Interview Archive
Pelvic attrAction
Interview - 17-6-2002
JXL & Elvis’s single outta that great Nike football ad
Neo-audio vintage
Interview - 10-6-2002
Cousteau’s album ‘Sirena’ brims with exquisite songs
Halo of sunshine
Interview - 15-5-2002
The Proclaimers’ ‘The Best Of’ is a compilation to enrich every collection
A woman about time
Interview - 4-4-2002
In Part Deux La Faithfull discusses advice, life, bridges, credit and living off charm
The original ‘Posh’
Interview - 2-4-2002
Marianne Faithfull is a lady singing about vagabond ways with distracting sexology
Causality sphere
Interview - 14-3-2002
Six By Seven’s new album is an excursion to the dark side of a shaped loop
Stairwell to Haven
Interview - 17-1-2002
Haven’s debut album ‘Between The Senses’ stakes odds in their favour as the year’s tip for success
Music where the mouth is
Interview - 16-1-2002
Echo and The Bunnymen’s singer Mac explains how the band regained its majestic grandiosity
Adamantine love, vespertine travail
Interview - 6-1-2002
Starsailor, inspired by some of the best artists of yester-years, are the undisputed Band Of Brit Year
A cure for gravity (pt 2)
Interview - 3-1-2002
Still at the centre of time
     
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Notes of a technaut

As we bravely crawl toward the future our technology leaps forward at a pace the Olympians can’t keep up with. Its application has brought incredible changes to our lives and culture, in particular - music, the virtual notes...

The changes are fundamental and affect our consumption and outlook of popular music, from a pop ditty to an avant-garde symphony. The first casualty is - album, as format, its sequencing, artwork… With the erupting trend of online buying - it is SONG that’s being emphasised again that, B-sides being long defunct, signals the single's end.

Individual cut or, hopefully, a cluster of songs rather than a collection we know as a ‘long playing’ record, is the ‘king’ again. Thus, running order - determined by whatever criterion artists use [emotional?] - is futile because a listener randomises the experience. Consequently a ‘concept album’ concept is instantly obsolete; artwork is also meaningless with all its credits, ‘thank yous’ and other trivia acts piled onto inlays-cum-booklets.

This shift has been caused by the small cyber matter Downloading is as well as by the current gen’s view of music as something - evanescent. This virtual consumption needs no physical possession and the non-materialistic way has resulted in destruction of the ‘First editions’ also by simply ‘bettering’ subsequent versions by remixing, re-digitising, adding bonuses, format-upgrading…

The neo-music lovers do not mind seeing details of a painting before being able [ever?] to view the whole picture. The iPod generation is happy to have it all on hardware that is nowt more than a glorified Walkman, effectively isolating a listener, again. It hopefully is just a passing phase, alike its cassette predecessor, but albums may only survive in the present form as long as the players are made. All VHS tapes are already part of techno-history...

Max Stresco
4-4-2005