All Muxed Up

Since the Internet at large is going all ga-ga over this Muxtape business today, I figured I’d try it out. It’s pretty awesome. A little quirky and slim on features for the moment, but definitely useful, and if it improves as promised, I can see it becoming an internet fixture. Assuming it doesn’t become too big for it’s own good first.

Anyways, I threw together a muxtape featuring music I’ve made, in bands or on my own, over the last 8 years or so. I don’t have any music available from my first band from high school, Leviathan, or I would have a track from each of our releases (So What? and Alarmingly Stylish) up. I don’t have any tracks from my old (possibly resurrected) electronic duo Car Stereo Destroys Michael Bolton Tape either. But other than that, there’s something from pretty much all my musical projects represented here. The post-Leviathan indie rock band Superficial Hero, the solo 4-track project The Sigmund Fraud, my electronic project Miniature Airlines, and even a (thankfully) unreleased rehearsal track from the short-lived three piece The One Two Three Foes. It’s roughly chronological, and it’s a wide range of stuff, from tape-hissy demos, to full band recordings and all-digital creations.

Maybe someday I’ll get ambitious and track down some Leviathan material, rip some cassette recordings, and make it truly representative of my musical “career”. Until then, enjoy what’s there.

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Posted by Dylan
On March 25, 2008
In Category: Linkage, Recorded Music, Seattle, Sonoma County
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*Headdesk*

Oh man, this is probably the most astute takedown of Sony’s plan to renounce DRM you could possibly read. I mean, you see a headline that reads something like “Last Major Label Holdout Ditches DRM” and think it must be a good thing, right? Then you read their actual plan, and it’s like your forehead is involuntarily drawn towards your desk at an excessive velocity. Thud! Idiots! Is it even physically possible to have a lesser understanding of your market?

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Posted by Dylan
On January 8, 2008
In Category: General, Linkage, Recorded Music, Whining & Griping
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In Rainbows

In Rainbows Discbox

I guess we finally know what’s up with the 7th Radiohead album. After a lot of speculation (are they still on contract to Capitol/EMI? When will it be released? Will “Big Boots” or “Nude” be on it?), the band have announced the impending release of In Rainbows.

Of course, leave it to Oxford’s boys to make a simple album release announcement a much more interesting affair.

The album appears to be self-released by the band. Odd enough for a band this large, but not unheard of (see: Prince for example). Strangely though, it will be released first as a download only, on October 10th, followed by a hardback book/2xCD/2xvinyl /bonus tracks and artwork laden $80US monstrosity in December. Even stranger: They mention that the Discbox is made to order. Stranger still: you choose your own price for the download.

So. No label. Digital only initial release with no fixed price. Custom, made to order physical format 2 months later.

This should get interesting.

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Posted by Dylan
On September 30, 2007
In Category: Linkage, Recorded Music
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I’m A Dot Com

So I just launched a new vanity site that I’ve been working on for a while. Check out www.dylanabbott.com if you’d like to see the ultimate in online ego-stroking. I created it basically as an exercise for teaching myself some PHP, and it was actually a pretty good project for that goal. I ended up running into a lot of hurdles getting things to work the way I wanted to, and had to find creative solutions to move forward.

Essentially, the site just pulls content from RSS feeds from various places I post or participate. You can see recent blog posts, photos, upcoming events, interesting links, and more. It’s the closest you can get to looking over my shoulder while I browse the vast untamed wilds of the internet. And if that doesn’t get your blood pumping, I don’t know what will (insert sarcastic eyeroll here).

If you feel inclined to browse, let me know if you run into any bugs. Thanks!

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Posted by Dylan
On August 22, 2007
In Category: General, Linkage
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Links for 2007-04-02

This has been my experiment with the del.icio.us “daily blog posting” feature, which automatically posts a list of pages I’ve bookmarked and tagged each day. I love the idea, but it’s still very rough around the edges, and lacks a lot of control (most notably in the formatting department). I’m not going to continue doing it, but I’m definitely keeping my eye on the service to see if it matures.

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Posted by Dylan
On April 1, 2007
In Category: Linkage
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Jukevox

I’ve been neglecting my Vox account a bit lately, since I redesigned this site here. I just wasn’t sure where another blog fit into my online life, so to speak. but I finally figured it out.

My Vox will now feature a new song each day, and a few words about that song. I’ve been doing it for about a week already, but wanted to see if I would keep it up for that long before I made an announcement about it. I’m trying to focus on some rare stuff, or artists people may not have heard of, but I’ll probably throw in some really familiar stuff along the way. I’m trying to find some sort of interesting tidbits that go a little bit beyond “here’s a good song, listen to it.” So check it out if you’re so inclined.

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Posted by Dylan
On March 12, 2007
In Category: General, Linkage, Recorded Music
1 comment

Sky Blue Sky

On the offhand chance that someone is reading this site in the next hour or two, Wilco is streaming their upcoming album, Sky Blue Sky until “the wee hours.” You will need Quicktime, and you will need to have “Enable Flash Tracks” set to Yes in your preferences. Enjoy.

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Posted by Dylan
On March 4, 2007
In Category: General, Linkage, Recorded Music
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Stuck in the Past

Lionel Shriver, writing for the Guardian UK, tackles a few topics in this column, starting with contemporary book cover design, and ending with contemporary jazz. Both of these topics are widely off the mark and betray a mindset that is stuck resolutely in bygone days, as well as a whiff of anti-intellectualism.

Regarding book cover design, and the larger world of design in general: his complaint is that young designers are growing up with computers as their prime tool, and lack the ability to draw, and this leads to poor cover design. I’ll agree that there is a glut of poor book covers flooding the market today, the most obvious of which consists of “mysteriously” cropped stock photography and self-consciously “edgy” typography. But book covers, like most art, obeys Sturgeon’s Law (in brief: 90% of everything is crap), and there are always fresh and exciting covers being produced. Poor design comes not from a lack of traditional drawing ability, but an unwillingness to edge away from what is currently in style. He also asserts that “many enduring classics of packaging involved someone sitting down to draw or paint a picture,” ignoring that the overwhelming majority of classic book and album covers are photographic in nature. Sure, there’s plenty of great illustrative cover design out there, but illustrative art is no the be-all and end-all of cover design, and whether or not it has fallen out of favor seems to bear little on the advent of computer design. After all, computers are capable of being used as illustrative tools, just as pen, pencil, paint, etc. Maybe if he wasn’t getting what he wanted from the 13 rounds of revision his publisher went through in designing his latest book cover, he should aim that ire at the individual designers (or better yet, perhaps his own ability to communicate his needs to them!), rather than their tools. There’s no lack of talented illustrators out there today.

And, regarding jazz: Using Blue Note Records’ announcement of their plans to sell ringtones of classic jazz tunes as a springboard, rails against the commercially dire straits of jazz music today. He places the blame solely at the feet of Free Jazz musicians, who apparently have “[t]he same perverse obliviousness to what an audience really wants that has alienated so many would-be viewers from modern art.” In Shriver’s mind, this has turned people off from seeing “many jazz musicians today, playing at a club near you, whose music is accessible, tuneful, and tap-your-foot rhythmic.” Never mind that Jazz since the 40s (a time he cites, along with the 60s as jazz’s heyday) left behind such populist concerns in favor of the sounds of bebop and its descendants, a musically sophisticated style that wrenched jazz from the dancefloor and required engagement and musical knowledge from both listener and performer. “I’m convinced that, while it may be fun to play, even most jazz musicians can’t stand to listen to it,” he insists, referring to Free Jazz. Of course, he can’t be bothered to understand the form as anything other than “unstructured, often atonal and unmelodiously improvised,” ignoring the sheer range of tonalities and levels of melodic content in the genre. Apparently, it’s just not toe-tapping enough, so he can’t be bothered to investigate further, or attempt to engage the music on terms other than shallow pleasantries and adherence to European-classical derived notions of craft. It’s an act of contempt and a disservice to the fans to explore what lies outside of the realms of traditional Western music forms and rules, and because of those bad, bad, Free Jazzers, none of his friends will go see the accessible, danceable jazz bands he likes. Poor Lionel.

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Posted by Dylan
On August 2, 2006
In Category: General, Linkage, Whining & Griping
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Vox Trot

Six Apart, the fine people behind such tools as LiveJournal, Movable Type, Typepad, etc. have sent out another wave of invites for their new service, Vox, and I was lucky enough to get one.

I’ve signed up and played around for a bit, and it seems fun. It’s sort of a combination of different aspects of a lot of other social networking/blogging sites, and even integrates services from other sites (most notably Flickr and YouTube). The friends system is less of a pain than, say, MySpace, and lacks the friend approval requirement, allowing you to build your “neighborhood” from any interesting people you run across on the site, rather than having to request their approval for friendship. It also allows you to build collections of content, either your own or from offsite. You can upload audio (a nice feature, and sure to make it attractive to musicians, especially since it lacks some of the presentational drawbacks of MySpace) or post video from YouTube, and build collections of books from Amazon.

It’s customizable, but not 100% freely customizable. You have a few layout options, and a couple dozen themes (designed by Six Apart) that are based on these modular layouts. You can choose which elements appear in your sidebars, though from what I can see, you can’t control their order.

Everything on the site is organized by tagging, so you can search for, say, Seattle, and find any blog posts, photos, audio files, videos, etc. that have been tagged Seattle. Content can also be organized into collections, allowing you to group together different types of content, for example, all your vacation photos and blog posts about that vacation could belong to a single collection.

I’m not sure exactly where this new blogging site will belong in my lineup of blogs (currently, I post here, at my comics blog, at EM411, and at my (possibly redundant) music blog. But it seems like the casual nature of Vox could keep me coming back. We’ll see how it goes.

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Posted by Dylan
On July 18, 2006
In Category: General, Linkage, Seattle
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Networked Panhandling

Is it totally tacky of me to beg for a Vox invite here? Well, I don’t care, because I really want one. If anyone happens by and can spare one, let me know. THIS DOMAIN NAME at GMAIL.COM. You know you want to.

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Posted by Dylan
On June 9, 2006
In Category: General, Linkage
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