Bauhaus Undead’s aesthetic reflects the bands art school origins to create and elegant and tasteful art book. This deluxe coffee table book is a fitting tribute and celebration of the legacy created by this ground breaking band. The book is ready for pre-order now.
Jack Black’s Son Racked Up a $3K App Bill
Jack Black talks to Jimmy Fallon about life with his two sons, including occasionally getting attacked in his wallet and genitals.
Pixar’s ‘Incredibles 2’ Official Teaser Trailer
Everyone’s favorite family of superheroes is back in “Incredibles 2” – but this time Helen (voice of Holly Hunter) is in the spotlight, leaving Bob (voice of Craig T. Nelson) at home with Violet (voice of Sarah Vowell) and Dash (voice of Huck Milner) to navigate the day-to-day heroics of “normal” life. It’s a tough transistion for everyone, made tougher by the fact that the family is still unaware of baby Jack-Jack’s emerging superpowers. When a new villain hatches a brilliant and dangerous plot, the family and Frozone (voice of Samuel L. Jackson) must find a way to work together again—which is easier said than done, even when they’re all Incredible.
Directed by Brad Bird (“Iron Giant,” “The Incredibles”) and produced by John Walker (“The Incredibles”) and Nicole Grindle (“Sanjay’s Super Team” short, “Toy Story 3” associate producer), “Incredibles 2” busts into theaters on June 15, 2018.
Why every American graduation plays the same song
We’re all familiar with Pomp & Circumstance, the graduation song that’s the official soundtrack of almost every commencement. But how did it get so big? In this episode of Vox’s Almanac, Phil Edwards investigates and finds diamonds, war, and Dame Clara Butt.
Pomp & Circumstance has long been a graduation anthem. Part of Edward Elgar’s infamous military marches, the tune was composed in the midst of the Boer War, a conflict that expanded the British empire in search of diamonds and gold. When the song was used for Edward VII’s coronation, it was lent words that, even today, promote the British empire. That’s why the version with lyrics is known as “Land of Hope and Glory.”
The famous song was used when Elgar received an honorary degree at Yale and, quite simply, people liked how it sounded. It quickly spread and became a graduation anthem in America (and remained an unofficial national anthem in the UK). Today, we hear it everywhere — and it’s all thanks to Edward Elgar’s unique place in British culture.
Aimee Mann Performs Four Songs At NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert
“This song is called ‘You Never Loved Me’ — it’s another cheery, optimistic number,” says Aimee Mann, introducing the second of four songs in this Tiny Desk Concert. She has been writing songs on the human condition — more often than not with a strong sense of humor to underpin the inevitable melancholy — as far back as the ’80s, when she was the singer and bassist in Boston’s The Young Snakes. Mann’s newest solo record, the first in five years, is baldly called Mental Illness — clearly, there’s a deep honesty within these songs.
Thousands Of Photos From NASA’s Apollo Missions Are Turned Into An Animated College
In the year 1957 the cold war expands to space. The Soviet-Union sends Sputnik as the first man-made object into earth-orbit. 3 years later Yuri Gagarin enters space as the first man in space. The so called “Space Race” seems to be decided. But in 1961 President Kennedy promised to send American Astronauts to the Moon. The Apollo Project was born. A space ship had to be built that is strong enough to escape earth’s gravitation, land on the moon and bring the crew safely back to earth. Motion Designer Christian worked with his brother and Composer Wolfgang for 18 months on this short film. The foundation were thousands original NASA photos, taken from the Astronauts during the Apollo Missions, which were released in September 2015. It is an animated collage using different techniques to bring the stills to life.
LUNAR from Christian Stangl on Vimeo.
Watch David Bowie Perform The Album “Low” For The Last Time In 2002
Here’s David Bowie, live at Montreux Jazz Festival, Auditorium Stravinski, Montreux, Switzerland on July 18 2002. The Low set at the Montreux Jazz Festival was captured on video with high-quality audio and video, and also the final time Bowie ever played the album Low live.
Music Archeology: Reviving the World’s Forgotten Records
For generations, record collectors have played a vital role in the preservation of musical and cultural heritage by “digging” for obscure music created by overlooked artists. These music “archeologists” are consumed by a desire to give these records a second chance at being heard and appreciated. In our digital age, these record-diggers also act as music curators and are crucial alternative voices to a contemporary culture often served by computer algorithms.
In addition, MIMS launched several ventures such as 24 Hours of Vinyl, numerous signature events and several music curation projects, including a weekly radio show. For the past 15 years, Alexis has been a pillar of the Montreal music scene as DJ Lexis. He is a music entrepreneur, a music programmer at Montreal’s Phi Centre and tours for worldwide DJ shows and festivals.
A History of Sampling with Chris Read of WhoSampled
DJ/Producer Chris Read gave students a journey into the history of sampling at a recent PB x Ableton event at Point Blank in London, covering the origins of hip-hop through to the use of samples in today’s pop music.
Aziz Ansari on ‘Master of None,’ Hosting ‘SNL,’ and Kanye Studio Session Stories
HBO and The Ringer’s Bill Simmons is joined by Emmy Award–winning comedian Aziz Ansari to discuss shooting the second season of ‘Master of None’ in Italy (5:00), taking intense Italian lessons (15:00), directing modern Woody Allen moments (24:00), improvising scenes in auditions (29:30), hosting ‘SNL’ for the first time (33:00), stand-up at the Comedy Cellar (38:00), living outside the internet outrage cycle (43:00), working with Lorne Michaels (48:00), the untimely passing of Harris Wittels (53:45), shooting the ‘Otis’ video with Kanye and Jay Z (1:04:00), listening to Kanye albums before their release (1:08:00), Kanye and Jay’s humorous side (1:12:00), the first time meeting Dave Chappelle (1:19:00), and the ‘Girls’ series finale internet controversy (1:25:00).



