Posts Tagged “media”

Some friends of mine are getting broadband (at last) and I’ve been asked for netcast recommendations.

Over the past few years most of my media consumption has switched to downloads, whether netcasts or torrents, accessed via RSS feeds, aggregated using Google Reader. My use of radio and TV is now mainly for news and occasional sports broadcasts. This feels like an inevitable technological and cultural shift, so I was surprised when I discovered recently that very few of my students subscribe to any netcasts.

Here are my current subscriptions. As you can see, there are a lot of them! I don’t have time to catch every episode, so pick and choose based on episode descriptions.

UPDATE: This post has been receiving links, so I’ll endeavour to keep it updated. I’ve just added some recent finds, such as Are We Alone?, The Bugle, and Epic Fu, and removed several others that I was no longer downloading.

Audio netcasts:

Video netcasts:

  • Boing Boing TV
  • Xeni Jardin is a good presenter, and there’s plenty of the weirdness one would expect from Boing Boing, but I want more from this show. Maybe longer, less frequent episodes, rather than the current morsels which leave me remembering the ads more than the content.

  • Cranky Geeks
  • John C. Dvorak is indeed a very cranky geek, which makes this otherwise typical discussion of tech news entertaining. Some of the guests are interesting, too.

  • David Wain
  • If you liked Stella you’ll like this.

  • Diggnation
  • I watch this so that I don’t have to read Digg.com. Like many Revision3 shows, it can be painfully frat-boy, but Alex Albrecht & Kevin Rose have enough charisma to carry it off.

  • Epic Fu
  • At last, a Revision 3 show that has a clue about art and music. This is quickly becoming a favourite.

  • Howard Rheingold’s Vlog
  • The author of Smart Mobs takes us into the classroom and his freaky wardrobe.

  • iFanboy
  • I don’t have time to read comics these days, so I watch this instead.

  • Internet Superstar
  • Martin Sargent is my Internet superstar. He’s obsessed with the weirder side of the web and presents it for our pleasure.

  • Lynchland: The Liam Lynch Podcast
  • The guy who sang ‘The United States of Whatever’ and directed ‘Jesus is Magic’ makes this amazing-looking show full of music and humour.

  • MacBreak
  • Not, as one might assume, a show about Apple computers, but mostly little tutorials about high end media production technology. Which is interesting to me anyway.

  • My Damn Channel - Big Fat Brain
  • The ‘You Suck at Photoshop’ series is already a classic.

  • My Damn Channel - Harry Shearer
  • Occasional satirical sketches and songs from Harry Shearer.

  • PixelPerfect
  • Photoshop tutorials by someone from the Mafia, apparently.

  • popSiren
  • A show hosted by women, for… guys? I’m not yet sure about this new Revision3 show, although Dr Kiki’s science demonstrations are fun.

  • Rocketboom
  • I love this show. One never knows whether to expect serious news or something completely whimsical. Often it’s somewhere in-between.

  • Tekzilla
  • Hosted by Patrick Norton, this Revision3 show isn’t sure what it is yet, but I think it’s intended to become a relatively mainstream, viewer-friendly tech show. UPDATE: The wonderful Veronica Belmont, whose talents had been wasted at Mahalo Daily, is now co-host of Tekzilla. Roger Chang is getting more screen time too. This bodes well.

  • The Digg Reel
  • A compilation of popular videos from around the net. It’s funny downloading a huge HD file to watch lo-res YouTube videos.

  • The Totally Rad Show
  • Reviews of TV, films, comics, etc. by ‘three rad dudes’. Good production values.

  • Tiki Bar TV
  • A very silly show featuring Dr Tiki, Johnny Johnny and Lala.

  • UChannel Video Podcast
  • Video recordings of lectures. Sometimes fascinating, sometimes dull.

  • Wallstrip
  • A humorous show about the stock market? It shouldn’t work, but it kinda does, mainly cos it keeps things short and punchy, with each episode focusing on a single stock.

  • Web Drifter
  • Martin Sargent meeting Internet weirdos again, this time on their turf.

  • XLR8R TV
  • Whether it’s checking out Matmos’ record collection, or getting Ableton Live tips from Christopher Willits, this is a cool show for music geeks.

  • Yacht Rock
  • A brilliant, melodramatic piss-take of the world of 70s smooth rock.

Any others you’d recommend?

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/10/17/1192300857463.html

Marcus Westbury
October 18, 2007

In the music scene there has always been a pretty strong division between those who play original music and those who are derisively, and sometimes unfairly, dismissed as covers bands. What’s the point of being in a band if you’re not playing your own songs? When was the last time that duo with a keyboard and a drum machine from your local RSL club had a breakthrough hit?

It’s not that covers bands aren’t talented, don’t make good music, don’t entertain or even have a good time. Hell, put enough drinks in me and I’ll hit the dance floor to an ’80s pop classic or wave a lighter with half a tear in my eye to, say, Flame Trees.

But no one seriously goes out of their way to suggest that covers bands are the most vital or important part of the music scene. Why then are covers bands - of the high-culture variety - receiving the bulk of arts funding?

An overwhelming amount of arts funding in Australia goes to organisations that either exclusively or primarily play covers. Think symphony orchestras, opera companies and state theatre companies that produce comparatively little in the way of original, innovative or even Australian work. Like classic hits radio, they are busting out the chart-toppers of the 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th centuries.

Confused? If you’re not sure what I’m talking about, grab yourself a copy of the Australia Council’s annual report. The nation’s cover bands, mostly the state-based symphony orchestras, collectively receive just under $50 million each year from the council.

Whether that figure seems average or outrageous would depend on the context that you choose to put it in. The context that I put it in is the $4.8 million pool that every single musician in Australia who isn’t in a symphony orchestra competes for every year. That’s more than a 10-fold disparity between the orchestras and everyone else combined.

The Sydney Symphony receives nearly $9 million each year. That is more funding than goes to all of Australia’s visual artists, or all of the nation’s writers and publishers, or all the dancers, or all the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists, or all the community art practitioners.

Don’t get me wrong; I’m no heathen or unreconstructed postmodernist. Okay, I’m a bit of a heathen but I’ve never entirely got the postmodern thing. My problem is not that we still fund classical European culture, it’s just that we fund so bloody much of it and so very little of everything else.

My argument isn’t about form and it isn’t an extreme one. It’s about scale, equity and magnitude. I do think it would be a loss if Australians were to lose all connection with our vast and glorious European cultural heritage.

But Opera Australia receives more than $10 million a year from the Australia Council. Sure, opera is lavish, expensive and glorious but I simply cannot think of a single sensible, logical or sane reason why one opera company is valued roughly on par with more than 400 separate organisations supported by the music, dance, literature and inter-arts boards of the same organisation.

Great art to me creates a resonance and opens up possibilities; it isn’t the echoes of the past. It’s not something you reproduce proficiently. Art is made out of anger or curiosity or awe or beauty or because you’re in love or want someone to fall in love with you.

Artists don’t just preserve the past. They make new things from the sum total of human experience. They tell new stories and find new ways of telling stories from the tools and influences that they have around them.

Culture isn’t something that happened in Europe centuries ago that needs preservation. It’s actually all that messy, beautiful, inspiring and wonderful stuff that is happening around us right now. Arts funding should reward innovation not preservation and vibrancy over bureaucracy.

Most importantly, no one art form or institution - however regarded - should have its funding quarantined and its position privileged so that it is never tested against all the other possibilities to which its resources may better be put.

Marcus Westbury is the writer and presenter of Not Quite Art on Tuesday nights on ABC TV. marcus.westbury@gmail.com

Electrofringe 2007 Program Online!

The full program for Electrofringe is now online. This year sees an unprecedented diversity in the Electrofringe program, as well as a stock of brilliant and stimulating events of the calibre you’ve come to expect from the October long weekend in Newcastle. Themes include accessibility and collaboration in electronic arts, wearable art, rethought radio and new approaches to electronic music. Screen works, contemporary dance, immersive and site specific works are nestled alongside dynamic panel discussions, workshops and gigs.

International guests include Tim Hecker (Canada), Leafcutter John (UK), Sebastien Roux (France), Jason Kahn (USA) and Ralph Steinbruchel (CH) alongside local artists including Robin Fox, Machina Aux Rock, Darrin Verhagen, SpatnLoogie, Sanso-Xtro, Pimmon, Shannon O’Neill and Gail Priest, plus may more.

Head to the Electrofringe website, www.electrofringe.net to check out the program and stay tuned for further updates.

One of the better Web2.0 sites is now pwned by the RIAA.

BBC reports:

Music site Last.fm bought by CBS

Social music site Last.fm has been bought by US media giant CBS Corporation for $280m (£140m), the largest-ever UK Web 2.0 acquisition.

The online network was founded in the UK five years ago and it now has more than 15 million active users.

It allows users to connect with other listeners with similar music tastes, to custom-build their own radio stations and to watch music video-clips.

Last.fm founding member Martin Stiksel said it was an “exciting opportunity”.

As part of the deal, Last.fm’s managing team will remain in place and the site will maintain its own separate identity.

Mr Stiksel said: “This move will really support us to get every track ever recorded and every music video ever made onto Last.fm.

“With a strong partner like CBS, this is now within our reach.”

Dot.com boom

CBS Corporation has business interests in TV, web and radio.

CBS radio is the largest radio group in the United States, with 179 stations in the top 50 markets covering news, rock, country and urban music.

The firm’s president and CEO Leslie Moonves said: “Last.fm is one of the fastest growing online communities out there.”

He said Last.fm’s strength in building communities around music and syndicating content was “central to CBS”.

He added: “Their demographics also play perfectly to CBS’s goal to attract younger viewers and listeners across our businesses.”

Hmmm.

CBS is not the first major player to purchase up-and-coming websites for millions or even billions of dollars, prompting what some have called the second dot.com boom.

In 2005 Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp snapped up social networking site MySpace for $580m (£290m). And last year, search engine Google paid $1.65bn (£883m) for video site YouTube.

Mr Stiksel said Last.fm would retain an independent identity.

He said CBS was buying “great technology and a very vibrant, active community”.

“They want to move from a content company to an audience company giving the audiences control and learning from this and that’s why Last.fm was their choice,” he added.

Mr Stiksel said he did not think that users would feel disappointed that a mainstream media firm had bought the site.

Cognitive dissonance?

“When we said revolution we mean that - we put the users in charge. CBS gets this.

“They understand that consuming media is changing, the patterns are changing.”

Online network

As part of the acquisition, the Last.fm management team, including founders Felix Miller, Martin Stiksel and Richard Jones, will continue to independently run the online network

Mr Stiksel said the deal proved that Web 2.0 companies did not have to be in the United States to succeed.

“Being in London has helped us; it’s the best place to do things with music full stop. It’s the place that leads the world.”

London is not the centre of the universe.

The three founders will now be among the most successful - and potentially wealthy - Web 2.0 pioneers in the world.

Getting rich from the volunteer labour of users: that’s Web2.0.

Mr Stiksel said: “The success of the site is the most important thing. With a strong partner we can add the features we always dreamed about.”
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/technology/6701863.stm

Published: 2007/05/30 10:55:20 GMT

© BBC MMVII

Very tempted to pull all of my stuff from Last.fm and close my account. I’ll be keeping a close eye on how this ‘partnership’ develops.

This Is Not Art is on in Newcastle this weekend. It’s my favourite Australian festival - if you’ve never been, you should check it out. I’ll be doing a couple of talks and a couple of performances.

The Sydney leg of the annual Liquid Architecture festival of sound arts
starts tonight at the Performance Space. The Sydney Morning Herald has a preview: http://tinyurl.com/gqkoj

This week will be packed with performances, talks and workshops from local and international artists. Liquid Architecture is an essential event for anyone interested in contemporary sound and music. Check out the lineup:

Wednesday July 5, 8pm - Opening Night
($15/$10)

The Loop Orchestra
Clayton Thomas & Jim Denley
Amanda Stewart

Thursday July 6, 8pm - Concert 1
($20/$15/$12)

Pimmon
Dean Roberts (NZ)
Greg Davis & Jeph Jerman (USA)
Donna Hewitt & Julian Knowles
Gail Priest

+ Artist Talks 6-7pm (Free)

Friday July 7, 8pm - Concert 2
($20/$15/$12)

The Swiss Australian Collectibles (Switzerland & Melbourne)
[featuring Speak Percussion, Duo B&B and Martin Baumgartner]
Martin Baumgartner (Switzerland)
Ros Bandt (Melbourne)
Garth Paine & Michael Atherton
Peter Blamey

+ Artist Talks 6-7pm (Free)

Saturday July 8 - Panel + Workshop

12-2pm - Instrument Building Workshop (Free)
with Ross Bencina/Donna Hewitt/Ros Bandt

3-5pm - Panel/Forum – ‘Interrogating The Instrument’ (Free)
with Ian Andrews/Julian Knowles/Peter Blamey/Garth Paine

Saturday July 8, 8pm - Concert 3
($20/$15/$12)

eRikm (France)
EPA [Darrin Verhagen](Melbourne)
Ross Bencina (Melbourne)
Duo B&B (Switzerland)
Ivar Lehtsalu

+ Artist Talks 6-7pm (Free)

Sunday July 9, 10.30am-1.30pm - AudioMulch Masterclass
($20/$10)

With Audiomulch creator Ross Bencina.

Sunday July 9, 2pm - Audiovisual Performance
($15/$10)

Klipp AV (UK/Sweden)
Ian Andrews
Kazumichi Grime
Dave Noyze

A season pass is available for just $60/$40 which will get you entry to
all performances. http://performancespace.com.au/bookings.html

Liquid Architecture
http://liquidarchitecture.org.au

Presented in Sydney by

Alias Frequencies
http://aliasfrequencies.org

The Performance Space
http://performancespace.com.au

and 2SER
http://2ser.com

With support from The Australia Council for the Arts, NSW Ministry for
the Arts, The University of Technology, Sydney, Alliance Française,
Association Française d’Action Artistique, French Embassy, CAOS.

My review of the NOW now festival for RealTime is now online (and in print). In the same issue is Ben Byrne’s response to Nigel Helyer’s ‘critique‘ of laptop music performance.

Some interesting free talks coming up in Sydney:

1) Key Concepts lecture series at Sydney Uni. A follow-up to last year’s Key Thinkers series which I couldn’t make due to work commitments. I’m looking forward to attending some of these.

Wednesday 3 May ‘Terra Nullius’ Andrew Fitzmaurice
Wednesday 10 May ‘Nationalism’ Glenda Sluga
Wednesday 17 May ‘Freedom’ Duncan Ivison
Wednesday 24 May ‘Truth’ Huw Price
Wednesday 31 May ‘Racism’ Ghassan Hage
Wednesday 7 June ‘Death’ Jennann Ismael
Wednesday 14 June ‘Globalisation’ Raewyn Connell

Venue: NEW VENUE FOR 2006 Footbridge Theatre The University of Sydney

2) Cory Doctorow (of Boing Boing, Creative Commons, etc.) at Popcorn Taxi:

Outspoken novelist, commentator and new-tech guru CORY DOCTOROW debates the future for filmmakers and media artists in this special event presented by Popcorn Taxi and the Australian Film Commission. Doctorow asks where does Hollywood get off, “with its antiquated business model, in treating the media user as a criminal with their draconian copyright laws?…Such laws limit the creative possibilities for artists and users.”An innovativeand brilliant thinker Doctorow proposes a revolutionary new model for media artists that defies the Digital Rights Management: “Technologies that seek to restrict the copying and use of digital works are wrong and wrong-headed”, Cory says. “Wrong because they don’t work, because they suppress creativity, and because they treat honest users like crooks. Wrong-headed because they seek to make digital works act as much as possibly like analog works. No DVD owner wants a way to do less with her movies, and companies that try to sell her technologies to do this deserve to go broke.”This debate is essential for any filmmaker and media artist who wants to give serious consideration to the future of their Work. The evening will include an interview and audience Q&A conducted by MARCUS GILLEZEAU, filmmaker (Firelight) and a specialist in digital production technologies.

popcorn taxi
Rated: R18+ EXEMPT from CLASSIFICATION
Time: 7.00pmDate: Wednesday, April, 19th, 2006
Where: Greater Union Bondi Junction
Address: Level 6, 500 Oxford Street, Westfield Bondi Junction Entry: Free

Bettered by the borrower - copyrights and music composition

Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project

Famous Cannabis Users

Google Idol

THE MARRIAGE OF CADMUS AND HARMONY FOR CHILDS

The Mercury Theatre on the Air

Nyet

sCrAmBlEd?HaCkZ! (awesome software!)

SONY admits that CD/44.1PCM is inferior

Stagg Chili Recipes

Video Downloader

xTal - free mp3 DJ VSTi plugin

Zaatar Mix

These were given out at Max’s funeral. I wanted to post them earlier, but my scanner stopped working and I’ve only just got a new one.

Click on this image to read the story of an amazing life: