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Blog Posts About Classical Music
A loosely sorted and lightly annotated catalogue of through the music posts on this blog.
Macro Lecture Notes | Wedge Accounting and Intersectoral Distortions
From the front line of macro class: Motivation Most poor countries remain heavily agricultural yet exhibit low agricultural productivity relative to richer economies. The central question is: what prevents reallocation of labor from agriculture to manufacturing? The class studied Russian industrialization (1880–1940) as a laboratory. Pre-1928: ~80% of labor in agriculture, yet agriculture accounts for less than 50% of value added. Post-1928 under Stalin: 30 percentage points of labor shift to manufacturing in 12 years, accompanied by famine and mass repression. ...
Technical Bug Fix | Sleepingbot Auto Blog Catalogue Sync
Sleepingbot has a bug that new blog posts in content/posts never made into the chatbot’s catalogue. Content never synced automatically. The original setup required manually running sync_content.sh after every new post. Really? So I scrapped the GitHub Actions approach entirely and replaced it with a local git pre-push hook (.git/hooks/pre-push): #!/bin/bash echo "Syncing blog content to chatbot..." rsync -av --delete content/posts/ blog-chatbot/content/posts/ git add blog-chatbot/content/ git diff --cached --quiet || git commit -m "Auto-sync blog content" echo "Sync done." This runs silently on every git push, syncs the posts, and commits them.
The Violin Market, and Strad as an Investment
From the paper: Investigating the potential of investing in fine stringed instruments as an alternative investment asset. Angela ORTIZ MUÑOZ, 2020. PhD Thesis A helpful reference Investing in Fine Instruments, a PhD Thesis Investigation | Dr. Angela Ortiz Muñoz analyzes fine stringed instruments as an investment asset. Tarisio TL;DR: Violins are a real, if niche, alternative asset — not just a passion hobby. They offer ~3.5–5% real annual returns with genuinely low correlation to financial markets, meaning they earn their place in a diversified portfolio at a modest (~10%) allocation. The two most striking findings are that maker identity dominates everything else in price formation (Stradivari/del Gesù = +333% value impact), and that which musician plays an instrument functions like a credit rating upgrade, creating measurable abnormal returns. The market survived 2008 without a downturn, which is rare for any asset class. ...
Correlated Equilibrium in Fashion
The Maxinomics’ new video points out a new way fashion industry works. Instead of experimenting and betting on what the next hit style is, they just follow the authority: you might remember Pantone’s annual color, or: WGSN: trend forecasting From viral TikTok trends to shifts in global consumer behaviour, the world is changing fast. While anyone can spot a trend once it arrives, the most successful brands know what’s coming beforehand – and act on it early. That’s the power of trend forecasting. ...
Paper Reading Notes | The Economies of Superstars (Sherwin Rosen, AER 1981)
The market for classical music has never been larger than it is now, yet the number of full-time soloists on any given instrument is also on the order of only a few hundred (and much smaller for instruments other than voice, violin, and piano). Performers of first rank comprise a limited handful out of these small totals and have very large incomes. There are also known to be substantial differences in income between them and those in the second rank, even though most consumers would have difficulty detecting more than minor differences in a “blind” hearing. (Rosen 1981) ...
American ICONs by the Joffrey Ballet
Joffrey’s winter season show the American Icons is on. It features four contemporary choreographies in one night. Kettentanz choreographed by Gerald Arpino, with music by Johann Strauss Sr. Secular Games by Martha Graham Exerpt from Postcards by Robert Joffrey, with music by Satie Voluntaries by Glen Tetley, with music by Francis Poulenc A view into the kaleidoscope night: The night begins with — Teletubbies? Just kidding. The Kettentanz features Strauss Sr.’s cheerful composition — straightforward, happy, a little boring. As if it’s chosen intentionally to mimic the music we hear at ballet classes (but my standard is Tchaikovsky and Chopin, so judge not the pianist not, judge me). Kettentanz’s choreography feels less like an piece intended for performance and more like an etudes — a series of Grand Allegros, with dense technique showcase and seldom thinkings. You’ll see what I mean: ...
Fixing KaTeX Rendering in Hugo PaperMod
In my hugo papermod powered website where math is rendered by Katex, math blocks were silently failing to render mid-page. Everything after a certain point appeared as raw LaTeX. Here’s the fix. NOTE: The fix is generated by Claude. It works. But I’m not sure if the mechanism is 100% correct. But it works. Root Causes 1. Goldmark mangles math before KaTeX sees it Hugo uses Goldmark as its Markdown renderer. Goldmark processes the .md file first — and it escapes or corrupts characters like \, _, {, } inside math delimiters. By the time KaTeX receives the string, the LaTeX is broken. ...
Fixed effect regression — WG/DID estimator and their cluster-robust variance
In the early days of recording, the microphone could only cleanly capture a narrow frequency range. So engineers were like: we’ll just record what the microphone handles. Fair enough. Then the microphone got better. Then digital audio arrived. Then we could capture everything. But by then, scholars had already proven theoretically that music only contains those frequencies. The proof was very elegant. It won a Gramophone award. And to this day, grad students learn that a symphony is just a low-frequency hum with robust standard errors. ...
Cross-Country Income Differences is Because of What?
Another lecture note from macroeconomic class. Question: why the log GDP per capita are widely different across countries and that they doesn’t seem to converge? Estimates of the distribution of countries according to log GDP per capita (PPP-adjusted) in 1960, 1980 and 2000. Courtesy to Theory of Income II class. ...