Archive for the 'Events' Category

More SL adventures and an interview!

Monday, February 25th, 2008

After listening to Amanda Shinji play a nice chilled set at the Parkade she invited me over to the SL Blogger meetup hosted by Ravishal Bentham and GoSpeed Racer; great music courtesy of Kona Radio and I was surprised to be asked if I was THE DJNoNo - it’s not often I get recognised cos of my mashup work, and they proceeded to make me and Amanda feel totally at home playing loads of mashups…the venue Sailors Cove and the hosts Ravi and GoSpeed are both highly recommended.

Also other SecondLife news, something I forgot to mention is that I was interviewed for the Living a Second Life podcast by Parkade regular Tim Drury (aka Tim Eastkew in SL) and it’s up now, it was a fun interview and he’s featured a video of myself DJing at the Parkade relaunch in a previous show also, which is great viewing for those who maybe haven’t been to one of my sets at the Parkade and would like to know what it’s like.

Thanks Tim!

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Joe Strummer Calls Back

Saturday, January 12th, 2008

Joe StrummerJust before I went to Spain, and as I was busy preparing to release This One’s For Joe, BBC Radio 6 did a week of shows dedicated to Joe Strummer. They replayed 4 of the shows from 2001, I recorded them off-air and they are here for you in the feed/clicky linky.

Also included is the great show by Don Letts they did on the Saturday, with his memories of Joe Strummer and an unreleased BAD demo that Joe wrote. Very good listening, but it’s sadly too large for the other server and is on my 20Gb daily limited archive account, so if the bandwidth gets blasted and it’s unavailable, come back the next day or so.

If anyone from BBC Radio reads this, apart from as Negativland said ‘please don’t sue us’ ;-) we want MORE STRUMMER LONDON CALLING SHOWS. It’d be great to hear a podcast or repeat of all the shows., 1998-2001. Pretty please.

If anyone can ID the songs and/or the original 2001 transmit dates of the shows, I’d be very grateful.

Joe Strummer London Calling Show 1 (2001/repeated 17/12/2007)
Joe Strummer London Calling Show 2 (2001/repeated 18/12/2007)
Joe Strummer London Calling Show 3 (2001/repeated 19/12/2007)
Joe Strummer London Calling Show 4 (2001/repeated 20/12/2007)

Don Letts Clash City Radio tribute to Joe Strummer (transmitted 22/12/2007)

(Those with podcatchers who can’t handle multiple enclosures will have to download all but the first one manually - I’m not doing a post for every show!)

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Foundry Xmas party

Thursday, December 13th, 2007

Sorry for the short notice, forgot to post this, and people on Facebook Strummer group knew about this a while back anyway, but I’m playing the Foundry in Old Street tomorrow night, on at 7pm, at the Who Boys Xmas Party (or should that be Xmess?) with Celebrity Murder Party and Pilchard also wrecking the joint, err playing.

Reason Strummer facebook peeps got the shout is a) tis the future and b) I’ll be playing some of the Strummer remix tracks for the first time. So come on down if you’re around!

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3rd Year Birthday Mashup Party!

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

As part of 3rd Birthday calibrations (the official date is tomorrow, I’ll be posting more then) I’m DJing a live 3rd Birthday party set as part of my set tonight at the Parkade in SecondLife (you can find that here) tonight from 10pm-12am UK time / 2-4pm SL time.

Not only being an extremely rare thing - an all mashup set/show from me, there’ll also be the return of a few classics from RC’s 3 years!

Come join us…if you want to listen at home try here

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Andrew Keen RSA lecture

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

I went to a lecture and discussion called ‘The Digital Seduction‘ at Royal Society of Arts last night. Speaking was Andrew Keen, author of ‘The Cult of the Amateur’ and Tim Montgomery, editor of ConservativeHome.com (I am SO not linking that), and humorously chaired by Matthew Taylor, RSA Chief Executive.

There’s been a lot of bandwidth especially amongst the professional media hand-wringers about The Cult of the Amateur (it’s interesting that Matthew opened up the introduction with this previous bout from the Guardian site) and obviously as a podcaster and blogger, I disagree with most of what Andrew is saying, that’s not really news. I went along to see what his arguments were and what he had to say for himself.

I’m not going to spend a lot of time adding to the shitstorm, especially as wannabe John-Perry Barlow style techno-priest I suspect he wants such controversy to sell his book - or speaking gigs like this one - in fact when the podcast of the lecture comes online you’ll hear me saying just that during the questions, I’ll just concentrate on my impressions and some of the ideas that struck me in the session.

Andrew came across as very arrogant and rude (in fact he received a stripping down from Tim Montgomery, a classic tory wet, for his response to the MD of Encyclopaedia Britannica as being ‘immature’) but his ideas were that Web 2.0 was destroying culture, that the gatekeepers (editors, experts and the like) are needed and must be respected. Stop me when you can see the obvious protection of interest going on, and politics (the least is that Web 2.0 is a publishing invention from O’Reilly, of course his publishers are Doubleday).

He pointed out that YouTube and the like are ripping off their users for free content, and making money off them, with no quality control or royalties paid (obviously conveniently forgetting the new YouTube deal to record companies) and getting rich off advertising, which the content is either becoming veiled advertising or around the content.

I think he had a point here, in this new era of Infonomics where people pay for ideas, and not formats, unless you are one of the Big 4 you can’t negotiate a deal like that one, and these companies via Creative Commons and licensing are leeching off all this free content. What I don’t agree with his sneering about citizen journalism (’you don’t get citizen doctors do you?’) as if the mainstream was and is catering for everyone. It plaintantly is not, hence the desire for grassroots media - as I asked in my question to him - it’s a chicken and the egg situation, wasn’t the void in journalism already there, and Web 2.0 and citizen media just filling that void?

Also journalism is one of those areas where training has some benefit but it’s obvious that the old-media is just as full of bias and badly done journalism (see any article on mashups for example) that unlike a doctor or architect, a citizen journalist CAN do a better job, and I think books like this one (and the created PR storm around it as old-media journalists fall on it as their new bible) reflect the pinch and dilemma at the heart of media. When podcasters and vlogger show you up, for the staid old media hack that you are, how do you respond? Contrasting this with Chris Vallance’s response about learning from podcasters at PodCamp and I know who I’d put my money on surviving as the landscape changes in the next 5-10 years.

Also covered in the Wikipedia vs Encyclopaedia Britannica debate (ironic as Wikipedia is based on the 1911 version of EB) was that it’s interesting what is left out of encyclopaedias and what is in Wikipedia - Andrew used this to sneer at Wikipedia’s pop culture entries such as about Pamela Anderson, but to my mind this is the very strength of Wikipedia, it covers the areas that paper media cannot keep up with, or won’t cover. Of course for the less ’sexy’ classic subjects you might want to refer to paper media, but the total inclusion of Wikipedia is not it’s weakness it’s also it’s strength.

Matthew pointed out the age mix, and stratification of views around this - it was nice to see 20s - 70s debating such a thing, from established media (BBC) to new media (Yahoo) and non-media (me, grassroots media creators, and one avowed Facebook addict) .

The other interesting point was from a teacher and was about teaching media literacy, that these technologies and their public doubts around them lend themselves as examples of questioning sources, biases etc. I think this is more the issue, rather than requesting we artifically enforce a set of gatekeepers, (as an early question pointed out, not necessarily from Eton or Oxbridge, but still part of an privleged elite) isn’t it better to teach children how to question ALL sources, and see the value in all media? Ie. We partly become the gatekeepers, rather than trusting a set of sanctioned gatekeepers with their known and unknown biases and unknown background dealing?

As pointed out at the end, this is partly a false discussion, old media and new media are really the same; both bow down to the advertiser dollar. I think the real issue is about content creation, especially in the CC field, who pays for it if at all, and who makes money off it, and whether money should be mixed up in this at all? Books and lectures like this are a symptom of the changing infonomics, changing structures within media to a model where musicians and artists are part-time, where journalists or experts (even those on book tours) can be a dirty word, where bloggers fact-check the old media, and podcasters wonder where the hell to go next.

I’ll link to the RSA podcast when it’s up.

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