Posts Tagged Amazon
Chelsea Crowell on Solo Music, Jane Only
I broaden my musical knowledge in various ways. In the case of Chelsea Crowell, I found out about her music via Twitter. I recently e-mail interviewed Crowell on the eve of her entering the studio to record her second solo effort (she entered the studio on June 8). Her first solo effort, Chelsea Crowell (also available from Amazon and on iTunes), was released last year, while her earlier collaborative band effort, Jane Only (also available from Amazon and on iTunes), was released last month (both from Cleft Music). Before jumping into the interview, here are snippets from her bio: “Chelsea Crowell is an American songwriter, singer, artist and author. She has lived in New York, Baltimore, Memphis, Charleston, Colorado and Nashville. Having grown up in a musical family, she began writing and playing guitar as a teenager … Her real start in music began when she moved back to Nashville in 2004 with guitarist, Stephen Braren. They lived together on the top floor of a now bulldozed, pre war walk up apartment building on 31st Ave called Maberta. It had a clear view of the Nashville skyline at the time. It was there they would shoot fireworks from the window towards the Parthenon but always hitting the neighbors across the street. The two eventually formed the band “Jane Only” with Lincoln Kaufman. The group became Stephen, Chelsea, Marty Linville and Fletcher Bangs Watson the Sixth … In ’08, Chelsea began her first solo project with producer and fellow generational conduit, Loney John Hutchins. … Originally meant to be an experiment while band mate Braren was on tour with band, Cheap Time, by early ’09 a full length record had taken form. It is being released on vinyl, cd, and online through Hutchins’ Cleft Music imprint … She is currently working on an opera as well as her sophomore record.” My thanks to Cleft Music‘s Hutchins for putting me in contact with Crowell, and to Crowell, most importantly, for her valuable time and thoughts.
Tim O’Shea: What was the inspiration for “Where the Hell is Robert E. Lee” (Cut 10 from your solo release)?
Chelsea Crowell: Aside from being from the south and having a bit of an American civil war history fetish, I wanted to write a song that was historically accurate. Aside from the line in the song about Sal T, who was my ancestor Sal Taylor Willoughby, the song can be fact checked. I have a note book of biography songs I wrote that I hope to make an entire record of when I am done with the projects I am working on now. For the sake of my first debut album, there was plenty of love-lorn-lost and low down emotion, so it was between ‘Robert E Lee’ or a song about ‘typhoid Mary’ just to throw off the singular heartbreak. The civil war was a different sort of heartbreak.
Venky Harinarayan on Kosmix
Posted by admin in commerce, Search tool on December 15, 2009

Venky Harinarayan
In the past few months, while researching for this site’s various interviews, I’ve found Kosmix to be quite effective in providing me with a great deal of background for questions. Curious to learn more about the helpful web presence, I contacted its staff for an email interview. They were quite open to the idea and put me in contact with Kosmix Co-Founder Venky Harinarayan. Here’s the official bio for Harinarayan from Kosmix: “Venky Harinarayan and his business partner Anand Rajaraman co-founded Kosmix in 2005 with the vision to connect people to the information that makes a difference in their lives. Together with Anand, Venky developed the first ecommerce search engine, Junglee, which was acquired by Amazon.com in 1998 for $250 million. At Amazon, Venky and Anand created the company’s search and marketplace business. In addition to Kosmix, Venky is a principal at Cambrian Ventures, an early-stage venture capital firm. He is a graduate of Stanford University and the Indian Institute of Technology.” Regular readers know I typically run my interviews on late Wednesday evenings, but I so enjoyed the amount of ground we covered with this particular exchange, I opted to post it a day early. My thanks to Harinarayan for his time.
Tim O’Shea: Recently at the Kosmix blog, there was a mention of Sean Parker’s October speech, where one of his points about the future of the Internet was “Parker argues that the next phase is about building connections between people and things.” Is Kosmix’s acquisition of Cruxlux an effort to do just that–build stronger connections between people and things?
Venky Harinarayan: Absolutely. At Kosmix, our mission is to connect people to the information that makes a difference in their lives. Our acquisition of Cruxlux fits perfectly with that vision.
In the early days, the Internet was about finding information, not about connecting people. Now with the advent of sites like Facebook and Twitter, the Web has an amazing capacity to illuminate social networks. Interacting with other people has moved to the forefront our online activities. The next step will be to connect people with information that matters to them—without you having to search for it.
We’ve made progress in this area with www.Meehive.com, our personalized news site. You tell MeeHive your interests, and then the system scours millions of news outlets and blogs to bring you fresh stories about the people and things you want to follow. For example, if you’re passionate about Broadway theatre, MeeHive will let you know every time there’s a review of a new musical, or breaking news about your favorite playwright’s latest work. Facebook is about what you’re up to, and Kosmix and MeeHive are about what you’re into.
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