Madlib stopped in to Radio Nova in Paris this week for a 30 minute set.
From http://www.stonesthrow.com/news/2009/05/madlib-radio-nova
There are no people in jasonweinberger’s collective.
Madlib stopped in to Radio Nova in Paris this week for a 30 minute set.
From http://www.stonesthrow.com/news/2009/05/madlib-radio-nova
Tagged with madlib hip hop music:artist=madlib beats
Conductor Jason Weinberger introduces Bartok’s Miraculous Mandarin with live orchestral excerpts.
From http://jasonweinberger.com/2009/03/bartok_seen_and_explained.html
Tagged with jason weinberger bartok miraculous mandarin wcfso orchestra
March 26 2007 - Author Kevin Kelly talks about the role of technology in our lives, the future of the web, how to time travel, the wisdom of the hive, the economics of reputation, the convergence of the biological and the mechanical, and his impact on the movies The Matrix and Minority Report.
As the Mac celebrates its 25th birthday, one of Apple’s co-founders, one of the development team, and a computer historian discuss its creation and legacy.
From http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/audio/2009/jan/24/tech-weekly-podcast-apple-mac
J Dilla [aka James Yancey, 1974-2006] was and remains one of the most important voices in independent hip hop. Earlier this month, just days before the third anniversary of his death from a rare blood disease, Miguel Atwood-Ferguson and Carlos Nino released four orchestral arrangements of his music under the title Suite for Ma Dukes. Read more about the project at Mochilla.
I hope to have a chance to perform Dilla’s music sometime soon. In the meantime here’s my own mix of Nag Champa, bringing together Atwood-Ferguson’s studio orchestra version and the chorus from the original track.
From http://jasonweinberger.com/2009/02/dillarrangements.html
What is the future for art and ideas in an age when practically anything can be copied, pasted, downloaded, sampled, and re-imagined?
LIVE from the NYPL and WIRED Magazine kick off the Spring 2009 season with a spirited discussion of the emerging remix culture. Our guides through this new world—who will take us from Jefferson’s Bible to André the Giant to Wikipedia—will be Lawrence Lessig, author of Remix, founder of Creative Commons, and one of the leading legal scholars on intellectual property issues in the Internet age; acclaimed street artist Shepard Fairey, whose iconic Obama "HOPE" poster was recently acquired by the National Portrait Gallery; and cultural historian Steven Johnson, whose new book, The Invention of Air, argues that remix culture has deep roots in the Enlightenment and among the American founding fathers.
From http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/pep/pepdesc.cfm?id=5206