Cool Hunting

DJ Spooky has had one foot in music and another in academia over the years and the release earlier this year of his new book "Sound Unbound: Sampling Digital Music and Culture" is no exception. The "literary mixtape" is a collection of "reports from the front lines on the role of sound and digital media in an information-based society." Tasking authors, musicians, designers, curators and other creative types with describing their process, 36 first person accounts touch on a number of contemporary and esoteric topics, from science fiction writer Bruce Sterling's take on dead media to musician Brian Eno's study of bells. Accompanied by a mix CD of avant-garde music that includes writers, artists and musicians such as Nam Jun Paik, Allen Ginsberg, Iggy Pop, Gertrude Stein, Aphex Twin and Sonic Youth, it's a must for anyone interested in the ways technology influences culture.
For those in NYC next Thursday, 21 August 2008, you can catch DJ Spooky in conversation with author of the book's forward and Boing Boing editor Cory Doctorow. There's also an afterparty and both events benefit the Comic Book Legal Defense fund. Buy tickets ($20) from the CBLDF, see details below and the flyer after the jump.
Cory Doctorow Meets DJ Spooky
21 August 2008, 7:30pm
Helen Mills Theater
137-139 West 26th Street
New York, NY 10001 map
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Tomorrow Unlimited presents the first annual Creators Series, a multidisciplinary conference that highlights emerging creative cultures and social change through discussion panels, musical events and a free art exhibition. The series will be held over successive weekends starting in New York and ending in Los Angeles. Bringing together some Cool Hunting favorites, the Social Interfaces Panel of the series will investigate new platforms of...
Gore, the kaleidoscopic photo collage that's equal parts documentary project and art book by New York noise band Black Dice and their collaborator, photographer Jason Frank Rothenberg, gets a launch tomorrow 23 June 2006 at New York's New Museum. Featuring Rothenberg's dreamy anonymous landscapes and snapshot-like portraits interspersed with (and integrated into) cutouts of porn, candy wrappers, '70s-era advertisements, and other ephemera, the book...
Likely due to their home state, name and penchant for upbeat chord progressions, Florida's Holiday Shores draw comparisons to a slew of feel-good bands like Wavves, Beach Fossils and the Beach Boys, to name a few. But writing them off as surfer-dude tunes misses the mark. The band wisely tempers sunny melodies with a healthy dissonant sheen, such that each carefully-crafted pop melody comes...
by Julie Wolfson Already on a roll with their t-shirts that raise money for good causes, Yellow Bird Project's recently-launched whimsical Indie Rock Coloring Book offers kids, and the music fans that care for them, many pages of fun and games. From the psychedelic cover of a hand drawing an explosion of instruments and swirls topped with a bird head to the 31 pages...
by Bailee Wolfson Good news for cell phone addicts everywhere—on Monday 26 January 2009 our friends at LVHRD, the NY-based arts collective, is at it again with another unique event. Unlike their last (CLL) PHN-LCKN (pictured above) this time you can bring your phone and will be using it throughout the party. Drinks are on the house—Dewars and Sapporo—and a camera is a must, as...
Riffing on the juxtaposition of the traditional with the digital, the inspiration for the upcoming panel discussion in NYC, Craft Hackers, is the kind of work that melds needlework and computing. Members of the panel include a cadre of accomplished artists engaging the tech-meets-handmade aesthetic. Cat Mazza has captured moving images into stills knit from yarn; Christy Matson uses an early loom (one of...
