Andre Callot - “Burning Rocks”

Made by a friend of my sister. I haven’t met him, and she hasn’t really even mentioned him much,but I’m a very big fan of his work.

(Source: youtube.com)

Played 30 times
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“Study for Solo Snare”

Performed by Loren Mach
Berkeley, Ca 2009

Composed by my good friend Zach Hejny 

Nils Norsell - 1002 Images of the Moon

A little something by my good friend Nils.

POWDER 2: POWDER 2 THE PEOPLE (by skummissile)

The first time I saw this it completely derailed me. I was watching it at least once a week for a very long time. Now I’m afraid to watch it because I don’t know what it will do to me.

The Who - A Quick One While He’s Away (Rock and Roll Circus)

(Source: youtube.com)

Cory Arcangel: Pro Tools: Various Self Playing Bowling Games, 2011 (by WhitneyFocus)

John Cage on music

(Source: youtube.com)

alecshao:

Keetra Dean DixonJust Between You and Me: Objects of Codependency 

I’ve seen some of her other work, this is her only series that I really liked.
more here 

Made a second tumblr

http://thevomitingbuddha.tumblr.com/

A more typical tumblr page, not really dedicated to anything, not very serious, mostly reblogs and humorous images.

First reblog
3rdofmay:

The art: Paul Pfeiffer, Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (8), 2005.
The news: “Basketball players of the NCAA, unite!” by Patrick Hruby for TheAtlantic.com.
The source: Partial and promised gift to the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington.
Critic’s note: Hruby’s essay notes that the NCAA financial model relies on the fondness fans and alumni have for their schools. The athletes themselves mostly do not participate in that success: They are the unpaid labor that enables a multi-billion-dollar annual industry. Pfeiffer’s Four Horsemen reminds us that when the identifying jersey is stripped away the player is almost always anonymous. The athletes are conditionally adored by the fans even as they are exploited by the schools for which they play. Jerry Seinfeld was right: We root for the laundry with which we identify.

First reblog

3rdofmay:

The art: Paul Pfeiffer, Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (8), 2005.

The news: “Basketball players of the NCAA, unite!” by Patrick Hruby for TheAtlantic.com.

The source: Partial and promised gift to the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington.

Critic’s note: Hruby’s essay notes that the NCAA financial model relies on the fondness fans and alumni have for their schools. The athletes themselves mostly do not participate in that success: They are the unpaid labor that enables a multi-billion-dollar annual industry. Pfeiffer’s Four Horsemen reminds us that when the identifying jersey is stripped away the player is almost always anonymous. The athletes are conditionally adored by the fans even as they are exploited by the schools for which they play. Jerry Seinfeld was right: We root for the laundry with which we identify.

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Radiolab - Long Distance

Zach Galifianakis @ Coachella 2007

I was lucky enough to be there and see this live, standing ovation.

(Source: youtube.com)

J.S.Bach - Toccata in F major BWV540/1

(Source: youtube.com)

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Radiolab - Slow