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This week I decided to do a best of 2017 mix. It includes all of my most played tracks of the year. A huge thank you for the supporting my show which we launched this year. It's great to hear all the good feedback about the show. See you on the dance floor in 2018!!! TRACKLIST 1. Secret Cinema - Séance (special intro version for Oregon Eclipse Festival 2017) 2. Rico Puestel - Enokid 3. Umek - Shadow Tactics (Mar-T remix) 4. Eitan Reiter - Look Away 5. Artbat - Wall (Original Mix) 6. Tiga, Audiom - Stabbed In The Back (Anna remix) 7. Lutzenkirchen - Undoomed (SUDO Remix) 8. Kasst - Base 4 9. Raxon - Jungle Express (original mix) 10. Luca Agnelli - Voltumna (Truncate remix) 11. Secret Cinema & Egbert - I Can Feel It Rising 12. Secret Cinema & Reinier Zonneveld - Extreem 13. Eitan Reiter - Flux 14. Secret Cinema - Séance (original mix) 15. Yello - Limbo (Boris Blank remix)
In this episode, Ari recounts his experience at the Oregon Eclipse Festival. He was a cynic about pretty much the entire thing, but had an unexpected change of heart. Enjoy!
The Wizards conjured a mini-episode this week in order to wind down after the Oregon Eclipse Festival and some of the personal trials they're going through. This quick episode is a thank you to everyone who's supported them these last 6 months and a promise to keep improving the show and keep improving themselves. There is no show next week, check back on September 14th. Photo Credit (Jamal Eid) (Instagram) instagram.com/jamal.eid Let It Bleed (Twitter) twitter.com/LetItBleedCast (Facebook) facebook.com/LetItBleedCast (Instagram) instagram.com/LetItBleedCast David Amaya (Instagram) instagram.com/hoodratstufff Phil Arroyo (Twitter) twitter.com/philNOBODYcares (Instagram) instagram.com/hoodratstufff (Twitch) twitch.tv/pjpantsfire #LetitBleed #Magick #Festivals #OregonEclipse
Part 2 of our podcasting journey at Oregon Eclipse Festival, we answer some common sex questions about sexual trauma, open relationships, flirting, anal sex, and more!
Recorded from the Oregon Eclipse Festival, we bring you a sneak peak into our workshop, Erotic Superstar: Step Into Your Power! Tune in for our 6 step system for erotic empowerment!
This week, OPB’s State of Wonder is driving across Oregon ahead of the eclipse, checking out the preparations towns in the path of the totality are making. Today they’re in the middle of the Ochoco National Forest at the Symbiosis' Oregon Eclipse Festival.
Oregon's Most Audacious Eclipse Festival Comes Covered in Glitter - 2:42We visit the Big Summit Prairie in the Ochoco Mountains, where a temporary city is being built to host some 30,000 attendees from around the world. The Oregon Eclipse Festival promises 400 musical acts, lectures and workshops galore, art installations both profound and whimsical, a floating bridge, and enough glitter to make a drag queen blush.Mexico ‘91: Two Oregon Writers Look Back on Another Eclipse - 6:48We checked in with two Oregon writers who witnessed the same solar event 26 years ago: the total eclipse that passed over Mexico. In honor of this year’s eclipse, both writers are working on new stories based on what they saw in 1991. Octaviano Merecias lives and writes in metro Portland, and his story focuses on the unexpected birth that happened on his family’s farm during the eclipse. Meanwhile, the writer, designer, photographer and translator Ivonne Saed watched the '91 event from Mexico City. Tylor & The Train Robbers Headline at Helix’s Wheatstock Festival - 15:56Music runs thick in Tylor Ketchum’s family. Growing up in Helix, Oregon, he formed a band with his younger brothers before making his way to Boise, in search of a broader music scene. His brother Jason followed, and they formed the band “Tylor & The Train Robbers.” They have performed their blend of outlaw honky tonk and gritty Americana around the Northwest and released their debut album, “Gravel,” earlier this year. On Aug 19, they return to Kechum’s hometown in eastern Oregon for the homegrown music festival Wheatstock.Playing Concerts in Rural Oregon? At One Theater in Enterprise, Big-Name Artists Say 'OK' 21:13When Darrell Brann bought the OK Theater in Wallowa County, he knew it wasn’t a number one destination for big touring bands, or really, touring bands of any size. But Brann has used small-town charm to lure in some really big names, and it’s not just a success for him — it’s helping his whole community."Quest for Beauty" — John Yeon’s Architecture on Display at the Portland Art Museum - 28:53You might be more familiar with the work of John Yeon than you realize. His imprint is everywhere, from houses in the Columbia River Gorge to the trees in Portland’s Tom McCall waterfront park. An architect, landscape designer, and conservationist, Yeon is the subject of two new books and the exhibition “Quest for Beauty” at the Portland Art Museum, open through Sept. 3.Sailor-Turned-Painter Christos Koutsouras at Astoria’s Imogen Gallery 37:41The Greek sailor-turned-painter Christos Koutsouras's life sounds like it was ripped from an old-fashioned adventure novel: growing up on a famous Grecian isle, sailing around the world as a deck boy, studying painting in Germany, and finally moving to the Pacific Northwest.These days, Koutsouras paints big, tumultuous landscapes. His newest show, "Venetian Red for Despina," runs Aug. 12–Sept. 5 at Imogen Gallery in Astoria. It’s all about Big Red, the iconic fishing building and net shed that perches precariously on piers out in the Columbia River and has served as a studio to a number of local artists including Koutsouras.Nature Writer Robert Michael Pyle is Not Quite a Bigfoot Believer - 45:04In 1990 the entomologist Dr. Robert Michael Pyle went into the woods looking for Bigfoot. Well, sort of. Pyle isn’t a Sasquatch hunter; he wasn’t even really a believer. But he spent several months trekking through a region of the Southern Washington Cascades known to be prime Bigfoot habitat. That journey became the book “Where Bigfoot Walks: Crossing the Dark Divide.” It first came out in 1995, and now Pyle has updated it with new research and findings.
Legalizing green sanitation, kite safety through cartwheels, coming back from serious crisis, and all the ways your shower can kill you. In this special live episode, polymath Mathew Lippincott enlightens Shawn Shafner (The Puru) with his encyclopedic knowledge of everything. A designer who creates future technologies influenced by history, Mathew tells us how he helped create Portland’s emergency sanitation protocol, worked with RECODE to make compost toilets a legal option, and takes us under the leach field to see why most septic tank users are pooping straight into their aquifers. PLUS Shawn tells stories of his travels in Nicaragua, reveals the origins of “justify your existence,” we redeem the value of outside defecation, and learn why it might be best to hold your breath the next time you visit a PortaPotty. Also mentioned in this episode: West Side Story, lunar colony, industrial design, University of Pennsylvania, Center for Social Impact, Global Social Impact House, Nicaragua, crisis, Joseph Campbell, hero’s journey, the origins of justify your existence, privilege, poverty, El Porvenir, Public Lab, crowdsource data, Deepwater Horizon, presence, safety, Kite Man, Portland, Oregon, airline travel, REN Project, Wayne RESA, curriculum development, Michigan, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Guerilla Science Group, Oregon Eclipse Festival, shower, sink, low-flow toilet, design object, Victor Papanek, Design for the Real World, basic human needs, consumer society, James Hennessey, How Things Don’t Work, unbalanced mixer valves, pressure valves, intentional community, bucket toilet,Molly Jean Winter (née Danielsson), sepsis, Art Monastic Laboratory, bucket system, majority world country, libraries, ARPANET, OhioLINK, apocalypse, interlibrary loan, Clara Greed, Alexander Kira, Joel Tarr, Carnegie Mellon, Cloacina, Cloaca, Rome, portable compost toilet, Henry Moule, Australia, Natural Event, Pootopia, Hamish Skermer, green, sustainability, Adam Rome, Bulldozer in the Countryside, primary treatment, scum, leach field, aquifer, laminar flow, Pacific NorthWest College of Art, Neighborhood Emergency Training, Portland Bureau of Emergency Management, emergency sanitation, citizen science, Uniform Plumbing Code, Rich Earth Institute, 20/20 Engineering, Greywater Action, Laura Allen, Watershed Management Group, John Grey, Interface Engineering, Nicole Cousino, Nature’s Commode, International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials (IAPMO), Green Supplement, American National Standards Institute (ANSI), WE Stand (Water Efficiency), public domain, NorthWest Permaculture Convergence, open defecation, family restroom
MADMOTORMIQUEL on: - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/madmotormiquel - SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/madmotormiquel HOW I MET THE BASS on: - Facebook: www.facebook.com/howimetthebass - Twitter: twitter.com/howimetthebass - Mixcloud: https://www.mixcloud.com/HowIMetTheBass 3 QUESTIONS to MADMOTORMIQUEL: Q: Your mix shows influences from Beats and Hip-Hop. When did you come to electronic music and why? A: I have been collecting records from an early age on listening to so many styles of music that I realized pretty early that there is good music in every genre, you just need to find it. So it’s really hard for me to tell when I first got in touch with electronic music. I came from Punkrock, Hardcore, Ska, but I listened to hip hop really early too, and I grew up with friends in Berlin that started some of the first techno clubs and some of my friends became quite famous musicians. So I guess I have been in touch with electronic music all my life, but my passion for raves was definitely highly influenced by my first Fusion Festival and all those illegal raves a long time ago. Q: From Berlin to the world. Where´s your favorite place to DJ? A: There are soooo many amazing places around the world where I had the chance to play, thats always hard to tell. To name 3 places that really really mean a lot to me: Garbicz Festival, Afrika Burn, Egypt Sandbox Festival. Q: Which releases can we expect this year? And is there maybe another tour coming up? A: I was touring so much in the last 2 years that I didn’t have that much time for studio, hopefully this year I will spend some more time producing again. There is a track coming up in March/April on the Bar 25 compilation I did together with my Melbourne friend moodmachine, and I made a remix for my friend Sam Farsio from Dubai which will be out in the next months as well. And I am working on some new tracks, so let’s see what happens. I’m playing 2 shows in New Caledonia end of February which I am really excited about! A US tour in summer including Oregon Eclipse Festival and Burning Man, again Egypt in May and quite a lot other stuff. Thanks a lot for giving me the opportunity to show a little bit of me meeting the bass :)