Archive for October, 2006

Dirtier Little Slut: A New Mix from Blue Rubber (J. Scott G)

DeepskyThe folks over at Hybridized.org have been busy over the last few weeks posting a slew of mixes from Hybrid, Andrew Kelly and Greg Benz, but by far my favorite new mix of the bunch is a double-cd/mp3 offering called Dirtier Little Slut from J.Scott G of Deepsky. Ostensibly mixed by “Blue Rubber” (Buck Morello and Rusty Wood), I’m pretty sure Scott’s just screwing with us on that.

The first disc is a chunky, breakey affair with a couple familiar tracks, notably Duoteque’s “Drug Queen”, Starkillers’ “Discoteka”. One highlight for me is a delightfully cheesy track, “Where The Party’s At”, a cranking mix of guitar samples and bleeping electro. Overall, disc one is nice, but the mix really starts kicking in on disc two.

The after a relatively mellow start, Disc Two shifts into high-gear around 9 minutes in with the Moroder-esque Quivver track “Not Givin’ Up” (Nox & Beckers Mix) that leads directly into one of the best tracks of the year “Colour Me Blind” by Beckers–truly a wicked track that chugs along like a 2AM clubbing freight train. Other highlights include the Backdoor Hussies “I wanna feel ya”, Prodigy’s trippy retro-feeling “Girls”, and “Heel ‘N’ Toe” from Freeland.

Not content to go out quietly this disc finishes with an electro-funk orgy of beats, analog synth stabs and syncopated basslines featuring Sarah McLeod’s “He Doesn’t Love You (Hook ‘n’ Sling Vocal Mix)” (also one of the best tracks of the year IMO) and Stretch Sylvester & Ben Macklin’s “Fireworks” featuring a sublimely integrated vocal from Stevie Nicks’ “Edge of Seventeen”.

So it’s been a while since I’ve been really happy with a whole mix, but this is a great effort…particularly Disc Two. Download it at Hybridized.org and consider supporting them with a mere $12/quarter donation to support their bandwidth needs and keep the mixes coming.

Worst…President…Ever

BushSo in his continuing chronic state of cognitive dissonance, George Bush pulled his head out of the sand just long enough to parrot some classics from the “distract them with fear and terrorism before the mid-term election” phrasebook. From his press conference on October 25th, 2006:

A defeat [in Iraq] — in other words, if we were to withdraw before the job is done, it would embolden extremists. They would say, you know, we were right about America in the first place, that America did not have the will necessary to do the hard work. That’s precisely what Osama bin Laden has said, for example. A defeat there would make it easier for people to be able to recruit extremists and kids, to be able to use their tactics to destroy innocent life. A defeat there would dispirit people throughout the Middle East who wonder whether America is genuine in our commitment to moderation and democracy.

I’m sorry to tell you, Mr. President, but people are already dispirited in the world. Iraq now makes it very easy for extremists to recruit. Most of us feel significantly less safe now than we did immediately after 9/11. So how exactly are we supposed to win? What does this win look like?

By many accounts his description describes a dream that is the exact opposite from the reality on the ground. Our very presence in Iraq emboldens the terrorists and forces many to question whether we are for moderation and democracy. Further, while there might have been groups of outside fighters that the Bush Administration could refer to as “outside terrorists”, it now appears that the U.S. is battling substantial Iraqi sects, each with their own 2000-year-old agendas. His dream for Iraq assumes we can just roust out those troublemakers from Iraq, and when we do, we’ll come home. Alas, it’s quite unlikely that we’ll roust Iraqis from Iraq.

Unfortunately, the situation in Iraq plays exactly to a key Bush weakness: To Bush, there is no nuance, no complexity.

History is already being written and in the end, I believe, George W. Bush will be remembered as a vapid, inept executive who set our nation back decades. If you want to watch chapter one of this history, you need to watch the chilling documentary from Frontline, The Lost Year in Iraq. These guys have been wrong about every strategy they’ve taken…and yet some would consider still listening to him and his cronies?

Want FairPlay DRM for your content? Don’t ask Apple. Ask a hacker.

iTunesHas it really come to this, Apple? Jon “DVD Jon” Lech Johansen, famous for cracking Apple’s FairPlay DRM, is apparently now offering to apply Apple’s own DRM to media so that they will work with Apple’s products…without having to sell them through the iTunes Store. Now I’ve long been in favor of Apple opening up their DRM to allow others to encode media, but I’m not sure this effort by the this famous hacker will last long enough after the sharks in Apple’s legal department catch the stink of hacker blood in the water. [ via Gizmodo and GigaOM ]