I miss scarcity


This is not a complaint. Or, if it is a complaint, it's half-aimed at me. Mostly this is a reflection.

In the old days, I got to know music really well -- in great detail, sonically, musically, reading all the credits, the liner notes, etc. A friend would have an album I didn't, so I'd go to his house to listen. We'd talk about the music. We'd talk about how album sides hung together or didn't. We were thrilled by double albums.

Now, a torrent of information is everywhere. I listen alone, often to a single song, often not listening to anything over and over again.

You will tell me, "That's your choice." I'd half agree. It's like agreeing that "It's my choice not to live off the electrical grid." 

As I read and teach about AI, I am learning that our tools often prioritize speed and information glut. It seems, initially, like a cornucopia but it becomes a wash of "content." I must admit, I'm losing my talent for managing all this content, and I'm losing my love for it. And it's making me into a different person, somewhat, and I am not so sure I want to be that person. End of reflection.

Wizard Conjuring Cosmic Chaos Art Print featuring the drawing Let There be Content by Benjamin Schwartz

hilde45

Check out the link. The grade school using AI, uses it for three hours a day… getting all the formal training out of the way. Then the majority of the time is used in groups… socializing, life skills, and working together. Used correctly it is about maximizing socialization as well as learning. 
 

I think what the shows is that you must completely rethink how approach learning.

RE: The original post subject. Although I have access to 10's of millions of songs at my fingertips, what I find incredibly frustrating is the difficulty finding the information that used to be featured in liner notes. Being a Half-fast musician (acoustic guitar), I'm always interested in the musicians who performed. Especially the background performers.

Interesting aside to that, back in the early 90's I bought a Shawn Colvin CD and while reading the notes saw a last name that looked familiar to me. Sure enough, it was the son of one of my exes' college instructors who had purchased her elementary school age son a set of drums. Turned out he was the drummer in the Saturday night life band and a prominent New York studio sessions drummer with a who's who credits list. 

I must admit, I'm losing my talent for managing all this content, and I'm losing my love for it. And it's making me into a different person, somewhat, and I am not so sure I want to be that person. End of reflection.

@hilde45 

There's a lot more to say about that, but I feel the same way. Amen, brother. 

 

An engineer's colleague died, and when he reached the widow in the condolence line, the engineer just said "Cornucopia".  Thank you, said the widow, that means a lot to me