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Entries by Logan Molen (279)

Tuesday
Feb222011

A visual way to (re)discover music

I've been consumed with a new iPad app called Discovr (yep, the typo is intentional) that allows a person to visually connect musicians or bands they like with related artists they may not be aware of. Discovr also culls archives to bring to your attention videos or articles of artists you didn't know existed.

The search results page for "Bram Tchaikovsky." The tiny images at the bottom are for artists you have loaded onto your iPadThe video above touches on the basics, but I've attached a few specific examples from my own discoveries. I could pull from dozens of examples that have sucked me into a time machine but will focus on one: Bram Tchaikovsky, a pup-rock favorite of mine who had some solo success from 1979-1981.

A simple search for Bram Tchaikovsky turned up the visual to the right, with Bram surrounded by related bans like Graham Parker and The Rumour, The Jags and Dwight Twilley Band. A doubleclick on the Bram Tchaikovsky circle takes you to a details page with short bio, videos, links and reviews. A single click on any of the surrounding artists creates a completely different grouping around that particular choice.

So, in the example to the right, a click on Dwight Twilley Band and Graham Parker and the Rumor brings up their own artist ecosystems.

Clicking on related artists brings up new strings of music ecosystemsI found that in the punk, pup rock and power pop genres, the suggested connections were pretty good. But On other occasions, I was puzzled by the lack of seemingly obvious relations. For example, Rainbow is not directly connected to Deep Purple, even though both bands shared high-profile common members.

The Discovr algorithms pull from EchoNest data to visualize the musical connections and pull in band info. Discovr supplements that by pulling related video from places like YouTube and related links. blog posts and reviews. The videos play within the app, which is great, but the search results are sometimes spotty in pulling in unrelated but similarly named songs or artists.

But even amid that chaff, I've discovered more than a few single gems. The Bram Tchaikovsky performance of "Strange Man, Changed Man" on "Don Kirshner's I've discovered more than a few videos I never knew existedRock Concert" was new to me, and a great pleasure. I didn't even mind that the search results pulled in a video of a pedestrian bar band performing Bram's "Sarah Smiles." The song is so good even a subpar performance by unknowns made me smile.

Discovr costs $2.99 but is worth every penny. But be forewarned: Discovr will swallow time you didn't know you had.

 

 

Thursday
Feb172011

The collaborative power of "The Mesh"

I finished Lisa Gansky's "The Mesh: Why the Future of Business Is Sharing" earlier this year and have been struck by how many great "mesh" ideas mentioned in the book are starting to pick up steam. 

ZipCar, Kickstarter and time-sensitive group-buying services like Bakersfield Daily Deal are just a few examples of relatively new collaborative business models that have gained widespread growth over the past year. The concept of sharing a business with others is a tough one to grasp. But when the mix is right -- like private owners renting out their cars when they're otherwise sitting idle -- blinders come off traditional business models.

I've been tossing around a few ideas on how a newspaper company might play in a "mesh" environment but haven't come up with something worth pursuing. But I'm thinking. 

To get your brain churning, check out a fun outgrowth of Gasnky's book called Meshing It, an ever-growing list of businesses that fit the book's theme. You'll be amazed to find hundreds of creative business models that once were right under our noses. 

Wednesday
Feb162011

Ferrari F1 car turning 19,000 rpm at Laguna Seca

Formula 1 has never raced at Laguna Seca Raceway in Monterey but F1 cars have taken flying laps in historic races and exhibitions. 

Case in point is this Ferrari F1 car tackling the tight track, including the famous Corkscrew. Laguna Seca is too small for F1 cars to really open up at high speed, but this video captures the glorious sound of a normally aspirated F1 engine revving to more than 19,000 rpm and accelerating like no other cars on Earth.  

It's hard on novice ears but heaven for any race fan, particularly on the eve of racing season.