Tuesday, 5 May 2009

Swine


Crikey! For the first time since anyone remembers a major news website has dropped 'swine flu' from its lead story. Our latest panic story that the broadsheets were just as eager to bore us with has, for now, apparently lost it newsworthiness. i can't wait to see what's next...

Tuesday, 7 April 2009

'Wretched'

It's nice to see at least one public figure bucking the trend of the media current. It seems most people are more than happy to (or just appear to) adopt the goldfish short memorys that are required of our TV soaps and apply them to real life. Michael Parkinson has spoken out in the Sunday Times at the glorified exit of Jade Goody saying what a lot of people are probably thinking.

The article is available here:

http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/tv_and_radio/article6048656.ece

Friday, 3 April 2009

Gaycore


Yeah, you’ve heard of Jewdriver but Black Fag or Gayrilla Biscuits? Hardcore has always been better when it doesn't take itself to seriously but where the hell did this scene come from? Gay punk cover bands that are actually pretty good, even if the lyrics get pretty graphic? Yes they’re here.

Gayrilla Biscuits

Transexpistols

Black Fag

Thursday, 2 April 2009

Obsolete?


Math from Pixelh8 on Vimeo.

I’m a big fan of Pixelh8 so when he announced these experimental shows I was excited and intrigued. Being more than adept in 8-bit sounds and computer wizardry, if anyone was up for the job, they had picked the right man. I had no real idea of what to expect but thought the mixture of classic war time computers and modern music geekery could go either way. As it happens it was a so so affair.

Unfortunately the show’s emphasis fell more on the computers leaving me feeling a bit lost in a sea computers rather than an actual music event. The entertainment formed a 7 part set of songs and visuals. The pieces were all made from recordings of clunks and clicks made by various items around Bletchly Park Computer Museum. This gave it a percussion heavy vibe that cried out for Pixelh8’s beautifully buzzing computer melodies and left it feeling somewhat sparse. Despite this the visuals were a delight and accompanied the pieces with a great mass of flickering animations that brought a lot of it to life.

While the pieces created work well as an experiment in Bletchley much of this type of thing has been done before. The visuals were particularly interesting but couldn’t quite make up for it.

Super


One of the great thing about going on holiday is a special form of shopping. The foreign supermarket is an alien place that every so often will present you with a gem.

Wednesday, 14 January 2009

- Architects

Bad things happend to bad people. YFAA have split and I am left trying to figure out what I did that was so terrible?

Bowie

I love shouting credit crunch or making other people say it without them knowing, but is it all down to David Bowie? This interesting theory came through on the CMU network:

"GLOBAL RECESSION LINKED TO DAVID BOWIE

David Bowie has been accused of causing the current recession by being one of the first to adopt a means of borrowing known as 'securitisation'.
Okay, stick with me here. As previously reported, back in 1997 Bowie realised that he was missing out on a whole load of money that was rightfully his - all the money he hadn't made yet. So, he came up with the idea of "Bowie Bonds", which saw the singer sell off the projected royalties from his first 25 albums for $55 million to the Prudential Insurance Company. So far, so good. Bowie has a big stack of cash, which he used to buy the publishing rights to his entire catalogue, and The Pru has a steady income from now until the end of time (or until sales of recorded music start to tail off, but that'll probably never happen, right?).
So successful was the idea, that artists including James Brown and The Isley Brothers followed suit. As did banks. Although the banks weren't selling on future revenues from songs they recorded, they were selling on future revenues from mortgages, which is all well and good until large amounts of people start defaulting on those loans, leaving the new owners of the loans suddenly out of pocket in a big way. As we have now seen, this leads to what is now known as a credit crunch, where people realise all of that pretend money they bought isn't actually worth anything.
So, if you're feeling the squeeze at the moment, you know who to blame. Bloody David Bowie. If it weren't for him, banks would be the ethical institutions we always knew them to be. They're just easily led astray, is all. Although, I should probably point out, it was a banker who originally suggested the bonds idea to Bowie."