A Week In The Dark

I just finished my first week of work at my new job. It was hectic and stressful, but not because of the job itself. More so because my key broke off in my ignition on what was supposed to be my third day. What seemed like a simple matter for a locksmith to deal with turned into an ongoing ordeal involving a new ignition, a $1000 bill, a bus trip from Redmond on Friday night, and a lost day of work. Things start looking up, and something has to come along and rain on the parade, I suppose. Hopefully I’ll get my car back today.

On a more positive note, I’m really enjoying the new Hot Chip album. Almost as much as the new Why? album. And I’m still wrapping my head around the new Autechre. Every time one of their albums comes out, it takes repeated listening over several weeks to really get inside it and understand what’s happening, musically and technically. By the time my copy of the limited edition version arrives, I should be ready to take on the bonus disc…just in time to go see them in April.

As for now though, I’m gonna watch some participatory democracy in action at the Central Library, then do some relaxing and try to forget the whole car ordeal. Music will probably help. So will red wine.

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Posted by Dylan
On February 9, 2008
In Category: General, Recorded Music, Seattle, Unabashed Consumerism, Wage Slavery, Whining & Griping
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Fear of a Black MacBook

IMG_4956, originally uploaded by successless.

I think that my first foray into the realm of Consumer Credit has been fruitful indeed. Merry Xmas to me.

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Posted by Dylan
On December 18, 2007
In Category: General, Unabashed Consumerism
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No Excuses

At the risk of being spammy (can one be spammy on one’s own blog? Hmmm…) I have a few things for sale. If you’re in the Seattle area and would like to buy a guitar, a keyboard, or a drum machine, hit me up.

I’ve been an awful blogger lately, I know. Hang tough though, true believers, the rest of this year should be pretty interesting, with at least two trips and hopefully some musical goings-on. Soon enough…

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Posted by Dylan
On August 6, 2007
In Category: General, Seattle, Unabashed Consumerism, Whining & Griping
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Bag of Dick’s

I present to you a completely unsolicited pitch for an advertising campaign for local Seattle burger joint Dick’s Drive Thru, a cultural institution despite lackluster hamburgers.

Scene: Broadway, Capitol Hill, mid day. Two young men dressed in current youth fashions are walking along the street.

Youth 1: Man, I sure am hungry. My stomach is killing me! I really wish I could get my hands on some cheap, greasy grub right about now, brah.

Youth 2: Well, why don’t you just go eat a bag of dicks?

Youth 1: Yo brah, that was uncalled for! I don’t get all harsh on your broke ass when you need some munchies, do I?

Youth 2: No brah, I mean a bag of tasty burgers and fries from Dick’s Drive Thru!

…And this is why I will never work in advertising.

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Posted by Dylan
On May 9, 2007
In Category: General, Seattle, Unabashed Consumerism
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The Owl in Daylight

I’m adjusting surprisingly well to my new work schedule, a previously unimaginable 5:00 am alarm leaving me none the worse for wear. The job itself is not bad…every day is a little different, and my employers are flexible enough to let me take time off for a Parisian vacation and a significant other’s surgery, even though I haven’t been there for two weeks yet.

The new hours are somewhat prohibitive of my choice leisure activities, including showgoing. But I figure an afternoon nap will do wonders in that department. I already had some late nights this past weekend, and slipped back into work mode pretty easily.

In preparation for a lengthy flighty to Europe (my first), my aforementioned other and I have purchased matching pink Nintendo DS Lites. Possibly an ill-advised purchase, as I am now resigned to the fact that I will have no spending money until after I return from Paris, which means my planned record shopping trip (to celebrate gainful employment) will have to be indefinitely postponed. But it’s all worth it for the glory that is New Super Mario Bros., and the promise of wireless Mario Kart action in my near future is tantalizing as well. Even Animal Crossing: Wild World has drawn me into it’s cute little web of addiction.

In essentially unrelated news, there might be some weirdness when trying to visit this site or the Miniature Airlines website, or even the comics blog in the next week or so. The panicNow free server is going offline after 6 years of serving up pages for various artists, musicians, misfits, and ne’er-do-wells. Godspeed panicNow free server! You shall be missed as we migrate over to Dreamhost and actually have to bear the indignity of paying for webspace.

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Posted by Dylan
On February 22, 2007
In Category: General, Unabashed Consumerism, Wage Slavery, Whining & Griping
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Scattershot

Goddamn. The Capitol Hill Block Party. Or, as the chalkboard behind the bar in the Comet Tavern referred to it, the Capitalist Hill Block Party. Whatever you call it, it was a blast. For 24 measly dollars, I saw a ton of bands, including local faves Band of Horses, Sera Cahoone, Common Market, and Minus the Bear, plus out-of-towners like Silversun Pickups. Sure, some of the acts weren’t my cup of tea (Himsa, Murder City Devils, I’m looking at you!), but overall, it was well worth it. You take the good with the bad at these festivals, and in there was way more good to be had here than otherwise. I even took some pictures, although it’s somewhat telling that most of them are of us inside a bar…Serene has some better pictures up too.

Blogging has been slow here, though I’ve been blogging up a storm over at Vox. There’s something very easy and inviting about it. I think I’m hooked. I have an invite if you’d like to try it out…e-mail me. My first name at this domain.

Still planning on souping this site up a bit….eventually. I started a design I liked, and have since fallen out of love with, although I learned a few things while doing it, so it wasn’t a total waste. But I have a new idea to try out, soonish. I need to get the Adobe suite re-installed on my PC soon, so I can do some of the scanning I’ll need to do to make that design happen. Oh, and I picked up O’Reilly’s Programming PHP at Half Price Books last night, so that gives me some more tools to play around with (assuming I can find some time to sit down and get my hands dirty).

Blah blah….more later, as usual.

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Posted by Dylan
On July 31, 2006
In Category: Debauchery, General, Live Music, Seattle, Unabashed Consumerism
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The Sound of Settling

The new apartment is pretty much settled in now, with the exception of a few odds and ends that need to be sent to Value Village, and a box or two of audio gear that needs to be organized and stashed away. Serene was a real trooper about organizing our CDs yesterday (she has the week off, pending a new job start date after walking out on her previous employers). And the good news about CD organization and music library consolidation is that it gave us both an opportunity to convert duplicate or unloved discs into trade credit at Easy Street records. I ended up with $50 in trade-in credit (I had a short stack of mostly pretty desirable music), which was more than I was expecting, so I converted that credit into a nice stack of vinyl (and one CD).

I’m trying to move away from acquiring new CDs. The one that I bought last night was the new I Am Robot And Proud album, The Electricity In Your House Wants To Sing, which they didn’t have in stock on vinyl. C’est la vie. But regarding CDs: they have a lot of upsides. Convenience is probably the primary one. They’re smaller and more portable than records, and even though I use an iPod for almost any listening I do outside of my house, that is an attractive feature. Especially given that I’ve moved 5 times in the last 4 years. They’re also convenient in the sense that I can pop them into my CD drive, rip them, and have them available for listening, copying, adding to a portable device, burning, etc. without ever having to fuss with packaging or anything. They’re a completely ubiquitous format, available and playable basically everywhere, and despite rising prices and complaints of overcharging by labels, they’re still relatively affordable, especially at larger stores that can afford to order in large quantities and discount to their customers. They’re also capable of a high level of audio fidelity, and while debate rages among audiophiles over the relative quality differences between vinyl and CD, I’ve found that each format complements different musical and engineering styles. They’re incredibly practical, all things considered.

That said, I’m increasingly disenchanted with them, for reasons personal and philosophical.

Let’s start with the more tangible reasons. Larger labels are increasingly trying to shoehorn DRM schemes into the CD format, crippling the very convenience and flexibility that makes them appealing. Also, the current Loudness War being waged in the world of major label popular music (and which is currently bleeding over to the realm of smaller labels and niche genres) in the name of competitive volume comes at the expense of the sonic fidelity that CDs were originally engineered to offer. On both of these fronts, the format is being undermined by middlemen with no concern for either the customers or artists.

There’s an aesthetic difference between vinyl and CD as well. While I find blanket statements of either format’s superiority somewhat silly (they both have upsides and downsides, some of which are emphasized by different musical material), it’s tough to deny the physical and auditory appeal of well-pressed, well-mastered, and well-cared for vinyl records, even without investing a small fortune in top of the line audiophile gear. My cheap turntable coupled with Serene’s cheap stereo would give an audio purist a heart attack, but it works well enough to hear whatever subtle differences exist.

Philosophically, vinyl offers a more direct connection to the music. Even though most music recorded today goes through digital conversion processes before being released, the grooves on a record are physically analogous (hence the name “analog”) to the final waveform being reproduced. It’s nice to know that after the Oil Crash (yes, this is hyperbole), a needle and piece of paper are all that will be needed to listen to a record. Try listening to a CD without electricity!

Not a very convincing case for dropping CDs, I know, but most of my decision is more personal, and relates more to listening habits. I have hundreds of CDs, and hundreds more CDs worth of downloaded music (don’t sue me). I’ve found that the overabundance of music, and the increasing separation between music-as-experience and music-as-object tends to lead (at least in my personal habits) to a sense of disconnection. This is more a product of the availability of free music online than any issues related to CDs themselves, but bear with me here. Most of my music listening is being done now on my computer or my iPod, usually during some other activity. When I bought new CDs, they would be opened, liner notes perused, ripped, shelved, and rarely touched again. Music became a background, an endless cornucopia of sounds to be chosen as background to other tasks. There was so much to listen to that it was difficult to find time for repeat listens to anything that didn’t grab me straight off the bat. Considering that some of my favorite albums (OK Computer, The Milk Eyed Mender, Vespertine, among others) didn’t reveal their charms immediately, this is troubling. How much music have I bought and downloaded and filed away without giving a real chance? I also noticed that I was becoming bad at remembering song titles, track orders, lyrics. I’d find myself sitting down to make a mix CD and not really knowing what half the songs I wanted to use were about. I’d hear a track come up on shuffle and wonder what it was, because it was towards the end of an album I’d never finished listening to.

So part of the appeal of vinyl is a closer connection to the music. My turntable is in the front room, away from my computer desk, and even though I use laptops, wireless internet, and VNC in order to access anything on any computer in my network from anywhere in the house, removing myself from that setting helps to put the focus on the act of listening. Having to deal with the packaging again puts the focus back on relating to the music as an experience with a physical, tactile aspect, and encourages reading tracklists and liner notes and lyrics. It makes music less of a commodity and more of an experience. Listening becomes something to do, rather than something that happens in the background. Vinyl facilitates engaging with music in a way that CDs and MP3s don’t.

I’m not giving up on CDs completely. I’m not going to give up my iPod or digital music collection. I’m not going to stop downloading music (in fact, I’m going to make sure to download copies of whatever I buy on vinyl, when possible). I recognize, that there are plenty of upsides to the wide availability of digital music (most notably the ease of acquiring rare or out-of-print material and easier access to the history of recorded music, leading to the potential to wider exposure to music of different styles and eras). But for me, right now, the shift of mindset that comes with a shift of format feels more beneficial than convenience.

Wow, that was long and self-indulgent. Sorry.

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Posted by Dylan
On July 12, 2006
In Category: General, Recorded Music, The Best Of, Unabashed Consumerism, Whining & Griping
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Odds and Ends

A few short things that don’t merit full posts on their own…

I picked up a great stack of music at Amoeba a week or two ago, when I was down in SF meeting up with some of my compadres from EM411.com (pics by John). Some Jaga Jazzist, the Morr Music Slowdive tribute compilation, the new Doseone album, Owen’s last album, a Hood promo single, and the last Funkstorung (with brilliant multilayered packaging). All quite fun, especially the Doseone. I had a promo copy of the Funkstorung album (Disconnected) at some point, and the tracks were layered over with spoken commentary in order to discourage piracy, so it’s nice to have an unmarred copy now.

I’ve also been slowly collecting more music through, ahem, more illicit means. How have I not listened to the Jim Yoshii Pile-Up before?They’ve really got the classic emo formula down, in a way that’s not overwrought, but sort of refined and dramatic. I’d group them more with classic Karate than other emo bands though, really. And that’s a good thing.

Also managed to acquire the new Why? album, Elephant Eyelash (and I can see by my referrer logs that a lot of people are curious about this one as well). All I can say is, buy it. It’s good. Did you like Sanddollars? This is like that; quirky, off-kilter, accessible pop music with that good ol’ Anticon Flava. Seriously, album of the year contender.

On the topic of my own music: slowly plucking away at a few projects, including a new track for a compilation that will be out in Novemeber. Thent he 2 EP projects that are next in line, and a spot on a Sonic Youth tribute, with no fixed release date yet…

Also: the Apparel EP has been picked up for re-release by the lovely netlabel Kendra-Unique, and should be available on their site soon. Check out the other music there, from Samarah and the Great Mundane while you’re at it. Some fine folks to be associated with…

The Comics Blog is comig along nicely, but the whole reason I started it is so you wouldn’t have to read about that sort of thing here if you didn’t want to. So click thorugh if that’s your sort of thing.

More later, as I think of it.

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Posted by Dylan
On August 29, 2005
In Category: General, Making Music, Recorded Music, Unabashed Consumerism
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Enter the Apple

So I took the plunge last night and picked up a 12″ iBook. I’ve been looking for something to complement my current PC laptop, a bulky-but-powerful AMD64 monster. The iBook is going to be my lightweight, mobile computer for non-music stuff (and probably a little music every once in a while, too).

I got a start on tricking it out last night, setting up Firefox to synch bookmarks from both computers, and installing all the little gadgets I’m used to (like system stats monitors). I’ve still got a lot of stuff I need to install to feel truly at home on this machine, but so far, it’s pretty sweet. I think this was a good investment.

More later….

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Posted by Dylan
On August 2, 2005
In Category: General, Unabashed Consumerism
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Late to the Party

Anyone who knows me knows who astute I am about keeping up with the latest trends in personal entertainment (cue eye roll here). So you should all be shocked to learn that I just now have tried Blizzard’s MMORPG World of Warcraft for the first time.

This is my first MMOWTFRPG, and though I’ve only played for a bout 2 hours, I like it so far. Oh, and that’s two hours not counting the 45 minute install time, and the 2 hours downloading a 200Mb patch from the server before I could even start the game. But whatever. Once I finally got up and running, I was pretty impressed. It was a little laggy, but I have a feeling that that was due to the fact that I had a couple of hefty torrents going at the same time. I’ll try it again tonight with a little more free bandwidth, and see if that makes a difference.

So yeah, I was planning on trying it out for a couple of hours before bedtime, but after the excessive installation/patching process, I ended up playing way too late into the evening (if 2am is still considered evening). I have to say, I’m glad I’m only on a 10-day trial account right now (thanks Reed!), as this could lead to massive amounts of sleep deprivation. We’ll see how I’m feeling after 10 days, I suppose.

More later…

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Posted by Dylan
On July 25, 2005
In Category: General, Unabashed Consumerism, Whining & Griping
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