Interview Archive
A cure for gravity
Interview - 30-12-2001
The Beatles remain topical and continue to sell more records than most contemporary stars
A parallax view
Interview - 4-12-2001
Tori Amos pauses recording own songs to tackle tunes written by men
The nightmare is over
Interview - 1-12-2001
The former Beatles' lost chord
Angel-ism regained
Interview - 15-11-2001
Dido reissues ‘No Angel’ with added selection of remixes and live material while we learn of kitchen composing and dancing on a cooker (well, nearly)
Familiar songs of men and feelings
Interview - 12-11-2001
The Cure have ‘Greatest Hits’ out but Robert Smith, known as ‘Gothfather,’ feels he is on a career-crossroads
Aperitifs at The End of The Universe
Interview - 14-10-2001
The Divine Comedy's Neil Hannon on the change from black to golden brown...
Laughs, trials and tribulations of Oasis
Interview - 4-10-2001
Oasis celebrate its decade by playing a couple of live dates to preview new songs
Strange kinda woman
Interview - 26-9-2001
Garbage have never comfortably fitted in the mainstream and ‘beautifulgarbage’ continues the theme
Biking in Virginian woods
Interview - 25-9-2001
Moviemakers, songwriters, and champion poets of pessimism max all the elements. in unison on their new album. Is there no end to the subdued enigma of Sparklehorse?
Twisted New Despairism
Interview - 21-9-2001
Elbow’s decade-long perseverance finally pays off with the band’s album being nominated for the Mercury Award
     
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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