Saturday, November 20, 2010

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Rationale on buying and listening to whole albums

...as opposed to single songs on a shuffled playlist

Dear readers,

1. I prefer listening to albums as a whole - end to end, exactly the way the artist intended to. There are idiosyncrasies and nuances that one can know only after doing so. The flow of Dark Side of the Moon, the stories of Metropolis Pt. 2 : Scenes from a Memory and Operation: Mindcrime, the cohesive nature of Fear of a Blank Planet, the history behind black sheep of Opeth's catalog - Damnation,
the psychology/beliefs/listening habits of Rush members during each of the albums are all better conveyed this way.

2. It presents an opportunity to really absorb a song in context rather than judging from its face value. This has helped me grasp and internalise complex arrangements (
à la Rush, Cynic, Scores by Hans Zimmer, etc.) An apparently not so catchy song can become a source of joy after several listens. A playlist on shuffle is virtually a guarantee that this song will not be registered in the brain's index.

3. I spend a massive amount of time dissecting, absorbing and musing over one album over and over again rather than fill a digital player with 16 GB of songs. It helps my cognitive function classify the songs and cluster them as one. This also increases the probability of me remembering the names of the songs, the lyrics, writers, etc. I believe too much music on a shuffled playlist serves no such purpose.

4. I try and buy 1-2 physical CDs per month. I like the feel of a tangible object in my hands while I listen to the album thereby dissecting, absorbing and musing over the artwork / design. There are albums with incredible camerawork, imagination, visual gags, etc. that would otherwise go unnoticed. Lasse Hoile, Hugh Syme, Storm Thorgerson have all created beautiful artwok and these are just to name but a few.

Regards.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Reasons why I plan to switch back to blogging

Dear Readers,

Around a decade ago, at the turn of the millennium, blog formally evolved from the concept of online journal. The original people associated with web logs were intelligent, eloquent and just plain amazing in their deeds and endeavours. Around a decade later, a decade into the twenty-first century common era, English has formally evolved into an unstructured, hyper-condensed construct - a change that will probably be as profound as the Great Vowel Shift. A blog is my way of reverting back to older ways of life when things were a bit more meaningful than they are now.

Communication on social networks and media has become more and more superficial. I could write in detail about how online social media bothers me but Alexis Madrigal has already done it and I wholeheartedly agree with him.

Also, this is my first posting experience via e-mail. Although, not as personal as a real letter written with a fountain pen on a cartridge paper, a well formatted electronic mail is still a treat to the eye when compared to a `Dude, wasup' on facebook or it's likes.

Regards.