BuckarooBanzai

joined 2 years ago
 

“In a thousand years, Gandahar will be destroyed. A thousand years ago, Gandahar will be saved and what can’t be avoided will be.”

The riddle at the heart of legendary French animator René Laloux’s strangest movie is as confusing as the film itself. By the end of Gandahar, you may not understand either, but you’ll have experienced one of the most ambitious and beautiful time-travel stories ever told.

Inverse article on Gandahar

Original in French

 

Through the mist, out of the corner of your eye, it could be hope, but it's just passin' by. If the apple's really poison, Baby I could make a pie
Cause you're my sweet darlin'
Sigh, Sigh

If the sky may split
And sea may open wide
We can hide
If the mountain peaks
Return to paper thin
We can grin
For the end of time
Is just a game to us
It's treasonous
You and i will be just fine
In what they call
A fallen world

Forgive me you know
That i can't tell a lie
Said the creature in my dream
Whеn i asked it if i'd die
Next to my lovеr
In a stoop of whiskey rye
Bubbling and giggling
High, High, High
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Olivia Rodrigo
If the sky may split
And sea may open wide
We can hide
If the mountain peaks
Return to paper thin
We can grin
For the end of time
Is just a game to us
It's treasonous
You and i will be just fine
In what they call
A fallen world

Riff Kitten Bandcamp

Links for Riff Kitten

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago
1
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

The Way that can be articulately described is not the Unchanging Way. The name that can be said out loud is not the Unchanging Name. With your mouth unopened, and things left undefined, you stand at the beginning of the universe. Make definitions, and you are the measure of all creation.

The Tao Te Ching (UK: /ˌtaʊ tiː ˈtʃɪŋ/,[1] US: /ˌdaʊ dɛ ˈdʒɪŋ/; simplified Chinese: 道德经; traditional Chinese: 道德經; pinyin: Dàodé Jīng [tâʊ tɤ̌ tɕíŋ] i) is a Chinese classic text and foundational work of Taoism written around 400 BC and traditionally credited to the sage Laozi, though the text's authorship, date of composition and date of compilation are debated. The oldest excavated portion dates back to the late 4th century BC, but modern scholarship dates other parts of the text as having been written—or at least compiled—later than the earliest portions of the Zhuangzi.

The Tao Te Ching, along with the Zhuangzi, is a fundamental text for both philosophical and religious Taoism. It also strongly influenced other schools of Chinese philosophy and religion, including Legalism, Confucianism, and Chinese Buddhism, which was largely interpreted through the use of Taoist words and concepts when it was originally introduced to China. Many artists, including poets, painters, calligraphers, and gardeners, have used the Tao Te Ching as a source of inspiration. Its influence has spread widely within the globe's artistic and academic spheres. It is one of the most translated texts in world literature.

Wikipedia

 

Gotta get up

Ups and downs
Never the same each day
Rolling with the plays
Never an easy way

Highs and lows
Battles in my mind each day
Rolling with the plays
Never an easy way

Gotta get up
Gotta get up
Got to, got to, got to, got to...

Feel good
Feel good
Feel good
Feel good

Tears of joy
Tears of pain
Keep moving forward
Just throw your fears away

Times you'll win
Sometimes you'll lose
Keep moving forward
Don't throw your dreams away

If it was easy... it's never easy
If it was easy the reward wouldn't be this good

Gotta get up
Gotta get up
Got to, got to, got to, got to

Feel good
Feel good
Feel good
Feel good

Gotta get up
Gotta get up
Gotta get up
Gotta get up
Got to, got to, got to, got to

Feel good
Feel good
Feel good
Feel good

If it was easy... it's never easy
If it was easy the reward wouldn't be this good

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago

That groove pops. Speaking of the cats, apparently the extradimensional nature of the @13thFloor combined with frequent visits to the Caravan Palace has resulted in a batch of fall Rift Kittens. They'd like to say Hello, Stranger.

Note that if you visited the Caravan Palace within the last two months, you may be on the hook for child support and/or wanted for questioning in a murder investigation, depending on your activities and your time of visit.

 

Why are you such a derelict? Such a piece of human junk? The answer's simple. You're a scanner, which you don't realize. And that has been the source of all your agony. But I will show you now that it can be a source of great power.

CW: Exploding head. David Cronenberg. Genetic manipulation. Homeless escalator acrobatics. Involuntary suicide. Thinly veiled Thalidomide allegory. Did I say exploding head? Exploding head.


Wikipedia

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago (2 children)

I've come here to kick ass and chew bubblegum. And I'm all out of bubblegum.

 

"The feeling is definitely there. It's a new morning in America... fresh, vital. The old cynicism is gone. We have faith in our leaders. We're optimistic as to what becomes of it all. It really boils down to our ability to accept. We don't need pessimism. There are no limits."


"Outside the limit of our sight, feeding off us, perched on top of us, from birth to death, are our owners! Our owners! They have us. They control us! They are our masters! Wake up! They're all about you! All around you!"


One of the best everyman's survival guide to dealing with alien infiltration. The Electroids love to use these kind of tactics.


They Live is a 1988 American science fiction action horror film written and directed by John Carpenter, based on the 1963 short story "Eight O'Clock in the Morning" by Ray Nelson. Starring Roddy Piper, Keith David, and Meg Foster, the film follows an unnamed drifter who discovers through special sunglasses that the ruling class are aliens concealing their appearance and manipulating people to consume, breed, and conform to the status quo via subliminal messages in mass media.

Wikipedia

3
Unknown Unknowns - Jonny Fallout - 2023 (jonnyfallout.bandcamp.com)
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I was unaware of these unknown unknowns. I should have known better. Thanks to @JonnyFallout for the smooth groove. Here's some background on this cat:

Jonny Fallout is an electronic artist / producer of synthwave, retrowave and synthpop with cyberpunk flavor. When he's not abusing the upper limits of his machine's RAM, he's obsessively sampling cool noises, constructing new sounds, or remixing tracks.

@ Spotify

Jonny Fallout's Bandcamp

Review of Unknown Unknowns from his Bandcamp site:

The Boston-based retrowave wizard known as Jonny Fallout marks his debut on Triplicate Records with the stunningly sleek 'Unknown Unknowns', which finds him defiantly enveloping the dark landscape of the present with a gorgeous retro-futurist shimmer, with extremely appealing and danceable results.

'Delete War' as an opener is a fine statement of intent, both in the energy of the composition and the badass anti-war title (which admittedly could be a small scale endurance contest over who can hold down 'backspace' the longest). We're treated to pretty flourishes set against a reliable Tangerine Dream-esque arpeggio sequence kicked into a mechanistic overdrive. Perfectly compressed percussion (spoiler: the LP has a lot of that) compliments the melody beautifully.

The following number, which has the honour of carrying the album title's name muses on the maximum point of power in a person's life, i.e. the present, with the repeated refrain: 'There is no past, there is no future, only now'. You can see (or hear, rather) how the concept of the record might've formed around this initial spark of brilliance.

'Perpetual Drift' will sound familiar to those who enjoyed last year's Time Lapse compilation, this time we're treated to an extended and gnarlier affair. Well, 'gnarlier' but not without the familiar Falloutian slickness. Every sound on this song and the album as a whole feels so stunningly tight and deliberate, it's a lesson in editing, sequencing, production and composition all in one.

'Saints in the Code' adopts a more traditional synthwave methodology with its sweetly sequenced.. well.. synths, complimented nicely with tasteful licks of electric guitar and pretty key stabs. 'Cybernaut' on the other hand, remixed from the 2021 Triplicate compilation 'Protozoa' is a wonderful mid-paced melody-focused banger whose meditative arpeggios threaten to meander into melancholy but never quite cross that line, though the depressingly titled 'Oceans of Plastic' comes closer yet. Perhaps the most experimental piece on the record, wherein disembodies and a steady 4-4 occasionally gives way to junglist breaks, all wrapped under a warm envelopment of synth-pads.

The lengthiest tune on Unknown Unknowns 'Hidden Language' features a propulsive beat and a nicely arranged extensive array of whooshes, pads, beeps... everything but the kitchen sink. An exercise in maximalist synthwave composition, colourful and fresh, a strong contender for the high-point of the record that truly dispels the myth of the second-side lag, though 'Interpreter of Dreams' seems hell-bent on raising the musical bar to further dazzling heights. An aural show-reel for Jonny Fallouts skills, borrowing components of the heights that preceded it, while reinventing the sound in the process. There's something the squeaky synth-bends do your brain that's hard to articulate in words. You'll just have to listen and do my job for me.

'Alternate Timeline', another reworked piece, this time from the 'Music for Dotted Lines' Trip FM compilation, and works wonders as a closer, both offering a somewhat more chilled final excursion than its eight brothers that came before, and dispelling the notion that a last track needs to truly wind-down, as the second half thumps off and takes to the skies.

You're not likely to hear many records so sweetly arranged and tightly put-together this year (though admittedly it's early yet). A truly inspired collection of heights and bangers from a proven expert in his field.

 

It's a fine day, people open windows. they leave their houses, just for a short while.

Just something to sing to the Sunday sunrise, to toss a bit of sparkle Monday's way.

 

The Yoshida Brothers (吉田兄弟, Yoshida Kyōdai) are Japanese shamisenist musicians who have released several albums on the Domo Records label.

The two brothers are performers of the traditional Japanese music style of Tsugaru-jamisen which originated in northern Japan. They debuted in 1999 in Japan as a duo playing the shamisen. Their first album sold over 100,000 copies and made them minor celebrities in Japan, a fact that surprised the Yoshida Brothers themselves.They have since attracted an international audience.

Their music has been a fusion of the rapid and percussive Tsugaru-jamisen style along with Western and other regional musical influences. In addition to performing songs that are only on the shamisen, they also use instruments such as drums and synthesizers.

Wikipedia

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago

Solid. I have to say that the Kruder & Dorfmeister mix is a bit more my speed - smoother groove and provides a gentler glide into Interzone's east side, best played around sunrise as you skim in from the desert wilds.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago

Thanks to @readbeanicecream for the link.

 

Astronomers have found a new way to detect one of the oldest features of our universe.

These Baryon Acoustic Oscillations, or BAO, are subtle wrinkles that flowed through cosmic matter during the first 380,000 years of the universe's existence. Today, they are popular subjects in space science because they're one of the very few hints of the Big Bang that can still be traced — and importantly, astronomers can use the presence of BAOs to measure cosmic distances as well as the rate at which the universe is expanding.

While astronomers have historically focused on galaxy clusters to observe these cosmically imprinted waves, a new study aims to sniff out some overlooked waves by looking at galaxy shapes and orientations rather than just clusters as a whole. These features, the study researchers write, can offer a "promising cosmological probe" yet have been ignored so far.

To fill this gap, the team looked at oddities in the orientations of about one million galaxies by studying how stretched those galaxies are. In turn, that revealed the number of nearby galaxies which exert a gravitational pull. Then, researchers zoomed in on galaxies that were not as intensely stretched, which stood out as oddballs in the database.

"It is in those points, where galaxies do not point where they should, where statistics tell us that the Baryon Acoustic Oscillations are located, since these waves also act as points of gravity attraction," Antonio Cuesta, an astrophysicist at the University of Córdoba in Spain and one of the authors of the new study, said in a statement.

As the new way of detecting BAO is quite independent, it helps researchers in measuring the locations of galaxies in the universe and their distances more accurately, according to the study. Ultimately, this knowledge could be used to better map the universe, scientists say.

The novel method also reveals more information about the universe's expansion — which is a puzzle in itself because it is accelerating at a rate the scientists can't quite explain. According to the team, the mechanism could also help calculate the amount of the elusive dark matter and dark energy that lies in our universe — the latter of which is actually suspected to be causing space's accelerating expansion somehow.

The new study is not the first effort to detect BAO in the universe. That milestone belongs to two independent teams who spotted the signal in 2005 while analyzing data of nearby galaxies. At the time, the size of BAO signals in the universe was found to be about 150 million parsecs.

One of the goals of the European Space Agency’s Euclid telescope, which launched early July to hunt for dark matter and dark energy, is to measure at least some of these signals across the universe.

Hovering about a million miles (1.6 million km) above Earth, the telescope recently sent home its first starry images.

The paper was published last month in the journal Nature Astronomy.

Related: No, the Big Bang theory is not 'broken.' Here's how we know.

 

Up on the hill, people never stare. They just don't care.
Chinese music under banyan trees, here at the dude ranch above the sea
Aja
When all my dime dancin' is through
I run to you
Up on the hill
They've got time to burn
There's no return
Double helix in the sky tonight
Throw out the hardware
Let's do it right
Aja
When all my dime dancin' is through
I run to you
Up on the hill
They think I'm okay
Or so they say
Chinese music always sets me free
Angular banjoes
Sound good to me
Aja
When all my dime dancin' is through
I run to you

Wikipedia

 

Switch off the mind and let the heart decide
Who you were meant to be
Windpower
Flick to remote and let the body glide
There is no enemy
Windpower
Etch out a future of your own design
Well tailored to your needs
Yeah,
Windpower
Then fan the flame and keep the dream alive
Of a continent, a continent, a continent, a continent, a
Windpower
There is no enemy
Windpower
Switch off the mind and let the heart decide
We're a continent, a continent, a continent, a continent, a
Ooh ooh...
Shatter the lens and grind it into sand
Windpower
One measured exposure
Yeah
Scatter the seed and furrow in our land
The future is roses! Roses!
Windpower
Switch off the mind and let the heart decide
There is no enemy!
Yeah,
Windpower
Lift up the hearts of this your only tribe
We're a continent, a continent, a continent, a continent, a
Yeah!
We're a continent, a continent, a continent, a continent, a
Yeah!
Ooh ooh...
Windpower

The Golden Age of Wireless - Wikipedia

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I'll put $500 on the tyrannosaur. I don't usually gamble, but another two of my cats are missing, and I'm looking at you @Sasquatch. With the ruckus last night at the Caravan Palace, I'm down to 91 and the remaining ones are too nervous to sing on key. I agree with the crow here - you've gotta stop eating other people's pets.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago

Thanks to @useless_modern_god for the tune.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago

We just let the day go by, and the water flowed off underground.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago

Those are some slick beats. I dig these guys.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago

Arigato for the kind words. It was life changing for me as well.

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