David Emery Online

Hi there, I’m David. This is my website. I work in music for Apple. You can find out a bit more about me here. On occasion I’ve been known to write a thing or two. Please drop me a line and say hello. Views mine not my employers.

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Hardformat: Vaughan Oliver

Vaughan Oliver is one of the great (music) designers. His work is highly original and often breathtakingly beautiful. Probably best known for his work for The Pixies and Cocteau Twins on the 4AD label, Oliver’s designs for Scott Walker, His Name Is Alive, Heidi Berry and many other lesser known names is just as remarkable. For someone who claims to have been uninspired by typography at college, his use of type is a joy. In its gestural expressiveness it focuses and enlivens each design with tremendous inventiveness. Oliver’s work often foregrounds dark images produced by photographers who are essential collaborators in the creative process (key names include Simon Larbalestier, Nigel Grierson and Marc Atkins). Also central to his process is a willingness to experiment and a deep engagement with the music. The result is work that is passionate, elegant and highly influential.

I have had the great fortune to work with Vaughan on a few occasions, and I’m never anything less then inspired by his work.

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Living in the Age of Art vs Content

So, Converse is opening a recording studio in Williamsburg, and nobody seems entirely sure what to make of it. Is this a well-earned payday for struggling musicians? A shameless corporate buyout of the last remaining scraps of “indie integrity?”

A really interesting article on the whole endless “art vs commerce” debate (wherein art is reduced to faceless “content” used to promote stuff you can buy). A bit too deep in it’s own blog hole though – Pitchfork doesn’t matter nearly as much as they think it does – but worth a read nevertheless.

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Twin Shadow - Slow

4AD introduces Twin Shadow, the latest addition to the 30 year-old label, rubbing shoulders alongside the likes of Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti, Bon Iver, Deerhunter and The National. Initially discovered by Grizzly Bear's Chris Taylor, 4AD will release the debut album Forget on November 15th.

This goes straight in there for me as one of the debut albums of the year (alongside Sleigh Bells). Has a great groove to it, and I mean that unironically.

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Ye Gods! Brand new 7 track British Sea Power EP!

British Sea Power release a generous seven-track EP on Monday 4 October. The Zeus EP is the band's first release since The Man Of Aran soundtrack from 2009 and acts as a wild and wunderbar-wonky precursor to the band’s fourth studio album, set for release in 2011.

Love this track (seems to be at least 3 songs smooshed into one):

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RIM introduces PlayBook - the BlackBerry tablet

The new slate -- which Lazaridis described as "the first professional tablet" -- will sport a 7-inch, 1024 x 600, capacitive multitouch display, a Cortex A9-based, dual-core 1GHz CPU (the company calls it the "fastest tablet ever"), 1GB of RAM, and a 3 megapixel front-facing camera along with a 5 megapixel rear lens (and yes, there will be video conferencing).

Looks fairly impressive, but I don’t understand why all the iPad competitors are using 7” screens – 10” is just about big enough to do “normal” things like web browsing without feeling cramped, whereas 7” is a weird in-between size between mobile and laptop.

Also, don’t forget that this isn’t shipping until “Early 2011” – this thing is an iPad v2 competitor, not the one on the shelves at the moment.

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Fujifilm unveils FinePix X100 large-sensor compact

Fujifilm has announced the X100, a large-sensor compact camera aimed at professional and enthusiast photographers. Based around a 12Mp APS-C CMOS sensor, Fuji EXR processor and 23mm F2 Fujinon lens (equivalent to a 35mm semi-wideangle), the classically-styled camera features traditional analogue controls for shutter speed, aperture and exposure compensation.

This has gone straight to the top of my wish list. All I can hope is that it doesn’t have a Leica-style price tag to go with its Leica-style looks.

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Making Future Magic: light painting with the iPad

We developed a specific photographic technique for this film. Through long exposures we record an iPad moving through space to make three-dimensional forms in light.

Well this is seriously cool:

light painting the city with Matt Jones
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Twitter power: how social networking is revolutionising the music business

...Sites enable smaller labels and less mainstream artists to spread the word about their talents, said David Emery of Beggars Group, a collection of independent record labels. "Word of mouth has always been incredibly important to us and now it's easier than ever to get the word out there," he said. Different networks play different roles, he added. "Twitter is great for artists interacting directly with fans, like MIA, who has millions of followers and will do things like make a video on her phone and post it on Twitter. That is so much more powerful than traditional marketing.

A good tie in to the whole Kanye on Twitter stuff.

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Kanye On Twitter

This is important.

Historically, there’s been a buffer between star and audience. And this buffer was managed by professionals who’d seen it all and told you how and when to play. It was like everybody with a media profile had a coach. And if you disobeyed him, you were booted from the team.

But now, through the magic of the Web, through the magic of Twitter, a celebrity can speak directly to his audience, can tell his side of the story, sans the reinterpretation and the agenda of the media.

Kanye on Twitter has been really interesting this past few days.

He ‘gets’ it.

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iTunes Says Artist Profiles On Ping Invitation Only

We asked Apple to explain and just heard back from a spokesperson that "artist profiles were launched by invitation, but we'll keep adding more and more." No information was provied on who is handing invites or what criteria they are using. But bands do have another option ...kind of. "Any iTunes user can create a profile on Ping, artist or otherwise," reminds Apple.

As a follow up to my earlier post, it does indeed seem to be the case that you have to go through the existing iTunes Connect system that labels/distributors have with Apple.

Interestingly, the recommended artists section on Ping is now suggesting 31 artists, along with the 6 I’m following already, and it’s going up day by day and adding new pages to the box.

Which suggests to me that as of right now, there are only 37 artists active on Ping.

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