Categories
Entertainment Music

R.E.M live in Johannesburg, 10 March 2005

Brilliant. Yep. That is the word that best describes the entire R.E.M. experience. Sure there were downsides and upsides, but it averages out to brilliant.

My first coup of the evening was getting my camera in. If I pay R370 for a ticket I’d like to be able to take a couple of snaps. So I smuggled it in. The photos will be up here soon. Brad almost outclassed me by nearly getting a six pack of beers into the dome, but was caught out at the last minute.

The act opened with Michael Stipe introducing Arno Carstens & New Porn to much applause. Thinking back to Arno’s performance, it can said that it was solid, and there is no doubt that he and the new band are very talented. However I did feel that Arno managed to alienate most of the audience, partly through the choice of music, but more so because his stage presence was missing. Thinking back to the few times I saw Arno with Springbok Nude Girls, perhaps there is a pattern showing itself here. So my advice to Arno – keep playing and writing, but talk to the audience, let them feel more involved, don’t just stand up and perform in front of everyone as if you were a music video. To quote something I heard “Concentrate a bit less on the hair and a bit more on the performance”.

Once I had finished dashing to the bathrooms and queueing at the beer counter I dashed back through the crowd in the golden circle, balancing four beers and spilling very little, to where Brad and Nadia and Co. were standing, arriving just in time to jam to “Bad Day”, the second song of the set.

From here R.E.M. took us on a musical journey with stunning visual effects, candy for our eyes. The whole repertoire was in there, from new to old. Each and every song prompting the crowd to sing along where they knew the lyrics or cheer at the end when they didn’t.

I was disappointed in the audience. I don’t believe they gave it their all and were as enthusiastic as they could have been. By and large this statement excludes the patrons of the Golden Circle who were vocal and trying to work the crowd from within. Although there was a large amount of singing along to songs people knew, there was no enthusiasm for clapping along to beats and there was little dancing or jumping around. Ok, except for us few crazies.

Michael Stipe was subtle yet brilliant, from singing through a megaphone to simply standing and nodding or crouching on stage. He can still perform equally alongside all the twenty year olds learning about rock nowadays. He was wearing his trademark Mask of Zorro – in blue this time, and I was surprised that nobody else had cottoned on to his masked performance thing, and strangely I was the only one that I saw who mimiced this with a mask of my own. Thank goodness it was in blue too – I think a lot of people must have seen me and wondered, only to be pleasantly surprised when Michael walked on stage.

In the end, after two hours of great music, the trademark closing “Man on the Moon” was spectacularly performed, with everyone making the most of the final minutes of a real treat of a show.

Categories
Entertainment Music

The Warm Up to R.E.M in Joburg

Yes, R.E.M. mania has hit South Africa hard and the pace is not letting up. I’m starting to get real excited about the concert on Thursday. The venue is sold-out and the crowd is hungry. The media has been pushing R.E.M. down our throats from all angles.

Judging by the shows in Cape Town last weekend the South African audience is a force to be reckoned with. Here’s an excerpt from remhq.com:

“…Two tremendous shows in front of some of the most enthusiastic, raucous crowds R.E.M. has ever seen (and heard); On Saturday night, the staccato clapping part during the bridge, where the audience mimics the sounds on stage, literally was louder than the amplified sounds coming from the stage…pretty wild!…”

That Cape Town show (a more independent review here) only had an eight thousand strong audience. The Dome in Northgate can handle around eighteen thousand people. With a close to two hour strong set lined up it is going to rock.

Categories
Freedom

Laugh It Off not giving up yet..

Laugh It Off productions, the small company that inspired a nation of parody T-shirts has not given up in their battle against the SABMiller brewing giant. Today they argued an appeal in front of the Constitional Court for the freedom to express their parody slogans. Good for them, hopefully the constituional court will think a little deeper this time. More info at iafrica.com.

Categories
Freedom

More Open Source Advocacy

Interesting! As a follow up to my discussion on Open Source with Brad, this morning I saw a great article at linuxdevcenter. Yes, Peruvians into Open Source(Dr. Edgar David Villanueva Nunez) rock! Why? Read this. Brilliant.

Open Source Cars, GPL Air Conditioners, Communism versus Capitalism and Beer.

So this week, due to other appointments and the idea of waking up on a Wednesday with a hangover not being a great one, we moved our regular Tuesday social evening (part of a mass new religion of Tuedaism – a principle belief being that Tuesday night is the real middle of the week) to Thursday, which as it happens was last night.

Only myself and Brad were present and as the beer flowed the conversation moved inevitably first to cars and to Open Source software. Brad is an engineer, an industrial engineer at that, and I am in the process of convincing him that Open Source software and the GPL is a viable route for the software development industry to head towards.

I’m not really winning, but I’m not losing. Brad’s main concern about migrating to Linux is that the engineering apps, such as Solid Edge and others, are not available under Linux. I tend to agree, as I have struggled to find a viable CAD system on Linux without a price tag (I’ve struggled to find any WITH a price tag at that).

Apart from that I was trying to explain why the “communistic” approach of GPL software can work, but this time I used a different field for an example – Motor vehicle air-conditioners. What if you take your existing BMW’s air-conditioning (climate control, whatever) system and redesign it in superior fashion? Then you release the design back to BMW with the condition that any improvements they make to your design are given to you to use as well. A sort of “GPL Aircon”, if you will. Of course you can then release the same design to Toyota or any other motor manufacturer you choose. Then, all of a sudden, the efficiency of the air-conditioner no longer becomes a selling point for the vehicle, as all vehicles have the capability of having the superior design installed. Suddenly, motor vehicle manufacturers have to find a more creative way of compelling you to buy their car. The areas of support and cost come to mind.

Brad’s response was to say that further development of the air-conditioner will eventually stall, as any large corporate would not want to spend money on enhancing a system that everyone can in effect ‘steal’ without incurring any research costs. My response to this was that customer demand would now be the motivating factor behind any further research. As the customer demanded, so the manufacturer would be compelled to continue with research. (Of course, there is nothing stopping the manufacturer from redesigning yet again, not based on your design, another proprietary aircon.)

Brad’s next thought then considered the designing of an “optimised support package” to deliver in a GPL fashion to the motor industry. Eventually all support is ‘optimised’, and nobody wants to spend more on enhancing it. And the same goes for any other component or design of any motor vehicle. His prediction: a collection of generic component vehicles where appearance is the only distinguishing factor. As a result he too predicted the merging of most motor vehicle manufacturers as they are bought out or die, resulting in a single monopoly manufacturer.

My response was, yes, but the evolutionary process would continue, as nobody wants a monopoly, and a monopoly introduces a loophole for rogue development away from the monopoly. In retrospect I should have brought in the idea of forking in designs, as some people would disagree on optimal designs and as a result a number of different, although better designs would become available to all to choose from.

Nobody won outright with an opinion, and the debate will continue I’m sure, but it was a really interesting discussion, and for once I actually felt as though I was winning an argument for open-source and GPL use in an area where it may not or does not belong. It was definitely easier to discuss it in the arena of cars, as opposed to software, a less tangible item, but of course the tangibiltiy also introduces a whole array of variables into the discussion too.

In the end I basically called him a capitalist and he basically called me a communist. I don’t think I’m a communist though – I still need to find my true political persuasion. Brad? Well he’s mostly capitalist I’m sure.

How to resolve the situation? We cracked open another couple of beers. Cheers to open source and the GPL!