Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136

Warning: Parameter 3 to mb_videobot() expected to be a reference, value given in /home/ethansme/sg_html/libraries/joomla/event/dispatcher.php on line 136
Culture & Life

Culture & Life

The happs in today's nightlife and music culture.


The graffiti in my neighborhood really sucks—it'd be nice to see as much creativity as I have in other locales. Maybe the local taggers are just unorganized? This eight-can bag makes spraying down a masterpiece oh so convenient.

The canvas Graffiti Utility Backpack not only comes with enough slots for a weighty color arsenal, but holds room for a laptop, paint pens, and even straps for your skateboard, if you're so inclined. Just make sure you're all packed up when the cops roll up.
For reasons inexplicable, a “Today I Learned” thread on Reddit has turned into a treatise on how to make Google Translate beatbox for you, among other things. It must have taken some intense experimentation for Redditor Harrichr to get here but he somehow stumbled upon the following combination of steps.

    1) Go to Google Translate
    2) Set the translator to translate German to German
    3) Copy + paste the following into the translate box: pv zk pv pv zk pv zk kz zk pv pv pv zk pv zk zk pzk pzk pvzkpkzvpvzk kkkkkk bsch
    4) Click “listen”
    5) Be amazed :)

Since the original post both the thread and meme have expanded into slight tweaks and variations, including Technocopter, Helicopter and Dubstep. YCombinator user iamdave actually posted a guide to making your own beats:

    zk = suspended cymbal
    bschk = snare
    pv = brush
    bk = bass
    tk = flam1
    vk = roll tap
    kt = flam2
    kttp = flam tap
    krp = hi hat tap
    pv = short roll
    th = better hi hat
    thp, ds = instant rimshot.

While I’m not 100% sure how exactly this is working, it seems like a peculiarity of the German translation setup in Google Translate is allowing for playing consonants in a way that sounds like drums. Or, more specifically, a delightful way that sounds like drums.
 

Post image for Entertainment

This year’s Lightning in a Bottle will be home to an astounding array of musical acts and live performances, art installations and live art creations, workshops and speaker panels, and can you believe it…even more to be announced!


The LIB team prides itself on filling three performance stages with a wide variety of live and electronic musical acts and vaudevillian performances, as well as deploying unique intersections of artistic form and sustainable function to create stages that double as large-scale art installations.  Experience has taught us that top-level artistic and musical experiences are best enhanced by still more art!


Check back here often for updates on artists and acts, workshop details, images of past LIB revelry, and more surprises in the coming weeks. And if you just can’t wait and need personal, up-to-the-minute notifications on LIB news, sign up for our mailing list at the bottom of  the page!



 

 

A History of the Sky is a project by Ken Murphy in which he plans to collect 365 days worth of time-lapse video from the sky above San Francisco, and then slap them all together in a video mosaic, each cell representing one day, in chronological order. Impressive Ken, but have you considered using a Dewey Decimal order instead?

A History of the Sky reveals the rhythms of weather, the lengthening and shortening of days, and other atmospheric events on an immediate aesthetic level: the clouds, fog, wind, and rain form a rich visual texture, and sunrises and sunsets cascade across the screen.


This is a work in progress. Currently, an image of the sky is being captured every 10 seconds from a camera installed on the roof of the Exploratorium, on the edge of San Francisco Bay.

Each day's images are assembled into a time-lapse movie. The final piece will consist of a large mosaic of 365 movies, each representing one day of the year, arranged in order by date. The days all play back in parallel, so that at any given moment, one is looking at the same time of day across all of the days.

The video after the jump is of the 125 days Ken has collected so far, and I've got to admit: it's mesmerizing. Mesmerizing in a "holy shit I think those clouds just told me to kill my neighbor" kind of way. Mr. Kirby? But he's so nice! Fetch my shovel.

Hit it for the video and links to the project pages.

Project Site (with an explanation of the setup and all that jazz)
and
Project Funding Site

Thanks to Joslene, who doesn't like clouds because they rain. You know what else they bring, Joslene? Babies. It's true, that's where the storks live.

Related Video

Friday, 16 April 2010 18:10

(Video) Advertising Is Invisible

Written by Ethan

Kapitaal is a short animated film by a Dutch design studio, Studio Smack. The video tries to convey the huge amount of visual information surrounding us, which renders branding and advertising simply ineffective as we have become immune to it.

The video, which received several awards, has everything in black except content hoping to demand attention, which is in white.

Check out the video below:


Studio Gangstas Interview with the Wisconsin Journal in 2003
Promoters give raves a makeover
Published by Wisconsin Daily Tribune - 1st December 2003http://studiogangstas.net/index.php?option=com_simgallery&func=imagephp&format=raw&image=/images/sg_photos/B23D61FA8DF1-27.jpg

STEVENS POINT - Matt Ebel and Ethan Koerten think raves have gotten a bad rap.

"There's so much negative stigma. There's so much negative experience," Ebel said of the gatherings built around electronic music.

Ebel and Koerten, both of Stevens Point, are working to change the rave image with a series of parties they promote at Mission Coffee House in downtown Stevens Point. DJs spin vinyl records featuring a variety of electronic music. Partygoers must empty their pockets, remove their hats and let security guards pat them down and search purses before they're allowed to enter.

Drugs and drug paraphernalia are confiscated and often destroyed, Ebel said. 

"What it comes down to is providing a safe place for people to come and have fun and providing good music for them," Koerten said.

The image of raves that police and the general public have is in stark contrast to the music-oriented parties Ebel and Koerten describe. There's so much bad press associated with the word rave, they say they don't even use the word to describe their gatherings.

Organizers canceled a Wood County rave after sheriff's deputies made it clear they were taking a hard line against the possibility that illegal activities might arise. Police in Racine have also cracked down, issuing 445 tickets at a party there.

In Congress and in several states, lawmakers are considering plans to extend "crack house statutes" to raves. Such laws allow authorities to close or even raze buildings found to harbor drug users.

Typically touted as alcohol-free events, raves often attract teens whose parents think the parties are all right because they're advertised as dances and are held at places that don't serve alcohol, said Sgt. Mike Retzki of the Stevens Point Police Department. Raves' reputation took a hit locally in early September when Stevens Point police and other members of a multijurisdictional task force cracked down on a party above Skipps' Bowling Center. That raid resulted in 17 arrests for various drug violations.

Among the participants were teens 15 years old and younger, Retzki said.

"They're not a growing problem (in central Wisconsin), but they've shown themselves in the last two or three years," Retzki said. Law enforcement authorities say raves and Ecstasy, the so-called "hug drug," go hand in hand. Stevens Point police found Ecstasy, marijuana, psilocybin mushrooms and various prescription medications at the rave raided in September, Retzki said.

Koerten and Ebel acknowledge police have reason to be skeptical of parties advertised as raves.

"The police have a right to be suspicious, but they don't have a right to jump to conclusions," Ebel said.

True raves, police said, are underground events. Locations often are kept secret until the day of the party to keep law enforcement agencies off guard. Rave participants rely on drugs such as Ecstasy to give them a sense of happiness. The drugs add to the sense of peace, love, unity and respect, or PLUR, Retzki said.

"That's the underlying theme of almost every rave," he said.

Koerten and Ebel counter that true raves are all about the music.

"The last thing I want is for someone to come to one of our parties and to have something happen so they have to be hospitalized," Koerten said. "We're trying to focus more on the music and the DJs." So far, it seems they're meeting with success.

Capt. Linda Daubert of the Stevens Point Police Department said there haven't been problems with raves held at the Mission Coffee House. Food manager Kimber Seis said there's no need to worry that the raves will turn ugly.

"We don't worry at all because we know how well Matt and Ethan run their parties," Seis said. "They've got tight security. It's a very safe, very clean, fun type of event. People picture these huge warehouse parties where 90 percent of the people are on drugs, and that's not the way it is in Stevens Point." Retzki said members of the task force, which includes a dozen police agencies throughout central Wisconsin, want to keep it that way. The goal, he said, is to deal with problem raves quickly and effectively.

"We want to make it too inconvenient to have it here," he said.

Studio News

Sign in with Facebook

Soonest Upcoming Events

BASSGASM4 - Klever/SPL/Christopher Lawrence/Deathface/Sassmouth - 07/22/11, MPLS
07/22/2011 | 
Genius of Fun, City Pages, and First Avenue Nightclub present... BASSGASM...
More Details...
Markus Schulz @ Epic Nightclub - Minneapolis
08/19/2011 | 
On Friday, August 19th, Sound In Motion is proud to...
More Details...
10.06.11 Cut Chemist @ The High Noon Saloon
10/06/2011 | 
  Thursday Oct 6th, Joint Effort presents Cut Chemist http://www.cutchemist.com Cut Chemist has been recording...
More Details...
All Events...
Follow us on Twitter