The Grammy In Mathematics 150
An anonymous reader writes "A mathematician will receive a Grammy award for restoring the only known recording of a live Woody Guthrie performance — a bootleg someone made in 1949 using a wire recorder. Guthrie's daughter, who had never heard her father perform in front of a live audience, oversaw the restoration. The article links very cool before and after clips."
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:In even more other news... (Score:5, Funny)
Also: RIAA patents bad recording quality as a copy protection measure.
(couldn't be closer to the truth for your average CD...)
someone else take the torch from here
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2. Add 3dB
3. Profit!!!
Obviously the adverts on commercial radio get +6dB. Bah! Did Amy Winehouse really pick up 4 awards, or was that just a nightmare?
Re:In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
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Oh - BINGO!
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1
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3 ?????
4 Profit !
overlords
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Re:In other news... (Score:5, Insightful)
Always record your originals in analog and immediately transfer to digital, and one day you may find that more of the original sonic environment can be recovered from that master than you ever thought possible through the progression of physics, chemistry and math.
Re:In other news... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:In other news... (Score:4, Informative)
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The link points to where Steve Albini enters, the next few pages attempt to hammer the long term storage argument home. For those who can't be bothered to read it, SA's contention is that the cost of maintaining digital archives is prohibitively expensive when compared to the cost of storing tape.
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Look how many of the digital tape formats are dead [richardhess.com] and then go compare with the obsolete analog formats that can still be successfully replayed/transferred. You might want to read the thread I linked and think about the problem in real world terms, just as people who own professional recording facilities do.
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Re:In other news... (Score:5, Insightful)
2) There are technologies that would benefit from having more information available. Imagine being able to extract enough information from a recording to simulate that vocalist singing something else. Heck, for an example of a technology that benefits from much fancier recordings than some people ever thought they would need, consider the game "Rock Band". You can't (today) use a master recording in Rock Band unless each drum in the drum kit has a separate recording track. This is why the old Rush songs in the game are covers and not masters. Almost nobody imagined they'd actually have a need for those more detailed recordings, but now we do. (I say "you can't today" because the software to de-mix the drums isn't advanced enough yet. Once it is advanced enough... we may determine that common digital recordings aren't as good for this purpose as straight-up analog recordings!)
3) This is the far-out one -- go ahead and warm up your mockery engines... what about superhuman hearing? Are you sure that, by technology (biotech, cybernetics, whatever), human hearing won't ever be improved? What about
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1) Things that we believe we can't distinguish now, we may demonstrate that we can distinguish in the future. Just because you can't tell the difference consciously when you listen to two samples doesn't mean that some subconscious part of your brain can't determine a difference. We cannot rule out subsonics, subliminal effects, and so on.
Some of the "advantages" of analog recording are artifacts of its behavior. It turns out that tape has a natural compression effect built-in when the recording is too loud; digital, on the other hand, will audibly clip.
What we are finding out is that once the source medium starts to degrade, digital is harder to restore. A decaying digital tape will be much harder to play back then a decaying analog tape.
Re:In other news... (Score:4, Interesting)
Because later down the line we might find that we do care about that missing information that we discarded because it had no obvious value at the time. The Romans didn't measure the temperature on a daily basis, but they did measure crop yields and other factors. From those figures we were able to deduce the average daily temperatures. To the Romans, the daily temperatures weren't useful. To us, it helps us track global climate conditions.
It is well known that string instruments Wouldn't it be interesting to know how a Stradivari sounded when it was only a few months old? We could have compared that information to surviving examples and had a better understanding of how the instruments age.
Granted that is just an off the cuff example, but I'm certain that it is better to preserve as much information as possible when dealing with musical performances.
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Re:In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
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Just delete the part about 'It is well known that string instruments'. I was going to describe how string instruments have a breaking in period, but it was too far off the mark for the original point I was trying to make.
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about time (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2004/10/8/134958/152 [kuro5hin.org]
In the late 1970s when digital recording was born, 44 k samples per second was the best the equipment of the time could do. It was deemed "good enough," since the labels "golden ears" (humans with hearing well above average) didn't hear any noise and the sound of aliasing was something they had never encountered. They knew wha
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(Interesting story: the DVDA of REM's best of album is just the CD upsampled; this was only noticed when someone ran an audio editor on it).
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The lesson is also to keep the digital version in the simplest possible form. Lossy formats and high compression formats will end losing the data if we don't also make sure to keep around the file format too. Analogue how ever bad it is, is much easier to decode, since very little technology is really needed.
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Michelle Shocked [wikipedia.org] owes her career to bootlegging. She was singing by a campfire at night at the Kerrville Folk Festival, and was recorded on a Walkman. She didn't know it was even released until she read about it in a Dutch music magazine and heard it on the attached "flexidisk".
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Modern versions of both are so good that it isn't likely to matter much, so just doing whatever is most convenient and remembering to store unprocessed data is probably a better strategy.
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Title of story wrong? (Score:5, Informative)
The title of the article says the mathematician was norminated for a grammy, yet the article itself says the recording was put forward, which sounds more plausible.
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Coach Z, is that you? Do you need a jorb?
Re:Title of story wrong? (Score:4, Informative)
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Only known what? (Score:2, Informative)
He was on a weekly radio show in the 40's and I've heard tapes of that, too. Hell, you can go to Wikipedia and listen to a streaming recording of Guthrie.
It's not the only "live" recording in front of an audience, either.
You think I'm gonna spend the time to read TFA to see what their actual claim is? No friggin' way.
Re:Only known what? (Score:5, Informative)
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I believe that TFS means 'the only known recording of a particular live Woody Guthrie performance'.
Re:Only known what? (Score:4, Informative)
TFS actually says:
In 1949, recordings of live concerts were extremely rare. Live performances were rarely recorded. They were transmitted on the radio or TV and that was it. Call it short sighted but people really thought back then that TV and Radio were never going to catch on.
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Why call it shortsighted? In 1949, recording technology was neither mature nor inexpensive. TV and radio had nothing like the budget they enjoy today, so there often simply was no money to archive broadcasts. Hell, the BBC (not what you'd consider an insignificant or poorly-funded organization) was plagued by this well into the '60s.
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And the sad thing is that we are still losing past recordings, because many of the TV stations just don't have the space to store all of their previously recorded material, nor do many of the movie archive maintainers have the funds to convert the aging media into digital media before they become unusable. [wikipedia.org]
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In this country(UK) at least, the real significance of television didn't really catch on until the queen's coronation in 1953. Even then people had to crowd into the house of the one person in the street that had a television. (a slight exageration perhaps but not far from the truth).
As far as I know, that was the first major outside broa
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t's not the only "live" recording in front of an audience, either.
Do you have some of those live recordings? His own daughter said she never heard a live recording of her father! You know, I really think we should ask all those grandparents of ours to bust out their cassette decks, CDs or MP3 players with recordings of those live performances they attended. OH WAIT, they don't exist because magnetic tape wasn't even around when this recording was made! Our fancy radio/tape player that could record stuff wasn't around yet! Seriously, is it that hard to believe that n
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Re:Only known what? (Score:4, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wire_recorder [wikipedia.org]
Didn't you ever watch Hogan's Heroes? Newkirk had one in his sewing kit. The thread in the kit was actually wire. And the Germans never figured it out!
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Magnetic recording on a piece of metal wire which is moved past an electromagnetic recording head.
Lookie here [videointerchange.com]
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You've got that right. My wife, who's a mathematician, tries to explain something to me once every year or so and my eyes start to water in about 15 seconds.
"Live recording", as used in this context, is pretty much a useless phrase. Now that I've read the article (and skipped the math), it sounds like Guthrie's daughter is hyping this pretty heavy. There were studio audiences in some of the tapes of radio shows of Guthrie performing I've heard.
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hearing about Woody Guthrie (Score:2)
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I assume you mean either READ Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck, or WATCH Grapes of Wrath by John Ford.
mirror please? (Score:4, Insightful)
CoralCDN mirror (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.sciencenews.org.nyud.net/articles/20080209/Guthrie1.aif [nyud.net]
http://www.sciencenews.org.nyud.net/articles/20080209/Guthrie2.aif [nyud.net]
For those of us who don't know Mr. Guthrie (Score:2, Informative)
Come back Woody Guthrie (Score:4, Interesting)
""I am out to sing songs that will prove to you that this is your world and that if it has hit you pretty hard and knocked you for a dozen loops, no matter what color, what size you are, how you are built, I am out to sing the songs that make you take pride in yourself and in your work. And the songs that I sing are made up for the most part by all sorts of folks just about like you."
"I hate a song that makes you think that you are not any good. I hate a song that makes you think that you are just born to lose. Bound to lose. No good to nobody. No good for nothing. Because you are too old or too young or too fat or too slim or too ugly or too this or too that."
"Yes, as through this world I've wandered I've seen lots of funny men; Some will rob you with a six-gun, And some with a fountain pen"
"This song is Copyrighted in U.S., under Seal of Copyright # 154085, for a period of 28 years, and anybody caught singin' it without our permission, will be mighty good friends of ourn, cause we don't give a dern. Publish it. Write it. Sing it. Swing to it. Yodel it. We wrote it, that's all we wanted to do."
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As I was walkin' - I saw a sign there
And that sign said - no tress passin'
But on the other side
Now that side was made for you and me!
Arlo is great in concert, but I would love to have seen Woody too.
Z.
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copyright flap (Score:1)
In 2004, the Web site JibJab featured a parody of the song, featuring John Kerry and George W. Bush singing altered lyrics,[8] resulting in the Richmond Organization threatening legal action.[9] At this point, it was noticed that the copyright to the original 1945 publication had expired in 1973 and was not renewed as then required by copyright law.[10] The Richmond Organization settled with Jibjab shortly thereafter. It still, however, claims copyright on other versions of the song, such as those appearing in the 1956 and later publications. Legally, such claims only apply to original elements of the song that were not in the public domain version.
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I went to a college that was infested with Oxbridge rejects, rich kids who were so stupid that Mummy and Daddy couldn't get them into Oxford or Cambridge. Instead they ended up at the college I was at, as it was close to where most of the chinless wonders came from (Windsor, Ascot, etc). What really annoyed me about them was how "right on" they were, clad in Che Guevera t-shirts, a copy of the Socialist Worker newspaper tucked under their arm and spouting Trotskyite dogma in the student bar. Of course, nepo
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so do you now work at your father's firm?
No, I was one of the people who chose to go to that college in the mistaken belief that as it was part of London University I'd be able to pick and choose interesting course modules at all the London colleges. It didn't quite work out like that as all the interesting modules were massively over subscribed. As for my dad's firm, the whole reason I was at university was to avoid having to work on a building site (he was a self-employed floor and wall tiler).
A Mathematician (Score:5, Insightful)
How awesome is that, to do some really interesting work, and finally get some world-wide recognition and even get your name on the front page of Slashdot!
Oh, wait...
Common people, let's give credit where credit is due. Thanks. The guy's name isn't even mentioned until the 11th paragraph of the story! Somehow when it's something cool like this it's enough to say, "mathematics did it!", as if this restoration technique of identifying the hum of a 1949 power supply to help guide a dynamic warping and interpolation technique just dropped out of thin air.
(It's Kevin Short by the way, although if I understand the article, this sound engineer Jamie Howarth played a large part as well.)
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Buzz: Kevin Short and Jamie Howarth were the real heroes here. They restored the recording using this.
Man 1: Hey, what is that?
Man 2: It's mathematics!
Everyone: Yay!
[Rolling Stone magazine cover: "E Pluribus Mathematicus"]
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"Fine gentlemen and virtuous ladies, do please I prithee give credit where it's due!"
Would love to hear on Beatles's earliest tape (Score:2)
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Too cool! (Score:1)
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Resample your noise (Score:2)
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Hindsight is 20/20 etc, etc...
Er, but... (Score:4, Informative)
Woodie Guthrie and Pete Seeger were both on this album.
After my folks were divorced in 1976 (the year I got married) it wound up being mine. Sadly the copy was stolen along with my killer stereo and most of my other albums.
Unlike what they call "stealing music" these days I no longer have my copy of the Weavers. Furthermore, it's out of print and I can't get a new copy. It should be in the public domain and I should be able to at least get a good SHN of it.
In USSA, copyright steals from ME.
-mcgrew
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Sooner or later, this is pretty much the situation everywhere, I'm afraid...
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Sources:
http://www.amrhome.net/contents/sepdsc.txt [amrhome.net] "The Weavers on Tour (1956-58)" "The Weavers at Carnegie Hall (Decem
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I don't know how old the album was; I remember it was no later than the very early '60s. As I was only 10 in '62 my memory is of course not a good judge.
But at any rate, I don't see how his daughter would have not heard this album.
As a side note... (Score:4, Interesting)
More information (Score:2)
Grandma-ies (Score:3, Funny)
Don't make em like that anymore (Score:2)
Why bother with an antique player at all? (Score:2)
Sigh. I can't hear the difference... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:aif file not working in Helix player on Ubuntu (Score:5, Informative)
Re:aif file not working in Helix player on Ubuntu (Score:2)
How is parent offtopic? he is asking about how to play the "very cool and after clips" presented in the summary. I could not play them in Kubuntu 7.10. What format is this
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That first recording sounded pretty jacked up. I think a lot of the progress and reason for this article is not the amount of cleanup, but the fact that it was done with mathematics. It could probably get cleaned up a little more with a person smoothing it out, but the problem with this is that it is so time-intensive. You could work all day on a couple o
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Cheers.
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That doesn't change the fact that, all things being equal, a louder signal will sound better to the human ear. But you couldn't have listened to the first one at higher SPL without grinding your teeth. So I suppose it
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Re:The difference is negligible .. (Score:4, Informative)
Yes there is less hiss in the background, but to say that the vocals are unchanged is wrong. I don't know what you were expecting here, but the point was to get it to sound as close as possible to hearing him playing live. The tone and pitch is correct, the high nasal voice is common in folk music, and that is how other Guthrie recordings sound.
If you read TFA you would know that they used different mathematical approaches to compensate for kinks, and breaks in the original wire recording media, and various slow downs, and speed ups during recording which change the pitch when played back.
And I have to say... Banjo? WTF! If you can't tell the difference between a banjo and an acoustic guitar you have no business commenting on this article.