By James Rosen on 8.14.06 @ 12:05AM
The download on musical downloads in the age of 60-gig beasts.
This article appears in the July/August 2006 issue
of The American Spectator. To subscribe, click here.
BEHOLD MY BELOVED iPod -- constant companion! Battery-charged
bulwark against bridge-and-tunnel boredom!
Engraved on its silver gleaming backside with my e-mail address
and the very necessary words REWARD IF RETURNED, I now find the
mere act of walking without this small, once unimaginable
machine... well, small and unimaginable. And mine is just the
modest 20-gigabyte model, mind you, not the unruly 60-gig beast for
which I could have splurged if I were a more ostentatiously vulgar,
or richer, man.
So now what the hell should I listen to? Round and
round the finger goes, and where it stops, only I know, or don't --
and that's the whole problem in a nutshell, really. My iPod tells
me I currently have 4,336 songs loaded into it, enough to provide
40 days of continuous, non-repeat play, and that I still haven't
used up half its overall storage capacity.
Not that I've exhausted my underlying CD collection, on which I
stage the periodic, furtive raids that keep my downloading habit in
business. Not even close. Hell, the Beatles collection alone --
some 400 neatly arranged discs that bespeak a frighteningly
advanced obsessive-compulsive disorder, the (statutorily nebulous)
pursuit of Every Little Thing the lads ever recorded, released and
unreleased, live and in the studio -- would totally overwhelm the
little bugger, game as she is. And such a downloading nightmare it
would be! Can you imagine weeding out the overlapping material from
Ultra Rare Trax Volume 5 and Unsurpassed Masters
Volume 7? Or manually typing in the track info that fails to
appear (e.g., "Hey Jude [Take 7]") because iTunes, the iPod's
desktop operating system, also known as "The Benevolent
Mothership," gets finicky about bootlegs?
Fact is, I've collected so many bloody CDs, so much audio
content -- back when I started, we quaintly called it "music" --
that even if I spent the rest of my life doing nothing but
listening to it all, devotedly, without repeating a single song, I
would surely die before completing the task. The same is
effectively true for my iPod. Somewhere along the line, without my
noticing it, the ethos that (I thought) was fueling my scrupulous
transfers of material from The Collection to The Unit -- This
would be nice to have in there -- resulted in a massive
overload, not of the unit's capacity to store it all, but of my own
to enjoy it: So now what the hell should I listen to?
This shocking paralysis -- at what was supposed to be the
precise moment of my emancipation, when several thousand songs are
mine to savor, and I can't choose a single freaking one -- exposes
the real ethos driving me, and all other iPod owners, in the
downloading frenzy we keep up, beyond all rational utility:
What would look cool on an iPod? So we scrupulously
endeavor to ensure our fabulous portable jukeboxes, whether
searched by Artist, Album, or Genre, will reflect the one trait we
imagine any collection of music should boast, above all others:
eclecticism. "Wow, you've sure got eclectic tastes!" we imagine
others will say, admiringly, or: "What an eclectic collection!"
So let's get the Beatles' entire released canon in there, for
starters and as a matter of Proper Respect, and a smattering of the
bootlegs -- both live and in-the-studio stuff -- just to serve
notice on my iPod's Imaginary Inspectors, those exacting little
bastards, that I'm a serious collector!
And let's throw some Stones in there, so they know I can get
down and dirty, too, that it's not all "Lucy in the Sky" with me.
In fact, we'll need the full gamut of British rock royalty -- the
Who, Led Zep, Pink Floyd, the Kinks, Van Morrison -- and a
smattering...oh, the artful smatterings!... of bootleg
material for each, so they'll know I'm not some Total Tool who only
buys the greatest hits packages, or even the full studio albums,
including the obscure ones, but that I dig deep! And that
I am well connected enough to secure unreleased material for even
the most obscure artists! Need the acoustic studio demos for
"Astral Weeks"? Gotcha covered, buddy! Not that I'm planning on
actually listening to them anytime soon, but...
Yes! Soon we've got Classic Rock fully represented, along with
Oldies, '70s Disco, Classic Funk (can't show your iFace in iPublic
without some James Brown, my man, and Stevie Wonder's Talking
Book and Innervisions -- the greatest hits is
probably permissible there), and the Acceptable '80s Music (Talking
Heads, Madonna, Stevie Ray Vaughn).
And how could I have forgotten? We need some jazz! How can I
consider myself "eclectic" if I don't have some jazz on there?
Of course, I don't actually listen to jazz, and I wouldn't know
my Coltrane from my Bird, my Miles from my Mingus, but -- better
have some of each! Thank God my fraternity brother burned me those
discs! Hooked a brother up, he did!
And some classical. Yes! But which? Doesn't matter. Throw some
Bach on there and call it a day. The people you care about
impressing -- other iPod owners, or wannabe owners -- aren't going
to notice if Grieg, Gorecki, or Glass aren't as Fully Represented
as the Beatles and the Elvises (Presley -- greatest hits and live
in Hawaii -- and Costello -- Get Happy!! and Imperial
Bedroom).
THOUGHTOUT THE GREAT downloading frenzy, the same question recurs:
What would look cool on an iPod? In downloading a given
album, should I transfer the whole thing, or just the songs I like?
Wouldn't the Imaginary Inspectors see that I... skipped a song...
on Sticky Fingers? Better to enter the whole thing in
there. What the hell! You've got another ten gigabytes still to
play with. And if you need more space later, you can discreetly
delete the Bach -- Classical is always the first to go -- or just
swallow the extra cash and buy the 60-gig beast, which, truth be
told, you should have splurged for when you had the chance.
When it's all done, you've spent a massive amount of time trying
to impress other people with the content entered into a device that
is intended solely for your own, solitary use. You've catered to
the same fears your mother used to stoke, with her exhortations for
you to live clean: What if you are hit by a bus, found splayed
across Fifth Avenue, a lifeless heap with a sterling resume... and
the cops find you're wearing dirty underwear? Or that your iPod,
still lovingly clutched in your lifeless hand, had no Coltrane on
it?
That moment may never come -- but what if it does? Odds are,
you'll have been standing where you weren't supposed to, right in
the middle of traffic, as the bus struggles, unsuccessfully, to
screech to a stop, your finger going round and round, in the
fruitless service of helping you to answer the question: So now
what the hell should I listen to?
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