Thursday, 27 May 2010

Rostik Litvak May Mix

   
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The Geotaggers' World Atlas #2: London

Floating Chords & Echoes by Northern Shore

  
Ambient Tracks by Intrusion, Echospace, Variant, Rod Modell & Brock van Wey.
Thanx to HerrB for the hint!
There are more great Deepchord/Echospace/Bvdub mixes by Northern Shore to download at
Soundcloud

Owen Freeman - New Burrough's book covers


The William Burroughs paperbacks that I illustrated earlier this year along with Naked Lunch just arrived from the printers. Because the art director liked the style of the Silky Shark print in my portfolio for the initial Naked Lunch assignment, I continued the process using a silk screen-style approach and a limited palette throughout the sketches and finals. The Soft Machine, The Ticket That Exploded, and The Place of Dead Roads all followed the same process as Naked Lunch, including two or three layers of drawn tones, which I attempted to keep in tune with the style of each book and as a set. The final layouts and text were done by Jo Walker at Harper Collins and I think they did a nice job of pulling the artwork together.

Anti Design Festival London 2010

The Oliverwho Factory - Nightlights

   

North Korea scraps South Korea military safeguard pact

New Idea Society - Quiet Prism EP

New Idea Society is Mike Law and Chris DeAngelis, along with new members Trevor Watson and Marshall Ryan.
During 2008 New Idea Society was involved in a serious accident on Germany's Autobahn while on tour - as a result, main songwriter/vocalist/guitarist Mike Law was unable to play guitar. During his recovery period, he composed a number of songs, including Iradell and They Won't Find Us, on vintage synthesizers.
These tracks, along with the debut of the brand new song Autumn You (the first release from their upcoming full-length out later in 2010), and two other guitar-based tracks, make up the Quiet Prism EP.

Quiet Prism is a collection of songs created within a time of solitude and recovery. The songs are a prelude to
the larger scope and scale of the upcoming album. Some of the songs can even be classified as solo efforts, as Mike Law attempted to work every day, mostly alone in Brooklyn's Translator Audio while waiting for bones to heal.
New Idea Society (NIS) will tour the U.S., Europe and Japan in late 2010, in support of their upcoming full-length release.
Get it

Carla Bruni Asks for a Finger Up Her Butt


Needless to say all hell has broken out at the Élysée Palace!

Still looks...

 ...like the same old shit to me...

BP Used Riskier Method to Seal Oil Well Before Blast

WTF???

Dub Gabriel - Live @ Surefire Sound Party SF

   

Many Faiths, One Truth by The Dalai Lama

  When I was a boy in Tibet, I felt that my own Buddhist religion must be the best - and that other faiths were somehow inferior. Now I see how naive I was, and how dangerous the extremes of religious intolerance can be today.

Though intolerance may be as old as religion itself, we still see vigorous signs of its virulence. In Europe, there are intense debates about newcomers wearing veils or wanting to erect minarets and episodes of violence against Muslim immigrants. Radical atheists issue blanket condemnations of those who hold to religious beliefs. In the Middle East, the flames of war are fanned by hatred of those who adhere to a different faith.


Such tensions are likely to increase as the world becomes more interconnected and cultures, peoples and religions become ever more entwined. The pressure this creates tests more than our tolerance - it demands that we promote peaceful coexistence and understanding across boundaries.


Granted, every religion has a sense of exclusivity as part of its core identity. Even so, I believe there is genuine potential for mutual understanding. While preserving faith toward one’s own tradition, one can respect, admire and appreciate other traditions.


An early eye-opener for me was my meeting with the Trappist monk Thomas Merton in India shortly before his untimely death in 1968. Merton told me he could be perfectly faithful to Christianity, yet learn in depth from other religions like Buddhism. The same is true for me as an ardent Buddhist learning from the world’s other great religions.


A main point in my discussion with Merton was how central compassion was to the message of both Christianity and Buddhism. In my readings of the New Testament, I find myself inspired by Jesus’ acts of compassion. His miracle of the loaves and fishes, his healing and his teaching are all motivated by the desire to relieve suffering.


I’m a firm believer in the power of personal contact to bridge differences, so I’ve long been drawn to dialogues with people of other religious outlooks. The focus on compassion that Merton and I observed in our two religions strikes me as a strong unifying thread among all the major faiths. And these days we need to highlight what unifies us.


Take Judaism, for instance. I first visited a synagogue in Cochin, India, in 1965, and have met with many rabbis over the years. I remember vividly the rabbi in the Netherlands who told me about the Holocaust with such intensity that we were both in tears. And I’ve learned how the Talmud and the Bible repeat the theme of compassion, as in the passage in Leviticus that admonishes, “Love your neighbor as yourself.”


In my many encounters with Hindu scholars in India, I’ve come to see the centrality of selfless compassion in Hinduism too - as expressed, for instance, in the Bhagavad Gita, which praises those who “delight in the welfare of all beings.” I’m moved by the ways this value has been expressed in the life of great beings like Mahatma Gandhi, or the lesser-known Baba Amte, who founded a leper colony not far from a Tibetan settlement in Maharashtra State in India. There he fed and sheltered lepers who were otherwise shunned. When I received my Nobel Peace Prize, I made a donation to his colony.


Compassion is equally important in Islam - and recognizing that has become crucial in the years since Sept. 11, especially in answering those who paint Islam as a militant faith. On the first anniversary of 9/11, I spoke at the National Cathedral in Washington, pleading that we not blindly follow the lead of some in the news media and let the violent acts of a few individuals define an entire religion.


Let me tell you about the Islam I know. Tibet has had an Islamic community for around 400 years, although my richest contacts with Islam have been in India, which has the world’s second-largest Muslim population. An imam in Ladakh once told me that a true Muslim should love and respect all of Allah’s creatures. And in my understanding, Islam enshrines compassion as a core spiritual principle, reflected in the very name of God, the “Compassionate and Merciful,” that appears at the beginning of virtually each chapter of the Koran.


Finding common ground among faiths can help us bridge needless divides at a time when unified action is more crucial than ever. As a species, we must embrace the oneness of humanity as we face global issues like pandemics, economic crises and ecological disaster. At that scale, our response must be as one.


Harmony among the major faiths has become an essential ingredient of peaceful coexistence in our world. From this perspective, mutual understanding among these traditions is not merely the business of religious believers - it matters for the welfare of humanity as a whole.