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They're just photos, after all. |
Earlier this month
Nick Southall, who wrote for sadly defunct webzine
Stylus, unveiled
The Music Diary Project. The project's worthy goal is "to document, over the course of one week, how we listen to music: when we listen, where we listen, who we’re with when we listen, and how we choose what we listen to." This week a
whole bunch of smart
people I
follow on
Tumblr have been
participating, dutifully posting listening logs and sharing their experiences. It's a great idea, and while I'm far too neurotic to take part, it's been a lot of fun seeing not only what people are listening to, but how they listen.
On Day Two of the project, Australian writer
Jonathan Bradley posted some
observations I found myself copying and pasting into my own media-consumption diary of sorts-- this weird little blog. Most of Bradley's music listening is solitary, he says. He writes that "I just don't give a fuck if I can't share music with other people, because usually I don't. I listen to a ton of stuff, and most of it I know of no other person who shares my liking for the music, just because I have my taste and other people have theirs and the two don’t need to meet for us to be friends... The music I listen to is for me, and it doesn’t worry me if I’m not sharing it."
These comments started me thinking. How much of my listening is solitary in the same way? How much is driven by this mad urge to share, share, share?