The father of the iPod music in a heareth toccata

Tuesday, 30 September 2008

I could not resist wear this. Neil Young, as usual, genius and figure:

"The CD was a disaster but it all got worse with MP3. It's a tragedy that people listen to music on computers or in those aparatitos. They do not give real sound, are like those plastic toys sold in supermarkets. We left that computer companies define what is a good sound and have demonstrated that they have no idea of high fidelity. They make very nice machines but they sound like shit. You know something? Was at the home of Steve Jobs, Apple chief. And in his living room had elepés and a turntable "

(Neil Young to Diego A. Manrique, in El Pais)

Copypasteado blog I would like.

What do you think yourselves?. Posts to drag along the ground until eggs make a furrow (vaguear like a dog, come on), also copypasteo the comment that I left myself in the original post:

"I do not share all their views Radikal: IT has done a great service to music and its dissemination, and this can not argue with anyone.

Today it's so usual to have to spend an hour or more public transport route from work or college, have a handy portable device capable of carrying your favorite music behind him is something that is priceless. Regarding the sound quality can not say because I am not the right person for this, but I bet that only the most gourmets dare to criticize the quality of music from an MP3 player or a computer that is attached to good Speakers and playing audio files of quality. For two decades, the music went hand in hand cassette tapes, the quality generally very questionable, and no one complained much.

Technological progress is not an error, if not their misuse. The latter can lead to real nonsense because err humanum est after all, but from there to tick the electronics and the progress it has made possible as a cancer ... "

For my part I have in the living room of my house a multipurpose computer (made of TV, Internet Cafe, the music channel and an entertainment center videojueguil) and just a simple Creative Audigy coupled with some decent speakers so that what comes out of there ring scary. To me it seems to me at least, that is what is important ;-).


Published by Leo / Archived on: Weblog
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Forum

Monday, 29 September 2008

Although in many cases goes unnoticed, Computer Age has since its inception with a great forum to discuss many different topics. If you visit this site regularly, we invite you to participate in this section.

Lately have appeared in such forums posts Disk with links to download directly. As a collection I will gather here the last few discs that have appeared:

-The Beach Boys - Sunflower
-Carole King - Tapestry
-Gene Clark - No Other
-Van Morrison - It's Too Late To Stop Now
-The Millennium - Begin
-Chris Bell - I Am The Cosmos
-The Band - Music From Big Pink
-The Innocence Mission - Befriended
-Great Lake Swimmers - Ongi
-Superchunk - Foolish
-Calexico - A Feast Of Wire
-Loose Fur - Born Again In The USA
-Beat Happening - You Turn Me On
Last-Harbor - Hold Fast, Pioneer
Ray Lamontagne - Til The Sun Turns Black

A greeting


Published by Luis / Archived on: Weblog
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Beatles forever: Prologue and First Party

Friday, 26 September 2008

First of all, I believe we should begin by making clear that the article I wrote what I did not. What you will read below was originally published in the October 1987 issue of the journal Very Interesting, dean of journalism popular Spanish (leaves at newsstands steadily each month since May 1981). The date was no coincidence, because at that time were met twenty-five years since the publication of the group's first single, that simple but catchy "Love me do". That day of 1962 nobody was aware that such an event would mark a milestone in the history of popular music, from which nothing would be the same as before. And not just on the ground is strictly musical, as the influence of the "Fab Four" to reach many areas of life and culture of the twentieth century and still today, fully immersed in the XXI, such influence is far from disappearing.

The idea of reproducing the full story in this Computer Age came to mind after dedicating part of my free time to revisit the discography of the band and go back to watching movies and documentaries relating to it. I recalled the existence of this excellent work, published for more than two decades and certainly unknown or forgotten by almost everyone. I understood that it would be worth making it available to people on the Net and I contacted Jose Pardina, the director of the VERY, which I gladly granted permission to carry out the idea. Therefore, here I leave with you a sample of good journalism coming from an era when there was no Internet, with its stunning ease of access to huge amounts of data (with all the good and bad that that entails), and therefore that he had flip, and much, to find reliable information and quality, even for a group like The Beatles. It will draw in the light of deliveries over the next few weeks, so it does not make you too heavy, and I will leave to insert some comments of his own when he deems it appropriate, properly marked to differentiate them from the original text. I hope you enjoy it as it deserves because it is really worth it. I assure you.

Beatles Forever: 25 years since "Love me do". Part One
Original author: Agustin Sanchez Vidal
Published in Very Interesting, number 77. October 1987
http://www.muyinteresante.es/

Comments on the text (bold) by Leo.


In 1963 and 1964, the Beatles led states of collective hysteria over there where spent. Prior to his music, this was the first shocking appearance that underlined the pacatos media of the time. Below, the "Fab Tour" in a typical promotional photo of the glorious years. From left to right: John, George, Paul and Ringo.

Future Beatles all were born in the harsh enclave of Liverpool, who at the mercy of the provincial industrial belt of central England then add those imposed by the Second World War. John Lennon and Richard Starkey (better known then as Ringo Starr) were born in 1940, Paul McCartney followed them in 1942, and George Harrison in 1943. Ringo came from the outskirts of proletarians and father George was the driver of the school bus to the center where he was studying. John and his mother, Julia (who died in 1957, hit by a drunk police) had been abandoned by his father, a sailor tough that when his son reached the fame record an album trying to return the situation. Perhaps Paul was the children who enjoy a more calm and stable, within a typical middle-class family - with low musical hobbies.

Over time, Liverpool would, however, its advantages: the port remained well-stocked for the new record, communication with Sodom and Gomorrah as Hamburg was flowing and people survived thanks to a dislocated sense of humor that give faith of the best comedians in the country, who come from there. After several formations and names, John, Paul and George (the three armed guitars, which must be added Stuart Sutcliffe on bass and Pete Best on drums) was playing in Hamburg strive tirelessly in clubs in bad death. But they are also prized by German university as Klaus Voorman, a future member of the Manfred Mann, author of the cover of their album Revolver. Many years later, and after having collaborated with the time of Lennon Plastic Ono Band, Voorman would again be both the surviving Beatles to bring home the compilation album The Beatles Antology (1996).

By then, some merely careless rockers with the inevitable zamarras leather, that have adopted the name Beatles as a play on words very carefully between Lennon beat (drum) and beetle ( "beetle"), a wink the Crickets ( "Crickets") that came with Buddy Holly. But this image somewhat haggard zafia and will be polished by Brian Epstein when it takes over his promotion after hearing them at The Cavern, a former jazz club where he played in Liverpool on his return, and without Stuart Sutcliffe, who stays in Germany die some time later.

In 1993, the director Ian Softley (K-Pax) debuted at the cinema with Backbeat, a film focusing on raids by the Beatles in Hamburg in early 60s, but Luis (the jefón of this site) is not short of qualifying publicly as "a piece of shit." It is certainly not a film too bright for us to say, but can be constituted as a starting point to explore more seriously in a stage of the gang known as little as equally fascinating.

GO TO THE SECOND PART.


Published by Leo / Archived on: Reviews
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