My Favorite Records:The Cure – Disintegration

This is the another installment in my series of favorite records.

While my music tastes are anchored in the country, classic and blues rock of the late 60’s and 70’s, the mid-eighties was a wonderful time for rock and roll. During the 80’s alternative rock bands like The Replacements, REM, Elvis Costello, Talk Talk and others created an entire new genre and catalog of music that was different than anything we had heard before. I recall hearing some of the best music on WRVU during my graduate school years of 1982-85.

No band of that era grabbed me more than The Cure. They made several records that are candidates for this list, but I’m going to pick their 1989 record Disintegration.

This record epitomizes the dark, brooding and occasionally ever-so-hopeful music that I discovered and enjoyed so much during the 80’s. Pictures of You is a wonderful song by any standard. Love Song is another classic from this record. Last Dance is another brooding, enchanting number, with a great guitar track behind Robert Smith’s unique and compelling voice.

Lullaby is a great song too. But the song that put this record on this list is Fascination Street. It’s about as haunting as a song can be.

Every one of the other songs on this record is somewhere between very, very good and excellent. The Cure made sad records, happy records (sort of), alternative records and almost pop records during the 80’s. This record is a great combination of all of that and more.

Technorati Tags:
,

RanchoCast for 12/16/05

I did a new installment of our RanchoCast podcast last night.

The theme is hard to find. I played some rare and hard to find songs by The Del Fuegos, Dancing Hoods, my friend Steve Young, Fever Tree and The Judys.

A word about the music files: I am a songwriter and musician, and I have no desire to take money out of anyone’s pocket. To the contrary, I am trying to promote some great music that you likely won’t hear on mainstream radio. These are low bitrate MP3s. I am experimenting with podcasting as a way to promote alt. county music. Go buy these records. You’ll be glad you did.

Is Anyone Really Mad About Christmas?

3 pc wise men

I participated in two separate discussions today about the holidays and the whole “Merry Christmas” thing. Most of my friends seem to think it’s a little bit dangerous to wish someone a Merry Christmas in this age of abundant political correctness. A survey of the “Holiday” cards I have received so far this year certainly indicates a hesitancy to mention Christmas. So who, exactly, are we tying to avoid offending?

I have heard a lot of cautionary tales about accidentally mentioning the word Christmas in a meeting, at the mall or on an elevator, but what I have not yet heard is a single person who admits to being offended by a Christmas greeting. I have a lot of Jewish friends, a few Hindu friends and a couple of Muslim friends. Never have I sensed any issues from them about the C word. In fact, some of them talk more about Christmas than I do. Again, where’s the problem we are trying so hard to avoid.

I certainly understand that we can’t have schools and governmental entities or even businesses promoting Christmas celebrations to the exclusion of other religious holidays. But who does that? No one I know. My daughters have been teaching me about menorahs and playing with dreidels lately- and it makes me so happy that their school and friends are teaching them about these wonderful and meaningful things. Kids have the “one world” thing down pat. I can only imagine the better world today’s children will create when they grow up. So, again, where’s the problem?

If I get card from someone wishing me happiness on a day that’s important to them, that makes me feel happy and honored. In fact, the holiday card I look forward to most of all each year is a holiday card from a Muslim friend of mine. I can’t read it because it’s in Arabic, but it always has the most beautiful pictures on it. It makes me profoundly happy that my friend sends it to me, and I keep it long after the others have been recycled. I would be sad if that card didn’t come. To be upset that it did is incomprehensible and heartbreaking to me.

Christmas is going to happen, just like July 4th and Elvis’s birthday. How you feel about any of them depends on your personal beliefs (“I don’t work January the 8th, ’cause it’s Elvis’ birthday”– name that movie for extra credit). But if someone who believes Christmas is a special day wants to send a nice card to someone they care about, why would that ever be offensive.

Maybe I’m wrong (it wouldn’t be the first time), but I just don’t think that anyone would be offended by a Merry Christmas wish. I hope not, because that would make me almost as sad as I would be if no one wished me a Happy Hanukkah or a Happy Ramadan. If someone wishes you peace and happiness, that’s a blessing.

So Merry Christmas. Happy Hanukkah. Happy Bodhi Day. Happy Kwanzaa. Happy Boxing Day. It’s the merry and happy that matters.

Technorati Tags:
,

20 Second Movie Review

weddingcrashersI saw a couple of movies I’ve been wanting to see in my hotel room during my recent trip to San Francisco. Here’s 10 seconds on each.

Wedding Crashers: Hilarious. Joins Something About Mary on my list of funniest “modern” movies. It’s not The Holy Grail, but it’s about as close as you can come these days.

The 40 Year Old Virgin: A little disappointing. I chuckled a few times, but no gut splitters like there were in Wedding Crashers. Catherine Keener was lovely (hey, I’m an old man), but I expected hilarious and it wasn’t.

Technorati Tags:

ScobleFeeds A-Z: The F’s

This is part five of my A-Z review of Scoble‘s feeds. The rules and criteria are here.

There aren’t too many to choose from in the F’s, but here are my favorites:

Feld Thoughts
(RSS Feed)

Feld Thoughts is a popular blog by Brad Feld, Managing Director at Mobius Venture Capital. Broad range of topics, including the usual tech, VC, etc.

Honorable Mention:

Flickr Blog (RSS Feed)

FuzzyBlog (RSS Feed) (Founder of Feedster, but I had to look hard to find the feed link)

Very Different Layout Award:

Flutterby
(RSS Feed) (I’m not sure if I love it or hate it, but it’s definitely different)

Things will get hopping next time when we visit the G’s.

Technorati Tags:
, ,

Wikipedia Found to be Accurate

After getting slammed for some inaccuracies and having some idiots try to jump-start a class action suit against it, Wikipedia got some much needed good news today when Nature reported that Wikipedia is actually pretty accurate. In fact, it’s about as accurate in covering scientific topics as the Encyclopedia Britannica, according to Nature:

[A]n expert-led investigation carried out by Nature- the first to use peer review to compare Wikipedia and Britannica’s coverage of science- suggests that such high-profile examples are the exception rather than the rule.

The exercise revealed numerous errors in both encyclopaedias, but among 42 entries tested, the difference in accuracy was not particularly great: the average science entry in Wikipedia contained around four inaccuracies; Britannica, about three.

That’s good and not unexpected news for those of us who believe Wikipedia is a great example of the future of the collaborative internet.

Technorati Tags:

DJ Jazzy Bob

There’s a lot of stuff on XM Radio. 90% of it is of no interest to me, though I gladly subscribe for the other commercial free 10%. Today comes news that Bob Dylan is going to host a weekly radio show on the Deep Tracks channel (Channel 40, which is on the pre-sets in my truck).

This is going to be worth tuning into. I am interested to see if Dylan has aged into the engaging and very down to earth type like Paul McCartney (who also has a special on XM-40 right now) or the fan-hating arrogant type like Van Morrison (whose mild dislike for his fans grew into some sort of enraged hatred). It will also be interesting to see what songs he picks to play and how free and candid he is with his commentary.

XM has to add a lot of different stuff to appeal to a wide range of people. Dylan will hopefully join Whispering Bill Anderson (whose XM-10 talk show on Thursdays is my favorite talk show ever) as my favorite shows on XM.

Ed Bott is fired up about it too.

Technorati Tags:
,

More on Del.icio.us

delicious

Henry Blodget posted today about Yahoo’s acquisition of del.icio.us and posed the question whether del.icio.us exploited and then abandoned its users.

First a little background and a brief rant:

1) Del.icio.us is a social bookmarking service, which means it is a service that allows users like me and you to bookmark web sites and parts of web sites and add descriptive keywords, called tags, to describe the things we have bookmarked. Other users can then search for topics of interest by searching for related tags.

2) The discussion that Henry describes happened at some “industry think-tank.” I find the whole idea of think-tanks to be hugely pretentious. I’m surprised Ken Leebow wasn’t there so he could run home and post about how useless the rest of our blogs are, but I digress. Henry’s a smart guy and I enjoy his writing- even if he did participate in a think-tank.

Anyhow, the issue is that web sites like del.icio.us build a platform, rely on users to populate and expand it and then, sometimes, sell it for a fat profit. As Henry points out, that’s the same thing that happens with message boards, review and opinion sites and countless other platforms. It happens with blogs- commenting and interactivity are the best ways to increase page views, which increase value.

The theory behind del.icio.us is the same theory that drives the growth of message boards. People want to express their opinion (Henry did it and now I’m doing it) and they like to do it at a place where they can find an audience. When I developed ACCBoards.Com, it was just an bunch of code on a server. But it filled a need- the web was a smaller place back then there was no other web site where fans of all ACC schools could gather to talk about their shared passion for ACC sports. By share, of course, I mean not just to read, but also to write. Before long we were getting millions of page views a month. I didn’t sell ACCBoards.Com, but I was about to when the dot.com bust occurred (I still get that letter of intent out once in a while and weep over it).

Was I somehow taking advantage of my users? I don’t think so. It took a lot of money to pay for the servers that ran the original site, and the new features I wanted to add were going to require money and resources I didn’t have. The users’ needs would still have be met had the sale closed- maybe even met better. Yes, I would have made some money, but so do the developers of successful shopping malls, restaurants and golf courses- all of which rely on their customers to make them successful. And unlike most golf courses, you don’t have to pay to use del.icio.us.

It all boils down to service- if you provide a service to people, they will use it. If you create a sense of community, they will use it even more. If you do that and then make some money, that’s a good thing, not a bad thing. Sure the big dollars might be harder to come by in the future, but we thought the very same thing after the dot.com bust and there’s lots of money being made now- 5 or so years later. It’s a cyclical thing. There will always be new trends and new ideas driving those trends. In the mid-nineties, blogs (nee journals) were boring internet diaries. Now for all intents and purposes blogs are the internet. Things change and ideas are hatched. Money can be made, and lots of it on the frontiers- be in California in the 1890’s or the internet in the 1990’s.

Henry concludes, as I do, that del.icio.us did nothing wrong. Provide a good service, make a little money. That’s the way things ought to work.

Technorati Tags:
,