The new examined life: ‘meaning from the mundane’

Bloggers who, like me, like to dabble in analytics, charts and graphs may find this Wall Street Journal piece titled The New Examined Life intriguing — and a bit disturbing.

It’s a story (via Murleting’s delicious links) about how the broad array of online tools at our disposal can help us measure and analyze even the most mundane of activities. Such is the case with Nicholas Felton (pictured above), a New York-based graphic designer who will boil down all his activities from the year into an annual report similar to the one he did for 2007. Felton is the Journal‘s hook to the bigger picture of our growing interest (obsession?) with “personal informatics” — something the Journal calls drawing “meaning from the mundane.”

The culture of sharing information online has shifted in recent years, from a focus on blog ramblings to the ubiquitous micro-movements of posters’ daily lives. Microblogging sites like Twitter have become commonplace. … Facebook’s News Feed feature initially drew criticism from members because it offered a running log of users’ minute postings and updates, but has since became a core part of the Web site’s community. Some sites collect data automatically for their users. Last.fm keeps a record of all of the songs users have listened to, and Netflix keeps track of members’ movie-watching habits.

“It’s a natural progression from people sharing things like movies, photos and videos,” says Dennis Crowley, founder of Dodgeball, an early social-networking service for mobile phones which was sold to Google in 2005. “What’s left to share? Basic data.”

And so we have the Internet to help us. With sites like Wordle, bloggers to create “word clouds” to quickly grasp what words or subjects they most frequently post about. (As my word cloud below suggests, I might want to quit yammering so much about Twitter.)

Wordle cloud -- via www.wordle.net
Wordle cloud -- via http://www.wordle.net

But that’s probably more than I need to be sharing. According to the Journal report, “Personal data collection can get in the way of living.”

And it seems like such a harmless pursuit. Mundane, even.

Friday Five: Best albums of 2008

This is a public service announcement — with guitars!

OK, bonus points for anyone who can post the musical reference to that quip. No googling, please. Be the first to correctly name the song, artist and album in the comments box and you’ll win … something. I don’t know what yet.

Anyway, on to our end-of-year countdown of the five best albums of 2008. Some of you know that I’m a rock geek who dreamed of working for Rolling Stone, back when it was a tabloid and really mattered. That was before the Internet and its wonderful explosion of music blogs. Now, everyone’s a critic. Even higher ed marketing peeps, at least once a year.

So, about my list: This is a totally biased selection, based on my limited knowledge and skills as an amateur music critic. If you can’t get enough of this, and also want to hear some audio from these and other releases, check out the full monty inside.

Best albums of 2008

1. My Morning Jacket, Evil Urges. For years, I’ve had this love-hate thing going with My Morning Jacket. I would love their hard-driving tunes but was less enamored with their mellower stuff. Plus, I thought they should try harder to subdue their Kentucky roots. But with Evil Urges, MMJ has managed to mitigate my worries, and now all I have is a love-love thing for the band. (This was also true of Z, their 2005 offering. But Evil Urges sealed the deal.) Alternating between solid guitar-driven rock and sublime ballads, Evil Urges blends it together into a nicely balanced elixir for the ears.

2. The Hold Steady, Stay Positive. Not just another band out of Boston, the Hold Steady can easily lay claim on one of the nation’s best rock bands. Earlier claims that lead vocalist Craig Finn was little more than a Springsteen clone don’t hold up these days. With lyrics that sound like Raymond Carver set to music, Finn and company sing about Jesus on the cross, drinking binges, guilt and regret and love and desperation. And for good measure, they name-check Joe Strummer. The Hold Steady has proven its staying power, and Stay Positive is positively this one-time bar band’s best album ever.

3. John Mellencamp, Life, Death, Love and Freedom. Over his 30-year career, John Mellencamp has come close to crafting the masterpiece. Two albums — Scarecrow and Human Wheels — fell just short of the mark. But Mellencamp hits his stride with this gritty, heartfelt album. With world-weary vocals and lyrics, Mellencamp takes the mantle from John Prine and Johnny Cash, giving us a great slice of Americana.

4. The Raveonettes, Lust Lust Lust. Sweet Jesus and Mary Chain, the Raveonettes’ mix of ’60s surf and pop with ultra-modern noise is the best echo/reverb sound to come out since, well, The Jesus and Mary Chain. The only difference is the Raveonettes sound better through the fuzz than that other band ever did. I love this album.

5. Santogold, Santogold. Listeners of a certain vintage may compare Santi White’s sweet voice to that of Dale Bozzio, lead singer of early ’80s new wavers Missing Persons. Other, younger listeners may detect a hint of Gwen Stefani. But those comparisons fail to tag the inventiveness White, aka Santogold, shows in this debut album. Mixing new wave and pop influences with hip-hop, soul and R&B, Santogold creates a near-perfect pop album. And she’s proving to be a good capitalist, cashing in on her sound with licensing deals. (You’ve probably heard some tunes from this album in Bud Light commercials.) When it comes to licensing, Santogold could probably teach even Moby a thing or two.

On to the top 20 and other musical musings.

Also, if anyone has an end-of-year music list they’d like me to share, just leave a comment with the link and I’ll add it to this post — providing that it’s in good taste (i.e., no nudity or Kenny G).

Other end-of-year lists:

The Mother of All Best-of-2008 Lists, updated routinely by Largehearted Boy.

Top Albums of 2008 from fellow higher ed blogger and music aficionado Ron Bronson.

Inside Tim’s Head posts his top 10.