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"The Comprehensive, User-Lovable Menu of Computer Lore, Culture, Lifestyles and Fancy", 1984… and worth a gratitudinous look back.
Author Archives: oook
links for 2008-08-20
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from Make
Been a while
…what with summer visitors, a weekend at an extreme yoga workshop, more summer visitors. But here’s one that summarizes a lot of what I learned about The South in 13 years of living on its fringes, courtesy of Michelle Shocked:
A nice sunny day
Several things this morning:
(1) The feed from my Delicious bookmarks is still out of commission, but here are three, eclectic as ever, from the last couple of days:
Magic From Space: Traffic from Space Videos Blow Our Minds, Pants, and Socks (yup. UK traffic visualizations, the sort of thing I’ve been imagining for years, and here it is)Geeks, nerds, or dorks? (Joho the Blog points to an explanation of the frontiers of physics)
Dumneazu: Polish Truck Stops: We Like Them. Very Much. (more food and music)
(2) Today’s BoingBoing tells us of Cliff Bolling, an enthusiast for 78 RPM records, who has digitized a whole lot of them (all this via a Wired blog posting). Since I’ve been playing around with the same general sort of effort to extract music from obsolete formats and organize the resulting mountain of mp3 files, it’s useful to see how somebody else approaches the enterprise.
(3) via Keep Swinging: Chinatown My Chinatown as a banjo duel. The banjo player on the left is Spats Langham; on the right Johan Lammers:
How’d I miss this one?
Again belated but still delicious
(Not sure why the auto function isn’t working again)
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via Nick, a Cautionary TaleThere IS hope for Western Civilization, or at least there was in 1967 (via Dr. Frank’s What’s-it)a whole education, right here for the grabbing…
Another duel
via Echidne:
links for 2008-08-09 [delicious.com]
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Stewart Brand's 1997 series, 3 hours of fascination, via elearningpost.com
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nice clear presentation
Delicious links, belatedly
(Not sure why the auto function isn’t working)
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via Neil Gaiman’s blog; “Yes, he really talks like that, his voice and accent musical and strange…”
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Oh yeah. I have a whole lot, collected over the years, and now perhaps someplace to put them…
Lamellophones
I happened upon this bit of organological serendipitude via Make’s blog, featuring a Pitch Bending Thumb Piano:
As an instrument, I think it’s not totally successful, but certainly heuristic for those who think about musical experimentation. Lately I’ve been deeply immersed in a wide spectrum of African musics, and the clip sent me off on a search for some interesting variants of approach to “thumb piano” (so many other names… sanza, mbira, kalimba…). Here are some of the results:
Jazz improvisation on a 5 octave Array mbira
Garland – Suite for Bass Sanza
Don MacLane’s musical instruments
Ken Kolodner Plays the Dulcimer-Mbira in West Virginia (and more via his Web site)