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On today's episode, Bob Holmes of the band SUSS interviews David Moore, Peter Silberman, and Nick Principe of the jambient band Cowboy Sadness. They discuss influences and their favorite music, including Air, Bill Orcutt, Nathan Salsburg, and Mountains. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.flowstate.fm/subscribe
Dive into a captivating auditory adventure on this episode of CORNDOWN, where I take you on a whirlwind tour of intriguing calls with my cohost, SPLink. Explore a collection of unique calls that delve into the quirks of life. From quirky musings to intriguing sounds, we delve into the whimsical world of sound and storytelling. Join us as we uncover the mysteries behind each call, including 911 test calls, personal reflections, and even unexpected encounters. Tune in for an exploration of creativity and storytelling in this fascinating auditory journey. This show is made possible by donations from listeners like you. If you enjoy what you hear, please consider donating at https://www.patreon.com/dragonmere ! brought to you by rogueserver.com
You might not realize that singer Jenny Owen Youngs has written a ton of songs for other people, including Panic! At The Disco, Pitbull, and Brett Dennen, to name a few. Her new album Avalanche dropped last week and includes several collaborators including S. Carey, Madi Diaz, and The Antlers' Peter Silberman, who helped co-write “It's Later Than You Think,” which warns about lost time scrolling.
This week we review the Season One finale of Willow and the Star Wars: The Bad Batch S02E03. We also announce the 2022 Spockies Award nominees.2023 Golden Globes: the complete list of winners - The VergeWarner Bros. Discovery says it's done killing shows and movies just for tax write-offs - The VergeHBO Max's first price hike raises the monthly rate by $1 - The VergeMarvel Studios' Ant-Man and The Wasp: Quantumania | New TrailerRick and Morty co-creator and star Justin Roiland facing felony domestic violence chargesInside Job Cancelled at Netflix, Reversing Season 2 Renewal — Read Creator's 'Heartbroken' StatementWednesday renewed for season 2 at Netflix | EW.comTerminator actor Earl Boen, who played the villainous Dr. Peter Silberman, dies at 81Maggie Thrett Dead: ‘Star Trek,' ‘Three in the Attic' Actress Was 76 – The Hollywood ReporterNicolas Cage: No Plan to Join ‘Star Wars' Universe: “I'm a Trekkie” – The Hollywood ReporterThe Making of Casino Royale(s) was a Sh*t ShowHonest Trailers | Every Star Wars Movie (Compilation)Apple TV+ Guide: Every Apple TV show and movie available nowHISTORY OF THE WORLD PART 2 Teaser Trailer (2023) Hulubasically the Avatar™ discourse:Velma | Official Trailer | HBO MaxThe Last of Us | Final Trailer | HBO Max (2023)Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/spockcast-a-star-trek-discovery-picard-and-lower-decks-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Peter Silberman, the singer of The Antlers, joins Gemma for a discussion about their brand new LP "Green to Gold" and a catch-up. Silberman chats about his hearing loss, songwriting, studio space, gear, and much more.
GOOD Friday, great episode. Yes, we’ve finally done it, and it only took a crucifixion to convince us. To honour this episode’s release day, we’re focusing our Top 5 on the show’s patron saint, Kanye West (sorry Frank). But before that main event, we tackle big news from the My Bloody Valentine camp, somehow round-up all the latest non-fungible controversy and discuss the somewhat miraculous return of The Antlers. Easter might be a moveable feast but NO ENCORE is your weekly music mainstay. So tuck in…ACT ONE: Craig and Dave brace themselves for what may well be a divisive episode. So… what’s new?ACT TWO (5:35): Yes, we’ve bought more vinyl. And yes, it’s actually newsworthy. The big question is whether Kevin Shields is really going to grace us with two new My Bloody Valentine albums anytime soon… Other pressing questions this news section: are you interested in a 20 quid Glastonbury show, would you let Matt Willis prick you and are non-fungible tokens “the most disgusting things on the planet right now”? Lindsay Lohan has an answer for at least one of these.ACT THREE (23:41): Peter Silberman has battled stark hearing problems to deliver The Antlers’ sixth studio album, an unflappable record that finds him opting for zen-like serenity. The lads openly wept when they last saw The Antlers live. How will they react during this album review?ACT FOUR (39:00): Our Top 5 Kanye West Songs. Have your NO ENCORE bingo cards at the ready. Naturally featuring Craig reading from a 16 year-old issue of Q Magazine.Q might be a thing of the past but if you fancy helping this musical outlet survive and indeed thrive, you can head on over to patreon.com/noencore. We greatly appreciate it!
In this episode, we get to meet Peter Silberman, frontman and chief singer/songwriter of indie rock band The Antlers. In this chat, Peter and I discuss the music he's made throughout his career, including the Antlers' landmark 2009 album, Hospice. We also talk a lot about their brand new album, Green to Gold, which comes after a 7-year hiatus from the group, a gap that saw Peter undergo a serious vocal cord surgery, and a big move to upstate New York, where he has found quite a sense of peace and quietude. Please enjoy, and thank you for listening.
The Antlers are an alternative rock group from New York City. Their new record, "Green To Gold", arrives on vinyl and all music streaming services on March 26th. We talk with Peter Silberman about escaping New York, being influenced by your surroundings, trading ideas with other creatives, walking, seasons, understanding yourself, Rumi, meditation, mixing, field recordings, tiny details, the visual side to their new record and conversation. Theme Music: "Breakfast Burger" by Snack Villain See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Matt Heart Spade & Jinners interview Peter Silberman, the frontman, singer, and principal songwriter of the Antlers, revered solo artist and one half of Spatial Relations. They discuss the early days of the Antlers, Nirvana, college radio, "Hospice" fandom and much more. For the Repeat/Skip segment, they discuss Yo La Tengo's And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out (2000) and The Books' Lost and Safe (2005).Follow us on social media:@mixtapememoriespodcast @pantheonpodcasts on Facebook@mixtape.memories on Instagram@MemoriesMixtape @pantheonpods on TwitterVisit mixtapememories.com for links to our Spotify playlists, blog posts and episode extras as well as the wonderful podcast network pantheonpodcasts.com for the episodes! Special thanks to Ryan Mulkey, our technical director who also wrote our theme song and drew our cover art!
Matt Heart Spade & Jinners interview Peter Silberman, the frontman, singer, and principal songwriter of the Antlers, revered solo artist and one half of Spatial Relations. They discuss the early days of the Antlers, Nirvana, college radio, "Hospice" fandom and much more. For the Repeat/Skip segment, they discuss Yo La Tengo's And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out (2000) and The Books' Lost and Safe (2005). Follow us on social media: @mixtapememoriespodcast @pantheonpodcasts on Facebook @mixtape.memories on Instagram @MemoriesMixtape @pantheonpods on Twitter Visit mixtapememories.com for links to our Spotify playlists, blog posts and episode extras as well as the wonderful podcast network pantheonpodcasts.com for the episodes! Special thanks to Ryan Mulkey, our technical director who also wrote our theme song and drew our cover art!
Music professor and author Peter Silberman walks us through the shifting, jagged landscape of one of Trout Mask's more harrowing tracks.
Clearing Clutter is a musical composition to help you let go of the thoughts crowding your mind, designed to help ease you to sleep and dream more spaciously.Peter Silberman is a musician based in New Paltz, NY. He is the singer and primary songwriter behind The Antlers, and comprises 1/2 of scoring and production duo Spatial Relations.Presented by On Air Fest at Wythe Hotel. On Air Fest explores storytelling and creativity in sound. For more information visit onairfest.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
For this atmospheric instrumental track created for the ESOPUS 25 "Jokes" CD (included in ESOPUS 25, the nonprofit arts publication now in bookstores) The Antlers frontman Peter Silberman took his inspiration from an old classic: A horse walks into a bar, and the bartender asks, "Why the long face?" Silberman talks about his choice in the issue's liner notes: "I love this joke for its simplicity, and fittingly, I wrote a piece that revolves around a single, economical melody [whose] central riff mimicked the phrase ‘Why the long face?’” The track appears on the compilation along with new songs by Lonnie Holley, Katie Von Schleicher, and Joseph Keckler, among others; the CD is introduced in the issue by comedian Demetri Martin.
For its latest audio compilation, ESOPUS invited 11 musical acts -- including Peter Silberman, Joseph Keckler, and Katie Von Scheicher -- to create new songs inspired by a joke of their choice. The CD will appear in ESOPUS 25, which is just now hitting bookstores. The iconic comical query “Why did chicken cross the road?” opens “Why Did the Man Talk to a Horse Off in the Bar?,” created by acclaimed artist and musician Lonnie Holley. This song is a haunting, deeply moving meditation upon mortality, religion, and humankind’s relentless search for meaning through the act of storytelling. Holley recorded it at Figure 8 Recording Studio in Brooklyn several months ago, enlisting the help of musicians Courtney Hartman, Elizabeth LaPrelle, Anna Roberts-Gevalt, and Zosha Warpeha.
Well Thanks For The Extremely Strong And At Times Offensive Opinions
Join us for a bumper episode full of Halloween cheer, insightful gaming commentary, a peek behind the news in our weekly Behind The News Of the Week weekly segment and a new feature: things that are bad. Theme tune is like 8 seconds of Brassbanda by La Brassbanda. Please don't sue us. https://open.spotify.com/track/4UPOXjO0tpasXrsrFafPRD Supplementary materials This is the bit written by Elliot when he listens through for the edit, so information in here may or may not be slightly biased. On with the show notes... Not only is Dreft a real thing but it's also laundry detergent. Get in. Kitchen Nightmares restaurant statuses: http://www.kitchennightmaresblog.com/2013/01/list-of-all-episodes-posts.html The closure rate is actually closer to 60% but I still think that may be statistically higher than the market average Itsyotsy: http://www.anorak.co.uk/290349/technology/daily-mail-kills-off-istyosty-are-there-other-ways-to-read-the-mail-and-not-encourage-it.html/ Rhun ap Orwerth's sass: https://twitter.com/RhunapIorwerth/status/660159355002687489 Welsh AM's SuperstarLife gaming (10/10 journalism): http://www.llanellistar.co.uk/Welsh-Assembly-Member-s-SuperstarLife-gaming/story-25981026-detail/story.html FALLOUT 4 PIP BOY EDITION: http://store.bethsoft.com/fallout-4-pip-boy-edition.html Pimp-Boy 3 Billion (not 5 million, sorry!): http://fallout.wikia.com/wiki/Pimp-Boy_3_Billion Archer S6E11 – Achub Y Morfilod: http://www.netflix.com/watch/80046156 Erdős Number: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erd%C5%91s_number There is also an Erdős-Bacon number: the combined steps between you, Erdős and Kevin Bacon. The lowest known Erdős–Bacon number is 3 – for Daniel Kleitman, a mathematics professor at MIT – his Erdős number is 1 and his Bacon number is 2. (From the Wikipedia article above) We talk about quite a few songs in this one so I’ve made a Spotify playlist of the job lot: https://open.spotify.com/user/tobiasgray/playlist/1FPONkbx3scbTuCsUtXWcG Datblygu - Can I Cymru https://open.spotify.com/track/6tnZ6B1D3Hbh56AsD45Lvp S4C doc on Datblygu: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=meGp4i8RAos Elliott Smith – Between the Bars: https://open.spotify.com/track/52Bg6oaos7twR7IUtEpqcE (also give Oh Well, OK a go https://open.spotify.com/track/52cVyjHPzvP7jA7JTXTdBi) Tunng – Soup: https://open.spotify.com/track/26tnpn5utqZGBiLDZUdCx4 The Pink Spiders – Going Steady: https://open.spotify.com/track/3xty8NBCxhU1lHn69KH7ED The Antlers – Kettering: https://open.spotify.com/track/6eAEy3JgrOCLx0pOWogFQo (Caution this one is pretty bloody depressing, but the album is a masterpiece. If you’re strong of will then put the whole thing on and chill out to Peter Silberman’s haunting beautiful tones) Also try my favourite one on this album, Two https://open.spotify.com/track/49ZR4CJXkG8cKigutb66un Don't forget to write us with your ideas for how to spice up Steff's downstairs. I mean his house. The downstairs of his house. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/wtftesaatoo Twitter: https://twitter.com/wtftesaatoo Please talk to us. I'm so lonely.
This week's episode is as varied as it gets - running the gamut from the propulsive Superhumanoid to the understated, solemn David Bazan to the boozy rollick of Man Man and ending with the glitchy freak-out that is Nasty Nasty. As well, Jesse, in conjunction with Jewcy.com, has a conversation with The Antlers' Peter Silberman about his band's new album, Burst Apart. The interview begins at 24:18 and you can read the interview here. Lastly, the team picks their Ear About Town recommendations, and we debut our fan chosen recommendation. If you'd like to call in and leave your Ear About Town recommendation, please call 585-4NOISE5. Tracks: 1. “Palm Springs” – Superhumanoids, Parasite Paradise 2. “Life Fantastic” Man Man, Life Fantastic 3. “Dinner” - Blood Orange, Number Six 4. “Wake and be Fine” - Okkervil River, I Am Very Far 5. “Ever Falling in Love” - Times New Viking, Dancer Equired 6. “Babies” - Radiation City, The Hands That Take You Antlers Interview "Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out" (clip) - The Antlers, Burst Apart "Two" (clip) - The Antlers, Hospice "Putting The Dog to Sleep" (clip) - The Antlers, Burst Apart "Parenthesis" (clip) - The Antlers, Burst Apart 7. "Wolves at The Door" - David Bazan, Strange Negotiations Ear About Town Dawson: “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man” (clip) - Aretha Franklin, I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You Jesse: “November 30th, 2006” (clip) – Paleo, Daytrotter Session 2/12/2007 Jaime: “Oh Industry” (clip) – Bette Midler, Beach Original Soundtrack Guest caller, Damian Lopez: "Bejan" (clip) - Tanlines, Volume On 8. "No Names" - Nasty Nasty, Single
Black Hat Briefings, Las Vegas 2006 [Video] Presentations from the security conference
In the past couple years there have been major advances in the field of rootkit technology, from Jamie Butler and Sherri Sparks' Shadow Walker, to FU. Rootkit technology is growing at an exponential rate and is becoming an everyday problem. Spyware and BotNets for example are using rootkits to hide their presence. During the same time, there have been few public advances in the rootkit detection field since the conception of VICE. The detection that is out there only meets half the need because each tool is designed to detect a very specific threat. After three years, it’s time for another run at rootkit detection. This presentation will review the state-of-the-industry in rootkit detection, which includes previously known ways to detect rootkits and hooks. It will be shown how the current detection is inadequate for today’s threat, as many detection algorithms are being bypassed. The talk will outline what those threats are and how they work. The presentation will then introduce the RAIDE (Rootkit Analysis Identification Elimination) tool and detail RAIDE’s unique features such as unhiding hidden processes, showing new ways to detect hidden processes, and restoring non-exported ntoskrnl functions. The talk will conclude with a demonstration, which at Black Hat Europe included five rootkits, one virtual machine, two kernel level debuggers, and RAIDE running happily on top of them all. Peter Silberman has been working in computer security field for a number of years, specializing in rootkits, reverse engineering and automated auditing solutions. Peter was employed at HBGary during the summer of 2005; however during the year, Peter is an independent security researcher who tries to contribute to openRCE.org in his spare time. Peter is currently a sophomore at a liberal arts school where he tries to not let education interfere with his learning. Peter if not behind a computer or power tools can be found behind a pong table mastering his skills. Jamie Butler is the Chief Technology Officer at Komoku, Inc. He has almost a decade of experience researching offensive security technologies and developing detection algorithms. Mr. Butler spent the first five years of his career at the National Security Agency. After that, he worked in the commercial sector as the lead kernel developer on a Windows host intrusion detection system. Mr. Butler was also the Director of Engineering at HBGary, Inc. focusing on rootkits and other subversive technologies. Mr. Butler has a Master's degree in Computer Science from the University of Maryland and a B.B.A. and B.S from James Madison University. He is the co-author and teacher of "Offensive Aspects of Rootkit Technologies" and co-author of the recently released bestseller, "Rootkits: Subverting the Windows Kernel." Mr. Butler has authored numerous papers appearing in publications such as the "IEEE Information Assurance Workshop, USENIX login";, "SecurityFocus", and "Phrack". He is a frequent speaker at computer security conferences such as the Black Hat Security Briefings and has appeared on Tech TV and CNN. Before that, Mr. Butler was the Director of Engineering at HBGary, Inc. specializing in rootkits and other subversive technologies. He is the co-author and a teacher of "Aspects of Offensive Rootkit Technologies" and co-author of the newly released bestseller "Rootkits: Subverting the Windows Kernel" due out late July. Prior to accepting the position at HBGary, he was a senior developer on the Windows Host Sensor at Enterasys Networks, Inc. and a computer scientist at the NSA. He holds a MS in CS from UMBC and has published articles in the IEEE IA Workshop proceedings, Phrack, USENIX login, and Information Management and Computer Security. Over the past few years his focus has been on Windows servers concentrating in host based intrusion detection and prevention, buffer overflows, and reverse engineering. Jamie is also a contributor at rootkit.com."
Black Hat Briefings, Las Vegas 2006 [Audio] Presentations from the security conference
"In the past couple years there have been major advances in the field of rootkit technology, from Jamie Butler and Sherri Sparks' Shadow Walker, to FU. Rootkit technology is growing at an exponential rate and is becoming an everyday problem. Spyware and BotNets for example are using rootkits to hide their presence. During the same time, there have been few public advances in the rootkit detection field since the conception of VICE. The detection that is out there only meets half the need because each tool is designed to detect a very specific threat. After three years, it’s time for another run at rootkit detection. This presentation will review the state-of-the-industry in rootkit detection, which includes previously known ways to detect rootkits and hooks. It will be shown how the current detection is inadequate for today’s threat, as many detection algorithms are being bypassed. The talk will outline what those threats are and how they work. The presentation will then introduce the RAIDE (Rootkit Analysis Identification Elimination) tool and detail RAIDE’s unique features such as unhiding hidden processes, showing new ways to detect hidden processes, and restoring non-exported ntoskrnl functions. The talk will conclude with a demonstration, which at Black Hat Europe included five rootkits, one virtual machine, two kernel level debuggers, and RAIDE running happily on top of them all. Peter Silberman has been working in computer security field for a number of years, specializing in rootkits, reverse engineering and automated auditing solutions. Peter was employed at HBGary during the summer of 2005; however during the year, Peter is an independent security researcher who tries to contribute to openRCE.org in his spare time. Peter is currently a sophomore at a liberal arts school where he tries to not let education interfere with his learning. Peter if not behind a computer or power tools can be found behind a pong table mastering his skills. Jamie Butler is the Chief Technology Officer at Komoku, Inc. He has almost a decade of experience researching offensive security technologies and developing detection algorithms. Mr. Butler spent the first five years of his career at the National Security Agency. After that, he worked in the commercial sector as the lead kernel developer on a Windows host intrusion detection system. Mr. Butler was also the Director of Engineering at HBGary, Inc. focusing on rootkits and other subversive technologies. Mr. Butler has a Master's degree in Computer Science from the University of Maryland and a B.B.A. and B.S from James Madison University. He is the co-author and teacher of "Offensive Aspects of Rootkit Technologies" and co-author of the recently released bestseller, "Rootkits: Subverting the Windows Kernel." Mr. Butler has authored numerous papers appearing in publications such as the "IEEE Information Assurance Workshop, USENIX login";, "SecurityFocus", and "Phrack". He is a frequent speaker at computer security conferences such as the Black Hat Security Briefings and has appeared on Tech TV and CNN. Before that, Mr. Butler was the Director of Engineering at HBGary, Inc. specializing in rootkits and other subversive technologies. He is the co-author and a teacher of "Aspects of Offensive Rootkit Technologies" and co-author of the newly released bestseller "Rootkits: Subverting the Windows Kernel" due out late July. Prior to accepting the position at HBGary, he was a senior developer on the Windows Host Sensor at Enterasys Networks, Inc. and a computer scientist at the NSA. He holds a MS in CS from UMBC and has published articles in the IEEE IA Workshop proceedings, Phrack, USENIX login, and Information Management and Computer Security. Over the past few years his focus has been on Windows servers concentrating in host based intrusion detection and prevention, buffer overflows, and reverse engineering. Jamie is also a contributor at rootkit.com."