I never miscue a record. I am punctual, well-prepared, and dislike clutter. Outgoing and helpful, I'm always appropriately dressed. I do not behave erratically and have excellent penmanship. My CD's never skip, and I am in good health. I like all the notes, in any order.
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Listener comments!
zedprophfer:
bryce:
g:
zedprophfer:
Doug:
d:
north guinea hills:
Hugo:
jass, jass ...
it's all in the ear of the beholder, innit?
bryce:
Hugo:
don't hafta.
Sean Daily:
matt:
Hugo:
J.J. Bigglesworth III, Esq.:
bryce:
Sean Daily:
Doug:
Ike:
Ethnic food guide for D.C.:
http://tinyurl.com/5cfyns
jonathan:
organize by haircuts.
Sean Daily:
dc pat:
bryce:
Sean Daily:
dc pat:
spaniel:
Sean Daily:
And, yes, I listen to NPR. It's the only news station in Las Vegas.
C:
dc pat:
C:
spaniel:
dc pat:
Lipwak:
I have records (and this would work for CDs too but I don't have enough to worry about) in a few broad genres and use the genres for things that are obvious for them. Those genres are: main/everything else (rock, pop, etc), broadway/film, spoken, comedy, classical. If anything doesn't fit into a genre nicely, it goes in the main/everything else section. All genres are arranged alphabetically within the genre. Your shelf space will determine how they are physically arranged. Making genres accept things that could be one genre or another will have you ending up looking in several places. (It could be this; it could be that.) A catch-all category with few genres to worry about works for me. Alphabetical seems to be the best way within each genre.
Cassettes are filed by date (which is how I titled most of them), title (with separate sections for prerecorded and things I have dubbed), live recordings.
Software, unless you want to keep track of where things are, signing or scanning things in and out, only helps you make a list of what you have, not with how they are physically organized. You have to figure that out on your own. I used Delicious Library and Word to list my records and tapes (and videotapes), I recommend iCDc to list CDs if you have a Mac.
Cheers,
Lipwak
ex-librarian
bryce:
seen him perform -- it is pretty amazing, just a modified walkman and a microphone. he's made a special extra long looping cassette and invented a little handheld remote thing. his thing allows him to record on either or both channels, and to obliterate or add to what's already looping. he builds those elaborate textures by just speaking and dragging the mic over stuff. kinda brilliant.
spaniel:
Skazz:
dc pat:
bryce:
you can still ogle... http://tinyurl.com/4lyw4m
Kenzo:
Pshaw. It's much better at helping you make a list of what you don't have.
bryce:
a few bazillion scrapey plucky jittery twitchy things, powered by solar cells, in a garden.
spaniel:
bryce:
nice soul on him, too. back when soho was just loading docks, joe jones rented a storefront for like a hundredth of a nothing, stuffed the window with his thingamers, and mounted a shit ton of doorbell buttons on the outside so drunk people could walk by and be happy at 3 am. that's love.