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Posted

And yes I agree Paul  the more and frequent you add to the internet the more the AI fancy’s you! So that proves that AI is corrupt! I wonder if a politician came up with AI😂

  • Up vote 3
Posted (edited)

It's not so much that AI rewrites history, it's that it doesn't have sufficient historical sources to work with in this area. The outcome though is the same, partial, often incorrect information based on incomplete, insufficient data sets.

I recently did a speech explaining the opportunities and risks of AI in the energy sector. We got AI to do all the imagery working forward through the ages of humans into the future. It's interpretation when there isn't online content, is often wonky or speculative in a sci-fi way. For example AI understood that the industrial era had water wheels but not that they needed to be at a water source such as a river. Or that in the agricultural revolution preceding that, the farmers did not wear modern tweed flat caps.  When talking about 'smart homes' it looked like product brocures in idealistic pictures we see in EV car adverts - because those are the sources it is working with.

I used the recent AI assisted Northern Soul songs in the speech live as an illustration at one point - which became the hook that got people thinking afterwards (you can see it mentioned a lot at LinkedIn).

Anything where the core knowledge is offline prior to the internet age or behind walls it cannot reach (old fora, chat groups, email groups such as the Keeping The Faith one some of us were in for example), then the AI results are often poor. Especially where this is outside official culture that has historians who have covered it. While we do have plenty of books, these likely haven't been ingested and a model trained on them. 

For Northern Soul, AI is picking up Wikipedia, news articles, social media, Youtube etc - but it doesn't have a context to refer back to that is extensive. Academic books often miss this as we know, a lot of the real knowledge in 'folk' culture isn't written or online.  As such, in future we can envisage AI to produce shallow, often incorrect or partial information from pre-internet sources that do not have biographies/historical references to align to.  What's written right now about these things at an online source that is accessible to AI, will likely become woven into the way it expresses its 'truth' in future. Getting writing folks!

Edited by Thinksmart
  • Up vote 2
Posted
16 minutes ago, Paul-s said:

Well, it doesn't, thats the entire point?

BUT, the idea and discussion is not about its validity but the fact that history is co-opted by AI and people (lazy bookers and TV producers) take the results as gospel and book these comedy parody dancers to represent the scene. In that way, like most vernacular dance culture, it becomes gentrified, sanitised, and mis-represented. You may not care, but as someone who has spent 5 decades caring and contributing, I do.

Spot on Paul….the northern soul scene is like a lot of things in this country where everything is constantly being watered down!

  • Up vote 1
Posted

Don’t know if anyone else watched the last series of Traitors, but one of the lads on there did an intro piece and stated he was into ‘northern soul dancing’. Not into northern soul, but northern soul dancing! 

  • Up vote 1
Posted (edited)
4 hours ago, Paul-s said:

Yes, very  good point! They never object to the misrepresentation, but rather, choose to exploit it for profit.

Its disingenuous and comes across as delusional and narcissistic.....but, more often that not (if you dig deeper) they are all sole trader or limited company 'Northern Soul dance' businesses.
The result is a plethora of hoppy, skippy, smiley, windmill armed, line dancers who have missed out the part that requires time, patience, observation, attendance, meeting people, absorbing the atmospheres (beyond the line dancing class venue), contribution to the scene, listening to the music and connecting with it all.

The business(s) of Northern Soul dancing have watered it down to the simple equation that it is just steps to music....nothing more. No need for cultural connection, no need for historical connection, no need for a connection to the musicians.
In some cases labels are even replacing images & biographies of the Afro-American musicians who have always represented the heart of the scene, with those of self promoting  'celebutantes' whose soul has been moulded via hashtags and relentless posting of the self online. 

It does have long-term implications due to its cynical erasure of memory, and the cultural amnesia that AI inspires and propagates. Much like the Wikipedia facade of self written history! It negates those who danced before us, collected, played, contributed, traveled far and wide, post - Wigan, to keep the scene going. And also those who perished in the pursuit.

Imagine a lazy (they are all lazy) TV or Radio producer  (BBC comes to mind) goes online and googles Northern Soul Dancer because they want to feature one, they will get this list of individuals. Apart from being below average dancers, who are not even on the scene as a whole,  they are people who are solely business orientated and do not have the humility to recognise and admit that there is no such thing as 'a World Champion Northern Soul dancer, or a boy or girl or man or woman who represents the scene and its culture. It was/is a communal scene, a community, or nowadays a series of   rival communities perhaps? 

Anyway, personally, I find it not to be "a bit of fun" but recognise it as a vacuous profit driven business model aimed at sucking the soul of the culture and the scene dry....and often attempting to gaslight us into thinking we are being negative if we question their motives and their products.

Anyway, that is just my opinion and experience of course.

I wonder if John Hurt was asked how many classic race meetings he'd won before getting the role to play Bob Champion in Champions, You also mentioned radio producer, so how does northern soul dancing on the radio work, I'd still be a rubbish dancer even on the radio.

Edited by Jessie Pinkman

Posted

AI will ultimately prove to be bad for society but good for some businesses. Even this tiny extract is complete garbage - it presents Bristol as the epicentre of contemporary Northern culture which of course is far from the truth. AI will use robots to replace people impoverishing both knowledge and citizens. Any money involved will head to Silicon Valley leaving originators of songs/films/books etc without payment or credit.

  • Up vote 1
Posted
17 hours ago, Jessie Pinkman said:

I wonder if John Hurt was asked how many classic race meetings he'd won before getting the role to play Bob Champion in Champions, You also mentioned radio producer, so how does northern soul dancing on the radio work, I'd still be a rubbish dancer even on the radio.

Indeed.

John Hurt also starred in 1984 which kind of captures the dystopian state of Group Think, Double Think and News Speak that dominates the commercial spaces of Northern Soul dancing gurus: their products and productions.

It doesn't work on the radio, but its a great space for these narcissists to showcase their sales propaganda and to sell and fabricate an imagined past....much like the Ministry of Truth in 1984. 

12 hours ago, Frankie Crocker said:

AI will ultimately prove to be bad for society but good for some businesses. Even this tiny extract is complete garbage - it presents Bristol as the epicentre of contemporary Northern culture which of course is far from the truth. AI will use robots to replace people impoverishing both knowledge and citizens. Any money involved will head to Silicon Valley leaving originators of songs/films/books etc without payment or credit.

Spot on!

  • Up vote 1
Posted
13 minutes ago, Paul-s said:

Indeed.

John Hurt also starred in 1984 which kind of captures the dystopian state of Group Think, Double Think and News Speak that dominates the commercial spaces of Northern Soul dancing gurus: their products and productions.

It doesn't work on the radio, but its a great space for these narcissists to showcase their sales propaganda and to sell and fabricate an imagined past....much like the Ministry of Truth in 1984. 

Spot on!

👏😂

Posted
56 minutes ago, Paul-s said:

Indeed.

John Hurt also starred in 1984 which kind of captures the dystopian state of Group Think, Double Think and News Speak that dominates the commercial spaces of Northern Soul dancing gurus: their products and productions.

It doesn't work on the radio, but its a great space for these narcissists to showcase their sales propaganda and to sell and fabricate an imagined past....much like the Ministry of Truth in 1984. 

Spot on!

Somebody should do a Northern Soul play 1984 Once Upon A Time In Stafford.🤔

  • Up vote 1
Posted
26 minutes ago, Jessie Pinkman said:

Somebody should do a Northern Soul play 1984 Once Upon A Time In Stafford.🤔

No one with the true grit, honesty, tenacity and willingness to sacrifice time and  lose a fortune left to step up to that mark i think

  • Up vote 2
  • Helpful 1
Posted

To access Soul Source (almost always on my phone), I type ‘soul’ into Google and Soul Source will always normally be in the top five results, which I find reassuringly pleasing.

It’s a pity the algorithms don’t have more depth than to point towards recent Bristol well meaning enthusiasts when it comes to the great northern soul dancers down the years. In the World for you Kev. 🙂

 

IMG_1875.jpeg

Posted (edited)
57 minutes ago, Hooker1951 said:

Your dead right there Dylan been telling them to switch the lights off for the last 40 years, plus leaving doors open  , fans switched on all things that kill the atmosphere, all the ingredients that destroy the atmosphere and keep you in reality when your trying to escape it , to be fair in all honesty a lot of people on the scene today haven’t a clue, as regards dancing there s a big difference between gymnastics acrobatics, and feeling the music I know which I prefer but each to their own

ML

You certainly had it dark at Blackburn Mick, It was always a pleasant surprise who I'd missed when the lights came on at the end of the night

Edited by Jessie Pinkman
  • Up vote 2
Posted

Its always been about how a person as an individual, feels about the music. Everybody's dna differs and folk treat each song in the same manner. Dancing is a personal thing and people have their own distinct mannerisms.

  • Up vote 2

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