Asmrion is an elegant and beautiful ambient sound simulator that’s best enjoyed with headphones. It’s completely interactive and has a very natural, organic and soothing user experience with subtle buttons to shift up and down volume. It’s possible to attune yourself with these app tools to varying states of consciousness, all pleasant, reassuring and relaxing and perfect for a yoga or meditation session at home. This app could very well be the antidote to a stressful day. Although I have recommended online ambient music apps in the past, and also ambient music podcasts – this one triumphs over all of them for elegance, subtlety and non-intrusive relaxation and even better there is no hard selling of a premium version of the product, it’s simply free and beautiful. Check it out now: http://asmrion.com/
Stuck on what to read next? Hate judging books by their covers? Then the Recommend me a bookapp will delight you.
The app takes you headlong into reading the first few pages of a book without knowing anything about the author, title or context of the book itself.
This allows you to gain some traction and assess the book based on its contents rather than simply judging the book by its cover.
I found myself engrossed with the first few pages of a political novel set in Germany 300 years ago, which I wouldn’t normally touch with a barge pole. Yet it sounds strangely compelling and I want to know more.
Recommend me a book is a great way to become hooked on new subject matter and to discover new authors that you may not have been privy to otherwise.
To be modern is to find ourselves in an environment that promises us adventure, power, joy, growth, transformation of ourselves and the world – and at the same time that threatens to destroy everything we have, everything that we know, everything that we are.
Marshall Berman, “All that is solid melts into air’.
POSTCONSCIOUS is a web experiment by Andrew McCarthy that extracts random posts from Twitter, and reads them aloud using Speech Cloud text-to-speech. The app uses a cute and kitsch reverb effects and a retro typeface called Space Mono. What results is a strange echo-chamber of vaguely familiar and yet alien sounding voices coming out of the ether and their inner most thoughts, emotions and verbal diarrhoea on Twitter is regurgitated into the aural atmosphere and the result is something that sound disturbing and yet very compelling. Andrew McCarthy is a (very talented) web developer from Phoenix and now based in Berlin, you can follow him on Twitter@andrevvm
Over the coming weeks I will share an eclectic lucky dip of music that I discovered and loved via subreddit /r/listentothis, Here is no.5 on the jukebox, Japanese ambient/new age producer Hiroshi Yoshimura’s floaty album Soundscape 1 Surround from 1986.
There is something eerily familiar about Hiroshi Yoshimura’s 1986 album Soundscape 1 Surround. It’s so minimal and delicate it could be the soundtrack of any summer movie or backing soundtrack to a shopping centre, gallery or lift. Hiroshi was a minimal ambient composer who, in addition to a slew of cruisy and beautiful recordings, also made soundtracks for Tokyo museums, galleries, malls, train stations.
The music reverberates, ebbs and flows lazily like a soft breeze on water, it’s the perfect summer album for a long hot day by the pool or at the beach. A luscious and timeless ambient album. Hiroshi Yoshimura is Japan’s answer to Brian Eno and he is just as prolific as Eno with many albums to his name.
Solistice Streets is a web-based app that’s the brainchild of some pagan programmers who wanted to make it easier to worship the seasons and the summer solistice (21st of December) and winter solistice (20th June).
In particular they wanted to create an online place for collective worship in honour of Stonehenge. A place where on these two auspicious dates each year, the central Altar stone aligns with the Slaughter stone, Heel stone and the rising sun to the northeast.
Similar alignments can be found at Newgrange, Ireland, Maeshowe, Scotland and other prehistoric monuments. Winter solstice was very important in the life of ancient communities since it was seen as the beginning of the deep winter, and in the same time the reversal of the days shrinking was giving some hope for people. Same is true for the Summer solstice
Although centred around the Northern Hemisphere’s seasonal fluctuations, Solistice Streets is valiantly global in its reach. With the team attempting to locate streets in cities which are aligned along the direction of rising sun of the solstice.\
Although I’m a bit unclear of what to do with information now, does this mean I should be doing a solistice ritual on a street corner in a city instead of a forest?
eSkeletonsis an ingenious online resource that compares the skeletons of primates and including the most notorious of the bipeds homo sapiens.
Created by the Department of Anthropology at the Univrsity of Texas in Austin, eSkeletons provides an interactive environment where visitors can examine skeletal anatomy through an osteology database.
It’s a very engaging and robust site where you can glimpse at 3D models of different primate bones and also the taxonomic/evolutionary tree of where each animal fits. Designed as a learning tool it’s quite fun to play with if you are (like me) a fan of the great apes, monkeys and primates. Discover more: http://eskeletons.org/
Lucy Sparrow is a quirky felt artist who mass produces felt replicas of branded goods like grocery store items, fresh fruit and veg, daily papers. She loves to recreate well-known and loved foods from British households and then sell them in quaint corner stores where people can purchase these reasonably priced and bite size pieces of modern art. Recently she ventured across the Atlantic and set up a deli in New York City. And at one stage she had a Sex Shop where you could buy hand felted pornos, condoms, masks and dildos by the dozen Wherever she goes, she loves to delight, bemuse and attract people with her creations.
Each creation is a kingdom of kitsch and a parody on the enthusiasm that people have for the different consumables.
“I wanted to make an installation that would get people to feel sick with sheer wonderment and excitement. I’ve always tried to capture that feeling when you’re really excited about something and you want to flap your arms about. The Cornershop, to me, is that. It’s the possibility that anything can be achieved and that no matter how mad or silly an idea is, there’s someone out there doing it.
A selection of poisons by Lucy Sparrow
“I want people to question my sanity and wonder why on earth someone would devote the best part of a year to making something so zany. Before production of the project started, I’d been planning it for about eight months. The idea actually came about on the Oxford Tube bus going out of London, around about Marble Arch. My partner and I were scribbling crazy ideas down in the back of a notebook and now here we are, it almost doesn’t seem real,” Lucy says.
The Cornershop
Lucy Sparrow’s Fantastical Felt Mountain of Consumable Goods
Inside of a intricate felt porn magazine
A selection of felt dildos
At home with Sparrow and her gigantic toothpaste
A local lady buys felt products in the Corner Store
The felt cash register at the Corner Shop was priced at 600 pounds. Lucy Sparrow’s Fantastical Felt Mountain of Consumable Goods https://wp.me/p41CQf-JGH
“I love Grayson Perry for his playfulness and his confidence to make work that he likes, not what other people like. I also really love the Chapman Brothers and their dark subject matter and pure evil sense of humour. I want to make people uncomfortable and a bit weirded out when they see my work,” she says.
Sparrow has been knitting in one way or another since she was four years old. She made a felt star to hang on the Christmas tree and her mum still has it.
“Knitting didn’t come naturally, I still hold my needles wrong and it took me years to learn. i used to leave my knitting around my mum and my gran in the hope that they’d get bored and do it for me. I used to go to school with some very holly homemade scarfs that used to drive some of my teachers bonkers,” she says.
Of all of her felt creations, she loved creating these ones the best. “I like the Nurofen and the custard and the Spam Fritters. Not everything translates well into felt but they do for some reason,” Lucy says.
“You can buy all the items in The Cornershop, even the shop fittings! If you can’t make it to the actual shop, you can also get stuff online here too! Love hearts are only available in giant packs and they’re going to Swizzel’s I’m afraid. I’m tempted to do a limited run though as people seem to really love them,” she says.
“The porn mags are one of my favourites too. It’s just so wrong on so many levels but it works. It’s an innocent, childlike medium which has been taken to the extreme and made into something naughty and beautiful. I love including details in these things, there’s a lot of in jokes and hidden meanings in my work and the porn mags are some of the best opportunities for this,” she says.
In 2017, Lucy set up a Bodega in New York City called 8 Till Late. All of her 9,000 felt consumables sold out nine days before the end of the exhibition and she had to shut up shop early. That’s what I’d call a successful retail enterprise.
Peering through the windows of From 8 Till Late in NYC
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