How technology killed (and then saved) music

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by Cody Kitaura

Years from now, people may look back and say that technology both ruined music and saved it.

Over time, there have been many controversial developments in technology that have drastically changed music, and not everyone has been happy about them. Now, there have been major technological advancements that may forever change hip-hop, rock and classical music for the better.

Hip-hop
The house of hip-hop was built on a foundation of sampling, and it’s why some people have a fundamental problem with the genre. It’s debatable, but some might argue that rapping over a lick from a Motown hit takes less creativity than writing the initial song did.

Now, increasing costs mean more and more artists are abandoning sampling – or at least cutting back. Spin magazine reports that the average cost to clear a sample from its original owner is about $10,000.

"In the old days, samples were $2,500 or $1,500," the Wu-Tang Clan’s RZA told Spin.

And artists hoping to sneak a sample from a lesser-known musician without paying now have the Internet to consider.

“You'd be surprised who's out there Googling themselves," Eothen Alapatt, general manager of Stones Throw Records, told Spin.

Because of these high costs, hip-hop of the future may sound very different than the sample-based albums of the past. According to Spin, Kayne West’s latest album, 808s and Heartbreaks, features no prominent samples – his last, Graduation, used samples on 10 of its 13 tracks.

So if this trend threatens to change the fundamental basis of hip-hop, how can it be good? Because hip-hop was never supposed to be about the hook. It was supposed to be about one thing: the lyrics. Somewhere along the line, record companies took over and hip-hop became about pumping out mindless club hits. If this trend takes hold, maybe it will draw attention to what really matters: the lyrics (even if it does mean enduring some meager electronic production).

Rock
Today, it’s hard to tell who’s really playing the music heard on the radio. Advancements in recording studio technology have made it easy to stretch an off-beat drum fill, clean up a sloppy guitar riff or straighten out an off-pitch singer.

Now, the Internet is helping musicians find more ways to focus on the most pure form of music: live music.

eJamming’s AUDiiO software is a peer-to-peer network that allows musicians to use Web connections to jam online with other musicians – no matter where they are. The company emphasizes the service is focused on allowing musicians to jam with each other no matter the distance between them, but its real strength may be the revival of the jam session.

In a live jam, there is (usually) no studio trickery available to hide missteps. In the CES demo of eJamming, Smash Mouth’s Steve Harwell sings a few wrong notes as he jams online with his band mates. But that matters a lot less in a live jam, where the energy and spirit are the focus.

If eJamming takes hold, perhaps musicians and listeners will stop focusing so much on artificial studio perfection and rediscover live music.

Classical
Classical music has been confined to conservatories and stuffy concert halls, and YouTube is hoping to change that with the YouTube Symphony Orchestra. The project allows musicians to download sheet music for an original composition by Chinese composer Tan Dun, practice, and upload their video auditions.

Once musicians upload videos of their tries at the piece, judges will select semi-finalists, with the final musicians (who will perform the piece in Carnegie Hall in April 2009) to be chosen by YouTube viewers.

The LA Times’ Meghan Daum thinks letting the average YouTube viewer is too ignorant to be trusted with the final choice.

“How, after all, can an audience raised on Auto-Tune vocal enhancement and digital sampling be expected to tell one violinist's pizzicato technique from another's?” she wrote.

Daum is missing the point. If Dun wanted his piece to be performed only by the best of the best, he would have left it at the demo video recorded by the London Symphony Orchestra. In fact, he doesn’t seem too concerned about perfection. He encourages musicians to enter videos using “any instrument . . . or without any instrument,” like kitchen utensils, rocks or paper.

“Anything could be the way – could be your language to talk to the people,” he said in an interview posted to the site. “But all this sound is the language of your heart – nothing related to the technique. That’s the future of the expression of music.”

If enough people enter videos and become involved with the selection process, the YouTube Symphony Orchestra could be a revival of classical music – not in terms of technique or virtuosity, but in terms of the way people appreciate it.

[completely irrelevant photo courtesy flickr user Orange_Beard]

Five reasons Cyber Monday should replace Black Friday

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by Cody Kitaura

Someone should tell all those people who on Friday wrapped themselves in fleece and shivered outside Best Buy about this thing called the Internet. It’s pretty fantastic, really. Not only does it make waiting in line outside a brick-and-mortar store before opening a thing of the past, it can even compete with the wild deals offered as part of Black Friday.

Today is Cyber Monday, the Internet’s answer to the wild sales offered as part of Black Friday. There are deep discounts, free shipping and plenty of big, bright ads. It was coined in 2005 when the National Retail Federation noticed a spike in traffic the Monday after Black Friday. Now its influence is growing; with any luck, it might some day even replace Black Friday. Here are a few ways we'd all benefit from such a switch.

1. Give power to the people

One of the main reasons Black Friday is so frantic is obvious. By scheduling the best sales to only last for a few hours, retailers trick shoppers into a frantic race to buy before someone else does. They tightly control the supply of discounted items, and whip shoppers into a frenzied mob obsessed with saving a few bucks.

It’s much harder to create a rabid mob of shoppers when they can’t see each other, so shoppers on Cyber Monday are much more likely to stay level-headed when hunting for deals. Without the added pressure that another shopping might beat you to the HDTV section, it’s much easier to stay calm and do some research before buying.

But online retailers are fighting to find a way to drum up some Cyber Monday chaos – eBay is running a series of “holiday doorbusters,” secret "Buy it Now" items like a Nintendo Wii or a new Corvette listed occasionally on the site for only $1. This is a clever attempt to carry over some of the frantic emotion from Black Friday, but someone should tell eBay two things:

1. A website has no door.

2. The $1 items are apparently being snatched up seconds after they are listed by scripted “bots” programmed to hunt the site faster than any human possibly could. Where’s the fun in that?

2. Stay safe

It’s a sad reflection of our society when a guide to shopping has to include an entry on personal safety, but facing off against the wild, deal-crazed mob created by Black Friday can be legitimately dangerous. There have been at least two instances of Black Friday tragedy this year:


In Long Island, N.Y., a temporary Wal-Mart employee was trampled to death as a flood of shoppers broke through the store’s front doors just minutes before its 5 a.m. opening. The family of Jdimytai Damour will have to spend the holidays without the 34-year-old fan of movies, Anime and politics. Hopefully the hundreds of people who “had to step over or around him or unfortunately on him to get into the Wal-Mart store” will enjoy the fruits of their shopping trip.

A Southern California Toys R Us was the scene of another Black Friday tragedy, as two men shot each other to death in the middle of the store’s crowded aisles about 11:30 a.m. Toys R Us officials were quick to try to dissociate the incident from Black Friday.

“Our understanding is that this act seems to have been the result of a personal dispute between the individuals involved,” the company said in a statement. “Therefore, it would be inaccurate to associate the events of today with Black Friday.”

Frenzied mob or not, the average shopper does not bring a loaded weapon to Toys R Us. But it’s still too early to know for sure whether this dispute was related to past tension or a fight over a toy.

3. Sleep in

Some people look better in their pajamas than others. It’s as simple as that. And even if you are a “morning person,” odds are you aren’t a “get frostbite in line at Best Buy person.”

4. Take your time

Miss today's deals? Don't worry, there's always next week's Cyber Monday. Although today's is the most prominent, each Monday between Thanksgiving and Christmas is considered a Cyber Monday. A few years ago, retailers noticed a spike in online shopping on each of these Mondays, and decided to capitalize on it with sales and promotions.

5. Don’t end up on YouTube

There’s just something about Wal-Mart that attracts the strangest group of shoppers, so it’s no surprise that the added mob mentality of Black Friday affects them more so than the clientele of other stores. It’s not like viewers of this video will commend the shoppers piling on each other for the last Xbox 360 for their shopping prowess. A more likely reaction is pity for and disappointment in our society.



[note] Want to find Cyber Monday deals? Deal aggregators abound, including the sites listed in this article, dealhack.com, as well as tech blogs like Gizmodo and Engadget.