“Dubstep”
The entire collection from “Just Like Us” is online at Gallery1988.com, where you can purchase the remaining prints & originals.
(via technicolorlullaby)
“Dubstep”
The entire collection from “Just Like Us” is online at Gallery1988.com, where you can purchase the remaining prints & originals.
(via technicolorlullaby)
It started off in 1994 at a club called Disobey, around the corner from where Richard lived. He would go down there to see all the weird and wonderful acts they had, and one time they asked him to DJ. First, he dropped a tone arm on a sheet of sandpaper, sending an ear-shattering roar of scratchy distortion through the shocked crowd. Next, he stuck a microphone inside a blender and flipped the power switch.
Disobey really got into it and invited him to go to America to do it again. It was only supposed to be a one-off, but they wanted to pay him and take his friends, so he did it. It was Blast First Records’ showcase in New York, and there were people there who danced to it; they thought it was death metal or something. He just mixed some sandpaper together for a bit and then played a food mixer and threw it at someone. Oops! It hit the bloke on the head. “I thought I would get sued for that,” Richard worried, “but he wanted me to sign it afterward. He said, ‘I will keep this food mixer forever.’”
"—
The one and many Richard D. James…
(via manbartlett)
Noisy Jelly
A fully working prototype game where the player has to cook and shape their own musical material, based on coloured jelly.
This object aims to demonstrate that electronic can have a new aesthetic, and be envisaged as a malleable material, which has to be manipulated and experimented.
Audioholics Anonymous Presents:
- From the Heart…
- From the Hurt…
- Swapping Stories Pt. 1
- Swapping Stories Pt. 2
- Up In Smoke
- Dwelling on Death
- From the Heart/Hurt… II
- Fresh Produce
- Fair Warning
Enjoy them guys and reblog this as much as you can as Dropbox will probably take it down!
Spreading good music around, I think is a good idea.
Unimaginable Symphonies by Jacques Maes
— Jim Morrison (via lesbius)
(Source: nosuchthingastime, via itallgetscomplicated)
— Jim Peterick (guy who wrote Eye of the Tiger)
My new sounds: it’s called Bubbles