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Dear all,

At 16:00 this Wednesday, 28th November, the Centre for Digital Music  
will be hosting a seminar from David Jennings, author of "Nets, Blogs  
and Rock'n'Roll", on "How Digital Discovery Works: Deciding what to  
listen to next in a world of infinite choice".

The seminar will take place in room 105 in the Electronic Engineering  
Department, Queen Mary, University of London, Mile End Road, London  
E1 4NS. Directions of how to get to Queen Mary are available at  
http://www.elec.qmul.ac.uk/research/seminars/ as are details of  
future seminars. The room is under access control, so people from  
outside QM Electronic Engineering will need to contact C4DM to get in  
- the lab phone number is +44 (0)20 7882 7986 and if I'm not  
available, anyone else in the lab should be able to help. If you are  
coming from outside Queen Mary's, please let me know, so I can make  
sure no-ones stuck outside the doors...

All are welcome to attend. If you wish to be added to / removed from  
the mailing list, please send me an email and I'll be happy to do so.


Time: 16:00, Wednesday 28th November 2007
Location: Room 105, Electronic Engineering Department, Queen Mary,  
University of London
Title: "How Digital Discovery Works: Deciding what to listen to next  
in a world of infinite choice"

Abstract:
The culture we choose to explore makes us who we are. Music fans have  
more choice in their listening than ever before. The on-demand  
availability of everything, and the choice it confers to step inside  
anyone's cultural shoes, brings with it responsibilities and  
anxieties as well as excitement. The act of discovery -- what are you  
going to listen to next? -- moves to centre stage.

Many enterprises want to help with discovery: Amazon, Google,  
Wikipedia, MySpace, Last.fm, radio, TV and press. But one of the most  
powerful (and truly "cross-platform") media is word of mouth and the  
reputation that accrues via the exchanges in blogs, recommendations  
and fan sites.

My talk will seek to explain some of the dynamics of word of mouth,  
and what the implications of these dynamics are for the marketing and  
promotion of music. There is an influential minority of fans who are  
keen to 'pioneer' in discovering new music and then spread the word  
to other fans. Meanwhile a mostly silent majority takes a more casual  
approach to discovery.

Artists and bands cannot control the means by which they are  
discovered. They can only enable these means. It helps to understand  
the dynamics of communication and influence so that you can tap into  
their power.

I propose three levels to what I call the Net, Blogs and Rock'n'Roll  
'architecture of discovery':
1. The Net is the data-crunching and underground plumbing that  
processes massive volumes of user behaviours and spots the trends and  
patterns within them
2. Blogs are the human level of conversation, not as 'clean' and  
quantitative as the data level, but enriched by personality, trust  
and shared history
3. Rock'n'Roll is the spirit that keeps us interested in exploring  
the edges of our culture, and that challenges yesterday's consensus.

Bio:
David Jennings is Director of DJ Alchemi Ltd and author of "Net,  
Blogs and Rock 'n' Roll". David is an independent consultant  
specialising in online learning and discovery. His clients have  
included learndirect, the Trades Union Congress and the British  
Standards Institute. He has written on music and technology for  
specialist and generalist press in the UK, and advised the (now  
defunct) National Centre for Popular Music.  He has also created  
online reference resources for communities of music fans, including  
the wiki site for the cult album, '69 Love Songs'.

Before setting up his own business twelve years ago, David was a  
Principal Psychologist in what is now the Department for Work and  
Pensions in the UK Government.  He is registered as a Chartered  
Psychologist with the British Psychological Society and is a  
Certified Member of the Association for Learning Technology (CMALT).

David was chair of the British Human-Computer Interaction Group from  
1995-97, and a member of the Editorial Board of the journal  
Interacting with Computers for ten years. He has held board positions  
in arts charities and technology companies, including Wired Workplace  
Ltd, which he co-founded. He holds degrees from the Universities of  
Cambridge, Sheffield and Sheffield Hallam.


If you'd like to present a seminar at C4DM, please get in touch, and  
we'll see what we can do.

Steve Welburn
--
Centre for Digital Music (C4DM)
Electronic Engineering Department
Queen Mary, University of London
[log in to unmask]
Tel: +44 (0)20 7882 7986
Fax: +44 (0)20 7882 7997

C4DM Web-site : http://www.elec.qmul.ac.uk/digitalmusic/index.html