Special Comment- The Death of Muxtape

I was going through old bookmarks, when I saw a bunch of Muxtape playlists that I had liked. I remembered that the site had been having some RIAA trouble, and I went to see if it was still up.

In short, no.

The story is worth checking out and reading fully, but basically the founder of Muxtape was in negotiations with the big record labels to try and license the content being hosted. The labels were receptive to a deal, but were strong-arming the founder over editorial control and independence. In the middle of negotiations, the RIAA served a DMCA notice on their web hosting service who then pulled the site.

This kind of thing irritates me to no end. I understand the financial pressures that musicians are under, and I understand the desire to want to recover revenue from listeners who are not paying for it. But, at the same time, stopping individual websites does absolutely nothing to disrupt the piracy that goes on. Furthermore, these websites that gather large numbers of listeners are hard to build up. Thus far, they have been much more successful than the label-sanctioned attempts to do legal music 2.0. It would be more cost efficient to try and divert even a small bit of that stream into your bank account than to try to dam up the river.

The thing is, like everything else, computers and the internet have made it easier to record and be heard. I, too, mourn the passing of big, expensive, recordings that use studio orchestras and scores of session musicians. I wonder if mega-tours or even music superstars will exist in 50 years. But I do know that record labels can no longer price their music as if they are selling a scarcity.

*This started as a Tuesday’s Top Tune post, but then Tuesday turned into Wednesday and it became no longer about a song. Maybe next week I will finally get the timing down right on one of these things.

Lost: Day Two

“The Moth”  “Confidence Man”

-Really digging Locke’s growing spiritual power. The full realization of the sage, or wise old man archetype. One of the best stretches the show has ever had was the dueling priest showdowns between Locke and Mr. Eko.

-Man oh man, I had forgotten how good “Confidence Man” was. Unquestionably one of the finest episodes the show has ever had.

LOST: Day One

“Pilot: Parts 1&2” “Tabula Rasa” “Walkabout” “White Rabbit” “House of the Rising Sun”

Some collected thoughts (not intended to be a summary or recap):

-The motif of the eye is everywhere. I miss those cues in the later seasons.

-Super nice tracking shot of Jack in the opening minutes of the pilot. It’s easy to see why this was the most expensive pilot ever made, and that the executive who gave it the green light was fired for it.

-On the other hand, I hate Jack so much!

-Boone! I miss Boone. He can’t really be straight if the only person that he had sex with was his sister right?

-Why does the only Hispanic character have to be dumb and fat?

-Claire’s prosthetic belly looks ridiculous.

-It’s amazing that they kept suspense with the monster for so long.

-The flashbacks were a nice format for the show.

-I had forgotten that Charlie was once a cool character.

-Matt Parkman!

-Do Kate’s armpits grow hairy later in the show?

-“Was it a dinosaur?” “No.” “Then, you saw it?” “No.” “Then how do you know that it wasn’t a dinosaur?” “Becuase dinosaurs are extinct.” Great exchange.

-The show gets a lot more subtle with the use of music.

-Christian Shepard = great character.

-I must have missed “Walkabout” the first time around

More to follow!

Review- The Fall

Tarsem Singh’s fim “The Fall” is, beyond doubt, the most beautiful film that I have ever seen. It captured me in a way that most films don’t, blocking away all my thoughts and quieting my inner critic and pulling me into the world of the film. It excels at something that I thought had been lost from film since the rise in quality and quantity of CGI: the sense of wonder at what you see on the screen, the thought that what you see couldn’t possibly exist, in a sense, the magic.

The film is set in the 1920’s in a Catholic hospital in Los Angeles. We follow Alexandria (played by the charming Cantica Untaru), the daughter to immigrant fruit pickers that has broken her arm, as she meets paralyzed stuntman Roy Walker (an amazing Lee Pace). He entertains her with stories (to an end that I won’t reveal here) and it is these stories, interpreted through the mind of Alexandria, that we see on scree<n in rich colors, breathtaking sets and magnificent costumes.

But like the plot in the hospital is a frame for the stories that are told in it, the story is just a frame for the beautiful set pieces and visual sequences that make up the movie. Tarsem is primarily a commercial and music video director, and that approach to creating striking images and visual hooks is all over the movie. What’s more amazing is that no computer generated images were used, and all of the locations in the movies were real.

I could go on forever about the things that don’t make sense about the movie; a lead actress that doesn’t speak English, a film whose biggest star is Lee Pace (star of the canceled TV show “Pushing Dasies”), a Los Angeles hospital shot in South Africa… the film boggles the mind.

But none of those things matter. What is on the screen obliterates all reservations. All I can say is, see it. If you can find it in a theater, see it there. If you have to watch it on DVD, see it at home. But see it.