audioscrobbler doesn’t like me

Inspired by Weez, I set myself up with Audioscrobbler. But my page remains blank, even though I’ve downloaded the iTunes plugin and everything.

Hmmm.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

latest issue of quadrat

Via SHARP-L:

The latest issue of ‘Quadrat’ (the bulletin of research in progress on the history of the British book trade) is now available on-line (as a PDF) on the British Book Trade Index website.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

analog rights management

Our first bookmaking class met last night, and I think I’m going to like it. Being a student is good practice for teachers.

We are free to pursue whatever projects we like. I guess I went in assuming we would be receiving specific assignments, so I’ve had to think through possibilities. What I’ve realized is that I’m really interested in fasteners: devices that are used to keep a book closed, whether that’s a latch like on one of the Bibles I examined last summer, an elastic band like the one on my new little Moleskine notebook, or a cord like what’s attached to the Tibetan notebook I bought over a year ago. What appeals to me about these devices? Perhaps it’s the way in which they work against the familiar openess of books, acting as a kind of safeguard (even if only a symbolic one) against unauthorized uses.

I began to think, “What would it take to create an exact replica of one of these things?” Then I began to think, “What kinds of things did readers do with (or to) their books before they became so cheap and commonplace and before we had automated book production?” One of the above Bibles, for example, had been “hacked” at some point, by which I mean that someone took the traditionally bound Bible, split it in two, and then bound the two halves separately, but facing each other on a common backboard. The result was a book half as thick but twice as wide. My guess is that this alteration was done to fit into a particular pocket or satchel.

Users of electronic devices frequently hack them to see what kinds of non-authorized uses they can get out of them. As digital rights management technology gets more and more sophisticated (and as laws are passed to outlaw bypassing DRM), such hacking becomes more and more appealing, frankly.

Readers have long had the ability and inclination to alter their books, to make them say or do things other than what their creator intended. In some deep sense, this practice is perhaps a residue of oral culture, in which discourse exists only in conversation. Walter Ong calls writing “autonomous discourse” because it needs no interlocutor. In practice, however, we intervene in written discourse all the time, through writing marginal notes, underlining and highlighting key passages, and through altering the physical makeup of the book itself.

But how would history be different if the technology of the book had prevented such interventions? What if we were unable to try out new arrangements, to foreground different textual elements than those the author deemed most important?

Or to ask a question from a completely different angle: what elements of printed books might accurately be described (in a weird kind of back formation) as “analog rights management” features? How does the form of print seek to protect the integrity of the information it contains?

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

monday morning mp3: cat power

I should be asleep, but some combination of getting up later than usual and having coffee at 5 this afternoon has resulted in insomnia. So you’re getting your music early.

I worked the 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. shift at a 24-hour photocopy place in Atlanta for a good chunk of my college career. The guy who worked the graveyard shift was Glen Thrasher, who also published a ‘zine called Lowlife and cohosted a show on WREK called “Destroy All Music.” Glen struck me as grumpy but basically pretty nice, and he tried to clue my clueless self in to some local indie and avant-garde music. He played sporadically in a few different bands, including “I see the moon” and, I think, “Freedom Puff.” I learned years later, after I’d moved to D.C., that he’d also played with Chan Marshall, better known as Cat Power.

Then I read in Creative Loafing that in her younger years, Marshall had worked at a pizza place on Ponce de Leon in Atlanta that was like a second home to me. Perhaps she’d even served me a slice and a salad.

Marshall has developed a reputation for being absolutely horrible live, reportedly because she suffers from extreme stage fright. I’ve never seen her perform, so I can’t say. I have listened to most of her recorded music, however, and it’s really affecting and often disturbing. Somehow melodic and dissonant at the same time, usually midtempo or even quite slow.

I’ve picked one of the most accessible tracks off of her recent album, You are Free, because the lyrics just break my heart: “Good Woman” (mp3, 4.7MB)

Here’s an iTunes list of Cat Power music.

I realize that this is not exactly the most obscure music selection, and you’ve probably heard of Cat Power already, haven’t you, dear reader? The point is this: I’m not trying to play obscurantist bingo; I just want to share some music I really like, most of which is stuff I don’t hear on the radio.

MP3 files are posted for evaluation purposes only. Availability is limited: usually 24 hours. Through this site, I’m trying to share and promote good music with others, who will also hopefully continue to support these artists. Everyone is encouraged to purchase music and concert tickets for the artists you feel merit your hard earned dollars. If you hold copyright to one of these songs and would like the file removed, please let me know.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email