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<metadata><identifier>DayOne</identifier>
<title>Day One</title>
<title>Day One</title>
<mediatype>audio</mediatype>
<collection>opensource_audio</collection>
<subject>Greg Fox</subject>
<subject>John Cage</subject>
<subject>Relaxation</subject>
<subject>Avant-Garde</subject>
<subject>Free Music</subject>
<subject>Utilitarianism</subject>
<subject>Contemporary Music</subject>
<subject>Zen</subject>
<subject>Computer Music</subject>
<licenseurl>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/</licenseurl>
<description>&quot;Day One&quot; is one of a planned series of single-stretch CDs which subvert the idea of &#039;Relaxation CDs&#039; - in this case a certain steadiness and calmness of mind *does* tend to arise from concentrating on the piece or playing it when you&#039;re in bed. Future examples may contradict this basic function in more direct ways. The piece runs for 74 minutes and it generally soft and abstract.</description>
<date>2005-10-05</date>
<publicdate>2006-02-19 14:27:25</publicdate>
<addeddate>2006-02-19 21:27:27</addeddate>
<adder>gregskius@tesco.net</adder>
<uploader>gregskius@tesco.net</uploader>
<taper>Greg Fox</taper>
<creator>Greg Fox</creator>
<runtime>CD length: one 74-minute track</runtime>
<notes>&quot;Day One&quot; is the prototype for a series of CD-length pieces. In the early years of the 21st century two ideas are very widespread: one is that of functional music, a strong example being the &quot;Relaxation CD&quot; - the idea is that by playing the music (or sounds, typically, such as waves, etc.) the mind will become calmed and sleep/relaxation will be easier as a result. The other idea is that of &quot;Relaxing Classics&quot;, which tends to mean historical concert-music of the better-known variety, often compiled in cross-cultural pan-era CD mixers with the clear intent of aiding relaxation again. Both these ideas have a certain amount of merit, even though clearly both are deeply problematic in terms of &quot;satisfying musical experiences&quot;. &quot;Day One&quot; is an attempt to look at the idea of music serving to &#039;relax&#039;, and over its CD-length stretch it remains calm, quiet and abstract. No &quot;content&quot; is allowed to dominate. Yet the music is &quot;pure music&quot; - there&#039;s no landscapes or extra-musical imagery here. The other interesting dimension to this is the fact that with &quot;relaxation&quot; and generally utilitised music the mode of communication is very much one to one: the product is designed to be used by a single person listening alone (presumably in bed or at the computer). That is certainly the best way to use this CD. Future examples of this series may more crudely *contradict* or in some way subvert the functional nature of the project. However in this case it&#039;s an attempt at making something worthwhile with the functional aspect built in from the start.</notes>
<format>Sound</format>
<updatedate>2006-02-23 04:59:49</updatedate>
<updater>Greg Fox / La Voix Fidel</updater>
</metadata>
