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Rip a Vinyl

edited April 2013
Does anyone have the tech to do this?

I have one very rare and special record that I want to digitize lest (god forbid) anything ever happen to it. It's way out of print and not particularly special to anyone but me, so don't think this is a creepy venture!

Comments

  • I have a cdr hooked up to my stereo/turntables so it would be easy to put it on a cd...if that helps? You are welcome to come over with your special vinyl and oversee the process.
  • Cool! That would be awesome!
  • I think this is a creepy venture. not sure why
  • Over the past year and a half I’ve been tracking down an album from a local band that I listened to in middle school. It was crazy to me in the world of the internets that I couldn’t track it down. I finally did, but it left this uneasy feeling about how many things are forgotten. How maybe it is important to share and document the things you know aren’t widely available or remembered. A lot of that time in my life is connected with my best friend who passed away a few years ago and how I am only left to remember those times.
  • That is the nature of life. Chateaubriand as long ago as 1830 wrote lovingly about long afternoon teas at his aunt's house and how now he is the only living human who even remembers her name, and when he dies it will be as though she never existed.

    Last night we were talking about how crazy it is that we even know anything about ancient greece. How did enough scraps of 3,000 year old paper survive to give us even the vaguest notion of what was going on back then, not to mention, like, Plato's Dialogues?

    C'EST LA VIE
  • edited April 2013
    You guys Sally's art is about this (and other things)
    It helps me make sense of this g.d. world
  • Destroy 2,000 years of culture.
  • We are all in this together.

    I imagined I’d be older when I started thinking about legacy.
  • edited April 2013
    < 3
    don't get me started
    GET ME STARTED
  • I don't care about legacy
    legacy is bullshit ideology! Fight the power
  • > How did enough scraps of 3,000 year old paper survive to give us even the vaguest
    > notion of what was going on back then

    I know RIGHT?! Plus: pottery and bones! Taking Ancient Greeks on Coursera right now and it is faci-FUCKING-nating how much of our knowledge is based on literal garbage and accidents of fate. The broken pot shards that were used to scribble a name for tallying up ostracism votes, then thrown away, let us follow the political in-fighting in 400 BC. Thank (the) god(s) for the Olympics because otherwise we would have no way to reliably date events. Etc.

    My main take away is that a single random collector can end up being IMMORTAL due to us finding his stash two thousand plus years later! So keep hoarding you pack rats out there, you might be collecting an archaeological trove for someone in 4138.

    Actually my main take away is how utterly alien the culture of the ancient greeks would be to us who assume it's a pretty straightforward line from Greeks -> Romans -> Europe -> Western Democracies. But hoarding is right up there.

    I wonder how we know anything about music in the ancient world if there was no sheet music? (not even guitar tab, er- lyre tab?) Is there anyway to be able to know the actual notes played in a musical piece from ancient history? What is the earliest form of attempts to write down the structure of a piece of music?
  • edited April 2013
    GREAT QUESTION THAT I CAN ANSWER

    The answer is: WE DON'T

    Another mind-blower.

    The Greeks wrote a lot ABOUT music but they didn't (so far as we know) have much of a notational system. If you think about it, the idea of writing down music is totally bizarre and it makes sense that it would basically never occur to anybody to try to do it. So we know a lot about Greek instruments, and we know a lot about what they THOUGHT about various musical styles and, for lack of a better word, "keys" (they did not have keys) and stuff. We know that leaders shouldn't listen to dithyrambs for fear of becoming feminized, e.g. We know about lyres and stuff. We have that great story in Plato where he says large men should enforce respectful listening behavior at concerts by hitting people with sticks. But we don't have any way of even vaguely recreating what the music actually sounded like. It is a total mystery and will always remain so---because even the music theorists who wrote a lot ABOUT music don't ever mention notation or anything, because it didn't exist (we assume)

    The kind of stuff they did write down was more like science--figuring out the overtone series and stuff (Pythagoras did that, athough he was a member of a religious sect that didn't believe in writing things down, so everything we know about his musico-scientific discoveries is hearsay). They didn't actually write down songs in any modern sense of the word. They thought of music as science and thought it helped them understand things about the planets and the earth and stuff. "the music of the spheres" was this idea that all the heavenly bodies make noise as they revolve, and that the overtone series mirrors the perfection of the heavens or something. Pythagoras had ideas about this after listening to a blacksmith hammering, apparently.

    They think there might be music notation in various Egyptian hieroglyph systems but nobody can figure it out. I think I learned that somewhere.

    The first actual notation that you could actually read and then reproduce doesn't come into being until the 10th century A.D. Can you believe that shit??? And even then, it was only because the church wanted to standardize its liturgy in an effort to control everybody.

    The history of music pre-notation is really the history of how UTTERLY BONKERS ancient peoples' memories were. It would have been like nothing we can even imagine. Priests having LITERALLY TENS OF THOUSANDS of plainchants memorized--the melodies, the words, etc., but also which day of the church calendar year each chant belongs in, etc. Homer reciting the entire Iliad from memory. Shit like that. Give me a break!
  • A man I spoke to about his music recently told me he learned some scales directly from Pan while visiting one of his shrines.... so there's that
  • My bugaboo is that, since my art is digital, it will literally shrink as screen resolution increases : - ( for my 2033 retrospectiiiiiiiiive
  • And the beautiful CRT green I grew up learning how to work with...... GONE FOREVER
  • edited April 2013
    good call, I guess the meaning is built in to the medium though.... like why anyone uses TV/VHS/pixel artifacts
    pixels :: vector as mosaic :: stained glass
  • After spending 8 months guarding artifacts at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and therefore staring at them for a very long time, I can assure you that they are all in fact exquisite fakes.
  • All that music... lost to time. Kinda depressing. Someday maybe we'll dig up a parking lot in Athens and find some student's cheat sheet. I'm guessing there must have been teaching methods that involved some sort of "put your finger here to make X sound" to train courtesans/slaves even if there wasn't a formal notation in use. Or a traveler that heard some music somewhere that wanted to tell people back home about it. SOMETHING. Throw us a frickin' bone, history.
  • "My bugaboo is that, since my art is digital, it will literally shrink as screen resolution increases : - ( for my 2033 retrospectiiiiiiiiive "

    I don't think it will actually get too bad. The new Apple stuff is called "Retina resolution" because increasing resolution beyond this point isn't really something our eyes can discern.
  • ohhhhhhhhhhkay... we'll see in 2033
  • pre-notation all music was taught orally. If you heard a cool song, you learned it from the dude you heard it from. The upshot though was that their memories were so amazing. They could hear a song and replicate it way more easily than most of us nowadays.

    training to becoming a priest took 10 years, and involved almost nothing but memorizing chants. Once you knew all the tens of thousands of chants, you were a priest! To learn the chants you had to go to the university in Paris so you could actually hear them sung by someone who already knew them.

    Think though of all the films that have been lost to time because they hadn't invented film yet
  • In 2033, I'm pretty sure we're all going to be just jacked into weird machines that directly control our dopamine levels, so nbd.
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