Category: Music


After hearing much criticism of the film’s excessive beauty, I finally saw Tom Ford’s A Single Man the other day and, quite frankly, loved every frame, every word, every sound.  Many people, as well as paid critics, bash the rigorous “handsomeness” of the film.  The film is, without a doubt, very beautiful to look at and is impeccably designed – a quality that can alienate or intimidate people who might not have Tom Ford’s knack for… well… making things look beautiful.

Without going into detail about my own experience, I would argue that a true appreciation of and identification with the film almost requires personal experience with the paralyzing loss on the scale experienced by the lead character, George, played so exquisitely by Colin Firth. So when I hear someone say, “Oh, it just looked like a melodramatic perfume ad,” I want to tell him to bury someone he’s very much in love with, see the film again, then get back to me.

But one of the things that struck me as I saw the film was the score. I have a keen ear for certain types of music. There are certain film scores that are among my absolute favorite music selections. At a certain point in the A Single Man, I heard startlingly beautiful yet very familiar notes in the film’s score. Almost immediately, I knew that the notes were from Bernard Herrmann’s score for Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo.

When I got home, I did a brief investigation. On the soundtrack for A Single Man is a track by Shigeru Umebayashi  called “A Variation On Scotty Tails Madeline.” In the film Vertigo, Scotty is Jimmy Stewart’s character, and Madeline is Kim Novak’s character.  Then, of course, I looked at the Vertigo soundtrack from 1958: there is a track called “Scotty Tails Madeline.” Beautiful. And the gorgeous notes, in both Vertigo and A Single Man, played underneath stories of broken men mourning the loss of a true love, are breathtaking. I bought them both…

A Single Man on iTunes
Vertigo on iTunes

CDs Available!

I’m doing it like Radiohead: name your own price.  Whatever you want to pay.  Whatever you think it’s worth. $5.00? $1.00?  $.50? $.25? Free?  Whatever you want.

All CDs are original, factory-printed disks (not burned) purchased from the record store, but I long ago discarded the jewel cases and stored my hundreds of CDs (and the booklet inserts) in several Case Logic CD books. Again… NO JEWEL CASES… JUST THE CDs and the booklets if available. I’m re-digitizing all of them in full-resolution Apple Lossless format, and making the CDs progressively available as I complete the process.  I will keep this list rigorously updated as I get further along.

(And if you want me to set aside any title before unloading it or if you’re embarrassed about wanting Air Supply or Rick Astley’s first album, email me directly.)

Here’s what’s available (in semi-alphabetical order):

View Full Article »

I’ve been wanting to do this for a long time.

Actually, I’ve already done it.  Years ago, I invested a great deal of time in digitizing all my CDs in high-resolution mp3 format (320 kbps), with the intention of holding on to the CDs for safekeeping. I got rid of the jewel cases and kept the discs and the booklets in Case Logic CD books. Now, in an effort to streamline my digital life even more, I want to get rid of the CDs altogether. So…

I am re-importing all the CDs into iTunes, but instead of importing the CDs with mp3 encoding, I’m using the Apple Lossless import setting. (Apple Lossless preserves the full CD quality of the music, yet maintains a smaller file size than the original aiff format on the CD itself.) My entire CD library will be at my fingertips in glorious full quality in iTunes.

“But what about the artwork?” you ask. If I’m going to be rigorously honest (with you and with myself), I haven’t really looked at the artwork of these CDs since I bought them. But as a graphic and web designer, I do have a special interest in album art. With those rare, extra-special, ground-breaking and inspirational booklet designs, I can simply scan them as desired.

My home stereo setup is wireless. In addition to my main AirPort wireless router, I also have an AirPort Express connected to one of the auxiliary channels on my stereo, enabling me to stream all the music in my iTunes library wirelessly and in full quality with AirTunes on my home sound system.

Very very exciting.

Aside from the obvious feng shui, space-saving solution to maintaining an exclusively digital music collection, it’s better for the environment. We’ve all heard about the floating Texas-sized continent of discarded plastic drifting around the Pacific Ocean.  If there is anything I can do on a personal level to NOT contribute to that and any other evidence of human excess and careless waste, I’m onboard. From now on, all my music purchases will be exclusively digital. And, as a stickler for audio quality, I urge all artists and record labels make full-quality audio files available for purchase and download, as opposed to just mp3 versions.

And as for the analog concern about not having any artwork to look at with digital releases, I urge you to open the mind: with a digital release, we’re not limited to the confines of paper and plastic surfaces. Instead, the options go boundless with digital… bonus photos, fullscreen artwork, companion videos… whatever your imagination allows. Also… no paper, no plastic, no toxic ink, no printing costs, never out-of-stock or back-ordered, no “4 – 6 weeks delivery” bullshit. Instant gratification. And even instant gratification, in the words of Carrie Fisher, “takes too long.”

10 Favorite Albums of 2009

In no particular order…

21_soundsoftheuniverseDepeche ModeSounds of the Universe
They still do it for me. I had this on regular rotation on my iPhone during my bike rides along the Hudson River bike path.

Favorite tracks: ‘In Chains’ and ‘Miles Away.’

Purchase from iTunes

quietnights2Diana KrallQuiet Nights
This was a perfect summer record. Unlike a lot of singers with pitch-perfect technical skill, she tells the truth when she sings.

Favorite cut: ‘How Can You Mend A Broken Heart.’

Purchase from iTunes

Prince-MplSoundPrinceMPLSoUND
Available exclusively at Target (Huh? Yep.) this was the best of the three-cd set (one of which was his protogé Bria Valente, making me long for the days of Vanity and Apollonia).

Favorite cuts: ‘(There’ll Never B) Another Like Me’ and his cover of ‘Crimson and Clover.’

Years_of_Refusal_lo_resMorrisseyYears of Refusal
Sure, it’s more “boo, boo… wah, wah… everybody sucks…,” but who does this better than Morrissey??? Still a pouty rock ‘n’ rolla after all these years.

Favorite cuts: ‘I’m Throwing My Arms Around Paris’ and ‘All You Need Is Me.’

Purchase from iTunes

pet_shop_boys_yesPet Shop BoysYes
The techno-pop romantics have had me since ‘West End Girls’ in 1984, and this album didn’t let me down. In fact, there are few artists who excite me at the mere announcement of a new release. Pet Shop is one of them.

Favorite cuts: ‘Did You See Me Coming?’ and ‘King of Rome’

Purchase from iTunes

u2nolineonthehorizonU2No Line On The Horizon
I heard from some friends who are U2 fans that this record didn’t really do it for them. Still one of my favorite bands of all time.

Favorite cuts: ‘Get On Your Boots’ and ‘Magnificent’

Purchase from iTunes (deluxe with a bonus video)

moby-wait-for-me-coverMobyWait For Me
Recorded in is bedroom in NYC and simply packaged, proving that a good album doesn’t have to be an over-produced 3-ring circus to be interesting (to me, at least).

Favorite cuts: ‘Pale Horses’ and ‘Slow Light’

Purchase from iTunes

mayer-hawthorne-album-artMayer HawthorneStrange Arrangement
Apparently, the young lad was just a DJ who never really sang. He loved the Motor City music from his dad’s car radio. A true modern Motown sound from a white boy from Detroit. Terrific and surprising record.

Favorite cuts: ‘Just Ain’t Gonna Work Out’ and ‘Shiny & New’

Purchase from iTunes

gossip-music-for-men-album-artGossipMusic For Men
Seriously. I first heard ‘Dimestore Diamond’ on David Byrne’s October ‘09 radio playlist, and it blew my mind.

Favorite cuts: ‘Dimestore Diamond,’ ‘Men In Love,’ and ‘For Keeps’

Purchase from iTunes

la-rouxLa RouxLa Roux
When I first heard ‘Bulletproof,’ I thought it was a lost Yaz album. When I first saw the cover photo, I thought Elly Jackson was the secret spawn of Tilda Swinton and Rick Astley. A thrilling alternative pop record.

Favorite cuts: ‘Bulletproof’ and ‘Reflections Are Protection’

Purchase from iTunes

A Little Night Music

subway_cellist

The platform at 59th Street Uptown 1 train was filled with the most beautiful music from an extraordinary cellist tonight. The piece I heard him play was classical (I didn’t recognize it), and the cellist got applause from everyone on the platform, which I’ve never seen in my fifteen years in the city.

If I didn’t have to get to get to Barnes & Noble before midnight, I would have stayed on the platform a little longer. It was a beautiful New York moment.

Photo taken by iPhone and posted with WordPress iPhone app.

Byrne’s Take on Thanksgiving Music

radio_tower_waves-300x82David Byrne’s November 2009 radio playlist – titled Background Music for Thanksgiving Family Hell – features over 3 hours of delicious standards performed by Billie Holiday, Fred Astaire, Willie Nelson, Nellie McKay, Chris Connor, The Doors and Carla Bruni.  Yes, that Carla Bruni.

http://www.davidbyrne.com/radio/index.php

Clint Eastwood Presents: Johnny Mercer

EastwoodMercerFamous Mercer fan Clint Eastwood has assembled a collection of delicious Johnny Mercer favorites covered by an impressive roster of jazz vocal’s elite. Among this A-list are two of my web design dames: Janis Siegel and Laurel Massé. Collectively, along with third vox Lauren Kinhan, the trio is called ‘JaLaLa,’ contributing their exquisite rendition of “Spring, Spring, Spring.”

Other artists featured on the album include: Queen Latifah, Ella Fitzgerald, Bing Crosby with Buddy Cole & His Trio, Audra McDonald, Tony Bennett, Bono, Barbra Streisand, Ray Charles, Bobby Darin, Billy May and several others, including Mr. Mercer himself.

Purchase from Barnes & Noble
Purchase from iTunes

uniqloUNIQLO – the Japanese clothing design company – has the most delightful web installation I’ve ever seen. It is a real-time clock, called the UNIQLOCK, set to timed dancing to music. The music must always be 120 bpm (beats per minute) so the girls are timed as beautifully and perfectly as they are. I’ve been known to stare at this for a substantial chunk of minutes because it’s so damn entrancing.

Everytime you go to the UNIQLOCK, you may never hear the same music or see the same color palette twice, since it seems to rotate randomly. Simply beautiful. View Full Article »

David Byrne Radio

Artist, bicyclist, eclecticist, musician, singer, producer, former Talking Heads frontman, and consummate New Yorker David Byrne also adds the titles of internet rado D.J. and Program Director to his extensive skill set. View Full Article »

Tip 009: Digital Audio

“Can I make an mp3 version of my CD?”

Absolutely.

CDs and AIFF files
The digital files on an audio CD (like the Streisand album you rushed out to get last week) are in an industry-standard digital format called aiff (audio interchange file format). The aiff is the leading digital audio format used by professional audio and video applications, and it is the purest, uncompressed format of digital audio, offering the best sound quality. View Full Article »

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