gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 06 2009 | music, videos
quoted: Every week, we invite an artist or a band to play in the streets, in a bar, a park, or even in a flat or in an elevator, and we film the whole session. Of course, what makes the beauty of it is all the little incidents, hesitations, and crazy stuff happening unexpectingly. Besides, we do not edit the videos so they look perfectly flawless, instead we keep the raw sound of the surroundings. Our goal is to try and capture instants, film the music just like it happens, without preparation, without tricks. Spontaneity is the keyword.
tons of awesome bands, played against "unedited" beautiful video
gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 09 2009 | lovely, music, visualizationone of my favorite lp and lp covers of all times. visualized.
gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 04 2009 | music, mashupsquoted: a Yes/Sir Mix-a-lot mashup by Minneapolis artist Rich Barlow.
builds up slowly, gets better and better
gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 01 2009 | lol, video, music
gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 26 2009 | music, video, mashups
click to playwow surprisingly great!
gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 30 2009 | video, music, design
gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 23 2009 | music, mashups, sampling
Quoted: In the modern laptop era, any monkey with Pro Tools can make a mashup. But Pittsburgh-based computer maestro Girl Talk (known to the IRS as Gregg Gillis) has turned the cut-and-paste process into a jams-packed jigsaw puzzle. His latest album, Feed the Animals (released digitally in June with hard copies out September 23), brims with 300 song snippets in just over 50 minutes (compared to around 250 in his previous effort). "People want to see the bar raised," Gillis says. Below, a beat-by-beat breakdown of a single track.
gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - May 04 2009 | keith richards, face, music
gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 26 2009 | video, music
click to playflamethrower version!
gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 25 2009 | video, music, japanese
click to playrobot down! robot down!!
gravitymax | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 13 2009 | music, politics
Quoted: The Eighties were polarised but complex times. Punk, which determined even seemingly antithetical things like Depeche Mode and ABC, was itself a reaction against Old Labour rather than New Tory and was itself part of the same coin as Thatcherism, revolting against the same, dreary, dysfunctional 70s Britain.
playlist included. =)




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