Monday, 22 February 2010

Paul Schütze: Third Site Live

          
Visit the Soundcloud page for free download
Recorded live at the Impact Festival, Utrecht 11/05/1999.

Paul Schütze - electronics, vibraphone
Clive Bell - woodwinds, reeds
Raoul Björkenheim - guitar
Simon Hopkins - guitar
Thomas Köner - voice (in absentia)

More from Paul Schütze
@'Everythingonmyipod'
HERE
Where there is also this comment from Schütze himself:
Paul Schütze said...
"keep up the good work. Don't let anyone tell you file-sharing will destroy the music industry. They have achieved that themselves by treating their artists and customers with contempt. As models of commerce implode and dissolve around us, art (which should have no use) is defined by our use of it. I would rather you share my work with people who may not know it and may otherwise never hear it."

The Hurt Locker sees off The Smurf Movie at Baftas

Kathryn Bigelow
Kathryn Bigelow's film The Hurt Locker won six awards at the Baftas, including best film and director. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images
It came, it saw, but failed to conquer. James Cameron's Avatar, which has taken more money at the box office than any other film in the history of cinema came away tonight with just two Bafta awards in an evening dominated by arthouse films made on a fraction of its budget.
The outright winner at the London ceremony was The Hurt Locker, directed by Cameron's ex-wife Kathryn Bigelow. It won six awards including best film, director, original screenplay, editing, cinematography and sound.
British success came in the acting awards with Carey Mulligan named best actress for An Education and Colin Firth best actor for A Single Man.
The Hurt Locker, a grittily realistic depiction of US army bomb disposal men in post-invasion Iraq, has been around a long time, gathering pace and acclaim on the film festival circuit. It first premiered in competition at Venice 18 months ago and has been seen by only a small fraction of those who have seen Avatar: it took $17.6m at the box office, compared with Avatar's mind-boggling $2bn.
Nevertheless, the film has been lavishly praised as a brilliantly accomplished piece of tense, well-crafted drama.
Bigelow, best known for her macho action dramas such as Point Break and K-19: The Widowmaker, said: "The secret to directing is collaborating and I was so, so lucky to have an incredible cast and crew. This is amazing and humbling."
She dedicated the award to never abandoning the need for a peace resolution and is hoping to repeat her success by being the first woman to win a best director Oscar.
It was a miserable night for Cameron and Avatar, a film dismissed as hyped and derivative nonsense by its detractors, or the glorious future of cinema by its fans. It did, though, win best special visual effects and best production design.
Firth won his first Bafta for his portrayal of a gay college professor breaking down after his partner dies in a car accident. Firth paid tribute to director Tom Ford, the fashion designer, who had also made him "better groomed and more fragrant".
"What Tom Ford doesn't know is I have the email telling him I could not possibly do this," Firth said. "I was about to send it when a man came to repair my fridge … so I would like to thank the fridge guy."
Many had tipped An Education to win best British film, as a consolation prize, perhaps, to best film. Instead, Andrea Arnold's working class Essex drama Fish Tank took the award for outstanding British film.
Mulligan's victory had been widely predicted. The film, based on a schoolday memoir by journalist Lynn Barber, tells how, in 1962, she was seduced by an older Bristol-driving charmer. It was a career-making performance which has resulted in the 24-year-old becoming a hot Hollywood property One of her next roles will be this spring's sequel to Wall Street in which she plays Gordon Gekko's estranged daughter.
"I really didn't expect this at all so I didn't think of anything to say," she said. "Thank you so much Bafta. I was here a year ago and I didn't imagine in a million years that this would happen. I wish I could do a speech like Colin Firth and talk about fridges, but I can't."
She said: "My brother and my dad are right up there. My mum is there. I love them. Thank you so much."
Christoph Waltz had been odds-on to win best supporting actor for his role as the unhinged Nazi "Jew hunter" in Inglourious Basterds. He called the award "beautiful and terrific." He said: "Supporting or supported? From the moment that fate dropped me in front of Quentin Tarantino everybody has supported me."
Similarly, Mo'Nique had been favourite in the best supporting actress category for her portrayal of a monstrous mother in Lee Daniels' Precious. It will be astonishing if she now fails to win the Oscar.
It was a good night too for The Young Victoria, which won for costume design and make-up & hair.
The Orange Rising Star award – chosen by the public – went to Twilight's Kristen Stewart. The first-timer award for an outstanding debut by a British writer, director or producer was won by Duncan Jones – David Bowie's son – for his space drama, Moon. Slightly overcome by emotion, he said he had tried a lot of jobs, but: "Finally, I think I've found what I love doing."
Perhaps the most zeitgeisty movie was Up in the Air, in which George Clooney plays a hatchet man who flies around the US making people redundant. It won in the best adapted screenplay category.
The arguments continue to rage about how good a year it had actually been for English language films. Some argue that the best movies came from Germany (The White Ribbon), Sweden (Let The Right One In) and France (A Prophet). The latter, a brutal, gripping prison drama, won the award for best foreign language film.
The final award, the Bafta fellowship, was presented by the new Bafta president, Prince William, to Vanessa Redgrave. Accepting her award, Redgrave said: "Oh dear, you've absolutely done me in." She also paid tribute to Prince William's father, Prince Charles, praising him for his "intelligence, humility and kindness.

'Exile' accused of plagiarism (???)

Plagiarism on the Net
you don't know the meaning of procrastination.
Post a reply
2 posts • Page 1 of 1
Plagiarism on the Net

Postby Kelvin Throop » Sun Feb 21, 2010 2:57 pm
My recent post on "Mindfulness Education" has been cut and pasted in it's entirity and posted here. I'm obviously happy to be quoted but what is the point of just repeating the entire post? Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, I suppose.

Editted to fix link
Last edited by Kelvin Throop on Sun Feb 21, 2010 4:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Beware of the superficially profound

Read "Education Watch" at http://kelvinthroop.wordpress.com/

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Kelvin Throop
Bolero

Posts: 102
Joined: Sun Oct 01, 2006 9:35 pm

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Re: Plagiarism on the Net

Postby ZackDavies » Sun Feb 21, 2010 3:56 pm
Hi Kelvin,

It looks like your link is broken. Not sure whether this is intentional (like when people post "hxxp" links to stop anti-vaxxers seeing who's linking to their site), so maybe you don't want to fix it. But if anyone else is interested, add ".com" after "blogspot" and it'll work.

That's a weird-ass "blog" - 750 posts this year, mainly videos. I can't see any coherent point to it. If it seemed like the product of a rational mind, and if they hadn't linked back to your article using links with your name in, I'd be more inclined to call it plagiarism. As it is, I think it's just spreading the word with lax attribution practice.

ZackDavies
Viennese Waltz

Posts: 220
Joined: Wed Oct 11, 2006 12:55 pm
Location: Kent


When I have stopped laughing, I shall comment on this...

Boys, boys, boys
1/ Linking back to your blog post cancels out the plagiarism accusation...
2/ I felt that it WAS an important point that you were making, so DO consider it flattery
3/ It's 'edited'
4/ 'Weird-ass' blog...one of the nicest things that anyone has ever said about 'Exile'
5/ I agree, my mind is NOT rational!
6/ Mostly videos? I think not and if someone wants to do the maths for those 750 posts we may discover the real reason why it is called the "Bad Science' forum
7/ It may not be 'coherent' but it sure looks pretty
8/ 'Lax attribution'? I think not when as I say I link back directly to your blog post


Spread the word... 
MonaXXX
PS: Anything that I write at my blog is always in grey...

Sunday, 21 February 2010

Underground Resistance - The Lightning (Acid Rain)

Cabaret Voltaire - Colours

Meanwhile...

Larkin Grimm - December 27, 2009 Knitting Factory


[photo by nyctaper]
Larkin Grimm is the subject of one of my favorite artist descriptions. Michael Gira, founder of The Swans, and with whose Young God Records Larkin is signed, described her as follows: “Larkin is a magic woman. She lives in the mountains in north Georgia. She collects bones, smooth stones, & she casts spells. She worships the moon. She is very beautiful, & her voice is like the passionate cry of a beast heard echoing across the mountains just after a tremendous thunder storm, when the air is alive with electricity. I don’t consider her folk though - she is pre folk, even pre- music. She is the sound of the eternal mother & the wrath of all women. She wears jewels, glitter, & glistening insects in her hair.”
Last night at Knitting Factory, Larkin was just a singer, albeit a special one. The Sunday night crowd was larger than expected for an early post-holiday off-night, and Larkin entertained us with stories and songs anchored by her deeply rich voice. The band included the legendary producer Tony Visconti (Bowie, TRex, Morrissey) on bass guitar. Larkin performed primarily new songs, and just one number from her most recent release Parplar.
We recorded this set with the four-microphone rig set up directly in front of the soundboard, and other than some venue sounds during quieter moments of the recording, the sound quality is quite excellent. Enjoy!
01 [introduction]
02 Paradise
03 Blond and Golden Johns
04 [banter]
05 Pool of Milk
06 [tuning/banter]
07 Paved With Leaves
08 [tuning/intro]
09 Flash and Thunder
10 [banter]
11 The Butcher
12 Dirty Mind
13 The Burglar
14 [outro/band]
Direct download of MP3 files (HERE)
FLAC's available

Flyfire Vision

HA!

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Former Secretary of State Alexander Haig Dies at 85

Some people have NO luck...

(Thanx Nick!)

Medusa

Throbbing Gristle Live Chicago 4/26/09 (complete performance)


Saturday, 20 February 2010

Emma (Facebook portrait)