[note: this is a repost from a long-neglected blog I started last summer while at SIGGRAPH]
I'm currently doing a work-from-hotel morning since there's nothing at
the conference that lured me away this morning, listening to my rather
eclectic ~4K song playlist on my iPod on shuffle. This leads to some
interesting, occasionally jarring, boundaries between songs; it also
got me thinking more about something I've wanted for a while.
If you're like me, you have moods. Sometimes my moods do an energetic
sprint through hours of Pete Tong's Essential Mixes. Other times, they
dance delightful undulations down the sandy beaches of Angelique
Kidjo's Black Ivory Soul. Occasionally they strut, oozing an attitude
of down-home Texas hip as only Stevie Ray Vaughan or Lyle Lovett can
manage.
(We'll ignore the immature, pissed-off moods that stomp into Evanescence,
shoot you the finger, and slam the door in your face. They just want
attention. Don't give in.)
For me, the analogy is apt: music makes a path for me and, when I find
I'm on the right one for the moment, I want to follow it until I come
to a crossroad where another path seems more interesting.
I want to iWander.
If you think about it, it should be easy. Every song starts with some
implicit metadata attached: title, artist, album, year, genre -- though
the last is often argued over, especially out on the
electronica/dance/techno/alternative fringe. Apple adds some more: your
rating, grouping, playlists, last played, artwork, etc. I want to be
able to add more, defining relationships between artists, songs,
albums, etc. that exist only for me. I want to be able to change paths
-- say, from playlist to album, then perhaps genre, etc. -- to follow
my mood.
An example might go something like this:
- Texas Flood, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Greatest Hits
Man, I loved living in Austin while he was there. More of him.
- Pride and Joy, Stevie Ray Vaughan, MTV Unplugged, Vol 1
I remember when he did this at Austin City Limits. That reminds me of the time we saw Indigo Girls there ...
- Romeo and Juliet, Indigo Girls, Rites of Passage
That was a good night; seeing them, Nancy Griffith, and Mary Chapin Carpenter on the stage was phenomenal
- This Shirt, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Hitchhiker Exampler
Wow. For a cheap sampler of music from a mediocre cable show, this is amazing. Let's hear it all again.
[...]
- Make It Easier, Indigo Girls, Hitchhiker Exampler
Oh, yeah, they have a tune on this one, too. I must be in a mood.
[...]
- Talkin' at the Texaco, James McMurtry, Hitchhiker Exampler
He knows small-town like nobody's business, that's sure. Didn't David Garza do something fun like this?
- Big Stick, Twang-Twang-Shock-a-Boom, Me So Twangy
Bummer they couldn't get along ... they were awesome.
...and
so forth. Stevie Ray Vaughan could have just as easily branched to
Robert Cray or Eric Clapton (great guitarists all and SRV died in a
plane crash while on tour with both of them).
There's even a commercial angle: it's not legal for me to share my
music with others, but give me a way to share my metadata and I can
find other people who have similar but diverging tastes and find new
music I'll probably like ... and, as a bonus, I can judge that
likelihood by evaluating the nature of the association between the two
("Austin City Limits? That's a hick show ... ewww." or "David Garza was
in a band? Wow!") and follow the paths that seem interesting through
the iTunes Music Store and on down the sidewalk.
Hey, Apple, you listening?