When Brian Eno released his Generative Music 1 album — music that is created ‘on the fly’ by a computer following a set of rules that Eno programmed, released on floppy disk, and now virtually unplayable on any current hardware — he wrote “I really think it is possible that our grandchildren will look at […]
Curatorial
Culture and Learning: response to consultation paper
A couple of months ago the UK think tank Demos published a consultation paper with the title Culture and Learning: Towards a New Agenda. The paper aims to challenge cultural professionals and educationalists “to provide a new and coherent direction for creative learning and for encouraging creativity through culture”, and the consultation period runs until […]
Give me back my tags: portable attention data
Having recently moved and been caught up in a silly broadband snafu, I spent a couple of weeks without regular Internet access: the previous entry on this blog was composed in the local pub, which offers free wi-fi along with a pint of Youngs bitter. This interrupted form of net access is fine for keeping […]
Behaviour patterns in collecting music and video
I’m looking at patterns in how people collect different media, and how collecting relates to repeat listening/viewing/using. In the UK, estimates of the average number of CDs in a collection vary between 126 and 178 for men, 135 for women. Are there any similar figures for DVDs or games, or for US markets? I’m still […]
Book announcement: Net, Blogs and Rock’n’Roll
People have access to vastly more music, video and other entertainment than ten years ago. In the case of music, record companies are releasing twice as many new albums per year. Not only that, but some are ‘rescuing’ old and deleted tracks for release in the digital marketplace. So how do people find out about […]
Aggregating the non-music stuff about music
The MusicStrands Labs seem to have a good head of steam at the moment: it’s worth keeping an eye on their blog. The recent announcement that caught my eye was their music-related content discovery (we need a better term for this!) mash-up. The thumbnail on the right (click it to enlarge) shows the Wikipedia entry, […]
Experimental prototype of BBC Programme Catalogue
I missed this at first in the slew of announcements about the BBC Creative Future initiative, but last week the BBC launched an ‘experimental prototype’ of its programme catalogue, comprising details of nearly a million programmes (here’s the relevant press release). Tom Loosemore from the Beeb spoke about this at an event I attended last […]
Update on playlist services
In preparing the White Bicycles playlist yesterday, I revisited a subset of the playlist services that I reviewed last year and in January. Here are some notes on what’s changed, plus some notes on different contexts for searching for tracks.
Visualisation of music collections
The picture on the left is an annotated version of a possible visualisation of someone’s music collection, as proposed and described in a research paper available from Musicstrands. The segments in the circle represent different genres of music within the collection; the distance of each track (represented by dots) from the centre shows how old […]
Copyright infringement in shared playlists: don’t blame the carrier?
When I created a playlist on Webjay last year, I noted the varying legal statuses of the recordings I included — from public domain to creative commons to promotional ‘giveaway’ — including one I deleted when I knew it was not authorised and had read Webjay’s legal guidance. This Reuters article seems aimed at stirring […]