Looks like I haven't posted this before. A big oversight.
One of the songs of the year.
The Way It Is. Bluegrass style.
And of course film has already changed a great deal: streaming is not analogous to the videocassette or DVD. Now we have instant access to an unparalleled library of films, books and recordings, we are wallowing about, really, in an atemporal zone of cultural production: none of us have the time – unless, like Kermode, we wish to spend the greater part of our adult life at it – to view all the films, read all the texts, and listen to all the music that we can access, wholly gratis and right away. Under such conditions the role of the critic becomes not to help us to discriminate between "better" and "worse" or "higher" and "lower" monetised cultural forms, but only to tell us if our precious time will be wasted – and for this task the group amateur mind is indeed far more effective than the unitary perception of an individual critic.
An outstanding piece of writing by Will Self, reviewing Mark Kermode's book but offering so much more on where technology has taken society and the arts.
Footage from At The Edge Of The Sea - David Gedge's curated festival, which is now an annual late summer event in Brighton, opened by Cinerama and closed by The Wedding Present.