On the Line: Egan, Burnside, Whitehead

Some favorite recent sentences

“And if more than eight lines of awkward dialogue threaten irrevocable awkwardness, silences like the one now elapsing between M and me are an even greater peril. And I am a guy who knows how to measure silences. But whereas in music, a prolonged pause adds power and vividness to the refrain that follows it, pauses in conversation have the opposite effect, of debasing whatever comes next to the point that a perfectly witty riposte will be reduced to the verbal equivalent of a shrunken head, if too long a pause precedes it.”

That is from The Candy HouseJennifer Egan’s excellent sequel to her novel A Visit from the Goon Squad. The bit about how the speaker is “a guy who knows how to measure silences” is a call back to a bit in Goon Squad when the younger version of this character kept track of songs with pauses in them. Here, older and maybe a little wiser, that character finds additional (and painful) meaning in silence.

. . .

"I stood out in the road, by Brewster’s Yard,
and waited for a ghost, since ghosts were true,
a pair of Clydesdales pressing to the fence
to listen: rain; the music of the spheres;
or else, those calls I knew, from other worlds,
the wind across the sands, a whimbrel’s cry."

That is from one of two poems by John Burnside published in the March 21, 2024, edition of the London Review of Books. I didn’t know what a “whimbrel” was before I read this. I enjoyed the comprehension void before I filled it with a simple Google search, during which the word could have referred to anything at all. It’s nothing special, but I won’t say what a “whimbrel” is so you, too, can — if you also don’t know — take a pause before doing the search yourself. 

. . .

“Out of the Zenith hi-fi shook crazy saxophone stuff from the Village. Freddie could have identified who was playing, and on what basement bebop nights he'd seen them, but whenever Carney heard those sounds he felt trapped in a room of lunatics.”

That is from the novel Harlem Shuffle by Colson Whitehead, whom I had not gotten around to reading until now. It’s a great book, and there’s a lot packed into those two sentences, key among the data: (1) the identification of the make of hi-fi relates the main character’s job as a furniture salesman, a form of employment that begins as background information but comes to serve as a filter for how he processes the world around him, and (2) the notion of jazz as being like something from “lunatics” is a marker of a cultural divide between that character, who is Black, and certain aspects of the culture in which he was raised. (I’ve been on a novel-reading tear. Harlem Shuffle was my eighth in 2024. Reading is a form of writing procrastination that sort of doubles as research.)

Sound Ledger: Go-karts, SoundHound, leaf blowers

Audio culture by the numbers

100: Number of noise complaints in Tokyo in 2023 due to go-karts

346: Percentage return to holders of SoundHound shares since start of 2024

2028: The year Portland, Oregon’s leaf blower prohibition goes into full effect 

Sources: Go-karts: japantimes.co.jp. SoundHound: forbes.com. Portland: portland.gov

Life Without Metadata

Or #blogworldproblems

When you send me an album without proper metadata for the tracks, this is what I do:

  • I unzip the archive.
  • I load it into VLC for a quick listen. (Recommendations for alternate, elegant, quick-listen apps on a Mac appreciated.)
  • I notice the tracks have little if any information — and may even be in the wrong order.
  • I pull up AudioRanger, which is the software I use to edit the metadata of audio files. (If other tools are recommended, please lemme know.)
  • I see in the grid what is missing. The main things I look for are:

    Title (track)
    Artist
    Album (title)
    Track number
    Release date
  • I proceed to fill those in manually. The biggest hassle is the track title information.
  • I then locate the album’s cover, either in your .zip file (thank you!) or on your Bandcamp page. Sometimes I can’t find it.
  • I then attach the image to the files, again using AudioRanger.
  • Then I save this material.
  • Then I load it into my digital jukebox (I use Plex).
  • Often these promotional .zip archives don’t actually include the press materials. Easily some 75% of the time, I create a .txt file and copy and paste in the background information, and then I save that in the folder with your audio files.

Think of how much easier it would be for the people to whom you’re sending your music if you just took the extra step to edit your metadata. On a positive note, something about Bandcamp’s audio hosting process generally seems to ensure that all such information is in the right place (sometimes excepting the press information).

Scratch Pad: Whistle, Wenders, Whitehead

From the past week

I do this manually at the end of each week: collating (and sometimes lightly editing) most of the recent little comments I’ve made on social media, which I think of as my public scratch pad. Some end up on Disquiet.com earlier, sometimes in expanded form. These days I mostly hang out on Mastodon (at post.lurk.org/@disquiet), and I’m also trying out a few others. I take weekends and evenings off social media.

▰ There’s this kid who can’t whistle but sure practices a lot who walks by the house every morning on the way to school and it is the best thing ever

▰ Due to the fairly intense wind outside (30 MPH gusts), in the building where I rent a tiny office the skylight is making a buzzing that sounds like there’s a fly here the size of an avocado

▰ Working through 7th chords (major, dominant, minor, diminished, half-diminished, minor flat 5) during guitar class felt somehow like sorting through pages of D&D rules

▰ Thought some random tab on my laptop was playing a drone album, but it’s the bathroom fan

▰ Afternoon trio for laundry machine spin cycle, passing jet plane, and low level electric hum

▰ My email inbox would seem to suggest that more records have been released in the first two weeks of March than in all of 2023. It’s sort of out of control, but hey, worse things than an embarrassment of riches.

▰ The March 14 Strands game on the New York Times’ website was particularly fun

▰ Alert! Wim Wenders Criterion Closet! He says he’s the first person allowed to enter it twice. Last time was 11 years ago, before he had Blu-ray. He spies Until the End of the World on a shelf and says he thinks it may be the best thing he ever did.

▰ I finished reading several books last week, including my eighth novel of the year, Colson Whitehead’s Harlem Shuffle, which is up there with other favorites I’ve read in 2024 (Jennifer Egan’s The Candy House, Mick Herron’s The Secret Hours, and Alastair Reynolds’ Permafrost). Lively and personal, and so smart, especially how it threads in the characters’ personal histories. I also finished the first proper non-fiction book I’ve read this year, Matthew Desmond’s Poverty, by America, and I’ve read a ton more of the manga series The Fable (about a hitman who is required to take a year off), by Katsuhisa Minami, which I’m now up through volume 16. It’s always interesting how, when you read a few books proximate to each other, connections surface. The Whitehead and Desmond both deal with the invisible and visible boundaries of class and race, the Whitehead and Minami deal with hitmen, and all three deal with characters/individuals whose lives are significantly constrained by societal forces. That statement isn’t to excuse the murderous occupation of the main character in The Fable, more to point out how difficult it is to properly hide oneself when one has been a killer for so long.