Thursday, August 20, 2009

Dance music is different

I learned something important recently: Dance music is its own species. Music that is intended for dancing goes by too slowly if you're sitting in one place and concentrating; music that is intended to be listened to carefully flies by too quickly when you're dancing. Which means that if you're a composer, and you're writing dance music while sitting still, you have to adjust your sense of time.

Do different times make different people?

I've been scanning negatives from the early 1970s, when I was in college. Some of them are of people who were involved in the then-new computer chess world. Makes me wonder: How would my life have been different if computers were everywhere when I was in college, rather than being expensive, specialized devices that could fill a house?

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Wisteria is like collectivism

Wisteria is a climbing vine native to the northeast USA and east Asia. In small doses, it is a pleasant addition to its surroundings. It produces pleasant-smelling flowers, has no thorns, and appears, at least on the surface, to be capable of thriving with little attention.

However, appearances are misleading. Left to its own devices, a single wisteria plant can send out 30-foot-long runners in a single season. These runners root wherever they touch the ground, and if left undisturbed, become very hard to remove. If they touch a vertical surface, they climb it, and again, if left alone, they will thicken into woody stems capable of tearing down a house.

Moreover, if left unpruned, wisteria puts all of its energy into expansion and stops flowering. The only reliable way to get it to flower is to cut it back hard each year—much harder than would appear necessary at first glance.

There is no lack of collectivist ideas that have enriched our society. For example, a few days ago I attended a wonderful theatrical performance, at which one of the actors claimed that the performance would have been impossible were it not for government support, and implored the audience to write to their state legislators to urge them to increase that support. I do not know whether his claims were true, but I do know that live theater is an expensive proposition, and we would all be the poorer were it to die out.

But even if collectivism springs from noble impulses, it will take over if not kept in check. Georges Clemenceau once said: "If a man is not a socialist in his youth, he has no heart. If he is not a conservative by the time he is 30, he has no head." Few people would want to live in a society with no heart, but even fewer would want to live in one with no head.

And so I smother my temptation to take a backhoe to the wisteria in my yard, preferring instead to go out every day with my pruning shears and remove the shoots that keep appearing, leaving only the main plant and encouraging it to concentrate its energy into producing flowers, not runners.

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

How times change

So I signed up for this blog, then didn't do anything with it for nearly a year and a half. I think I'm one of those people for whom logging into, and using, a web interface is just enough of a hurdle to give me an incentive to do something else instead.

But a few days ago I upgraded my word-processing software, and lo and behold it has a "publish to a blog" feature. Not only that, but it claims to know about Blogger's interface. So if you see this message, it means its claims are correct.

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

Hello, world!

My name is Andrew Koenig. The R stands for Richard, though I don't usually use my middle name in print (so as to avoid duplicate junk mail). You may have read one of my books.

I'm active in several Usenet newsgroups (particularly C++ and photography), but Usenet gets chaotic sometimes, and I want to try writing in a more coherent, less reactive way.

Bloggers like to call others' attention to things they find interesting, and my interests are scattered all over the map. So I hope to write about technology (particularly as it applies to art), art (particularly photography and music, and technologal aspects thereof) and politics (I consider myself a libertarian with a small l).

I'm new at this game. We'll see how it goes.