« Posts tagged Entertainment

Melodic GPS

So, I am sitting here, pondering what sort of cacophonic concoction I should throw at you all this week, and I get to thinking.  I keep offering what to listen to, but I never really go into where to listen.   Knowing where to go to hear music is just as important as knowing what to listen to, don’t you think?  After all, how would you know what to listen to otherwise?

Not all of us have the well-cultured friend or two that happens to have exactly the type of music that you want to hear at the time.  I’m lucky enough to have people in my life, both in my past and in the present, that have done just that.  It was Ron Yorgason that introduced me to They Might Be Giants and other alternative music.  It also was Ron that started me down the path of the comedic genius that is Monty Python and the sideshow wonders that is novelty music, made popular by the Dr. Demento radio show and others.  It was Susan Kulpanowski that tuned me in to the celtic/new age scene when she played The Lady of Shalott by Loreena McKennitt over a long-distance phone call from Michigan to my dorm room in Minnesota.  I remember being so caught up in the song that I promptly went out and bought all the Loreena McKennitt cds I could get…regardless of the fact I did not even own a CD player at the time.  Present day influences include Shawn Schliepp, a virtual walking encyclopedia of all things musical.  It was Shawn that inspired last week’s spotlight on King Missile, so you can thank him for that.   Of course, my fellow bkI comrades-in-arms Pat and Ben have their impact on my musical tastes, as well.  I am grateful to all of these people and more, for showing me that there is more to life that 80′s New Wave.

I would be remiss in my duties as bkI’s friendly neighborhood musical aficionado if I didn’t provide the same consideration and give you all some guidance to some good music sources.  Since calling each reader and playing a song over the phone isn’t the most effective way to go, instead I have some web sources and general knowledge stuff to pass on.   These are the places that are usually the inspiration behind the music articles, so feel free to place blame accordingly.

»Read More

What has it got in its pocketses?

I return! I’m sure you all enjoyed your winter break. I know I enjoyed mine.

I got some great things for Solstice, and that got me to thinking about where our entertainment comes from, and how that’s changed. The changes have a large effect on our culture.

Not that long ago, things could be hard to find. I remember a story about a young Bob Dylan traveling 30 miles to someone’s house (a ‘friend of a friend’) to hear a Robert Johnson album. The music was hard to find.

Now, if you want to hear the newest, hottest, local band someone from a far away place mentions, you hit their web page. Even if they don’t have EP’s for sale on their website, I’ve never contacted one by email with an offer of 10 bucks and some shipping cash and had them deny my request for a mail order.

Scarcity is a crazy thing, and one that doesn’t exist as much in the digital realm as it does in the real world. You can always make more bits. With a printing press and a load of ink, I could possibly get the words I am writing now to a few hundred people, and it would be a lot of work. With the internet, they can be served up to millions of people (as long as they don’t all arrive at the exact same moment. Moving bits from place to place in the internet is the only real scarcity it has to deal with.) with very little relative work.

As much entertainment is no longer done in person, almost anything you want can be found. When I tell someone about the new ifihadahifi EP, they can go to their website and find out how to get it. The same applies to movies, books, stand up comedy…the list is incredible.

Therefore, cultural movements are no longer strictly geographic. You can’t be interested in something you’ve never heard of, of course, but now you can find anything you’ve heard of at the touch of a few buttons. I think that’s a pretty damned cool thing. I believe it may finally allow talent, and not marketing, to play a larger role in what new media we devour.

So, who should we be paying attention to?

WP SlimStat