
Anyone who had the experience of dating anytime from 1981 to 1998 knows the superiority of Mixtapes to all other forms of mixes. The receiving of a tape from a person you were interested in was an occassion for day dreaming of the pleasures to come. They liked you! They really really liked you! You know how you knew that?
You got a mixtape.
The mixtape is also superior in that the inherent clash of form and content is skewed heavily towards that ultimate in achievement, the triumph of aesthetic superiority (content) despite the acknowledged limitations of action (form). At the beginning of the process, we see the content become embedded with meaning, as the making of the tape requires the listening of every song. One might be compelled to use the quality canceling high speed dubbing technique, but this would be an acknowledgment to the recipient of the problems associated with the form, and by extension, the lack of time and effort put into the meaning of the auditory letter they were now listening too. On the other end, when listened to, it is precisely the fact that one cannot easily skip from song to song that fixes the meaning of the tape as a thing to be considered in its entirety and not as incidental statements unconnected to the content working together.
Nowadays it seems that while undoubtedly superior in ease and use, the MP3 or CD-R mix (things in this form should never be referred to as a mixtape, for this is, again, an insult to the importance of the addition of form and content that gives us meaning) allow for people to drag and drop, click and burn, give and receive without the implied time of investment. These new forms necessarily take the meaning out of the content, because the process allowed by the technology denies it the time and thought commitment necessary to the emotional meaning one might mean to convey.
1 comment:
Great Post i love mixtapes too!!! check out my blog at http://www.mixtapesbringsmiles.com and http://phillymixtapeexchange.blogspot.com
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