dvdp first video of the moons far side taken
February 2, 2012 #
dvdp:
First Video of the Moon’s Far Side
(taken on 2012-01-19 by the MoonKAM aboard the mission’s ‘Ebb’ spacecraft)
Why we are out there

dvdp:
First Video of the Moon’s Far Side
(taken on 2012-01-19 by the MoonKAM aboard the mission’s ‘Ebb’ spacecraft)
Why we are out there
I dreamed of being a painter, but I let the image slide into a vat of pigment and pastry-foam while I bounded from temple to junkyard in pursuit of the word. A solitary shepherdess gathering bits of wool plucked by the hand of the wind from the belly of a lamb. A noun. A nun. A red. O blue.
—Patti Smith from ‘He of the Assembly’ as quoted in The Mother Courage of Rock by Luc Sante | The New York Review of Books

Well Jack I was glad to learn how you felt about your summer’s work & your coming school year. The secret of success is concentrating interest in life, interest in sports and good times, interest in your studies, interest in your fellow students, interest in the small things of nature, insects, birds, flowers, leaves, etc. In other words to be fully awake to everything about you & the more you learn the more you can appreciate & get a full measure of joy & happiness out of life. I do not think a young fellow should be too serious, he should be full of the Dickens some times to create a balance.
Advice for all sons.
"the biggest and gnarliest Teahupoo ever ridden. […] The French Navy labeled this day a double code red prohibiting and threatening to arrest anyone that entered the water."
Full screen viewing highly recommended. The final shot of the surfer’s arm disappearing with the Void…
Of course I heavily dig the “noisy burst of chirping electronic tones, atonal guitar noodling, and a raucous drum solo”, but when the groove finally unwinds and lays it down, this tune becomes wide open for ANYONE.
Area: “Mela di Odessa”
From the album Crac! (1975)
Active from 1972 to 1983, Area was a pioneering Italian group that creatively synthesized currents of American popular music such as jazz and funk with experimental tendencies in song form and sound production. Led by the Orphic incantations of vocalist Demetrio Stratos, Area featured a rotating cast of musicians anchored by the core group of Giulio Capiozzo (drums), Patrizio Fariselli (keyboards), Ares Tavolazzi (bass and trombone), and Paolo Tofano (guitar).
Crac! is Area’s third album, following Arbeit macht frei(1973) and Caution Radiation Area (1974). Although they disbanded within a few years of Stratos’ untimely death in 1979, the group’s early records earned them a spot on the legendary Nurse with Wound List, a hugely influential catechism of underground music circa 1980.
“Mela di Odessa” (The Apple of Odessa”) opens with a noisy burst of chirping electronic tones, atonal guitar noodling, and a raucous drum solo, leading into a driving jazz-rock texture topped by a piercing electric keyboard solo. Stratos’ trademark wordless vocalizations occasionally double the instrumental parts, leading through a frenzied labyrinth of improvised passagework. About halfway through, the mood changes quite suddenly, as the the drums and bass introduce a funky, off-kilter groove. Twittering electronic noise, Stratos’ spoken words, and brassy interjections—including a quotation of “Taps“—bring the track to a highly ambiguous close.
In his liner notes to the 1990 re-release on Cramps Records, Franco Bolelli writes: “To sink one’s teeth into the Area apple is to experience a taste which is neither the penitential taste of the avant-garde nor the tamed taste of the spectacle. Area has proven that the poetic and the experimental is not at all difficult and suffering. Indeed, it can be energetic and contagious.”
Illustrator and designer, his Fliers are of particular interest.
Mark Bittman's 25 favorite recipes from 15 years and 1000 recipes.
"redefines our notions of underwater life and presents a world of alarming sophisticated communication"

£100 + shipping, but perhaps worth having a copy around to remind oneself of one’s place in the solar system.
dvdp:
Astronomical is a scale model of our solar system in twelve 500 page volumes printed-on-demand. On page 1 the Sun, on page 6,000 Pluto. The width of each page equals one million kilometres. - by Mishka Henner
//via olena
A labyrinthine hypertext accompaniment to a book. Swallow and be swallowed.