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article jockey


8:38
タグ:seo  articles  content  lsi  search  engines 
投稿日: August 30, 2007, 2:36 am
閲覧数: 6310
投票: 4.70(5点満点) 3 人の平均

article jockey - new と improved


9:10
タグ:seo  articles  content  lsi  search  engines 
投稿日: February 4, 2008, 6:58 am
閲覧数: 469
投票: 5.00(5点満点) 1 人の平均

breaking news - be a news-jockey


4:29
タグ:media  art  installation  news  criticism  infotainment 
投稿日: May 14, 2008, 6:48 am
閲覧数: 99
投票: 0.00(5点満点) 0 人の平均

translecture


7:04
an introduction into transacoustics in cut-up-text, sound and image. ''...open the book text 'n theory jockey following circuits with translation and with simultaneous coupling of paradoxical informational cycles — translation mechanisms become visually palpable within the apparatus for the maintenance of theoretical balance with great ease, with eloquence and similitude as an intellectual balancing act in the crossover and overlap of linguistic as well as acoustic and graphic intersections, the theoretical feedback serves as a flow of information like a metaphorical bookmark in the encapsulation and weave of content. a firework over the amusement park smashes into the synapses' storm of ideas...'' translectures are one of the strategies to materilize and visualize the transacoustic paradoxon. video & live drawing: nikolaus gansterer theory jockey: ernst reitermeier sound: matthias meinharter, joerg piringer
タグ:iftaf  transacoustic  research  music  lecture  theory 
投稿日: December 10, 2007, 9:49 pm
閲覧数: 112
投票: 0.00(5点満点) 0 人の平均

times square: cleo club - damn dog versão cachorral


2:37
Times Square is a 1980 film starring Trini Alvarado, Robin Johnson, and Tim Curry. The plot of the film is essentially a punk rock ethic - misunderstood youth forming a band and, through music, articulating their frustrations toward adult authority, personified in the film as parents, the medical establishment, and politicians. The film is about two teenage runaways, Nicky Marotta (Robin Johnson) from a poor family and Pamela Pearl (Trini Alvarado) from a rich family, living in New York City. They soon link up with disc jockey Johnny LaGuardia (Tim Curry). The two girls form an underground punk rock band, The Sleez Sisters, and become a hit with the city's disillusioned youth after broadcasting their volatile songs and speeches on LaGuardia's radio station. The climax of the film features all the fans of The Sleez Sisters congregating in the streets of New York's Times Square for a rooftop concert. Times Square was directed by Allan Moyle from a script written by Moyle and Jacob Brackman. The movie was inspired by a diary, found in a second-hand couch bought by Moyle, detailing the life on the streets of a young mentally disturbed woman. The original script contained lesbian content which was mostly cut from the the film, though the final version still has subtle lesbian overtones. Moyle revealed in the DVD audio commentary that the film's integrity was compromised by the removal of the more overt lesbian content, and the addition of several inappropriate songs to the film's soundtrack at the insistence of producer Robert Stigwood. Stigwood expected the film to be another Saturday Night Fever and insisted that the soundtrack be a double album to make the film more commercially viable. Moyle and Johnson remarked on the audio commentary that the loss of key scenes made the narrative disjointed and damaged the story's emotion and characterisations. They give as examples the film's focus jarringly changing from Pamela to Nicky and the increasingly outlandish and unrealistic story works against the movie's gritty, on-location documentary style. Moyle left production before the film was completed, and further scenes were shot under the supervision of others, mainly footage backed with the new soundtrack additions. The version of the film released to theatres was not Moyle's preferred cut; however, he still acknowledges the finished film's importance as it documents a Times Square that no longer exists. The film was shot on location and captured Times Square's seedy, grindhouse atmosphere before it was cleaned up in the mid 1990s. The movie was not initially a commercial success. However,it has since been rediscovered and has become a cult classic and a staple at gay and lesbian film festivals, because of the subtly portrayed lesbian relationship between the film's two female leads. Kathleen Hanna of Bikini Kill and Le Tigre cites this as one of her favorite films. Welsh rock group Manic Street Preachers have made several references to the movie throughout their career: They covered the original song "Damn Dog" on Generation Terrorists, though it was excluded from the American release. The band also named their song "Roses in the Hospital" after a line in the film discussing Nicky's eating of roses as performance art in hospital. In 1993, for stage performances and publicity shots, Manic Street Preachers bassist Nicky Wire wore eye makeup like Nicky Marotta does in the film. The movie features a soundtrack of punk rock and New Wave music with a wide range of artists including the Ramones, The Cure, XTC, Lou Reed, Gary Numan, Talking Heads, Suzi Quatro, Roxy Music, Robin Gibb & Marcy Levy, Patti Smith and The Pretenders. The soundtrack also features original songs sung by the film's actors, "Damn Dog" by Johnson and "Your Daughter Is One" by Johnson and Alvarado. The soundtrack, as a compilation of some of the most important new wave and punk music from the era, achieved far more notoriety than the film did on its release. The soundtrack also became a collectors' item among fans of XTC, because it included the specially-written XTC track "Take This Town", which for many years was only available on this soundtrack.
タグ:cachorro  pet  perro  dog  chien  hund 
投稿日: May 16, 2007, 12:16 pm
閲覧数: 8177
投票: 4.00(5点満点) 9 人の平均

t-bone music vjs


1:45
T-Bone Music's VJs get on the decks and kick out this Promo Video Using a total of 3 videos. T-Bone Music's VJs are a team of talented Video Jockeys who "Spin" video like a DJ would music. They perform at T-Bone Music's Video Dance Parties, mixing the hottest music videos as well as there own content on huge video screens and plasma displays. T-BoneDJ.com TheSchoolDJs.com
タグ:t-bone  music  nj  dj  new  jersey 
投稿日: August 2, 2007, 1:17 am
閲覧数: 172
投票: 3.00(5点満点) 2 人の平均

candidates jockey for position on campaign trail


1:37
Candidates jockey for position on campaign trail
タグ:wavy  video  content  candidates  jockey  for 
投稿日: March 1, 2008, 1:37 pm
閲覧数: 13
投票: 0.00(5点満点) 0 人の平均

power of techno music


2:44
this song is very awsome to get play in a club, very awsome music TOXIC RECORDS . LABEL - AGENCY - EDITION . - HiBeatz - Time will tell Promo record to be offered to the public. In 1906, Reginald Fessenden transmitted the first audio radio broadcast in history also playing the first record, a contralto singing Handel's Largo from Xerxes.[4] The world's first radio disc jockey was Ray Newby of Stockton California. In 1909, at 16 years of age, Newby began regularly playing records on a small spark transmitter while a student at Herrold College of Engineering and Wireless located in San Jose, California, under the authority of radio pioneer, Charles "Doc" Herrold.[5][6] We used popular records at that time, mainly caruso records because they were very good and loud; we needed a boost... we started on an experimental basis and then because this is novel, we stayed on schedule continually without leaving the air at any time from that time on except for a very short time during World War I when the government required us to remove the antenna... Most of our programming was records, I'll admit, but of course we gave out news as we could obtain it...[5] —Ray Newby, I've Got a Secret (1965) In the 1910s, regular radio broadcasting began, using "live" as well as prerecorded sound. In the early radio age, content typically included comedy, drama, news, music, and sports reporting. The on-air announcers and programmers would later be known as disc jockeys. In the 1920s - "Juke-joints" became popular as a place for dancing and drinking to recorded jukebox music. In 1927, Christopher Stone became the first radio announcer and programmer in the United Kingdom, on the BBC radio station. In 1929, Thomas Edison ceased phonograph cylinder manufacture, ending the disc and cylinder rivalry.
タグ:love  trance  techno  house  toxic  records 
投稿日: July 4, 2008, 1:48 am
閲覧数: 1293
投票: 4.40(5点満点) 7 人の平均

news-jockey


1:28
"Breaking The News - Be a News-Jockey" is an interactive installation by Marc Lee that transmits information from the internet after the user enters a subject. Real time audio-visual streaming content is then uploaded from web services such as youtube, wikipedia, google video ... to be projected onto the installation space. A week long exhibition commissioned by mapping festival, April 2008 Video by Jerome Monnot oamos.com mappingfestival.com
タグ:marc  lee  antivj  mapping  festival  news 
投稿日: August 23, 2008, 3:42 am
閲覧数: 24
投票: 0.00(5点満点) 0 人の平均

dj toxic - piano in heaven ( one of my favourites)


3:23
DJ Toxic - Piano In Heaven one my favorite song by dj toxic, very nice and very awsome song In 1857, Leon Scott invented the phonoautograph in France, the first device to record sound. In 1877, Charles Cros invented the phonograph in France (it was patented before Edison's invention but never built) and Thomas Alva Edison invented the phonograph cylinder, the first device to play back recorded sound, in the United States. In 1892, Emile Berliner began commercial production of his gramophone records, the first disc record to be offered to the public. In 1906, Reginald Fessenden transmitted the first audio radio broadcast in history also playing the first record, a contralto singing Handel's Largo from Xerxes.[4] The world's first radio disc jockey was Ray Newby of Stockton California. In 1909, at 16 years of age, Newby began regularly playing records on a small spark transmitter while a student at Herrold College of Engineering and Wireless located in San Jose, California, under the authority of radio pioneer, Charles "Doc" Herrold.[5][6] We used popular records at that time, mainly caruso records because they were very good and loud; we needed a boost... we started on an experimental basis and then because this is novel, we stayed on schedule continually without leaving the air at any time from that time on except for a very short time during World War I when the government required us to remove the antenna... Most of our programming was records, I'll admit, but of course we gave out news as we could obtain it...[5] —Ray Newby, I've Got a Secret (1965) In the 1910s, regular radio broadcasting began, using "live" as well as prerecorded sound. In the early radio age, content typically included comedy, drama, news, music, and sports reporting. The on-air announcers and programmers would later be known as disc jockeys. In the 1920s - "Juke-joints" became popular as a place for dancing and drinking to recorded jukebox music. In 1927, Christopher Stone became the first radio announcer and programmer in the United Kingdom, on the BBC radio station. In 1929, Thomas Edison ceased phonograph cylinder manufacture, ending the disc and cylinder rivalry.
タグ:very  awsome  dj  toxic  one  of 
投稿日: June 30, 2008, 5:26 am
閲覧数: 4151
投票: 4.80(5点満点) 13 人の平均

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