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#carry on art remix 2022
excalisbury · 1 year
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@coartremix
Happy Carry On Art Remix, friends! I had the honor of remixing one bit of @letraspal's domestic snowbaz art series!
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Look at how cute they all are!! I love Annie's art in general (I think I've remixed or been inspired by her art a few times outside of official events) and this art was simply too cute!
So I decided to draw Sophie and Petra being Simon's shoes and Swithin and Baz walking in to investigate the mischief. My brother and I used to love doing this to our dad and make him walk around with two full children clinging to his feet. I can tell you from experience as a teen babysitter that it's very tiring.
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the14yearjourney · 2 months
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just wanted to say that I love your comic and the way you remix "The journey to the west". The drawings are incredible and the story captivating! I really enjoyed reading it and I hope that other readers feel the same joy as me in reading it :3
But I also have a few questions...
Why the name "The 14 year journey"?
What made you want to make this comic?
Are you planning to redo the whole book?
And do you intend or would like to make a living from your comic?
Thank you so much for your interest in my story! It’s been a blast to make so far!
1. In the beginning this story was gonna be really small, so I did some quick research on how long the journey lasted in the original and Google gave me the answer of 14 years. So I ended up just taking that and running with it. In hindsight I shoulda done more research but I like how it ended up ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
2. In the summer of 2022 I had literally nothing to do, and a friend recommended I watch Monkie Kid to pass the time. I watched it all in two days and quickly bought and devoured the book it was based on. I had heard some of the Monkey King and Journey to the West myths before, but never really paid attention to them till then.
As I was reading the book I started imagining major scenes in a comic format and decided to make a short collection of comics about those scenes. As I remade and scrapped designs and formats it evolved into me adapting the story into my own thing, instead of just remaking it.
3. Yes, I have plans for long standing growth and plot points for the characters that go from chapter 1 to 100 of the original story.
I was originally just going to adapt Wukong’s portions, but having gotten carried away I’m now too entranced and in love with the story I’ve made and I want to adapt the whole thing now in my own way.
4. That’s the dream, it’s a hard one to attain and even harder since I have to devote time to college right now. But if I could move to creating this comic full and have art be my job I would take it in a heartbeat.
I’m planning and thinking of ways to possibly get it to that point, but I won’t be enacting them until I’ve finished the first volume, that’s when the story really starts ;]
Thank you for your questions!!
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cyarskaren52 · 8 months
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Jack Harlow Knows What He Wants. And Where He Stands.
On the heels of his first solo No. 1 hit, the 24-year-old rapper is releasing “Come Home the Kids Miss You,” an album that appeals to the vastly different corners of his fan base.
https://web.archive.org/web/20220507003259im_/https://static01.nyt.com/images/2022/05/08/arts/08HARLOW1/08HARLOW1-superJumbo.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp
ATLANTA — Last June, on the red carpet at the BET Awards, Jack Harlow finished up an interview and noticed that the rapper Saweetie was nearby. He had appeared on a remix of her hit “Tap In,” but the two hadn’t yet met in person. And so he strolled up, tilted his body slightly in her direction, smoothly extended his hand and said hello.
What unfolded for the next 20 seconds was a rather epic tug-of-flirt, his charm bumping up against her arched eyebrow.
“I was like, that wasn’t the interaction I was hoping it would be,” Harlow said on a Thursday evening late last month at the unflashily sleek Generation Now Studios. “At the time, though, I was like, I hope that don’t go on the internet.”
It very much did. The playful face-off had been captured by a camera from the gossip site The Shade Room, and the video spread quickly. It’s prominently included in a fan-assembled YouTube compilationtitled “jack harlow being a natural flirt for 5 mins straight” that currently has over 6.6 million views. “My compilations used to be ‘Jack Harlow being sus,’” he said with a big smile, using a slang term for awkward or lame. “It’s crazy how the narrative has changed.”
Whether or not Harlow, now 24, was flirting (“Sometimes I’ll just be talking to people and people think I’m flirting,” he said. “I think I carry a warmth”), the frisky moment ended up becoming one of the defining documents of his rapid ascent.
“Everything shifted after that,” he said. “I tell people that was like a hit song.”
Harlow has had a few of those as well: the effervescent “Whats Poppin,” which became a hugely trafficked meme on TikTok in 2020; a cheeky guest turn on Lil Nas X’s “Industry Baby,” which went to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 last year; and the Fergie-sampling “First Class,” which recently became Harlow’s first solo No. 1.
On Friday he released “Come Home the Kids Miss You,” his second major-label album (Harlow is signed to Generation Now’s joint venture with Atlantic). It’s full of sumptuous thumpers about the disorienting spin of new stardom, becoming an object of craving and good old-fashioned throne-taking ambition. Harlow is a notably adept technical rapper, cocksure and also sometimes witty; some of his earliest breakout moments were punch-line-packed radio freestyles. But Harlow — a commercially successful white rapper, still a rare thing in hip-hop — is craving centrist hip-hop acclaim, not a connoisseur’s classic.
“I’m looking to get away from rapping in a way where people can marvel at it and more something we can all enjoy together,” he said.
He has also become an object of fascination for more than his music, as the Saweetie clip encapsulated. To watch Harlow’s climb is to see the many ways, most of them not on record, in which a white rapper can demonstrate comfort in — and ultimately be embraced by — a Black genre.
Drake posted casual footage of a Turks and Caicos vacation with Harlow on his Instagram, crowing, “Shorty, don’t try and hit my phone now ’cause you see I’m chilling with Jack.” When Harlow posted an awkward video of himself rapping as an 11-year-old, Kendrick Lamar, who hadn’t clicked to favorite a tweet in two years, emerged to smash the like button. The Louisville rapper EST Gee told a story on the No Jumper podcast about how the local police had attempted to dissuade Harlow from working with him, but Harlow disregarded them.
These informal interactions have been crucial to Harlow’s fluid path to hip-hop’s top tier, and are an implicit rejoinder to earlier generations of white rappers who drew incessant attention to their whiteness, often in ways that felt compensatory, or penitent.
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“Even though I haven’t lived through all those generations, I’m aware of and I’ve been able to reflect on them,” he added.
More broadly, skilled white rap stars aren’t as novel as they were in the Eminem era, which automatically dims the spotlight on Harlow slightly. And also the genre is as broad and as street-immediate as it’s ever been in the mainstream — Black innovation remains at the forefront.
Harlow, who was born and raised in Louisville, Ky., has been studying for this moment for more than a decade. A 2017 profile in Louisville Magazine relates a story of how, at 12, he asked his mother how to become the best rapper in the world. She told him he’d need 10,000 hours of practice, after the rule popularized by Malcolm Gladwell. He began self-releasing music in short order.
Local success led to meetings with management companies and record labels when he was still a high school freshman, though nothing came to fruition. Instead, he steadily released albums that were sharp-tongued and self-awarely nerdy. He grew up in the Highlands — a neighborhood that was “very accepting, diverse, a place that you can walk around and not have to look over your shoulder.” But he was also in contact with artists and producers from other neighborhoods, and sought to cultivate audiences in both white and Black Louisville.
Even though the city is not a nationally acknowledged musical hotbed, Harlow hears a through line of smooth-talking between him, EST Gee and the R&B star Bryson Tiller. The city’s music, he said, “has this silk to it.”
He remains connected to his hometown. He recently bought an apartment there, in a part of town better known for residents in their golden years: “I want the same thing as them — peace and quiet.”
In the wake of the success of “Whats Poppin,” Harlow has had a whirlwind couple of years. He’s starred in a Tommy Hilfiger campaign. Been slimed at the Kids’ Choice Awards. Gobbled a biscuit in a KFC promotional spot. Attended the Met Gala, twice. Scored the role of Billy Hoyle in the remake of “White Men Can’t Jump” despite having no acting experience. Sat courtside during the N.B.A. playoffs, baffling two referees, who were caught on microphone wondering who he was. Rapped on a remix of one of Eminem’s songs. Been nominated for three Grammys, and performed at this year’s ceremony, though forced to censor a particularly bawdy lyric.Harlow and Lil Nas X performing at the Grammys in April.Emma Mcintyre/Getty Images For The Recording Academy
He was also bleeped on the Grammys preshow for expressing support for gay participation in hip-hop while using emphatic cursing. Harlow wants to be an ally for inclusion: “I wouldn’t have cussed if I knew it was on television,” he said. “I want people to hear me.”
Like many emerging pop stars, he has a devoted online fan base. One particularly devoted account, @jackharlowmemes, captures many of Harlow’s high points and also some of his awkward ones. It also sometimes catalogs one of the more well-documentedand obsessed-over parts of Harlow’s fame: his appeal to Black women, captured in umpteen passionate TikTok videos and tweets over the last two years. (Sample caption: “Why Does Jack Harlow Have a Hold on BW?”)
“I’ve loved Black women since I was young, so it doesn’t feel foreign to me,” said Harlow, who often casts Black women as romantic interests in his videos. “And it doesn’t feel like this weird phenomenon. It just feels like something that’s now happening on a mass scale.”
“I’ve had relationships with Black women. So it would feel strange to me if it wasn’t the case a little bit,” he added. “Nobody in my inner circle is like, ‘Damn, Black girls like you, bro’ — you know what I’m saying? Because my whole inner circle loves Black women, and are constantly around Black women.”
In the summer of 2020, Harlow participated in the protests following the police killing of Breonna Taylor in Louisville. His attendance garnered significant attention online. His growing profile, along with the public embrace of his Black female audience, he said, “has heightened my awareness of my responsibility to protect them, and just being thoughtful for the position they might be in versus white women.”
There is also the matter of becoming a heartthrob. Harlow is tall — 6-foot-3 — and telegraphs bodily ease. He steps lightly, smoothly. On this day he was dressed in all black — tight mock-neck T-shirt, leather pants — with white New Balance 550s. (He is a brand ambassador for the sneaker company.) On display in the lounge nearby were some boxes of promotional popcorn in the style of Orville Redenbacher, but instead with photos of Harlow, back in his pre-dreamboat ringlet-hair era.
Navigating this aspect of fame is still new to Harlow. “It’s made me a lot more vain,” he said. “It’s probably made me a little more insecure just because, people could tell, I didn’t used to care how I looked. I think it’s what beautiful girls go through, you know what I’m saying? When they know the world thinks they’re beautiful, they see what isn’t beautiful. They want to be perfect. I wouldn’t say I’m there, but I’m conscious.”
Suavity is the primary lens through which Harlow thinks about how his music should sound: “I always think about if I was in the car and the girl I had a crush on was in the shotgun and I had to play a song, would I be proud to play the song?”
“Come Home,” primarily produced by Harlow with Angel (BabeTruth) Lopez and Rogét Chahayed, deliberately straddles constituencies — fans who clamor for his intricate rapping and clever punch lines, and fans who clamor for his beard and smile. Emblematic of this approach is “Dua Lipa” — essentially an up-tempo arena trap song. It’s not a song about Dua Lipa (nor does she appear on it), but one that uses her name as a way of catching the attention of curious pop listeners.“I’m looking to get away from rapping in a way where people can marvel at it and more something we can all enjoy together,” Harlow said.Luisa Opalesky for The New York Times
“And those people are going to make it so big that the rap fan is going to be embarrassed to say he snapped on that,” Harlow said, laughing. “Even though I objectively snapped on that.”
“First Class,” which set the tempo for this album’s release, can be read multiple ways. On the one hand, the beginning is essentially a hyperengineered TikTok trend, a sample of Fergie’s “Glamorous” that lends itself to phone-screen-friendly choreography. But get past that and the song’s verses are packed with internal rhymes and tensions. And “Nail Tech,” which takes its name from the modern parlance for a manicurist, is among the tougher songs on the album, dexterous enough to make Kanye West post that Harlow was among the “Top 5 out right now.”
In many ways, West’s “808s & Heartbreak” and the Drake innovations that followed set a template for Harlow. But when he worked with Drake on a song for this album, “Churchill Downs,” he opted not for a melodic, pop-oriented song, but rather an intense rapfest: “I thought that restraint would be refreshing. Just us showing our love for the craft.”
Harlow remains close to Private Garden, a crew of rappers and producers from Louisville that he’s been around for years. (Some members contributed production to the new album.) But he is the breakout star, and with that attention comes accountability and influence. On “Baxter Avenue,” the contemplative closing track from Harlow’s 2020 major-label album “Thats What They All Say,” he addresses the circumstance with an earnest humility and a light dash of anxiety, describing his awareness of what he has — and doesn’t have — access to as a white man in rap, as well as what responsibilities that role comes with.
“Especially where I’m from, you know, Black people haven’t had a lot of chances,” Harlow said. “I think people have waited for me to, like, garner all this and just take off and be larger than life and come back and be like, ‘Y’all, look how massive I am! Ain’t you proud?’”
But Harlow doesn’t want to separate from the community that raised him: “What people really need and want to see is like, ‘Come with me.’ It’s how many opportunities can you create? How many people can you put in position?”
With that as his goal, Harlow long ago decided that being musically bashful wouldn’t serve his ultimate ends. “My competitive spirit is what is so hip-hop about me,” he said.
“I feel like any respect I’m earning is because people can see I love this. I love this like a kid that really grew up on hip-hop, that isn’t looking at this as like the cool trend, like this is a cool way to get famous,” he said. “I really want to play.”
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joeonmusic · 2 years
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Mirror Neuron Generator - out tomorrow
On Tuesday I did a Listening Party for my new album with an exclusive first listen via soundcloud for those who took part. Thanks to In Your Ears Music Radio for hosting it and doing such a fantastic job of promoting unsigned artists like me. 
With the album coming out tomorrow, I thought I’d share those tweets here for anyone listening to get the commentary:
#SummerSessions The first song on the album was also the first single. 100 Doors bridges this album with the previous one quite well because although it’s got a disco feel, it has some guitar. The arrangement is quite sparse, but I've been told it's also quite catchy.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions 100 Doors is based on one of the most famous prophetesses of ancient legend, but also our desire to have someone to tell us what will happen in the future, especially when you’re going through dark times and want easy answers.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions I’m particularly proud of this guitar solo. I was kind of having a break from that instrument on this album, but sometimes it really does add something special.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions track two is called Inner Spaceman and lyrically is about having to deal with what’s going on in your head when you’re own your own and probably shouldn’t be.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions It started as an instrumental track called Barren thoughtlands and the music conjured this idea of desolate wastelands, but then with an element of seeking a way out and some brighter spots.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Track three The haunted everything is about the slender man. This is a much more modern theme than most of mine, but I love the way it’s a mixture of folklore and internet trickery.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Musically, it’s influenced by the trance techno I listened to a lot in the ‘90s, but also Transglobal Underground and that kind of tribal storytelling around the campfire. It also started out as an instrumental track, which was called "The trail leads upwards".
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Track four is Inquisitor, which you’ve guessed it is about the Spanish Inquisition (or the man who led it - Tomas De Torquemada), which is something nobody expects on an album, right?
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Musically, it’s quite influenced by trip hop - obviously the theme is very dark and I even get into a bit of spoken word, rather than singing, which is something I’m not overly comfortable with. There's more of that on one of the extra Bandcamp tracks, though!
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Track 5 and you finally get to hear what Trace sounded like before the @invisibleSqrl got his paws on it. He didn’t keep much of the music, as you can hear, but I love what he did with it. The remixer's job is to transform a song, and he certainly did it.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Despite that, there are still things I love about the original. I am quite proud of the string part that I wrote on this and some of the vocal harmonies. It's a song about the origins of art.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Track 6 is Forgiveness Powder, which was the last single to come out, but has surpassed the first two in terms of streams. My mate in Russia mixed and mastered it and I love what he did.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions The theme is pretty dark, as usual. A woman called Mary Blandy was tricked by her lover into poisoning her dad because he wanted the dowry for marrying her. Not what you'd expect from a track with that kind of backing, but the speed suggests getting carried away.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions I like the description that @SharmanSomerset gave it: “It’s like Blur and Goldie had a baby”.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Track 7 is another disco-influenced song called Enheduanna. I kind of had the idea that this would be a Boney M style anthem about an Ancient Egyptian priestess - you tell me if that's what it sounds like.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions I'm not kidding myself that it will reach that level of success (huge hit), but it’s not as dark as the other songs and is supposed to be a bit about girl power and drama!
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Track 8 is probably the outlier on the album. It’s the slowest song, in 6/8 time, and has been compared to a song from avant-garde musical theatre, although I was thinking jazz/torch song.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Track 8 is probably the outlier on the album. It’s the slowest song, in 6/8 time, and has been compared to a song from avant-garde musical theatre, although I was thinking jazz/torch song.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Mass Exodus is the only track with someone else playing. @mikeyj_music added a cello part over one part of the song, although it’s a little bit low in the mix. On the last album, @JoeAdhemar actually did a lot more than produce! He's a very talented musician!
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions It’s a very tragic story about the murder of Hypatia of Alexandria by an angry mob whipped up by religious fervour. It led to the collapse of a beautiful, cultured and civilised city and I see many parallels in it.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Track 9 is a more positive song. Calypso through the oceans is about the French explorer Jacques Cousteau and how he transformed people’s understanding of life under the sea.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions I think it’s important to highlight heroes as well as villains. This song has a bit of a baggy feel to it for me, taking influences from Manchester bands without copying anything too closely.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions The final song on the album is called This is not a good idea. It’s another cheery one!
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions It focuses on childhood fears of nuclear bombs and the dread that everyone’s now so obsessed with their individual pleasures that they can’t be arsed to leave the world habitable for our children. On days this hot with many places in Europe burning, it's quite apt
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions When @3LittleWolves1 listened to this final track Paul suggested I should do a shorter radio edit to get airplay, but I like the epic 5 minutes and the space it has.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Thanks for taking the time to listen to my album. Please buy a copy from Bandcamp if you can. It’s got 3 totally exclusive extra tracks, plus the @InvisibleSqrl remix of Trace and a lyric book.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions I'm really proud of this album. Thanks to Rob of @palstar_records for mixing and mastering 9 tracks. I know it has its imperfections, but that's just going to be part of what I do unless I suddenly get rich or sell hundreds of copies, so I can afford a producer.
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions If you haven't checked out my previous album and want to hear what I sound like with a brilliant producer (@JoeAdhemar) working to make the songs more polished/better formed, listen/buy it here: https://t.co/1zLeCFIH4P
— Joe Peacock (@joe_peacock) July 19, 2022
#SummerSessions Great album that by @joe_peacock He really is trying something different with his music n should be applauded for being so brave... Nice to read the Stories behind the songs 👍👍👍👍🎧🎧🎧 ..
— Moby T and The Ukraine People 🇺🇦 (@Mobytanner) July 19, 2022
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kolajmag · 2 years
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COLLAGE ON VIEW
What a Wonderful World
Luis Cruz Azaceta at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA through 24 July 2022. The exhibition features over 50 works from 1975 to 2021 that trace the formal and conceptual development of Cuban-American visual artist Luis Cruz Azaceta. After emigrating to the US in 1960, Azaceta found his voice and identity through art. In the 1970s, Azaceta began using the self-portrait as a way to both explore his own identity and to understand the pain of others. By placing himself as a victim in the compositions, he expressed both solidarity and empathy–a process that he has carried throughout his career. His work preceded and informed the Neo-Expressionist movement of the 1980s. Since moving to New Orleans in 1992, his work has moved towards abstraction, exploring the human condition through metaphorical representations of current events. MORE
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Kolaj Magazine, a full color, print magazine, exists to show how the world of collage is rich, layered, and thick with complexity. By remixing history and culture, collage artists forge new thinking. To understand collage is to reshape one's thinking of art history and redefine the canon of visual culture that informs the present.
SUBSCRIBE | CURRENT ISSUE | GET A COPY
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20 April 2022: Staying Out Late with Beat Rodeo, Beat Rodeo. (1985 US IRS edition of 1984 German Zensor release)
I wanted this item because my brother got me hot to trot for all things Steve Almaas after giving me Almaas’s 2021 solo album Everywhere You’ve Been for Christmas last year. His purchase of the Almaas album came after an out-of-nowhere revisiting of Beat Rodeo’s debut album, which he’d owned since it was new. This was the band that Minneapolis musician Almaas fronted after spending time in a variety of groups that I discuss on another post here about The Crackers, a one-off band that he fronted.
Proving that US record companies cannot resist fiddling with anything, the IRS label—once the premier US indie label—took Beat Rodeo’s debut, which originally came out in Germany the year prior, and turned it into something quite different than its original guise. The cover art is different, the track sequence is different, and the credits show a different line-up than is credited on the original version (that last part isn’t IRS’s fault; band line-ups do change). I’ve only heard the US version once, but I swear it is significantly remixed, and at times it almost seems like there’s been new bits added in. I need to hear the two versions back to back. 
Above are the front cover, hype sticker (this is a promo copy, so it’s directly on the jacket), and back cover. Note that the hype sticker says “Produced by Richard Gottehrer.” The original version of the album is produced by Don Dixon and Dan Amis. According to credits on the IRS version, Gottehrer only produced the two songs mentioned on the hype sticker, but he’s not mentioned at all on the German version, which does contain both songs, once again suggesting the fiddling about goes well beyond resequencing and new cover art. Whatever the case, by giving them their own hype sticker, IRS was obviously banking on the Gottehrer tinkerings to carry this album.
I always liked the clear inner sleeves used by IRS; before they did it, I’d never seen a clear sleeve like this used to advertise merchandise. Here’s a view of the whole thing, followed by some details of the ads.
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I always just chalked it up to bohemian eccentricity that IRS offered posters of an Ed Colver photograph of a bunch of people’s motorcycle boots. Even IRS acknowledges it’s an odd thing, saying “Why is this for sale?” It wasn’t until much later in life that I learned Oki Dogs is the name of a Los Angeles hot-dog stand. Back in the mid-’80s I assumed it was some sort of motorcycle-gang reference.
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Another oddity on IRS sleeves was a videotape by The Police. They weren’t on IRS! Those in the know are aware, though, that the label was started by Police drummer Stewart Copeland’s brother Miles, and IRS was distributed for a period of time by A&M Records, The Police’s label.
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Next we have side one’s label. I remember vividly when IRS switched from silver-and-maroon labels to this bland brown design. I first saw it on R.E.M.’s Fables of the Reconstruction.
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Having shown you the IRS version of the album, let me show some photos of the German original. My brother gave this to me at Christmas 2021 along with Almaas’s new solo album. Neither have appeared on this page before, because I got so behind on posting here that I skipped more than a year of purchases in order to get caught up on January 1 of the current year.
First are the front and back covers. IRS definitely wanted to tone down the cowpoke imagery of the Zensor original for a more moody, new-wave or even hard rock vibe.
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Here is the inner sleeve. The other side is plain white. It’s a nice sleeve that has a built-in sort of poly liner. You see that only two members are pictured anywhere here; Almaas is the blonde fellow with the fiddle on the front cover, and Bill Schunk is the brunette with the guitar. Sidemen here are Allan Greller on bass and Peter Moser on drums. By the time the group was signed to IRS, Dan Prater was in the group on bass and Mike Osborn was the drummer. The new members are pictured on the IRS cover even though they don’t play on it (unless, of course, there were new recordings incorporated, which again I have not been able to determine).
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Here is the label. This might appear to be the standard Zensor label at first glance, but that little lizard design appears elsewhere on the jacket as part of the album design.
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One last note: this album doesn’t seem to be able to decide what it wants to be called or if the band needs a “The.” Here are all of the variations.
Zensor front cover: Staying Out Late w/The Beat Rodeo
Zensor spine: Staying Out Late       The Beat Rodeo
Zensor label: Staying out late          Beat Rodeo
IRS front cover: Staying Out Late With Beat Rodeo
IRS spine: Staying Out Late With Beat Rodeo
IRS label: Staying Out Late With...Beat Rodeo
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burlveneer-music · 2 years
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Tangerine Dream - Probe 6-8 - a teaser for a full-length album in 2022, the lineup now being Thorsten Quaeschning, Hoshiko Yamane and Paul Frick “with full access to Edgar Froese’s Cubase arrangements and Otari Tape Archive”
Tangerine Dream have been a fundamental influence on electronic music since Edgar Froese founded the band in West Berlin in 1967. Providing the groundwork for multiple electronic music genres including ambient and electronica, inspiring musicians and other art forms, with seven Grammy nominations to their credit. In recent years their music has featured in the popular TV shows such as Stranger Things and video games including Grand Theft Auto. After Froese passed away in 2015, the remaining band members, Thorsten Quaeschning, Ulrich Schnauss and Hoshiko Yamane carried on to help realise Edgar’s vision for of a conceptual album that attempts to translate quantum physics and philosophy into music; Quantum Gate was released to critical acclaim in 2017. With a new line up, Thorsten and Hoshiko have been joined by Berlin based keyboard virtuoso Paul Frick. The trio have spent 2021 in their Berlin studio working on Probe 6-8, a first glimpse into the forthcoming full Tangerine Dream studio album due for release in early 2022. Probe 6-8 sees the group’s classic studio productions and late night real time compositions form a blueprint for slowly evolving ambient structures, with the band’s sequencer driven sound reminiscent of TD’s early 1970s work combining with a lush 1980s crystalline bliss. The trio have composed and produced Probe 6-8 with full access to Edgar Froese’s Cubase arrangements and Otari Tape Archive with recordings from 1977-2013. The first track titled ‘Raum’, is a nod to the band’s early live studio performances ‘Zeit’ and ‘Phaedra’, with a distinctive heavy Moog bass marking the beginning and the end of this 15-minute introductory piece. This new set of recordings also feature two remixes - Berlin-based composer and producer Grand River (Aimée Portioli) has given ‘Raum’ her signature sound and ‘Continuum’ was remixed by Berghain resident and Leisure System co-founder Sam Barker.  
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showbizchicago · 2 years
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Broadway In Chicago Announces Tickets For SIX On Sale Monday, Dec. 6
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Broadway In Chicago is delighted to announce that tickets for the electrifying new musical phenomenon SIX by Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss will go on sale Monday, December 6. SIX will return to Chicago for 14-weeks at Broadway In Chicago’s CIBC Theatre (18 W. Monroe St.) from March 29 through July 3, 2022. Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived. After taking Broadway by storm, SIX makes a triumphant return to Chicago this spring. From Tudor Queens to Pop Princesses, the SIX wives of Henry VIII take the mic to remix five hundred years of historical heartbreak into an exuberant celebration of 21st-century girl power! The female cast is backed by an all-female band, “The Ladies in Waiting.” SIX is the global sensation that everyone is losing their heads over. The New York Times says SIX “TOTALLY RULES!!” and The Washington Post hails SIX as “Exactly the kind of energizing, inspirational illumination this town aches for! The Broadway season got supercharged!” SIX, which closed in March 2020 due to the pandemic on what was supposed to be opening night, is now playing at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre on Broadway in New York City. The show had a successful North American Premiere at Chicago Shakespeare Theater in the summer of 2019. Prior to Broadway, the show played limited engagements at American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.) in Cambridge, MA, the Citadel Theatre in Edmonton, AB Canada, and the Ordway Center for the Performing Arts in Saint Paul, MN. SIX is co-directed by Lucy Moss and Jamie Armitage, featuring choreography by Carrie-Anne Ingrouille. The design team includes Emma Bailey (Set Design), Gabriella Slade (Costume Design), Paul Gatehouse (Sound Design), and Tim Deiling (Lighting Design). The score features orchestrations by Tom Curran with music supervision and vocal arrangements by Joe Beighton and U.S. Music Supervision by Roberta Duchak. Casting is by Tara Rubin Casting / Peter Van Dam, CSA with original US casting by Bob Mason. Theater Matters is General Manager, Sam Levy is Associate Producer and Lucas McMahon is U.S. Executive Producer. SIX is produced in the United States by Kenny Wax, Wendy & Andy Barnes, George Stiles, and Kevin McCollum. Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss devised the original concept and started writing SIX when they were students at Cambridge University in early 2017. It was first presented as the Cambridge University Musical Theatre Society’s submission to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe later that year, playing a one-month run and featuring student actors. SIX went on to get picked up by UK Producers and a new production was mounted, with professional actors and a predominantly new creative team, at the Norwich Playhouse and then again at Edinburgh Festival in 2018. A limited engagement at the Arts Theatre in London garnered the WhatsOnStage Award for Best Off-West End Production and the show toured the UK in the autumn of 2018 before returning to the Arts Theatre and subsequently the Lyric Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue. SIX is currently playing an open-ended run at the Vaudeville Theatre on the Strand. SIX earned five 2019 Laurence Olivier Award nominations, including Best New Musical. A UK and Ireland tour is now running concurrently with the London production. An Australian and New Zealand tour will launch this year at Sydney Opera House with dates set for Melbourne, Adelaide, and Wellington. PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE Please visit Broadway In Chicago to view the SIX performance schedule. TICKET INFORMATION Individual tickets for SIX will go on sale Monday, December 6, and range in price from $39 - $119 with a select number of premium tickets available. Individual tickets will be available by calling the Broadway In Chicago Ticketline at (800) 775- 2000, visiting BroadwayInChicago.com, or by going to any Broadway In Chicago venue box office. Tickets are available now for groups of 10 or more by calling Broadway In Chicago Group Sales at (312) 977-1710 or emailing [email protected]. ABOUT BROADWAY IN CHICAGO Broadway In Chicago was created in July 2000 and over the past 21 years has grown to be one of the largest commercial touring homes in the country.  A Nederlander Presentation, Broadway In Chicago lights up the Chicago Theater District entertaining more than 1.7 million people annually in five theatres. Broadway In Chicago presents a full range of entertainment, including musicals and plays, on the stages of five of the finest theatres in Chicago’s Loop including the Cadillac Palace Theatre, CIBC Theatre, James M. Nederlander Theatre, and just off the Magnificent Mile, the Broadway Playhouse at Water Tower Place and presenting Broadway shows at the Auditorium Theatre. COVID-19 Protocol:  Broadway In Chicago audience members are required to wear a mask, a provide vaccination card, and photo I.D. and valid ticket upon entry to the theatre.  For exemptions or if you are unable to be vaccinated (including children) must provide proof of a negative COVID-19 test along with a photo ID and valid ticket. For further information and specifics related to vaccines and tests visit broadwayinchicago.com/covid19 All Broadway In Chicago schedules, productions, and protocols for attendance will continue to be reviewed as further guidance and recommendations are provided by the CDC, Illinois State, and Chicago Departments of Health. For the latest health and safety procedures and guidelines, visit broadwayinchicago.com/covid19. For more information about the show, visit SixonBroadway.com Follow SIX on: Facebook ● Twitter  ● Instagram  ●@SIXUSTour   Read the full article
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palimpsessed · 4 years
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Pal’s Masterlist
This post contains links to my art, fics, podfics, meta/asks, headcanons, and playlists. It is sorted by category, subject matter, and date created, with the oldest first.
Art
Snowbaz:
Fantasies - a duet of Simon and Baz’s impressions of each other pre-truce, based on Carry On quotes - CW for blood splatter on clothing, blood dripping from the Sword of Mages🗡, and a bloody handprint on Simon’s face; blood in a champagne flute in Baz’s hand - (May 2020)
Windows - two pages of line art I submitted for the Simon Snow Coloring Book, including the colored versions (May 2020)
Save the Date - I promised happy Snowbaz and it got away from me... (May 2020)
Baz’s Feeding Mug - based on a scene from the domestic Snowbaz fic by @bazzybelle, “Speak My Language of Love” (June 2020)
“That’s where I’d bite him, right in the throat.” - Baz biting Simon during an intimate moment - NSFWish - cw for sexual content including choking, vampire biting, and one very small drop of blood (June 2020)
Breath - a little thing I did originally as a header for this masterlist then moved off (July 2020)
“He lets me touch him like this” - A soft moment between Baz and Simon from my post-WS fic, Use Your Words (September 2020)
“Or maybe I’m swooning.” - A quick take on the Pitch Manor library scene in Chapter 64 of CO for the book’s 5 year anniversary (October 2020)
“I know.” - The scene in the forest from Cath’s Carry On, Simon fic from Fangirl and a challenge for me to try a nighttime piece (October 2020)
Cover Redraw - My version of Kevin Wada’s Carry On cover art (October 2020)
Any Way the Wind Blows - Simon and Baz on their wedding day, drawn for the final day of the COC (December 2020)
Art from Chapter 2 of A Man of Letters - dandy Baz is not much pleased Captain Snow has torn his coat (June 2021)
“He brings my palm to his mouth and kisses it.” - the scene on the floor of Baz’s room in Chapter 62 of CO - done as part of the Carry On Art Remix (original art can be found in the link above) (July 2021)
“It would be too much for anyone.” - art from Chapter 91 of AWTWB (August 2021)
Tyrannus Pitch Observatory - Simon observing Tyrannus Pitch in front of the Tyrannus Pitch Observatory (September 2021)
Make the Yuletide Gay - The First Kiss™️ for Flames day of COC 2021 and the first proper kiss I’ve drawn (December 2021)
Chamber by Chamber series art masterpost - 🔞EXPLICIT🔞 - a collection of 10 illustrated moments from my Chamber by Chamber series made for the Erotic Grope Fest 2022 - CW: explicit sexual content including choking, restraints, spanking, fisting, sounding, welts, and blood - links to full art on pillowfort (February 2022)
“And then he kisses me.” - a tribute to first kisses for the first anniversary of AWTWB (July 2022)
What can you do with a forklift licence? - 🚨SPOILERS FOR SNOW FOR CHRISTMAS🚨 (December 2022)
The Beginning - a triptych of handshakes through the years that mark beginnings - for COC 2022 (December 2022)
Simon, Baz, and Penny:
Happy Birthday, Simon - birthday post for Simon’s 23rd featuring a very wholesome group hug (June 2020)
Any Way the Wind Blows era gang:
“There are magickal swans in Oxford, we could take a day trip.” - what if they did indeed all take a day trip to visit swans? (April 2022)
A full commitment’s what I’m thinking of - the gang is never gonna give you up or let you down (December 2022)
Wayward Son era gang (pre-Niamh):
The Gang’s All Here (for the moment) - first drawing I did of all five friends together, experimenting with colors (please ignore how weirdly orange Simon’s hair looks 😬) and using bat wings as a reference for Simon, just because I wanted to 🦇 (April 2020)
Medieval AU for Carry On Through the Ages - a piece done for the historical AU event, inspired by illuminated manuscripts (November 2020)
The Gift of the Mage-Eye - a Fab Five crossover concept for a magickal Queer Eye, done for the COC 2020 (December 2020)
Art from Chapter 1 of A Man of Letters - when Army captain Simon first sets eyes on dandy Baz - includes everyone but Penny (February 2021)
Carry On era gang (pre-Shepard):
Simon Snow and the Missing Magician - Scooby-sona character concepts from when I was still sorting out my Scooby Doo AU and the very first fan art I did (April 2020)
Enigma Ltd. In Simon Snow and Dracula’s Curse - a cover piece for my Scooby Doo AU fic and also a bit of an unofficial redraw of my original Scooby-sona art (November 2022)
Penny/Shep (StormChaser?):
“Hands in the air, bloodsucker, or I’ll burn this whole city to the ground.” - my imagining of Penny delivering this line in Wayward Son, with Shepard as backup (May 2020)
The Hex Files - a X-Files AU comic I did for Shepfest featuring our favorite conspiracy theorist and skeptic - also my first comic ever! (Oct 2021)
Simon
Cheer Captain - Simon the cheerleader, inspired by @pipsqueakparker’s concept of a football captain/cheer captain AU (August 2020)
Dragon kitten!Simon - part of COCrack!Fest, Simon finally realizes his full dragon potential as a cuddly kitten (April 2021)
Happy Birthday, Simon - birthday art for Simon’s 24th featuring a happy reimagining of his music video moment on the beach in WS (June 2021)
Let It Snow - or is it Le Tits Now? Simon says: Why not both for COC 2021? (December 2021)
Date Night Simon - Simon gets dressed up for a date night (May 2022)
Between Simons - a slightly angsty (but hopeful) birthday piece showing Simon’s past, present, and future selves inspired by a line in AWTWB (June 2022)
“What could be better than this?” - Simon in AWTWB Chapter 82 from Baz’s POV made as part of Carry On Art Remix 2022 (original art linked in post) (November 2022)
Cake in both pockets - Simon modeling the fit of his 1940s cut trousers (November 2022)
Baz:
“Who would you be without me, Snow? A blue-eyed virgin who’d never thrown a punch.” - my interpretation of the fan art hanging in Cath Avery’s dorm in Fangirl (July 2020)
“I’m going to carry on. As I am.” - a moody birthday piece for Baz’s 24th (February 2021)
Emo Rise - Baz as the Elmo Rise meme (July 2021)
Don We Now Our Gay Apparel - A sardonic floral Baz for the COC 2021 prompt: Decorating (December 2021)
Penny:
Happy Birthday, Penelope!!!! - a birthday portrait of the birthday girl (January 2021)
She’s Making a List and Checking it Twice - Penny and her knees being cheeky for Lyrics day of COC 2021 (December 2021)
The Best of Penelope Bunce - Penny birthday art inspired by the album cover of Timespace: The Best of Stevie Nicks (January 2023)
Baz and Penny:
“Hush.” - Baz casting Kiss it Better on Penny (August 2020)
Agatha:
Jock!Agatha - pencil study of Agatha doing all the sports (August 2020)
“I ... am magic.” - tried a new style for Agatha’s birthday (October 2020)
Ebb:
Ebb at Watford - a small portrait done in conjunction with my fic for the COC2020 WLW prompt (November 2020)
Fics, Pod fics, and Art for fics
My Fics:
At the Top of a Tower, With You - part of the Carry On Tarot event (completed, 848 words) - a short canon compliant piece told from Lucy’s POV - set during Carry On - General (July 2020)
Use Your Words - part of the Carry On Summer Exchange event (completed, 16k) - Baz tries to find the words to tell Simon how he feels and save their relationship - set post WS, not AWTWB compliant - Teen (July 2020)
A Man of Letters - A 5+1 epistolary Regency AU for the Carry On Through the Ages event (completed, 54k) - a series of letters written by Simon and Baz while getting to know each other during the 1810 London season - Teen (November-December 2020)
To the Manor Borne - written for the Carry On Countdown 2020 (completed, 43k) - the gang spends the holidays at Pitch Manor - uses a different prompt for each chapter - set post-WS, not AWTWB compliant - Teen (November-December 2020)
Lotus-Eaters and Sirens - MerMay-adjacent canon compliant one shot (completed, 557 words) - a lovesick WS Simon contemplates Baz’s allure - General (May 2021)
Chamber by Chamber - a three-part series (completed, 46k) about navigating identity in a liminal space, being a home for the people you love, and finding a way to accept yourself, even when you don't know who you are - set post-WS, not AWTWB compliant - Mature and Explicit (June-July 2021)
Sleeping with the Fishes - A Normal/sports/uni/text fic AU co-written for the Carry On Big Bang 2021 (incomplete, 8k) - Simon works at Baz’s tennis club and an accidental text leads to a somewhat unsteady truce - fantastic art by @mae-berry - Mature (June 2021-?)
Slings and Eros - A loose retelling of the Eros (Cupid) and Psyche myth for Carry On Through the Ages 2021 (in progress, 100k+) - Mature (September 2021-?)
I Can’t Believe He’s Not Butter - A sentient diner condiments meet cute for COCrack!Fest 2022 (completed, 5k) - Teen (April 2022)
by any other name... - Baz and Simon swap phallic euphemisms and dicknames - post-AWTWB compliant (completed, 3k) - Mature (June 2022)
Simon Snow and Dracula’s Curse - a Scooby Doo AU (completed, 46k) - Teen (October-November 2022)
My Podfics:
Palimp’s Podfics series on AO3
Art for My Fics:
Simon Snow and Enigma, Limited (the Scooby Doo AU no one asked for)
Simon Snow and the Missing Magician - a character concept for my (WIP) fic of the same name, in the Scooby Doo style, and the very first fan art I did (April 2020)
Use Your Words
“He lets me touch him like this” - A soft moment between Baz and Simon (September 2020)
A Man of Letters
Art for Chapter 1 of my Regency AU (February 2021)
Art for Chapter 2 of my Regency AU (June 2021)
Chamber by Chamber series
Chamber by Chamber series art masterpost - 🔞EXPLICIT🔞 - a collection of 10 illustrated moments from my Chamber by Chamber series made for the Erotic Grope Fest 2022 - CW: explicit sexual content including choking, restraints, spanking, fisting, sounding, welts, and blood - links to full art on pillowfort (February 2022)
Art for Fics by other creators:
Baz’s Feeding Mug - based on a scene from the domestic Snowbaz fic by @bazzybelle, “Speak My Language of Love” (June 2020)
Tying the Rakhi - drawn to accompany @scone-lover’s found family fic “For Always” (August 2020)
Cheer Captain - Simon the cheerleader, inspired by @pipsqueakparker’s concept of a football captain/cheer captain AU (August 2020)
Strangers Like Me - cover art for @otherworldsivelivedin’s fic written for the Carry On Big Bang 2021 (June 2021)
Metas and Asks
1. Steel Yourself - a heavy meta on hair, or some thoughts about Simon’s Las Vegas haircut - also posted on AO3 (October 2020)
2. Simon’s duffel in WS - a little meditation on literal as well as figurative baggage - also posted on AO3 (February 2021)
3. AWTWB and Chosen Ones - my thoughts on narrative foils in CO and AWTWB -also posted on AO3 (July 2021)
4. The Watford Goats and the World of Mages - musings on parallels between the goats and the flock of magic - also posted on AO3 (July 2021)
5. On Vampires Needing to be Invited in - an ask to clarify vampire rules (July 2021)
6. Love as Consumption - an ask about Chapter 18 of AWTWB (July 2021)
7. Is This What People Do? - an ask about Simon’s internal refrain in AWTWB (July 2021)
8. Be Kind to Me/Fine You Fucker - an ask deep diving into Chapter 32 of AWTWB (August 2021)
9. Baz’s Vampirism - an ask looking at Baz’s vampire arc in AWTWB and the trilogy (August 2021)
10. Killing as a Love Language - an ask about Simon and Baz’s differing approaches to murder in WS (August 2021)
11. Simon’s relationship with touch - an ask about touch between Simon and Baz during WS and AWTWB (August 2021)
12. Finding Spells and Baz’s Kidnapping - an ask about why it took so long to find Baz in spite of finding spells (October 2021)
13. Communication, or Lack Thereof - an ask about the AWTWB breakup and why Simon and Baz were having problems (November 2021)
14. I Like Your Shoelaces-Agatha and Avoidance - a meta contemplating the metaphorical implications of Agatha not learning to tie her shoes (October 2022)
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buysneakersonline · 2 years
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Virgil Abloh Is Bringing the Nike Air Force 1 to Louis Vuitton
It takes two, Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock famously explained, to make things go right and outta sight. “It takes two” is a fitting mantra for the sneaker industry, too, as brands have dosey-doed into collaborative nirvana. More specifically, the 1988 hit song is also the source code for the latest batch of sneakers from Louis Vuitton’s men’s artistic director Virgil Abloh: 21 pairs of Air Force 1s made in partnership between Nike and the French house (now that’s two making it outta sight). Last week, during the Louis Vuitton men’s spring-summer 2022 runway show, Abloh debuted almost two dozen of the Swooshed and LV monogrammed sneakers in green, white, metallic blue, lemon yellow, red, and even Vuitton’s iconic “Damier” check that probably have StockX building out additional servers in preparation.
The shoes are a very long time coming, and a full-circle moment for culture and Abloh, according to notes provided along with the show. Abloh provides a new list of concepts and definitions every season, laid out the same way your biology textbook defined protons and xylem. This season, the Air Force 1 is defined as “one of the most successful shoes ever created,” according to the notes. But Abloh is particularly interested in the version of the Air Force 1 that appears on the cover art for Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock’s single—the one that was customized so that the Nike Swoosh was covered with the Louis Vuitton monogram. “The cover embodied the hip-hop community’s early practice of hacking together high fashion and sportswear, side-lining diverging brands with equal reverence.” Now, Abloh is making that 1988 bootleg official. (There are a few classic Abloh touches on the Air Vuitton 1s: where Abloh typically prints “LACES” on...the laces, here they have the French translation: “LACET.”)
The partnership between Abloh and Nike has been incredibly fruitful since it first kicked off in 2017. Abloh has made a habit out of taking large bites out of the apple: his first collaboration featured his take on 10 different iconic Nike models, and more recently, Abloh announced that he’s customized 50 Nike Dunks. Over that time, the relationship between sneakers and high fashion have started to change drastically: one of the most coveted shoes of 2020 (and the only one to show up at Joe Biden’s inauguration) was Dior’s Air Jordan 1, which carries a resale price tag of $8,000.
Abloh’s Louis Vuitton-Nike tie-up fits this trajectory. While Abloh’s past collaborations with Nike have focused mostly on making high-fashion design accessible through $250-or-less sneakers, this collaboration is about making the sneaker a super-luxe item. Another show note—the one defining Abloh’s new sporty take on the suit—provides useful context. By splicing together a suit and a tracksuit, he’s challenging the perceptions of what’s “formal” and what’s “street”: “Is a man in tailoring trustworthy? Is a man in ‘streetwear’ less trustworthy?” the notes read. Abloh writes that he wants to remix these enough that both lose their traditional symbolism. Is a sneaker “formal” or is it “street”?
This philosophy applies to Abloh’s sneakers, too—and, really, to his entire career. Since the beginning of his partnership with Nike, he’s been pushing the idea of what a sneaker can be—and now, he can broker a partnership between a (his!) historic French leather goods maison and an Oregon-based sportswear company, and the only question people have is: when and where can I buy it? Louis Vuitton’s answer: “Stay tuned for more details.”
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bestdjkit · 2 years
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Audius Awards Showcase Highlights of 2021 In Blockchain-Based Streaming
In the red-hot streaming platform wars, Audius held its ground and netted millions of new users. The inaugural Audius Awards showcase their "best of" selections for 2021.
Like most blockchain-based protocols, Audius boomed to new heights in 2021, netting over seven million monthly listeners. To celebrate, the community is recognizing the platform's many highlights with the advent of the Audius Awards.
Clayton Blaha, Audius’ Head of Partnerships, touted the meteoric user acquisition and artist adoption as big wins for the platform as Audius aims to carry momentum. 
"Like many communities in crypto, 2021 was pretty insane for Audius," Blaha said. "The network saw tremendous growth in terms of users and it launched some amazing product features and partnerships. More and more artists are using the network to get their music out and to connect with fans directly; it’s inspiring to see folks who began their careers on Audius go on to play festivals and really build fanbases. I think the Audius Awards will help carry that energy into 2022."
c/o Audius
In total, the Audius Awards considered the "best of" across numerous unique categories: Best EDM Song, Best Bass Song, Best Rap Song, Best DJ Mix, Best Artist, Best Emerging Artist, Best Playlist On Audius, Top Label On Audius, Best Track / Album Art, and Most Active Community Presence.
The top five recipients in each category will receive a special "Silver Audius Awards" NFT, and every community member who voted will receive a participation NFT. Check out the community's top five selections in each category below.
Best EDM Song
Zedd - Squid Game & Do It To It Edit camoufly - told u so Skrillex - Kliptown Empryean Steve Aoki & 3LAU - Jenny Andy Caldwell - Pulling Every String
Best Bass Song
Bass Nation - Anthem III Million Records: Archelli Findz - Umbrella SUB FOCUS:  John Summit - Deep End Remix Partica Artist Group: Frankenstein (23-Artist Mega Collab) acloudyskye - Daze
Best Rap Song
Allan Kingdom - Reasons thugbirdz - Thugbirdz rap contest (Produced by P Doc) Mr. Carmack - BUBBLIN' Remix Hannibal Buress - Cheers (Produced by Brian Babylon) MadeinTYO - Chucky Cheese
Best DJ Mix
Minnesota - Bicycle Day Mix Vol. 4 RL Grime - Halloween X RAC - North Beach DJ Mix Brownies & Lemonade - Netsky (LA Live Set) n0zero - n0mix#008
Best Artist
camoufly wuki 3LAU Skrillex deadmau5
Best Emerging Artist
camoufly JKuch Ljazzbeats Feldt celiaINside
Best Playlist On Audius
Audius Playlists - Lo-Fi Nights Trap Nation - Trap Nation Byte - Lofi Chillhop Beats Broz Rodriguez - Dance Latino SPICYCAKE - Tasty Alley
Top Label On Audius
QULQUL LABEL  Phuture Collective  Electric Wave  Partica Artist Group  Trap Nation
Best Track / Album Art
Million Records: BYRAM - Close to me 3LAU - Faces Powfu - .xxxx.xxxx.xx.xxxx MAHARI MADAN - PILOT (Prod. UNLUCKY) RL Grime - Halloween X (Live at the Hollywood Palladium)
Most Active Community Presence
SenjienZ Phuture Collective Broken Blythe Audius Playlists Greek LoFi Community
from Best DJ Kit https://edm.com/news/audius-awards-winners-2021
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buttonholedlife · 4 years
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Over a decade later, I'm still fascinated by Techno Viking
More than a decade after its own launch, I'm still captivated due to the notorious Techno Viking online video.
There is actually something indescribably fascinating regarding it. I discover myself watching the clip at the very least numerous opportunities a year. I can easily try to detail it, however its own enigma steers clear of writing. Every little bit of information in the online video just falls perfectly in to spot, as if it was presented. However it had not been.
Where perform I start? Bear along with me throughout this review-- or even scroll up to see the actual video first.
The video clip opens along with a girl in a bright, cyan hairpiece awkwardly dancing to a techno keep track of ("Sat nav" through Can-D-Music) in broad daytime. She is actually certainly not the only subject matter visible-- she's dancing following to a crowd of ravers-- but she is actually undoubtedly the concentration of the acton approximately that factor. Out of nowhere, a noticeably drunk guy enter the structure as well as quite aggressively run across her.
It is actually unclear if his actions are actually willful, however he promptly starts strolling away after running into the female. This is when the actual protagonist of the video clip come in: the guy currently notoriously called the techno viking.
Shirtless, the techno viking grabs the intoxicated man through the wrist, and promptly captures his various other hand, too. The techno viking, who's completely mounted as well as wearing denim shorts, mean-mugs the intoxicated guy, tells him off, as well as releases him, directing in a direction past the frame. The intoxicated male starts walking in that direction, and also leaves the structure.
The techno viking maintains mean-mugging him, gazing at him for a great 10 seconds. He then elevates his hands again as well as-- I take up-- keeps directing at the intoxicated man for one more 6 secs a minimum of.
Then, virtually as if on hint, an arbitrary person strolling in from the history pulls a canteen away from his bag, approaches the techno buccaneer, as well as floats the bottle-- which somehow he stores bottom-side-up-- right facing the techno viking's face. Without even switching his head, the techno viking grabs the bottle, and only then acknowledges the male by glancing in his direction.
He opens up the bottle as well as arises to drink from it. A few gulps later on, he returns the bottle to the fella.
There's no saying to if there is actually something in the water, however the techno viking appears refreshed. He instantly begins dance in an ahead motion, every move of his sticking right to the rhythm of the track in the background. The group that was lethargically dancing currently follows him as he marches ahead.
An additional random gentleman surfaces from the group and also hands the techno viking a leaflet. Again, without even switching his mind, the techno buccaneer grabs the leaflet, still softly dance. The men departures the framework. The monitor in the history modifications ("Save Modifications and also Departure" by Winstan vs. Noia). The techno viking pauses momentarily to take a peek at the brochure. He then closes it, points at someone out of view and mumbles one thing indistinctly, as he at the same time tears the leaflet apart and also drops its to the ground. He's dancing throughout all of this.
The cameraperson briefly switches their lense to the left behind to expose the techno buccaneer was talking with the guy who initially ran across the female in the cyan hairpiece. They then flip the lense backto the techno viking who's still dancing. At some time, one more guy moves toward the techno buccaneer, that shifts to engage in discussion, and also ignores the cam.
The video clip fades to black and our company see an intertitle reading "Fuckparade, 2000." Fin.
Numerous have tried creating the video clip in several parodies, however none of them pretty capture the state of mind and characteristics of the online video with the same credibility as well as proximity. You may immediately tell they're-- at ideal-- low-priced duplicates of the authentic.
They are actually clearly considered and also choreographed, yet still seem to be much less staged and also choreographic than the real online video. Gone is actually the bizarre dynamism and changability. They also underdeliver as apologies, considering that there's nothing at all specifically comical concerning them.
Techno Viking: the beginning tale
The video recording, which was initially tape-recorded through performer Matthias Fritsch at the Fuckparade in Berlin in 2000, was very first discharged in 2001. It failed to, having said that, obtain interest until a user re-uploaded it to YouTube in 2005, and also it subsequently went virus-like in 2007 after carrying out the spheres on different notification boards.
For those strange, Fuckparade was conceived as a counter-demonstration to Love Parade-- a large electronic songs dancing event which originated in 1989 in West Berlin.
As Affection Procession turned into a mainstream sensation, enticing thousands of guests, it removed certain more speculative noises that were actually when important to the festival. This didn't sit well along with some hardcore supporters, so they booted off Fuckparade to commemorate these "forbidden" styles.
The techno viking was actually, presumably, some of these followers.
According to reports from 2010, the Techno Viking footage has actually amassed over 20 million views, however the actual amount is actually much higher today. Definitely, the 1st handful of end results on YouTube have virtually 40 million sights combined. Fritsch claims the video clip has even more drawn in over 700 "remix" models and also reaction video recordings.
Despite all this focus the video clip has actually created, the identification of the techno viking remains a mystery. A lot of have ventured the techno buccaneer made a look in a German body building series referred to as Raab in Gefahr in 2009, yet the proof isn't really effective. Some have advised the male in the video recording is in fact former UFC boxer Keith Jardine.
Still, an attorney embodying the undisclosed techno viking insurance claims he has actually certainly never been a public body, nor possesses he ever meant to turn into one.
All we understand is actually the techno viking had not been a large fan of the Techno Viking video clip. That is actually likewise why there's a legal representative entailed in this story.
Shortly after the online video went viral, Fritsch was actually come close to with some deals to profit off of the notoriety of Techno Viking. Along with placing adds on the clip, the musician also crafted as well as sold a small volume of Techno Viking merch.
In overdue 2009, a lawful agent delivered Fritsch an end as well as end letter on account of the techno viking. The letter asserted Fritsch's use the video recording breached the techno buccaneer's civil rights, and also required it be removed right away. It additionally forbid the performer from marketing merch (he had actually only sold an overall of regarding $14,000 really worth of products during the time).
Factors deviated for the even worse when the techno viking took Fritsch to courthouse in 2013. Later on this year, the courtroom regulationed in benefit of the unnamed techno buccaneer, ordering Fritsch to pay EUR13,000 (nearly $14,400) in loss as well as an extra EUR10,000 ($11,050) in courthouse charges.
The musician was actually additionally ordered to stop making use of the techno viking's photo.
Life after "death"
While the undisclosed techno viking efficiently blocked Fritsch coming from utilizing his photo in his art, that didn't deter the artist coming from more working toward the story.
Fritsch later on ran an Indiegogo initiative, seeking to bring up funds for a film entitled The Story of Technoviking, which he ultimately discharged in 2015.
In the documentary, Fritsch observes the folklore of the Techno Viking coming from its birth at Fuckparade in 2000, to its surge as a virus-like phenomenon around 2007, and its own succeeding commencement into the meme empire. The film also looks into the ethical as well as lawful conundrum of that owns the photo of the Techno Viking: the anonymous lead character, the performer, or even the we, the net.
I'm certainly not one of these individuals to comment, "Who's enjoying it in 2020?" under online videos, but there is actually a single thing I recognize for certain: the magnetism of the Techno Viking video is infinite, and also I do not doubt I'll discover myself watching it in 2020-- and in 2021, in 2022, as well as so on.
Due to the fact that Techno Viking is going to for life stay on in the kingdom of memes.
This content was originally published here.
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When She Was Good
Kim Triedman at Concord Arts in Concord, Massachusetts, USA through 13 February 2022. Kim Triedman says about this work, "Much of my work focuses on issues of gender expectations and historical perceptions of femininity and sexuality. The series that I’ve been working on these past few years is entitled “When She Was Good”–a play off the old nursery rhyme. I’m particularly interested in the notion of nostalgia–how old perceptions collide with current societal realities–and the emotional wounds that women continue to carry as a result. MORE
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Kolaj Magazine, a full color, print magazine, exists to show how the world of collage is rich, layered, and thick with complexity. By remixing history and culture, collage artists forge new thinking. To understand collage is to reshape one's thinking of art history and redefine the canon of visual culture that informs the present.
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kolajmag · 2 years
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Ginnie Gardiner at Carrie Chen Gallery in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, USA, through 4 January 2022. “Interlusion” presents selections from Gardiner’s “Artifact Color” collages and "Interlusion" paintings and highlights her mastery of opacity and translucency and exploration of visual perception and phenomenal transparency. Gardiner scaled-up the "After Color" collages into larger oil paintings, and by adding another layer of semi-transparent subject matter she evokes a sense of atmospheric, surrealistic landscape. MORE
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Kolaj Magazine, a full color, print magazine, exists to show how the world of collage is rich, layered, and thick with complexity. By remixing history and culture, collage artists forge new thinking. To understand collage is to reshape one's thinking of art history and redefine the canon of visual culture that informs the present.
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