Bloc Party

The weather was kind of disgusting tonight, but I'll take spring disgusting over winter disgusting any day. Also, I almost got hit at an intersection by a car which had forgotten about the change of the light, but that's more or less reasonable when it's as wet and dark as it was.

Scout Niblett was passable and the Kills were, as Bloc Party noted, "the sexiest band in the world." I don't know, though, if I'd pay money to see the Kills again. I spent the time mostly thinking about how to design some sort of system for people at Carleton to figure who is going to what concert and how they are going to get there. I saw two separate groups of Carleton students there, but I had no idea any of them were going.

I think such a system would be either mainly a blog (or a bulletin board) type of thing. The blog would have each event listed as a post with the headlining band as the title. The body would include opening acts, the time, place, and date, as well as ticket price and availability. Each entry would be post-dated to the time of the concert, so everything would be in chronological order. The subject field could be used for genre. Anyone who was driving could leave a comment with how many available seats they had and what time they were leaving/returning. Anyone who needed a ride would solicit one from the listed drivers, or if there were none, leave a comment with how many people in their group needed a ride, and any other stipulations they had. Once someone picked up either riders or a ride, they would need to be able to delete their comment; or if someone partially filled up their vehicle, they would need to be able to change their number of available seats.

It would be great to use existing social software such as Upcoming.org or the Facebook, but neither of those appears to have quite the capabilities we would need. A blog would be closer, but would still lack comment editing, unless some service already handles that.

Bloc Party blew everybody away. I felt their pacing caused a lull during the second through fourth songs of the encore (they will probably improve in that department over time), from which I didn't think they'd recover, but they ended with a blazing jam that brought the house down. Guitarist Russell Lissack was wearing a Death from Above 1979 shirt, and I couldn't tell if that was his decision or whether it was a mandate from Vice Records, but their sounds aren't completely dissimilar, so it made sense.

They, or at least lead singer Kele Okereke, seem to know how good they are, which was kind of unsettling. Usually young bands overestimate themselves or don't have any stage presence, but Bloc Party knows exactly how good they are (which is pretty good) and seem to get genuinely excited at playing well for the crowd. At this point, they're a precociously talented band who haven't yet reached that awkward stage in their touring life where, two or three times a night, they have to introduce a song like, "Okay, this is a new one, so just bear with us." Everything they played before the "intermission", and the first song after it was terrific, with no dead time at all. "Banquet" was probably best, though the crowd and by extension the band might have just got more excited because that's the "big" single right now.

Also, I think they would be a really great band to introduce your kid brother to or your cousin or whoever you know is into kind of worthless pop-punk or hard rock, because they can play really fast and loud, but they're also broad and skilled enough to distinguish themselves from boring radio rock.

Pitchfork (and probably everybody else) compares them to Interpol, Franz Ferdinand, and the Futureheads, which are all exactly right. They've got downloads on their site. They're a good enough live band that the recordings don't quite capture their sound or energy, but it's probably still worth your while to check out the MP3s or the album.

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NBA Blogging

Kottke.org linked to a temporary blog by Suns twelfth man, and former Iowa State Cyclone, Paul Shirley. I wasn't expecting a post about attending an Interpol concert, but there it was.

Music Backup

I've been thinking recently about some article or report or something I saw that listed the average lifespan of a hard drive as something like 3-6 years. I can't really check the veracity of that claim, but it did get me to thinking that I should probably try to find some way to store most or all of what I have on my media drive.

Buying another hard drive seems stupid, since it wouldn't be very accessible in any situation where I didn't want to actually install the thing into a computer. The thought of burning my thousand (hard drive-only) albums onto CDs and then putting them all in cases on a lot of shelves seems like it would be very satisfying, but also not quite sensible for a multitude of reasons.

As of now I'm thinking that I ought to try to hook up with a DVD burner (perhaps in Iowa City) this summer, or just buy one, and slap my collection onto 10-15 digital versatile discs that I would then stash away somewhere safe. Probably I would make use of a temporary external case for my drive to then hook up to the other computer unless I obtain my own. Hopefully the data could then be copied directly from its current physical location to the new disc in a fairly efficient fashion.

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Surcharges

I considered buying a ticket for the Bloc Party show on Ticketmaster just now, but then I realized they were trying to charge me an extra $9.41 for an $11.00 ticket. I think I'll just get there near 8:00 on Wednesday and assume it won't sell out.

It's being advertised by 89.3, but I'm not really sure what that does to attendance. Besides, Bloc Party has just barely released their debut album, and it's not like they're the Arcade Fire or anything in terms of first tour hype. Luckily this is the last Ticketmaster-related show I'll be going to in the Twin Cities, so I should be able to get whatever else I want online.

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How to fix your computer

I recalled reading this back near the time it was posted, and decided to go look for it again since I had some trouble with adware, etc. last night. This happened because I was using an ancient version of Internet Explorer on the old laptop we picked up recently. I actually just went through and manually found and deleted most of the really annoying things that were running, but Ad-Aware turned up a lot more. I didn't do everything on the list, because I'm not that concerned and it's not our primary computer anyway, but Firefox should help a lot.

Cities without Kids

I was intrigued by this article in the New York Times about otherwise successful cities losing children. What I noticed most of all was that no one interviewed for the article seemed to have any idea what to do about the problem. I suppose about the only thing I can think of is something really obvious like tax breaks or housing vouchers for young families, which would lower the cost of living for them, and then once you'd attracted a "critical mass", the city could start putting money toward the "parks, trails and public safety improvements" that Portland's mayor says kids help make possible.

It might also be necessary to convince young parents that they actually have options other than moving out to the exurbs. It seems to be almost culturally unacceptable to not escape your apartment at least by the time your kids reach school age, if not several years earlier, although that could have as much to do with the instinct to flee hopelessly ghettoized and underfunded (or racially unfamiliar) urban school districts as with yard space and extra bedrooms.

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

I don't really know that I have much to say about this book that hasn't been said by someone else. I did notice that I seemed to enjoy the "socially unacceptable thinking = insanity" trope like I did in the film The Ruling Class. I'm not sure if that always works for me, but I'll have to keep an eye out for more stuff about how insane people are really not the ones who need help.

I liked a lot of what Pirsig had to say about "Quality" and our relationship to others, our environment, our occupations, and ourselves. I don't know if I'd go so far as to say that the only way to effect social change is through personal transformation, but I suppose I have heard worse ideas. I didn't agree with his demonization of cities and urbanity, particularly since it's not really sustainable to have everybody living in a house with a big yard and whatnot, but I guess it wasn't out of line with his ideology in general as espoused in the book.

I don't know if I'll bother with the sequel, but it did present a lot of ideas that I'd like to explore further, so I'm glad my edition had a sort of reading list in the back. There are a lot of subjects I'd like to read about in the near future, but both Eastern and Western philosophy rank pretty high. I'm not sure whether I'll hold off on non-fiction until the summer; I guess I'll just have to see where my whims take me.

EmPRINT

I read in the physical newspaper today about an internet news project, called EmPRINT, going on at the University of Missouri. According to them, their product is "a visually rich, comfortable reading experience with no page scrolling and no distracting computer or browser clutter." It requires weekly 5-10 MB downloads so I'll probably wait till I get back to Northfield before I take a look at it.

It sounds interesting to me since I readily agree that the medium of the world wide web encourages browsing much more than it does close reading, and I think that difference negatively affects the way I read the news. I like how you can scan the whole of a real newspaper in a couple minutes if you want, and then decide what you want to focus on, whereas online you only see a few headlines at a time, and may be less likely to scan an article since you'd have to open it in a new browser tab or window. I'm not sure if it will matter that it's the Mizzou paper, which I wouldn't normally look at, but it seems worth a try.

Liars

Liars is a New York experimental/noise rock band. I mention this because I found a great sentence in this week's Harper's Review, and thought it would make an amazing album title for them. (Their previous full-lengths have been named They Threw Us All in a Trench and Stuck a Monument on Top and They Were Wrong So We Drowned.)

The sentence: "The woman won his trust, made him pancakes, and turned him in."

The album: The Woman Won Our Trust, Made Us Pancakes, and Turned Us In

Vacation

It looks as if I will try to survive the next two weeks without my computer. This may turn out to be a sad, sad time as I won't be able to access the internet as much, watch movies in my room, or listen to the roughly one thousand albums I don't have on CD, but perhaps it will be a character-building experience as well. I can't say exactly how frequent updates will be here, but it never hurts to check, I suppose.

I've been playing the CCL game quite a bit during finals. You assemble springs, fans, and conveyor belts to maneuver a block around various obstacles to reach the goal. The game is, however, pretty simple and gets boring after you've solved the seven levels a few different ways, so if you know of other similar internet games, you should comment about it.

David Brooks in the NY Times on the dangers of "healthy" living.

Wes Anderson Paper

Don't feel obligated to read it, but I've posted my paper on Wes Anderson on my Carleton webspace. It's all nice and HTML-formatted.

Minnesota Film Arts

The calendar for the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Film Festival is still not up yet, but there will an enormous number of classic films showing at the Oak Street in the month after the festival. Mostly I'm thinking of April 24, when they will be showing the following:
  • 1:45 The Rules of the Game
  • 5:30 The Magnificent Ambersons
  • 7:30 The Third Man
  • 9:30 Citizen Kane
There will also be a double feature of Breathless and Jules et Jim over mid-term break.

Plus: M, The Blue Angel, Ugetsu, Sunset Boulevard, Manhattan, Vertigo, and Days of Being Wild.

I wish I could move in for the month.

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New Links

You'll notice that on the right where the links used to be are three sections: MP3 Blogs, Photo Blogs, and General Links.

The MP3 blogs I listed are ones with stuff I actually wanted to download, but they are for the most part also better designed than many I looked at but haven't returned to. There is also the MP3 Blogs Aggregator which lists new posts each hour from a very long list of music blogs. I've so far found it to be more overwhelming than useful.

The photo blogs are, again, ones with pictures and site designs that I liked. I think I might have gotten them from Photoblogs.org Top 100, but I can't really remember.

Mountain Goats Show

Are you a fan of the Mountain Goats or Ames, Iowa? They will play a show there on April 1.

Professor Yeti Review

I've got a review in the latest Professor Yeti. I tried using Google to get an archive of what I've written for PY, but its listing isn't complete, so I guess I'll have to wait until all the pages are indexed. The page would look like this, except fuller.

MP3 Blogs

For whatever reason it has taken me a REALLY long time to find an MP3 blog to get into. It may be because I've had an entire network and record library of music to work through. Anyway, I found a good place to start (I think) at Fluxblog which was referenced in a Pitchfork track review today. Fluxblog itself seems to be fairly interesting and it has a lot of links to other MP3 sites, which I can probably find time to sort through during finals, hopefully finding a few dependable ones to check fairly often.

This would be a good thing to do if I actually try to have a theme show next term (ambient, drone, electronic, etc. | basically not traditional rock/pop songs), since I wouldn't have to depend on what I've got sitting on my hard drive. Actually, the best would be if someone were to do a show entirely from MP3 blog songs they'd downloaded during the week, but that's probably too ambitious for preoccupied college students.

Also, The Morning News had this great "roundtable" with six MP3 bloggers last August that you should read unless you really don't care.

Furthermore, though I've visited Metacritic several times in recent weeks, I hadn't stumbled upon their CD release schedule, which is as manageably sized, though not lacking, as any I've seen for a while.

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KRLX Board of Directors

After roughly nine hours of interviews and deliberation, the KRLX Board of Directors has been decided for next year. The results are at bottom.

There were a lot of good candidates this year, although I'm sure that gets said pretty much every time. You can be glad you missed most of it, probably, unless you're a glutton for punishment, but it was exciting to see who will be in charge of the radio station next year. Also, some of the current board members spent their allotted fifteen minutes detailing their vision(s) for the future, which was both inspiring and comforting; the station is certainly in good hands.

Sitting in a room with the same seventeen other people for nine hours messes you up. I can't tell it's Sunday, I don't have any sense of what time it is, finals are completely absent from my mind. I was kind of surprised there were people at the grocery store when I went, but then I realized that it was only eight o'clock, and not after midnight like when I usually go.

A while after voting was over, and my mind had begun once again to function, I started to realize what a major part of my life the radio station has been. It's funny to think how we try to play down the importance of spending a year or more on the board of the radio station to encourage the applicants who aren't elected, but I have trouble coming up with anything else that has defined my identity more than this. The number of people I know (and their relative importance in my life thus far) solely from being involved with the station is staggering. I'd say in terms of impact on my life to this point, probably the three biggest and most basic choices I've made (though this could be debated) are which high school to attend, which college to attend, and to get involved in radio. I would imagine a large number of Carleton students "know" me primarily from receiving compliance and programming emails.

For some people studying abroad or finding an especially significant significant other or figuring out what they want to major in or which career to pursue is one of those things that changes them. Probably my most effective example about the positive impact radio had on me is the wretched winter term I had sophomore year, dropping a class because I was going to fail, getting my worst GPA ever in the two classes I kept, and just generally not enjoying life outside of class either. With no discernible change other than becoming compliance director, my grades improved by nearly a full point despite an incredibly full schedule and my outlook on life improved drastically.

It tends to annoy me when others claim about their lives that they "wouldn't have it any other way," because maybe other great things would have happened given other circumstances, but I'm excusing myself just this once, because I can't really imagine what else I'd have been doing every first weekend of each term and Thursday night of each weekend, and countless other hours of the day and night.

Apologies to those of you who applied to the board any number of times but lacked the dumb luck to run uncontested for compliance director, but I'm guardedly optimistic that you, too, have something to smile about from your college days.

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Station Manager: Cameron Nordholm
Engineers: Matt Moltaji (Audio), Henry Gross (IT)
Record Librarians: Katie Zerwas, Nick Ver Steegh, Lizzie May, Hibah Hussain
Compliance: Clinton Peterson
Program Director: Adam Carr
News Director: Morgan Weiland
Producer: Terin Mayer
Music Directors: Dana Reinoos, Sarah Nienaber, Tom Schmidt
Business: Mathias Bell
Promotions: Scott Vignos

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Ancient Archives

Tonight I've been going through my old archives and standardizing the format a little bit. I'll put a link up later. I was trying to decide how I should divide them up. Currently I have everything from the first two-plus years on a single page; that should probably change. At the least I'll keep the years separate. Should I go to quarterly, biannual, monthly sections? What do you think? I'm especially interested in the opinion of the mystery person who read all of my archives (according to Charles) over winter break or so, if you have one, since I'm assuming you're the last (perhaps only) person to have done that.

Go to Film School

It looks like tomorrow's New York Times is telling students to go film school, sort of, in this article entitled, "Is a Cinema Studies Degree the New M.B.A.?" Apparently it doesn't really matter what you do after you graduate from film school, employers still like to see it on your record, because cinematic literacy is so important these days. I guess that will be good for me, especially if I actually do go to grad school in cinema studies.

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Touch and Go Records

As I was reading the most recent update over at Last Plane to Jakarta, I decided to look at Touch and Go's page for the new Enon compilation. I think Touch and Go may have one of the best designed record label websites I've ever seen. No stupid Flash intro page, an incredibly clean interface (the scrolling frames mean it's all onscreen at once, always), but not so clean that you're left wondering how to get to all the other relevant information. I really like how they have the news, tours, and clips pages (and they could easily be individual pages) linked together in one frame, so you can flip through them without leaving the band or album page you're on. Also, they automatically find the items that pertain to whatever you are currently browsing. Maybe Pitchfork should have used these guys for their redesign, since I don't think their site is actually any easier to navigate than it was last year.

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Verdana

I was looking at this post from November on Kottke.org where he mentions the fact that Wes Anderson uses the Futura typeface for all his films. I didn't get a lot I'll probably use in my paper, but I found this remark about Verdana at the bottom of the comments:
I've been around and around and AROUND with experimental fonts for various blogs and photography portals in recent years, and always seem to come slinking back to Verdana...

Whilst it's a tad boring continually returning to Verdana, I think it serves blogs very well, because most blogs try to be at least slightly amusing - and for my money, Verdana has a certain buffoonery to it, a kind of slightly tongue-in-cheek campness that makes a written paragraph look as if the author was grinning wryly at the time.
You're probably not reading this in Verdana right now, but it's what I've used for most of the last three years, and haven't found anything I like better overall.

Incidentally, I missed my three-year blogging anniversary last Friday, but we can all now mark it belatedly. Maybe I will predate a blog entry to fake it. Yes, I will.

Next Year

I've been getting a lot of confused questions about what it is, exactly, I'll be doing next year. I don't know where I'll be yet, but here are some possibilities, with links to the organizations with which I'd be "employed," that I looked at before applying to the program.

Google Calculator

Neal brought this up at lunch, so I looked to see just what you could do with the Google calculator. I'm glad they have the choose function, since it's a lot easier than entering three factorials and a division sign. This will probably be most useful once I start using computers that don't have Mathematica installed.