Friday 27 January 2012
Concepto MIX #68 FaltyDL
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Tracklist:
1. I Like You! - Arthur Russell
2. Tell Me Anything - Andy Stott
3. Roberta Jean Machine - Moodymann
4. Canticle Drawl - AFX
5. Nefarious Stranger - Theo Parrish
6. Love Is The Message (Danny Krivit Re-Edit) - MFSB
7. Corrosion Control - Bintus
8. Don't Fuck With Him/She Sleeps - FaltyDL
9. Narry - Gerry Read
10. Moonlight - Theo parrish
11. For Them Eye - Seun Kuti & Egypt 80
12. LFO (Leeds warehouse mix) - LFO
13. Shave Mister - Theo Parrish
14. Feels Like feat. Kevin JZ Prodigy - MikeQ
Via
1. I Like You! - Arthur Russell
2. Tell Me Anything - Andy Stott
3. Roberta Jean Machine - Moodymann
4. Canticle Drawl - AFX
5. Nefarious Stranger - Theo Parrish
6. Love Is The Message (Danny Krivit Re-Edit) - MFSB
7. Corrosion Control - Bintus
8. Don't Fuck With Him/She Sleeps - FaltyDL
9. Narry - Gerry Read
10. Moonlight - Theo parrish
11. For Them Eye - Seun Kuti & Egypt 80
12. LFO (Leeds warehouse mix) - LFO
13. Shave Mister - Theo Parrish
14. Feels Like feat. Kevin JZ Prodigy - MikeQ
Via
EFF EFF
What's the Internet without Downfall remix videos? Help us protect video artists: ripmixmake.org#DMCA
What's the Internet without Downfall remix videos? Help us protect video artists: ripmixmake.org
Clash of the Titans - The System Shakedown Remixes
An epic Double Vinyl journey of remixes from some of the world’s most talented producers: Zion Train, G.Corp, Marcus Visionary, Liondub, Vibronics, Victor Rice, Duibvisionist, Mungo’s Hi-Fi, Aldubb, Nate Wize, TVS,Subatomic Sound System, and Webcam Hi-Fi.
David Byrne: Interactive Guitar Pedal Art Installation
An interactive art piece consisting of a grid of 96 guitar effects pedals that are wired together, as well as a guitar and an amplifier. As people step on the different pedals they activate various effects, which multiply over one another, creating a dynamic sonic experience.
davidbyrne.com/art/guitar_pedals
davidbyrne.com/art/guitar_pedals
HA!
dangerroom Danger Room
your awesomely bad acronym of the day... Crypto-Partitioning Aware Performance Enhancing Proxy for Tactical Networks (CAPTAIN)
your awesomely bad acronym of the day... Crypto-Partitioning Aware Performance Enhancing Proxy for Tactical Networks (CAPTAIN)
dangerroom Danger Room
your awesomely bad acronym of the day (2) ...Textual Inference for Grounding Events in Space (TIGRESS)
your awesomely bad acronym of the day (2) ...Textual Inference for Grounding Events in Space (TIGRESS)
Tweets still must flow
JShahryar Josh Shahryar
Why arrest tweeps when you can simply invest $300 million in@Twitter and directly censor them? #AlWalidbinTalal
Why arrest tweeps when you can simply invest $300 million in
Tweets still must flow
Cease and Desist Notices: Sent to Twitter
European Parliament Official In Charge Of ACTA Quits, And Denounces The 'Masquerade' Behind ACTA
This is interesting. Kader Arif, the "rapporteur" for ACTA, has quit that role in disgust over the process behind getting the EU to sign onto ACTA. A rapporteur is a person "appointed by a deliberative body to investigate an issue." However, it appears his investigation of ACTA didn't make him very pleased:
Mike Masnick @'techdirt'
I want to denounce in the strongest possible manner the entire process that led to the signature of this agreement: no inclusion of civil society organisations, a lack of transparency from the start of the negotiations, repeated postponing of the signature of the text without an explanation being ever given, exclusion of the EU Parliament's demands that were expressed on several occasions in our assembly.Pretty rare to find such direct honesty in political circles. That's quite a direct and clear condemnation of the entire process. In terms of process, it will be interesting to see if this has an impact. While the EU did sign on to ACTA today, it still needs to be ratified by the European Parliament (more on that in a little while). Having Arif quit makes a pretty big statement, and hopefully makes it easier for Parliament Members to speak out loudly against ACTA... Still, this is an uphill battle. The supporters of ACTA have been working to get ACTA approved for years. To them, this is basically a done deal.
As rapporteur of this text, I have faced never-before-seen manoeuvres from the right wing of this Parliament to impose a rushed calendar before public opinion could be alerted, thus depriving the Parliament of its right to expression and of the tools at its disposal to convey citizens' legitimate demands.”
Everyone knows the ACTA agreement is problematic, whether it is its impact on civil liberties, the way it makes Internet access providers liable, its consequences on generic drugs manufacturing, or how little protection it gives to our geographical indications.
This agreement might have major consequences on citizens' lives, and still, everything is being done to prevent the European Parliament from having its say in this matter. That is why today, as I release this report for which I was in charge, I want to send a strong signal and alert the public opinion about this unacceptable situation. I will not take part in this masquerade.
Mike Masnick @'techdirt'
Poland Signs Copyright Treaty That Drew Protests
Lawmakers from the leftist Palikot's Movement cover their faces with masks as they protest against ACTA, or the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, during a parliament session, in Warsaw, Poland, Thursday, Jan. 26, 2012, after the Polish government signed the agreement. Poland's plans to sign ACTA sparked attacks on Polish government websites and street protests in several Polish cities this week. (AP Photo/Alik Keplicz)
YourAnonNews Anonymous
SIGN - Global petition to EU Parliament to stop ACTA (does not matter where you are from) | goo.gl/VqGnA | Please sign + Retweet
SIGN - Global petition to EU Parliament to stop ACTA (does not matter where you are from) | goo.gl/VqGnA | Please sign + Retweet
Thursday 26 January 2012
Picturing Nick Drake back on tour
One summer evening in the late 1970s, Michael Burdett was scavenging through a skip behind Island Records HQ in London. He was a teenager, employed as a postboy at the label, and had been given permission to hunt through all the discarded demos for tapes he could record over in the studio he was setting up at home.
An object caught his eye. "A scruffy little tape," he recalls. "On the front, in felt tip, it said 'Nick Drake' and on the back 'Cello Song'. And at the bottom were the words 'With Love' and two kisses. I knew Nick's material; he'd been dead five years. I couldn't let it go to the dump. So I took it and kept it."
Burdett didn't listen to the tape for 20 years. By then, he was a composer, writing music for adverts and TV acts such as Mr Blobby, but had taken himself off to Wales to record his own album. One day, struggling with a piano piece, he decided to distract himself by playing some of the many unlistened-to tapes he had acquired over the years. The first was that recording of Cello Song, a work that had appeared on Nick Drake's debut album, 1969's Five Leaves Left. But it did not sound like the version Burdett was familiar with. "I remember it distinctly: windows open, sound of the river coming in. As the guitar started I thought, 'That sounds different.' Then the percussion began and sounded busier. And then two cellos came in, and they played a flourish I didn't recognise. Nick started humming, and I realised I was listening to something different, something I suspected nobody had heard for a good 30 years."
The album version, produced by Joe Boyd, features Clare Lowther on cello, Danny Thompson on bass and Rocky Dzidzornu on congas, as well as Drake's distinctive guitar-playing and exquisite voice. It is at once melancholy and sublime, in its essence everything that would bring Drake acclaim and adoration in the years following his death in 1974, aged just 26.
Burdett tracked down Cally Callomon, manager of Nick Drake's estate. He played him and Robert Kirby (Drake's friend and regular strings player) the lost recording. "They thought it was a beautiful version," says Burdett, "but we were none the wiser as to where it might've come from. Though it turned out not to be Nick's handwriting."
Burdett was unsure what to do. "Copyright laws mean it's not my place to broadcast or release it," he explains. Another decade passed and, reading of Kirby's death, Burdett thought again of Cello Song. He also happened to watch Werner Herzog's 2005 film Grizzly Man, and was struck by a scene in which Herzog sits with headphones on, listening to the sound of a man being eaten by a bear. His thoughts led to the unheard Drake recording and suddenly he knew what he wanted to do: photograph people listening to it.
"For the next year and a half," he says, "I kept the camera and the recording with me wherever I went. I approached people at random and ended up photographing tattooists, homeless people, florists, mountaineers, City workers, people aged two to 96." Of the 200 people he asked, 167 agreed. "I think that is the beautiful thing about all this," he smiles. "It's not just about Nick Drake – half the people had never heard of him."
He calls his collection of photographs the Strange Face Project, a nod to the song's opening line: "Strange face/ With your eyes/ So pale and sincere." It was also a reference to the peculiar intensity that played across subjects' faces as they listened. "With four minutes 22 seconds to photograph someone," says Burdett, "I invariably found that the images were telling."
We sit in Burdett's car and look through the photographs, about to go on show at the Idea Generation gallery in London. There are famous subjects: Tom Stoppard, Noel Fielding, Billy Bragg; as well as a car park attendant at Southampton airport, a climber on a mountaintop in the north-west highlands of Scotland, and a man fishing for grayling on the River Itchen in Hampshire. At the end of the recording, Burdett would ask each person what they thought. The comic Robin Ince told him: "Listening to Nick Drake always makes me nostalgic for things that didn't actually happen to me, like standing in a wheat field in Cambridge, which I've never done."
I am listener 167 in the project. I have always regarded Drake's music as an otherworldly thing, swallow-tailed and windhovered. This version of Cello Song is a more earthly creature: richer, busier, warmer than the one I am familiar with, and in many ways more engaged with its era. It appears more psychedelic, with shades of the Beatles' Within You Without You. As I listened to the track, I stared at the ground, oblivious to the traffic, the cold wind, the snap of Burdett's camera. It is an entrancing work and, like all of Drake's material, engulfs the listener. Once it is over, I am startled – it feels less as if a song has stopped playing than as if it has been spirited away. I stand in the street, suddenly aware of the roar of the day.
Laura Barton @'The Guardian'
Strange Face: Adventures with a Lost Nick Drake Recording
♪♫ Wilco - Dawned On Me
'Dawned On Me' from Wilco's Grammy-nominated new record 'The Whole Love'. This collaboration with King Features presents the first hand-drawn Popeye cartoon in more than 30 years. Directed by Darren Romanelli.
For full gig downloads and much more visit:
Psych Explorations of the Future Heart
BONUS:
For full gig downloads and much more visit:
Psych Explorations of the Future Heart
Happy (?) Invasion Day
The weather is not looking kind to the traditional Australia Day celebration of a barbecue and beers and a day off work with your mates. Several outdoor events that were planned for our region have already been cancelled.
But as another Australia Day/Invasion Day rolls around I wonder (again) about the suitability of having January 26 as our national day of celebration.
It is the day that celebrates and commemorates the landing of the First Fleet; the day that Captain Arthur Phillip planted the English flag in the beach at Sydney Cove and declared it a colony of the British Empire.
By definition it is a divisive date as it fails to recognise that Aboriginal people had been living on this land for 40,000 years (or more) before that flag was planted.
And by being divisive rather than inclusive, it is hard for me to get excited by our national holiday. Surely January 1, 1901, the day that recognises the Federation of six separate colonies into the nation of Australia is a more appropriate date to commemorate as 'Australia Day'?
The argument against it seems to be that we'd lose a public holiday. Well what about we just add another one on May 27, the day day all Australians were recognised as citizens? Or Bradman's birthday? Any other day will do...
It may seem trivial or tokenistic to some, but as Janelle Saffin pointed out when I spoke to her about her role in the panel on Constitutional Recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, symbolism is important. It affects how we see ourselves and how we feel about ourselves.
It will now come down to the argy bargy of backroom politics to determine exactly how a referendum will be put to ensure that it will be supported by the majority of Australians.
...Aunty Bertha Kapeen also talks about the importance of the 1967 referendum on the self-esteem of Aboriginal people.
It's time we grew up as a nation and acknowledged our history. A few symbolic changes are not going to hurt anyone and might actually make us feel better about ourselves as a nation.
Via
Image
But as another Australia Day/Invasion Day rolls around I wonder (again) about the suitability of having January 26 as our national day of celebration.
It is the day that celebrates and commemorates the landing of the First Fleet; the day that Captain Arthur Phillip planted the English flag in the beach at Sydney Cove and declared it a colony of the British Empire.
By definition it is a divisive date as it fails to recognise that Aboriginal people had been living on this land for 40,000 years (or more) before that flag was planted.
And by being divisive rather than inclusive, it is hard for me to get excited by our national holiday. Surely January 1, 1901, the day that recognises the Federation of six separate colonies into the nation of Australia is a more appropriate date to commemorate as 'Australia Day'?
The argument against it seems to be that we'd lose a public holiday. Well what about we just add another one on May 27, the day day all Australians were recognised as citizens? Or Bradman's birthday? Any other day will do...
It may seem trivial or tokenistic to some, but as Janelle Saffin pointed out when I spoke to her about her role in the panel on Constitutional Recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, symbolism is important. It affects how we see ourselves and how we feel about ourselves.
It will now come down to the argy bargy of backroom politics to determine exactly how a referendum will be put to ensure that it will be supported by the majority of Australians.
...Aunty Bertha Kapeen also talks about the importance of the 1967 referendum on the self-esteem of Aboriginal people.
It's time we grew up as a nation and acknowledged our history. A few symbolic changes are not going to hurt anyone and might actually make us feel better about ourselves as a nation.
Via
Image
Children to learn why Australia Day is also known as 'Invasion Day'
Wednesday 25 January 2012
blakehounshell Blake Hounshell
Apple reeling from the impact of Obama's socialist policies http://t.co/1IYy6qcq
Apple reeling from the impact of Obama's socialist policies http://t.co/1IYy6qcq
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