15 Oct

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Logitech® Performance Mouse MX™

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Logitech® Performance Mouse MX™I have been using Apple’s Mighty Mouse for years and overall i like it, but the constant problem with the scroll-ball. Well, it turns out, when the Mighty Mouse scroll wheel gets dirty, it stops being able to scroll down. Apparently, it’s a common problem, and there are like 1000 of solutions to this problem and i tried most of them.

The one working best it the Rub-Ball-On-Paper-Method, but cleaning the mouse is not what i want to do with my time, and lately i have been experiencing wrist pains and i think it’s due to the low flat design of Apple’s Mighty Mouse. I do have an old injury in my left hand / wrist. I’m not an orthopedist but i feel that my wrist get “tired” when using the mouse all day.

I’ve had many brands of mice, my last non Apple mouse Logitech MX Revolution was nice fit like a glove, and i loved the Hyper Scrolling wheel. I was just about to buy the MX Revolution when i came a cross an article about Logitech® Performance Mouse MX™ on some blog. And I was impressed by the specs. and the similarity to the MX Revolution. So i went shopping and i am now using my brand new Logitech® Performance Mouse MX™ and this mouse is amazing I love everything about it, they’ve redesigned the Hyper Scrolling so that you can switch it on and of, Hyper Scrolling or standard clicking scroll. And they added a thumb button which you can assign to any function.Logitech® Performance Mouse MX2

19691.1.0Logitech’s new Darkfield technology makes possible to use the mouse on all sorts of work surfaces. A glass desk or shiny table shouldn’t stand in your way. I’m using my new mouse on my wood desk without any mouse pad and it feels so smooth. It’s a joy working in Photoshop and Illustrator with this mouse. The mouse comes with a exclusive pouch with a cable for charging while you actually use the mouse, no more dock like with the Revolution, and you also get a extension cable for the USB Logitech® Unifying receiver.

I must say I have never had one that felt so right in my hand. I used it on many different surface just to see if it would make a difference. It works great every time. This mouse is easily the best Logitech mouse I have owned.

You work and play all over the place—and that means you’re going to encounter all sorts of work surfaces. A glass desk or shiny table shouldn’t stand in your way.
That’s why we created Logitech® Darkfield Laser Tracking™, featured in the Logitech® Anywhere Mouse MX™ and the Logitech® Performance Mouse MX™.
Darkfield tracks on surfaces like clear glass* and lacquered desks that stump optical mice and standard laser mice. So now your mouse works wherever you do. Darkfield

06 Oct

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Brian Eno – Curiosities Volume I/II (2003/04)

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Brain One’s interest in doing things in the present rather than trading off his considerable reputation means he’s almost constantly at work in his studio; it’s not unusual for him to turn up for a radio interview clutching a new piece he’s finished off that morning. That many of these tracks never see the light of day was a source of concern to Brian’s assistant Marlon Weyeneth, who’s compiled this album from the heaps of DATs littering the Eno studio.
Brian’s fans are split by a desire to hear him repeat old glories and a simultaneous longing to hear him do something groundbreaking. It’s a lot to live up to. Curiosities sort of sidesteps that anticipation by just presenting the music – no conceptual baggage, no sleevenotes. Just Brian and his machines making some rather lovely noises.
Apart from two remixedtracks from the unfortunate Headcandy CD-ROM (one with trusty old mucker Robert Fripp) and one extended version of a track from The Drop, all of the music here is previously unreleased. It runs the gamut from mechanistic digital funk (slithery basslines, stiff drums and ghostly percussive clatter) to the ‘Unwelcome Jazz’ of The Drop. There’sspectral ambient meanderings and a spot of the experiments with processed vocalese that he’s lately become interested in. There’s even a rather beautiful little organ solo, entitled “My Lonely Organ” (Fnaaar).
The thing that unites most of this stuff is Eno’s rhythmic sense. Despite his reputation as the Godfather of Ambient, Eno’s love of funk and Africangrooves has been as strong an influence on his work as Cardew or Cage. There’s a kind of non-funky funkiness (what do you expect from a fifty-something white Englishman?)at work, which gives his rhythmic constructions a distinct personality.
Eno also gets some of the best bass sounds known to man, and that’s the key to what makes him so great. In an age where any off-the-shelf synth or software gives anyone access to instant sonic wonderment,he still has an immediately recognisable sonic palette. As he said to Lester Bangs 25 years ago, it takes a day to learn how to use a synthesizer, and five years to learn what not to do with it. Even at its most sketchy and provisional, Eno’s music resonates and seduces in a way that little other electronica can.

Curiosities Volume IBrain One’s interest in doing things in the present rather than trading off his considerable reputation means he’s almost constantly at work in his studio; it’s not unusual for him to turn up for a radio interview clutching a new piece he’s finished off that morning. That many of these tracks never see the light of day was a source of concern to Brian’s assistant Marlon Weyeneth, who’s compiled this album from the heaps of DATs littering the Eno studio.

Brian’s fans are split by a desire to hear him repeat old glories and a simultaneous longing to hear him do something groundbreaking. It’s a lot to live up to. Curiosities sort of sidesteps that anticipation by just presenting the music – no conceptual baggage, no sleevenotes. Just Brian and his machines making some rather lovely noises.

Apart from two remixedtracks from the unfortunate Headcandy CD-ROM (one with trusty old mucker Robert Fripp) and one extended version of a track from The Drop, all of the music here is previously unreleased. It runs the gamut from mechanistic digital funk (slithery basslines, stiff drums and ghostly percussive clatter) to the ‘Unwelcome Jazz’ of The Drop. There’sspectral ambient meanderings and a spot of the experiments with processed vocalese that he’s lately become interested in. There’s even a rather beautiful little organ solo, entitled “My Lonely Organ” (Fnaaar).

Curiosities Volume II

The thing that unites most of this stuff is Eno’s rhythmic sense. Despite his reputation as the Godfather of Ambient, Eno’s love of funk and Africangrooves has been as strong an influence on his work as Cardew or Cage. There’s a kind of non-funky funkiness (what do you expect from a fifty-something white Englishman?)at work, which gives his rhythmic constructions a distinct personality.

Eno also gets some of the best bass sounds known to man, and that’s the key to what makes him so great. In an age where any off-the-shelf synth or software gives anyone access to instant sonic wonderment,he still has an immediately recognisable sonic palette. As he said to Lester Bangs 25 years ago, it takes a day to learn how to use a synthesizer, and five years to learn what not to do with it. Even at its most sketchy and provisional, Eno’s music resonates and seduces in a way that little other electronica can.

I did some shopping on ebay and found this two Eno Compilations (cheap too!!) Some songs we know well but most of the material is unreleased elsewhere. Volume II is one of my many favorite Eno albums.

Filed Under: Ambient, Music

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05 Oct

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Compounds + Elements: An Introduction to All Saints Records

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Compounds + Elements: An Introduction to All Saints Records
London-based All Saints Records decided to celebrate its relaunching (it was mostly silent from 2001-2004) by releasing Compounds + Elements, an 18-track compilation album showcasing the span and quality of the label. Though All Saints started in 1991 with producing almost solely ambient music, it has expanded since its birth and now concerns itself more with innovation in the approach to the music rather than genre. This is not to say that there are any particularly unexpected pieces here: Harold Budd and Brian Eno, the label’s biggest names, are both heavily featured.
There are songs from six of Eno’s records, which does make sense — he is the father of ambient music, after all. “Neroli,” from the album of the same name, with its calm, meandering bass, is roomy and suggestive, a true minimalist masterwork. Eno describes “Neroli” as “like opening your window onto an orange grove in high summer,” which might be a bit of an exaggeration (especially since the song is mixed at such a low decibel level that it’s difficult to even hear), but his point is well taken.
These songs do present an image, an idea, a fleeting sensation, a story, and it’s up to the listener to decide what exactly that is. While the first part of the album offers a modal exploration into the world of ambient music and soundscapes, the second part picks up the tempo and adds some groove, beginning with Jon Hassell’s “Out of Adedara.” Driven along by rolling jungle beats, Hassell shows off his trumpet skills by turning his instrument into traffic sounds and train horns, a jazz guitar accenting the movement of the piece.
Newcomer Vacabou offers the most traditionally structured of any of the tracks, the Europop-ish “Russia in White,” and even Eno’s “Fractal Zoom” has a funky feel. Surprisingly, the strangest — and perhaps best — piece on this album is one that is the least ambient. John Cale (of Velvet Underground and punk-producer fame) presents an orchestral interpretation of 20th century Welsh poet Dylan Thomas’ “Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night,” using a children’s choir, plenty of strings, and Cale himself passionately singing the poem’s stanzas. Compounds + Elements is certainly not all-encompassing, either of genre or of All Saints’ catalog, but it’s a nice collection of well-put-together and thoughtful songs, and a good way to reintroduce the label to the world. ~ Marisa Brown, All Music Guide

London-based All Saints Records decided to celebrate its relaunching (it was mostly silent from 2001-2004) by releasing Compounds + Elements, an 18-track compilation album showcasing the span and quality of the label. Though All Saints started in 1991 with producing almost solely ambient music, it has expanded since its birth and now concerns itself more with innovation in the approach to the music rather than genre. This is not to say that there are any particularly unexpected pieces here: Harold Budd and Brian Eno, the label’s biggest names, are both heavily featured.

Compounds + Elements.An Introduction to All Saints RecordsThere are songs from six of Eno’s records, which does make sense — he is the father of ambient music, after all. “Neroli,” from the album of the same name, with its calm, meandering bass, is roomy and suggestive, a true minimalist masterwork. Eno describes “Neroli” as “like opening your window onto an orange grove in high summer,” which might be a bit of an exaggeration (especially since the song is mixed at such a low decibel level that it’s difficult to even hear), but his point is well taken.

These songs do present an image, an idea, a fleeting sensation, a story, and it’s up to the listener to decide what exactly that is. While the first part of the album offers a modal exploration into the world of ambient music and soundscapes, the second part picks up the tempo and adds some groove, beginning with Jon Hassell’s “Out of Adedara.” Driven along by rolling jungle beats, Hassell shows off his trumpet skills by turning his instrument into traffic sounds and train horns, a jazz guitar accenting the movement of the piece.

Newcomer Vacabou offers the most traditionally structured of any of the tracks, the Europop-ish “Russia in White,” and even Eno’s “Fractal Zoom” has a funky feel. Surprisingly, the strangest — and perhaps best — piece on this album is one that is the least ambient. John Cale (of Velvet Underground and punk-producer fame) presents an orchestral interpretation of 20th century Welsh poet Dylan Thomas’ “Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night,” using a children’s choir, plenty of strings, and Cale himself passionately singing the poem’s stanzas. Compounds + Elements is certainly not all-encompassing, either of genre or of All Saints’ catalog, but it’s a nice collection of well-put-together and thoughtful songs, and a good way to reintroduce the label to the world.

01 Oct

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Warp20 Box Set

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The Warp20 (Chosen) double CD serves as a sort of best-of for the label, with one CD chosen by online voting and another handpicked by Warp co-founder Steve Beckett. (Beckett, I’m happy to report, shows “Bucephalus Bouncing Ball” some love.)

warp3The other double-CD, Warp20 (Recreated), consists of Warp artists covering other Warp artists. So we get Jamie Lidell doing Grizzly Bear, Bibio doing Boards of Canada, and Born Ruffians having their way with Aphex Twin, among others.

As for the other stuff, there’s Warp20 (Elemental), a single-CD continuous mix of Warp tracks, specifically commissioned for this box, from mashup maestro Osymyso. You’ll also get Warp20 (Unheard), a triple 10″ of rare and unreleased tracks, and Warp20 (Infinite), a double 10″ of locked-groove loops from Warp tracks.

The tracklists for (Elemental) and (Infinite) are still being finalized, but we’ve got everything else right here.

Warp20 (Chosen):
CD1 (chosen by online voting):

01 Aphex Twin: “Windowlicker”

02 Boards of Canada: “Roygbiv”
03 Squarepusher: “My Red Hot Car”
04 Battles: “Atlas”
05 LFO: “LFO (Leeds Warehouse Mix)”
06 Plaid: “Eyen”
07 Luke Vibert: “I Love Acid”
08 Autechre: “Gantz Graf”
09 Jimmy Edgar: “I Wanna Be Your STD”
10 Clark: Herzog”

CD2 (chosen by Steve Beckett):

01 Broadcast: “Tender Buttons”
02 Squarepusher: “My Sound”
03 Boards of Canada: “Amo Bishop Roden”
04 Battles: “Race: Out”
05 Flying Lotus: “GNG BNG”
06 Black Dog Productions – Xeper: “Carceres Ex Novum”
07 Nightmares on Wax: “I’m for Real”
08 Mike Ink: “Paroles (Original)”
09 Aphex Twin: “Bucephalus Bouncing Ball”
10 Jamie Lidell: “Daddy’s Car”
11 Squarepusher/AFX: “Freeman Hardy & Willis Acid”
12 Seefeel: “Spangle”
13 Autechre: “Drane”

Warp20 (Recreated):
CD1:

01 Born Ruffians: “Milkman/To Cure a Weakling Child” (Aphex Twin cover)
02 Jimi Tenor: “Japanese Electronics” (Elecktroids cover)
03 Tim Exile: “A Little Bit More” (Jamie Lidell cover)
04 Rustie: “Midnight Drive” (Elecktroids cover)
05 Luke Vibert: “LFO” (LFO cover)
06 Autechre: “What Is House? (LFO Remix)” (LFO cover)
07 Russell Haswell: “Cabasa Cabasa” (Wild Planet cover)
08 Clark: “So Malleable” (Milanese cover)
09 Diamond Watch Wrists: “Fool in Rain” (Pivot cover)
10 Hudson Mohawke ft. Wensday Night: “Paint the Stars ” (Jimi Tenor cover)

CD2:

01 Mark Pritchard: “3/4 Heart” (Balil – Black Dog Productions cover)
02 Mira Calix With Oliver Coates: “In a Beautiful Place Out in the Country” (Boards of Canada cover)
03 Pivot: “Colorado” (Grizzly Bear cover)
04 Bibio: “Kaini Industries” (Boards of Canada cover)
05 Jamie Lidell: “Little Brother” (Grizzly Bear cover)
06 Leila: “Vordhosbn” (Aphex Twin cover)
17 John Callaghan: “Phylactery” (based on Autechre’s “Tilapia”)
18 Gravenhurst: “I Found the F” (Broadcast cover)
19 Plaid: “On My Bus” (Plone cover)
20 Seefeel: “Acrobat’ (Maximo Park cover)

Warp20 (Unheard):
10″ 1:

A1 Boards of Canada: “Seven Forty Seven”
B1 Autechre: “Oval Moon (IBC mx)”
B2 Clark: “Rattlesnake”

10″ 2:

A1 Plaid: “Dett”
A2 Elecktroids: “Elecktroids Bonus Circuit”
B1 Flying Lotus: “Tronix”
B2 Nightmares on Wax: “Biofeedback Dub”

10″ 3

A1 Plaid: “Sam Lac Run”
A2 Nightmares on Wax: “Mega Donutz Dub”
B1 Broadcast: “Sixty Forty”
B2 Seefeel: “As Link”

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30 Sep

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Zero 7 – Yeah Ghost

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UK down-tempo duo Zero 7 has returned with an album that sounds unlike the back catalogue. Four albums deep, Henry Binns and Sam Hardaker are still striving for interesting new ground. Although Yeah Ghost will be dubbed trip-hop by most, Binns and Hardaker have injected plenty of pop sensibilities and hooks into the template.

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In places, the album has a quirky dance-pop sound that is similar to Basement Jaxx and in others they opt for some straight acoustic folk sounds. What ties these opposing genres together is an otherworldliness: be it a cut-up, stop-start vocal or their knack for chilling guitar riffs. It seems like the guys always get in early with up-and-coming vocalists (Sia or Jose Gonzalez spring to mind) and for their fourth album it is Eska Mtungwazi who sounds brilliant on numerous outings.

Soulful electronica? Breezy soundscapes? Proper, hum-along pop tunes?

Filed Under: Music

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