The
WoodSongs Podcast
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About Podcasting
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Dear WoodSongs Fans,
I'm glad that we can provide a
virtual multi-media array to help
you enjoy our show and grassroots
music. Foremost as radio, then
online streaming, the archives,
television and of course, iPods.
However, I have strong concerns that
any technology is used properly and
am posting this article for your
consideration.
Folk On! Michael |
Pete
Townshend Warns IPod Users
LONDON (Jan. 4) - Guitarist Pete
Townshend has warned iPod users that
they could end up with hearing
problems as bad as his own if they
don't turn down the volume of the
music they are listening to on
earphones.
Townshend, 60, guitarist in the 60s
band The Who, said his hearing was
irreversibly damaged by years of
using studio headphones and that he
now is forced to take 36-hour breaks
between recording sessions to allow
his ears to recover.
"I have unwittingly helped to invent
and refine a type of music that
makes its principal components
deaf," he said on his Web site.
"Hearing loss is a terrible thing
because it cannot be repaired. If
you use an iPod or anything like it,
or your child uses one, you MAY be
OK ... But my intuition tells me
there is terrible trouble ahead."
Referring to the increasingly
popular practice of downloading
music from the Internet, Townshend
said: "The downside may be that on
our computers - for privacy, for
respect to family and co-workers,
and for convenience - we use
earphones at almost every stage of
interaction with sound."
The Who rock group was famous for
its earsplitting live performances,
but Townshend said his problem was
caused by using earphones in the
recording studio. |