Podcasts about broken20

  • 9PODCASTS
  • 16EPISODES
  • 1h 14mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Mar 28, 2024LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about broken20

Latest podcast episodes about broken20

Cowboy's Juke Joint
Episode 124: Tobacco Road Show Episode 124

Cowboy's Juke Joint

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2024 141:53


*NEW EPISODE NOW AVAILABLE**The Tobacco Road ShowEpisode 124 - The "THE EASTER SPECTACULAR!” Episode.**LAST CALL TONIGHT.... From Romania... it's WOOLDOZER!!The Tobacco Road Show comes to you live every Wednesday at 7:30 PM CST with Chicagoland's dlonz on Cowboy's Juke Joint Radio www.cowboysjukejoint.com.  Take a ride down Tobacco Road for the best in dirty cowpunk, whiskey soaked blues, and beyond. Email:  tobaccoroadshow@gmail.comWeekly Segments:Hey Scotty!On This Day in Chicago HistoryJoke of the WeekWednesday Night's Main Event Wrestling TriviaThe Tobacco Road Top 10Hey Chicago!Playlist01. Gene Autry - Peter Cottontail02. Scott H. Biram - When I Die03. Slim Cessna's Auto Club - Harris04. Gallows Bound - History05. The Bridge City Sinners - Break the Chain06. Tejon Street Corner Thieves - Never Meant To Be07. Fishgutzzz - 01 - Fishgutzzz - Crawling To Church08. Ramona and the Holy Smokes - I Honky Tonked Too Hard Last Night09. Natalie Prauser - East Texas10. The Golden Roses - Clean Slate11. Jeremy Pinnell - Goodbye L.A.12. Emily Nenni - Get To Know Ya13. Clint & the Cosmic Wake - Shark Eyes14. Gutter Town - Wake Up Dead15. Annie Dukes - Rosey Hued16. Jimmie's Chicken Shack - Sitting with the Dog17. The Howlin' Roosters - Gimme Some Respect [Explicit]18. IV and The Strange Band - Filth [Explicit]19. Virtue Furnace - Everything is Broken20. Failure - Smoking Umbrellas21. The Ugly Kings - Black Widow22. The Blackwater Fever - My Weakness23. Reverend Deadeye - Jesus Is Knockin'24. Black Eyed Vermillion - Jesus in the Waiting Room25. The Black Furs - Jesus left me die so young26. Masters of Nothing - Jesus Don't Want Me (For Sunbeams)27. The Goddamn Gallows - Y'all Motherfuckers Need Jesus (Live)28. Eve's Plum - Jesus Loves You (Not as Much as I Do)29. Rose City Collective - Jesus Christ Pose30. Wooldozer - Seeper31. Wooldozer - No Snow For The Northern Man

Generous Questions
Episode 9: Niall Grimes: climbing and desire

Generous Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2022 94:22


Niall Grimes has a website here (http://www.niallgrimes.com/), he's the host of Jam Crack podcast, which you can find on all good podcasting apps or click here: http://www.niallgrimes.com/jam-crack-climbing-podcast and you can follow him on twitter @grimerclimber (https://twitter.com/grimerclimber) or on instagram @niallgrimes (https://www.instagram.com/niallgrimes) At one point in the conversation I mention the concept of 'grip', which is used by philosophers and psychologists interested in embodied (and specifically 'enactive') cognition, and which has its origin in the work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, specifically the following text: Merleau-Ponty, M. (2002/1945). Phenomenology of Perception (C. Smith Trans.). London: Routledge. For further reading about the ideas associated with 'embodied' cognition, here's the Stanford Encyclopedia entry – §2.4 addresses focuses on enactivism in particular: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/embodied-cognition/ As ever, please get in touch to send any thoughts, responses, ideas, reactions, feedback or ideas about this episode or any of the others, it's always great to hear from you, particularly if you want to say encouraging things. To drop me a line you can just head over to the contact (https://www.generousquestions.co.uk/contact) page, or tweet at me on twitter (@drjoemorrison (https://twitter.com/DrJoeMorrison)) The theme music is from li_serios05 (https://store.broken20.com/album/li-series-05-jack-on-piano) by TVO on Broken20 (https://store.broken20.com/) records under Creative Commons license BY-NC-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/).

Art + Music + Technology
Podcast 327: Ruaridh Law (TVO)

Art + Music + Technology

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2020 47:57


Whether you are talking the Broken20 label, TVO music releases, the Further_in virtual festival or installations under his own name, you would have to admit that Ruaridh Law is dedicated. He's a self-described 'finisher', but also has a head full of ideas, so he's in constant motion. With Further_in in full swing, upcoming releases for the label and a new work (44 Tarot) in play, Ruaridh has lots to talk about! What is fun in this interview is getting to hear about how media art is both an extremely personal and an extremely social thing for him. Some of his longest relationships are related to music-making, but his newest friends are all media artists. By providing a friendly face to a label and a (virtual) performance space, he is providing a great opportunity for community engagement. If you haven't yet, check out Further_in on Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/further_in), and the label on its own site (https://site.broken20.com/) and on Bandcamp (https://store.broken20.com/). Ruaridh is super-closely attached to the label; you can check out his 44 Tarot work here: http://44.broken20.com/ Enjoy!

Generous Questions
Episode 8: Susan Notess: Listening, silencing, gaslighting and honesty

Generous Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2020 77:47


Susan suggested a bunch of things to read about the philosophy and ethics of listening, for you to follow up: * Talk: The science of conversation by Elizabeth Stokoe * Yo! And Lo! The Pragmatic Topography of the Space of Reasons by Mark Lance and Rebecca Kukla * Dotson, Kristie. "Tracking Epistemic Violence, Tracking Practices of Silencing", Hypatia 26.2 (2011): 236-257. [link to .pdf (http://www.victorkumar.org/uploads/6/1/5/2/61526489/dotson-2011-hypatia.pdf)] * Medina, José. "Varieties of Hermeneutical Injustice 1." The Routledge Handbook of Epistemic Injustice. Routledge, 2017. 41-52. And here are some other things for you to explore that came up in our conversation: * I mentioned the following book at one point: Solnit, Rebecca. Hope in the dark: The untold history of people power. Canongate Books, 2010. * Susan talked a bit about the ethical work done by Elizabeth Edenberg, (http://elizabethedenberg.com/) which emphasises how participants to discussions often have a wide range of commonly held values. * She also mentioned a Horizon-2020 research project at the University of Manchester that looks into youth radicalisation: it's called the Dialogue about Radicalisation and Equality, or DARE (http://www.dare-h2020.org/). * I mentioned the 'deep listening (http://deeplistening.org/site/)' programme of composer Pauline Oliveros. A great introduction to her work can be found on this episode (https://www.newsounds.org/story/performer-part-two-pauline) of WQXR Q2's awesome 'Meet The Composer' series with host Nadia Sirota here. A performance of Oliveros' 'Tuning Mediation' can be seen in 360º video recorded in binaural sound here (https://www.newsounds.org/story/make-radio-met-cloisters-pauline-oliveross-tuning-meditation). * In this regard, Susan also mentioned the following work: Cavarero, Adriana. For more than one voice: Toward a philosophy of vocal expression. Stanford University Press, 2005. You can find Susan online on twitter (@susannotess (https://www.twitter.com/susannotess)), and her academic webpage is here (https://susannotess.wordpress.com/), where you can find links to her work, including this excellent article: * Listening to People: Using Social Psychology to Spotlight an Overlooked Virtue. Philosophy, 94(4), 621-643. As ever, please get in touch to send any thoughts, responses, ideas, reactions, feedback or ideas about this episode or any of the others, it's always great to hear from you, particularly if you want to say encouraging things. To drop me a line you can just head over to the contact (https://www.generousquestions.co.uk/contact) page, or tweet at me on twitter (@drjoemorrison (https://twitter.com/DrJoeMorrison)) The theme music is from li_serios05 (https://store.broken20.com/album/li-series-05-jack-on-piano) by TVO on Broken20 records (https://store.broken20.com/) under Creative Commons license BY-NC-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/).

Generous Questions
Episode 6: Aoife – Icelandic Sagas and moral philosophy

Generous Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2019 62:09


I didn't know much about Icelandic Sagas before I heard about Aoife's project, I just knew that they were long and complicated and involved feuds and fate. But Aoife, a philosophy student at Queen's University Belfast, knew a lot more and wanted to try to make sense of all the heavyweight moral decisions and decisive actions that go on in them. Her project is partly an investigation of a moral framework, and partly a research project into historical and anthropological reconstruction, but along the way she tries out a number of philosophical different approaches to understanding character traits. Here are some things that Aoife's suggested for you to read: * The saga that Aoife is talking about is called Hrafnkel Saga Freygoda. There's a wikipedia article about it here (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hrafnkels_saga) which has links to several translations, and Aoife was working from Gwyn Jones' edition. * Óskar Halldórsson (1989) “The Origin and Themes of Hrafnkels Saga”, Sagas of the Icelanders, edited by John Tucker, Garland Publishing: New York. * Tomasson, Richard F. (1980) Iceland : The First New Society, University of Minnesota Press. * Kristán Kristánsson (1998), "Liberating Moral Traditions: Saga Morality and Aristotle’s “Megalopsychia”", Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, Vol.1, No.4, pp397-422. (Appears on the publisher's page here (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1023/A:1009990801822), paywalled but consider using twitter and the hashtag #icanhazpdf). * Vilhjálmur Árnason (1991), "Morality and Social Structure in the Icelandic Sagas", The Journal of English and Germanic Philosophy, Vol. 90, No.2. (Appears on JStor here (https://www.jstor.org/stable/27710482), paywalled, consider #icanhazpdf). As ever, please get in touch to send any thoughts, responses, ideas, reactions, feedback or ideas about this episode or any of the others, it's always great to hear from you, particularly if you want to say encouraging things. To drop me a line you can just head over to the contact (https://www.generousquestions.co.uk/contact) page, or tweet at me on twitter (@drjoemorrison (https://twitter.com/DrJoeMorrison)) The theme music is from li_serios05 (https://store.broken20.com/album/li-series-05-jack-on-piano) by TVO on Broken20 records (https://store.broken20.com/) under Creative Commons license BY-NC-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/).

Generous Questions
Episode 5: Rupert – Ethical Egoism

Generous Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2019 24:46


We talk about ethical egoism, which Rupert seems to feel is dismissed a little bit too lightly, and we hear about how he's going to try to defend it. While Rupert’s talking about ethics and about what determines or fixes ethical truths – where they come from – at the same time in the background there are lot of other issues about political philosophy and authority and freedom and the state. I cut some of that discussion out just to help keep this episode focused on a particular subject, but Rupert's made some reading suggestions for you to follow-up, and they cover some of these broader topics. So, some things for you to explore: * An introductory / survey article to get started is this one by James Rachels, 'Ethical Egoism', in Shafer-Landau, R (ed.) Ethical Theory: An Anthology.: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 48-53 * This collected volume of papers on the topic comes hotly recommended: David Gauthier (ed.) Morality and Rational Self-Interest. New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1970. * Rupert mentions Sidgwick's 'rational egoism', which is discussed in his 1872 book The Methods of Ethics. * A slightly more recent piece that comes up in our discussion is by Jesse Kalin (from 1975) "Two Kinds of Moral Reasoning: Ethical Egoism as a Moral Theory". Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 5 (3), pp.323-356. [publisher's link (https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00455091.1975.10716116), probably paywalled, consider tweeting it using the hashtag #icanhazpdf and a burner email address on twitter to get hold of a copy] As ever, please get in touch to send any thoughts, responses, ideas, reactions, feedback or ideas about this episode or any of the others, it's always great to hear from you, particularly if you want to say encouraging things. To drop me a line you can just head over to the contact (https://www.generousquestions.co.uk/contact) page, or tweet at me on twitter (@drjoemorrison (https://twitter.com/DrJoeMorrison)) The theme music is from li_serios05 (https://store.broken20.com/album/li-series-05-jack-on-piano) by TVO on Broken20 records (https://store.broken20.com/) under Creative Commons license BY-NC-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/). A transcript of this conversation is available from the episode website, just go to this episode and click on the button that says 'transcript'. The transcripts for every episode have been beautifully prepared by Becci. Thanks Becci!

Generous Questions
Episode 4: Aine – Pyrrhonic Scepticism

Generous Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2019 21:59


This is a conversation with a final-year student in Philosophy. Aine graduated from Queen's University Belfast in the summer of 2019, and like many students she used her final year of studies to work on an extended independent research project. Dissertation students write about a philosophical topic of their own devising, working alongside individual members of faculty who help to steer their project. Aine worked with my colleage Roger Clarke (http://www.rogerclarke.org/) on an epistemology project to do with ancient skepticism – the philosopher Sextus Empiricus tells us about the Pyhrrohnic skeptics, who thought that there's something desirable about freeing oneself from the tyranny of 'dogmatic' beliefs and making a concerted effort to free oneself of any knowledge. Here are some things you might like to look up to find out more about Aine's topic: * Peter Adamson's excellent podcast 'The History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps' has an episode dedicated to Pyrhho and the Skeptics (https://historyofphilosophy.net/pyrrho), and another one dedicated to Sextus Empiricus (https://historyofphilosophy.net/sextus) and his approach to belief. * Katja Maria Vogt (https://katjavogt.com/) has a number of excellent introductions to Hellenistic skepticism on her webpage here (https://katjavogt.com/introductions/). * She's also the author of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy's entry to Ancient Skepticism, which you can find here (https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/skepticism-ancient/). Aine's dissertation is exploring the question of whether a Pyrhhonic skeptic is 'practical', whether they can 'act normally' or 'live their skepticism', and for this specific question she recommends the following papers: * Burnyeat, Myles F (1979) 'Can the Sceptic Live His Scepticism?' From Schofield Malcolm & Burnyeat M.F. & Jonathan Barnes (ed.), Doubt and Dogmatism: Studies in Hellenistic Epistemology. (1979) Oxford: OUP. (Google Books link (https://books.google.co.uk/books/about/Doubt_and_Dogmatism.html?id=tohKmwEACAAJ)) * Vogt, Katja Maria (2010) Scepticism and Action. From Bett, Richard (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Scepticism. (2010) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. * Wieland, Jan Willem. ‘Can Pyrrhonists act normally?’ Philosophical Explorations 15 (3), pp. 277-289. (Seems to be available online here (http://www.slavernijvoetafdruk.nl/wp-content/uploads/apraxia.pdf)) Please get in touch to send any thoughts, responses, ideas, reactions, feedback or ideas about this episode or any of the others, it's great to hear from you, particularly if you want to say encouraging things. To drop me a line you can just head over to the contact (https://www.generousquestions.co.uk/contact) page. The theme music is from li_serios05 (https://store.broken20.com/album/li-series-05-jack-on-piano) by TVO on Broken20 records (https://store.broken20.com/) under Creative Commons license BY-NC-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/). A transcript of this conversation is available from the episode website, just go to this episode and click on the button that says 'transcript'. The transcripts for each episode have been beautifully prepared by Becci. Thanks Becci!

Generous Questions
Episode 3: Nancy Jecker – the chronically ill, the newly deceased

Generous Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2019 28:38


Prof. Nancy Jecker came to Queen's University Belfast to speak at this philosophy conference (https://philevents.org/event/show/64710) on the ethics of chronic illness, and I used that opportunity to ask her about her philosophical interests and work. We talked about life and death – in particular, lives lived with chronic illneses, and the ways that a person's story doesn't end just at the moment that they die. We talked about intergenerational ethical issues (for example, about caring for the dependent elderly). She introduced me to the concept of an 'itai hoteru', which are Japanese hotels-for-the newly-deceased, and the 421-problem in China. Here are some links to help you find out more about Nancy and her work: * Nancy Jecker's webpage (https://phil.washington.edu/people/nancy-s-jecker) at the philosophy department at the University of Washington * A list of Nancy Jecker's publications (https://philpapers.org/s/Nancy%20S.%20Jecker) from PhilPapers.org - many with links to the articles. Don't forget that if you need help getting access to paywalled articles, you can try contacting authors and politely asking them whether they'd be happy to send you a .pdf. Using the hashtag #icanhazpdf on twitter can be sometimes be useful as well. * Here's Nancy's piece on itai hoteru in the journal Bioethics: 'What do we owe the newly dead? (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/bioe.12578) An ethical analysis of findings from Japan's corpse hotels workers', co-authored with Eriko Miwa. It's behind a paywall at this link, but you can read a pre-print version on her ResearchGate page here (https://www.researchgate.net/publication/332242536_What_do_we_owe_the_newly_dead_An_ethical_analysis_of_findings_from_Japan's_corpse_hotels_workers). * In the episode Nancy talks about using the 'capabilities approach' to justice in her work on intergenerational justice and the ethics to do with ageing. Over on the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy you can find this entry on Amartya Sen's 'capabilities approach' (https://www.iep.utm.edu/sen-cap/), which is a good overview. But more recently people are discussing Martha Nussbaum's version of this approach, so you might find it useful to skip down to §7 (https://www.iep.utm.edu/sen-cap/#H7). * We mention the 4-2-1 problem (or 4:2:1 problem, strictly, since it's about ratios), and here's an accessible article in io9 which talks more generally about China's looming population crisis. 'The Unintended Consequences Of China's One-child Policy' (https://io9.gizmodo.com/the-unintended-consequences-of-chinas-one-child-policy-5948528) by George Dvorsky. * We briefly talked about 'Parfit's non-identity problem' without really explaining it. It's a problem that Derrick Parfit proposes in the final section of his book Reasons and Persons (1984, chapter 16). The problem is summarised in this (slightly challenging, not hugely accessible) entry of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/nonidentity-problem/). You can see Parfit discussing it in person over on this YouTube video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtU0pah4R8Q), again, not entirely accessible to people who are new to philosophy. Please do feel encouraged to get in touch to send any thoughts, responses, ideas, reactions, feedback or ideas about this episode or any of the others, I'd love to hear from you. To do that, you can just head over to the contact (https://www.generousquestions.co.uk/contact) page. The theme music is from li_serios05 (https://store.broken20.com/album/li-series-05-jack-on-piano) by TVO on Broken20 records (https://store.broken20.com/) under Creative Commons license BY-NC-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/). A transcript of this conversation is available, you just need to click on the button that says 'transcript'. The transcripts for each episode have been beautifully prepared by Becci.

Generous Questions
Episode 2: Jonathan Webber – Freedom and Morality

Generous Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2019 39:50


This is part two of the interview with Jonathan Webber about his book 'Rethinking Existentialism', and in this one we talk about existentialist ideas around freedom and ethical action, which is why I'm calling it I'm calling it 'Freedom and Morality'. I asked him some questions about how he knew that he had a big enough idea to start thinking about the topic as a 'book' project rather than a series of philosophy papers. We also got chatting about the current vogue of contemporary writing about Fanon, Beauvoir, existentialism, and (in contrast) a resurgence of essentialist positions in popular science writing. You can find part one of this interview, which is about what existentialism is, and how to think about 'projects' and 'choices', by clicking here (https://www.generousquestions.co.uk/1). Here are some things that you might find useful – they're the same things that I linked to in episode 1, but here they are again: Jonathan Webber's website (https://www.jonathanwebber.co.uk/). He's on twitter @jonathanwebber. (https://twitter.com/jonathanwebber) His home philosophy department at the University of Cardiff (https://www.cardiff.ac.uk/english-communication-philosophy). The publisher page for his book, Rethinking Existentialism (https://global.oup.com/academic/product/rethinking-existentialism-9780198735908). The project page (http://blogs.cardiff.ac.uk/rethinkingexistentialism/) for the book, which includes a YouTube playlist of videos about it. The book / project also has a twitter account, so if you want to keep up to speed with things afoot in the study of existentialism, you can follow it @rethinkexistent (https://twitter.com/rethinkexistent). A blog article (https://blog.oup.com/2018/11/mysterious-case-disappearing-existentialist/) Jon wrote for OUP about the book. The website of the UK Sartre Society (https://uksartresociety.com/). I'd really like you to get in touch if you've any feedback about this episode, particularly if it's supportive and encouraging. Just head over to the contact page. The theme music is from li_serios05 (https://store.broken20.com/album/li-series-05-jack-on-piano) by TVO on Broken20 records (https://store.broken20.com/) under Creative Commons license BY-NC-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/). A transcript of this conversation is available, you just need to click on the button that says 'transcript'. The transcripts for each episode have been beautifully prepared by Becci.

Infrasonics Netfilter
ResonanceFM: Broken20 showcase Sept 2018

Infrasonics Netfilter

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2018 60:00


Previews the imminent Broken20 at Cafe OTO, presenting three live recordings from label heads Rose & Sandy, Datasette, and your host, Spatial. Visit Broken20.com for more information. https://www.resonancefm.com/programmes/5b9f974f50000b3170000004 Shouts to ResonanceFM!

spatial resonance fm cafe oto broken20
Mantis Radio
Mantis Radio 221 + Not Alive Yet

Mantis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2017 120:00


Mantis Radio 221 + Not Alive Yet On Mantis Radio this week, a session from Not Alive Yet. We're packing new sound from Ariadne's Labyrinth, ASC, Shifted, Relapso, Sleeper, Broken20, Sync 24, Figure-Ground, and more. Show playlist available at Darkfloor.

Mantis Radio
Mantis Radio 221 + Not Alive Yet

Mantis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2017 120:00


Mantis Radio 221 + Not Alive Yet On Mantis Radio this week, a session from Not Alive Yet. We're packing new sound from Ariadne's Labyrinth, ASC, Shifted, Relapso, Sleeper, Broken20, Sync 24, Figure-Ground, and more. playlist → show archives. support the show → become a patron.

Blank Code Podcast
Blank Code Podcast 177 – Mick Finesse

Blank Code Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2014 61:12


This week we have an exclusive Blank Code podcast from Denver's techno producer/DJ Mick Finesse.   Mick has released his music on labels such as Perc Trax, Emote Music, Broken20, Broken Mind Recordings, Emetic and Prosthetic Pressings.  You can follow new [...]

dj blank finesse code podcast perc trax emetic broken20 prosthetic pressings
The Erratic Podcast
Erratic Podcast 76 | Mick Finesse

The Erratic Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2014 63:53


Once again, what a show we have for you in this unique and exciting episode by American talent, MICK FINESSE. Pulling from his versatile tastes as well as from his Perc Trax roots of raw and industrial sounds, Mick delivers in the next hour an astounding and superlative contribution, coursing through over 60 minutes of break-beats, bass music, and industrial techno - all of it mixed surgically and flawlessly. These are all qualities and tonalities that can be heard in his own productions, with a stunning EP due this summer on Prosthetic Pressings and an LP on Broken20 later this year. It is as much of an honor to have him be part of the series as it is for us to showcase what he stands for musically. Please listen and enjoy. TRACKLIST Prostitutes - Crawl On You At Night Perc - Lurch Perc - Take Your Body Off (Tessela Remix) Witch - Vent (Truss Remix) Delta Funktionen - Petrol Claro Intelecto - Tone Bambounou - Take It Out On Me (French Fries Remix) Objekt - Balloons Martyn Hare - The Temple (Mick Finesse Remix) Blacknecks - Hotline Trade - Half Nelson Container - Slush Furfriend - Endless September Joey Beltram - Nameless Eschaton (Ancient Methods & Orphx) - Kali Lakker - Thermohaline Batillus - Concrete (Andy Stott Remix) MICK FINESSE's Facebook Page MICK FINESSE's Resident Advisor Page MICK FINESSE's Discogs Page - Erratic is comprised of a small team of passionate curators hosting proper Techno parties in New York City. www.ErraticNYC.com | www.fb.com/ErraticNYC

Prosthetic Pressings Podcast
PPOD | 017 | Mick Finesse

Prosthetic Pressings Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2012 109:22


PERC TRAX 2012 US TOUR Opening set @ Norad (Denver, CO) on June 8th Stephen Penders, aka Mick Finesse, has been djing and promoting in locations ranging from Tokyo to Boston since 1999. Now based in Denver, CO, Mick has become an integral part of the local techno community. Having hosted the very popular Dissonance / Resonance afterhours, in addition to regular appearances at Beta’s Beatport Lounge and various other local clubs, Mick has been all the while tempering his own interpretation of techno. Obsessed with themes of context and contrast, Mick Finesse attempts to peel away layers, perception and prejudice in both his namesake and his music. Stephen's unique warm-up set at Freq Boutique (Denver, CO) is what ultimately caught Ali's attention, then he followed up soon after with a release on Perc Trax. This set shows just another angle through the mind of Mick Finesse... 01. Folk Festival - PYE Corner Audio - Type Recordings 02. De Gulpa - The Village Orchestra - Broken20 03. Mandala - Celer - Celer 04. Skalectrikz - Ekoplekz - Mordant Music 05. Paris - Perc - Stroboscopic Artefacts 06. Dipping - Shackleton - Woe To The Septic Heart 07. Skeng (Autechre Dub) - The Bug - Ninja Tune 08. Xylem Teardrops - Ekoplekz - Perc Trax 10. Kindred - Burial - Hyperdub 11. Underfoot - JK Flesh - 3BY3 12. The Dance Hall Walk - Senking - Raster-Noton 13. Black Sun - Kode 9 - Hyperdub 14. Tactics - Last Japan - LNUK 15. Lo Tek Bridge - Black Rain - Blackest Ever Black 16. Not All Clouds Are White - Penalune - Broken20 17. Metal Image - Forward Strategy Group - Perc Trax 18. Ninio (Henning Baer Re-Edit) - Sawf - K209 19. Feukt Call (Henning Baer Remix) - Lodbrok - Counter Pulse 20. Strick - Tom Dicicco - Traut Muzik 21. Over The Edge - Sigha - Our Circula Sound 22. Veinticinco - Truncate - Historia y Violencia 23. Krowork - S100 - Stockholm LTD 24. Church of All Images (Regis Version) - Vatican Shadow - Blackest Ever Black 25. Elegant Mistakes - Forward Strategy Group - Perc Trax 26. Blood Witness - Regis - Blackest Ever Black 27. Episteme - Emptyset - Caravan 28. Obsessed - Function - Echocord Colour 29. Bleeding Through - Shifted - Mote Evolver 30. White/Drip - Rrose - Sandwell District 31. Bell Blocker (Silent Servant Remix) - Planetary Assault Systems - Ostgut Ton

Spannered Radio podcast (all items)
Spannered Oddcast #14 - Production Unit's Other Musics

Spannered Radio podcast (all items)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2012 124:04


The latest instalment of Spannered's Oddcast series comes from none other than Glasgow's Dave Donnelly, aka Production Unit. Dave's no stranger to these pages, having previously contributed two short works of fiction about talking cows and a rather exquisite review of Autechre's Quaristice album. Formerly a member of Glasgow's now-dispanded electronica trio the Marcia Blaine School For Girls (along with Ruaridh Law, aka The Village Orchestra), Dave's had outings under his Production Unit guise on keen-eared labels such as Highpoint Lowlife and Stuff Records. He currently has releases primed and ready for Broken20 (which helps to run with Law) and Phuturelabs. The Broken20 release, titled ICU Tracks, is a particularly intense body of work —  a stark techno set (suitably supported by remixes from Perc and Emptyset's Paul Purgas) constructed from the sound of hospital machines. A while back, just after we got a whiff of his Mature Cheedar Dadcast for Techno Dads, we asked Dave if he'd pick up the Oddcast gauntlet for Spannered — and he's done so with gusto. "The theme is 'other music'" he tells us, "stuff that I'd probably never normally put in a mix." Well, we think he deserves one fat cigar for this epic two-hour selection, chock-full of beauty and strangeness in equal measures — and a large plastic beaker of warm sambuca for holding the dubious accolade of being the first (and probably last) mix on Spannered to feature the versatile delights of the legendary Bernard Cribbins. Tracklisting: Bjork - Overture Rose and Sandy - Play Cat's Cradle Hildur Gudnadottir - Aether Fatimah al Zaelaeyah - Ya mun dakhal bahr al hawa (Hey, who enters the sea of passion) Gendhing Kemanak Anglirmendung (Pelog Barang) Drummers of the Societe Absolutment Guinin - Yanvalou Njib Ould N’Ghaimich – Guetna Throbbing Gristle - Exotica Directions - Echoes (Continental Drift version) John Coltrane - Ole Miles Davis - In a Silent Way The Beach Boys - Fall Breaks and Back to Winter Scorn - White Irises Blind (Minimal Mix) Godflesh - Christbait Rising Scorn - Drained John Cohen - Tar River Coil - Triple Sun Introduction Hype Williams - Untitled 1 Tangerine Dream - Love on a Real Train Steve Reich - Proverb FSOL - Papua New Guinea (Dub Mix) Pole feat. Fat Jon - Slow Motion Senking - Mimi Kate Bush - Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God) (Instrumental) BFC - Sleep Mos Def - Kalifornia Chris Thomas King - Hard Time Killing Floor Raphael Corderos - Rock Creak Parp Bernard Cribbins - Winkle Picker Blues ^ New Production Unit EPs out soon on Broken20 and Phuturelabs