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Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing

36 messages · 16 participants · spans 8 days · search this subject
◇ merged from 6 subjects: fiction reading, writing · fiction reading, writing, was re: [idm] matmos re: rat relocation prostate was: matmos [offtopic] · good shops near dutch boarder of germany · juana molina in los angeles tonight · …
2004-10-20 02:55kiya iamacopier babzani Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
├─ 2004-10-20 03:04dobri Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
│ └─ 2004-10-20 03:12kiya iamacopier babzani Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
└─ 2004-10-20 03:51Luis-Manuel Garcia Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
└─ 2004-10-20 03:54kiya iamacopier babzani Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
└─ 2004-10-20 04:05Luis-Manuel Garcia Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
2004-10-20 05:56seek Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
└─ 2004-10-20 06:40dobri [idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
├─ 2004-10-20 07:33Andrew Hime Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
└─ 2004-10-20 13:31Adam Piontek Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
└─ 2004-10-20 14:30n3wjack Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
└─ 2004-10-20 14:44Adam Piontek Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
├─ 2004-10-20 15:08DJ Tinus [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
│ └─ 2004-10-20 15:29Robert Feuchtl Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
│ └─ 2004-10-20 15:45DJ Tinus RE: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
│ └─ 2004-10-20 22:46Robert Feuchtl Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
│ └─ 2004-10-20 22:58DJ Tinus RE: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
│ └─ 2004-10-20 23:19Robert Feuchtl Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
│ ├─ 2004-10-20 23:44DJ Tinus Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
│ └─ 2004-10-27 23:35ko broken electronica industries AW: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
├─ 2004-10-20 15:25Robert Feuchtl Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
│ └─ 2004-10-20 15:50Fisk Industries Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
└─ 2004-10-20 18:40Enquiries Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
2004-10-20 19:05seek Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
└─ 2004-10-20 19:57dobri Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
├─ 2004-10-20 20:22Greg Clow Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
└─ 2004-10-20 23:46Robert Feuchtl Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
└─ 2004-10-21 00:33dobri Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
├─ 2004-10-21 02:18Adam Piontek Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
└─ 2004-10-21 05:24Robert Feuchtl Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
└─ 2004-10-21 22:49dobri Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
└─ 2004-10-21 23:04Robert Freeman [idm] Juana Molina in Los Angeles tonight
2004-10-20 20:46Jonathan Ackerman Fwd: [idm] fiction reading, writing
2004-10-21 17:20seek Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
└─ 2004-10-21 19:16Robert Feuchtl Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
2004-10-22 10:08David Sim Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
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2004-10-20 02:55kiya iamacopier babzani>> Oi ! >> But have you heard the Rat Relocation Project? > > Many times. I've own it, and
From:
kiya iamacopier babzani
To:
idm list
Date:
Tue, 19 Oct 2004 19:55:26 -0700
Subject:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
permalink · <BD9B21AE.F0DF%denial@ix.netcom.com>
quoted 4 lines Oi !>> Oi ! >> But have you heard the Rat Relocation Project? > > Many times.
I've own it, and have listened to it more than a few times. >> If so, did you try and suffer through it more than
quoted 3 lines once?>> once? > > It's phenomenal. Much better than the film Solaris.
I forced myself to listen to it past the first complete listen, hoping to find something else. alas, I found nothing but a shallow piece of work outside of the actual concept. Solaris on the other hand Is an absolute fucking masterpiece in every way and one of my favorite films of all time. the criterion version is worth every penny and I suggest you give it another chance after reading some more insight as to what Tarkovsky and Lem were trying to say with their versions of this mindblowing book/film.
quoted 4 lines Matmos is as Matmos does but how does something>> Matmos is as Matmos does but how does something >> like this get released? > > It's part of a series of similar stuff, and most of it's pretty good stuff.
here I partially agree, it's mostly decent stuff for what they're trying to achieve, this work in particular I felt was an afterthought past the liner notes.
quoted 4 lines And what made me think I'd>> And what made me think I'd >> like it after reading the description? > > Drew Daniel writes good publicity?
drew daniel is very photogenic naked. -kiya --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 03:04dobridude, tarkowski and lem wanted to say completely different things. that's why Lem was mad
From:
dobri
To:
idm list
Date:
Tue, 19 Oct 2004 23:04:03 -0400
Subject:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
Reply to:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
permalink · <4175D5A3.1030407@fandm.edu>
dude, tarkowski and lem wanted to say completely different things. that's why Lem was mad when he saw the way his book was about to be used for other purposes than its own. anyway, this is strongly off-topic. kiya iamacopier babzani wrote:
quoted 67 lines Oi !>>>Oi ! >>>But have you heard the Rat Relocation Project? >>> >>> >>Many times. >> >> > >I've own it, and have listened to it more than a few times. > > > >> If so, did you try and suffer through it more than > > >>>once? >>> >>> >> >>It's phenomenal. Much better than the film Solaris. >> >> > >I forced myself to listen to it past the first complete listen, hoping to >find something else. alas, I found nothing but a shallow piece of work >outside of the actual concept. >Solaris on the other hand Is an absolute fucking masterpiece in every way >and one of my favorite films of all time. the criterion version is worth >every penny and I suggest you give it another chance after reading some more >insight as to what Tarkovsky and Lem were trying to say with their versions >of this mindblowing book/film. > > > >>>Matmos is as Matmos does but how does something >>>like this get released? >>> >>> >>It's part of a series of similar stuff, and most of it's pretty good stuff. >> >> > >here I partially agree, it's mostly decent stuff for what they're trying to >achieve, this work in particular I felt was an afterthought past the liner >notes. > > > >>>And what made me think I'd >>>like it after reading the description? >>> >>> >>Drew Daniel writes good publicity? >> >> > >drew daniel is very photogenic naked. > >-kiya > > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > > > >
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2004-10-20 03:12kiya iamacopier babzani> dude, tarkowski and lem wanted to say completely different things. > that's why Lem was
From:
kiya iamacopier babzani
To:
dobri , idm list
Date:
Tue, 19 Oct 2004 20:12:45 -0700
Subject:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
Reply to:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
permalink · <BD9B25BD.F0EA%denial@ix.netcom.com>
quoted 3 lines dude, tarkowski and lem wanted to say completely different things.> dude, tarkowski and lem wanted to say completely different things. > that's why Lem was mad when he saw the way his book was about to be used > for other purposes than its own. anyway, this is strongly off-topic.
did you not read what I wrote? I clipped it for you below so you can reread it. notice the word "versions"? I fully understand the difference in what Lem meant by writing the book the way he did, Tarkovsky took Solaris expanded on it in a direction that Lem didn't agree with, that's why Lem raised such a stink about it. He couldn't handle seeing his own work being twisted for a film. Regardless, both of their versions are amazing in their own way. :) -kiya
quoted 8 lines I forced myself to listen to it past the first complete listen, hoping to>> I forced myself to listen to it past the first complete listen, hoping to >> find something else. alas, I found nothing but a shallow piece of work >> outside of the actual concept. >> Solaris on the other hand Is an absolute fucking masterpiece in every way >> and one of my favorite films of all time. the criterion version is worth >> every penny and I suggest you give it another chance after reading some more >> insight as to what Tarkovsky and Lem were trying to say with their versions >> of this mindblowing book/film.
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2004-10-20 03:51Luis-Manuel GarciaOn Tuesday, October 19, 2004, at 09:55 PM, kiya iamacopier babzani wrote: >>> And what mad
From:
Luis-Manuel Garcia
Cc:
idm list
Date:
Tue, 19 Oct 2004 22:51:02 -0500
Subject:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
Reply to:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
permalink · <42EDC3AA-224B-11D9-A1DC-003065DD8B18@uchicago.edu>
On Tuesday, October 19, 2004, at 09:55 PM, kiya iamacopier babzani wrote:
quoted 9 lines And what made me think I'd>>> And what made me think I'd >>> like it after reading the description? >> >> Drew Daniel writes good publicity? > > drew daniel is very photogenic naked. > > -kiya >
So I'm not the only one who read that interview in BUTT. =] Luis P.S. It's a real magazine. I swear. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 03:54kiya iamacopier babzani>>>> And what made me think I'd >>>> like it after reading the description? >>> >>> Drew D
From:
kiya iamacopier babzani
To:
Luis-Manuel Garcia
Cc:
idm list
Date:
Tue, 19 Oct 2004 20:54:57 -0700
Subject:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
Reply to:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
permalink · <BD9B2FA1.F0F8%denial@ix.netcom.com>
quoted 10 lines And what made me think I'd>>>> And what made me think I'd >>>> like it after reading the description? >>> >>> Drew Daniel writes good publicity? >> >> drew daniel is very photogenic naked. >> >> -kiya >> > So I'm not the only one who read that interview in BUTT. =]
actually, if you go to Aquarius Records in san francisco.. there is a 4"x 6" picture of drew behind the counter. he's naked. with the exception of a plastic fish with a hole in the top, and his genitals are stuffed into the plastic fish. it's so the fish catches all his sweat as he's dancing at the gay club he used to dance at for money. :) -kiya --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 04:05Luis-Manuel GarciaOn Tuesday, October 19, 2004, at 10:54 PM, kiya iamacopier babzani wrote: >>>>> And what m
From:
Luis-Manuel Garcia
To:
kiya iamacopier babzani
Cc:
idm list
Date:
Tue, 19 Oct 2004 23:05:22 -0500
Subject:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
Reply to:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos
permalink · <43488065-224D-11D9-A1DC-003065DD8B18@uchicago.edu>
On Tuesday, October 19, 2004, at 10:54 PM, kiya iamacopier babzani wrote:
quoted 21 lines And what made me think I'd>>>>> And what made me think I'd >>>>> like it after reading the description? >>>> >>>> Drew Daniel writes good publicity? >>> >>> drew daniel is very photogenic naked. >>> >>> -kiya >>> >> So I'm not the only one who read that interview in BUTT. =] > > actually, if you go to Aquarius Records in san francisco.. > there is a 4"x 6" picture of drew behind the counter. > he's naked. with the exception of a plastic fish with a hole in the > top, > and his genitals are stuffed into the plastic fish. > it's so the fish catches all his sweat as he's dancing at the gay club > he > used to dance at for money. > :) >
Ah yes. Vice magazine has a copy of this picture in one of their online articles (search for "Matmos' teabagging days"). Don't ask me how I know this. Anyway, the pics in BUTT are of DD and MCS giving the full monty in their hotel room sometime around the endstages of A Civil War. The interview is more interesting (honestly), but you can't pass up the puerile amusement of seeing (idm) celebrities naked. tappity-tap, Luis --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 05:56seekFrom: "dobri" > dude, tarkowski and lem wanted to say completely different things. > that'
From:
seek
To:
idm list
Date:
Tue, 19 Oct 2004 22:56:14 -0700
Subject:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
permalink · <44e601c4b669$82ad3ff0$7db1a943@obelisk>
From: "dobri"
quoted 3 lines dude, tarkowski and lem wanted to say completely different things.> dude, tarkowski and lem wanted to say completely different things. > that's why Lem was mad when he saw the way his book was about to be used > for other purposes than its own. anyway, this is strongly off-topic.
PKD thought that Lem was a spy. Lem thought PKD was brilliant. Logic? seek --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 06:40dobrispeaking of fiction, specifically sci-fi authors, I always wanted to ask you people, what
From:
dobri
To:
idm list
Date:
Wed, 20 Oct 2004 02:40:52 -0400
Subject:
[idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
Reply to:
Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
permalink · <41760874.1000408@fandm.edu>
speaking of fiction, specifically sci-fi authors, I always wanted to ask you people, what do you read, or have read in the past. what's good literature according to you, and most importatnly, is there anything you can relate directly to electronic music, techno, idm and experimental and whatever else you call it? for instance, i know that the people who invented the term "techno" borrowed it from a novel from Alvin Toffler, maybe the third wave. anyway, the story was about the "techno renegades", and those guys in detroit decided that they were techno renegades, that's why they called their style "techno" in order to advertise it to bigger audiences. i wrote once a specific shrot article for a sci-fi fanzine on how sci-fi and electronic music are similar. if i find it, i will paste it here. otherwise, i'm going to write it again. good night everybody, dobri "The best way to predict the future is to go (mentally) in the direction in which your fears grow." "What some people perceive as the end of the world, for History is just the sign that Future is coming." seek wrote:
quoted 24 lines From: "dobri">From: "dobri" > > > >>dude, tarkowski and lem wanted to say completely different things. >>that's why Lem was mad when he saw the way his book was about to be used >>for other purposes than its own. anyway, this is strongly off-topic. >> >> > > >PKD thought that Lem was a spy. >Lem thought PKD was brilliant. >Logic? > >seek > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > > > >
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2004-10-20 07:33Andrew Himedobri wrote: > speaking of fiction, specifically sci-fi authors, I always wanted to ask >
From:
Andrew Hime
To:
Date:
Wed, 20 Oct 2004 02:33:16 -0500
Subject:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
Reply to:
[idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
permalink · <417614BC.1070804@charter.net>
dobri wrote:
quoted 20 lines speaking of fiction, specifically sci-fi authors, I always wanted to ask> speaking of fiction, specifically sci-fi authors, I always wanted to ask > you people, what do you read, or have read in the past. what's good > literature according to you, and most importatnly, is there anything you > can relate directly to electronic music, techno, idm and experimental > and whatever else you call it? for instance, i know that the people who > invented the term "techno" borrowed it from a novel from Alvin Toffler, > maybe the third wave. anyway, the story was about the "techno > renegades", and those guys in detroit decided that they were techno > renegades, that's why they called their style "techno" in order to > advertise it to bigger audiences. > > i wrote once a specific shrot article for a sci-fi fanzine on how sci-fi > and electronic music are similar. if i find it, i will paste it here. > otherwise, i'm going to write it again. > > "The best way to predict the future is to go (mentally) in the direction > in which your fears grow." > > "What some people perceive as the end of the world, for History is just > the sign that Future is coming."
I'm Nea; Stephenson's buttboy. That being said, I'm having a tough go with his latest series. Can't wait to see what he does next, though. -- The best show killed by Cartoon Network/Adult Swim: Home Movies. Season 1, Out on DVD - November 16th. http://homemovies.toonzone.net/DVD.html (Entertainment Weekly endorsed it after it was canceled - what does that tell you?) If he knows how the world works, how come he's done such an awful job? Think about that next month. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 13:31Adam PiontekWell Lem is good, of course. Never read any Philip K Dick, but I keep meaning to. Kim Stan
From:
Adam Piontek
To:
Date:
Wed, 20 Oct 2004 09:31:02 -0400
Subject:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
Reply to:
[idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
permalink · <41766896.8060308@damek.org>
Well Lem is good, of course. Never read any Philip K Dick, but I keep meaning to. Kim Stanley Robinson is also good, and he wrote his thesis on PKD. Don't read his Antarctica, though, it's not very good. Other than that I give high respect to Ken MacLeod and Alastair Reynolds - Scottish & Welsh/Dutch (respectively) authors of smart space opera... Something vaguely IDM about them. If you like Vernor Vinge... -adam piontek dobri wrote:
quoted 2 lines speaking of fiction, specifically sci-fi authors, I always wanted to ask> speaking of fiction, specifically sci-fi authors, I always wanted to ask > you people, what do you read, or have read in the past. what's good
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2004-10-20 14:30n3wjackor William Gibson, TEH cyberpunk writer imo Philip K. Dick rulz btw, started reading some
From:
n3wjack
To:
Date:
Wed, 20 Oct 2004 16:30:56 +0200
Subject:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
Reply to:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
permalink · <3206472204102007302a90ab58@mail.gmail.com>
or William Gibson, TEH cyberpunk writer imo Philip K. Dick rulz btw, started reading some of his books after seeing Blade Runner which was based on his "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep" book On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 09:31:02 -0400, Adam Piontek <adam@damek.org> wrote:
quoted 22 lines Well Lem is good, of course. Never read any Philip K Dick, but I keep> Well Lem is good, of course. Never read any Philip K Dick, but I keep > meaning to. Kim Stanley Robinson is also good, and he wrote his thesis > on PKD. Don't read his Antarctica, though, it's not very good. > > Other than that I give high respect to Ken MacLeod and Alastair Reynolds > - Scottish & Welsh/Dutch (respectively) authors of smart space opera... > Something vaguely IDM about them. If you like Vernor Vinge... > > -adam piontek > > > > > dobri wrote: > > speaking of fiction, specifically sci-fi authors, I always wanted to ask > > you people, what do you read, or have read in the past. what's good > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > >
-- "progress doesn't come from early risers progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things" http://n3wjack.blogspot.com http://www.jungletrain.bet - 24/7 dnb radio station --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 14:44Adam PiontekNever could get into Gibson (but then I've only read 1.6 Gibson books, perhaps I should gi
From:
Adam Piontek
To:
Date:
Wed, 20 Oct 2004 10:44:39 -0400
Subject:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
Reply to:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing, was Re: [idm] MATMOS Re: Rat Relocation Prostate was: Matmos [offtopic]
permalink · <417679D7.8070207@damek.org>
Never could get into Gibson (but then I've only read 1.6 Gibson books, perhaps I should give him another shot someday) ...or "cyberpunk" in general. Always seemed too faddish, more style than substance - I mean, it always seemed too disconnected from possible reality, more tech-fantasy than sci-fi. But then sci-fi and fantasy are pretty much one and the same, really. Speaking of which, The closest I've come to enjoying cyberpunk was China Mieville's _Perdido Street Station_, which I know isn't really cyberpunk - if anything it's "steampunk", but I wanted to mention it because it's a beautiful book. Does anyone know if his "sequel" books "The Scar" and "Iron Council" are similar at all, or "as good"? I suppose "cyberpunk" is the IDM fiction style - comes to mind when thinking of early Warp (B12, early Autechre...) But don't real hackers only rave? :P -adam piontek n3wjack wrote:
quoted 18 lines or William Gibson,> or William Gibson, > TEH cyberpunk writer imo > > Philip K. Dick rulz btw, started reading some of his books after > seeing Blade Runner which was based on his "Do Androids Dream of > Electric Sheep" book > > On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 09:31:02 -0400, Adam Piontek <adam@damek.org> wrote: > >>Well Lem is good, of course. Never read any Philip K Dick, but I keep >>meaning to. Kim Stanley Robinson is also good, and he wrote his thesis >>on PKD. Don't read his Antarctica, though, it's not very good. >> >>Other than that I give high respect to Ken MacLeod and Alastair Reynolds >>- Scottish & Welsh/Dutch (respectively) authors of smart space opera... >>Something vaguely IDM about them. If you like Vernor Vinge... >> >>-adam piontek
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2004-10-20 15:08DJ TinusHallo list! Me and a friend are planning to go visit some shops in Krefeld and Essen, look
From:
DJ Tinus
To:
Date:
Wed, 20 Oct 2004 17:08:52 +0200 (CEST)
Subject:
[idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
Reply to:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
permalink · <11559.193.32.3.82.1098284932.squirrel@webmail.xs4all.nl>
Hallo list! Me and a friend are planning to go visit some shops in Krefeld and Essen, looking for IDM/electronica (4me) EBM/Industrial (4myfriend) CDs. Do any of you know a good shop in those surroundings / other cities nearby? We usually go to Enterprise. Thanks, Tinus. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 15:29Robert FeuchtlDJ Tinus wrote: >Hallo list! > >Me and a friend are planning to go visit some shops in Kre
From:
Robert Feuchtl
To:
Date:
Wed, 20 Oct 2004 17:29:20 +0200
Subject:
Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
Reply to:
[idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
permalink · <41768450.7060505@groove.de>
DJ Tinus wrote:
quoted 6 lines Hallo list!>Hallo list! > >Me and a friend are planning to go visit some shops in Krefeld and Essen, >looking for IDM/electronica (4me) EBM/Industrial (4myfriend) CDs. > >
hehe. hey, come on admit it. the ebm-stuff is for you, isn´t it? :) stand up for your shit... I still like some of the EBM / new beat thang.. I still play THE WEATHERMEN "POISON" .. it can drive ppl crazy on dancefloors serious weapon...
quoted 14 lines Do any of you know a good shop in those surroundings / other cities nearby?>Do any of you know a good shop in those surroundings / other cities nearby? >We usually go to Enterprise. > >Thanks, >Tinus. > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > > > > >
-- B O B H U M I D @ G R O O V E M A G A Z I N E ( t e c h n o l o g i c a l _ e d i t o r ) c/o robert feuchtl aachener strasse 72 50674 köln germany +49 (0)221 42 333 42 +49 (0)163 514 85 35 servicelinks: http://www.groove.de --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 15:45DJ TinusRobert, :) I like my music just a bit 'lighter' nowadays. I'm still into EBM though, alway
From:
DJ Tinus
To:
,
Date:
Wed, 20 Oct 2004 17:45:26 +0200
Subject:
RE: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
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Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
permalink · <200410201545.i9KFjR7B062575@smtp-vbr13.xs4all.nl>
Robert, :) I like my music just a bit 'lighter' nowadays. I'm still into EBM though, always been a huge fan of Front242. Had a girlfriend in Brussels during the New Beat period. Cool stuff. The Weatherman with Poison, superb track. Have it on this wonderful 'This Is Electronic Body Music' album. Not from around Essen? np: In The Carcrash - Swayzak (Swayzak sometimes reminds me of Nitzer Ebb btw) -----Original Message----- From: Robert Feuchtl [mailto:bobhumid@groove.de] Sent: woensdag 20 oktober 2004 17:29 To: idm@hyperreal.org Subject: Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany DJ Tinus wrote:
quoted 6 lines Hallo list!>Hallo list! > >Me and a friend are planning to go visit some shops in Krefeld and >Essen, looking for IDM/electronica (4me) EBM/Industrial (4myfriend) CDs. > >
hehe. hey, come on admit it. the ebm-stuff is for you, isn´t it? :) stand up for your shit... I still like some of the EBM / new beat thang.. I still play THE WEATHERMEN "POISON" .. it can drive ppl crazy on dancefloors serious weapon...
quoted 14 lines Do any of you know a good shop in those surroundings / other cities nearby?>Do any of you know a good shop in those surroundings / other cities nearby? >We usually go to Enterprise. > >Thanks, >Tinus. > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional >commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > > > > >
-- B O B H U M I D @ G R O O V E M A G A Z I N E ( t e c h n o l o g i c a l _ e d i t o r ) c/o robert feuchtl aachener strasse 72 50674 köln germany +49 (0)221 42 333 42 +49 (0)163 514 85 35 servicelinks: http://www.groove.de --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 22:46Robert FeuchtlDJ Tinus wrote: >Robert, > >:) I like my music just a bit 'lighter' nowadays. > > i still
From:
Robert Feuchtl
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Date:
Thu, 21 Oct 2004 00:46:49 +0200
Subject:
Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
Reply to:
RE: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
permalink · <4176EAD9.50809@groove.de>
DJ Tinus wrote:
quoted 5 lines Robert,>Robert, > >:) I like my music just a bit 'lighter' nowadays. > >
i still like the really heavy stuff when it is really clever. say foetus, meshuggha, skinny puppy, otto von schirach, britney spears. no. britney, no. itz too fucking scary. i mean her face expression.
quoted 3 lines I'm still into EBM though, always been a huge fan of Front242.>I'm still into EBM though, always been a huge fan of Front242. > >
i was the skinny puppy fan guy you hated cause he was constantly repeating that front 242 where lamers with only one good song, which is "headhunter" ... haha. sorry, please... lol*.. couldn´t resist... ;-).. ah, those good ole day´s religions...
quoted 3 lines Had a girlfriend in Brussels during the New Beat period. Cool stuff.>Had a girlfriend in Brussels during the New Beat period. Cool stuff. > >
funny. i still /have /a belgian girlfriend from brussels. :) and she /was /into newbeat too once. weird. hey, are we talking about the same person? :-D
quoted 4 lines The Weatherman with Poison, superb track. Have it on this wonderful 'This Is>The Weatherman with Poison, superb track. Have it on this wonderful 'This Is >Electronic Body Music' album. > >
yeah... SPV tried to set up a huge hype with EBM in germany.. they sold it for 5,90 DM in the shops, would be like 2,50 € today.. features some nice chris and cosey stuff too..
quoted 3 lines Not from around Essen?>Not from around Essen? > >
cologne. we have nice record shops here too.. plenty of them: http://www.uni-koeln.de/phil-fak/fs-muwi/platten/Absicht.htm click on "recherche" and you have a list. unfortunately in german but you´ll get an impression my recommendations: "a-musik", for all weird stuff and experimental, also a lot of electronic music.. excellent shop. "normal" for alternative and rare vinyl & CDs, THE indie shop in a classical way, nice atmopshear "paralell" strictly vinyl, strictly EVERYTHING in vinyl used or new. soundtracks, electronics, a lot of folk, jazz, chanson, gothic, breakbeat you name it.. "saturn" (get out at U-bahnstation: "hansaring" you won´t miss it) .. the wicked empire. its not PC to buy there but nobody can resist the choice in CDs. biggest jazz floor I have seen, was formerly known 2 be the biggest record shop in the world but I guess they have been beaten. buy the easy stuff there. also very cool for movies (DVD). "groove attack" for classical drum´n´bass and the usal b-boy stuff.
quoted 4 lines np: In The Carcrash - Swayzak (Swayzak sometimes reminds me of Nitzer Ebb>np: In The Carcrash - Swayzak (Swayzak sometimes reminds me of Nitzer Ebb >btw) > >
and whatever happened to "à;grummh" .. eh. did i write it right? i dont remember.. ?
quoted 52 lines -----Original Message----->-----Original Message----- >From: Robert Feuchtl [mailto:bobhumid@groove.de] >Sent: woensdag 20 oktober 2004 17:29 >To: idm@hyperreal.org >Subject: Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany > >DJ Tinus wrote: > > > >>Hallo list! >> >>Me and a friend are planning to go visit some shops in Krefeld and >>Essen, looking for IDM/electronica (4me) EBM/Industrial (4myfriend) CDs. >> >> >> >> >hehe. hey, come on admit it. the ebm-stuff is for you, isn´t it? :) > >stand up for your shit... I still like some of the EBM / new beat thang.. > >I still play THE WEATHERMEN "POISON" .. it can drive ppl crazy on >dancefloors > >serious weapon... > > > > > > >>Do any of you know a good shop in those surroundings / other cities nearby? >>We usually go to Enterprise. >> >>Thanks, >>Tinus. >> >>--------------------------------------------------------------------- >>To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional >>commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >> >> >> >> >> >> >> > > > >
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2004-10-20 22:58DJ TinusThanks for the recommendations (always wanted to make a site with content like that). Thin
From:
DJ Tinus
To:
,
Date:
Thu, 21 Oct 2004 00:58:33 +0200
Subject:
RE: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
permalink · <200410202258.i9KMwZ3I072981@smtp-vbr1.xs4all.nl>
Thanks for the recommendations (always wanted to make a site with content like that). Think we'll go to Cologne instead for a change... p.s. Don't tell me her name is Anne ;) np: Rechenzentrum - Absent minded -----Original Message----- From: Robert Feuchtl [mailto:bobhumid@groove.de] Sent: donderdag 21 oktober 2004 0:47 To: idm@hyperreal.org Subject: Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany DJ Tinus wrote:
quoted 5 lines Robert,>Robert, > >:) I like my music just a bit 'lighter' nowadays. > >
i still like the really heavy stuff when it is really clever. say foetus, meshuggha, skinny puppy, otto von schirach, britney spears. no. britney, no. itz too fucking scary. i mean her face expression.
quoted 3 lines I'm still into EBM though, always been a huge fan of Front242.>I'm still into EBM though, always been a huge fan of Front242. > >
i was the skinny puppy fan guy you hated cause he was constantly repeating that front 242 where lamers with only one good song, which is "headhunter" ... haha. sorry, please... lol*.. couldn´t resist... ;-).. ah, those good ole day´s religions...
quoted 3 lines Had a girlfriend in Brussels during the New Beat period. Cool stuff.>Had a girlfriend in Brussels during the New Beat period. Cool stuff. > >
funny. i still /have /a belgian girlfriend from brussels. :) and she /was /into newbeat too once. weird. hey, are we talking about the same person? :-D
quoted 4 lines The Weatherman with Poison, superb track. Have it on this wonderful>The Weatherman with Poison, superb track. Have it on this wonderful >'This Is Electronic Body Music' album. > >
yeah... SPV tried to set up a huge hype with EBM in germany.. they sold it for 5,90 DM in the shops, would be like 2,50 € today.. features some nice chris and cosey stuff too..
quoted 3 lines Not from around Essen?>Not from around Essen? > >
cologne. we have nice record shops here too.. plenty of them: http://www.uni-koeln.de/phil-fak/fs-muwi/platten/Absicht.htm click on "recherche" and you have a list. unfortunately in german but you´ll get an impression my recommendations: "a-musik", for all weird stuff and experimental, also a lot of electronic music.. excellent shop. "normal" for alternative and rare vinyl & CDs, THE indie shop in a classical way, nice atmopshear "paralell" strictly vinyl, strictly EVERYTHING in vinyl used or new. soundtracks, electronics, a lot of folk, jazz, chanson, gothic, breakbeat you name it.. "saturn" (get out at U-bahnstation: "hansaring" you won´t miss it) .. the wicked empire. its not PC to buy there but nobody can resist the choice in CDs. biggest jazz floor I have seen, was formerly known 2 be the biggest record shop in the world but I guess they have been beaten. buy the easy stuff there. also very cool for movies (DVD). "groove attack" for classical drum´n´bass and the usal b-boy stuff.
quoted 5 lines np: In The Carcrash - Swayzak (Swayzak sometimes reminds me of Nitzer>np: In The Carcrash - Swayzak (Swayzak sometimes reminds me of Nitzer >Ebb >btw) > >
and whatever happened to "à;grummh" .. eh. did i write it right? i dont remember.. ?
quoted 33 lines -----Original Message----->-----Original Message----- >From: Robert Feuchtl [mailto:bobhumid@groove.de] >Sent: woensdag 20 oktober 2004 17:29 >To: idm@hyperreal.org >Subject: Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany > >DJ Tinus wrote: > > > >>Hallo list! >> >>Me and a friend are planning to go visit some shops in Krefeld and >>Essen, looking for IDM/electronica (4me) EBM/Industrial (4myfriend) CDs. >> >> >> >> >hehe. hey, come on admit it. the ebm-stuff is for you, isn´t it? :) > >stand up for your shit... I still like some of the EBM / new beat thang.. > >I still play THE WEATHERMEN "POISON" .. it can drive ppl crazy on >dancefloors > >serious weapon... > > > > > > >>Do any of you know a good shop in those surroundings / other cities
nearby?
quoted 19 lines We usually go to Enterprise.>>We usually go to Enterprise. >> >>Thanks, >>Tinus. >> >>--------------------------------------------------------------------- >>To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional >>commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >> >> >> >> >> >> >> > > > >
-- B O B H U M I D @ G R O O V E M A G A Z I N E ( t e c h n o l o g i c a l _ e d i t o r ) servicelinks: http://www.groove.de --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 23:19Robert FeuchtlDJ Tinus wrote: >Thanks for the recommendations (always wanted to make a site with content
From:
Robert Feuchtl
To:
Date:
Thu, 21 Oct 2004 01:19:15 +0200
Subject:
Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
Reply to:
RE: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
permalink · <4176F273.9030108@groove.de>
DJ Tinus wrote:
quoted 4 lines Thanks for the recommendations (always wanted to make a site with content>Thanks for the recommendations (always wanted to make a site with content >like that). > >
that´ll be wicked i forgot: "formic" is closed unfortunately but still featured on the list.. but it was kind of very idealistic shop anyways.. they had focused on rare US electro, breakdance, electric boogie-stuff... you could find every record of U.S. electro history there.. . also rare detroit / chicago techno stuff.. morgan geist, dan curtin etc.. its a pity that is gone now. apropos electro-boogie: not much ppl in the states now that THE JONZUN CREW had a huge charts entry in germany, actually it got no.1 in germany back in the 80ies.. with "PACK JAM".... can u believe it? :) .. it was all because it was the title music of the one and only music-clip TV magazine back then
quoted 5 lines Think we'll go to Cologne instead for a change...>Think we'll go to Cologne instead for a change... > >p.s. Don't tell me her name is Anne ;) > >
phew. her name is olivia... :) ..
quoted 172 lines np: Rechenzentrum - Absent minded>np: Rechenzentrum - Absent minded > >-----Original Message----- >From: Robert Feuchtl [mailto:bobhumid@groove.de] >Sent: donderdag 21 oktober 2004 0:47 >To: idm@hyperreal.org >Subject: Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany > >DJ Tinus wrote: > > > >>Robert, >> >>:) I like my music just a bit 'lighter' nowadays. >> >> >> >> >i still like the really heavy stuff when it is really clever. say foetus, >meshuggha, skinny puppy, otto von schirach, britney spears. no. britney, no. >itz too fucking scary. i mean her face expression. > > > >>I'm still into EBM though, always been a huge fan of Front242. >> >> >> >> >i was the skinny puppy fan guy you hated cause he was constantly repeating >that front 242 where lamers with only one good song, which is "headhunter" >... haha. sorry, please... lol*.. couldn´t resist... ;-).. ah, those good >ole day´s religions... > > > >>Had a girlfriend in Brussels during the New Beat period. Cool stuff. >> >> >> >> >funny. i still /have /a belgian girlfriend from brussels. :) and she /was >/into newbeat too once. weird. > >hey, are we talking about the same person? :-D > > > >>The Weatherman with Poison, superb track. Have it on this wonderful >>'This Is Electronic Body Music' album. >> >> >> >> >yeah... SPV tried to set up a huge hype with EBM in germany.. they sold it >for 5,90 DM in the shops, would be like 2,50 EUR today.. features some nice >chris and cosey stuff too.. > > > >>Not from around Essen? >> >> >> >> >cologne. we have nice record shops here too.. > >plenty of them: >http://www.uni-koeln.de/phil-fak/fs-muwi/platten/Absicht.htm > >click on "recherche" and you have a list. unfortunately in german but you´ll >get an impression > >my recommendations: >"a-musik", for all weird stuff and experimental, also a lot of electronic >music.. excellent shop. >"normal" for alternative and rare vinyl & CDs, THE indie shop in a classical >way, nice atmopshear "paralell" strictly vinyl, strictly EVERYTHING in vinyl >used or new. >soundtracks, electronics, a lot of folk, jazz, chanson, gothic, breakbeat >you name it.. >"saturn" (get out at U-bahnstation: "hansaring" you won´t miss it) .. >the wicked empire. its not PC to buy there but nobody can resist the choice >in CDs. biggest jazz floor I have seen, was formerly known 2 be the biggest >record shop in the world but I guess they have been beaten. >buy the easy stuff there. also very cool for movies (DVD). >"groove attack" for classical drum´n´bass and the usal b-boy stuff. > > > >>np: In The Carcrash - Swayzak (Swayzak sometimes reminds me of Nitzer >>Ebb >>btw) >> >> >> >> >and whatever happened to "à;grummh" .. eh. did i write it right? i dont >remember.. ? > > > >>-----Original Message----- >>From: Robert Feuchtl [mailto:bobhumid@groove.de] >>Sent: woensdag 20 oktober 2004 17:29 >>To: idm@hyperreal.org >>Subject: Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany >> >>DJ Tinus wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >>>Hallo list! >>> >>>Me and a friend are planning to go visit some shops in Krefeld and >>>Essen, looking for IDM/electronica (4me) EBM/Industrial (4myfriend) CDs. >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>hehe. hey, come on admit it. the ebm-stuff is for you, isn´t it? :) >> >>stand up for your shit... I still like some of the EBM / new beat thang.. >> >>I still play THE WEATHERMEN "POISON" .. it can drive ppl crazy on >>dancefloors >> >>serious weapon... >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >>>Do any of you know a good shop in those surroundings / other cities >>> >>> >nearby? > > >>>We usually go to Enterprise. >>> >>>Thanks, >>>Tinus. >>> >>>--------------------------------------------------------------------- >>>To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional >>>commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >> >> >> >> > > > >
-- B O B H U M I D @ G R O O V E M A G A Z I N E ( t e c h n o l o g i c a l _ e d i t o r ) servicelinks: http://www.groove.de
2004-10-20 23:44DJ Tinus>>Thanks for the recommendations (always wanted to make a site with content >>like that).
From:
DJ Tinus
To:
Cc:
Date:
Thu, 21 Oct 2004 01:44:10 +0200 (CEST)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
permalink · <20475.193.32.3.82.1098315850.squirrel@webmail.xs4all.nl>
quoted 4 lines Thanks for the recommendations (always wanted to make a site with content>>Thanks for the recommendations (always wanted to make a site with content >>like that). >> > that´ll be wicked
I have the strange habit of taking digital pictures of all the record stores I visit wherever I am (recently Smallfish, Phonica, Reckless, before I saw Michael Mayer and Ellen Alien in London's Fabric). So maybe one day...
quoted 6 lines i forgot:> i forgot: > "formic" is closed unfortunately but still featured on the list.. but it > was kind of very idealistic shop anyways.. they had focused on rare US > electro, breakdance, electric boogie-stuff... you could find every > record of U.S. electro history there.. . also rare detroit / chicago > techno stuff.. morgan geist, dan curtin etc.. its a pity that is gone now.
I dig the +8 stuff a lot. Classic detroit techno rules.
quoted 15 lines apropos electro-boogie: not much ppl in the states now that THE JONZUN> apropos electro-boogie: not much ppl in the states now that THE JONZUN > CREW had a huge charts entry in germany, actually it got no.1 in germany > back in the 80ies.. with "PACK JAM".... can u believe it? :) .. it was > all because it was the title music of the one and only music-clip TV > magazine back then > >>Think we'll go to Cologne instead for a change... >> >>p.s. Don't tell me her name is Anne ;) >> >> > phew. her name is olivia... :) .. > >>np: Rechenzentrum - Absent minded >>
np: Anthony Rother - Past Present The Future (Depth Charge presents Electro Boogie !K7075)
quoted 171 lines -----Original Message----->>-----Original Message----- >>From: Robert Feuchtl [mailto:bobhumid@groove.de] >>Sent: donderdag 21 oktober 2004 0:47 >>To: idm@hyperreal.org >>Subject: Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany >> >>DJ Tinus wrote: >> >> >> >>>Robert, >>> >>>:) I like my music just a bit 'lighter' nowadays. >>> >>> >>> >>> >>i still like the really heavy stuff when it is really clever. say foetus, >>meshuggha, skinny puppy, otto von schirach, britney spears. no. britney, >> no. >>itz too fucking scary. i mean her face expression. >> >> >> >>>I'm still into EBM though, always been a huge fan of Front242. >>> >>> >>> >>> >>i was the skinny puppy fan guy you hated cause he was constantly >> repeating >>that front 242 where lamers with only one good song, which is >> "headhunter" >>... haha. sorry, please... lol*.. couldn´t resist... ;-).. ah, those good >>ole day´s religions... >> >> >> >>>Had a girlfriend in Brussels during the New Beat period. Cool stuff. >>> >>> >>> >>> >>funny. i still /have /a belgian girlfriend from brussels. :) and she /was >>/into newbeat too once. weird. >> >>hey, are we talking about the same person? :-D >> >> >> >>>The Weatherman with Poison, superb track. Have it on this wonderful >>>'This Is Electronic Body Music' album. >>> >>> >>> >>> >>yeah... SPV tried to set up a huge hype with EBM in germany.. they sold >> it >>for 5,90 DM in the shops, would be like 2,50 EUR today.. features some >> nice >>chris and cosey stuff too.. >> >> >> >>>Not from around Essen? >>> >>> >>> >>> >>cologne. we have nice record shops here too.. >> >>plenty of them: >>http://www.uni-koeln.de/phil-fak/fs-muwi/platten/Absicht.htm >> >>click on "recherche" and you have a list. unfortunately in german but >> you´ll >>get an impression >> >>my recommendations: >>"a-musik", for all weird stuff and experime > ntal, also a lot of electronic >>music.. excellent shop. >>"normal" for alternative and rare vinyl & CDs, THE indie shop in a >> classical >>way, nice atmopshear "paralell" strictly vinyl, strictly EVERYTHING in >> vinyl >>used or new. >>soundtracks, electronics, a lot of folk, jazz, chanson, gothic, breakbeat >>you name it.. >>"saturn" (get out at U-bahnstation: "hansaring" you won´t miss it) .. >>the wicked empire. its not PC to buy there but nobody can resist the >> choice >>in CDs. biggest jazz floor I have seen, was formerly known 2 be the >> biggest >>record shop in the world but I guess they have been beaten. >>buy the easy stuff there. also very cool for movies (DVD). >>"groove attack" for classical drum´n´bass and the usal b-boy stuff. >> >> >> >>>np: In The Carcrash - Swayzak (Swayzak sometimes reminds me of Nitzer >>>Ebb >>>btw) >>> >>> >>> >>> >>and whatever happened to "à;grummh" .. eh. did i write it right? i dont >>remember.. ? >> >> >> >>>-----Original Message----- >>>From: Robert Feuchtl [mailto:bobhumid@groove.de] >>>Sent: woensdag 20 oktober 2004 17:29 >>>To: idm@hyperreal.org >>>Subject: Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany >>> >>>DJ Tinus wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>>>Hallo list! >>>> >>>>Me and a friend are planning to go visit some shops in Krefeld and >>>>Essen, looking for IDM/electronica (4me) EBM/Industrial (4myfriend) >>>> CDs. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>hehe. hey, come on admit it. the ebm-stuff is for you, isn´t it? :) >>> >>>stand up for your shit... I still like some of the EBM / new beat >>> thang.. >>> >>>I still play THE WEATHERMEN "POISON" .. it can drive ppl crazy on >>>dancefloors >>> >>>serious weapon... >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>>>Do any of you know a good shop in those surroundings / other cities >>>> >>>> >>nearby? >> >> >>>>We usually go to Enterprise. >>>> >>>>Thanks, >>>>Tinus. >>>>> > -- > B O B H U M I D @ G R O O V E M A G A Z I N E > ( t e c h n o l o g i c a l _ e d i t o r ) > > > > servicelinks: > http://www.groove.de
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2004-10-27 23:35ko broken electronica industrieshi, formic closed their shop in cologne city. now they are located at the following adress
From:
ko broken electronica industries
To:
Date:
Thu, 28 Oct 2004 01:35:10 +0200
Subject:
AW: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Good shops near Dutch boarder of Germany
permalink · <BMEFLCJKPMFHPNNGLPEICEHLDGAA.mail@klangforschungost.org>
hi, formic closed their shop in cologne city. now they are located at the following adress: Maria Zanders Anlage 2 51465 Bergisch Gladbach Germany cheers, d ----- i forgot: "formic" is closed unfortunately but still featured on the list.. but it was kind of very idealistic shop anyways.. they had focused on rare US electro, breakdance, electric boogie-stuff... you could find every record of U.S. electro history there.. . also rare detroit / chicago techno stuff.. morgan geist, dan curtin etc.. its a pity that is gone now. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 15:25Robert Feuchtlhey, if you want to dig deep into the soul of scifi and its substance you´ll have to read
From:
Robert Feuchtl
To:
Date:
Wed, 20 Oct 2004 17:25:16 +0200
Subject:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
Reply to:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
permalink · <4176835C.7010608@groove.de>
hey, if you want to dig deep into the soul of scifi and its substance you´ll have to read late american 50ies / 60ies scifi and the things that came afterwards... that is the relevant period. while in the 60ies american television and cinema illustrated their subsconsious fear about russian invasions by issueing the never-ending "alien invasion" topic the real shit was only in the books.. the focus was on deep human psychology and scifi-writers where way ahead of their times.. look for books by these geniouses.. more psy-fi phillip k dick (u know him) john brunner (get a copy of "players and the play of people" and "quicksand" frank herbert ("the santaroga barrier") more classical scifi philipp josé farmer ("riverworld") jack vance (the mighty romancier of scifi, he created hyper-realistic scenarios of alien worlds and cultures, read the "alastor"-cyclus...) from the later writers I like Ian Banks... (but thats 80ies) but there is more excellent writers but I don´t dare to go down into my underground vaults cause I might nog get back before midnight ;) bob humid Adam Piontek wrote:
quoted 49 lines Never could get into Gibson (but then I've only read 1.6 Gibson books,> Never could get into Gibson (but then I've only read 1.6 Gibson books, > perhaps I should give him another shot someday) > > ...or "cyberpunk" in general. Always seemed too faddish, more style > than substance - I mean, it always seemed too disconnected from > possible reality, more tech-fantasy than sci-fi. But then sci-fi and > fantasy are pretty much one and the same, really. Speaking of which, > The closest I've come to enjoying cyberpunk was China Mieville's > _Perdido Street Station_, which I know isn't really cyberpunk - if > anything it's "steampunk", but I wanted to mention it because it's a > beautiful book. Does anyone know if his "sequel" books "The Scar" and > "Iron Council" are similar at all, or "as good"? > > I suppose "cyberpunk" is the IDM fiction style - comes to mind when > thinking of early Warp (B12, early Autechre...) > > But don't real hackers only rave? :P > -adam piontek > > n3wjack wrote: > >> or William Gibson, >> TEH cyberpunk writer imo >> >> Philip K. Dick rulz btw, started reading some of his books after >> seeing Blade Runner which was based on his "Do Androids Dream of >> Electric Sheep" book >> >> On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 09:31:02 -0400, Adam Piontek <adam@damek.org> wrote: >> >>> Well Lem is good, of course. Never read any Philip K Dick, but I keep >>> meaning to. Kim Stanley Robinson is also good, and he wrote his thesis >>> on PKD. Don't read his Antarctica, though, it's not very good. >>> >>> Other than that I give high respect to Ken MacLeod and Alastair >>> Reynolds >>> - Scottish & Welsh/Dutch (respectively) authors of smart space opera... >>> Something vaguely IDM about them. If you like Vernor Vinge... >>> >>> -adam piontek >> > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > > >
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2004-10-20 15:50Fisk IndustriesSome classic British Sci-fi is John Wyndham; Day Of The Triffids, Chocky, The Chrysalids..
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Some classic British Sci-fi is John Wyndham; Day Of The Triffids, Chocky, The Chrysalids...plus many more. All very, very good. On 20 Oct 2004, at 16:25, Robert Feuchtl wrote: hey, if you want to dig deep into the soul of scifi and its substance you´ll have to read late american 50ies / 60ies scifi and the things that came afterwards... that is the relevant period. while in the 60ies american television and cinema illustrated their subsconsious fear about russian invasions by issueing the never-ending "alien invasion" topic the real shit was only in the books.. the focus was on deep human psychology and scifi-writers where way ahead of their times.. look for books by these geniouses.. more psy-fi phillip k dick (u know him) john brunner (get a copy of "players and the play of people" and "quicksand" frank herbert ("the santaroga barrier") more classical scifi philipp josé farmer ("riverworld") jack vance (the mighty romancier of scifi, he created hyper-realistic scenarios of alien worlds and cultures, read the "alastor"-cyclus...) from the later writers I like Ian Banks... (but thats 80ies) but there is more excellent writers but I don´t dare to go down into my underground vaults cause I might nog get back before midnight ;) bob humid Adam Piontek wrote:
quoted 53 lines Never could get into Gibson (but then I've only read 1.6 Gibson books,> Never could get into Gibson (but then I've only read 1.6 Gibson books, > perhaps I should give him another shot someday) > > ...or "cyberpunk" in general. Always seemed too faddish, more style > than substance - I mean, it always seemed too disconnected from > possible reality, more tech-fantasy than sci-fi. But then sci-fi and > fantasy are pretty much one and the same, really. Speaking of which, > The closest I've come to enjoying cyberpunk was China Mieville's > _Perdido Street Station_, which I know isn't really cyberpunk - if > anything it's "steampunk", but I wanted to mention it because it's a > beautiful book. Does anyone know if his "sequel" books "The Scar" and > "Iron Council" are similar at all, or "as good"? > > I suppose "cyberpunk" is the IDM fiction style - comes to mind when > thinking of early Warp (B12, early Autechre...) > > But don't real hackers only rave? :P > -adam piontek > > n3wjack wrote: > >> or William Gibson, >> TEH cyberpunk writer imo >> >> Philip K. Dick rulz btw, started reading some of his books after >> seeing Blade Runner which was based on his "Do Androids Dream of >> Electric Sheep" book >> >> On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 09:31:02 -0400, Adam Piontek <adam@damek.org> >> wrote: >> >>> Well Lem is good, of course. Never read any Philip K Dick, but I >>> keep >>> meaning to. Kim Stanley Robinson is also good, and he wrote his >>> thesis >>> on PKD. Don't read his Antarctica, though, it's not very good. >>> >>> Other than that I give high respect to Ken MacLeod and Alastair >>> Reynolds >>> - Scottish & Welsh/Dutch (respectively) authors of smart space >>> opera... >>> Something vaguely IDM about them. If you like Vernor Vinge... >>> >>> -adam piontek >> > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > > >
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2004-10-20 18:40EnquiriesAdam piontek wrote: > ...or "cyberpunk" in general. Always seemed too faddish, more style
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Adam piontek wrote:
quoted 3 lines ...or "cyberpunk" in general. Always seemed too faddish, more style> ...or "cyberpunk" in general. Always seemed too faddish, more style > than substance - I mean, it always seemed too disconnected from possible > reality, more tech-fantasy than sci-fi.
You should try Neal Stephenson's Snowcrash, possibly very prescient stuff. Its successor, The Diamond Age focuses on nanotechnology, also pretty fascinating and perhaps better aligned to your predilection for steampunk. I found Cryptonomicon a bit disappointing. Bob Humid wrote:
quoted 3 lines if you want to dig deep into the soul of scifi and its substance you´ll> if you want to dig deep into the soul of scifi and its substance you´ll > have to read late american 50ies / 60ies scifi and the things that came > afterwards...
I'd suggest going back to HG Wells, Mary Shelley, Gustav Meyrink and Jules Verne in terms of precedent. And Wiliam S. Burroughs and J.G. Ballard of course. Tim Walters wrote:
quoted 2 lines Bruce Sterling's SCHISMATRIX isn't on there, and probably should be. It's> Bruce Sterling's SCHISMATRIX isn't on there, and probably should be. It's > certainly my favorite cyberpunk novel.
I've always found Sterling disappointing though I haven't read Schismatrix. My own recommendations: Jorge Luis Borges - anything, but particularly the collection called Labyrinths, not sci-fi, but what the heck, deals with the infinite Thomas Pynchon - has to be Gravity's Rainbow really. Samuel R. Delaney - dhalgren, don't know where to start, just read it. Jeff Noon - the earlier ones, particularly Vurt and Pollen. Donald Barthelme - again not really sci-fi, but freaky enough to include. Cheers, Colin. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 19:05seek----- Original Message ----- From: "Enquiries" > My own recommendations: > Jorge Luis Borg
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----- Original Message ----- From: "Enquiries"
quoted 7 lines My own recommendations:> My own recommendations: > Jorge Luis Borges - anything, but particularly the collection called > Labyrinths, not sci-fi, but what the heck, deals with the infinite > Thomas Pynchon - has to be Gravity's Rainbow really. > Samuel R. Delaney - dhalgren, don't know where to start, just read it. > Jeff Noon - the earlier ones, particularly Vurt and Pollen. > Donald Barthelme - again not really sci-fi, but freaky enough to include.
Now ~that~ is a worthwhile reading list. seek --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 19:57dobriI agree. I started reading dhalgren last summer and was scared by the gay sex scenes. i'm
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I agree. I started reading dhalgren last summer and was scared by the gay sex scenes. i'm not used seeing that in sci-fi. there's some engulfing atmosphere in this book, however, and I'm going to read it when i'm done with other readings. besides these, a lot of sci-fi novels that i read in my early teens, like the day of the trifids, artur clark, asimov, etc. probably pushed me towards strange electronica later on. me and several other friends in a local sci-fi fan club are crazy fans of electronic music also. they are psy-trance lovers (even though tried to convert them), while i'm digging deeper in synthetic music. btw, gibson's neuromancer audiobook is backed up by pretty old-school instrumental rock. i think u2 contributed a track, if i don't mistake it with something else. it could be much different. there's obviously some discrepancy in time between music and text futurists. anyone trying to call their music cyberpunk? this sounds pretty logical, doesn't it? anyone calling their writing idm? or braindance litetarure :))) this is part of what i think about the connection/parallels between sci-fi and electronica: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> even though eletronic musicians listen to their work in the headphones in their (home-) studios, they do not record the accoustic sounds (unless they mix live samples with synthetic sounds, which makes things a little more complicated). they construct electric signals, either analog or digital, which travel through complicated networks of cables and plates, being the subject of processing, refining (or distortion) and arranging. at the end, the result is recorded again as a sequence of potential electric/magnetic signals. the whole thing never really left the realm of wires. now, as i'm listening to a plop compilation, most of the sounds receive accoustic life from the speakers for the first time. before that, they were just electricity or bits of information. other speakers played the same bits of information much earlier, but these don't have anything to do with my copies of the music files. in the same way, science-fiction reality happens in our minds for the first time when we read it. this reality is not one that the writers saw in the real world. it is a complitely synthetically fabricated world which the writers weave according to their own imagination and then record into paper and harddisks in order our brains to give life to it later. that's how electronic music and science-fiction are similar in "artificiality" and that's probably one of the reasons why so many people enjoy these genres. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> well, that's for now, dobri "The best way to predict the future is to go (mentally) in the direction in which our fears grow." "What some people perceive as the End of the World, for History is just the sign that Future is coming." seek wrote:
quoted 26 lines ----- Original Message ----->----- Original Message ----- >From: "Enquiries" > > >>My own recommendations: >>Jorge Luis Borges - anything, but particularly the collection called >>Labyrinths, not sci-fi, but what the heck, deals with the infinite >>Thomas Pynchon - has to be Gravity's Rainbow really. >>Samuel R. Delaney - dhalgren, don't know where to start, just read it. >>Jeff Noon - the earlier ones, particularly Vurt and Pollen. >>Donald Barthelme - again not really sci-fi, but freaky enough to include. >> >> > > >Now ~that~ is a worthwhile reading list. > >seek > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > > > >
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2004-10-20 20:22Greg ClowAt 03:57 PM 20/10/2004, dobri wrote: >anyone trying to call their music cyberpunk? Billy I
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At 03:57 PM 20/10/2004, dobri wrote:
quoted 1 line anyone trying to call their music cyberpunk?>anyone trying to call their music cyberpunk?
Billy Idol. http://www.chaoscontrol.com/content_article.php?article=billyidol G. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Greg Clow ::: greg@stainedproductions.com ::::::::: concert & event promotions ::: http://www.stainedproductions.com :::::: electronic music radio & reviews ::: http://www.feedbackmonitor.com ::: electronic/experimental record label ::: http://www.pieheadrecords.com ::::::::: 158 Close Ave. 2nd Floor ::: Toronto, Ontario M6K 2V5 ::: Canada --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 23:46Robert Feuchtl> > in the same way, science-fiction reality happens in our minds for the > first time whe
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quoted 11 lines in the same way, science-fiction reality happens in our minds for the> > in the same way, science-fiction reality happens in our minds for the > first time when we read it. this reality is not one that the writers > saw in the real world. it is a complitely synthetically fabricated > world which the writers weave according to their own imagination and > then record into paper and harddisks in order our brains to give life > to it later. > > that's how electronic music and science-fiction are similar in > "artificiality" and that's probably one of the reasons why so many > people enjoy these genres.
i´m sorry friend. can´t agree with that. the scifi I mostly always admired is sometimes a predicted future, yes but not necessarily artifial nature (jack vance is quite hippie / fantasy stuff in a sophisticated scientific way)... I am simply fascinated by the possibilties of the future (frank herbert, p.k. dick). they feedback backwards towards our life. sci fi was an hatred genre because ppl thought it has nothing to do with their lifes.. this made the authors of these times even more mad about writing real shit.. that, and the (re)discovery of drugs and psychology, zen-philosophy etc. in the early 60ies towards the late 60ies layed the ground for the golden age of scifi which definetly was in that era. and john brunner is a fucking genious of giving real life stories a dark and thrilling psychologic twist.. i don´t understand why nobody ever plundered his books for film. aynways, thats also scifi and absolutely not artificial... i think its just the slick black / silver polished spaceships and an affection for high-tec we have since getting paralyzed by THX1138, blade runner and alien ... :) is "stalker" scifi? is it artificial? :)
quoted 8 lines well, that's for now,> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > > well, that's for now, > dobri > > > "The best way to predict the future is to go (mentally) in the > direction in which our fears grow."
yeah. but I totally agree with that... :)
quoted 2 lines "What some people perceive as the End of the World, for History is> "What some people perceive as the End of the World, for History is > just the sign that Future is coming."
u should have told that to the dinosaurs ;)
quoted 36 lines seek wrote:> > > seek wrote: > >> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Enquiries" >> >>> My own recommendations: >>> Jorge Luis Borges - anything, but particularly the collection called >>> Labyrinths, not sci-fi, but what the heck, deals with the infinite >>> Thomas Pynchon - has to be Gravity's Rainbow really. >>> Samuel R. Delaney - dhalgren, don't know where to start, just read it. >>> Jeff Noon - the earlier ones, particularly Vurt and Pollen. >>> Donald Barthelme - again not really sci-fi, but freaky enough to >>> include. >>> >> >> >> >> Now ~that~ is a worthwhile reading list. >> >> seek >> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >> For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >> >> >> >> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > > >
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2004-10-21 00:33dobrii'm talking about the technicalities of writing and reading about NON-EXISTENT (so far) wo
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i'm talking about the technicalities of writing and reading about NON-EXISTENT (so far) worlds and creating sounds which didn't exist before the speaker played them. i'm not concerned at all with how realistic a sci-fi, cyberpunk, space-opera, lsd-novel, etc is. in the same way, sounds coming from a synthesizer are artificially-produced but are not less real than those coming from a piano. you should not confuse "real", "realistic", "artificial", and "synthetic". see, when you play the guitar, the vibration is part of the qualities of the strings and the wooden-box. you can actually hear the strings vibrating, and the wooden box reinforcing the sound-wave. it's part of nature that you're listening to. in contrast, the synthesizer doesn't possess any good accoustic characteristics. it, however, can create certain electromagnetic fields which provoke a speaker membrane to vibrate. the worlds of william gibson don't exist in reality, do they? he didn't go out, saw a guy with chips in his head and steel bones and said, "dude, let's write a novel about that guy over there!" or maybe you can make the argument that certain people can see directly in the future as it is going to be? i doubt it. anyway. maybe you should just fuck this topic, it became too theoretical. dobri Robert Feuchtl wrote:
quoted 93 lines in the same way, science-fiction reality happens in our minds for the> >> >> in the same way, science-fiction reality happens in our minds for the >> first time when we read it. this reality is not one that the writers >> saw in the real world. it is a complitely synthetically fabricated >> world which the writers weave according to their own imagination and >> then record into paper and harddisks in order our brains to give life >> to it later. >> >> that's how electronic music and science-fiction are similar in >> "artificiality" and that's probably one of the reasons why so many >> people enjoy these genres. > > > iґm sorry friend. canґt agree with that. the scifi I mostly always > admired is sometimes a predicted future, yes but not necessarily > artifial nature (jack vance is quite hippie / fantasy stuff in a > sophisticated scientific way)... I am simply fascinated by the > possibilties of the future (frank herbert, p.k. dick). they feedback > backwards towards our life. sci fi was an hatred genre because ppl > thought it has nothing to do with their lifes.. this made the authors > of these times even more mad about writing real shit.. that, and the > (re)discovery of drugs and psychology, zen-philosophy etc. in the > early 60ies towards the late 60ies layed the ground for the golden age > of scifi which definetly was in that era. and john brunner is a > fucking genious of giving real life stories a dark and thrilling > psychologic twist.. i donґt understand why nobody ever plundered his > books for film. aynways, thats also scifi and absolutely not > artificial... > > i think its just the slick black / silver polished spaceships and an > affection for high-tec we have since getting paralyzed by THX1138, > blade runner and alien ... :) > > is "stalker" scifi? is it artificial? :) > >> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >> >> well, that's for now, >> dobri >> >> >> "The best way to predict the future is to go (mentally) in the >> direction in which our fears grow." > > > yeah. but I totally agree with that... :) > >> "What some people perceive as the End of the World, for History is >> just the sign that Future is coming." > > > u should have told that to the dinosaurs ;) > >> >> >> seek wrote: >> >>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Enquiries" >>> >>>> My own recommendations: >>>> Jorge Luis Borges - anything, but particularly the collection called >>>> Labyrinths, not sci-fi, but what the heck, deals with the infinite >>>> Thomas Pynchon - has to be Gravity's Rainbow really. >>>> Samuel R. Delaney - dhalgren, don't know where to start, just read it. >>>> Jeff Noon - the earlier ones, particularly Vurt and Pollen. >>>> Donald Barthelme - again not really sci-fi, but freaky enough to >>>> include. >>>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> Now ~that~ is a worthwhile reading list. >>> >>> seek >>> >>> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >>> For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >>> >>> >>> >>> >> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >> For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >> >> >> > >
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2004-10-21 02:18Adam PiontekThe art of music just isn't really comparable to the art of writing, except perhaps abstra
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Wed, 20 Oct 2004 22:18:47 -0400
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Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
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Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
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The art of music just isn't really comparable to the art of writing, except perhaps abstract poetry. Writing is about telling a story; it tickles the social/psychological part of our brain. Except for songwriting, music is chiefly about creating pleasing/interesting sounds. It touches one of our senses directly. As for creating something that didn't exist before, *ALL* fiction writing is fantasy to a certain extent. It's all creating lies from nothing. I always just figured IDM/electronic music had ties to sci-fi because the creators of each have their heads in the same clouds and think about similar things. -adam piontek On Oct 20, 2004, at 8:33 PM, dobri wrote:
quoted 129 lines i'm talking about the technicalities of writing and reading about> i'm talking about the technicalities of writing and reading about > NON-EXISTENT (so far) worlds and creating sounds which didn't exist > before the speaker played them. i'm not concerned at all with how > realistic a sci-fi, cyberpunk, space-opera, lsd-novel, etc is. in the > same way, sounds coming from a synthesizer are artificially-produced > but are not less real than those coming from a piano. you should not > confuse "real", "realistic", "artificial", and "synthetic". > > see, when you play the guitar, the vibration is part of the qualities > of the strings and the wooden-box. you can actually hear the strings > vibrating, and the wooden box reinforcing the sound-wave. it's part of > nature that you're listening to. in contrast, the synthesizer doesn't > possess any good accoustic characteristics. it, however, can create > certain electromagnetic fields which provoke a speaker membrane to > vibrate. > > the worlds of william gibson don't exist in reality, do they? he > didn't go out, saw a guy with chips in his head and steel bones and > said, "dude, let's write a novel about that guy over there!" or maybe > you can make the argument that certain people can see directly in the > future as it is going to be? i doubt it. > > anyway. maybe you should just fuck this topic, it became too > theoretical. > > dobri > > > Robert Feuchtl wrote: > >> >>> >>> in the same way, science-fiction reality happens in our minds for >>> the first time when we read it. this reality is not one that the >>> writers saw in the real world. it is a complitely synthetically >>> fabricated world which the writers weave according to their own >>> imagination and then record into paper and harddisks in order our >>> brains to give life to it later. >>> >>> that's how electronic music and science-fiction are similar in >>> "artificiality" and that's probably one of the reasons why so many >>> people enjoy these genres. >> >> >> iґm sorry friend. canґt agree with that. the scifi I mostly always >> admired is sometimes a predicted future, yes but not necessarily >> artifial nature (jack vance is quite hippie / fantasy stuff in a >> sophisticated scientific way)... I am simply fascinated by the >> possibilties of the future (frank herbert, p.k. dick). they feedback >> backwards towards our life. sci fi was an hatred genre because ppl >> thought it has nothing to do with their lifes.. this made the authors >> of these times even more mad about writing real shit.. that, and the >> (re)discovery of drugs and psychology, zen-philosophy etc. in the >> early 60ies towards the late 60ies layed the ground for the golden >> age of scifi which definetly was in that era. and john brunner is a >> fucking genious of giving real life stories a dark and thrilling >> psychologic twist.. i donґt understand why nobody ever plundered his >> books for film. aynways, thats also scifi and absolutely not >> artificial... >> >> i think its just the slick black / silver polished spaceships and an >> affection for high-tec we have since getting paralyzed by THX1138, >> blade runner and alien ... :) >> >> is "stalker" scifi? is it artificial? :) >> >>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>> >>> well, that's for now, >>> dobri >>> >>> >>> "The best way to predict the future is to go (mentally) in the >>> direction in which our fears grow." >> >> >> yeah. but I totally agree with that... :) >> >>> "What some people perceive as the End of the World, for History is >>> just the sign that Future is coming." >> >> >> u should have told that to the dinosaurs ;) >> >>> >>> >>> seek wrote: >>> >>>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Enquiries" >>>>> My own recommendations: >>>>> Jorge Luis Borges - anything, but particularly the collection >>>>> called >>>>> Labyrinths, not sci-fi, but what the heck, deals with the infinite >>>>> Thomas Pynchon - has to be Gravity's Rainbow really. >>>>> Samuel R. Delaney - dhalgren, don't know where to start, just read >>>>> it. >>>>> Jeff Noon - the earlier ones, particularly Vurt and Pollen. >>>>> Donald Barthelme - again not really sci-fi, but freaky enough to >>>>> include. >>>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Now ~that~ is a worthwhile reading list. >>>> >>>> seek >>>> >>>> -------------------------------------------------------------------- >>>> - >>>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >>>> For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> >>> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >>> For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >>> >>> >>> >> >> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >
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2004-10-21 05:24Robert Feuchtldobri, thats going to be long. sorry, i will keep a maximum of 20 lines next time.. just m
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Robert Feuchtl
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Thu, 21 Oct 2004 07:24:46 +0200
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Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
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Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
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dobri, thats going to be long. sorry, i will keep a maximum of 20 lines next time.. just my kind of rap... ;) and i had some neuronal activity I couldn´t stop. don´t take it wrong I am not trying to fuck up what you said. I understand your point of view too. if you are bored (or anyone else is) just tell me. dobri wrote:
quoted 3 lines i'm talking about the technicalities of writing and reading about> i'm talking about the technicalities of writing and reading about > NON-EXISTENT (so far) worlds and creating sounds which didn't exist > before the speaker played them.
you mean like an acoustic guitar on the first day of its invention? what you say makes totally sense but its not happening anymore. most sounds ppl do have been done before. non-exsiting worlds. yes, give it to me! :) its mostly a problem of technology that is already quite explored. rupert hine once said: "we cannot compose new melodies anymore, each thinkable melody has been done already. its about rearranging and twisting the game a little now... we can only variate.". i am afraid that is the case most of the time. but i know what you mean. actually we can do "acoustical sci-fi" with any given instrument or voice or whatever. its the attitude to actually really do something that wasn´t heared before. actually science fiction AND IDM both trigger the sense for exploration of uncharted territory.
quoted 5 lines i'm not concerned at all with how realistic a sci-fi, cyberpunk,> i'm not concerned at all with how realistic a sci-fi, cyberpunk, > space-opera, lsd-novel, etc is. in the same way, sounds coming from a > synthesizer are artificially-produced but are not less real than those > coming from a piano. you should not confuse "real", "realistic", > "artificial", and "synthetic".
:) sorry, i just don´t have your perception and concept of synthetic and artificial. a piano is a highly technical and therefore "artificial" thing for me. pure technology anyway. it does not grow on trees. it makes an extremely complex amplified sound that cannot be imitated by human voice, thatz why we feel so "small" and touched when a piano is playing. it is mighty and it is a technically amplified sound. look at it phenomenologically. the synthesizer does allow all kind of natural feedbacks too. i can touch it, play it, smell it, throw it out of the window. analog synths are highly sensitive to temperature. the amplification is not relevant to me. an electric guitar is as direct and natural as an acoustic guitar. the problem with the synthesizer is only that the speaker-system is not build in. we could do that. then it´ll be more natural in your sense? I vaguely remember this song from wevie stonder: "from the brain to the mouth, from the mouth to the mic, from the mic to the amp, from the amp to the speakers, from the speakers to your ears, from your ears to your brain. from the brain to my mouth.." or somthing alike.. each step of transportation / amplification is natural and equal in my understanding of "natural". i really dug that
quoted 5 lines see, when you play the guitar, the vibration is part of the qualities> > see, when you play the guitar, the vibration is part of the qualities > of the strings and the wooden-box. you can actually hear the strings > vibrating, and the wooden box reinforcing the sound-wave. it's part of > nature that you're listening to.
or not listening to. in psycho-acoustics we have the "masking effect" which says that in case that a low sound that was perceived by our neuronal system (brain) is followed by a loud sound its information will be substracted from the perceptive system. a loud sound coming in several milliseconds AFTER an already perceived low sound will be recognised consciously and prefered, while the low sound is deleted before it is pushed to consciousness (olthough it was in a buffered neuronal storage system before). this is possible cause there is a latency between hearing and storing the sound as an information and finally bringing it into the focus of the person. this is a mathematical process of addition / subtraction on a very high and precise level. what I want to say is: if my brain works sometimes like a signal processor, then how natural is a computer? worth to think about it and these kind of thoughts are exactly the ones that come to me since I read scifi :) ... i cannot think of a more life-focussed, nature-based concept and way to read ( a little bit of irony here ) ;) you have to be really carefully with the concept of "natural". it´s so overdone... i don´t think anyone on the planet can precisely say if the technological evolution (synthesizers, atomboms, mobile phones, food design) we are going through is natural or not. its just a human definition. I personally think IT IS natural. even I believe since we started polluting our bodies with radio-activity, quicksilver abuse, decreasing food-quality and electro-magnetic field-force overdoses and so on we really fucked it up ("we have come a long way baby"). BUT I am afraid that it is all part of nature´s concept. the planet doesn´t mind. the development of intelligent strategies and consciousness lead to technology and "civilisation". I can only think of "nature" as being the sum of all relevant dynamic forces of the universe in themselves (energy, entropy, gravity, electro-magnetism and so on). so nature is simply anything that is happening (in my opinion). and I am not so alone with it http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nature#The_natural_and_the_artificial
quoted 3 lines in contrast, the synthesizer doesn't possess any good accoustic> in contrast, the synthesizer doesn't possess any good accoustic > characteristics. it, however, can create certain electromagnetic > fields which provoke a speaker membrane to vibrate.
pure nature. I can make my guitar sound like a synthesizer if I want it. I just need acoustical tools.. no electricity or chips. the physical rules of sound-engineering say that you can produce mostle ANY acoustic manipulation with mechanical amplification and without electricity. filters are easy, you have to damp certain frequencies and if you move the sound-source while filtering you can achieve modulated filtering. exactly like a synthesizer (just waaay more fumbling). don´t try this at home, kids. a good example is the bass-filtering in acoustical subwoofers by simply damping the sound with material. (the ones without electrical LowPass-Filters) or human beatboxing
quoted 2 lines the worlds of william gibson don't exist in reality, do they?> > the worlds of william gibson don't exist in reality, do they?
yes and no. literally: no. we don´t have the chess-board-style matrix surfing lifestyle. but on the other hand we have all kind of viruses, trojans, bots and so on and we do use computers in a similar way. they are exactly the same in the networks then in gibsons vision. the difference is the dramatic effect. the computer-stuff in gibsan´s books are magnified, distorted. and then: just wait 2-3 years until SONY or another company starts selling some 180° panoramic TFT glasses that keep a hole generation of kids from making any homework ever again and will cause dramatical addictive problems on computer- and gamefreaks. design a 180° compatible webbrowser and you are half the way towards neuromancer (without the implants). but i guess gibson is not toffler..
quoted 4 lines he didn't go out, saw a guy with chips in his head and steel bones and> he didn't go out, saw a guy with chips in his head and steel bones and > said, "dude, let's write a novel about that guy over there!" or maybe > you can make the argument that certain people can see directly in the > future as it is going to be? i doubt it.
u shouldn´t. some people do and that IS sometimes the essence of the fantastic novels by these authors. see the future? william toffler did (read "future shock" and compare) and my mother did when she predicted a letter from the postman one day. I remember it very clearly: she got up in a terrible mood and told me that she felt really bad and anxious, she didn´t know why, was totally disbalanced and she had a weird dream of my grandfather telling her that everything´s fine. after she opened her letters we knew it. my grandfather had died 3 months ago and that was a delayed note of this incident. so she predicted the bad news, the arrival of the letter (not his death). i call this looking into the future, yes. you don´t need to believe what I tell you, but I think prediciton exists (evokes) in certain situations. we do it by interpolation/extrapolation of subliminal information. you can do it best the nearer you are to the moment that you want to predict. there is a lot of hidden information that we can use to predict situations to come. (meta-communication) nothing magical in the process, one day it will be explored. I don´t believe in supernatural effects btw.
quoted 2 lines anyway. maybe you should just fuck this topic, it became too theoretical.> > anyway. maybe you should just fuck this topic, it became too theoretical.
its only words.. ;) robert
quoted 111 lines dobri> > dobri > > > Robert Feuchtl wrote: > >> >>> >>> in the same way, science-fiction reality happens in our minds for >>> the first time when we read it. this reality is not one that the >>> writers saw in the real world. it is a complitely synthetically >>> fabricated world which the writers weave according to their own >>> imagination and then record into paper and harddisks in order our >>> brains to give life to it later. >>> >>> that's how electronic music and science-fiction are similar in >>> "artificiality" and that's probably one of the reasons why so many >>> people enjoy these genres. >> >> >> >> iґm sorry friend. canґt agree with that. the scifi I mostly always >> admired is sometimes a predicted future, yes but not necessarily >> artifial nature (jack vance is quite hippie / fantasy stuff in a >> sophisticated scientific way)... I am simply fascinated by the >> possibilties of the future (frank herbert, p.k. dick). they feedback >> backwards towards our life. sci fi was an hatred genre because ppl >> thought it has nothing to do with their lifes.. this made the authors >> of these times even more mad about writing real shit.. that, and the >> (re)discovery of drugs and psychology, zen-philosophy etc. in the >> early 60ies towards the late 60ies layed the ground for the golden >> age of scifi which definetly was in that era. and john brunner is a >> fucking genious of giving real life stories a dark and thrilling >> psychologic twist.. i donґt understand why nobody ever plundered his >> books for film. aynways, thats also scifi and absolutely not >> artificial... >> >> i think its just the slick black / silver polished spaceships and an >> affection for high-tec we have since getting paralyzed by THX1138, >> blade runner and alien ... :) >> >> is "stalker" scifi? is it artificial? :) >> >>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>> >>> well, that's for now, >>> dobri >>> >>> >>> "The best way to predict the future is to go (mentally) in the >>> direction in which our fears grow." >> >> >> >> yeah. but I totally agree with that... :) >> >>> "What some people perceive as the End of the World, for History is >>> just the sign that Future is coming." >> >> >> >> u should have told that to the dinosaurs ;) >> >>> >>> >>> seek wrote: >>> >>>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Enquiries" >>>> >>>>> My own recommendations: >>>>> Jorge Luis Borges - anything, but particularly the collection called >>>>> Labyrinths, not sci-fi, but what the heck, deals with the infinite >>>>> Thomas Pynchon - has to be Gravity's Rainbow really. >>>>> Samuel R. Delaney - dhalgren, don't know where to start, just read >>>>> it. >>>>> Jeff Noon - the earlier ones, particularly Vurt and Pollen. >>>>> Donald Barthelme - again not really sci-fi, but freaky enough to >>>>> include. >>>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Now ~that~ is a worthwhile reading list. >>>> >>>> seek >>>> >>>> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >>>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >>>> For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> >>> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >>> For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >>> >>> >>> >> >> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > > >
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2004-10-21 22:49dobriGood, I like this. some thinking is going on this list. Still, I think you go in a differe
From:
dobri
To:
Date:
Thu, 21 Oct 2004 18:49:15 -0400
Subject:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
Reply to:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
permalink · <41783CEB.4030104@fandm.edu>
Good, I like this. some thinking is going on this list. Still, I think you go in a different direction. not that I think my point is so important, but i just hate it when people argue about different things. Generally, I agree with all that you say, but it's not about what I was talking about at the beginning, it's about other problems. so let me start again,
quoted 5 lines i'm not concerned at all with how realistic a sci-fi, cyberpunk,> i'm not concerned at all with how realistic a sci-fi, cyberpunk, > space-opera, lsd-novel, etc is. in the same way, sounds coming from a > synthesizer are artificially-produced but are not less real than those > coming from a piano. you should not confuse "real", "realistic", > "artificial", and "synthetic".
:) sorry, i just donВґt have your perception and concept of synthetic and artificial. a piano is a highly technical and therefore "artificial" thing for me. pure technology anyway. it does not grow on trees. it makes an extremely complex amplified sound that cannot be imitated by human voice, thatz why we feel so "small" and touched when a piano is playing. it is mighty and it is a technically amplified sound. look at it phenomenologically. the synthesizer does allow all kind of natural feedbacks too. i can touch it, play it, smell it, throw it out of the window. analog synths are highly sensitive to temperature. the amplification is not relevant to me. an electric guitar is as direct and natural as an acoustic guitar. the problem with the synthesizer is only that the speaker-system is not build in. we could do that. then itВґll be more natural in your sense? you cannot be less or more natural in any sense. sorry for using the word "natural". I know it creates huge problems because ppl have so many different meanings of it. I'm not concerned with how close to each other different instruments sound, even if you make them create identical waves. I'm concerned with where the vibration comes from and where are its roots. in the case with the piano, the vibration comes from the piano and the materials it was made of. in the case of the synth, it comes from the speaker and the guyz who engineered the sound of the synth. but you're not going to hear them before you attach a speaker and let the electricity run through the circuits. let a synth play without speaker, it will be very funny. or stick your fingers in the jacks instead. but let the piano play with the wooden part dismantled. it will still make sounds, even though not the same. as highly developed instrument as it is, the piano possess the vibration as "an inborn" quality of the materials it is made of - metal and wood. when you hear a piano play, it's the strings vibrating that you're listening to. if you hear a synth, you're listening to the electricity running through the circuits, even though these might be two identical sounds.
quoted 5 lines see, when you play the guitar, the vibration is part of the qualities> > see, when you play the guitar, the vibration is part of the qualities > of the strings and the wooden-box. you can actually hear the strings > vibrating, and the wooden box reinforcing the sound-wave. it's part of > nature that you're listening to.
\\or not listening to. in psycho-acoustics we have the "masking effect" which says that in case that a low sound that was perceived by our neuronal system (brain) is \followed by a loud sound its information will be substracted from the perceptive system. a loud sound coming in several milliseconds AFTER an already perceived low sound will be recognised consciously and prefered, while the low sound is deleted before it is pushed to consciousness (olthough it was in a buffered neuronal storage system before). this is possible cause there is a latency between hearing and storing the sound as an information and finally bringing it into the focus of the person. this is a mathematical process of addition / subtraction on a very high and precise level. this is so right, but again, it doesn't really matter to me, right now. besides that, if you really want to get psychological, you have to admit that informed listeners usually know in advance what kind of sounds they are listening to, and expectation creates a huge difference for your perception. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nature#The_natural_and_the_artificial
quoted 3 lines in contrast, the synthesizer doesn't possess any good accoustic> in contrast, the synthesizer doesn't possess any good accoustic > characteristics. it, however, can create certain electromagnetic > fields which provoke a speaker membrane to vibrate.
\\\pure nature. I can make my guitar sound like a synthesizer if I want it. I just need acoustical tools.. no electricity or chips. the physical rules of sound-engineering \say that you can produce mostle ANY acoustic manipulation with mechanical amplification and without electricity. filters are easy, you have to damp certain frequencies and if you move the sound-source while filtering you can achieve modulated filtering. exactly like a synthesizer (just waaay more fumbling). donВґt try this at home, kids. everything is natural. the idea of "something which is not real" is purely absurd.
quoted 2 lines the worlds of william gibson don't exist in reality, do they?> > the worlds of william gibson don't exist in reality, do they?
\yes and no. literally: no. we donВґt have the chess-board-style matrix surfing lifestyle. but on the other hand we have all kind of viruses, trojans, bots and so on and we do use computers in a similar way. they are exactly the same in the networks then in gibsons vision. the difference is the dramatic effect. the computer-stuff in gibsanВґs books are magnified, distorted. \\and then: just wait 2-3 years until SONY or another company starts selling some 180В° panoramic TFT glasses that keep a hole generation of kids from making any homework ever again and will cause dramatical addictive problems on computer- and gamefreaks. design a 180В° compatible webbrowser and you are half the way towards neuromancer (without the implants). these things didn't exist when these authors were writing the novels. \but i guess gibson is not toffler..
quoted 4 lines he didn't go out, saw a guy with chips in his head and steel bones and> he didn't go out, saw a guy with chips in his head and steel bones and > said, "dude, let's write a novel about that guy over there!" or maybe > you can make the argument that certain people can see directly in the > future as it is going to be? i doubt it.
\u shouldnВґt. some people do and that IS sometimes the essence of the fantastic novels by these authors. see the future? william toffler did (read "future shock" and \compare) and my mother did when she predicted a letter from the postman one day. I remember it very clearly: she got up in a terrible mood and told me that she \felt really bad and anxious, she didnВґt know why, was totally disbalanced and she had a weird dream of my grandfather telling her that everythingВґs fine. after she opened her letters we knew it. my grandfather had died 3 months ago and that was a delayed note of this incident. so she predicted the bad news, the arrival of the letter (not his death). i call this looking into the future, yes. you donВґt need to believe what I tell you, but I think prediciton exists (evokes) in certain situations. we do it by interpolation/extrapolation of subliminal information. you can do it best the nearer you are to the moment that you want to predict. there is a lot of hidden information that we can use to predict situations to come. (meta-communication) nothing magical in the process, one day it will be explored. I donВґt believe in supernatural effects btw. seeing the future directly is different from predicting what's going to happen. quite different. ask the guyz who do physics what they think about looking at the future. wow, this even helped me straighten out some concepts for myself, i should read this list more often. dobri --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-21 23:04Robert FreemanHey every one - Juana Molina is playing in LA tonight at the troubadour - should be a good
From:
Robert Freeman
To:
dobri ,
Date:
Thu, 21 Oct 2004 16:04:18 -0700 (PDT)
Subject:
[idm] Juana Molina in Los Angeles tonight
Reply to:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
permalink · <20041021230418.15097.qmail@web41527.mail.yahoo.com>
Hey every one - Juana Molina is playing in LA tonight at the troubadour - should be a good show - any other recomendations for spanish language IDM? _______________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Declare Yourself - Register online to vote today! http://vote.yahoo.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-20 20:46Jonathan AckermanI was waiting for someone to mention him. He was one of my early favorites. He came out wi
From:
Jonathan Ackerman
To:
Date:
Wed, 20 Oct 2004 15:46:04 -0500
Subject:
Fwd: [idm] fiction reading, writing
permalink · <81e70c4a0410201346694f0403@mail.gmail.com>
I was waiting for someone to mention him. He was one of my early favorites. He came out with a newish one called "Falling Out Of Cars", that's just sitting on my bookshelf right now. Also his take off of "Through The Looking Glass" called "The Automated Alice", I thought was a great read. Though I must say that his books take a few chapters to get the hang of. On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 19:40:40 +0100, Enquiries <enquiries@eleventhvolume.com> wrote:
quoted 8 lines Adam piontek wrote:> Adam piontek wrote: > > > My own recommendations: > > Jeff Noon - the earlier ones, particularly Vurt and Pollen. > > Cheers, Colin. >
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2004-10-21 17:20seekFrom: "Robert Feuchtl" > but i guess gibson is not toffler.. He definitely read Toffler, t
From:
seek
To:
Date:
Thu, 21 Oct 2004 10:20:35 -0700
Subject:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
permalink · <688f01c4b792$46f18c80$7db1a943@obelisk>
From: "Robert Feuchtl"
quoted 1 line but i guess gibson is not toffler..> but i guess gibson is not toffler..
He definitely read Toffler, though.
quoted 2 lines u shouldn´t. some people do and that IS sometimes the essence of the> u shouldn´t. some people do and that IS sometimes the essence of the > fantastic novels by these authors. see the future? william toffler did
Alvin Toffler, not William Toffler: Gibson is "William", or Bill. ;)
quoted 10 lines (read "future shock" and compare) and my mother did when she predicted a> (read "future shock" and compare) and my mother did when she predicted a > letter from the postman one day. I remember it very clearly: she got up > in a terrible mood and told me that she felt really bad and anxious, she > didn´t know why, was totally disbalanced and she had a weird dream of my > grandfather telling her that everything´s fine. after she opened her > letters we knew it. my grandfather had died 3 months ago and that was a > delayed note of this incident. so she predicted the bad news, the > arrival of the letter (not his death). i call this looking into the > future, yes. you don´t need to believe what I tell you, but I think > prediciton exists (evokes) in certain situations.
See: Arthur Koestler - 'The Roots of Coincidence' and Jung - 'Synchronicity'
quoted 5 lines we do it by interpolation/extrapolation of subliminal information. you> we do it by interpolation/extrapolation of subliminal information. you > can do it best the nearer you are to the moment that you want to > predict. there is a lot of hidden information that we can use to predict > situations to come. (meta-communication) nothing magical in the process, > one day it will be explored. I don´t believe in supernatural effects btw.
The super-natural *is* ~natural~ by definition. ;) seek --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2004-10-21 19:16Robert Feuchtlseek wrote: >From: "Robert Feuchtl" > > >>but i guess gibson is not toffler.. >> >> > > >H
From:
Robert Feuchtl
To:
Date:
Thu, 21 Oct 2004 21:16:31 +0200
Subject:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
Reply to:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
permalink · <41780B0F.3020800@groove.de>
seek wrote:
quoted 23 lines From: "Robert Feuchtl">From: "Robert Feuchtl" > > >>but i guess gibson is not toffler.. >> >> > > >He definitely read Toffler, though. > > > > >>u shouldn´t. some people do and that IS sometimes the essence of the >>fantastic novels by these authors. see the future? william toffler did >> >> > > >Alvin Toffler, not William Toffler: >Gibson is "William", or Bill. ;) > >
god. i write too quick. i write to quick. i write to quick. i have to debug more often.
quoted 22 lines (read "future shock" and compare) and my mother did when she predicted a> > > >>(read "future shock" and compare) and my mother did when she predicted a >>letter from the postman one day. I remember it very clearly: she got up >>in a terrible mood and told me that she felt really bad and anxious, she >>didn´t know why, was totally disbalanced and she had a weird dream of my >>grandfather telling her that everything´s fine. after she opened her >>letters we knew it. my grandfather had died 3 months ago and that was a >>delayed note of this incident. so she predicted the bad news, the >>arrival of the letter (not his death). i call this looking into the >>future, yes. you don´t need to believe what I tell you, but I think >>prediciton exists (evokes) in certain situations. >> >> > > >See: > >Arthur Koestler - 'The Roots of Coincidence' > >
i got to check this out, thanx
quoted 4 lines and>and >Jung - 'Synchronicity' > >
... :)yeah. jung. i wanted to mention him. and don´t forget his assistance marie-louise von franz (thatz written corect, I insist!) :) she wrote that fantastic "Wissen aus der Tiefe" - "Knowledge from The Depth".
quoted 15 lines we do it by interpolation/extrapolation of subliminal information. you> > > >>we do it by interpolation/extrapolation of subliminal information. you >>can do it best the nearer you are to the moment that you want to >>predict. there is a lot of hidden information that we can use to predict >>situations to come. (meta-communication) nothing magical in the process, >>one day it will be explored. I don´t believe in supernatural effects btw. >> >> > > >The super-natural *is* ~natural~ by definition. ;) > >
I hope so! :) robert
quoted 11 lines seek>seek > > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > > > > >
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2004-10-22 10:08David Sim>>My own recommendations: >>Jorge Luis Borges - anything, but particularly the collection
From:
David Sim
To:
Date:
Fri, 22 Oct 2004 11:08:07 +0100
Subject:
Re: [idm] fiction reading, writing
permalink · <s178ea20.078@ccw0m1.nottingham.ac.uk>
quoted 9 lines My own recommendations:>>My own recommendations: >>Jorge Luis Borges - anything, but particularly the collection called >>Labyrinths, not sci-fi, but what the heck, deals with the infinite >>Thomas Pynchon - has to be Gravity's Rainbow really. >>Samuel R. Delaney - dhalgren, don't know where to start, just read it. >>Jeff Noon - the earlier ones, particularly Vurt and Pollen. >>Donald Barthelme - again not really sci-fi, but freaky enough to include. > >Now ~that~ is a worthwhile reading list.
Agreed. It's also, I think, stuff-that-appeals-to-me-in-the-same-way-that-IDM-does far more than the more overtly sci-fi stuff earlier in the thread - there's a distinct vibe of unpredictable, confusing, sometimes beautiful, sometimes funny and sometimes scary. Add in William Burroughs and Gabriel Garcia Marquez in the same vein, though. David ps is the new Jacen Solo as good as boomkat are implying? This message has been scanned but we cannot guarantee that it and any attachments are free from viruses or other damaging content: you are advised to perform your own checks. Email communications with the University of Nottingham may be monitored as permitted by UK legislation.