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Unicycle Loves You Highway Robbery
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Time The Lightswitch
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V8 Pain is the Cleanser
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Messinian Burn It Up
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Dub Sonata Revolution
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Fillin in the Blanks with Amanda Blank
HARD Summer Festival: A Primer
Coachella '08: Recapping the Recaps
By now, everyone has surely heard of Facebook. Facebook is the fastest growing social networking site in the world. While Myspace has a larger number of users as a result of being in the game longer, Facebook has quickly gained popularity and respect amongst social networkers- from business professionals to eager college students, all without the spam and absurdity that is common to Myspace.
For those who have yet to catch up to the craze, or for those who wish to up their Facebook skills, comes “The Independent Guide to Facebook,” a bookazine that provides 148 pages of Facebook know-how to turn a novice into a savvy user. From getting started to feeding a Facebook addiction on a cellphone, the bookazine has all the information you need. It also touches base on how to take the right photos, why you probably shouldn’t add random people, and how to utilize Facebook’s gazillion applications. Finally, everything there is to know about Facebook.
Having passionately shared his love for music with the world, John Peel will easily be remembered as one of the most legendary DJs for the rest of rock history. Jack White pens the foreword to this two-part memoir first started by Peel and later completed by his wife, Sheila Ravenscroft, after his death in 2004. It is not just a story of about his influential career. It is a window to his experiences, thoughts, emotions and struggles—all expressed with honesty in its purest form. Peel does not just reveal John the successful DJ, but John the child, John the adolescent, John the working man, John the lover of music and of life. Despite his absence, those who have ever been influenced by Peel—The White Stripes and many music fans among us—will again have the chance to enjoy his voice. Let the man speak.
It’s stated many times in this book that every company wants to be the iPod of their industry, and it’s true, since the iPod is not going anywhere anytime soon. And, in a world filled with so many companies trying to find their niche in today’s marketplace, it’s hard to be cool. Chasing Cool looks into a variety of companies from different industries and why they are or were at the top of their game. From stories about Grey Goose Vodka and Barneys to contributions from Tony Hawk and Talib Kweli, the book analyzes what makes something cool. Eventually what it comes down to is that the coolest companies or brands never set out to be cool, but rather provide something that was not previously done, or if it had been, they set out to do it better, just like the iPod.
The notion that Southern hip-hop’s current dominance isn’t the death of a genre but a return to its birthplace might make some serious heads put a price on Roni Sarig’s head. That real shit came from the Bronx. Sarig is quick to point out that hip-hop’s storied genesis (Herc with the system, Bambaataa with the records) isn’t a farce, he just examines the bloodlines further into the past. From the early stages of rock’n’roll, all the way back to the sing-song communication of slaves on the plantation, Sarig argues that the Third Coast (the territory) is succeeding because of its familiarity with the building blocks of all modern music. But Third Coast (the book) is also the most thorough, definitive and well-researched exploration of Southern hip-hop’s history that we have. Even if snap music threatens to put murder in your daily mantra, there is no denying this region’s rich history and even a few dope hip-hop cuts. Or what. . .you don’t like OutKast?