Monday, 17 May 2010
Havana Cultura Remixed Podcast with Gilles Peterson
It was two years ago that Gilles visited Cuba for the first time on a reconnaissance mission to check out the new generation of Havana-based artists. Suitably impressed, he was back within the year for a 5-day session at the legendary Egrem Studios with Roberto Fonseca and his superb band. Revelling in his role as executive producer, it was a hot, sweaty, intense session but a fruitful one nonetheless.
We released those tracks on an album entitled 'Gilles Peterson presents Havana Cultura: New Cuba Sound', and with GP living as much in the electronic/dance scene as in the jazz world, the decision to commission remixes of these session tracks was an easy one. Consolidating the numerous parts was by no means as straightforward, nor indeed was settling on our preferred remixers to coax the spirit of the Egrem session into the club. In the end, we settled on a squad of big-hitting producers that we trusted to do justice to the original jams: the likes of Louie Vega, MJ Cole, 4hero, Carl Cox, Rainer Trüby, Gotan Project’s Philippe Cohen Solal, Seiji, Michel Cleis and Mocky. All veterans of the Worldwide underground and all equipped with the skills and experience to flip Havana Cultura onto a another level. And of course, in order to maximise the Cuban flavour, we cut DJ Wichy and Doble Filo loose on their favourites from the album, with awesome results.
CD02 in the Havana Cultura Remixed package boasts a bonus DJ mix courtesy of Gilles himself that neatly weaves together the disparate threads that make up a typical Peterson DJ set.
The tracks featured here are:
1. Roforofo Fight (Louie Vega Remix)
2. Chekere Son (Alex Patchwork Remix)
3. Rezando (Michel Cleis Remix)
4. La Revolucion del Cuerpo (Skinner's Owiney Sigoma Mix)
5. Afrodisia (Rainer Trueby Remix)
6. Lagrimas de Soledad (No Existen Palabras) (d'Wala Riddimix)
7. Think Twice (4hero Remix feat. Danay & Carina)
2. Chekere Son (Alex Patchwork Remix)
3. Rezando (Michel Cleis Remix)
4. La Revolucion del Cuerpo (Skinner's Owiney Sigoma Mix)
5. Afrodisia (Rainer Trueby Remix)
6. Lagrimas de Soledad (No Existen Palabras) (d'Wala Riddimix)
7. Think Twice (4hero Remix feat. Danay & Carina)
The album 'Gilles Peterson presents Havana Cultura: Remixed' is released on 7th June 2010 via Brownswood Recordings. Watch out for two very special 12"s too:
EP1 featuring:
Rezando (Michel Cleis Extended Remix)
Chekere Son (Seiji Rerub)
La Revolucion del Cuerpo (Skinner's Owiney Sigoma Mix)
Rezando (Michel Cleis Extended Remix)
Chekere Son (Seiji Rerub)
La Revolucion del Cuerpo (Skinner's Owiney Sigoma Mix)
EP2 featuring:
Roforofo Fight - The Louie Vega Mixes
Louie Vega's EOL Mix
Louie Vega Remix
Louie Vega Remix Instrumental
Bonus Beats
Roforofo Fight - The Louie Vega Mixes
Louie Vega's EOL Mix
Louie Vega Remix
Louie Vega Remix Instrumental
Bonus Beats
Released by: Brownswood Recordings
Release/catalogue number: BWOOD053CD
Release date: Jun 7, 2010
Release/catalogue number: BWOOD053CD
Release date: Jun 7, 2010
Get well soon...
The Royal College of Psychiatrists is selling a brand new range of 'Get well soon' cards designed specifically for people who are unwell with mental ill health. These cards have been designed in collaboration with service users, carers, psychiatrists and other mental health professionals.
The cards come in two striking and colourful designs. Inside the greeting reads:
"Thinking of you at this time. Hope things improve soon."
Research shows that people who are unwell with mental problems receive far fewer cards or messages of support than people with physical health problems, but a College survey shows that 8 out 10 service users say that receiving a 'Get well' card would improve their recovery.
The Pirate Bay Goes Down Following Legal Pressure
The Pirate Bay is suffering some temporary downtime as their bandwidth provider has stopped passing through traffic. A week ago, Hollywood got an injunction to effectively shut down the Pirate Bay by threatening its provider with huge fines. The Pirate Bay team is currently working on a solution.
The injunction, which was granted without an oral hearing, stated that CB3ROB and Managing Director Sven Olaf Kamphuis were now prohibited from connecting The Pirate Bay website and its servers to the Internet.
yesterday Kamphuis officially confirmed receiving the injunction and has decided to stop routing The Pirate Bay’s traffic until his lawyers have carefully read and reviewed the legal documents. This decision has resulted in downtime for the world’s largest BitTorrent site.
A Pirate Bay insider told TorrentFreak that they are not planning to wait for a decision from the Cyberbunker team, and that they’ve already set the backup process in motion which will bring the site back online. The Pirate Bay’s servers are untouched and getting the site up and running only requires the routing to go through another provider.
It may take several hours before this process has been completed and before all ISPs see the new AS-path. TorrentFreak was assured, however, that things will return to normal as soon as possible.
Ever since The Pirate Bay’s servers were raided back in 2006, the operators of the site have taken extreme measures to ensure that there are proper backup mechanisms in place and that the locations of the servers are well concealed. Where the servers are actually located remains a mystery.
@'TorrentFreak'
Also
The jurisdiction of the German courts over CB3ROB's servers is also questionable. Although Kamphuis's company is based in Berlin, it is very much linked to the Cyberbunker server operation which is actually based in the Netherlands. Although the Hamburg court can fine and try to imprison Kamphuis, it is likely the Bay is actually physically hosted in the Netherlands, out of the reach of any German judges if they decided to order servers be seized.
Even if the Dutch courts were willing to make such orders, any legal action involving the Cyberbunker set up would be complicated, mainly because the owner of the former NATO bunker in which the firm's servers are stored has declared the site an independent state not under Dutch jurisdiction, I think on the basis that the Netherlands never formally repatriated the site after it stopped being used by NATO.
Cyberbunker's owner Herman Johan Xennt says he is King of the site, while the aforementioned Kamphuis is listed as the 'country's' Minister Of Foreign Affairs & Telecommunications. While the independence of the site is a bit of a fantasy, it would mean any legal action against the server firm through the Dutch courts would touch on constitutional as well as copyright issues. And given Cyberbunker's staff-list-come-government also includes a Minister Of Warfare, it might be that any attempt to raid the server site could turn violent.
All of which is familiar territory for those who have been following the Bay story closely. In 2007, the then top team at the Bay looked into buying Sealand, the former military platform off the British coast of unclear constitutional status, with the idea of basing the piracy service there, putting it outside the jurisdiction of any courts.
@'CMU'
Also
The jurisdiction of the German courts over CB3ROB's servers is also questionable. Although Kamphuis's company is based in Berlin, it is very much linked to the Cyberbunker server operation which is actually based in the Netherlands. Although the Hamburg court can fine and try to imprison Kamphuis, it is likely the Bay is actually physically hosted in the Netherlands, out of the reach of any German judges if they decided to order servers be seized.
Even if the Dutch courts were willing to make such orders, any legal action involving the Cyberbunker set up would be complicated, mainly because the owner of the former NATO bunker in which the firm's servers are stored has declared the site an independent state not under Dutch jurisdiction, I think on the basis that the Netherlands never formally repatriated the site after it stopped being used by NATO.
Cyberbunker's owner Herman Johan Xennt says he is King of the site, while the aforementioned Kamphuis is listed as the 'country's' Minister Of Foreign Affairs & Telecommunications. While the independence of the site is a bit of a fantasy, it would mean any legal action against the server firm through the Dutch courts would touch on constitutional as well as copyright issues. And given Cyberbunker's staff-list-come-government also includes a Minister Of Warfare, it might be that any attempt to raid the server site could turn violent.
All of which is familiar territory for those who have been following the Bay story closely. In 2007, the then top team at the Bay looked into buying Sealand, the former military platform off the British coast of unclear constitutional status, with the idea of basing the piracy service there, putting it outside the jurisdiction of any courts.
@'CMU'
Dude saves New York, makes sure no one forgets...
One can never be too ready for the moment when opportunity knocks on one's door.
Times Square vendor Duane Jackson, the handbag salesman who helped thwart the May 1 car-bombing, is peddling T-shirts commemorating his 15 minutes of fame.
"My wife came up with the design, and I think they just send the message to be vigilant and keep your eyes open," Jackson, 58, said after putting the shirts on sale Friday.
The T-shirts feature a picture of Jackson in front of an American flag, with the words "I saw something ... so I said something."
Beneath his picture, the shirt reads "Duane Jackson, Times Square, New York City, May 1, 2010."
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