Category Archives: News

Expressive Culture Turns 1!

I founded Expressive Culture back in November 2009.  It’s now November 2010 and I’ve had a blast maintaining this website with the help of some very good people.

Thank you to everyone who has visited, clicked, looked at, posted, and in any way supported this website!  Please check back often for updates, news, ideas, and all the works.

Express Yourself!

China’s New Supercomputer

China has built the world’s faster supercomputer, putting the US out of first place.  The Tianhe-1A PC has 14,336 processors from Intel and over 7,168 M2050 graphics cards from Nvidia ($2,500 each).  This gives it a horsepower equal to 175,000 laptops.

Read More Here

Not for Human Consumption: K2

Moog Fest 2010

Moogfest – the annual event honoring the remarkable vision of Robert Moog and his amazing musical inventions that changed the course of music – is reinventing itself. This year, moogfest 2010 will move from New York City to Asheville, NC – the place Bob Moog called home for the last 30 years of his life – and will expand to a 3-day, multi-venue event during the weekend of October 29 -31, 2010. During the festival, moogfest 2010 will host artists and audiences from throughout the world in different venues throughout Asheville’s beautiful, historic downtown.

Ruiner in Peace

www.youruiner.com
ruiner
october 5th, 2004 – october 9th, 2010
thank you

You can watch a video of their last show here.

(that shit is nuts)

Philips Unveils LED Bulb

Philips showcased their new 60 watt LED light bulb at the Lightfair International tradeshow in Las Vegas.  This bulb is set to completely replace the normal 60 watt incandescent light bulbs we are all used to.  The original incandescent bulbs accounted for almost half of all light bulbs sold on the market.  The new bulb will accomplish two things; it will only use 12 watts and last almost 25 times longer.  This means up to 80 percent savings on energy and removes the need to replace your bulbs as often.   LEDs work much more efficiently and require less energy to run.  “Philips estimates the potential saving of 32.6 terawatt-hours of electricity in one year.”  That amounts to enough energy to power the lights in 16.7 million United States homes.

Philips had to come up with an effective and creative way to design their new product and it required a new technology – this technology is known as remote phosphor technology.  This new light bulb will help reduce our carbon footprint vastly.  “It has the potential to eliminate the generation of carbon emissions by 5.3 million metric tons per year.” Their new bulb will have a life expectancy of over 25,000 hours compared to the old bulb which only lasted 1,000 hours.  This new LED bulb marks a big improvement over the last big innovation – the CFL.  The new LED bulb will be capable of controlling motion sensors and will be able to have dim features.  If you don’t have to replace something as often you save a lot of money and a lot of resources.  Over the lifespan of the new LED bulb; it would cost $120 per light source if you were using regular incandescent light bulbs.

I think the LED light bulb Philips unveiled Wednesday is an amazing innovation and there doesn’t appear to be anything negative about it.  It was only a matter of time before a company developed the technology to save massive amounts of energy, money, and resources.  This single product has the potential to save households $120 per lamp and over 32 terawatt hours of electricity in one year!  People will be wasting fewer resources by throwing away bulbs which contain materials that cannot be recycled.  When energy is being saved – less of our Earth‘s fossil fuels are being used and wasted.

New album talk by Menomena

But now album number four, Mines, is done. Barsuk will release it in North America on July 27, and Europe will get it one day earlier via City Slang. They also released the non-album track “Pilgrim’s Progress” on a split Record Store Day 7″ with the Helio Sequence.

Pitchfork Interview

Pitchfork: When I talked to you last year, you said that it was taking a while to get the songwriting process going. Did that end up taking a long time?

Justin Harris: Yeah. I think more than anything, it just took a long time to get the three of us on the same page at the same time. Events over the year and our personal lives kept delaying the process. But ultimately, I look at it as refinement after refinement, and the end result is what we have.  

Pitchfork: Did you go through multiple versions of these songs during the writing process?

JH: Yeah. Typically on our albums, each song goes through a number of permutations based on just what each one of us might do to it, and then what each one of us might change back. I wouldn’t say any of the versions were drastically different than what they ending up being, but yeah, there’s definitely that process: one of us finishing something, being really excited about it, and handing it off to the others. Then the others want to change stuff, and we inevitably have to talk about where we compromise, or what gets actually changed and what stays. Each one of us usually has a very good case built against why something should stay the way it is, and the other has a good case built against why it shouldn’t. That process can be time-consuming.

Pitchfork: With all three of you playing different instruments and taking on multiple roles in the band, I would imagine that everything would be a lot harder. There’s no clear leader of the band, and everyone plays everything.

JH: Yeah, it does add to the difficulty. I’ve never been in a band where there is a main songwriter or two, so I don’t know really how it differs from other peoples’ process. But I can imagine that scenario would make things go a little more smoothly and efficiently. But also, I’m really grateful to have band members that are equal contributors. I think it just adds to the diversity of songs. The layers, I suppose, are a little more in-depth than they might be if one person was doing the same thing for most of the songs. I suppose that we could get into a monotonous wreck if one person was doing most of the songwriting. Not to say that bands that have one songwriter are monotonous, but it’s something I don’t have experience with. I do appreciate that aspect of our band.

Pitchfork: You cover a lot of stylistic ground on the record, more so than on previous records. Horns play a big part, and certain songs are more aggressive than I’ve heard you guys get before. How did this evolve into a more all-over-the-place album?

JH: I don’t know. It appears that the older we get, the more polarized we become. Each one of us has such different taste and views on what music we like at this point in our lives. I’m pretty certain that’s contributed to the stylistic diversity. Over the last three years, there’s been some just big changes in each one of our lives. That’s also a solidifying of ideas of music– what we think a song should contain, and what it shouldn’t. Certainly in this album, it came out more emotional than any previous album has. Lyrics were a big focus for us this time around. It wasn’t something we were consciously talking about. We didn’t start out trying to cover a lot of stylistic bases, but I would agree that we did.

RIP

“Guru, the influential rapper known for his intellectual themes, his monotone delivery and his combination of jazz sounds with hip-hop beats, has died after battling cancer, collaborators said. He was 43.

The world has lost “one of the best MCs and hip-hop icons of all time,” according to a statement from Solar, Guru’s producer. It was posted on the Web site of DJ Premier, who with Guru made up the rap duo Gang Starr. The site said Guru died Monday.”

Coachella Schedule

Friday, April 16
2:00-2:45 Baroness (Mojave Tent)
3:30-4:10 Sleigh Bells (Gobi Tent)
4:20-5:10 Yeasayer (Mojave Tent)
5:45-6:35 She & Him (Outdoor Theater)
6:20-7:20 The Specials (Coachella Stage)
6:55-7:55 Gil-Scott Heron (Gobi Tent)
7:00-7:50 Passion Pit (Outdoor Theater)
7:50-8:40 Them Crooked Vultures (Coachella Stage)
8:05-8:55 Grizzly Bear (Mojave Tent)
8:35-9:25 Echo and the Bunnymen (Outdoor Theater)
9:05-10:00 LCD Soundsystem (Coachella Stage)
9:55-10:45 Vampire Weekend (Outdoor Theater)
10:50 Jay-Z (Coachella Stage)
11:10-12:20 Fever Ray (Mojave Tent)
11:20-12:10 Public Image Limited (Outdoor Theater)

Saturday, April 17
2:45-3:35 Frightened Rabbit (Outdoor Theater)
3:10-3:55 Camera Obscura (Mojave Tent)
3:25-4:10 Girls (Gobi Tent)
4:25-5:15 Beach House (Mojave Tent)
6:25-7:10 The xx (Outdoor Theater)
6:55-7:45 Dirty Projectors (Mojave Tent)
7:35-8:25 Hot Chip (Outdoor Theater)

7:55-8:45 Faith No More (Coachella Stage)
8:50-9:40 MGMT (Outdoor Theater)
9:25-10:10 Major Lazer (Mojave Tent)
10:45-11:35 Flying Lotus (Gobi Tent)
11:05-12:00 The Dead Weather (Outdoor Theater)
11:35-11:55 Die Antwoord (Sahara Tent)
11:50-12:45 Devo (Mojave Tent)

Sunday, April 18
2:10-2:55 Local Natives (Gobi Tent)
2:25-3:10 Owen Pallet (Outdoor Stage)
3:35-4:20 Deerhunter (Outdoor Stage)
3:50-4:40 De La Soul (Coachella Stage)
4:25-5:10 Matt & Kim (Mojave Tent)
4:30-5:15 Florence and the Machine (Gobi Tent)
4:45-5:30 Sunny Day Real Estate (Outdoor Stage)
5:00-5:50 Yo La Tengo (Coachella Stage)
5:35-6:20 Julian Casablancas (Mojave Tent)
5:40-6:30 Charlotte Gainsbourg (Gobi Tent)
5:55-6:45 Jónsi (Outdoor Stage)
6:30-7:20 Spoon (Coachella Stage)
7:00-7:45 Sly Stone (Gobi Tent)
7:10-8:00 Phoenix (Outdoor Theater)
7:45-8:55 Pavement (Coachella Stage)
7:55-8:45 Gary Numan (Mojave Tent)
9:00 Thom Yorke (Outdoor Theater)
9:25-10:15 The Big Pink (Mojave Tent)
10:30 Gorillaz (Coachella Stage)

http://coachella.com/

Obama Signs Landmark Bill