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New show notes This week's episode is about the WASD video game festival that happened in London last weekend. It was super fun to go a showcase like this for the first time – I met up with some developers, games industry folks, and podcasting pals, and got to play tonnes of exciting unreleased games on the show floor, including: NanoApostle, Pine Hearts, Gestalt: Steam & Cinder, Paper Trail, Zephon, Data Garden, Echo of the Waves, Wax Heads, and Crackernuts. And as always, many thanks to all the show's patrons! If you'd like to join them in supporting the podcast on Patreon, you can do so from $1 per month at http://patreon.com/gaminginthewild. Patrons get access to a catalogue of bonus episodes, and an invite to the show's lovely Discord community. If you enjoy the show, you can also come say hi on Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and Twitch - find all the links at http://gaminginthewild.com. And finally, check out this Steam curator page made by podcast supporter DovetailTrue: https://store.steampowered.com/curator/43457463-Gaming-in-the-Wild-%2528unofficial%2529/ Thanks for listening!
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Getting in touch with our senses is one of the most enjoyable aspects of psychedelic experiences.The synesthesia they produce reminds us of how much more texture, color, and life there is to our lives than we ordinarily accept. Is there a way to reclaim these lost intuitions and unlock new levels of joy and happiness?Joe Patitucci is an artist, CEO of Data Garden, and inventor of PlantWave, a device that translates real-time data from living plants into music, creating harmonious sound environments powered by nature.Today, Joe joins Ronan to discuss how he combines nature and the use of emerging technologies to extend human perception into subtle realms of reality. Tune in to find out more!Joe also shares his views on plant consciousness, his experiences with psychedelics, the future of biofeedback, and more. Key Takeaways Joe Patitucci explains plant music and biofeedback (00:00)What perceptions have we lost over time? (02:08)How to avoid becoming numb to today's constant state of emergency (08:44)Where did the idea of plant consciousness come from? (23:14)How to get plants to respond to the sounds you make (38:26)What was it like working with plants in the beginning? (57:54)The power of love and the power of physical affection (1:04:59)What's the future of biofeedback? (1:11:13)Additional ResourcesFind out more about PlantWave at: https://www.plantwave.com/Leverage the power of psychedelic therapy and start your path to long-term change. Learn more at: https://www.fieldtriphealth.com/Download the Field Trip App:https://www.fieldtriphealth.com/self-guided-mobile-appTune in to The Field Tripping podcast at: https://www.fieldtripping.fm/
Joe Patitucci enters the mind meld! Joe is an artist that fosters connection to intuitive states and the natural world through sound, breath, and technology. As CEO of Data Garden, he is working to build a future where humans will have a real-time soundtrack to their lives generated from wearable data that is responsive to mood, tailored to taste, and optimized for any activity. Data Garden's latest product, PlantWave, translates real-time data from living plants into music, creating harmonious sound environments powered by nature. In this one, we muse about communing with plant consciousness, different forms of human awareness, inspiration from visionary states, and more! *Support Third Eye Drops* Support the show and join the community on Patreon Sub and drop a 5 star review on apple Follow and review on Spotify Subscribe on Youtube Sign up for the mailing list and peruse the store at thirdeyedrops.com
Modern life can be isolating. We're wrapped up in our social media feeds, rushing to log into the next Zoom meeting, hurtling down the road in our metal capsules, or holed up in our houses. Being cut off from the natural world often leaves us feeling disconnected from ourselves and others. Enter this week's guest on Before IT Happened, Joe Patitucci, who's spent the last decade developing devices that connect us to nature by converting the biorhythms of plants into real-time music, or what he calls, “a sonic window into the secret life of plants.” Tune in now to hear how it all came together for Joe, from growing up in a family of piano teachers and electrical engineers to starting a music label and ultimately creating plant music for audiences all over the world. Before any world-changing innovation, there was a moment, an event, a realization that sparked the idea before it happened. This is a podcast about that moment — about that idea. Before IT Happened takes you on a journey with the innovators who imagined — and are still imagining — our future. Join host Donna Loughlin as her guests tell their stories of how they brought their visions to life. JUMP STRAIGHT INTO: (01:57) - Joe on growing up outside of NYC - “I had this really cool interaction between living in nature and then being kind of in the cultural mecca of New York and the East Village and music and jazz and all these things.” (11:14) - TEDx Philly - “I was invited to be music director for TEDx Philly. That actually was a huge watershed moment for me because that was the first time I worked with a really big team on something that was a passion project.” (13:21) - Data Garden and Joe's next set of milestones - “Records were starting to become cool again and everybody would always ask me like, ‘You should release a record.' And I would just think, ‘I don't feel like producing a piece of material plastic that could outlive me on this planet.'” (19:34) - From Data Garden to PlantWave - “What if we took the sensory input of a plant and used the wave form of a plant and actually translated that into pitch and then had that play instruments.” (27:53) - Turning plant biorhythms into music - “We're measuring how much connection there is between two points in the plant. That connection between those two points is varying over time based on the plant moving water around through its system as it is photosynthesizing.” (32:56) - The benefits of plant music - “What PlantWave does is it really helps to connect people more to a moment and helps people be more present. And that's associated in a lot of studies with things like stress reduction, just like better relating with people.” EPISODE RESOURCES: Learn more about https://www.plantwave.com/ (PlantWave) and follow on https://www.instagram.com/plantwave/ (Instagram) Listen to a live stream of plant music at http://plants.fm (Plants.fm) Learn more about http://www.joepatitucci.net/ (Joe Patitucci) and follow him on https://www.instagram.com/natureofnow/ (Instagram), https://twitter.com/NatureOfNow?s=20&t=oIKnGBx_05dTN_h8pakxvA (Twitter) and https://open.spotify.com/artist/3vManxn7MKYk0zJKWgMy48?si=mfV2h14YSua2K_XQ04_9mQ (Spotify) Watch tutorials and more on how PlantWave works on their https://www.youtube.com/c/PlantWave (YouTube channel) Listen to https://open.spotify.com/album/14B4YTb4YhcrG4o654XwTo (plant music from Data Garden's 2012 exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art) Watch a related Ted Talk by Greg Gage: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pvBlSFVmoaw (Electrical experiments with plants that count and communicate) Listen to Before IT Happened's: https://www.beforeithappened.com/podcast-episodes/solving-the-cheese-problem-with-change-foods-david-bucca-episode-42 (Solving the Cheese Problem with Change Foods' David Bucca) Thank you for listening! Follow https://www.beforeithappened.com/ (Before IT Happened) on...
PlantWave Music From Plants In my interview with Joe, I speak to him about his company and tech product PlantWave. A device that creates music from data waves produced by plants. Really cool stuff and in the interview Joe shares some live music direct from one of his office plants. Enjoy! Check out PlantWave here. Guest Bio Joe Patitucci is an artist fostering connection to intuitive states and the natural world through sound, breath and technology. As CEO of Data Garden, he is working to build a future where humans will have a real-time soundtrack to their lives generated from wearable data that is responsive to mood, tailored to taste and optimized for any activity. Data Garden's latest product, PlantWave, translates real-time data from living plants into music, creating harmonious sound environments powered by nature.
oe Patitucci is a multimedia healing artist who curates bio-responsive systems to help people broaden their experience of mental, physical, and digital space as well as the community. He is one of the Founders of Data Garden, home of PlantWave as well as Plants FM, an online streaming service delivering live music generated by plants. While much of the profit-driven world is focused on power plants, today we’re tapping into the power of plants and all you have to do is listen. Join us as we dig into plant intelligence, algorithmic and generative music, his experience running a zero-waste record label, holographic theory because why not, and more. Follow and support Joe Patitucci & PlantFM: https://www.plantwave.com/ https://www.datagarden.org/ https://www.plants.fm/ http://www.joepatitucci.net/ https://www.instagram.com/natureofnow/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
US Withdrawing Troops in Peace Deal With Afghanistan (0:30)Guest: Eric Jensen, JD, Professor of International Law, Brigham Young UniversityThe US this week began withdrawing troops from Afghanistan to fulfill its part of a peace deal signed with the Taliban on February 29. By the summer, America has committed to bringing home a third of its 13,000 current troops in Afghanistan. But what happens when America has left Afghanistan is still an open question. Fido or Foe? (22:56)Guest: Deni Elliott, Eleanor Poynter Jamison Chair in Media Ethics and Press Policy Department of Journalism and Digital Communication at USFEveryone's seen a Service Animal in action at some point or another. Maybe its task is more obvious, or maybe you're left wondering exactly what service they provide. Either way, these animals are clearly professionals and usually have vests to identify them. But what about the animals you're not so sure about? The yapping dog on the airplane or restaurant are sometimes allowed because they are emotional support animals. More and more often, people are blurring the line between pet and service animal, leading to some big problems. The History and Influence of Slave Songs in America (33:51)Guest: Kathy Bullock, PhD, Professor of African American and African Music, Berea College For enslaved Africans, folk songs were more than just a way to entertain themselves or pass the time. Spirituals were a source of hope and a way to bond in the face of extreme adversity. They were also acts of rebellion, used to organize secret meetings on the Underground Railroad or just cast shade on their White slaveholders. Kathy Bullock is an expert in the roots of African American music and a professor at Berea College in Kentucky. She's also an incredible musician. Hunting Is on the Decline in America, Conservation and Wildlife Will Suffer (50:39)Guest: Samantha Pedder, Director of Operations, Council to Advance Hunting and the Shooting SportsFewer people are hunting in America these days, which you might think is a good thing for wildlife. But the irony is that for the last hundred years, fees from hunting licenses and taxes on hunting equipment have been the primary source of funding to wildlife protection and restoration. The need for funds to protect endangered species and restore waterways is growing, thanks to pollution, climate change and development, but revenue from hunting and fishing is declining. How to fill the gap? One way is to recruit a new generation of hunters, which is what the Council to Advance Hunting and the Shooting Sports is working on. What a Plant Song Sounds Like (1:06:09)Guest: Joe Patitucci – Founder of Data Garden, Creator of PlantWave Some people swear that playing music for houseplants helps them grow. What do you suppose a plant would sound like if it could join the music? A gadget called PlantWave is giving voice to the plant. Preserving the History of Ice Harvesting (1:28:36)Guest: Kenneth Lincoln, President of the Thompson Ice House Preservation CorporationOn a daily basis, I take the power of refrigeration for granted. My lunch stays fresh until I'm ready to eat it. That soda can I crack open to wash it down is perfectly chilled and stays cold in the glass thanks to plentiful ice from the freezer. Electric refrigeration put ice harvesting out of business a century ago – you used to need a big block of ice in a literal icebox to keep anything cool. But there's a small town in Maine keeping the tradition alive with an annual ice harvest on a local pond.
Eric Jensen of Brigham Young Univ on 200311 peace in Afghanistan. Deni Elliott of Univ of San Francisco on fido or foe. Kathy Bullock of Berea College on slave songs. Samantha Pedder of the Council to Advance Hunting and the Shooting Sports on hunting decline and conservation. Joe Patitucci of Data Garden and PlantWave on plant music. Kenneth Lincoln of the Thompson Ice House Preservation Corporation on Maine ice preservation.
Joe Patitucci is the founder of Data Garden, creator of PlantWave, and a multimedia healing artist. In this podcast, we talk about the technology that enables plants to create music, what we can learn from other lifeforms, and how normal consciousness is the most surreal mind state of all. SAN FRANCISCO: I’m doing a book event at Book Passage on November 21. Merge with me! Now Is the Way is now available. Check the audiobook, hardcover, and kindle here! BINAURAL BEATS FOR DEEP WORK and GUIDED MEDITATIONS are available now! Use the code ASTRAL for 15% off! Please rate The Astral Hustle on iTunes. It helps bring more guests you’d like to hear ★★★★★ Sign up for Fresh thoughts, meditation tips, dope books, and more. Join me on Patreon for monthly guided meditations, Q&As, binaural beats, and handwritten secret knowledge! Connect with Cory: Home: http://www.cory-allen.com IG: https://www.instagram.com/heycoryallen Twitter: https://twitter.com/HeyCoryAllen Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HeyCoryAllen © CORY ALLEN 2019
You know how it feels to go on a hike or be surrounded by nature. You come out more relaxed, refreshed, and energized. Imagine if you could recreate the feeling of being immersed in a forest through music. Thanks to PlantWave, this experience will soon be available. With PlantWave, your phone becomes a way for you to connect to nature, rather than feeling separate from it. PlantWave turns a plants’ biorhythms into music. Just attach two sensors to a plant’s leaves and PlantWave connects wirelessly to an iOS or Android device running our app. The app has instruments we’ve built for plants to play. Digital technology has made life easier in many ways, however, as we’ve advanced technologically, we’ve welcomed increased stress and distraction into our lives. — JOE PATITUCCI / FOUNDER PlantWave detects slight electrical variations in a plant via two electrodes placed on the leaves. These variations are graphed as a wave, which we translate into pitch messages or notes that are routed to play instruments. Other characteristics of the wave are translated into messages that give a plant the ability to change the textural qualities of those sounds. The result is a continuous stream of pleasing music that gives you a sonic window into the secret life of plants. Data Garden is building a bridge from a world of digital distractions to a life of physical presence. — JOE PATITUCCI / FOUNDER Jon Shapiro produces biofeedback music performances and built an online learning platform for music education. He led in developing the supply and fulfillment chains for their previous product, MIDI Sprout. He continues to lead software development and joins me onto the Tech Talks Daily Podcast. We talk about the PlantWave Kickstarter campaign, and I also try and convince Jon to take PlantWave and the Data Garden Quartet to the Greenfields at next year's Glastonbury Festival.
Joe Patitucci, technological druid, founder/director of Data Garden, and co-creator of PlantWave, joins the DTFH! You can learn more about Joe here (http://www.joepatitucci.net/) and more about PlantWave here (http://www.plantwave.com/) . This episode is brought to you by Burrow (https://burrow.com/duncan) ($75 off and FREE 1 week shipping when you visit https://burrow.com/duncan and use code DUNCAN at checkout). This episode is also brought to you by Squarespace (https://www.squarespace.com/duncan) (use offer code: DUNCAN to save 10% on your first site).
Have you ever wondered what your dog or cat would say to you if they could talk? How about your plant? In this episode we explore the world of bioacoustics and cognitive ecology. Featuring MIDI Sprout creator, Joe Patitucci, and ecologist, Monica Gagliano, who is the author of Thus Spoke the Plant. Twenty Thousand Hertz is produced out of the studios of Defacto Sound, and hosted by Dallas Taylor. Follow the show on Twitter & Facebook. Become a monthly contributor at 20k.org/donate. If you know what this week's mystery sound is, tell us at mystery.20k.org. Check out Data Garden’s plant music at datagarden.org. Go to forhims.com/20k for your $5 complete hair kit. Check out SONOS at sonos.com. Episode transcript, music, and credits can be found here: https://www.20k.org/episodes/plantsthatsing
Hey Life Athletes, welcome to episode 156 of the Life Athletics podcast! Today’s guest Life Athlete are Jon and Joe of Data Garden. Data Garden builds community and connection to nature through experiences that extend human perception through sound. In 2011, Joe Patitucci along with Alex Tyson founded a zero-waste record label called Data Garden. Instead of CDs, vinyl records, and tapes, the label released digital albums via download codes on handmade printed artwork embedded with seeds that could be planted and grown into flowers. "When something happens inside your body that creates a palpable shift in the environment, you'll hear something from the plant." The fact that there seemed to be a connection between people who work closely with plants and subtle forms of energy greatly interested Joe. From that point on, he needed to learn how to connect to these energies without technology and continue to make this experience available to more people so that they could experience this connection. This ultimately led to success, and they continued Data Garden's work in festivals and museums across North America. Jon Shapiro then joined Data Garden and did not waste any time in exploring ways of presenting plant music in new spaces and formats. He explored the relationship between fluctuations in plant music with feelings in his body while practicing yoga. He began bringing musical plants to yoga classes and holistic healing spaces to explore how the relationship between plant music and energetic shifts in traditional healing. On this episode, Jon and Joe take you on their story - how they came up with Data Garden and what they're looking forward to in the future. Learn more about Data Garden: www.datagarden.org Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube Soundcloud Check out the MIDI Sprout here.
This episode features music from the latest Data Garden releases from Spaceship Aloha and King Britt, a smattering of songs from indie game soundtracks including Meteo Xavier’s Impulse, Joel Neilson’s Black Mesa, and Phologiston’s Super Crate Box (as performed by Pajjama! ). Plus, we’ve got some Halloweeny goodness from VikingGuitar‘s Danse Macabre compilation, some new ...Continue reading ‘Open Circuit #105’ »
On this episode, jmr brings you new music from Vomitron’s No NES For The Wicked, a live cut of a new George & Jonathan track, and more music from Data Garden artists Cheap Dinosaurs and Ray and the Prisms. As well, Open Circuit wishes Temp Sound Solutions a happy 14th birthday and congratulates them on ...Continue reading ‘Open Circuit #61’ »
This week, Open Circuit features new music from talented rockers Darkman007 and Stemage, Canadian bands The Disengagement and I Spell It Nature, and chip musicians Spamtron and Sabrepulse. As well, in recognition of some recently unveiled live videos from Autoscroll and the upcoming Cheap Dinosaurs release on Data Garden, jmr spotlights each member of the ...Continue reading ‘Open Circuit #60’ »
Old Pal Classic Shareable Cannabis celebrates 420 with the second iteration of the 'Grow Your Own' plants with the 'Music and Mary Jane' campaign focusing on the intersection of cannabis and music, highlighting music for and by plants. This is the first time the music from cannabis plants has been explored and shared with the world! CMO Allison Pankow fills us in. From the press release: Old Pal Shareable Cannabis celebrates 420 with "Grow Your Own' plants, giving consumers the chance to grow at home.This year, not one but three auto-flowering plants are in each pot carefully tended to by a celebrated cultivator of Old Pal Shareable Cannabis in California, Ladybug Farms. Each of the Grow Your Own kits comes in one powerful hybrid variety called Hifi Lemon to celebrate the cannabis connection to music. It's an easy to enjoy strain with roots in Mythic OG and Atlas Star genetics resulting in a vibrant blend that's blooming with good vibes. The nose is bright, citrusy and sweet, with favors of decadent cheese and zesty lemon offering an uplifting high.With the potential to yield up to a half to a full ounce of cured flower under standard conditions, each semi-mature plant arrives well on its way through the grow cycle packed in nutrient dense soil that takes out a lot of the guesswork for fertilization. The experts at Ladybug want to make sure customers are set up for success so each Old Pal decorated pot includes a QR code that links to the campaign landing page with growing tips, tricks, care instructions, the 'Pot Sounds' playlist and a series of videos demonstrating the music made by connecting a PlantWave midi controller to various plants.This partnership with Data Garden and PlantWave founder Joe Patitucci amplifies the idea that plants can actually make music; in fact, the science behind it is relatively simple as each set of electrodes measures electrical variations that change with environmental and even human manipulation. Each plant produces a wave that is translated into pitch messages that can be interpreted through various instruments. The results from these plants were unlike any others showing a smooth, continuous curve that was sonically meditative. "A lot of data from other plants will be super rich and less clearly defined; in fact, when you first hook it up to a plant there will be a lot of noise that will eventually become a wave. These cannabis plants all had very clearly-defined waveforms. I thought I'd seen everything but I'd never experienced that before. The album, released by me called '420hz: Plant Music from Cannabis Plants' will be a result of those HiFi Lemon plants playing and me performing with them," Patitucci added when asked about the project. This window into the secret life of cannabis plants is the first of its kind and an enlightening look at the convergence of trichomes and tech.Grow Your Own plants will be available in California at select dispensaries. Additionally, participating cultivators of Old Pal Shareable Cannabis in MA, OH, PA and CA will sample their plants to make Old Pal music stems generated by the PlantWave devices. Anyone curious to hear Old Pal cannabis sounds from various strains across the US can text 'Pot Sounds' to '420420' to explore the world of cannabis generated music.
PlantWave founder Joe Patitucci talks about a new partnership to Make Music From Living Old Pal Shareable Cannabis Plants. Below is a press release on the announcement....For the second year in a row, Old Pal Shareable Cannabis customers can enjoy a Grow Your Own initiative to put the power of cultivation in their hands for 4/20. Last year, the Grow Your Own program enabled the cannabis community to get up close and personal with a process familiar to the farmers who bring this beloved brand to life and to help deliver a more intimate connection to the plant.Old Pal Shareable Cannabis celebrates 420 with "Grow Your Own' plants, giving consumers the chance to grow at home. This year, not one but three auto-flowering plants are in each pot carefully tended to by a celebrated cultivator of Old Pal Shareable Cannabis in California, Ladybug Farms. Each of the Grow Your Own kits comes in one powerful hybrid variety called Hifi Lemon to celebrate the cannabis connection to music. It's an easy to enjoy strain with roots in Mythic OG and Atlas Star genetics resulting in a vibrant blend that's blooming with good vibes. The nose is bright, citrusy and sweet, with favors of decadent cheese and zesty lemon offering an uplifting high.With the potential to yield up to a half to a full ounce of cured flower under standard conditions, each semi-mature plant arrives well on its way through the grow cycle packed in nutrient dense soil that takes out a lot of the guesswork for fertilization. The experts at Ladybug want to make sure customers are set up for success so each Old Pal decorated pot includes a QR code that links to the campaign landing page with growing tips, tricks, care instructions, the 'Pot Sounds' playlist and a series of videos demonstrating the music made by connecting a PlantWave midi controller to various plants.This partnership with Data Garden and PlantWave founder Joe Patitucci amplifies the idea that plants can actually make music; in fact, the science behind it is relatively simple as each set of electrodes measures electrical variations that change with environmental and even human manipulation. Each plant produces a wave that is translated into pitch messages that can be interpreted through various instruments. The results from these plants were unlike any others showing a smooth, continuous curve that was sonically meditative. "A lot of data from other plants will be super rich and less clearly defined; in fact, when you first hook it up to a plant there will be a lot of noise that will eventually become a wave. These cannabis plants all had very clearly-defined waveforms. I thought I'd seen everything but I'd never experienced that before. The album, released by me called '420hz: Plant Music from Cannabis Plants' will be a result of those HiFi Lemon plants playing and me performing with them," Patitucci added when asked about the project. This window into the secret life of cannabis plants is the first of its kind and an enlightening look at the convergence of trichomes and tech. Grow Your Own plants will be available in California at select dispensaries. Additionally, participating cultivators of Old Pal Shareable Cannabis in MA, OH, PA and CA will sample their plants to make Old Pal music stems generated by the PlantWave devices. Anyone curious to hear Old Pal cannabis sounds from various strains across the US can text 'Pot Sounds' to '420420' to explore the world of cannabis generated music.