the digital
version will always be superior in audio content fidelity
since records
cannot effectively duplicate all audio frequencies
Hmmm, I'm not sure about that... most digital formats actually have a
ceiling of 44.1Khz, and cannot store frequencies higher than that. At the
same
stellac (sp?) an australian based performance artist in the 80s used
biofeedback. he would place electrodes on himself that would generate
Stelarc. He's also done some other strange things, like mapping those
same electrical impulses to an Internet ping-map so that the speed of his
twitching
So they didn't put out an album within the past couple years? One
entitled Neptune's Lair?
Sorry to be all snippy, but Drexciya were still around in late 99 when
they released that. I'll be real depressed if they're done.
Josh
To: 313 313@hyperreal.org
cc:
Subject: Re: [313] Drexciya?!?
2. It's slow. (cable modem - avg 90-130 kilobytes/sec) I'm curious about
how it comes across on a phone line connection. Anyone out there with a 56k
and a stopwatch?
A 14.4 here, til Friday. (Cable modem, finally.) And you really, really
don't want to know the time. I don't. I gave up.
I know it's a little late, but...
Anything of interest going on in NYC tomorrow night? And if it's a 21+,
forget it... some of us aren't that old yet.
Josh Landau
phase 10
tuesdays, noon to three
WCBN-FM, 88.3 FM
www.wcbn.org
Today, I finally motivated myself to purchase the CD OHM: the early gurus
of electronic music. What do you people think?? Is it concise?
Amazing boxset - an excellent introduction to the pioneers of
electronic experimental music, as opposed to techno.
Besides, it has Terry Riley's Poppy
Rarest record... 12 remixes of PiR2 themes from the movie Pi. It's fun.
Too bad I don't own a turntable. Oh well, have to go to the station to
listen to it now.
Josh Landau