Our life has no end in just the way in which our visual field has no limits.
have blog :: will travel
Education is the pathway out of poverty and Creative Commons (CC) licensing makes it possible to share educational materials (and all creative works) online for free. Their impact worldwide is significant. The licenses allow for legal sharing of text, video, photos, audio, art, music online using one of six free licenses.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/esther-wojcicki/creative-commons-in-2009_b_366548.html
some of the important changes that have taken place in 2009 with the help of Creative Commons non-profit licensing structures.
This rambling rant was my comment inflicted on the Jazz: Music of Unemployment post "The world we have lost"; I thought I'd take a page from Luciano Berio and "Say it again, LOUDER" over here.
At issue is the notion of what do the fans fetishize in the post-CD world of MP3s, in how do they continue to be band-fanatics, and the attendant issue of how it might be possible for artists to control the context of their own work. This is my attempt to answer both questions from the perspective of a disgruntled old geezer lost in a world he did not make, for which the short form might be, "You kids! get the hell off my lawn" but for the record, here's the long version:
Remember the days when folks sang in the pubs? Not so far back as Bilbo Baggins favouring us with a tune, but just nearly yesterday, like the day I walked into the 'Horn and someone was sittin' about with a guitar and another said, "Go home and get your mandolin!" and I was off like a shot and back in a flash and it was fab. Remember those days? Well, if you live in the UK, you won't have to put up with that nonesense anymore. "Breeds violence" says Whitehall, and they'll have none of it.
The law says that a publican can show football on a large-screen television, or have piped music blaring out, but if there is a folk singer or rapper in the pub, there has to be a special licence ... small venues have stopped putting on live music because managements do not want the hassle of filling out lengthy forms.
Just this evening we played in an old community hall in the nearby village of Hepworth. St. Andrews Church Hall spent years boarded up and unused, sad for a grand old structure right at the crossroads, in a town where the prime entertainment outside of intravenous satellite-TV is the lone and always busy foreign conglomerate franchise donut shop of friendly strangers. So why wouldn't a community use such a hall? Where are the dances, the BBQ Turkey Shoots or even neo-Vaudeville concerts like this?
"There's no business model for community events." is one reason, and the reason for tonight's show is to inject a little community donation capital into the fund that might bring the building closer to having a heating system that will appease the 21st Century Building Codes, which are themselves to appease the 21st Century Insurance Adjusters, which are incidentely implicated in the final stake through the community heart, the requirement to have the hall water sent to an expensive and distant government-approved laboratory to ensure the groundwater that everyone else in the neighbourhood also taps is sufficiently low-risk to the Insurer through these taps.
What happened? Where did we go so horribly wrong and how did it get so far out of control? And how do we get it back. Communities around the planet have been having community get-togethers quite fine for some 70,000 years (probably more) and we did so without a business model and without insurance and all the safeguards to minimize 'liability', and now that we're in the spider's trap, we are paying the liability with damages to the community, damages to the social fabric, and damages to our culture.
Where did we go wrong?
today's musicians are rediscovering 'tune books', small manuscript books of music that were in use from the late-17th to the mid-19th century.
They are now sharing them, in the way that musicians always have, but nowadays online, so that all over the world, people are playing these tunes once again in an ongoing global virtual session.
ABC, the brilliant smart thing done with stupid technology that illuminates the globally networked world of traditional music players by carrying the melodic DNA of your ancestors. I'd like to say abc is the finger in the face of the RIAA and pop-culture copyright oppression, but suffice it to say that here, in the tunebooks freely traded for millenia, here is where you will find a suprising number of those old familiar but catchy melodies now usurped and repurposed by the less scrupulous. But it's ok, as Pete Seeger once said, "We were here long before commercial 'Pop' music, and we will be here long after they are forgotten and in this generation, our musical heritage vehicles of survival are fueled by Walshaw's humble abc.
The show features interviews with Chris Walshaw, inventor of abc, and members of the Village Music Project team and is presented by singer and musician, Tim van Eyken.
Yeah, I know. No time, what's the point, what good would it do, who cares, and besides, sticking with the evolving status quo, we all get scads of really cool toys. All that considered, Lawrence Lessig's Keynote from OSCON is called "Free Culture" but if you ask me, the word 'free' there is not an adjective.
It's a verb.
Submitted by mrG on Sun, 2002-08-18 23:59