, the show went on.


© 2012 Thomas G. Dennehy. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

We Need to Talk About Our Relationship (With Music)

How is your relationship with music these days?

London Telegraph journalist Lucy Jones fears we are losing our respect for music. "Our listening is often quicker, shallower, and of lesser quality, through tiny computer speakers and low bit-rate streams and downloads. It is in danger of degrading and trivialising what we’re hearing."

[Image: 8,730,221 Suns from Flickr (Partial)]

But is sound quality really the issue? Generations have grown up discovering new music through a low bit-rate source — radio — without detriment. Eliminating computer speakers and earbuds from consideration, the majority of home listeners unfortunately are still listening to music using a variety of mediocre, mismatched, incorrecly installed and improperly operated audio gear. Yet they somehow find enjoyment.

I believe we are losing respect for music, as a side effect of losing respect for knowledge in general. In the words of self-described futurist Gerd Leonhold, "Access [to music] is replacing ownership, like it or not. Participate or become insignificant." When mere access replaces ownership, it also replaces understanding and appreciation.

Culture is predicated on shared knowledge and experience. Social networking is predicated on sharing links, passing one's access to information to others without really transferring knowledge or understanding. More "media outlets" exist to re-blog and re-tweet the news without further comment than to report it originally. Status on discussion boards is conveyed based on a person's number of posts, not the validity of their arguments. Klout scores equate influence with volume.  Social networking is our new shared experience base; books have been supplanted by bookmarks.

What is the solution? Reaffirm your relationship with music. Become an active filter again. Don't just share or like something — tell us why. The above image is taken from an extraordinary work. Starting in 2007, artist Penelope Umbrico has systematically searched flickr for photos tagged with the keyword "sunset," processed them and added them to an evolving collage. The title reflects the current count (over eight million). The least we can do is actively curate our dematerialized music libraries with a fraction of that source material.

But, if you must break up with music, upload a farewell playlist of kiss-off songs to Spotify. I've given you access.

            Vinyl-to-Digital Restoration #28           

Artist: Jaco Pastorius
Title: Word of Mouth
Genre: Jazz
Year: 1981




Recorded in 1981 at the height of the bassist Jaco Pastorius' career, while still with Weather Report and six years before his untimely death, Word of Mouth showcases his compositional skills, as well as a starstudded big band including Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Michael Brecker, Peter Erskine, and Jack DeJohnette. Muscial networking at its finest.

© 2012 Thomas G. Dennehy. All rights reserved.