13 Oct

0 Comments

The Orb – Aubrey Mixes: The Ultraworld Excursions

by


The Orb – Aubrey Mixes: The Ultraworld Excursions

Aubrey Mixes mixes is my favorite orb album and one of my top 10 album cover designs as well. This is a scan from my CD version of the Cumulus Nimbus press. I have worked with the colors and made it as clean and true to the original as possible.

Track listing:

01. Little Fluffy Clouds (Cumulo Nimbus Mix)
02. Back Side of the Moon (Under Water Deep Space)
03. Spanish Castles In Space (Castles In Goa Mix)
04. Outlands (Fountains Of Elisha Mix)
05. A Huge Ever Growing Pulsating Brain That Rules From The Centre Of The Ultraworld (Loving You, Aubrey Mix Mk II)
06. Perpetual Dawn (January Mix 3)
07. Spanish Castles in Space (Extended Youth Mix)

These amazing remixes are produced and remixed by Youth, Pal Joey, Ready Made, to name a few. This album is very rare and out of print, but if you love ambient music i recommend you to try to get you hands on this masterpiece.

Aubrey Mixes: The Ultraworld Excursions is a remix album compilation by The Orb, which was deleted on the day it was released. The album consists of seven alternate mixes of their first album, The Orb’s Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld. Five of these mixes are also available on the 2006 Deluxe Edition re-release of The Orb’s Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld.

13 Oct

0 Comments

Wall-E

by

Watch the trailer for Wall-E:

I saw Pixars Wall-E the other night. Brilliant movie as you can expect from the genius animators at Pixar. As with Pixar feature length animations, there is a screening of a short film just before the actual movie. This time it was a hilarious film called “Presto” featuring a magician performing in front of an audience while having to deal with his hungry rabbit.

 

About Wall-E now. This movie is set in the year 2815. Planet earth is devoid of human life and there are towering skyscrapers of un-recycled compacted waste. A robot, Wall-E takes trash, compacts them into cubes and arranges these cubes. His side-kick is a cockroach – I don’t recall this character ever having a name in the movie. One day, Wall-E discovers a seedling plant growing in an old refrigerator. He replants this seedling in an old shoe.

 

As the days go by, a massive spaceship-like thing lands near Wall-E’s place and a white robot by the name of Eve is left behind. Predictably these two robots fall in love. Eve then stumbles upon the seedling plant, puts it her “tummy” and suddenly goes into “sleep” mode. A saddened Wall-E tries to wake her up but fails.

Soon after, the spaceship like thing lands again and captures Eve. Wall-E stows himself away on the ship worried that he may lose his lady love… I won’t spoil it! Go and watch this adorable movie, it fun and suiteble for the whole family. Movie trailers here!

The cool Icons made by Michael Flarup.

12 Oct

0 Comments

Top 10 Album Covers

by

There was a time when album covers meant something. The vinyl cover was like a book for you’re reading pleasure while listening to you’re favorite artist. Not like today, when you buy a new CD first you have spend precious minutes trying to separate the security cellophane from the plastic case. And if you’re buying your music online, there’s no connection at all.

It was the era of the album that captured our attention, its broad, cardboard palate giving artists plenty of room for creativity. It’s difficult to appreciate the artwork on a smallish CD cover.

For their sheer brilliance and originality, these are the Top 10 album covers of all time:

 

1. Rolling Stones “Sticky Fingers
The marketing department had cash on its hands when it brought in Andy Warhol to design the cover with an actual brass zipper on the crotch of the jeans. Clearly a collector’s item if you can find the original 1971 release.

 

2. The Beatles “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
Incredible. Original. Hip, way ahead of its time. John, Ringo, Paul and George, in full pastel uniform holding brass instruments, surrounded by cutout photos of the famously living and famously dead.  A young Marlon Brando, Edgar Allen Poe, Marilyn and Dylan. And dozens more.

 

3. Led Zeppelin “III
The original release was a spinning circle disc underneath the cover that let you change pictures. The Jimmy Page idea was supposed to be based on crop rotation charts. It was a novel concept for the acoustic-spirited album, a marked contrast from “II.” All of Zep’s albums were unique, but this one stands out.

4. Yes “Tales From Topographic Oceans
Tough to choose just one album cover from the band that raised the bar for album cover design. The band’s 1974 release is a portrait of the ocean bottom, with the sun just over the horizon under a blue, starry sky. Surreal, like Yes’ music.



5. The Who “The Who By Numbers
Late Who bassist John Entwistle sketched the cover, which is a “draw by numbers” picture of the band, with an unshaven Keith Moon standing inside a broken snare drum. Original concept.



6. KISS  “Alive!
America gets its first close look at the phenomenon that would be known as KISS. The greasepaint, the glam, Gene Simmons’ wild hair and darting tongue — it was all on this cover. The band had released three previous albums, but it was “Alive!” that propelled Gene, Paul, Peter and Ace to super-stardom.

7. Black Sabbath “Black Sabbath
The 1970 debut is scary as, well, hell. A dead-looking woman with a green face is eerily standing at the edge of the woods in front of an English home. Its simplicity is haunting and still sends shivers when pulled from the album collection.

8. Hell Toupee “Hell Toupee
Boston funk-rock band’s full-length debut. The focus is a brain (borrowed from a local school lab) with a punk-red hairdo,  wearing a headset and puffing on a butt. Wonderful concept that bridged ’80s Kenmore Square with Allston back-beat funkadelics.

9. Frank Zappa “Weasels Ripped My Flesh
One of the greatest musicians and composers of our lifetime, Frank Zappa’s album covers were always weird and wacky. But it was this 1970 Mothers of Invention release that jumped off the record racks, a cartoon of a man shaving with a weasel. Only FZ could have come up with this concept.

10. Lynyrd Skynyrd “Street Survivors
The seven-piece band, in its prime, is devastated by a plane crash that kills singer Ronnie Van Zant and guitarist Steve Gaines. The photo on the cover shows the band in flames, with Gaines’ head and shoulders most prominently burning. Eerie foreshadowing. The cover was redesigned sans the flames shortly thereafter.

Dan, creator and author of Steel Kaleidoscopes.

08 Oct

0 Comments

Emilíana Torrini

by

Wednesday night, darkness dwells outside and the days get shorter. But in my darkness i listen to Emilíana Torrini. I rediscovered her music the other day and i have been playing here albums nonstop.

Her new ambum – Me And Armini is growing on me, but still, Love in the time of science from 1999 remains my favorite. It was while watching the end titles of The Lord Of The Rings – The Two Towers that i heard her special voice. Gollum’s Song is magnificent, Leonard Rosenman soundtrack is perfect!

I decided to rip my Emilíana CD to my iTunes Library and i have been enjoying her silk soft innocent scandinaviani-sch voice since. Now playing Baby Blue from – Love in the time of science this is a brilliant track!

When i first hear this song i was thinking to myself that she is riding the Björk wave, postmodern angst alá Torrini but now i think she’s a true and recognized artist.

Emiliana Torrini – Love in the time of science, 1999

01. To Be Free
02. Wednesday’s Child – Written-By – Alan Griffiths , Roland Orzabal
03. Baby Blue, Drums – Percussion – Clive Deamer , Siggi Baldursson Written-By – Alan Griffiths , Roland Orzabal
04. Dead Things
05. Unemployed In Summertime
06. Easy
07. Fingertips Drums, Percussion – Siggi Baldursson
08. Telepathy Keyboards, Written- By – Johann G Johannsson
09. Tuna Fish Drums, Percussion – Siggi Baldursson
10. Summerbreeze Guitar, Written- By – Mark Abis
11. Sea People

Producer – Eg White , Emiliana Torrini Recorded By – Eg White.

Emilíana Torrini Davíðsdóttir was born May 16, 1977, is an Icelandic singer, best known for her 1999 album Love in the Time of Science and for performing “Gollum’s Song”, during the ending credits of Peter Jackson’s film The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers.

Torrini grew up in Kópavogur, where, at the age of 7, she joined a choir as a soprano, until she went to opera school at the age of 15. In 1994, she became well-known in Iceland after winning the song competition of junior colleges in Iceland (Icelandic: Söngkeppni framhaldsskólanna), at the age of 17, singing “I Will Survive”. Her father is Italian and her mother Icelandic. She grew up with her parents in Iceland. Her father owns and operates a well-known Italian restaurant in Iceland, where she once worked as a waitress.

07 Oct

0 Comments

THX Trailer – “Amazing Life”

by

I was at the movies watching Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull yesterday, the movie was ok, but the best part of my movie theatre experience was the brand new THX Trailer “Amazing Life” This is something of the best I’ve seen, look for yourself, this small video format don’t do it justice, anyways here it is.

THX Trailer – Amazing Life

This Amazing THX Trailer rendering is made by Kyle and Michael from Eyestorm Productions. I predict a bright future for these guys. May time be on your side! ^^ Nelson.

Mike! Thanks for you’re nice mail!