Thursday 28th February 2002
So much for all my digital music ramblings. Here is an article that puts it much more eloquently than I could, but expresses pretty much the same sentiment:
The price would have to be reasonable. The mp3 format is a notoriously pirated format, but most people aren't going to go through the trouble of locating, downloading, and organizing pirated tracks if they could get them all in one place, legally, for a small fee. A band selling unencrypted mp3s at a low enough price wouldn't have to worry about piracy. In a sense, it would be like "legalizing" the mp3 format, if cheap and convenient, there'd be no reason to "black market" the music via the pirate networks. Unbound by the needs of record store shelves, trucks to ship units, and record companies, a band could charge a fee of say, $0.50 per track, so an "album" of music would run about $5-6. Of the few attempts by record companies to offer downloadable or streaming electronic versions of popular music, they've often set prices as high as $3 per song (scroll down to "digital downloads" and compare to the CD price), making an album cost two to three times the cost of a conventional CD, allowing companies to write them off as failures and say there is no market for electronically distributed music.
Compilation - Johnny Cash: 'Murder' (CD; American/Legacy; 1955-1993) SHOW DETAILS![]()

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An interesting Johnny Cash compilation. The only other Johnny Cash stuff I had on CD before buying this was the 'prisons' (Folsom and St Quentin) CDs. This is a great disc, in spite of its slightly gimmicky theme and liner notes by Quentin Tarentino. The original Sun mono version of 'folsom prison blues' is here, and sitting comfortably alongside it is the 1993 recording 'delia', which is a remarkably addictive song.
Perhaps because of the nature of the subject matter, there are a few sound effects gimmicks which spice up the songs. For example, in 'Joe Bean', we get to hear the sound of the protagonist's neck breaking as he is hung from a noose.
I've never consciously collected Cash's albums, but I respect him a lot, and this disc provides a high quality collection of tracks. Cash's influence on idols of mine like Nick Cave is strongly evident. Other hightlights include 'going to memphis' and 'when it's springtime in alaska (it's 40 below)'.
Thursday 21st February 2002
Update: pressplay responded to my email asking how many songs they had within an hour. Impressive! More impressive than what's on offer. Apparently there are 'roughly over 100,000 songs available'. This doesn't seem that many considering the size and number of record companies involved. Doesn't 'emusic' have 165,000? I much prefer emusic's interface an methods: they sell actual mp3s, as opposed to the right to listen to audio while subscribed to a paying service. They also allow you to purchase just one song if you like. Good customer service, poor product. If anyone signs up with pressplay, or hears of anyone who has, please drop me a line.
pressplay is a premier on-demand music service that will change the way you discover music. For a low monthly fee, you can search, browse, and instantly listen (via streaming) to full-length songs of your choice from your favorite artists while you are connected to the Internet. The pressplay service also lets you download high quality music files to your computer, and play them as much as you want as long as your membership is active. In addition, you can make your own compilations, or playlists, and you can even burn your favorite tracks to a CD.
With up to 2 tracks from each of your favorite artists per month, and thousands of artists to choose from, you can be sure that your pressplay CDs are going to reflect your individual taste.
Saturday 16th February 2002
I enjoyed this fascinating article about record collecting, which was mentioned by Alan on the exotica list.
Wednesday 13th February 2002
It's rather superior-sounding at times, but I found this article from the Guardian very amusing and informative.
Compilation: 'electronicagainsbourg' (CD; Pagan; 2001) SHOW DETAILS![]()

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I was happy to find this disc used. It seemed like a nice counterpart to 'Morricone RMX'. Serge's recordings sit alongside those of Ennio Morricone in my collection, so it seemed appropriate to have this as well. However, after the first listen, I feel disappointed.
Anyway... I'm sorry to come down on this one so negatively, but it doesn't do it for me at all. Even though I didn't massively *like* many of the tracks on 'Morricone RMX', I had more respect for them then most of the things on offer here. Many of the remixes seem very lazy and insubstantial to me. Track 12, Stratus's 'L'hotel particulier' is the only real winner for me. I guess the root of my problem with the remixes here is that they focus in on Serge the personality - most often sampling only the vocal tracks, and then instead putting in inferior or barren musical backings. More remixes which played with Serge's arrangements, textures and musical phrases would have made this far more interesting to me.
Friday 8th February 2002
Strange, half-forgotten music memory of the day: I just remembered an email I read five or six years ago on the exotica list. Unfortunately the archives are not searchable, so I can't trace the mail. Or maybe I imagined it. Anyway, it concerns a version of Grieg's 'In the hall of the mountain king' by Jerry Murad's Harmonicats. This was apparently called 'In the hall of the Mountain cha cha cha', and intrigued me at the time. It has since dropped back into my head, and I'll be looking out for it. That said, it's not completely clear what album it's on. It *could* be on 'Harmonicha-Cha-Cha' (Mercury MG 20391), but there's no track listing anywhere. That sounds like a fun album anyway, so I'll look out for it.
The whole thought of a cha cha version of 'mountain king' (which I first heard via ELO's version when my elder brother played it to me aged 7 or so) is very cool to me. Kind of like what Caterina Valente and Edmundo Ros did to Miserlou.
Tuesday 5th February 2002
I've just bought myself a new toy, a CD walkman that plays CDR discs with MP3 files on them. It's a top of the line (although soon to be outdated, I'm sure) model by Philips, the 'expanium 103'. I wanted to get a good one, and at the very least, one that read the ID3 tags (so that the name and artist can be seen in the little LCD screen). It seemed to be between this and the 'Riovolt 250'. I chose the Philips, probably because it looked nicer. I am shallow. Plus I rarely listen to the radio, so wanted to avoid the added distraction of having one built in.
Earlier this evening I hooked my new toy up to my old Aquatron 'egg' 8-track player with built in speakers. It was funny to mix the new and old technologies.
I spent most of the evening making just one full (700MB) 'mp3 CD'. I started off by including a Super Furry Animals 'best of' set of mp3s I had done for a recent compilation. I thought I would do the same for a few other contemporary bands, but in the end, it seemed like too much hassle. So I did the easiest thing - I plugged in 4 Belle & Sebastian albums, five Hefner albums and three Pulp albums, and let Music Match and the CDDB encode the mp3 files for me. The Philips machine will treat each folder as an 'album', so it wasn't too hard to set things up nicely.
However, the M3U tags on my existing mp3 collection left a lot to be desired. I downloaded a program, 'tagclinic', to help with this, but I think however you do it, making them perfect is a big job.
I'm currently listening, rather emotionally, to a quickly-put-together 'nostalgia' compilation of tracks I was into at age 16-18. I'm a complete music fanatic now, and I was then too, but in a different, almost more obsessive way. While my taste now is much wider, this spreads me more thinly around, and I don't listen to records as obsessively often as I did before.
Here's my 'nostalgia' collection (I should really go and recommend all of these):
Friday 1st February 2002
What is it with 2002? A lot of people I really admire have died already, and it's only February. I have been listening to her a lot recently, and she really was brilliant. Although I gather that she was mainly an actress, I've never seen any of her films, and it's her music that fascinated me. Over a long career, she made dozens of great records, including countless German language versions of standards (e.g. 'the lady is a tramp'), bossa novas, and psychedelic, groovy Bacharach-tinged pop. Like many people who don't sing in English, Hildegard doesn't seem to have had much of a following in the US or UK. This is a great shame. Some time, I'll make a single-disc Hildegard compilation in her memory. People have to hear this stuff - much of it is really incredibly good. If you're interested in checking her out her music, I recommended a couple of tracks (with sound samples) at musical taste. You can get the superb 7-disc box set of her work very inexpensively at amazon.de These really only cover a tiny corner of her oeuvre, but there you go. Rest in peace, Hildegard, and say hi to Juan, Peggy and Julie for me.
What did I do last night? Hmm, there's no point in dressing this up. I made three really childish tracks incorporating the outrageous audio which came from Mike Tyson last week. I sampled a few choice tracks while making these, but I warn you, the beauty of the music does not make up for the disgusting nature of the words... If you want a taste of my childish sense of humor, this is at 20 seconds the shortest track.
Oh, and that isn't all I did last night. I also stopped by the superb Tom Friedman exhibition at the New Museum. I actually didn't know him by name before, but had stuck one of his photos (an incredible one of a huge crater left in the earth by what seems like it must have been a giant falling from a great height) to my diary a few years ago.