Friday, 5 December 2014

Blackout City


In a metropolis like London light pollution makes the night sky invisible. Only a few of the brightest stars and asterisms force their celestial light through the man made glow of the city. The night sky, one of the most beautiful of natural wonders is extinguished from view. Blackout City is an experimental timelapse film that makes the invisible, visible. It attempts to show what the night sky would look like If there were ever to be a total blackout in the South East of England on a clear, moonless, summers night.
I started shooting this project back in August 2013 and have been slowly gathering footage when conditions were right. Although each shot in this film is a composite, all footage is real. The city shots were captured during the day and processed to look like night and the night sky shots were captured from dark locations around the South of England to ensure that the stars are astronomically correct for the latitude of London. I have also processed the astro shots to be more sympathetic to what the naked eye would see in terms of saturation and detail. The internet is saturated with well-processed images of the Milky Way that show phenomenal colour that are the result of fantastic low light DSLR technology. Don’t get me wrong I love these images, I am one of the people who endeavours to create them! But in reality the Milky Way does not look like this; so in order to make this film more believable I have chosen to process the shots this way.
I first got the idea for the film when I read an article about a blackout in LA in 1994 where people called 911 reporting these strange clouds floating in the sky, those clouds where in fact the Milky Way. It made me think about how the lights from cities have made many of us lose our connection to the night sky. We live in a fast paced man-made world whereby it is all too easy for us to become disconnected from the natural world around us, isolated from what is actually real. There are many other aspects of the human condition that this film could touch upon which could make its’ intentions appear somewhat complicated, but is essence the film's agenda could not be more simple; to inspire people to get away from the city lights, go somewhere quiet on a star-filled night and simply look up.
This project is purely non-profit but I would love the opportunity take the Blackout City idea to different metropolises across the globe as each city with it's specific latitude will reveal a different sky. If anyone thinks they can help to make this happen please connect with me through the links below:
To see more of my work please visit: nicholasbuer.com
For direct enquires please mail me at: contact@nicholasbuer.com
You can connect/follow me on all the usual social media sites:
facebook.com/nicholasbuerphotography
instagram.com/nicholasbuer
twitter.com/nicholasbuer
500px.com/nicholasbuer
Main track is by The American Dollar ‘As We Float’ (Ambient)
Licensed at: theamericandollar.info/licensing
For motion control I used the Stage One Dolly System by Dynamic Perception
dynamicperception.com
© Nicholas Buer 2014

Autechre - Live@Warp25 Krakow Poland (September 20, 2014)


All new 2014 Autechre live show debuted at 25 years of Warp celebration party held in the abandoned hotel Forum in Krakow, Poland, as part of Sacrum Profanum festival.
Recorded with Zoom H2n in mid side recording mode (XY + Center microphone setup) at 44.1khz, 16bit, Stereo. Captured and processed by DSPH Sounds crew.
DSPH is a Eastern Europe based electronic arts movement, running a weekly 2-hour radio show of experimental music called "DSPH Sounds" and organizing cutting-edge audio-visual events and showcases
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Ha!


The Quiet German

Joshua Scott Albert


Rhys Chatham - Merci, Chopin


I'm getting into making music for film. But alas, for the moment I have no film score commissions on my desk, so I thought I'd make my own movie and add music to it.. I recently obtained a copy of Final Cut Pro, so I made a movie. It's a 3-minute minimalist movie, influenced, I suspect, by Michael Snow's early work, but that is for the critics to decide!
The music in this video is a rendering of a recent version of my composition, "Merci, Chopin", for four electric guitars, el. bass and drums. The sounds come from Sibelius, but the guitars ended up sounding more like a harpsichord than guitar. Oh well, never mind, you'll get the idea, anyway.
Rhys Chatham

Thursday, 4 December 2014

William S. Burroughs: Can You All Hear Me? (October Gallery London)

Including works by Brion Gysin
Liliane Lijn, Genesis Breyer P-Orridge
Shezad Dawood & Cerith Wyn Evans
4 December 2014 - 7 February 2015

Yorke & Greenwood in the studio

Via

Joel Betancourt: Katsushika Hokusai Electronic Circuit Board

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Bez: we need housing not 'sugar-coated promises'

Chrissie Hynde's advice to chick rockers or 'how I did it'

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Lucrecia Dalt - Esotro (William Basinski Remix)

The lonesome death of Eric Garner

Jeff Bridges narrates Bob Dylan's road to Big Pink and 'Basement Tapes'




NYPD cop who choked Eric Garner wasn’t indicted-but man who recorded the incident was