"Papa. They email to our brain… like a computer."

Amelia teaches me the 5 Senses song they learned in school over a bowl of cereal.

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Recorded on & Sent from my iPhone

Latkes-cast: L'Shana Tova 5770

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Listening to some Regina Spektor, eating apples n' honey, making latkes with my daughter... dat's a pretty sweet way to spend the first day of the new year. L'shana tova. May you be inscribed in the book of life.

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Yum!

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"I Hope That I Don't Fall In Love With You"

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Recorded: March 31, 2002 in my old apartment @ 85 West Walnut St., Asheville, NC

I came across this while cleaning up my library after the iTunes 9 upgrade this morning and felt like sharing. This was recorded using a yard sale, Sony passive electret condenser microphone direct to hard disk via Sound Forge using my L'Arrivee Parlor Guitar. The "quality" of my voice is likely due to a long night of cigarettes, PBR, & yelling in the Vincent's Ear courtyard in Asheville, NC the night before.

Credits: 
"I Hope That I Don't Fall in Love With You" was written and originally recorded by Tom Waits for the 1973 album Closing Time.

The Police - "So Lonely" Live in Philadelphia - April 9th, 1979 [audio excerpt] #music #fb

This is just fun and also my test of the iPhone OS 3.0 Voice Memo Recorder app. Also a test of Posterous' audio file capability.

Sting had larngitis for most of the '79 tour. He still pulls off the song and the Philly riff at the end is really nice.
Have a listen...

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Link to album the studio album: http://www.google.com/musicl?lid=OKaa7iJptUI&aid=7egfiU55YZP

I really miss the liner notes y'all

A few days ago I switched to the iTunes cover art screensaver on the MBP. Wow. I've been transported to the times in my life when album cover art had a major influence on my taste in fashion, art, food, design, sense of humor, and popular culture in general.
 
Some of the albums I buy these days... I tell ya I wouldn't even know them by their album artwork! It's killing me, seriously. Where would I be... what would I be worth had I never seen and worshipped those three guys in b&w, sitting on the curb on the "Check Your Head" album cover? I can't even list the number of album covers burned into my memories. What worries me is a growing number of album covers & liner notes that I'll never see. It's partially my own fault. I submit. I could buy CDs of every album it I want cover art & liner notes, but I won't.
 
I miss it. The Cover Art. The smell of a CD booklet fresh from shrink wrap. I can remember the 1st CD booklet I received that was primarily made from recycled paper & soy based inks. Kenny Garrett: Pursuance. It had a different smell, matte finish, no staples.
 
Something else that's missing in this age of digitally distributed music is the liner note album credits. I used to looks to see who produced the album, took the photos, designed the album artwork.

Who did the artist(s) thank?
Where was it recorded?
Are there any candid photos could act as a window into the musicians soul?
All of this information was part of the experience of obtaining new music and I've taken it for granted.
Alot of passionate people work really hard to produce that album you purchase, shouldn't we be able to read some of their names in the "package"?
I know on some iTunes album downloads a PDF booklet is included at the record label / artists discretion.
Maybe the content distributors should step up and include an XML file that can be read by music players that contains the album credits... at the very least. Perhaps Myspace, Facebook, Last.fm, etc... have in a way replaced the album liner notes. Want candid photos, look online. Want to know who the lap steel player was on that track, check Last.fm.
 
Imagine if downloadable movies were stripped of their ending credits... If they only appeared online and on the DVD case. That would never fly.
 
I feel less informed about my music collection. 10 years ago I began ripping my CD collection to MP3 unaware that I'd soon banish those jewel cases and the fantastic booklets of information the protected to the attic, instead leaving the accompanying CD to the mercy of some 250 compartment folio. When did convenience become such an important factor in owning a large music collection?
 
Now having said all that I do believe that curtailing the needless use of plastics in the packaging, promotion, and distribution of music is a great thing. And there are still some albums that I will buy the old fashioned way. Here's what I'd like to see at some point.

  1. 1. When purchasing and downloading an album I'd like it to include at least a high quality PDF of the CD booklet as well as a computer / portable media player readable version of the textual content. Some kind of open format would be best.
  2. The opportunity to pay more for the download and be albe to "purchase media". Much like the software industry has done. For a $8.99 download I'd pay an extra $5 if they'd ship me the actual CD.

Any thoughts, insights? I'm sure this topic has been discussed / debated at great lengths many times over. I just felt compelled to honor my own inner discomfort with this post.  So chime in all you listeners, musicians... What do you think?

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