Friday 25 February 2011

Skip McDonald aka Little Axe - Fireside Chat @ RBMAR


Jazz, doo-wop, gospel, rap... you name it, Skip McDonald has done it! Since playing blues on his father's guitar aged eight, Skip has been on quite a journey through music. The seventies saw a first taste of success for Skip in disco band Wood, Brass And Steel. He then buddied up with bass player Doug Wimbish, from his former band, and drummer Keith Le Blanc to form the house band at the heart of legendary label Sugar Hill. The band accompanied a host of seminal artists including Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaata and of course, Sugar Hill Gang. Following a relocation to England, Skip McDonald formed a close working relationship with Adrian Sherwood, producing projects on the On-U Sound label. He continued band duties in Tackhead combininig funk, dub, industrial music and electronica. And then he's been coming full circle with Little Axe, his solo project, which sees him return to his roots playing the blues he learned from his father and sometimes mixing it with electronica, with Adrian Sherwood to create 'gospel dub'. He continues under this moniker, whilst still collaborating with artists worldwide including Mauritian singer, Daby Toure.

Wood, Brass And Steel - Long Live Music (Kon's Edit) - BBE
Grandmaster Flash And The Furious Five - White Lines - Sugar Hill
Grandmaster Flash And The Furious Five - The Message - Sugar Hill
Sugarhill Gang - Rapper's Delight - Sugarhill
Sugarhill Gang - Apache - Sugarhill
Tackhead - Ticking Time Bomb - World Records
Tackhead & Gary Clail - Hard Left - Blanc Records
Little Axe - Hammerhead - On-U Sound
Little Axe - Ride On - Wired Recordings
Little Axe - Down To The Valley - On-U Sound
Little Axe - Mean Things - Real World Records
Little Axe - If I Had My Way - Real World Records
Daby Toure & Skip McDonald - Time Has Come - Real World Records
Little Axe - Another Friend Gone - Real World Records

13 & God - Old Age


13 & God, the collaborative project between German electro-pop outfit the Notwist and avant-rap crews Themselves and Subtle, are readying their first LP since 2005's self-titled debut LP. The record's called Own Your Ghost, and it's out May 17 via Anticon (it'll see release May 6 in Europe through the Notwist's own Alien Transistor label). You can check out a cut from that LP, "Old Age", below.
Old Age
(left click to play, right click to download)
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Thursday 24 February 2011

♪♫ Tom Morello - World Wide Rebel Songs (Live in Madison, Wisconsin)

Mark Stephens makes statement outside Belmarsh He says they will appeal #Assange #extradition
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David Allen Green
judgment – Hurtig not only deliberately misled court but also defence witnesses. Devastating criticism.
esther addley
Crown suggests 'nominal' costs of £5,000. Defence opposes. Judge: Are u sure? Cd end up costing u a lot more
Glenn Greenwald
2 key points about Assange that media reports should emphasize: (1) he's been charged with nothing: (2) trial in Sweden will occur in secret

London Court Grants Swedish Request to Extradite Assange


Stefan Wermuth/Reuters
The founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, arriving at the court in London on Thursday.
Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder, to be extradited to Sweden to face accusations of sexual abuse. His lawyers have seven days to appeal the ruling and immediately indicated that they would so.
Mr. Assange, dressed in the blue suit he has worn to previous hearings, sat impassively as the decision was read. He is currently free on bail and the court continued that, subject to conditions which were being discussed.
Judge Howard Riddle, in his ruling, said that allegations brought by two women qualified as extraditable offenses and that the warrant seeking Mr. Assange’s return to Sweden for questioning was valid.
The verdict marks a turning point in the three-month battle in the British courts and the media against what Mr. Assange, his legal team and his celebrity supporters say is a conspiracy to stop WikiLeaks and its campaign to expose government and corporate secrets.
The case has been fought against the backdrop of the group’s highest-profile operation yet — the release of a quarter of a million confidential American diplomatic cables that became the basis of articles by news organizations worldwide, including The New York Times.
WikiLeaks supporters, many of whom contend that the case against Mr. Assange is retribution for the cables’ release, have mobbed courthouses over the course of six acrimonious hearings, chanting, “We love you, Julian.” Mr. Assange was initially denied bail and briefly jailed after defying a judge’s request to provide an address.
Swedish prosecutors argued that Mr. Assange, a 39-year-old Australian, must return to Stockholm to face accusations by two women who say that he sexually abused them last August. Under Sweden’s strict sexual-crimes laws, he is accused of two counts of sexual molestation, one count of unlawful coercion and one count of rape. His accusers, both WikiLeaks volunteers, have said that their sexual encounters with Mr. Assange started out as consensual but turned nonconsensual.
Mr. Assange has said the accusations are “incredible lies,” and he has referred to Sweden as “the Saudi Arabia of feminism.”
He has also denied accusations by the Swedish authorities that he fled the country in September rather than surrender to the police; he says he left Sweden with permission. And he has denounced the leaks of two Swedish police documents that provided graphic details of the accusations.
Mr. Assange, and his lawyers have signaled their intent to take their fight to Britain’s highest courts, and even to the European Court of Human Rights. In adjourning a hearing earlier this month to make his decision, Judge Riddle said with a note of resignation that whatever he decided would “perhaps inevitably be appealed.”
The long and costly legal battle has left Mr. Assange isolated in the country house of a wealthy friend, and he is electronically monitored as a condition of his bail.
During the legal fight, many of his closest colleagues have defected from WikiLeaks, and a dozen of them formed a rival Web site, OpenLeaks. The United States Justice Department, meanwhile, has subpoenaed his Twitter account as part of an investigation that could lead to espionage charges.
In one of the frequent interviews from his friend’s house, Mr. Assange compared himself to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. In a recorded speech played this month at a rally in Melbourne, Australia, his adopted hometown, he went further, comparing the struggles of WikiLeaks to those of African-Americans who fought for equal rights in the 1950s, of protesters who sought an end to the Vietnam War in the ‘60s and of the feminist and environmental movements. “For the Internet generation,” he said, “this is our challenge, and this is our time.”
Mr. Assange is also working on his autobiography, which he has said will be worth $1.7 million in publishing deals. “I don’t want to write this book, but I have to,” he said in a December interview with The Sunday Times of London, explaining that his legal costs had reached more than $300,000. “I need to defend myself and to keep WikiLeaks afloat.”
The book, he said, will detail his “global struggle to force a new relationship between the people and their governments.” He said he hoped the book, due out in April, “will become one of the unifying documents of our generation.”
This month, in another fund-raising effort, he organized what he called a “dinner for free speech,” encouraging online supporters to donate to his defense and dine with friends while watching a video message he had recorded. On a Web site to promote the idea, where he was pictured holding a wine glass aloft, he was quoted as declaring, “There are four things that cannot be concealed for long, the sun, the moon, the truth — and dessert!”
WikiLeaks, though unable to process and release new material, has continued to post classified United States diplomatic cables from the cache of the more than 250,000 it has obtained. Recent examples have included documents concerning the opulent lifestyle of the family of former President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali of Tunisia. The documents were widely disseminated during the revolution that ousted Mr. Ben Ali and started a wave of protests in the Arab world.
In recent weeks, some of Mr. Assange’s supporters, eager to see WikiLeaks operating with its founder’s full attention, have been echoing a question asked by a judge at one of the initial hearings in the case. “If he is so keen to clear his name,” the judge, Justice Duncan Ouseley, asked in December, “what stops a voluntary return to Sweden?”
Mr. Assange told friends in Britain he feared that if he returned to Sweden he would be extradited to the United States and perhaps be detained at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, or executed. But one of his former WikiLeaks colleagues said in an interview that he thought Mr. Assange’s reason was more mundane.
The colleague, Daniel Domscheit-Berg, who is one of the OpenLeaks founders, told reporters last week that when Mr. Assange first heard about the sexual abuse allegations in late August, “he was not concerned about the United States.”
“He was very scared of going to prison in Sweden,” Mr. Domscheit-Berg said, “which he thought might happen.” Such charges carry a maximum sentence of four years and no minimum sentence.
Ravi Somaiya @'NY Times' 

Ravi Somaiya
Situation on fair trials in Sweden "more subtle and less dark" than team argued, says judge. No evidence of breach of human rights

Assange Judgement in Full (PDF)

The judicial authority in Sweden -v- Julian Paul Assange

Noam Chomsky on Reagan's Distorted Legacy, Wisconsin Protests & Obama's Activist Crackdown


Anonymous: Herd Mentality or Convergence Theory Driven?

Mark Zuckerberg Comic Book Out Now

In the Oscar-nominated movie "The Social Network", Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg is portrayed as a detached, cold and calculating internet visionary. A more balanced portrayal of Zuckerberg hits stands this week in the form of a Bluewater Productions biography comic.
"Mark Zuckerberg: Creator of Facebook," a 48-page giant-sized issue written by freelance journalist Jerome Maida and illustrated by Sal Field, is scheduled to hit newsstands, comic book stores and online venues on Wednesday.
"This is a fascinating story," says Maida. "I enjoyed researching it because it's extremely compelling. Think about it. Mark Zuckerberg is the youngest billionaire on the planet and created something that has already had a profound impact on the world. Yet hardly anyone knows much about him. It's amazing."
According to Maida, the script doesn’t shy away from the harsh reputation Zuckerberg earned as a result of his business practices and aloof public persona, but tries to give context to a complex figure.
"Rightly or wrongly, Mark dealt harshly with some people on his way to where he is today", says Maida. "As we see, he left many people feeling betrayed. I try my best to be fair here. No one is totally innocent in this story. I try to represent each of the major players' point of view."
This take on Zuckerberg’s life and career prompted production company Hayden 5 Media to option the script and create an animated film based on the comic book.
According to Todd Wiseman, President of Hayden 5, the proposed film will apply an interpolated rotoscoping technique to give the project a unique comic book aesthetic. This cross between real characters and animated surrounding was used in the movie A Scanner Darkly.
The special edition title retails for $6.99 and is available through comic book shops. To find a comic book store near you go to www.comicshoplocator.com
@Bluewater Productions'

Libya - It's Time To Intervene

Inside Libya's first free city: jubilation fails to hide deep wounds

Digital Sampling and Remix Culture: Creativity or Criminality? (w/ Hank Shocklee)

Musicians have always borrowed from others — tunings, vocal styles, distinctive phrasings. But the advent of the sampler in the 80s brought borrowing into the digital age. Today, “sampling,” or lifting a snippet of someone else’s work — anything from a horn hit to a drum beat — is mainstream. But how to credit and pay those earlier artists for their contribution is where things get thorny. How much of someone else’s work should artists be able to use? How much should they pay for it? Is copyright law stuck in the age of analog?
Straight from the archives of NPR’s Science Friday with Ira Flatow, check out Hank Shocklee Discuss Sampling & Remix Culture along with Kembrew McLeod, Associate Professor, University of Iowa & Producer of the Film Copyright Criminals; Flora Lichtman, Multimedia Editor, NPR’s Science Friday; Dean Garfield, President and CEO, Information Technology Industry Council.
Download mp3 
Listen @'Science Friday' 

Israel eyes Street View amid security, privacy fears

Among Libya's Prisoners: Interviews with Mercenaries

Return of the Class Struggle

Nearly half of Australians are anti-Muslim: study

Scott Walker, governor of Wisconsin, falls for phone prank

Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker
Scott Walker is currently embroiled in a dispute over public sector pay Photograph: Pool/REUTERS
The Republican governor at the centre of the union-busting protests in the US has been embarrassed by a prank call that he believed was from one of his billionaire backers.
On the recording of the call, which has been released online, the Republican governor of Wisconsin Scott Walker tells a caller impersonating one of the rightwing Koch brothers that he is looking forward to flying to California to celebrate with them once the battle with the unions was won, and jokes about taking a baseball bat to slug Democratic leaders.
Walker is under siege in his office in the state capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin, in a backlash against his proposed legislation to remove unions' right to collective bargaining and cut public sector workers' pay.
Ian Murphy, who calls in pretending to be David Koch, suggests planting troublemakers among the protesters, who have been peaceful through 11 successive days of demonstrations. Walker says he has thought about doing that but decided against.
The prankster says: "I'll tell you what Scott, once you crush these bastards, I'll fly you out to Cali and really show you a good time."
Walker replies: "Alright, that would be outstanding. Thanks for all the support and helping us move the cause forward. We appreciate it and we're doing the just and right thing for the right reasons and it's all about getting our freedoms back."
The Koch brothers have given millions to the Americans for Prosperity campaign group, which has previously campaigned against Barack Obama's healthcare reforms and tightening environmental controls. It is launching a major advertising campaign supporting Walker in Wisconsin.
Records for the state show that the brothers' Koch Industries was one of the largest contributors to Walker's election campaign.
Ewan MacAskill @'The Guardian' 



More on Koch Industries

Robert Fisk: Tripoli: a city in the shadow of death


Plutocracy Now: What Wisconsin Is Really About

Prescribed Amphetamines May Up Risk of Parkinson’s Disease

Emerging research suggests people who have used amphetamines such as benzedrine and dexedrine appear to be at an increased risk of developing Parkinson’s disease. Benzedrine and dexedrine are drugs often prescribed to increase wakefulness and focus for people with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and narcolepsy, a disorder that can cause excessive daytime sleepiness and sudden attacks of sleep. They are also used to treat traumatic brain injuries.
The study involved 66,348 people in northern California who had participated in the Multiphasic Health Checkup Cohort Exam between 1964 and 1973 and were evaluated again in 1995.
The average age of the participants at the start of the study was 36 years old. Of the participants, 1,154 people had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease by the end of the study.
Exposure to amphetamines was determined by two questions: one on the use of drugs for weight loss and a second question on whether people often used benzedrine or dexedrine.
Amphetamines were among the drugs commonly used for weight loss when this information was collected.
According to the study, those people who reported using benzedrine or dexedrine were nearly 60 percent more likely to develop Parkinson’s than those people who didn’t take the drugs.
There was no increased risk found for those people who used drugs for weight loss.
“If further studies confirm these findings, the potential risk of developing Parkinson’s disease from these types of amphetamines would need to be considered by doctors before prescribing these drugs as well as be incorporated into amphetamine abuse programs, including illicit use,” said study author Stephen K. Van Den Eeden, Ph.D.
Van Den Eeden said amphetamines affect the release and uptake of dopamine, the key neurotransmitter involved in Parkinson’s disease. He explained that more research needs to be completed to confirm the association and learn more about possible mechanisms.
@'PsychCentral'

The Six-Legged Meat of the Future

50 million 'environmental refugees' by 2020, experts say

John Perry Barlow
Obama: "The United States will continue to stand up for freedom." Oh, yeah? With what besides fine words?

Inside LSD


Could LSD be the next drug in your doctor's arsenal? New experiments have a few researchers believing that this trippy drug could become a pharmaceutical of the future.
Outlawed in 1966 in the US, the street drug developed a reputation as the dangerous toy of the counterculture, capable of inspiring either moments of genius or a descent into madness.
Now science is taking a fresh look into this psychedelic world, including the first human LSD trials in more than 35 years.
LSD's inventor Albert Hofmann called it medicine for the soul. The Beatles wrote songs about it. Secret military mind control experiments exploited its hallucinogenic powers.
Can it possibly enhance our brain power, expand our creativity, or cure diseases?

♪♫ Mr.B The Gentleman Rhymer - Chap-Hop History


From the album 'Flattery Not Included' LOL!

Indiana Official: "Use Live Ammunition" Against Wisconsin Protesters

UPDATE:
HA! He's gone...

Franklin De Costa – Process part 250


This mix was originally done for my friends at the Greta Cottage Workshop. They do a regular radio show on Soundart Radio, a local station from the UK. In 1999, I produced a dark ambient album that was never released. They heard it and wanted to release a special limited edition as the first release on their new sublabel, Greta Cottage Woodpile. The album was only given out to my friends. I´m kind of excited that it will finally see the public after all this time. So, the music here is a journey through contemporary electronica with a hint of the stuff I loved in the 90’s. I edited some of the tracks to make them fit better to the mix.
Note: Many of the tracks are edited in arrangement and with additional production.
(Franklin De Costa)
01. John Carpenter & Alan Howarth – Arrival At The Library
02. Darkstar – Ostkreuz
03. Emeralds – The Cycle Of Abuse
04. Cluster – Fotschi Tong
05. Actress – Maze
06. Darkstar – Videotape
07. These New Puritans – Time Xone
08. The Black Dog – Delay 9
09. Autechre – Yuop-Snook
10. Lukid – Child Of The Jago
11. Lone – The Twilight Switch
12. Teebs – Humming Birds
13. Coil – 5-Methoxy-N, N-Dimethyltryptamine: (5-MeO-DMT)
14. Hauschka – Nadelwald
15. Broken Social Scene – Never Felt Alive
16. Bvdub – The Past Disappears
17. Toro Y Moi – Fax Shadow
18. Memory Tapes – Run Out
19. Phonophani – C
20. Oneohtrix Point Never – Ouroboros
   
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America Under Attack....


...of horrible saucermen!
But with Mattel machine guns you'll be ready to save the earth!

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One Shot Not Remix : Randy Crawford & Joe Sample



Respect Yourself
Streetlife

Muammar Gaddafi: method in his 'madness'

Inside the Business of Selling Human Body Parts

Politics by Other Means

Wednesday 23 February 2011

Jon Snow
Beware: When Gaddafi calls rebels 'cockroaches', its the word Hutus used before they massacred Tutsis in Rwanda, and Nazzis used of Jews

Cleanternet

!!!


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Letters From Readers - Reverse


Download 'The Live Sessions' EP
HERE