Hard News: Heads up for music
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And this just in from Flying Nun: The 3Ds Early Recordings 1989-90
This is exciting news! I can't wait to download it.
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Govt announces changes to NZ on Air music funding.
Switches focus from albums to singles. Trivial increase in (ancient) subsidy for music video to $6k, with subsidy for recording of $4k per track. Total value $2m. Pffft.
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3410,
Govt announces changes to NZ on Air music funding.
And a brilliantly original name for the new scheme, huh?
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You're going to listen to James Hansen tonight? Awesome.
Please let us know your impressions and reflections on having attended his lecture.
Normally i'd be much more interested in any live music than in any lecture given at some university school of business... But Dr. Hansen and his message are both just so damn important, and have been so ignored and shunned for so long, they need every opportunity to be noticed, encouraged and promoted.
I look forward to any comments. -
Steve Barnes, in reply to
Govt announces changes to NZ on Air music funding.
Great. So we fund these bludgers to sit around and sing songs and act like tools on video then we get penalised for downloading the result of our investment.
Bah, humbug. -
Is there any way Don Brash could be forcibly required to attend Jim Hansen's lecture?
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Just had a brief chat with James Hansen, who'll be talking to Kim Hill from around 8.15am on Saturday Morning. (Then it's nonstop Auckland Writers Festival guests, including A.A. Gill and the marvellous Rives.)
And have been listening to the rather excellent new album, Est. Twothousandaneleven Lyttelton, from Harbour Union (a conglomeration of Lytteltonians including The Easter, Delaney Davidson, Lindon Puffin, Al Park and others..) On Social End Product thru Rhythmethod. Check it.
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And still no recent MSM coverage of Hansen's visit.
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And then there’s this to think about too. More of The Adults, with Tour announced in July. That will be some tour bus. Maybe two even.
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Robyn Gallagher, in reply to
Govt announces changes to NZ on Air music funding. Switches focus from albums to singles.
Is this another sign of the death of the album? (And when you think about it, an arbitrary small collection of songs to be played in a specific order is a bit weird.)
This has also given me a diabolical new idea for a web project that will eat my life.
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Sacha, in reply to
Is this another sign of the death of the album?
Yes. Back to how things used to be..
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recordari, in reply to
Yes. Back to how things used to be..
It is an interesting point. The 'single' used to be quite a big deal, particularly for seminal bands like Joy Division and the like. An album was more of an event, and I don't think this move, or any other I can think of, will stop bands making full length albums, and then on occasion getting them pressed on vinyl. If anything, there seems to be a resurgence in this. David Kilgour's Left by Soft is on limited vinyl release, and I got The Clean Mister Pop recently.
(And when you think about it, an arbitrary small collection of songs to be played in a specific order is a bit weird.)
I think some of the 'great' albums have been designed to work in a particular order. I would include The Smith's first album in this, but many others besides. At the risk of being banished, ever tried playing a Pink Floyd album out of order?
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Sacha, in reply to
The 'single' used to be quite a big deal
I'm thinking when it was the only option, before recorded music business models changed mid last century. Mr Grigg no doubt has the references.
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recordari, in reply to
mid last century.
That's a little before my time. About a quarter century, in musically appreciation terms. ;-)
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Simon Grigg, in reply to
At the risk of being banished, ever tried playing a Pink Floyd album out of order?
You will have the opportunity of playing Dark Side Of The Moon in one seven hour session shortly.
I do think that the very best PF album, Piper At The Gates of Dawn, works perfectly in any order as long as it finishes with
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Simon Grigg, in reply to
before recorded music business models changed mid last century.
later than that - early 70s really. Blame Fleetwood Mac, The Beatles and David Geffen in no particular order.
Isn't there a thread about all this somewhere?
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recordari, in reply to
You will have the opportunity of playing Dark Side Of The Moon in one seven hour session shortly.
Saw Roger Waters play this at the North Harbour stadium in Jan 2007. Not bad. But seven hours? That's taking 'long player record' a bit too literally.
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Sacha, in reply to
Isn't there a thread about all this somewhere?
I'm sure you've provided informed links already (maybe in the thread o doom, even)
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3410,
the very best PF album, Piper At The Gates of Dawn
Be honest; you think it's the only real PF album. ;)
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Danielle, in reply to
That's a little before my time. About a quarter century, in musically appreciation terms.
You don't listen to anything recorded before 1975?
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Simon Grigg, in reply to
Be honest; you think it's the only real PF album. ;)
Isn't it?
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thanks for the 3ds russel, looking forward to that cd release......it'd be fantastic if some of the xpressway stuff was resurrected too......we've got a lot of hidden treasures I reckon
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To be honest, forty years of frenzied record buying means I think I have many/most of the the old albums I may need in this lifetime (and I don't need an extra five CDs of leftover bits of DSOTM), but I will miss the end of perfectly compiled, beautifully packaged, and intelligently annotated compilations in a physical format as they become less and less viable to do.
I've discovered so much stuff that way over the past decade or so, and - being the sort of sucker these are often targeted at - I tend to buy these even when I own almost every track on them just for the package and the words.
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1975
No, no. It's just claiming I started appreciating music prior to my 8th birthday might be a bit much. Hey Jude was played regularly on record and on the piano as far back as I can remember in our household.
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Bruce Wurr, in reply to
simon, absolutely. As a few people here have already posted, now more than ever the notion of an album as a complete piece (of art?) is so important, and that includes the artwork.
I'd like to say I'm a vinyl purist, I started off that way because there weren't any cds, but cds now form the basis of me collections. Plus they're much easier to handle when you're drunk.
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