Arts
Social Music
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 06/05/2011 - 21:00Music, like other forms of media is very social, from the mix tapes of my youth to the social media tools of today. This weekend, I started thinking about where we are with social media. For a long time, I’ve used Pandora and Last.fm I’ve liked tools that have mashed up Last.fm and Pandora as well as listed music I’ve played on my N900 on Last.fm. However, there have been some interesting developments since I started playing with Pandora and Last.fm. I just wish I could find an app that would scrobble the tunes I’m listening to on a Pandora android app to Last.fm
What got me thinking about this is over the weekend, I noticed a lot of my friends posting YouTube music videos on their Facebook Wall. I started adding them to a playlist on YouTube. With that, I can then play the playlist on my cellphone or on my Roku Player. (Yes, I loaded the YouTube Private Channel before it got shutdown, and I hope to use it until Roku and Google work out their issues and make YouTube fully supported).
Of course, I started thinking about how it would be nice if I could just click on the video to more easily add it to my Social Music playlist on YouTube, similar to the way you can get Last.fm to save information about music you’ve listened to or easily like songs on Pandora. Perhaps someone will come up with a nice way of doing this.
I also took a quick look at Vevo. So far, I am very unimpressed with it. It won’t allow me to upload my avatar and won’t save a bunch of my settings. Most of the music seems way to mainstream for my tastes, and I couldn’t find a way to associate my online profile to the Vevo Android app.
Meanwhile, music is moving to the cloud. The Last.fm app on the Android doesn’t seem to scrobble music from Amazon’s MP3 cloud. Perhaps that will get fixed at some time. However, Amazon’s MP3 cloud really hasn’t caught my attention. I’ve thought about experimenting with Ubuntu One, but it costs $3.99 a month to have mobile access, and it just isn’t worth that much.
So, what are you doing to share music?
Living The Great American Novel
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 05/28/2011 - 12:20The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation, the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn looking for jouissance, l’objet petit a.
The words of Emerson, Ginsburg and Lacan rattle around in my mind as I confront the blank page of a blog post yet to be written and the discussions on Facebook of my high school class mates from over a billion seconds ago.
One of them wrote, “Is anyone (else) having any sort of mid life crisis?” and we all shared stories of the difficulties we’ve faced, the broken marriages, bankruptcies, frustrations with our careers, and other struggles that those of us who have crossed the half century line have confronted.
In another post, there was a mention of a play a bunch of us had been in back in high school.
You see, she was gonna be an actress
And I was gonna learn to fly.
Well, I did take flying lessons in the years between high school and where I am now and I sure my classmates have had their successes as well, but
Dreams have lost some grandeur coming true.
Ah yes, grandeur. I always used to talk not about having delusions of grandeur, but aspirations of grandeur. I still dream of writing the next great American novel.
I’ve often been told that you should only write what you know about, so until I get ready to write that great American novel, I guess I have to live out parts of it. Yet maybe, that is the best we can do, live our lives as if we are living the great American novel.
It is great to be back in touch with some of the characters from the early chapters and to wonder what the next chapter brings.
#Teamtate and The Merchant of Shelton
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 05/12/2011 - 18:20Why are our schools failing? It is a popular question these days and too often people point at the teachers. They too rarely look at school administrators and I think the whole #teamtate fiasco is a good illustration of where administrators are failing.
Let me start off by laying out the story, at least as I understand it. James Tate, a senior at Shelton High School came up with a great way of asking a girl to the prom. He posted giant cardboard letters on the school. At least as I am hearing the story from the school administration’s perspective, this involved trespassing on school property after dark. This was grounds for a one day suspension, and any student who has been suspended cannot participate in other school activities. The rules are very clear. James Tate cannot go to the prom.
The rules are there for a reason and should not be altered, the argument goes. Else, you may head down a slippery slope. Someone else might do something destructive and since the rules were bent once would argue they should be bent again. It all makes perfect sense in a black and white world with no room for shades of grey, let alone anything colorful.
It may be that we are moving towards such a world. It turns school administrators into automatons applying the rules, without any critical thinking. Yet isn’t critical thinking an important skill our schools are supposed to be teaching? Is critical thinking something taught by rote? Learn the rules. Apply them. Do not attempt to be creative.
No, if our schools are going to stop failing, they need to move away from this black and white thinking. They need to celebrate creativity.
So, perhaps the students at Shelton High School need to study The Merchant of Venice. Perhaps they could even stage an adaptation with Shelton High School Headmaster Beth Smith taking the role of Shylock, James Tate taking the role of Antonio, and Sonali Rodrigues playing the role of Portia.
Yes, Shylock Smith is entitled to take a pound of flesh from Antonio Tate.
but, in the cutting it, if she dost shed
One drop of Tate’s blood, her lands and goods
Are, by the laws of Connecticut, confiscate
Unto the state of Connecticut.
Already the Mayor of Shelton and the Governor of Connecticut have lined up on the side of Tate and if we read The Merchant of Venice further, we will see that perhaps Shylock Smith will need to be seeking mercy from Duke Dannell. Will someone find such a creative solution to this current mess to help Shelton and Connecticut recover from the damage that Shylock Smith is doing to the city and the state? Let us hope so. Let us hope that this can be a reminder to all of us about the importance of celebrating creativity, even if it requires rethinking and even bending rules sometimes.
Random Stuff
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 05/09/2011 - 20:46Mother’s Day: We had a nice day at the park. I started working on the macrame hammock. Based on my experiences Sunday, this is going to take a very long time to complete. As long as I have energy for the project, I’ll provide updates.
Coming home, there was a car riding on our tail which promoted this tweet:
The Red Camero
Speeding, swerving on my tail
waiting accident
Actually, Kim was driving and the Camero was blue, but it gets across the idea.
It got me thinking more about other aspects of writing and so I spent some time watching YouTube videos about Lacan, Derrida, Zizek and others. More on that later, when I have more time.
Music Monday - Stephen Colarelli
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 04/18/2011 - 17:36With my new job, I haven’t had as much time to dedicate to writing blog posts as I would like. It’s been compounded by computer problems at home and just doing a lot of writing at work. Yet there is an interesting overlap between some of my work writing and my personal writing. Earlier this month, I wrote a blog post AmeriCorps Members a Decade Later. It was about two doctors at CHC who had been AmeriCorps members and are now doctors.
I thought of this as I started writing my blog post about Stephen Colarelli. His bio on Sonicbids includes:
Steve went to Senegal, in West Africa, as a Peace Corps volunteer. He lived in a small village working on agricultural projects. During his spare time he continued to play the guitar and write music. He formed a rock band with several other Peace Corps volunteers, and they would play for dances when they were in Senegal’s capital city, Dakar. After the Peace Corps, he earned a doctorate in psychology, began a career as a college professor and put music on the back burner. Years later, he got a call from one of his Peace Corp buddies about a reunion, and they talked about getting the band back to gather to play at the reunion. They did, and from then on, Steve has devoted much of his free time to writing, producing, and recording music.
There is something deep, tuneful, yet simple about his music, something I imagine it would have been great to listen to in Senegal, or on a college campus in Michigan. You see, Dr. Colarelli isn’t just Peace Corp alumnus and a performer; he is also a psychology professor who is currently working on a book, “Handbook of The Biological Foundations of Organizational Behavior”.
As with other Music Monday posts, let me end off by providing a video.