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Nixie Tube Spectrum Visualizer Has Over 1400 Components

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Elizabeth is the name given to this 32 Band Music Spectrum Visualizer made in Steampunk style. It is first prototype, and features real time analog sound processing, audio compressor, display made from 32 pieces of Soviet era nixie plasma bargraphs. Each from 32 channels are separated and tuned of specific frequency. Housing made from acacia solid wood, all metal parts made from brass. Here’s the best bunch of numbers – the electronic part consist over 1400 components.

I would have no idea how to dance along with it, but with a price tag of over $5,000, I guess I have time to practice.

Sesame Street: The Walking Gingerbread (The Walking Dead Parody)

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The Crumbies come from a bad batch of cookies and are eating everyone’s cookies! The cookies are only safe if they aren’t opened. Will Sheriff Graham learn to control his hunger for everyone’s safety? Will the boxes of cookies ever be safe again?

The World’s Greatest Trump Impersonator

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John Di Domenico has been impersonating Trump for more than a decade, a job that’s gotten seriously demanding since the election. VICE met up with the actor for a competition between the world’s leading Trump impersonators at LA’s Laugh Factory, where he showed off his routine and explained what it’s like to act like the president for a living.

The Tragically Hip, Feist Win 2017 Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize

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The Polaris Music Prize, produced by Blue Ant Media, announced the winning albums for the 2017 Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize today.

The winners were chosen from four short lists, each representing a different musical era, and were curated by a Heritage Prize jury of music historians and music media. Two winners for each era were chosen — one by public vote and one by the jury. Voting opened at the Polaris Music Prize Gala on September 18, 2017 and ended on October 19.

The winners of the 2017 Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize are:

1960 – 1975
Public: Gordon Lightfoot — Lightfoot!
Jury: The Band — The Band

1976 – 1985
Public: Harmonium — L’Heptade
Jury: Glenn Gould – Bach: The Goldberg Variations

1986 – 1995
Public: The Tragically Hip — Fully Completely
Jury: Eric’s Trip — Love Tara

1996 – 2005
Public: Feist — Let It Die
Jury: k-os — Joyful Rebellion

Gilbert Li, who curated the 2017 Polaris Music Prize posters and the posters for the 2016 Heritage Prize, will return to select eight new artists to pay tribute to the winning records.

The records that did not get selected as winners will remain on the short lists for the 2018 Heritage Prize. Two more records for each period will be selected by the jury.

The jury selected records for the Heritage Prize in accordance with existing Polaris criteria; to honour and reward artists who produce Canadian music albums of distinction without regard to musical genre or commercial popularity. It is our version of a “hall of fame”.

Kid Rock Announces ‘Greatest Show On Earth Tour 2018’ And New Album ‘Sweet Southern Sugar’

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Kid Rock announced today that he will be releasing his new album Sweet Southern Sugar on November 3 and will also hit the road on his “Greatest Show On Earth Tour 2018,” produced by Live Nation.

The tour kicks off on January 19 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee and will continue with 21 shows from coast to coast. Fans of the rocker can expect the same high-energy experience, but with brand new tracks from his latest album.

Sweet Southern Sugar is Kid Rock’s first album recorded in Nashville and features his spontaneous summer releases “Greatest Show On Earth” and “Po-Dunk,” as well as recent single “Tennessee Mountain Top.” The album ranges from country to classic rock, with a little rap sprinkled in between and highlights Kid Rock’s armory of talent, which transcends a single genre.

Tickets and VIP packages for the tour will go on sale to the public the day Sweet Southern Sugar is released, November 3, at www.LiveNation.com. Fan Club members will be able to purchase tickets beginning October 31 at 10am local, and fans who pre-order the album through www.KidRock.com will be eligible for a special pre-sale beginning on November 1 at 10am local.

GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH TOUR:
Jan. 19 Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena
Jan. 20 Louisville, KY – KFC Yum! Center
Jan. 25 Durant, OK – Choctaw Grand Theatre
Jan. 26 Durant, OK – Choctaw Grand Theatre
Jan. 27 Durant, OK – Choctaw Grand Theatre
Feb. 2 Tulsa, OK – BOK Center
Feb. 3 Houston, TX – Toyota Center
Feb. 9 Atlanta, GA – Infinite Energy Arena
Feb. 10 Charlotte, NC – Spectrum Center
Feb. 16 Toronto, ON – Air Canada Centre
Feb. 17 Columbus, OH – Nationwide Arena
Feb. 23 Philadelphia, PA – Wells Fargo Center
Feb. 24 Cleveland, OH – Quicken Loans Arena
Mar. 2 Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun Arena
Mar. 3 Baltimore, MD – Royal Farms Arena
Mar. 9 Newark, NJ – Prudential Center
Mar. 10 Nassau, NY – NYCB Live
Mar. 16 Chicago, IL – United Center
Mar. 17 Omaha, NE – CenturyLink Center
Mar. 20 Denver, CO – Pepsi Center
Mar. 23 Phoenix, AZ – Talking Stick Resort Arena
Mar. 24 Las Vegas, NV – Mandalay Bay Events Center

SWEET SOUTHERN SUGAR TRACK LISTING:

1. GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH
2. PO-DUNK
3. TENNESSEE MOUNTAIN TOP
4. I WONDER
5. AMERICAN ROCK N’ ROLL
6. BACK TO THE OTHERSIDE
7. RAINING WHISKEY
8. STAND THE PAIN
9. SUGAR PIE HONEY BUNCH
10. GRANDPA’S JAM

From MTV to YouTube, from MJ to Taylor – Did the Internet Kill the Video Star?

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Witnessing the rotting corpse of Taylor Swift climb her way out of a grave in the What You Made Me Do promo could lead one to believe that the music video has made little progress since the far more innovative Michael Jackson’s industry-transforming Thriller video in 1983.

The music world in which Swift’s zombies drag their way around, however, is light years away from the MTV-era dominated by Michael Jackson and his peers. MTV’s power has been on the decline for some time, as a result of social media and the internet at large. As opposed to falling by the wayside, however, the music video has grown and formed an inevitable partnership with the world wide web.

Taylor Swift” (CC BY 2.0) by Dvincleo

The video for What You Made Me Do is indeed in many ways reminiscent of Thriller, but it has something else going for it: it betrays the degree of change that has occurred since legendary director John Landis turned the Jackson song into a 14-minute featurette.

 

Thriller won three awards at the inaugural MTV Video Music Awards in 1984. This year saw the VMAs (the common abbreviation of the awards show) continue the trend of declining viewing figures, with its lowest ever ratings.

 

How much longer MTV will commit to the VMAs is unclear. The channel itself, however, which began in 1981 as a vehicle for new music stars to promote their music, has already significantly cut down on its programming. Taking a different path, it has built on the success of early docu-soaps, such as The Osbournes and The Real World, and is now focusing its core programming on reality TV.

MTV Video Music Awards sign” (CC BY-SA 2.0) by j1myi

As such, the natural destination for Look What You Made Me Do is on the web. Rather than being seen as a downgrade for MTV’s indifference, the power of such platforms as YouTube create more exposure than its cable TV playlisting ever could.

While MTV was responsible for introducing the early work of such auteurs as Jonathan Glazer, Chris Cunningham, Mark Romance, Anton Corbijn, Michael Gondry, Spike Jonze, and David Fincher, that responsibility now lies in the hands of YouTube, along with other such sites as Vimeo, to provide a space for new talent wishing to push the boundaries of the music video.

The internet has had a remarkable impact upon numerous industries and continues to change the shape of commerce and how consumers interact with their daily lives. While music fans used to have to stay home to watch music entertainment, they can now view their favorite music videos on-demand through their mobile device.

The same can be said for the television industry as a whole, with the likes of Netflix and Amazon now often favoured over live or scheduled viewing. Many of the broadcast shows are available to watch online and have created a culture of binge-watching, with audiences unable to get enough of their favorite shows.

Other forms of entertainment, such as gaming, have also found a home online. Now, iGamers can visit a site such as Bonus.ca and choose from a number of online casinos, featuring some of the best bonuses in Canada. Many of the offers are exclusive to that particular website and offer multiple means of payment, so bitcoin players and cash players alike can enjoy playing a whole host of casino games. Bitcoin, an increasingly popular currency, can also be used to make purchases in a number of music stores in Canada.

The shift from the MTV playlist means that producers are no longer obliged to create content simply to meet demand, but are now able to produce videos for their followers. This has resulted in some innovative work serving very specific markets, such as the recent Arca videos and their exploration of male vulnerabilit

Foo Fighters Announce 2018 North American Tour

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With newly minted memories of their CalJam 17 triumph still fresh in the eyes and ears of 30,000+ true rock believers, and with Concrete and Gold (Roswell Records/RCA Records) still riding high in the charts worldwide since its international #1 debut, Foo Fighters have announced the next phase of the Concrete and Gold global domination initiative.

The first 2018 North American dates of the Concrete and Gold world tour have been confirmed. The new shows will kick off April 18 in Austin, Texas and will run through the band’s July 29 return to Chicago’s Wrigley Field. Included on the newly announced itinerary are a July 16-17 two-night stand at New York’s Madison Square Garden, a July 21-22 encore doubleheader at Boston’s Fenway Park, and so much more.

Tickets for these shows will be on sale to the general public Friday, November 3 at 10am local time (*with the exception of the public on sale for Chicago, which will begin November 10).

Capital One cardholders will have access to an exclusive cardholder pre-sale for Foo Fighters Concrete and Gold Tour. The Capital One cardholder pre-sale starts Thursday, October 26 at 10am local venue time and ends Saturday, October 28 at 10am local venue time, or until pre-sale tickets run out. Capital One cardholder pre-sale for the Chicago date will begin Monday, November 6 at 10am.

Foo Fighters kicked off the first U.S. leg of the Concrete and Gold Tour October 12 with an intimate show by FF standards—the grand opening of The Anthem in Washington DC—a performance that USA Today noted “transformed the venue into a raucous rock cathedral.” In the days since, Foo Fighters have continued to storm through sold out arenas in Richmond VA, Greensboro SC, Cincinnati and more. The first Foo Fighters global trek since the 20th Anniversary trek that placed #5 in 2015’s top grossing world tours, the Concrete and Gold Tour has seen the Foos reaching new peaks of their estimable powers. “Foo Fighters keep going and going and going in epic Greensboro show,” wrote the Charlotte Observer, “If there’s one thing you can count on lately when you walk into a Foo Fighters concert, it’s that you probably won’t get home until tomorrow.” The Richmond Times-Dispatch reported, “Having played and sung all night with a seemingly endless store of energy, Grohl noted as midnightapproached, ‘I’m going to feel like I was run over by a truck tomorrow.’” And the Washington Post called the Anthem opener “a rock-and-roll clinic from Foo Fighters,” adding “when it was time to officially open the venue… the Anthem called in the only band with the local roots and international fame that could pull it off: Foo Fighters… That’s exactly what Grohl and friends did, treating the Anthem like a new leather jacket: turning something that glimmers with newness and making it feel as cozy as a childhood home.”

FOO FIGHTERS
CONCRETE AND GOLD
North American Tour 2018

4/18 – Austin, TX — Austin360 Amphitheater
4/19 – The Woodlands, TX (Houston) – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
4/21 – Dallas, TX – Starplex Pavilion
4/22 – Bossier City, LA – CenturyLink Center
4/25 – Tampa, FL — MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre
4/26 – West Palm Beach, FL– Coral Sky Amphitheatre
4/28 – Atlanta, GA — Georgia State Stadium
4/29 – Jacksonville, FL – Welcome to Rockville
5/1 — Lexington, KY —Rupp Arena
5/3 — Memphis, TN — Fed Ex Forum
7/7 — Philadelphia, PA — BB&T Pavilion
7/12 — Toronto, ON — Rogers Centre
7/14 – Wantagh, NY – Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater
7/16 & 17 – New York, NY — Madison Square Garden
7/19 – Pittsburgh, PA – PPG Paints Arena
7/21 & 22 — Boston, MA – Fenway Park
7/25 – Cuyahoga Falls, OH (Cleveland) – Blossom Music Center
7/26 – Noblesville, IN (Indianapolis) – Ruoff Home Mortgage Music Center
7/29 — Chicago, IL — Wrigley Field

Music, Media & Megabytes: Here’s How the Internet Went from Luxury to Necessity

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Source: Pexels

In the early 2000s, or even further back – when accessing the internet required time, patience and perseverance – the world wide web was reserved for the wealthy families and businesses well off enough to afford it. Back then, just 361 million people around the globe had access to the internet. After all, while computers may have existed at companies for a while, home computers were still a relatively new phenomenon and were yet to become affordable. Plus, dial-up modems and other primitive internet equipment – that often made necessities of that time such as home phones useless –  were still expensive.

Over the next decade though, computers became far more affordable as they evolved while internet packages became as accessible as other home necessities like television cable and mobile phone contracts. By 2010, 1.7 billion people around the world had access to the internet, and by 2015 the number had passed over a billion. Now, 40% of the world’s population is able to access the internet with ease.

Needless to say, this change has affected almost every part of our everyday lives. For example, it has changed the way we spend our leisure time and have fun. Instead of watching the same five TV channels or reading the same books repeatedly, we have access to millions of TV shows, movies and novels using sites like Netflix and Amazon Kindle.

Arguably one the most successful online industries is gaming, with online casinos attracting millions of users looking for easy, attainable yet entertaining fun each and every day. In fact, online poker operator 888poker receives over 200,000 unique visitors looking to play table games and slots from North America, Europe and Brazil alone according to Alexa. Poker and its variants – which include Texas Hold’em, Omaha and Omaha Hi-Lo – is incredibly popular online, as online casino operators have adopted almost every part of the internet’s ever-evolving capabilites, including interactive play, live dealer poker games and even worldwide poker tournaments that people can get involved in from their very own homes.

Source: Pexels

Meanwhile, if we’re looking to buy something we no longer have to even leave the house as most shops offer online services and home delivery, while sites like Amazon and eBay have created huge empires based on e-commerce. As if that wasn’t impressive enough, individuals can now even take free or cheap courses to educate themselves in how this new, modern world functions at sites like Udacity and Team Treehouse, both of which offer courses in everything from web development to games design.

Of course, the fact that the internet is now a necessity available in 40% of the population’s homes has also changed the music industry. Like games, shopping and online education, music is more accessible and affordable than ever. Occasionally this is considered a bad thing depending on who you ask, as the music industry is simply unable to make money like it used to since the internet’s creation. However, for consumers, the internet has made music more interesting than ever, as sites like iTunes and Amazon allow you to purchase just one song you like instead of an entire album. Plus, sites like Pandora and Spotify are incredibly popular, allowing listeners to stream entire music catalogues and pay for ad-free experiences.

Right now, the internet is a part of many of our everyday lives, but where will it go from here? It appears that the days of desktops and even laptops are coming to an end as consumers look for cheaper, portable platforms. As the latter gain popularity, the internet will be even more accessible than ever, so we can expect the number of households with internet access to grow significantly. Really, it seems as though the days of the internet as a luxury are officially over, and it has now become a necessity in our day-to-day lives.

Buffy Sainte-Marie’s “Medicine Songs” Gets Released November 10, 2017

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Since her groundbreaking debut, 1964’s It’s My Way!, Buffy Sainte-Marie has been a trailblazer and a tireless advocate. Today the innovative artist shares new song “You Got To Run,” a collaboration that features Tanya Tagaq and announces details of Medicine Songs, the follow-up to the Polaris Music Prize and JUNO Award-winning 2015 album Power in the Blood. Medicine Songs will be released November 10, 2017 via True North Records.

For more than a half-century, Sainte-Marie has been a disruptor of the status quo. In 1969, she made one of the world’s first electronic vocal albums; in 1982 she became the first Indigenous person to win an Oscar; When she was blacklisted and silenced from American radio airwaves she joined the cast of Sesame Street and became the first woman to breastfeed on national television. She’s written pop standards sung and recorded by the likes of Janis Joplin, Elvis Presley, Donovan, Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes in addition to writing “Universal Soldier,” the definitive anti-war anthem of the 20th century.

Medicine Songs has been a lifetime in the making and is perhaps, Sainte-Marie’s most powerful gift. In a statement, Sainte-Marie describes the album:

“This is a collection of front line songs about unity and resistance – some brand new and some classics – and I want to put them to work. These are songs I’ve been writing for over fifty years, and what troubles people today are still the same damn issues from 30-40-50 years ago: war, oppression, inequity, violence, rankism of all kinds, the pecking order, bullying, racketeering and systemic greed. Some of these songs come from the other side of that: positivity, common sense, romance, equity and enthusiasm for life.

I’ve found that a song can be more effective than a 400-page textbook. It’s immediate and replicable, portable and efficient, easy to understand – and sometimes you can dance to it. Effective songs are shared, person-to-person, by artists and friends, as opposed to news stories that are marketed by the fellas who may own the town, the media, the company store and the mine. I hope you use these songs, share them, and that they inspire change and your own voice.

It might seem strange that along with the new ones, I re-recorded and updated some of these songs from the past using current technologies and new instrumentations – giving a new life to them from today’s perspective. The thing is, some of these songs were too controversial for radio play when they first came out, so nobody ever heard them, and now is my chance to offer them to new generations of like-minded people dealing with these same concerns. It’s like the play is the same but the actors are new.

I really want this collection of songs to be like medicine, to be of some help or encouragement, to maybe do some good. Songs can motivate you and advance your own ideas, encourage and support collaborations and be part of making change globally and at home. They do that for me and I hope this album can be positive and provide ideas and remedies that rock your world and inspire new ideas of your own.”

Medicine Songs Tracklisting:
1. You Got To Run (Spirit of the Wind)
ft Tanya Tagaq
2. The War Racket
3. Star Walker
4. My Country ‘Tis of Thy People You’re Dying
5. America the Beautiful
6. Carry It On
7. Little Wheel Spin and Spin
8. No No Keshagesh
9. Soldier Blue
10. The Priests of the Golden Bull
11. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee
12. Universal Soldier
13. Power in the Blood

Digital version includes:
14. Disinformation
15. Fallen Angels
16. Now That The Buffalo’s Gone
17. Generation
18. Working For The Government
19. The War Racket (Unplugged)

That Time Sesame Street Took Us On A Tour Of A Saxophone Factory

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In 1980, Sesame Street took their viewers on a tour of a saxophone factory, showing every step that it took to create the instrument. As one YouTube commenter posted, “I love that man wearing the glasses playing a song on his saxophone at 1:47 he shouts out “SAXOPHONE!””

Or as Homer Simpson would say, “Saxomophoooone!”