Mog profile

Jenny Tatone

Vital Signs

Mogger Since:
May 31, 2006
Age:
32
Born & Raised :
Portland, Oregon

Posts

Artist: Album: Track:

Hi everyone. Long time no type. I mean, I've been typing a lot, just not here. As I mentioned before, I've been all thesis work, all the time, trying to explore how Intrnet technology and social media are impacting the way we relate to, interact around and experience music, etc., etc. That's it in a nutshell anyway.

And I don't mean to get all self-promotional here (ick) but I love feedback so I wanted to share with y'all that I'm writing a weekly column/blog for Oregon Public Broadcasting's music site. The blog is focused specifically on what I'm learning through my thesis studies, interviews and whatnot. I'll be posting each Friday. The first intro type post is up now if anyone wants to check it out and maybe follow the others to come. The ongoing series is called "The Sound of Technology."

To me, given that I'm writing about something unknown, something that's happening now in this odd sort of transitionary period, it only makes sense that I share my thoughts in a publicly networked space online so that the thoughts, feedback and comments expressed by others online may influence the various paths I take and will continue to find as I maneuver through this big, big project. I don't want to get stuck in my own viewpoints.

Thanks everybody, happy feasting and here's a song that might not have been possible without the connective powers of the Internet (and one of my all time favorites), hope you like it.

Comments
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Cody B says:

Wow. good for you.

Bookmarked it. Sounds real cool..I'm taking an aesthetics class right now, looking at a paper analyzing pop music through a philisophical lens..

Looking at this book

The Perception of Music

by Robert Francès, W. Jay Dowling.

and this one

Philosophy, Music and Emotion (Hardcover)

by Geoffrey Madell

 

 

Posted about 1 month ago
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Anna says:

Heya Jenny! You are dealing with a very intriguing theme, very nice. I hope the paths that you will follow will be very rewarding. I read the first entry, really enjoyed it. I know how you felt that day you got the mail, because I still feel that way every time I order CDs. For a long time in Greece I didn't buy CDs because they were ridiculously expensive. Now in the UK, I'm making amends. Every time I tear the package open, my heartbeat gets faster. I never download (except for albums that I cannot afford to buy), I want physical copies...call me old-fashioned...I'll be considered such in a few years anyway :)

Best of luck with your thesis!

Cody, I think that the aesthetics part of philosophy is an excellent one. I've actually met two people here that are philosophers specializing in aesthetics, and their subject is truly wonderful.

Posted about 1 month ago
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Oh thanks so much Cody, I'm writing down the book titles now (w/ pen and paper, no less!) Are you studying music? Sounds like an intriguing class. I'm sad to be done with classes, I miss them! I suppose I can always go back, best thing about school. Good luck with it!

And thanks to you too Anna. I love hearing other people's stories with music, what gets them going (heart beating, stomach turning), etc. Because, it seems, everyone's got a good story to tell that relates to music, and that's why I'm excited about talking about this stuff online -- the feedback is the best. And I'm glad you're still enjoying the tangible aspects of music, I think there's a rawness there that means something. Thanks again for your kind words and well wishing. Hope you're enjoying the UK!

Posted about 1 month ago
Artist: Album: Track:


So far, the double 0s have been prime time for the reuniting of ‘70s and ‘80s punk bands. Partially because just enough time has passed for original fans to become nostalgic, partially because today’s generation wants to feel part of movement they missed and partially because bands like Gang of Four, My Blood Valentine, The Pixies and Mission of Burma want to know what it would feel like to play again after all these years. 

And so far, there’s been few let downs. Take Mission of Burma for example. Even on a lazy Monday night, the threesome who came together in Boston in ’79, reminded all of us at Portland’s Doug Fir Lounge what it means to rock, last and mean it. I confess: I was having a rough Monday and I didn’t want to be there. But as soon as Burma hit the stage—where they would ensue to perform the entirety of their much-loved album Vs.—I was suddenly hit with a new burst of energy, with a second chance not unlike the second wave of opportunity occurring onstage in big bursts of guitar electricity, sweaty thrusts, saliva sprays and ferocious intentions. Sure, the band couldn’t induce the same force they achieved in the ‘80s—this is clearly a reunion tour, a salute to bygone times—but, with sheer passion inside tell-it-like-it-is punk rock, they came about as close as possible. And while not moved to shout for the same reasons that the ‘80s brought them, the band proved they still had plenty of reason to feel fired-up, tacking a sign to one guitar amp that read in big spray-painted letters: Oburma for Obama. The group was also not without humorous banter and self-deprecation. Drummer Peter Prescott complained of being hard of hearing and forgetting songs before breaking into classics like, "That’s When I Reach For My Revolver" and "This Is Not A Photograph," only to prompt head-scratching contemplation: Middle-age and this sort of loud, crazed intensity don’t tend to mix, which is precisely what makes Mission of Burma’s reunion shows so unexpectedly kick-ass. Miss Karyn-Lynn Fisette's below photos won’t deny it. They’re still on the road—catch them if you can.

Electrified. photo by Karyn-Lynn Fisette


Dignified. photo by Karyn-Lynn Fisette


Fiery. photo by Karyn-Lynn Fisette


Unafraid. photo by Karyn-Lynn Fisette

Comments
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    M.O.B. Made a ferocious splash on the Boston Scene, exploding the boundries, lashing out & reaching out.  Now they face the ageless conundrum as middle-aged men playing what is essentially the music of disaffected youth.  Their audience now live out their own arrested development vicariously, through them.  And the same can be said of so many artists & bands.

Having said all that,  I sure would like to catch 'em again,  for ole time's sake.

Posted 3 months ago
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I am says:

I am sooo jealous.

 

A little more Burma for the dog pile.

Posted 3 months ago
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I am says:

And one more cause you got me in the mood.

 

 

 

Posted 3 months ago
Artist:

English multi-instrumentalist (of mostly the '80s Amiga kind) Max Tundra will release his third full-length recording via Domino Records Nov. 18. His spiraling, synth-driven and colorful electronic collages and all his beep beep bleeps have garnered him much praise from the likes of the late John Peel---Tundra, a.k.a. Ben Jacobs, was among the last to record a Peel Session---Pitchfork, and Owen Pallett (formerly of Arcade Fire). I hear he kills it live, too -- I'm thinkin' Dan Deacon-style (see UK dates below). I think he sounds pretty darn amazing:


In a press release, Tundra was kind enough to describe his music-making processes and tools with many fun details, yipee:


There are no modern-day computers on this record.  My PC is strictly for emails and Photoshopping the words Max Tundra into Coldplay line-ups.  The main technology behind this and all of my albums has been the Commodore Amiga 500 - bestselling home computer at the time - running a $1 public domain software tracker program.  The sounds don't emerge from the Amiga itself however; the machine is used to control various synths, samplers and the like.  I look at colums of numbers all day on the screen of a black and white television; these digits relate to pitches, durations and tones.  A lot of the noises on my record are real; the cello, bass guitar, drums, piano, trumpet and others are all rehearsed and played by me, but sometimes I will use realistic fake versions of these noises.  Each song is recorded in a different way; drumkits are recorded on mono cassette recorders twice, then stuck together on the left and right of a mix; string arrangements are planned and then layered up; each note of an electric guitar is sampled so that it can be sequenced in ways too complicated for my fat fingers to play at full speed.  And then I have a cup of tea and sing my heart out.

 

Tour dates:

 

05 Oct 2008 - LSO St Luke's (with Juana Molina)    
23 Oct 2008 - Southampton Guildhall (with Hot Chip)    
24 Oct 2008 - Cardiff University (with Hot Chip)    
25 Oct 2008 - Liverpool Academy (with Hot Chip)    
26 Oct 2008 - Leeds Academy (with Hot Chip)    
28 Oct 2008 - Sheffield Academy (with Hot Chip)    
29 Oct 2008 - Birmingham Academy (with Hot Chip)    
30 Oct 2008 - Cambridge Corn Exchange (with Hot Chip)    
01 Nov 2008 - Manchester Apollo (with Hot Chip)    
02 Nov 2008 - Glasgow Academy (with Hot Chip)    
03 Nov 2008 - Leicester De Montford University (with Hot Chip)    
05 Nov 2008 - Brighton Dome (with Hot Chip)     
06 Nov 2008 - London Brixton Academy (with Hot Chip and Wiley)    
07 Nov 2008 - London Brixton Academy (with Hot Chip and Wiley) 

 

Comments
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this song is tight.  he's not holding back at all.   hell yeah!

Posted 3 months ago
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Nice to see you in these parts, Jenny. And that's pretty sweet. It's, um, Scritti Politti-ish - and I mean that in a good way. Gonna dig up more from the Tundra.

Posted 3 months ago
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