New iPod 'classic' 80GB

I finally decided it was time to upgrade my 4.5 year old third generation iPod since Apple refreshed the lines last week. I plumped for the 80GB version of the new iPod Classic. Yes, it is weird having a new product so much better than the one I have, but be called a ‘classic’. I suppose this means it’ll disappear after this. Anyway, here’s a comparison with my old one – it’s a similar footprint, bigger colour screen and it’s much thinner.

I put some pics on flickr! too. I’ll add a mini review to Brightblack after a couple of weeks with it. So far, it’s great.

Changing listening tastes on the move?

One thing I’ve noticed over the last month or so is that I’ve been listening to more and more podcasts on my iPod. Yeah, I know that sounds of odd to say – wow, podcasts on an iPod is just plain shocking – but it’s actually notable for me. When podcasts first started I liked listening to a few on my desktop, and even before them I used to listen to their forerunner, the MP3′d versions of internet radio icecast/shoutcast shows including the now defunct ‘Does Humour Belong in Technology?‘. Were that going today, I think it’d be a highly rated podcast.

As usual, I digress again. The bottom line is that whereas before I listened pretty much to music 100% on my iPod itself, despite the podcasts I subscribe to via iTunes, in the last month I’ve taken more of those ‘casts with me on the road, or more specifically the bus.

Perhaps more surprisingly, there’s an interesting spread. If I look at what I’ve listened to over the last couple of weeks I see Security Now!, 43 Folders, Boing Boing Boing, Paranormal Podcast and Penny-Arcade. Not a bad selection!

Will this trend continue? Will I join the sweaty legion who have been basking in the portable podcast realms for years, or will I tire, kick them back onto the desktop only, and continue to ride the No. 4 or 5 bus to Tokyo Station Marunouchi Minamiguchi irritating my fellow passengers with the tinnitus inducing charms of my usual selection of Asian Dub Foundation, Red Hot Chili Peppers and the AppleSeed soundtrack?

15 months

It’s hard to believe, but when I bought Queensyche’s “Operation Mindcrime 2″ CD last week, that was the first CD I’d bought in fifteen months (the previous one I think was Sanatana’s “All That I am”. Before that I honestly don’t remember.

Before people start jumping up and down, I don’t have any pirated tunes. Sorry to be boring, but I don’t – I just haven’t seen anything I really liked lately to buy. Chances are, I’m just getting older, or I just don’t listen to much music, but I also hold out the possibility that music continues to get more mediocre. Ah well.

Baby music and other audio

One thing we’ve been trying with our baby is music as some kind of relaxation device. There’s the belief that Mozart is ‘good for babies’, thought I’m not sure her hearing is developed enough to really hear it, (she’s not even a month old) but I thought we’d give it a try.

Though I have a few random Mozart CDs (and that MD) there is a lot available for free legal download I discovered. Specifically I went looking for Mozart for babies, if there was such a thing. Turns out there is, and a lot of it, as well as other musical, and classical music geared for babies. It starts with the downloads from Munchkin Musical Soup downloads, but I’m sure anyone who gets into this whole thing will soon be buying Baby Bach videos, and then will likely end up with the intriguing Magic Mozart Cube, or the wannabe gangsta-esque sounding iCrib Sound System which is actually just a nasty looking iPod holder and speakers, which likely means the sound quality is awful. As everyone knows, this kind of not baby bay products, are more expensive and generally worse than their ‘adult’ equivalents. Anyway, if you want specific tunes for you kids, probably try mykidstunes.com.

Anyway, I have digressed as usual. I wanted to see whether little Momo would like the baby Mozart from Munchkin. I downloaded it, played it. It’s Mozart sprinkled with nursery rhyme styled bits, and most of the instruments are tinkly tinkly childs style; possibly not something the raving Amadeus had in mind.

Still I played it through twice. After that I wasn’t sure who was benefitting. Momo was just ignoring it, and it was driving my wife and I nuts. It’s a nice idea, but for me it fell into the same category as lift music and the covers used in a lot of karaoke places. It’s a case of you know how something should sound, but it just doesn’t quite, and ends up being annoying.

So what next, well, I decided to try Momo with real, grown up, as written by The Man himself type Mozart, and though I’m not saying she was enamoured by it, it did at least look as if she was listening. She at least stopped practicing her rapid arm movement shuriken throws she’d getting known for.

Yesterday then I wondered what other music she liked. I decided against Pantera’s ‘Vulgar Display of Power’, and try something more relaxed, and settled on Miles Davis’ ‘Round About Midnight’. I have to say, I think that worked even better than Mozart. She listened for a while before slowly falling asleep (victory!). either way, she seems to like it a lot more than my singing.

(Un)neccesary (Re)Encoding

I generally use iTunes on my Mac for keeping all my music together nowadays, and via my Airport Express, I can play them through the sound system in the living room, and of course on my iPod. Broadly speaking, most of my music is encoded at either at 160kbps CBR MP3, or 128kbps AAC, both done conveniently within iTunes.

One column I tend not to have on in iTunes is the bitrate column, but when I did just flick it on the other day I was surprised to see I had 3 CDs encoded at 80kbps AAC. Hmm. They sounded OK on the computer speakers, but sure enough when I played them through the living room system and on my headphones, they did sound a little rough. OK, no problem, just re-encode them.

That’s when I started wondering how I should re-encode them. Just for the sake of tweaking, I thought I’d give LAME a try, an open source MP3 encoder and reckoned to be one of the best MP3 encoders out there. I’ve been using LAME for a while with Audacity when converting some minidiscs to MP3s, but not really as a straight from CD converter. Anyway, for the Mac there’s the iTunes-LAME app from Blacktree, and for Windows, one of the better ones seems to be Razerlame, though for both of these, they’re actually front ends and you can drive LAME via a command line without much difficulty.

I’m not going to claim you’re going to find huge perceptable differences here, but I blind listened to a couple of the original encodings, a LAME VBR encoding, and a similar sized iTunes MP3, and the LAME one did sound a bit better. Plus, if you’re a switch addict, LAME let’s you really see all the options of an encoding system like MP3 has to offer, but are hidden in iTunes and such behind monickers like ‘High Quality’, ‘Higher Quality’ etc..

This whole process actually took me back a few years. My first MP3 encoder was the N2MP3 app for Mac OS 8.x back in 1998 or thereabouts, but when I first started using Linux regularly around the same time, I started using an early version of Ogg Vorbis. Generally, Vorbis is much better sounding that AAC or MP3, but isn’t readily supported on portable music players which is a shame; I’m hoping the next iPod revision will open this up a bit. Currently you can play Vorbis files in iTunes via a plugin Xiph is working on.

Actually, whilst looking around for things on LAME in general, you hit the usual suspect websites like HydrogenAudio, but I also found a concise page over here, which seems to have been written by some coding audio engineers.

Stadium Arcadium

I’ve been a Red Hot Chili Peppers fan for quite a long time now – about 15 years I think. I’ve always liked their funkier work than their mid tempo balladry i.e. I listen to ‘Mother’s Milk’ and ‘BloodSugarSexMagik’ more than ‘Californication’ and ‘By The Way’, but I’m not slighting those albums either as they both have tracks in my top 50 most listened to tracks.

I was intrigued though that the new release “Stadium Arcadium” would be a double album given that that usually sends the signal of a desperate record company realising they don’t have enough for a single decent outing.

I was also wondering whether they were following their previous two (very similar) releases, or whether they’d be trying something else.

I’ve only had the CDs for a couple of days – listening to them in a hotel room in Hong Kong, and on my iPod coming back to Tokyo – and so far my fears don’t hold – both CDs are well worth listening to. RHCP seem to have tried to do a few more funky tracks here, as well as the more soulful recent stylings on this outing, but again the star is the John Frusciante on guitar. It’s more like a compendium of tracks from their whole history stylistically, and although the lyrics are somewhat cleaner than they used to be, some are just as nonsensical.

Pick up a copy – it’s a great summer set.

G-Force 3.5

Soundspectrum this week released G-Force 3.5, an upgrade to the very cool visualisation program for most media players. I’ll be looking to update my How To for the software very soon. This is the app I was using last year at some charity gigs, projected on the walls in some of of the venues – it’s a great light show.

The big things for this release are that it’s now openGL assisted, so it not just CPU speed which pays dividends, and thus it looks even smoother, especially on Macs, which were limited by colour depth before. The Mac 3.5 release also gets a control panel and ‘v-bar’ application, which Windows users got with version 3. V-Bar is basically a scalable vertical window which runs the visualisation, so you can run G-Force more easily as you work.

In many ways I found 3.1.x to 3.5 to be a bigger jump than 2.8.x to 3 was. Either way, give it a download and get ready to be sucked in to some seriously relaxing images.

Takarazuka

Takarazuka is a theatre group , though now almost a style of theatre in itself – which takes it’s name from it’s town of origin – Takarazuka – in Hyogo Prefecture. What differentiates Takarazuka, is that all of the roles are played by women. Stylistically, you might say it’s very ‘fairy-tale princess’ driven – lots of big frilly dresses, sequins and generally over-the-top performances. It also commands fanatical following from a mainly female fan base.

The production I went to see was the rather famous “Berusaiyu no Bara” (‘The Rose of Versailles’), allegedly based on some of the life of Marie Antoinette.

When you enter the Takarazuka theatre in Tokyo’s Yurakucho, it’s all in theme – huge chandeliers, bentos being sold and adverts for every other production and TV show the actresses will be on. The first thing that’ll strike you is that not only will all the roles be played by women, but 99.9% of the audience are women too. I exchanged nods with the couple of other men in the cafeteria, both of whom were being led by their wives, and who were already making inroads into some beers.

Since I’m probably only going to do this once, I was really pleased we got seats in the second row, although this is also kind of risky, as you see just how much make-up can be applied to human skin before it cracks.

To me, Takarazuka seems to have become one of those things where you don’t go and see a play/musical for the story-line, you go to see it for what it is – Takarazuka. The story-line was just pointless (really, Marie Antoinette as a nice fluffy person?), the costumes were huge and the general production values were about the same as most amateur dramatics shows; even the dancing was average, but then I must admit, it can’t be easy dancing in huge ballroom dresses which must’ve weighed more than I do. However, the producers know their audience, and they play to them 100%. I suspect that less than 5% of the audience were at their first Takarazuka – I suspect for many it’s a very regular thing.

Though I could follow most of the plot quite easily, I did get one bit wrong – I thought when Marie as a child speaks to her doll ‘Stefan’, I thought she was alluding to another character we were yet to see. Nope, she was indeed just chatting to her doll, though I was correct in my belief that Stefan would get a bigger role, and he makes another triumphant appearance just before Marie’s death. Don’t worry though, the plot really isn’t important here.

What it does well is it’s complete fairy-tale nature and melodramatic over acting. The famous death scene in the second half goes on and on for a few minutes. Poor Andre takes about ten bullets before he(she) finally slumps over a Parisian bridge (which wobbled as he/she did so, though whether that was due to poor construction or just the weight of the over-acting is difficult to say). At this point I didn’t know whether to laugh or not, it was hilarious, but the woman next to me had her handkerchief out and was crying…. Andoooreeeee….Osukaaaaa!

Like many of these kind of things, after you get over the ‘What the hell is going on?’ feeling from the first five minutes, and suspend disbelief a bit, you do actually start liking it, but just when you’re comfortable with the format, something odd happens. Antoinette is executed, then her ghost ascends to heaven (unlikely but anyway), then, the stage is full of a lit stair case with can-can dancers coming down it… it’s hard to see where the plot goes then as there is a ten minute set of dance numbers featuring flamenco and more contemporary numbers.

In summary then, it is what it is, and it is worth doing just once, as long as you treat it as a musical revue, rather than a serious dramatic or musical production, as it likely isn’t. It is though something that is just as Japanese as Kabuki is (and that being an all male cast), and really should be on any ‘to do’ list that has Kabuki on it. It’s probably the biggest piece of ‘cosplay’ (costume play) going.

And yes, I did nod off for a minute or two during one of the slower ‘plot explanation’ scenes, and was woken by women in big dresses spinning around not five metres from me!

Southern All Stars Live 3

It seems every other post here is about the Southern All Stars. Well, on December 30th (2005!), we went to see them again at the Yokohama Arena, and again, they were absolutely fantastic. So, from having never seen them before, in the the second half of 2005, we saw them three times, each time in different settings: Rock in Japan Festival, the Tokyo Dome, and now at the Yokohama Arena.

Whilst the songs for the latter two were pretty similar, it was great (again) seeing them in a smaller venue, and from a different angle, to really appreciate the live show, and really, there aren’t many bands nowadays who can keep a place moving for three hours solid.

The question then might be why we saw two stadium gigs in a months, and the answer is because we applied for both dates in a kind of raffle, and their tickets sell out within a day usually, and so we were really pleased we actually got allotted two sets of tickets. Also, as I understand it, they often do their live shows at the end of the year.