Musical Baton
Published 20 years, 5 months pastI was passed a musical baton by Nick Finck, while everyone else getting the same baton ignored me. Losers. (With the last-minute exception of Meryl, who passed one to me just as I was preparing to post.)
Total volume of music files on my computer
8.74 gigabytes, comprised of 1,885 songs that would take 5 days, 16 hours, 8 minutes and 22 seconds to play through.
The last CD I bought was
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“Decksanddrumsandrockandroll” by The Propellerheads. The last CD bought on my behalf, as a birthday gift, was a set of the 1963 von Karajan / Berlin Philharmonic recordings of Beethoven’s Symphonies.
Song playing right now
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As I post this message, it’s “When the Levee Breaks” by Led Zeppelin from “Led Zeppelin IV”. This might be interpreted as support for Mike Davidson‘s opinion of the Zep, except that I don’t agree with it.
Five songs I listen to a lot, or that mean a lot to me
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I’ll take the latter.
- “O Come, O Come, Emannuel” (traditional hymn)
- “Road” by Nick Drake from “Pink Moon”
- “Driven” by Rush from “Test For Echo”
- “4th of July” by Soundgarden from “Superunknown”
- “Life During Wartime (Live)” by The Talking Heads from “Sand In The Vaseline: Popular Favorites 1976-1992”
Bonus addendum piece: the second movement of Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony, “Allegretto”. It’s haunting, moving, inexpressably sad and triumphant. It doesn’t hold emotional meaning for me the way the other songs I listed do, but it has emotional effects that are unlike almost any other piece of music I know.
Fivesix people to whom I’m passing the baton-
- Tantek Çelik, just to see how many times he can work in references to his girlfriend
- Simon Willison, dashing Brit-about-town
- Scott Andrew, ex-Clevelander and lo-fi acoustic pop superhero
- Mark Bradbourne, new daddy and drummer
- Gini, because she’s always meme-ing, and besides, it’s the musical equivalent of the book meme she propogated a week or two back
- Will Kessel, because I’m curious
I’d have pointed to more web designer types, but they’d pretty much all been batoned already.
So there you have it: a little break from semanticity. Now all we need is a music-categorization microformat, and I could merge the two.