Chimpanzee, the Tool Maker?
Is there an anthropological record of a chimpanzee stone age?
Is there an anthropological record of a chimpanzee stone age?
That's pretty much what David Hewlett said. As a result, he made <I>A Dog's Breakfast</I> for less than a million—it's a long tail thang.
On Saturday night, Don Fiorino, Mark Flynn, Chris Jones, and <i>Stereophile</i>’s Bob Reina came together, within the walls of Merkin Concert Hall, as Attention Screen. I sat in the audience, watching and listening as these four men exchanged ideas, made music. I'm not going to say it was beautiful. I'm not going to say it was interesting.
John Atkinson sent me a link to <I>Time</I>'s Rick Rubin interview. I can see why JA liked it—Rubin's production philosophy reminds me a lot of the way JA edits and records.
Here's something you probably never even knew existed: music librarian humor.
Neuroscientist V. S. Ramachandran ponders self-awareness.
<I>Allen's English Phrases</I> sounds like a fun read.
Faithfully reproducing the sound of real, live musicians in our listening rooms is the audiophile's Holy Grail. Have you ever heard a system do this? If so, what was it?
On Saturday, February 10, collaborative improvisation band Attention Screen gave its debut at Manhattan's Merkin Hall at Kaufmann Center to a packed house. The event was recorded by John Atkinson for release in May as a <I>Stereophile</I> CD, possibly followed by a limited-edition DVD-A.
Is a high-end music server the audio equivalent of polishing a turd?