Friday, 9 September 2011

U.S. Ambassador to Syria Responds to Critics on Facebook

Adrian Sherwood - NYC Dub Music Workshop Demo#1 (Dubspot NYC on Sep 8 2011)

(BIG thanx Joly!)

'Divine cigarettes' Hmmm!

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player
Andrew Exum
Even if al-Qaeda strikes us on Sunday, they can't change the fact that 2011 has been a really crappy year for them.

9/11 as political propaganda


In stark terms, Providing for The Common Defense highlights the impacts that ten years of hard fighting have had on America's military. In the video, Armed Services Chairman McKeon previews questions that Committee members will be asking this fall of our nation's brightest national security minds; "what if we're attacked in some other area, what is our military going to be able to do if we keep cutting it... tell me the missions we've done in the last couple of years that we won't be asked to do in the next couple of years."

Stanford Hospital Suffers Comically Stupid Patient Data Leak

Alcohol and Other Drug Infographics

The Death Star: A Pentagon Purchasing Nightmare

Jon Stewart to Host Q&A With Former Nirvana Members on Nevermind Anniversary Night

Nirvana's surviving members will spend the night of Nevermind's 20th anniversary with Jon Stewart. On September 24, "The Daily Show" host will sit down with Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl, along with Nevermind producer Butch Vig, for a two-hour Q&A session that will be broadcast live on SiriusXM Radio. Subscribers to SiriusXM can enter a contest to attend the Q&A session, and ask questions themselves. "SiriusXM Town Hall With Nirvana" will air at 8 p.m. Eastern on SiriusXM's channel 34, the aptly named Lithium channel.The broadcast follows a tribute albuma reissue and box set, and a tribute show, among other Nevermind anniversary commemorations. In fact, "SiriusXM Town Hall With Nirvana" will be only one program on the satellite radio broadcaster's all-Nirvana channel, Nevermind Radio, which will run on channel 34 from September 23 at 3 p.m. Eastern through September 28 at 12:00am Eastern. The channel will play music from throughout Nirvana's career, plus comments about the band from various celebrities. (Stephen Colbert, anyone?)
Mark Hogan @'Pitchfork'

Blair war mongering again...

Via

Tony Blair calls for regime change in Iran and Syria

Adrian Sherwood says:

“Dubstep is very important at the moment, because if music stays in some kind of realms of nostalgia, it ends up dying.”

After 9/11: airports 'wasting billions' on needless security checks for passengers

Why Nevermind is overrated


1. It's a cop-out
I guess before the death threats start pouring in and I have to undergo plastic surgery, submit myself to the witness protection scheme and relocate to Huddersfield, I should make one thing clear: Nevermind isn't a bad album. It is full of memorable hooks, perky riffs (even the ones that haven't been lifted off Rainbow or Killing Joke) and exciting galloping beats. It is, in the main, a collection of pretty grunge songs that are nice to sing along to. It has one generation-unifying and genre-codifying all time anthem/irritating student disco staple in Smells Like Teen Spirit, the truly sublime Something In The Way and the genuinely exciting Territorial Pissings. Mainly however it plays to the gallery and is something of a failure (or at the very least a cop-out). It's supposed to be a sardonic dig at mainstream, MTV and FM radio culture but it shamelessly fits very neatly into the schedules of both institutions. If it had a subversive message it must have been generally too cryptic to be understood, as it was a massive hit amongst the jockish, mainstream types that they had always defined themselves in opposition to. This happened because the album was a massive compromise made to reach a mainstream audience. And it was a compromise agreed to by a sensitive, artistic, troubled frontman after he signed to a major label record deal - something he always regretted.
Your relationship to Nevermind perhaps depends on how old you were when it came out. Anyone younger than 35 is guaranteed to have felt full impact by being introduced to it as an angst-ridden teenager. As a gateway from whatever corporate nonsense Radio1 has chosen as its token 'heavy' guitar act of any given year - Green Day, Muse, Kings of Leon et al - into the weird and wonderful world of heavy, underground, alternative, psychedelic, mind expanding rock, it still remains a rite of passage. But to anyone who had been following grunge for a few years back then, it represented nothing more than the genre's cheap ascent into the mainstream.
2. Other bands did it better 
Nirvana may have had more of an impact on the state of mainstream metal and stadium sized alternative rock in the 1990s than any other band, except perhaps Metallica, but their roots were firmly in the more obscure American post-punk underground of the 1980s. Acts such as Pixies (who they lifted their sense of high contrast quiet loud quiet dynamics from), Sonic Youth, the Butthole Surfers, The Dwarves, Big Black, Pussy Galore and Flipper were cult acts gigging relentlessly around the US in the late 1980s when bands such as Green River and Mudhoney gave a more classicist Neil Young, Sex Pistols and Black Sabbath-influenced shot in the arm to the scene. But Nirvana's success helped to partially decimate this forward-looking music, replacing it with retro bands and arena alt-rock acts.
But before all this Nirvana weren't much to write home about. Their debut Bleach does not stand up to the early output of Mudhoney. Sure, Negative Creep is a great track but it is blown clean out of the water by the monumentally unhinged swamp metal assault of Sliding In And Out Of Grace. The scene was already becoming overcrowded with so-called grunge bands like Tad, Jesus Lizard and Pearl Jam; Nirvana realised they had to step their game up if they were not to become also-rans. Frontman Kurt Cobain stopped hiding his clear gift as a pop-hook writer under a bushel, they signed to Geffen and drafted in producer Butch Vig who polished everything up to a high shine, ready for their musical ascent. It's just that Cobain had not even considered what this kind of success would entail and more importantly was simply not cut out for it, whether he wanted it or not.
3. In Utero was better 
Almost immediately, Cobain quite clearly had misgivings about Nevermind, and what he had created with it, but what was done was done. Personally, my main reason for disliking the album is not the fact that it is - relatively speaking - bland and a compromise, but that it contributed to his subsequent death.
When Kurt Cobain took his own life due to a horrific combination of bad company, bad drugs, an inability to deal with fame and untreated depression, he had really only just begun to reveal his true genius in the form of the vastly superior album In Utero. Recorded by alternative-rock hero Steve Albini, it is a document of a splintering personality, expending the last of his energy in one final creative surge. The undeniable, John Lennon-esque knack for a pop hook is still present on tracks such as Heart Shaped Box but his lyrics were next-level poetry and would be pored over for clues to what went wrong much more than his suicide note would be. But nudging up to this and All Apologies were Radio Friendly Unit Shifter, Scentless Apprentice and Milk It - primal screams of rage emitted too late to do him any use. Ironically, they do reveal to us in a very visceral manner exactly how he felt himself about the pop polish of Nevermind.
4. Do you really need the box-set?
The thing is – it doesn't matter what I think about Nevermind. You almost certainly already have it. And my real point is: it's not that good that you need to buy it all over again. The really sad thing is, if he was around to see this dead-eyed, late capitalist, mercenary squeezing of every last red cent out of his band's reputation and fan base in the form of utterly unnecessary reissues, Cobain would probably pull the trigger all over again. If you genuinely feel you love this band, don't buy the Nevermind reissue. Instead try exploring the back catalogue of one of the many bands Kurt Cobain obsessed over such as Jesus Lizard, The Raincoats, The Meat Puppets, The Vaselines, Joy Division, Pixies, The Butthole Surfers, Earth, Bikini Kill, The Melvins or Daniel Johnson. Or at the very, very least dig out your copy of In Utero.
John Doran @'Virgin Media'
My thoughts exactly!

BBC World Service to sign funding deal with US state department

The ACLU on Obama and core liberties