Archive for the 'music' category

Oct 03 2008

The Mother of the MP3

Published by Carsten Knoch under music, technology

The New York Times, in its fascinating blog “Measure for Measure,” currently has a great piece by Suzanne Vega about how her song, “Tom’s Diner,” played a key role in the development of the MP3. The engineers at Fraunhofer Institut in Germany used it to iteratively eradicate noise artifacts from the MP3 compression algorithm.

One day in 2000, I dropped my daughter, Ruby, off at nursery school and was approached by one of the fathers I didn’t know very well. Imagine my surprise when he said, “Congratulations on being the mother of MP3!” he said.

Full story at New York Times.

No responses yet

Sep 17 2008

Today’s Desert Island Disc: Ben Harper & The Innocent Criminals, Lifeline


Lifeline

Ben Harper & the Innocent Criminals. Virgin Records Us 2007, Audio CD, $8.29

Ben Harper plays a stylish blend of rock, reggae and old-style r’n'b, like a subtler, less flashy version of Lenny Kravitz. These are well-crafted, well-rehearsed songs, recorded in just seven days in a studio in Paris, directly to 16-track without using any digital tools. The CD sounds open, airy and spacious. It’s sort of like Ben Harper’s ‘unplugged’ album. I’ve been a Ben Harper follower for a long time; in fact, it’s a little hard for me to pick just one Ben Harper record for the desert island batch. So I’ll pick this one because I’m enjoying it right now. There’s a certain honesty in Ben Harper’s music - a lack of irony, a deep understanding of, and reflection on, the history of popular music. I think this is becoming a bit of a theme for me: high quality music, a bit ‘retro,’ that avoids irony… anyway, this is a great record that you should listen to if you can.

No responses yet

Sep 16 2008

Random playlist fun

Published by Carsten Knoch under music

I don’t know why I hadn’t discovered this before. ‘Discovered’ may not be a particularly good word, actually. Of course, I knew about it. I just chose not to use it until now.

I’m talking about my MP3 player’s ‘random all’ function. It takes everything I have on it and shuffles it into a random playlist. Of course, you’d imagine that a music guy like me would use this all the time. But I don’t. I think there were two key factors that made me not use ‘random all’ previously:

  1. I like albums and I think of them as the logical unity of tracks, chosen by the artist to flow in a particular way. Call me old school.
  2. I don’t like jarring/weird segues in my music, and - before recently - it hadn’t occurred to me to ‘curate’ the underlying selection of albums in any way. Now that I’ve done that, ‘random all’ is interesting and smooth.

So far, I have found my player to be a good digital DJ. This goes to illustrate that it doesn’t really matter that it doesn’t know what it’s doing… its ‘programming’ is no worse than the average satellite radio station’s; in fact, I think it’s slightly better. But maybe I just think that because it’s all my own music that’s being ’spun.’

Here’s a running list of a sequence today:

  • The Detroit Cobras - My Baby Loves The Secret Agent (From: Baby)
  • Alejandro Escovedo - Looking for Love (From: The Boxing Mirror)
  • Susheela Raman - Mahima (From: Salt Rain)
  • Diana Krall - Besame Mucho (From: The Look of Love)
  • Alison Krauss & Union Station - Deeper Than Crying (From: So Long So Wrong)
  • Regina Spektor - 20 Years of Snow (From: Begin To Hope)
  • Vashti Bunyan - Iris’s Song For Us (Version Two) (From: Just Another Diamond)
  • Bill Frisell - Nature’s Symphony (From: Gone, Just Like a Train)
  • Steve Earle - Hillbilly Highway (From: Guitar Town)
  • Nickel Creek - Helena (From: Why Should The Fire Die?)
  • Ali Farka Touré - Cousins (From: Niafunké)
  • Louis Armstrong - Muggles (From: Hot Fives & Hot Sevens)
  • Steve Wonder - Ribbon in the Sky (From: Steve Wonder’s Original Musiquarium)
  • Rhonda Vincent - Where No Cabins Fall (From: Back Home Again)

Yes, I have wide-ranging tastes. I listen to all sorts of music. You’ll hate some of it, probably. But I can also passionately talk about why I like each genre, each album, each track. I think that good taste in music has something to do with being able to identify what’s great about any style and committing to it even when (maybe: especially when) others don’t understand. I’m passionate about being eclectic. That either makes me some sort of musical renaissance man, or just plain annoying.

No responses yet

Sep 16 2008

Currently reading

Published by Carsten Knoch under books, music


Lady Sings the Blues the 50th Anniversary Edition (Harlem Moon Classics)

David Ritz (Foreword). Harlem Moon 2006, Paperback, 256 pages, $9.46

No responses yet

Sep 14 2008

Today’s Desert Island Disc: De-Phazz, Daily Lama


Daily Lama

De-Phazz. Universal Int’l 2002, Audio CD, $9.80

De-Phazz is a revolving cast of singers and performers around German jazz/electronica producer Pit Baumgartner. For more than 10 years, De-Phazz has released an interesting and unique blend of jazz, German cabaret music, electronica, hip hop, reggae/dancehall and r’n'b. Baumgartner changes his lineup between albums, and there are very few singers who stay for more than a record or two. The music is sung mostly in English, but there are songs in German and French, too. Everything has a delightfully old-school, continental European touch: a 40s-style cabaret tune here, a 50s Brazilian-inflected German Schlager there. But there’s also some seriously funky, and not-German-at-all soul here: a track like ‘True North’ shows off Baumgartner’s production chops - chops that could grace any contemporary ‘big’ r’n'b artist’s album. The path he chooses, though, is quirkier than that. And it’s a very likable quirkiness, one I find myself returning to time and again. The sound is cultured and aware of the world’s musics in a way that British or American electronica isn’t. And that makes this first-grade pop music that doesn’t become dated.

No responses yet

Sep 13 2008

Today’s Desert Island Disc: Chip Taylor & Carrie Rodriguez, The Trouble With Humans


The Trouble With Humans

Chip Taylor. Megaforce 2006, Audio CD, $10.73

Staying with the theme of how country music could be, here’s a favourite record by Chip Taylor and Carrie Rodriguez. Taylor is a singer-songwriter who emerged as a writer of hit songs in the 60s (’Angel of the Morning’ and ‘Wild Thing,’ for example). Although he was born and grew up in New York, he had a strong predilection for country music from an early age, and that’s where he has now returned. Taylor met Carrie Rodriguez, an Oberlin and Berklee College of Music trained singer/songwriter/fiddler, during an in-store performance she gave at the South by Southwest Music Festival in 2001. The two now perform as a duo. Four albums and an EP into their journey together, their music is a low-key, intelligent kind of country/folk - not entirely dissimilar to, say, the Texas singer/songwriter Townes van Zandt. Anchored by Taylor’s strong rhythm guitar and harmonica and Rodriguez’ fiddle, the songs feature insightful lyrics and a kind of “old time country” feel. They also couldn’t be further removed from the Carrie Underwoods and Jessica Simpsons that seem to pass for country music today. Taylor and Rodriguez have perfectly matching voices - hers a strong cowgirl soprano with a Texas drawl, his a refined baritone with occasional carelessly slurred syllables and frequent moments where he speaks more than he sings. The lyrics are precise and emotionally spot-on throughout - this is material that’s carefully thought out, written to be performed by these two performers, meant to showcase their unique abilities. The Trouble With Humans is a beautiful record about grown-up relationships whose words often manage to encapsulate a core truth in the simplest way possible, yet in a way that we’ve never heard before. ‘Curves and Things’ and the title track should be prescribed material in English class, they’re so good.

No responses yet

Sep 12 2008

Today’s Desert Island Disc: Emmylou Harris, Wrecking Ball


Wrecking Ball

Emmylou Harris. Asylum Records 1995, Audio CD, $7.50

A towering achievement and also an immensely likeable record. Emmylou Harris, after spending the first half of the 90s playing and recording solid if traditionally-oriented country albums, in 1995 teams up with Daniel Lanois and engineer Malcolm Burn to make a surprisingly experimental, electronica-influenced, slow-burning gem of a modern country record that sounds nothing - absolutely nothing - like country music sounds in 1995 (or since, for that matter). She forges a completely unique path here, presenting material in a way that boldly proposes an alternate universe: one where country music does not sound like 80s mainstream rock (or bluegrass nostalgia). Instead of commercial sheen, the music here has grit, tape hiss, low and odd keyboard pads, loops and samples… and yet, there’s Emmylou Harris’ voice, invoking a true country idiom with every line she sings. There’s much pain and sadness on this record, all of it worth hearing any number of times. A true artist statement, even though she only co-wrote one of the songs (”Waltz Across Texas Tonight,” with Rodney Crowell), Wrecking Ball is a must-have, even if you don’t like country as a rule. (As someone who was always a performer and never a writer, this album also marks the beginning of Emmylou Harris’ journey into songwriting, culminating in later records that have a similar sound but songs mostly penned by her, which are also worth listening to.)

No responses yet

Sep 08 2008

Today’s Desert Island Disc: Mozart, Piano Concertos Nos. 18 & 20 (Richard Goode)


Mozart

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Composer). Nonesuch 1996, Audio CD, $10.94

This is a beautiful performance of Mozart’s 20th and 18th piano concertos, one of those records that changed my perception of how Mozart concertos could be played. I had grown up listening to Barenboim and Gulda playing these works (my mom’s record collection), and this is entirely in a different league. Well, ‘different league’ makes it sounds as if it somehow invalidates the other, older versions. That’s not really it. But the playing and recording quality are delightfully superior in this modern version. Goode, an American pianist, plays these concertos energetically, and with a very Viennese ‘lightness’ that seems wholly appropriate to the material. The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, the famous ‘conductor-less’ group from New York, seems an ideal pairing for this material. I love their complete Mozart Wind Concertos, and this seems to confirm their knack for Mozart concertos. I believe this disc could get anyone excited about Mozart’s piano works. Maybe that’s a bit of wishful thinking, but do give it a try :)

One response so far

Sep 06 2008

Today’s Desert Island Disc: Billie Holiday, The Lady Sings


The Lady Sings

Billie Holiday. Proper Box UK 2001, Audio CD, $14.98

Billie Holiday changed how we hear women sing. In recorded music, she essentially redefined vocal pop music by introducing a more personal and immediate singing style. She also changed how we think about phrasing, basing hers on instrumental music rather than the rhythms and cadences of pronunciation. But quite apart from all that, Billie Holiday is just an absolute joy to listen to - one of those timeless artists whose music can be enjoyed in any situation, surroundings and at any time of day. Everybody should have some Billie Holiday in their CD collection. Hers is an instantly recognizable and likable sound, so deeply embedded in the fabric of popular music that pop itself is no longer imaginable without Billie Holiday. All subsequent jazz singers, and most subsequent blues and r&b vocalists, owe her a tremendous debt of gratitude. This four-disc box set is dirt cheap and contains all the seminal early records from the 1930s and 40s - the decades when she was at the peak of her vocal power and invention. Everything has been restored impeccably from the best copies available. (Subsequent recordings sound better because recording technology had improved considerably, but Billie’s voice began to reflect her drug and alcohol consumption, and her performances were no longer as elastic or accomplished.)

No responses yet

Sep 05 2008

Today’s Desert Island Disc: Bryan Ferry, The Bride Stripped Bare


The Bride Stripped Bare

Bryan Ferry. Virgin Records Us 2000, Audio CD, $7.50

Bryan Ferry is a classic crooner in the same sense that Frank Sinatra was - he can sing anything and imbue it with his own style, interpreting it meaningfully and casting it in a new light. Starting in the 70s, Ferry established a long tradition of occasionally releasing solo albums that featured cover versions. The Bride Stripped Bare is, in my opinion, the best example of this: filled with ‘The Same Old Blues,’ ‘Carrickfergus’ and ‘Take Me to the River,’ it can’t fail. The arrangements are tasteful and accomplished, and Ferry’s own compositions (almost) keep up with the covers. His version of ‘That’s How Strong My Love Is’ has to be heard to be believed - it’s completely over the top to the point of being camp, and emotionally touching and sincere at the same time… quite an accomplishment. Most people would think of this as a ‘minor’ record at best, a footnote made by someone who was famous for something else; I think it deserves to be loved for being fearless and really showcasing Bryan Ferry’s unique and sensuous voice.

No responses yet

« Prev - Next »