Music Banter

Music Banter (https://www.musicbanter.com/)
-   Members Journal (https://www.musicbanter.com/members-journal/)
-   -   Sounds from Innerspace (https://www.musicbanter.com/members-journal/80913-sounds-innerspace.html)

innerspaceboy 09-10-2015 07:41 PM

The End of Scrobbling - A Farewell to Last.fm
 
Digital music has been a fascination of mine since the turn of the millennium. Audioscrobbler came into being in 2002 while I was in college, and the thought of sharing my listening with a global network of musical peers was exhilarating.

Audioscrobbler merged with Last.fm in 2005, taking the social element of music to a whole new level. There were forums to discuss listening trends, metadata analysis and recommendation engines... all while independent blogging exploded onto the scene in a flood of obscure music fetishism.


In the years since I admittedly lost touch with the service and dropped off the scrobbling radar to focus on personal relationships, collecting unscrobbleable LPs, and developing my career. As the summer of 2015 came to a close my life was settling up nicely - I left Windows for Linux, I have a fiance, a fantastic career, and I've just purchased my first home.

With these stations of life secure, my mind returned to the world of scrobbling and the possibilities of merging big data and my own hyper-specific musical tastes. I developed a ~500 day plan to scrobble every track from my library 24 hours a day for over a year to submit every title toward Last.fm's recommendation engine. Surely a library of over 110,000 tracks would produce some intriguing results!

But this evening, I logged into Last.fm and looked around to find that the site has retired all of its original functions. The social forums are closed. The "neighborhood" of your peers is now inaccessible. The homepage offers only a most-popular-globally-this-week roster plastered with "Uptown Funk" and other predictable tracks.


The Wikipedia spelled out what I'd missed - CBS had acquired Last.fm for £140 million in 2009. Wasting no time, in February of that year the service handed listener data over to the RIAA over concerns about a then-unreleased U2 album. By 2010 the service closed the custom radio feature, (again over licensing issues) and in early 2015 they partnered with Spotify, further crippling the usability of the site.

But the nail in the coffin came in August of this year with their fully-overhauled website. It received almost universally negative criticism from its users, who cited broken and missing features.

Given the new light of this information, I'm terminating the full-library scrobble project and saying farewell to Last.fm. Still, I shall not mourn the loss for long. The social function of digital music has experienced a parallel evolution in the world of private forums and closed groups on social media sites like Facebook.

http://i.imgur.com/SQyxRuj.jpg

A magnificent record I discovered thanks to a Facebook Record Community

Every morning I'm greeted with "now-spinning" rare vinyl treasures and independent music reviews which top anything you'd find from a recommendation engine. One user from South Korea offered nearly 40 daily installments of records from his Tangerine Dream collection, each accompanied by a custom write-up on the featured release.

Private tracker communities, classic bulletin board systems, and other social structures of the web continue to serve as a brilliant resource for musical discovery. Last.fm served us well during a pivotal time in the age of digital media, and it will be missed, but we'll carry on.

http://i.imgur.com/aNzSRXj.jpg

RIP Last.fm
2002 - 2015

innerspaceboy 09-12-2015 06:36 PM

Ambient Sound for Study or Sleep
 
As I entered the final days before I move into my first home, I began to contemplate the changes to the sonic space of my studio. I anticipated that the new space would likely be devoid of external noises and the familiar nuanced sounds of other persons moving about in the residence. I also considered the longing I'd felt for the bustle of a metro village cafe - something I've yet to find locally befitting of an eccentric like myself.

So it appeared I'd a new project on my hands - to archive a bank of ambient noise to calm me and to promote productivity in my new home. Astonishingly, (as I'd never searched YouTube for ambient field recordings before), there was an incredible bank of 6-10 hour environmental recordings available, and all of it for free. I extracted the audio from each, archived my favorite selections, and put together a playlist for my readers to sample for themselves.

The playlist includes:
  • the sounds of drafting a dissertation in a university library

  • various intensities of rain in a variety of environments, from city streets to the inside of a vehicle in evening traffic, and from a tin roof to the inside of a camper's tent

  • room-expanding noises from several coffeehouses

  • and it ends with a soothing, 8-hour train ride

Explore my playlist below. I'd welcome further recommended environments if you have any to share!

And as the [ytp] and [ytplaylist] codes don't appear to work, here is a good old-fashioned hyperlink.

88 hours of ambient soundscapes

innerspaceboy 09-18-2015 04:57 PM

Fall 2015 Megapost: The Playlist Project
 
This summer brought many changes to The Innerspace Library. First we started fresh with a Linux OS and finally said "farewell" to Windows. There was a brief period of limbo as I tested various open source media management software to find the right fit for my collection. I finally settled down with gmusicbrowser which outperformed Clementine and other major players in its handling of large libraries and in the incredible versatility and customization of its GUI.

This was the very first time since the launch of Winamp 5 (the amusing successor to Winamp 3) that I'd explored the power of music metadata to organize my library dynamically across multiple data points. (I'd never really saw the need during my years with MediaMonkey Gold.)

But as the summer drew to a close, I was still irked that my Subsonic media server lacked the function of genre browsing. I'd previously sidestepped this issue by generating mammoth genre playlists to serve as my personally-themed radio stations, each with hundreds or even thousands of the finest albums of their respective genre.

But it was this fresh start in the last few weeks that inspired my refinement of those playlists into distinct album libraries which would zero in on a specific moment of music history. The aim was to bring a semblance of order to the hundred thousand plus tracks in my file library and to give me a set of starting points to really explore the neglected and unplayed folders of my drive.

I'm proud to declare that this evening, the project was a complete success. I've created 100 all-killer-no-filler libraries showcasing each of the largest collections in my catalog. I found that 68% (9,300 albums) of my music library fell neatly into one of these 100 categories.

The following is an index of these 100 playlists, sorted by number of albums. This roster effectively summarizes and gives order to what is otherwise an insurmountable archive. I'm going to enjoy exploring these playlists throughout the fall and into the winter months.

Playlists with 1000+ Albums
  • Midnight on Mars: Ambient Worlds - 2,986 Ambient Albums
  • Hearts of Space: Innerspace Journey - 30 Year Complete 1,069 Broadcast Archive

Playlists with 200-999 Albums
  • Kelly Watch the Stars - 607 Classic Albums of the Downtempo Genre
  • Mentalism: Psybient Dreams - 545-Disc Archive of Psybient Electronic Music
  • Echowaves: Intergalactic Radio - 450 Legendary Krautrock Albums
  • The Shape of Jazz to Come - 387 Modern Jazz LPs (1959-1979)
  • Just Gimme Indie Rock!: 379 of the Greatest Indie Rock Albums (1988-2014)
  • Underworld: Dark & Long - A 35 Year Chronology - 339 Albums from Screen Gemz to Eno & Hyde
  • Old Time Radio: Dragnet (298 Broadcasts)
  • Salute to Birdland - 259 Classic Jazz Records (1924-1958)
  • FAX +49-69450464 Label Archive: The Legacy of Pete Namlook 254 Disc Catalog
  • We Came to Funk Ya - A 227 Album Funk Odyssey
  • Ninja Tune: Turn Me Loose - 204 LP Archive of Ninja Tune Records

Playlists with 100-199 Albums
  • Days of the Lords: 195 Album Archive of Ethereal & New Wave, Gothic Rock, Minimal Wave, Post-Punk, Jangle & Noise Pop (1976-1997)
  • The KLF: Abandon All Art Now - 189-disc Catalog of the Justified Ancients of MuMu
  • Shirt Tail Stomp: Swing & The Big Bands - 181 LP and Broadcast Archive
  • Tangerine Dream: Journey Through a Burning Brain - 178-Disc Chronology of TD & its Side Projects
  • Old Time Radio: The Adventures of Superman (171 Broadcasts)
  • Night Lines - 140 Album Archive of Deep House Sessions
  • Light Patterns - Jazz of Tomorrow - 139 Future Jazz Albums
  • Heaven or Las Vegas: 30 Years of Dream Pop & Ethereal Wave (134 Album Archive)
  • Max & Dima: Sapovnela Studio Sessions - 131 Deep House DJ Sets
  • Nurse with Wound: Walking Like Shadow - 127 Album Discography
  • Old Time Radio: X Minus One - 122 Broadcasts (1955-1973)
  • Deutsche Grammophon: 111 Years of DG (111-Disc Box Set)
  • Lemon Jelly : Going Places - 110-Disc Catalog of All Things Jelly
  • Miles Davis: The Complete Prestige & Columbia Recordings - 109 LPs released between 1955-2014
  • Daft Punk: Daftendirekt - 104-LP Chronology
  • Flea Market Funk - 100-Disc Archive of Funky Soul & Rare Groove
  • Frank Zappa: Shut Up 'n Play Yer Guitar - 100-disc Catalog (1966-2006)
  • RYM's Top 100 Downtempo & Trip Hop Albums

Playlists with 75-99 Albums
  • Franz Liszt: Lisztomania! - 97 LP Archive
  • Thelonious Monk: Straight No Chaser - 97 LP Discography
  • Good Looking Records: 94-Disc Archive of LTJ Bukem's Intelligent D'n'B Label
  • Franklin Mint: The 100 Greatest Classical Recordings - 88 LP Catalog
  • Somnium - 87-Album Library of Pure Drone Music
  • Aphex Twin: We are the Music Makers - 86 Album Chronology of Richard D James
  • Mike Oldfield: Tricks of the Light - 86 LP Discography (1973-2010)
  • Jimmy Smith: Jazz Scattin' - 85 LP Discography
  • Cinematic Soundscapes - 83-Disc Library of Music for Films
  • Old Time Radio: CBS Radio Mystery Theater - The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (83-Disc Box Set)
  • Klaus Schulze: I Sing the Body Electric - 81 LP Discography
  • Ludwig Van Beethoven: The Bicentennial Collection - 80 LP Complete Works
  • Old Time Radio: BBC Radio - The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (79-Disc Set)
  • Vangelis: Poem Symphonique - 77 Album Discographic Archive
  • Old Time Radio: The Shadow - 75 Original Broadcasts (1937-1954)

Playlists with 50-74 Albums
  • Sun Ra: Cosmic Tones for Mental Therapy - 74-Disc Catalog (1957-1994)
  • John Cage: A Chance Operation - 73 LP Discography
  • 2manyDJS - This is Radio Soulwax: 72 Mashup Sessions
  • Brian Eno: Strange Overtones - 70 LP Discography (1972-2015)
  • Peter Gabriel: Here Comes the Flood - 68-Disc Catalog (1977-2010)
  • Ornette Coleman: Change of the Century - 66 LP Discography
  • Prayer for the Paranoid: 66 Albums from a Decade of Shoegaze (1993-2003)
  • Muslimgauze: The Broken Radio of Istanbul Station - 63 Album Discography
  • The Piano Has Been Drinking: The Complete Recordings of Tom Waits - 63 LPs (1973-2011)
  • Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers: Just Coolin' - 62 Album Discography
  • Karlheinz Stockhausen: Kontakte - 61 LP Archive
  • Old Time Radio: The Complete Sherlock Holmes Audiobooks (Unabridged 60-Disc Set)
  • Philip Glass: Glasspieces - 60 LP Discography of Operas, Symphonies, Sonatas and Scores
  • Cornelius: Out of Phase - 60 Album Discography
  • Spacemind: Wonderland Syndrome - 60 Psybient DJ sets
  • Cafe del Mar: Step into the Sunshine - 59-Disc Archive of the Sounds of Ibiza
  • Throbbing Gristle: 555 Jazz Funk Greats - 56 Album Discography
  • DJ Food - Solid Steel - 55 LPs of Classic Jazz Breaks
  • Herbie Hancock: One FInger Snap - 52 Album Discography
  • Ash Ra Tempel & Manuel Gottsching: Deep Distance - A 40 Year, 50 LP Chronology
  • Houdini's Musical Box: Early Experimental Electronic Music (1940-1976) - 50 LP Archive
  • Porcupine Tree: Synesthesia - 50 Album Discography (1983-2013)

Playlists with 10-24 Albums
  • From Murmur to Monster: 21 Key Albums of the Jangle Pop Era (1983-1994)
  • Old Time Radio: Orson Welles Mercury Theater 1938 (20 Program Broadcasts)
  • Philips Prospective 21e siecle Label 18-LP Archive (1956-1972)
  • RYM: Round Midnight - 18 of the Highest-Rated Cool Jazz Records
  • Deutsche Grammophon Avant Garde: 17-LP Complete Recordings (1967-1971)
  • Braindance: A 15-LP IDM Chronology of Warp Records
  • The Plastikman Arkives: 1993-2010 (14-Disc Box Set)
  • Jellyroll Radio - Ragtime, Dixieland & Bluegrass Standards (13-Disc Catalog)
  • Claude Debussy - 12-Disc Complete Piano and Orchestral Works
  • Kompakt Records: Cirrus Minor - 12 Years of Ambient Music (2001-2013)

innerspaceboy 09-25-2015 08:27 PM

Evocation Poème Symphonique
 
Once in a blue moon, (or in this case a blood moon), I shed my polished sophisticate exterior and get a little creative. Tonight is that night, so light the incense, don your beret and check out what's cookin'.

I seldom get into poetry, doing my best to avoid anything with a rhyme scheme or regular meter. But I do fancy a particular strain of poem - nonsense verse and cut-up/plunderphonia.

John Lennon developed his own delightful style of jabberwock in his books, In His Own Write and A Spaniard in the Works which inspired my first exercises writing "Lennonish" in college.

And in more recent years I found a fascination with the history of plunderphonics, perhaps best-executed by James Joyce is his masterwork, Finnegans Wake. This evening I tried my own hand at the cut-up method, constructing something of a self-portrait from fragments of my music library. The library will be my legacy and I hope it will survive far beyond my years, so its content seemed well-suited for such a task.

Evocation Poème Symphonique

pulse steady
a chance operation
in and out of phase
from houdini's musical box
deep distance kontakt
and the kosmische braindance
i sing the body electric
strange overtones
intergalactic echowaves
funky breaks and solo flute
one finger snap and the jazz of tomorrow
tricks of the light
cirrus minor
the broken radio of Istanbul station
turn me loose
walking like a shadow
voodoo fusion or synesthesia
a prayer for the paranoid
an index of metals
walkin' the blues
it's wonderland syndrome
tones for mental therapy
justified
ancient
and bird's lament
straight no chaser
alone again with the dawn coming up
we are the music makers
fast 'n bulbous
and the curse of ka'zar
all this and more
tonight at innerspace



Regular readers will undoubtedly pick up on 20-30 references to favorites from my collection. But I think it functions just as well without the cliff notes
Thanks for indulging me. Back to our regularly-scheduled exercises in library management.

innerspaceboy 09-28-2015 07:03 PM

Lesson one: Basic hip.
 
https://i.imgur.com/WmuTvX2.jpg

Tonight's scene - Del Close & John Brent: How to Speak Hip. Fall out in your pad and dig this crazy thing. Get me?

Put your ear to it and check out the side.



https://i.imgur.com/jmGeHwh.jpg

DJ Food caught a few samples from this LP on his Kaleidoscope album. Check out "The Riff."



Kaleidoscope also featured Ken Nordine, legendary for his Word Jazz and Colors LPs from the same era.



https://i.imgur.com/rsortKb.jpg

Outta sight.

CLOSER 10-06-2015 12:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by innerspaceboy (Post 1550878)

I pressed on, looking for other sources of Gen-Z and Gen-Alpha inspiration. This lead me to an article on 21st century composers (because apparently, THAT IS A THING.) A Wikipedia entry for 21st century classical offered a list of composers I could arrange by birth date. At the end of the list I found a name - Alma Deutscher, who was born in 2005.
[/CENTER]

I know I'm responding to quite an older post of yours but I thought I would anyways. Speaking of Gen-Z inspiration, the only example I could think of is a surprising one. Contrary to her first hit "Whip My Hair", Willow Smith has been experimenting with some ambient Badu-esque sounds. I'm really quite impressed. This tune was freestyled and is a great example of what today's technology and emancipation from a record label can do for a young creative. Though I would not label myself as a fan of her's necessarily, I find myself drawn to this singular track. Let's hope there's more to come?

https://soundcloud.com/dhatu/female-...od-azzi-willow

CLOSER 10-06-2015 01:01 AM

P.S. "Summary Video of our Top 550 Artists of 2014"

DAMN do you ever put work in..Shit

innerspaceboy 10-06-2015 07:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CLOSER (Post 1640487)
P.S. "Summary Video of our Top 550 Artists of 2014"

DAMN do you ever put work in..Shit

Thanks, Closer! I enjoyed the Badu-esque track; thanks for sharing and for reading the journal!

Where've you been since 2013?

CLOSER 10-06-2015 02:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by innerspaceboy (Post 1640539)
Thanks, Closer! I enjoyed the Badu-esque track; thanks for sharing and for reading the journal!

Where've you been since 2013?

Oh no, I posted a link to the wrong song in my last message - so here is the real link.
https://soundcloud.com/dhatu/female-...od-azzi-willow


Yes I find your journal brilliant, haven't had the time to sift through it all the posts yet but I'm working through it. As for where I've been.. Sort of just disappeared from the forum for a good two years and just recently started posting again. For a while I actually forgot about this site, so now I'm giving it another go..

innerspaceboy 10-06-2015 05:09 PM

Yes I find your journal brilliant, haven't had the time to sift through it all the posts yet but I'm working through it. As for where I've been.. Sort of just disappeared from the forum for a good two years and just recently started posting again. For a while I actually forgot about this site, so now I'm giving it another go..[/QUOTE]

I did the same when I signed up. Glad to have you, and thanks again for perusing my journal!


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 07:44 PM.


© 2003-2024 Advameg, Inc.