In A Strangeland
This is what I want from music:
This is what I want from music:
On Friday, I promised myself that I would spend no more money on records until after the New Year. On Saturday, I found myself at <a href="http://www.othermusic.com/">Other Music</a> with three LPs in my hands. Gah! I brought them up to the counter, where the cute girl with the black hair was waiting. I felt despicable.
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Oh, the aptly named <a href="http://importantrecords.com/index.htm">Important Records</a>, one of my favorite sources for outstanding experimental, noise, and otherwise out-there recordings, is having a <i>crazy</i> holiday sale, yo. Check it out: You can buy 44 <a href="http://importantrecords.com/releases/44_66_sale.html">compact discs</a> for just $44. Or 66 compact discs for just $66. Finally! And your purchase comes with a sweet tote bag. You’ll need it for hauling around all those compact discs.
I’ve published two music articles elsewhere in the past couple weeks.
Saturday, December 5, 11am–5pm: <a href="http://www.talkofthetownvideo.com/welcome.html">Talk of the Town</a> will host an “Audio, Video, & Home Theater Demo Day.” Show highlights will include demonstrations of SIM2’s C3X Lumis Host projector; Marantz’s 9004 Reference Blu-ray player; Totem Acoustics’s <a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/ssi2009/totem_wind_design/">Wind Design</a> loudspeakers; Classe’s SSP-800 preamplifier-processor with Dolby TrueHD and DTS-MA surround decoding; McIntosh’s MA7000 integrated amplifier; and Meridian’s DSP 5200 digital active speakers and Sooloos <a href="http://www.stereophile.com/mediaservers/908sooloos/">Music Server System</a>.
I dreamed that I was back <a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/stephenmejias/what_happened_in_puerto_rico/… Puerto Rico</a> with the Vivian Girls. They asked me to work on a new song with them. We decided to set up a rehearsal space at my aunt’s beach house. It was taking us awhile to get the instruments properly set up, and Katy was becoming anxious, but I soothed her nerves with a stunning spread of snacks and candies: finger sandwiches, kiwis, grapes, pomegranates, baskets of popcorn, bowls of pretzels and chips, towers of Twizzlers, tall pyramids of Almond Joy…
It began when my oldest brother, 13 years my senior, returned from military service and told me about "hi-fi." Until then, all I'd known was our ancient tabletop radio-phonograph with its insatiable appetite for osmium styli. Back then, in the early 1950s, audio componentry was scrappy, still evolving from World War II military electronics and public-address systems. I began reading the electronics magazines and learned that, to get started, I needed a record player connected to an amplifier and a speaker. I toured the shops and stalls on old Cortlandt Street, before the building of the World Trade Center, and made my selections based on appearance, reputation, and specifications rather than on sound. Still, compared to what we were used to, the results sounded hair-raisingly good.
"Are You a Sharpener or a Leveler?" was the title of my "<A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/asweseeit/are_you_a_sharpener_or_a_leveler">… We See It</A>" in the February 2009 issue. The terms <I>sharpening</I> and <I>leveling</I> come from work in the field of perception by the early Gestalt psychologists, <I>sharpening</I> referring to the exaggeration of perceived differences, <I>leveling</I> to the minimization of those differences.