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Ampwall: Building Community With Chris Grigg

posted 5 hours ago #

I've been a fervent fan of Bandcamp since 2008. When it sold to Epic in 2022, I was surprised and a bit worried. A year later, when it was sold to Songtradr and a large chunk of the staff was let go, I was quite convinced the end was nigh.
Around the time of that Bandcamp sale, Chris Grigg felt similarly nervous. But instead of hand wringing, he realized there was no other place to go beyond Bandcamp and got to work. Over the ensuing years, Ampwall emerged - a platform for folks to add their creations and sell them to a fanbase. At least, as a core mechanic.

I am fascinated by Ampwall because it is consciously trying to become another platform but striving to be a better platform. Not everything in their system is designed to drive a user to a sale; there are many tools that exist simply to help a creative person do the things they need to do. I'm straying from the word "musician" because Ampwall has tools in place for visual artists to create a place for themselves; something I don't think Bandcamp would ever consider.

So, I asked Grigg if I could talk to him about the history of the platform, the principles that are guiding it and where things are headed. He obliged and we had a very nice chat. It's in the embed above or Apple Podcasts or Spotify, etc etc.

My interest in Ampwall does not mean that I am now somehow anti Bandcamp. I am a big believer in both platforms. I'm happy that Bandcamp has not shriveled up or starting embracing tactics that are not in favor of the independent musician; as many of us feared when it was acquired by SongTradr. I am glad there are more places to go and I'm excited to see them both grow!

I also am aware that there are plenty of other alternative platforms but that's a topic for another post. For now, give Ampwall a look and listen to Grigg explain what they're doing over there.

Recreating the Tres Hombres spread

posted 1 day ago #

Are you familiar with the ZZ Top album Tres Hombres? The one with "La Grange"? Are you familiar with the inside gatefold imagery of the album being a giant spread of Tex Mex?

Well, Austin chef Tom Micklethwait decided to recreate the entire spread and give himself a tasty treat. It's all documented in this short film ZZ Tom and it goes exactly as you'd hope. He recreates it damn nearly perfectly and we can only assume it's delicious.

And if you're curious what ZZ Top themselves would think of such a delightful Internet undertaking - read this Texas Monthly interview with Billy Gibbons. Includes a great anecdote involving a German Shepherd. Via Jamie.

This whole undertaking is from 2016 but it's new to me and, I hope, new to you. Here's that spread, stare into it at your convenience.

Anamanaguchi - Magnet

posted 4 days ago #

If you've been online for any notable amount of time, you know that Anamanaguchi is a high octane, instrumental, chiptune / videogame inspired / electronic act.

But now - after 19 years - they're changing things up. I don't wanna say "evolving" because what they did before was incredibly realized and in no need of fine tuning. There's a long story around their new album Anyway that I'll leave it to you to read but you can very quickly ascertain from this video for "Magnet" that they're doing things quite differently now. Musically, it's a new direction but the high octane energy and extremely clever execution is ever present.

We're all fans of supercuts but this fusion of every modern Batman movie into one "narrative" is brilliant and unbelievably well blended. I look forward to the new era of Anamanaguchi - it's off to a great start.

Shrunken Elvis

posted 5 days ago #

Hopefully you are familiar with the names Spencer Cullum, Rich Ruth and Sean Thompson - each an incredibly talented musician creating their own flavor of songs for years. They have joined forces to create Shrunken Elvis, a trio that creates instrumental, ambient, spacey and quite immersive soundscapes. Their debut album is set for release on Sept 5 via Western Vinyl. You can hear "An Old Outlet" now and pick up the LP or digital over here.

Seth Graves, AI Filmmaking

posted 5 days ago #

I am sure there is no shortage of filmmakers and creatives out there documenting their experiences using various AI tools like Runway, Midjourney, Veo, and all the rest. For me, it's fascinating to read about everyone's unique experiences with these tools and to see not only the results they create but the conclusions they come to about the toolsets. The former is always interesting, the latter is always confirming that there's not much to be scared of yet.

Seth's Substack is the documentation of filmmaker Seth Graves, an ex-Nashvillian living in LA who has always dabbled in the DIY scene of music and film. He is an excellent candidate for playing with these tools because he is quite familiar with the real world equivalents, for both larger productions and smaller scale undertakings.

He's making his way through the Tarot deck, making 22 episodes of 60-second explorations, all loosely based on the individual cards. It's a framing concept that helps reveal the path but it's not a rigid structure. The results of The Magician and The Wheel of Fortunre are surreal and outlandish but also not too far off from very solid indie filmmaking.

Metro Private Cinema

posted 5 days ago #

Stumbled upon Metro Cinema, a new theater experience opening in Chelsea, NYC that eschews the typical "giant screening room" vibe and leans into private suites. You book a room for 4-20 people, pick what movie you want to see and pick what menu you're interested in having served before the film. Take a little cruise around the website - it's especially nice on desktop and quite unique with the inverted scrolling banners. Ya love to see some innovation still happening with websites.

I've largely stopped going to the movies because the experience is such a crapshoot - insane amount of commercials and previews, people talking, uncomfortable seating, et al. I'm positive much of this is my age and becoming a bit more particular but something like the Metro Cinema experience would solve for a lot of that.

Clearly a single theater opening in NYC will have no impact on me but the Metro is conjured up by Tim League, the brain behind Alamo Drafthouse cinemas that previously redefined the screening experience. So, one cinema may not impact me yet but it's entirely possible League will expand to other areas. Here's hoping!

On the Effectiveness of Aluminium Foil Helmets

posted July 8, 2025 #

I must admit, I've been wearing my tinfoil hat a bit recently - especially in regards to 2024 election fraud. I'm convinced it happened and the evidence is going to slowly trickle out. The consequences will be nill but I do believe it will eventually come to light.

But how effective is my tinfoil hat? To answer that, we turn to this MIT study On the Effectiveness of Aluminium Foil Helmets. Turns out, the hat is actually amplifying radio signals, not obfuscating them. I may need to rethink my tactics.

Creative Works East 2025

posted July 3, 2025 #

The Creative Works conference started in 2014. I attended the 2015 edition and had a great time. The 2025 lineup of speakers is a really great list of designers, illustrators, lettering experts, creative directors and.. me! That's right! I'm finally gonna take the leap into speaking in front of a bunch of folks.

My presentation has been percolating in my head for months and I'm excited to solidify it and share it with everyone. Maybe you will attend? Presale tickets are available now and early bird pricing ends August 1.

Come see me in Brooklyn in early October!

Confronting AI Art

posted July 1, 2025 #

Really great piece here from the NY Times and Christoph Niemann - Sketched Out: An Illustrator Confronts His Fears About A.I. Art. This isn't a 10,000 word rambling about copyright infringement or ownership but, rather, an interactive graphic novel taking you through the worrisome ponderings of an artist looking into the void of a new era.

Obviously there are a ton of great drawings throughout this but there are also a lot of excellent thinking points - how will AI influence the future of art given that AI tends to deliver "popular" training data? What happens the brilliance of errors - if artists aren't making as many mistakes, do we lose out on this happenstance? "Does art require an artist?"

I don't have any answers here but I do like thinking about it and considering this situation with histories prior hurdles. Definitely a great read - please go through it all!

Cowboy Techno, Art Explosion 600,000

posted June 27, 2025 #

The other day I mused about the origin story of the Computer Cowboy - a gif that has had a persistent presence in every Slack I've ever been in. Its meaning is diverse and dynamic, which I think is a huge part of its ubiquity.

I asked around in my circles for any insights or resources that might help track it down and I was pointed to some absolute treasure troves of antique animations featuring cowboys, computers and (only occasionally) both. Steve (of Abandonware, naturally) steered me towards Discmaster, a browsable repository of art files uploaded to archive.org. A search for "Cowboy" yields thousands of results. So, I just started digging until I found our guy.

The image is taken from a CD-ROM of art files called Art Explosion 600,000, a tome of illustrations from 1998 consisting of 29 Discs of artwork. The Cowboy is on Disc 9, in the "Western & Rodeo (Part 1)" group. There are lots of other characters in the same folder but none come close to the depicted scene we've all come to love. It's clear why someone out there worked to disseminate his visage. His official name is Cowboy - Techno.wmf
Knowing that the image was spawned from an Art CD-ROM is a huge piece of the puzzle but there's certainly many holes left to investigate. Who was the original illustrator of the image before it made its way to the disc? This will be quite difficult to answer unless we find an employee of Nova, the company that published the disc. Additionally, we have no insight into who animated the cowboy. There are some brilliant decisions made by whomever did so - a slight change in color palette, thickening of lines, changing the monitor color and adding endless garbage, the best finger dancing movement the Internet has ever seen. Awards are deserved. They even seemed to have left his silver ear intact.

The search continues. If you have any insight on this character - maybe he's a subtle William Gibson Console Cowboy reference? Maybe he's a proto hacker? Maybe he's an AOL fever dream? - get in touch! I'm on Bluesky and all the other spots (check the footer for your options).

In talking all this through with friends, it was inevitable that a more modern rendition of our western surfer should arise. The inimitable Chad Pugh whipped up this guy and I find it to be a worthy tribute for the world to enjoy. May Cowboy Techno persist through all times.

Autolux / Demos (2001-2002) (Again)

posted June 25, 2025 #

I already talked about this (and seem to talk about Autolux pretty frequently) but as a top tier band in my book, this bears repeating.
Back in October of 2024, the band announced a vinyl release of their 2001-2002 demos. I snatched it up quick! But it was not available digitally in any form until now. I do not believe these are streaming in any form, you'll have to snag them on Bandcamp. I really can't recommend it enough (clearly).

Misc Tech Links, June 2025

posted June 25, 2025 #

Anyone know the history of that GIF? I'm so curious and, yet, can find nothing. Regardless, here's some little drops of joy:
  • Scream to Unlock - a Chrome plugin that blocks social media websites and requires you to yell "I'm a Loser!" into your microphone in order to bypass the block. This little detail is superb: "The louder you scream, the more time you get to browse."
  • Cheating OpenAI transcriptions - If you use OpenAI to create transcriptions of audio this is a very clever little hack that uses ffmpeg to speed up your audio 2x - 3x. Since OpenAI charges by the minute and speeding up your audio decreases the overall length, you just got cheaper transcriptions (with "almost no drop in quality").
  • Busy Bar - need a clever little LED display screen to let people know not to bother you? This is, surely, the best option for exactly that.
  • Getting Started with Dia - the folks at The Browser Company have put Arc in the icebox and are focsed on Dia now. The pivot is a bit controversial but it's all quite interesting to see how its unfolding. Love that someone is attempting to push some innovation!

Friday Videos - June 20th, 2025

posted June 20, 2025 #

Friday Videos is no longer a weekly feature but I still enjoy it when I've compiled enough ridiculous things to share with you. You know how crazy it is out there, give yourself a few minutes to unwind and enjoy the absurd.
  • DRAM - Cash Machine - found myself revisiting this video recently. Still an absolute delight start to finish.
  • NES Commercial? - I could not begin to tell you if this was real or parody. Either way, I think this aesthetic is making a comeback.
  • Two Talking Tom Test - this is 13 years old so it's likely you've seen it or it's even been on this site before.. but I enjoyed the revisit. I was impressed it had an upper threshold!
  • Steve Jobs Opera - in all honesty, if I saw this in person I would be delighted. But seeing it as a 30second Internet commercial, I'm aghast there was funding for this to exist.
  • Paving - I found myself visiting more modern works from Yoshinao Satoh. I really admire how much he is able to do with constraints and repetition.
  • "Bring Me Everyone" - you know that outlandish scene in Leon: The Professional where Gary Oldman screams his line like a madman? Apparently that was just meant to be a goof!
  • The Goof - been a minute since I watched this chunk of The Ten. Great goof.
  • Can We Fool The VFX Wizard? - I'm unfamiliar with the Nounish channel but have been enjoying what I've seen. Sort of like Dropout, there's a lot of recurring contributions.
  • The 11 Body Systems - nurse Reup gives you a real education on the human body!
  • 600m Glass Water Slide - YouTube loves to serve me up first person perspective experiences of rollercoasters around the world. Watch this and maybe it'll start doing it for you too.
I've also really been enjoying this Full Comedy Actor Roundtable with Seth Rogen, Adam Brody, Jason Segel, John Mulaney, Julio Torres and Ted Danson. There are many of these from The Hollywood Reporter, so let this also be a door opening your recommendations.

Matt & The Watt Gives, LP

posted June 17, 2025 #

The debut album from Matt & The Watt Gives was released last Friday. This is the new undertaking of Matt Pelham - previously the singer and songwriter for The Features. Back in 2016, the band quietly disbanded and fans were left to wonder if there would be new music from any of the members. Fortunately, drummer Rollum Haas answered that question with The Robe but there was always some curiosity about Pelham's future output.
I'm happy to share that the debut, full-length, self-titled record is now available. For anyone that was a fan of The Features, it's immediately familiar because of Pelham's distinctive voice but the sonic palette of the record is unique to Matt & The Watt Gives.

We pressed 100 records in Apple Red and the rest in standard black. There are still some of those red records available but not many! If you want one, they are here (if you're international, they are here).

The high energy rock songs of the record are an absolute treat but I actually think the record soars during the more vulnerable songs. "Wilder Days", "'Til You", "For Every Dream" and "The Chemo Blues" are heart heavy songs but all the more impactful for it. I'm clearly biased on my love of the record but I do hope you'll spend some time with it!

The Drifter

posted June 17, 2025 #

While I will unlikely ever play it, I am rather enjoying the aesthetic vibe of this trailer for indie game The Drifter. I'm not sure what this specific flavor of pixel art is called but it reminds me of the mid-90s adventure games and more modern games like Sword & Sorcery, Hyper Light Drifter and Zwaard. It's chunky but not lacking in detail - a great balance.

Vinyl Me, Please: What Went Wrong

posted June 17, 2025 #

I will admit, 100%, that this is driven by schadenfreude - a bit of pleasure derived from someone else's misfortune. I will also admit that I have no reason to feel such a way! I've got nothing against anyone involved in this story personally or otherwise, I'm just enjoying the drama.

If you have not been following, this Stereogum story on Vinyl Me, Please: What Went Wrong is a great place to start. The TLDR is; a vinyl subscription service known for high-quality, highly curated releases decided to open their own manufacturing plant in Denver and basically everything crashed and burned from there. The company overspent, the existing vinyl orders were never fulfilled and board members were expelled. High drama!

It looks like that drama may have a light at the end of the tunnel tho as VNYL has acquired VMP and will likely clean things up. If you're not familiar, VNYL is a different vinyl subscription service but they do not make their own records, they serve as a direct to consumer distributor. They have purchased several yk Records titles in the past and it's been a real boon.

Be interesting to see how it all shakes out in 6 months! I hope customers get their money back or their products or both. Best of luck to VNYL (sincerely) and my apologies for enjoying this delicious drama maybe a little too much.

Glange Fever

posted June 12, 2025 #

As it happens from time to time, I was revisiting Supergrass and then following that down the rabbit hole to drummer Danny Goffey's underrated side tangent Vangoffey while reading Wikipedia. As you do. There's a little bit in there about a period in 2007-2008 where Goffey and singer Gaz Coomes go off on their own tour:
In 2007 and 2008, while Supergrass bandmate Mick Quinn was suffering from broken heel and vertebrae, Danny and Gaz Coombes went on a short tour of the country playing at small venues as the Diamond Hoo Ha Men. The tour was captured on film for a Rockumentary called Glange Fever, released in 2008.
I knew Diamond Hoo Ha was the name of a Supergrass album but had never heard of them touring in such a way. And I'd certainly never heard of, or seen, the Glange Fever documentary. Fortunately, someone has been kind enough to put it on YouTube.

Never seen it so I am not sure I am vouching for it but, at the very least, whenever you're reading this - use it as an opportunity to revisit Supergrass and Vangoffey.

Cold Water AGI

posted June 8, 2025 #

Gary Marcus recently posted this insightful piece about the current state of "advanced" thinking within AI, entitled A knockout blow for LLMs?. He discusses a June 2025 research paper from Apple called The Illusion of Thinking: Understanding the Strengths and Limitations of Reasoning Models via the Lens of Problem Complexity, an enormous title that basically boils down to - "reasoning" in AI is not as great as these companies want you to believe.

Marcus piece is not dense or unapproachable. If you have the slightest interest in AI and how the ongoing advancements are proceeding, it's a very thoughtful discussion. A friend of mine called it "Some good cold water on how close AGI." Meaning, we're not that close to Artificial General Intelligence despite what some of the hype may lead you to believe. The pattern matching on current LLMs is incredibly impressive but "thinking" is the wrong word for it - a 7-year old has better reasoning skills.

I do not consider myself an AI evangelist or expert in any regard. I am a fan of it and use it regularly but also agree with a great many critiques of it. Mostly I try to remind myself that it is early days. Of course OpenAI and Claude and Google and all the rest want you to believe they have the best models - they want you to pay them to use the software! It's all marketing! But that doesn't mean it's not also impressive! It just has to be taken with a grain of salt, like all marketing does.

Marcus and Apple make a great point about the state of things - they are not wrong. AGI is not impending and AI "thinking" has a long way to go (for now). That's good for us because we need to figure out how these tools fit into our landscape from an ethical standpoint and how we can regulate them.

(not Boring) Camera

posted June 8, 2025 #

Arlo recently clued me in to !Camera, a photography app that uses a big, chunky, fun interface to surface some premium settings. The settings are not overwhelming and it's fun to use an interface that actually feels like a childhood toy - a bit of whimsy, if you will.

I like the standard Camera app on the iPhone - it's hard to complain about. It takes nice photos and it has a lot of features if you know how to use them. But apps like !Camera and its ilk - see also, Kino for a different flavor of a similar thing - find a nice balance between giving you manual control and letting you choose what kind of post-processed filter. I'm not sure I'm ready to subscribe to such a thing but I am happy to play with it and use all the free features.
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