Archive for the ‘Music’ Category

Wading Through My Best of 2006 List…

Wednesday, December 27th, 2006

My review frequency over at Candied Pop has been spotty at best what with the baby on my mind and subsequent inability to focus on anything long enough to form coherent sentences. Though I still have a stack of new releases to listen to, with three really standing out as candidates for this list, here are my top twelve in no particular order…

Luomo - Paper Tigers
Luomo – Paper Tigers
Quantic - An Announcement to Answer
Quantic – An Announcement to Answer
The Contingencies - Viva Ole
The Contingencies – Viva Ole
Wale Oyejide - Africa Hot!
Wale Oyejide – Africa Hot!
The Format - Dog Problems
The Format – Dog Problems
Nino Moschella - The Fix
Nino Moschella – The Fix
Loka - Fire Shepherds
Loka – Fire Shepherds
Moros Eros - I Saw The Devil Last Night And Now The Sun Shines Bright
Moros Eros – I Saw The Devil Last Night And Now The Sun Shines Bright
Bibio - Hand Cranked
Bibio – Hand Cranked
The Coup - Pick a Bigger Weapon
The Coup – Pick a Bigger Weapon
Natacha Atlas - Mish Maoul
Natacha Atlas – Mish Maoul
Karsh Kale - Broken English
Karsh Kale – Broken English
…and there you have it.

Music Collection, Amarok Style

Tuesday, December 19th, 2006
Music Collection in Amarok

I’ve been slowly working on re-tagging my collection as well as improving its organization on the server. Working it old school with cut-and paste in Nautilus for moving tracks into sub folders by artist and album and then editing the tags with EasyTag and Amarok.

Tedious and arduous would be the best adjectives for this process as I have only managed to take care of some 23,000 tracks since October and am only two-thirds of the way done. I am cursing my laziness over all these years as well as eMusic’s sloppy ass tagging between 2001-2003 when I acquired the bulk of my collection.

Well, at least I’ll have something to do with all those forthcoming sleepless nights.

mt-daapd, SSH, iTunes or Winamp, and You!

Wednesday, December 6th, 2006

Today was a bit of a slow day–I still cannot get Media Center 11 to run under Wine–so I thought I might give a shot to get mt-daapd to serve up files to a daap enabled client on Windows. iTunes is the obvious choice for a client but the UI sucks so bad that I want to slam my hands in a drawer and staple my eyes shut but luckily a kind soul has made a plugin for Winamp which makes me happy.
Here’s how it went down:

Server Side:

  • Make sure you are running SSH and if your not ask yourself why.
  • Grab mt-daapd and take care of any dependencies:

    libsqlite0
    libsqlite0-dev
    gawk
    gcc (this will install gcc-4.0)
    libid3tag0-dev
    libgdbm-dev

  • Edit /etc/mt-daapd.conf to your liking such as mp3_dir and servername
  • Grab Avahi and take care of any dependencies:

    avahi-daemon
    avahi-utils
    libnss-mdns

  • Edit /etc/nsswitch.conf to ensure that mdns is on the hosts line:

    hosts: files dns mdns

  • Give dbus a kick: sudo invoke-rc.d dbus restart
  • Get your avahi-daemon running: sudo invoke-rc.d avahi-daemon start
  • Fire up mt-daapd: sudo mt-daapd

Client Side

  • Get yourself a copy of iTunes, only if you are a masochist, or snag Winamp with the DAAP plugin if you love yourself.
  • Install Rendezvous Proxy and configure it (you need this to fool the client into thinking that the mt-daap server is on the same subnet):

    IP Address – 127.0.0.1
    Port – 3689
    Host Label – Your_DAAP_Server_Name_Here
    Service Type – daap

  • Set up a tunnel with Putty for port 3689, which is just like doing it for TightVNC.
  • Fire up iTunes or Winamp and wait for it to stumble onto your DAAP shares.

Well, that’s it in a nutshell.

Cribbed from James Henstridge’s write up about Avahi on Breezy, this thread, and this one.

**Update**

If Avahi seemingly won’t start check /etc/default/avahi-daemon and make sure it reads: AVAHI_DAEMON_START=1

Where’s Your Head At?

Thursday, November 9th, 2006

At the moment, I’m in the middle of another shift in my listening habits, a fairly sizable one. For years I’ve been neck deep in Electronic and Hip Hop with occasional forays into Jazz and even rarer ones into the Rock, Country, and Folk diaspora. Something about synthetic beats with warm and sticky rhythms and mechanical melodies grabbed me. I hungered for dystopian tracks that spoke of a near future urban sprawl but something has been shifting in me and I’m finding my fingers crawling out in search of something more organic, something human.

Looking over the past three months of purchases sees this trend growing:

  1. The Hold Steady – Boys and Girls in America
  2. Katharine Whalen – Dirty Little Secret
  3. Jas. Mathus – Old School Hot Wings
  4. The Blue Van – Dear Independence
  5. Horses Brawl – Horses Brawl
  6. Thievery Corporation – Versions
  7. Luke Vibert – Lover’s Acid
  8. Luomo – Paper Tigers
  9. Ad Astra Per Aspera – Catapult Calypso
  10. John Coltrane – Fearless Leader
  11. Charles Mingus Presents Charles Mingus
  12. Radio Citizen – Berlin Serengeti
  13. Paris Combo – Motifs
  14. Willowtree – What a Way to Go!
  15. The Black Neon – Arts & Crafts
  16. Ratatat – Classics
  17. Monsieur Leroc – I’m Not Young But I Need The Money
  18. The Contingencies – Viva Ole
  19. Bobby Hughes Combination – Nhu Golden Era
  20. Marc Mac pres. Visioneers – Dirty Old Hip Hop
  21. Wale Oyejide – Africa Hot! The Afrofuture Sessions
  22. Nomo – New Tones
  23. The Format – Dog Problems
  24. Quantic – An Announcement to Answer
  25. Thomas Mapfumo – Spirits To Bite Our Ears : The Singles Collection 1977-1986

Out of twenty-five albums, fifteen are unrelated to Electronic or Hip Hop and a handful that I did not highlight sort of occupy a space that isn’t quite really Electronic nor quite the organic feel of Rock or Jazz. This, so far, has seen me snap up five albums completely out of my normal element. So what’s with the shift?

Nostalgia. Well, that’s the lame ass theory I’m running with anyways. Looking back over my review for The Contingencies where I raved about a sound that leans way back but charges forward fueled by straight ahead guitar arrangements. After having snapped up that album along with Willowtree my ears felt thirsty for shorter, tighter, more aggressive arrangements. Not necessarily Punk or Thrash but sounds that left me warm all over reminiscing about practicing all weekend in the drummer’s half-heated garage, fingers stiff from the cold and swollen from pounding out song after song, never getting motivated enough to get a gig even at the local dives because really all we wanted to do was play.

Seems odd to think that after dropping out from the Daddy’s Junky Music and Sam Ash groupie scene that I would throw myself at music on the opposite spectrum but for a good eight years close to 80% of what I’ve been listening to could be classified as MPC/Pro-Tools music which is a far cry from the gritty Rock and Punk fueled Blues arrangements I cut my teeth on back in high school and my first tour of duty through college.

Recapturing lost youth on the eve of my first child? Yeah, that is the most likely answer here that and an astounding sense of ennui with what I have been listening to over the past year or so; that crushing feeling of “meh” has been heavy as of late and these last couple of selections have gotten me feeling a little more fired up about music.  If anything, my restless tastes result in a wide and varied selection and I can hope that our daughter, as she gets older, might find herself pawing through it on late nights like I did as a kid with my parents collection.

Unravelling the Mess…

Monday, October 16th, 2006

A better part of last week was spent teasing apart the disgusting knots that I had been letting pass as tagging among my files. The very same knots that made Jinzora damn near unusable and made Amarok look like a dollar store threw up all over MySQL. It took about 24 man hours but I tackled the genre issue along with the problem of null artists and albums, however there still appears to be some lingering issues as Amarok is reporting dead or unplayable tracks. Permissions maybe?

I’m coming to the conclusion that huge collections can be a real nightmare if tagging and preventive maintenance is not addressed up front. Having left mine to evolve over some seven years I am now really paying the price as I try and get it into a functional whole.  Thankfully, there are some solid tools out there as I am leveraging Amarok with a MySQL backend for reporting (N to the E dropping in on the R and D), EasyTag, and Picard (Amarok has it baked in but it is nice to have discrete tools).

To get started I imported everything into amarok and then wrote a group of reports looking for malformed tags, particularly ones using reserved characters like “;” which would cause Jinzora to choke.  Combing through the report for the obvious issues like null genre I used the sort and mass edit feature of Amarok to fill them in which made for smooth sailing.  Tracks that were an absolute disaster I fixed either with EasyTag or Picard, though I found the later to offer up some less than desirable data due to taggers as lazy as I posting to Music Brainz.

At the moment I feel like I am about 80% finished, more than enough to listen to my collection the way that I like but with still enough bugs to get me hot under the collar.  The bonus with a cleaner collection is now we can play music off the server for our greyhound which means I can track his listening over at Last.fm.  Yes, I am that much of a dork. ;-)

Intractable Mess?

Monday, October 9th, 2006

For all intents and purposes my cheap-ass home stereo solution has been working out real well but there is one minor problem and it is a problem that many of my friends have laughed at me for or just shook their heads in disgust muttering, “Have you no shame? None!?” My tags are a total mess. Worse than having non-existent, bizarre combinations like “CountryFusionSpaceJazzBop”. No, I have bleed-over where song titles end up in track numbering and genres become a string of unsupported characters. It is sickening to look at especially since it renders Jinzora damn close to useless for the way I listen to music (smartlists on random).

Here are some highlights from the genre tag:

  • ■Hip-Hop
  • “Fantaisie-Impromptu in C sharp min
  • 0.03
  • 03_Chaconne con variazioni.mp3
  • 4
  • false
  • Nameless (Radio App..”
  • true

To give you an indication of how big the problem is there are 6446 tracks tagged with either “-” or are empty in the genre field and on top of that I have some 33049 tracks to check. An egregious case of WTF if there every was one. So now I need to figure out how to remedy this problem and wishing that I were more diligent about my tagging like some of my friends isn’t going to get me very far.

What I need is stupid simple, easy, and relatively accurate system as I have neither the time nor the patience to hand tag every single track. So to get my feet wet, I’m going to narrow the directories down to smaller groups and give the auto-tagging feature of EasyTag a shot and see how that works. In the past EasyTag has served me well but I’ve only used it in small isolated instances and am not sure how it will handle chewing on hundreds if not thousands or tracks at a time.  Time to roll up my sleeves and get to work.