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You have arrived at the web home of Noah Brier. This is mostly an archive of over a decade of blogging and other writing. You can read more about me or get in touch. If you want more recent writing of mine, most of that is at my BrXnd marketing x AI newsletter and Why Is This Interesting?, a daily email for the intellectually omnivorous.

October, 2006

That's Not Really [INSERT ART FORM HERE]

By Noah Brier and Charles Gallant

Rock and roll is not music. How could it be? You've got a bunch of kids with shaggy hair playing instruments with no real musical knowledge. They don't even know scales! Hell, most of them probably can't read music! They're making noise, not music.

Or so the story goes.

Now let's try it from the design perspective:

The consequence of your design democracy is an ugly spectacle of deep purples and electric organges. It's a culture of me-me-me: my hideously personalized car, my hideously personalized sofa, my hideously personalized house. If we care about maintaining an aesthetic of public space, design should be left to professionals. Let people pour their uniqueness inwardly -- but don't let them clutter up the physical world.

That's straight out of Fast Company.

Pardon my French, but it all sounds like a bunch of elitist bullshit. Today everyone's got access to the tools that before only a select few could play with. Anyone can be a designer, a musician or an astronaut.

That scares and angers professionals.

Think about it. How would you feel if you went through four years of intense musical training and the people getting the fame and money spent all that time smoking pot and drinking Jack Daniels.

There's never been a time in history when it was easier to just hack something together. (I think that's paraphrasing something Henry Jenkins said.) Calling design 'bad' or music 'crappy' is a subjective judgement. 'Bad' design can be good. Just look at the filmmakers behind lonelygirl15: When it was time to build a Myspace page for their faux-15-year-old they intentionally gave it a 'Myspace' look. They knew their context and built something that could really have been produced by a 15-year-old girl in her bedroom.

The design represents the content. It presents the content. It is the content. If I'm a 9-year-old with a 'crappy' website, my design will probably scream "A 9-year-Old made this!!!" What those pompous musicians/designers need to get over is that some people are actually looking for a 9-year-old's content. They'd prefer a universe where people wanted things that looked pretty, but sometimes people just want something that 'is what it is.' Something accessible. Something that's all there on the table. Easy to swallow.

Design is a communication tool. Getting your point across should always be the ultimate goal. Sure I can make comments on the how much something adheres to traditional design rules. But at the end of the day it sure sounds like a bunch of classically trained musicians with their tux stuck up their ass complaining about the kids and their rock and roll.

October 6, 2006
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Noah Brier | Thanks for reading. | Don't fake the funk on a nasty dunk.