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Yeah he's bleeding stones
With his machinations and his palindromes
It was anything but hear the voice
anything but hear the voice
It was anything but hear the voice
That says that we're all basically alone
Poor Professor Pynchon had only good intentions
When he put his Bunsen burners all away
And turning to a playground in a Petri dish
Where single cells would swing their fists
At anything that looks like easy prey
In this nature show that rages every day
It was then he heard his intuition say
We were all basically alone
And despite what all his studies had shown
That what's mistaken for closeness
Is just a case for mitosis
And why do some show no mercy
While others are painfully shy
Tell me doctor can you quantify
He just wants to know the reason, the reason why
Why do they congregate in groups of four
Scatter like a billion spores
And let the wind just carry them away?
How can kids be so mean?
Our famous doctor tried to glean
As he went home at the end of the day
In this nature show that rages every day
It was then he heard his intuition say
We were all basically alone
Despite what all his studies had shown
That what's mistaken for closeness
Is just a case of mitosis
Sure fatal doses of malcontent through osmosis
And why do some show no mercy
While others are painfully shy
Tell me doctor, can you quantify?
The reason why
How funny! The LP cover is a photo of a budgie, and my little budgie loves this song!
I had a budgie once...Called him Onan 'cause he spilled his seed...
Tony in NJ
W.A.S.T.E.
Or an exercise in tenuousness.
I put it at six and half bricks.
Fascinating comment. It has never occurred to me to quantify art—except for its market value, itself a tenuous exercise.
Or an exercise in tenuousness.
Fascinating comment. It has never occurred to me to quantify art—except for its market value, itself a tenuous exercise.
OceanBlue wrote:
Why do some people post the same twice ?...weeks apart....is it like brain damage ?
I like this track...a bit.
You guys below...Quit taking up all the comment space with your babbling and talk about the music.
Thank you for your time.
Another influential book —- THE BIBLE —— said that we are not alone, and can have a personal relationship with God.
"Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me." REV 3:20
<—-
Researching - THE LONELY CROWD
—->
The earliest social type was obtained by people who were inner-directed. They discovered the potential within themselves to live and act not according to established norms but based on what they discovered using their own inner gyroscope. Inner-directed people live as adults what they learned in childhood, and tend to be confident, sometimes rigid.
After the Industrial Revolution in America had succeeded in developing a middle-class state, institutions that had flourished within the tradition-directed and the inner-directed social framework became secondary to daily life. Instead of living according to traditions, or conforming to the values of organized religion, of the family, or societal codes, the new middle class gradually adopted a malleability in the way people lived with each other. The increasing ability to consume goods and afford material abundance was accompanied by a shift away from tradition or inner-directedness. How to define one's self became a function of the way others lived.
Riesman and his researchers found that other-directed people were flexible and willing to accommodate others to gain approval. Because large organizations preferred this type of personality, it became indispensable to the institutions that thrived with the growth of industry in America.As Riesman writes, "The other-directed person wants to be loved rather than esteemed," not necessarily to control others but to relate to them. Those who are other-directed need assurance that they are emotionally in tune with others.
By the 1940s, the other-directed character was beginning to dominate society. Today the triumph of this type of social personality is complete. If one applies the other-direction criteria to everyday actors as portrayed in modern culture, for example, the other-directed person is easy to identify. But since the other-directed could only identify themselves through references to others in their communities (and what they earned, owned, consumed, believed in) they inherently were restricted in their ability to know themselves.
Riesman's book argues that although other-directed individuals are crucial for the smooth functioning of the modern organization, the value of autonomy is compromised. The Lonely Crowd also argues that society dominated by the other-directed faces profound deficiencies in leadership, individual self-knowledge, and human potential.
———>I propose that there is another social type "God-Directed" that views our maker as the external gyroscope that controls the whole universe. We are all connected to this influence and have a spirit within that completes the connection. Our selfishness and then our need for forgiveness has disrupted this connection since Eden. You can re-connect through God's son, Jesus who lived as a man and understands and loves us all. Once connected, the Spirit can be stoked by following God and understanding his character through Jesus. I think we all tend to be 'inner' and 'other' directed. The key is to tap into a broader external influence, you never know when you will be directed to selfless acts that can make a big difference.
How is your "God-directed" social type of today different from religious people from previous generations whom Riesman et al. describe as "inner-directed"? Do you believe "God-directed" types receive spiritual and moral guidance directly and personally from an active God, independent of religious organizations and officials? Riesman's "inner-directed" groups of earlier generations—groups that disappeared with the rise of the "other-directed" types—internalized religious teachings from their churches and religious leaders to create their moral compasses. Perhaps your "God-directed" types of today simply create their own religious understandings and draw moral lessons from those understandings all on their own without taking instructions from a church.
Your Wikipedia excerpt about The Lonely Crowd makes me wonder whether the book is on shaky ground when dividing people into "inner-directed" and "other-directed" groups. It strikes me that the "inner-directed" groups were seeking approval and perhaps love from others too, only their groups were not based on average wealth, consumption patterns, or income-based social classes. I agree with Riesman that when you have people trying to judge their self-worth based on how much money they make relative to others or how many possessions they have, they're going to feel morally or spiritually adrift and emotionally disconnected from others. Our consumer society doesn't give us lessons about the meaning of life, our obligations to others, the possibility of a higher power, etc.
But I'm not sure how someone can be purely "inner-directed." If you've embraced and internalized life lessons from your church, family, or social group, you're still "other-directed" even if your marching orders don't come from material goods and the consumer society.
I'm also not sure that peer pressure is such a driving force in consumption patterns anymore. Americans like reality shows in part because they like to watch other people ruining their lives or doing crazy things. Those shows also tacitly encourage the notions of being true to yourself and not viewing others with more stuff as better than you. These days people buy stuff because they view the stuff as extension of themselves (Apple's genius lies in getting people to buy into that) and enriching their lives. I think Americans aren't as worried about keeping up with the Joneses and may even mentally tell the Joneses to f*ck off.
10/19/14 insomnia-induced edit: from a NYT article :
"We embraced art and rejected a major-label system that cared only about selling records. Oddly, we expressed our position by buying records. The problem with my life as an anticorporate bohemian was that it was predicated on a consumer behavior.
Joseph Heath and Andrew Potter explore this contradiction in their 2004 book, “Nation of Rebels: How Counterculture Became Consumer Culture.” They argue that contemporary consumer culture is driven not by a desire to keep up with the Joneses but by the opposite impulse: to individuate. We believe our purchases distinguish us from a perceived mainstream of numb consumers, so we cannot stop buying things."
Only if they have been eating Hali Berries.
Another influential book --- THE BIBLE ---- said that we are not alone, and can have a personal relationship with God.
"Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me." REV 3:20
<---
Researching - THE LONELY CROWD
--->
The earliest social type was obtained by people who were inner-directed. They discovered the potential within themselves to live and act not according to established norms but based on what they discovered using their own inner gyroscope. Inner-directed people live as adults what they learned in childhood, and tend to be confident, sometimes rigid.
After the Industrial Revolution in America had succeeded in developing a middle-class state, institutions that had flourished within the tradition-directed and the inner-directed social framework became secondary to daily life. Instead of living according to traditions, or conforming to the values of organized religion, of the family, or societal codes, the new middle class gradually adopted a malleability in the way people lived with each other. The increasing ability to consume goods and afford material abundance was accompanied by a shift away from tradition or inner-directedness. How to define one's self became a function of the way others lived.
Riesman and his researchers found that other-directed people were flexible and willing to accommodate others to gain approval. Because large organizations preferred this type of personality, it became indispensable to the institutions that thrived with the growth of industry in America.As Riesman writes, "The other-directed person wants to be loved rather than esteemed," not necessarily to control others but to relate to them. Those who are other-directed need assurance that they are emotionally in tune with others.
By the 1940s, the other-directed character was beginning to dominate society. Today the triumph of this type of social personality is complete. If one applies the other-direction criteria to everyday actors as portrayed in modern culture, for example, the other-directed person is easy to identify. But since the other-directed could only identify themselves through references to others in their communities (and what they earned, owned, consumed, believed in) they inherently were restricted in their ability to know themselves.
Riesman's book argues that although other-directed individuals are crucial for the smooth functioning of the modern organization, the value of autonomy is compromised. The Lonely Crowd also argues that society dominated by the other-directed faces profound deficiencies in leadership, individual self-knowledge, and human potential.
------>I propose that there is another social type "God-Directed" that views our maker as the external gyroscope that controls the whole universe. We are all connected to this influence and have a spirit within that completes the connection. Our selfishness and then our need for forgiveness has disrupted this connection since Eden. You can re-connect through God's son, Jesus who lived as a man and understands and loves us all. Once connected, the Spirit can be stoked by following God and understanding his character through Jesus. I think we all tend to be 'inner' and 'other' directed. The key is to tap into a broader external influence, you never know when you will be directed to selfless acts that can make a big difference.
psittacosis is the answer.
yes i do agree, sadly so
Krispian wrote:
I'll just drop this here, too:
https://www.sing365.com/music/lyric.nsf/Myxomatosis-lyrics-Radiohead/7BE8051383C2693348256D340008F056
Krispian wrote:
He also has the coolest amp ever...
https://www.specimenproducts.com/single-ended-octoblock-tube-amplifier/
He always speaks very highly of you, but sometimes he does so using made-up words.
HD radio is garbage! The CODEC is AAC at sample rates around 64kbps for 2 channel stations. It may be cleaner than analog FM because the noise floor is quite low, but it is unlistenable on anything but a car radio. With the cost of storage currently at 3x10^^-09 cents/bit it makes sense to only save WAV files or lossless compresed files. Just be aware WMA Lossles is a proprietary CODEC and will only play back on a very few media servers (but will play basically any computer)
The trend in the audiophile community is toward FLAC, which is a lossless format that is compressed—saving space—and expanded only when played.
I meant MPEG-4. Sorry. Agree with BIll that MP3s at 320kbps can sound pretty good at times—at least equivalent to HD radio. However, as a matter of preference (almost said "principle"—which I don't think audio is so important that one resorts to "principles;" perspective, right?), I go with lossless formats. Can't accept the idea that throwing out data somehow preserves the intent or quality of the sound.
HD radio is garbage! The CODEC is AAC at sample rates around 64kbps for 2 channel stations. It may be cleaner than analog FM because the noise floor is quite low, but it is unlistenable on anything but a car radio. With the cost of storage currently at 3x10^^-09 cents/bit it makes sense to only save WAV files or lossless compresed files. Just be aware WMA Lossles is a proprietary CODEC and will only play back on a very few media servers (but will play basically any computer)
man, you've got that right!
A couple of corrections: MPEG-2 is most definitely not a lossless format, and well-encoded MP3s at 320kbps (or as low as 192k for some source material) are hardly low-fidelity. You can't judge the MP3 standard itself by the crappily-encoded 128k files that seem to be the norm these days.
I meant MPEG-4. Sorry. Agree with BIll that MP3s at 320kbps can sound pretty good at times—at least equivalent to HD radio. However, as a matter of preference (almost said "principle"—which I don't think audio is so important that one resorts to "principles;" perspective, right?), I go with lossless formats. Can't accept the idea that throwing out data somehow preserves the intent or quality of the sound.
A couple of corrections: MPEG-2 is most definitely not a lossless format, and well-encoded MP3s at 320kbps (or as low as 192k for some source material) are hardly low-fidelity. You can't judge the MP3 standard itself by the crappily-encoded 128k files that seem to be the norm these days.
What the hell do you know fella?
Who do you think you are...a recording engineer....a DJ?
Keep up the good work William!
It's a similar, minor-chord progression; the bass player is not playing the exact same bass line but it could certainly fit in. Which reminds me, there isn't enought Kraftwerk on RP.
I agree completely if...you want to toss out 7 of every 8 bits of recorded information and replace high fidelity with low fidelity. That said, there are a number of high fidelity file formats (FLAC, MPEG-2, and more) that are lossless and compatible with a host of playback devices, including the iPod and other portable players. Then again, if you grew up on AM radio and don't know hi-fi from Adam, peace.
A couple of corrections: MPEG-2 is most definitely not a lossless format, and well-encoded MP3s at 320kbps (or as low as 192k for some source material) are hardly low-fidelity. You can't judge the MP3 standard itself by the crappily-encoded 128k files that seem to be the norm these days.
Your CD player. Replace it with MP3 capability.
I agree completely if...you want to toss out 7 of every 8 bits of recorded information and replace high fidelity with low fidelity. That said, there are a number of high fidelity file formats (FLAC, MPEG-2, and more) that are lossless and compatible with a host of playback devices, including the iPod and other portable players. Then again, if you grew up on AM radio and don't know hi-fi from Adam, peace.
My thoughts exactly.
Both guys have class - true,
but,...naaaah!
Great cover, though!
("5-6")
Your CD player. Replace it with MP3 capability.
Totally. 7 -> 9
this is a great song....and great instrumentation.