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Amen brothers and sisters!
Today, I love them for this: They don't take the small stuffthe important stuff; the fundamentalsfor granted. In a recent Drag City newsletter, they remind us of how to listen.
You know, earlier in this email, we were railing against modern consumers and their parasitical non-consumerismtough stuffwhen we stopped to think for a moment, are we selling the youth of today short? Maybe they don’t know how to listen to a record anymore. This could be a lost art outside the ghetto of aesthetes who traditionally buy our long-playing product. So here’s a little checklist:1. Decide what you like. This may come as the result of self-searching, followed by reaching into the world in order to evaluate the music it has to offer.
2. Having evaluated the variety of products available to you, take the plungebuy one!
3. You are now in possession of something special. It requires your attention in order for you to determine if it also requires your faith and devotion. Take it home, it’s time to find out.
4. Conducting the ritual of listening is up to youwhen you want to listen, and where. We suggest you choose a space that allows the music to come to you in a relaxed state over a system that lets the sound breathe.
5. Listen to the record all the way through. It’s saying something to you, something you might not be able to hear if you subdivide it by songs, taking time and attention away from it in bits and pieces.
6. Spend time with the record, absorb the artwork and whatever details are available to you. It’s like a lover, don’t ignore him/her.
7. Congratulations, you’re listening to music. It’s not wallpaper; it’s not your ringtone. It’s like a book or a movie, worth your undivided attention, giving back to you the value of the time you put into it.
Right on, Drag City.