Daily Archives: March 8, 2015

Gig: London Electronic Arts Festival LEAF 2015 Mar 6-7

Posted: March 8, 2015 at 4:40 pm

This two-day celebration of electronic music is more than just a musos fantasy made real.

Combining electronic music, art, literature, records, technology and digital futurism, it is a cornucopia beyond even the wildest dreams of the most sonically-literate out there.

Day one will be when most of the talky stuff goes on, so to broaden your musical knowledge get down to this. Day two is when the tunes really kick into gear, with performances from some of the biggest and most progressive names in the electronic arts. It starts during the day and carries on all night with LEAF event taking place across the citys plethora of nightclubs. Tune-wise, we highly recommend catching Modeselektor, 808 State performing their 1989 LP Ninety as part of the classic album series and Kate Simko with the London Electronic Orchestra.

The whole thing is curated by Bestival mainman Rob Da Bank, which ensures amongst many things, its wildly diverse line up of persuasions. Fantastic.

When: Mar 6 & 7 / times vary Where: Tobacco Dock, 50 Porters Walk, E1W 2SF. And various venues across London. Check the website for full listings. Cost: 10+ Tube: Shadwell Web: leaflondon.net

Marina and the Diamonds - Mar 11 The first show in almost two years from the synth-pop superstar songstress who will be debuting new material from her Froot album, which is out next month. Shes already got a load of global fest shows lined up so you bet she will over here too, but for now, to whet your appetite, this is a sneaky little low key show. When: Mar 11 / 7pm Where: Oslo, 1a Amhurst Road, E8 1LL Cost: 16.50 Tube: Hackney Central Web: oslohackney.com

Underworld Mar 6 Underworld, who hit commercial paydirt when Born Slippy a-la-Trainspotting saw them go super global, started their career officially with this genre-bending debut. Celebrating its 20thbirthday, it is as ground-breaking and hip-shakingly super today as it was then. And after theyve rattled through this, if their show last year at the Royal Festival Hall is anything to go by, they'll be dipping into some other classics from their stupendous career that has seen them break all the rules. A techno act with a mumbly singer you say? Ooooh yes please.

When: Mar 6 / 7pm Where: Hammersmith Apollo, 45 Queen Caroline Street ,W6 9QH Cost: 20+ Tube: Hammersmith Web: eventimappollo.com

More here:
Gig: London Electronic Arts Festival LEAF 2015 Mar 6-7

Posted in Futurism | Comments Off on Gig: London Electronic Arts Festival LEAF 2015 Mar 6-7

Clash DJ Mix – David Carretta

Posted: at 4:40 pm

French electro-techno futurist David Carretta leads us on a journey down bleep street for the latest exclusive instalment of the Clash DJ Mix series.

After two decades in the game, Carretta has become known as something of a forward-thinking master at producing spiky, atmospheric electro that might work its way through anything from Italo-disco to noir-ish, cinematic electronica to the work of fellow French innovators like Laurent Garnier, Gesaffelstein and Arnaud Rebotini.

Thankfully, hes still crafting superb slabs of banging, synth-laden goodness that would sound perfect at any sweaty basement rave, as his latest EP, Land of Sin (released on The Hacker and Gesaffelsteins ZONE Records), demonstrates.

Carrettas exclusive Clash mix is a beguiling journey through electronic experimentation across the years, soundtracked by the likes of Kraftwerk, Cabaret Voltaire, Gary Numan and Throbbing Gristle.

But well let the man himself explain more: "For this mixtape I selected songs from the late 70s and early 80s to show just how incredibly modern and futuristic music from this era can still sound. At the same time I also had in the back of mind to compile the soundtrack to the kind of movie that I would love to see."

"Anyway, the music, and indeed artists, on this mix are those that have inspired me over the past three decades, going right back to when I first discovered electronic music. When you listen to this music youll hear the sounds that have that inspired not only me, but so many others over the years, and not just electronic music producers or DJs, but pop, rock and hip hop acts too."

"Unfortunately, time is limited and there are still many of my favourite artists from this period who I couldnt feature in this mix its just impossible to fit everything into the space of just one hour! So who knows, maybe I will follow this up with both a Volume 2 and a Volume 3 and showcase some of my favourite EBM and Italo-disco bands too."

Check it out now.

Tracklisting: Peter Baumann - Romance John Carpenter - Escape From New York Goblin - Profondo Rosso Gary Numan - Down In The Park D.A.F - Der Rauber Und Der Prinz Throbbing Gristle - Hot On The Heels Of Love Cabaret Voltaire - Just Fascination Crash Course In Science - Flying Turns Kraftwerk - Radio Stern Kraftwerk - Europe Endless

- - -

See the original post:
Clash DJ Mix - David Carretta

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on Clash DJ Mix – David Carretta

A Look Back: Futurist Joel Barker on the Challenge of Change

Posted: at 4:40 pm

Editor's Note: In 1995, IndustryWeek asked 25 of the leading CEOs, management gurus and futurists what they saw coming for their companies, their jobs and their life between 1995 and 2020. While we are still five years away from 2020, we nevertheless are going to revisit those reflections, opinions and predictions in the coming weeks and months and see how well are they holding up. The first of the 25 trail blazers into the future (presented in alphabetical order) is:

Joel A. Barker, Futurist

In the last 25 years, managers -- and management philosophy -- have come to understand that there are multiple modes of change. One is what I call "paradigm enhancement," which the total-quality, continuous-improvement message has been all about.

The other is radical change -- or paradigm-shift change -- which is unlike any other kind of change that you must deal with as a manager.

... I think the challenge for management in the future is to substantially improve its ability to anticipate change. And there are two aspects of that:

One is to be able to spot a paradigm shift in its early formation -- because there is usually a five- to 10-year developmental life before it hits you between the eyes. Manager-leaders must also learn how to monitor what is happening outside the boundaries of their business, because often that is where radical change originates.

The typical manager reads inside his profession; but that's not where you find the future. My rule is to get into areas that you're unfamiliar with and look around and see what is going on. When I work with corporations, I set up teams of 50 people, having each person read five different magazines. So yon have 250 periodicals covered every month -- and they are all reading outside the boundaries.

The second thing is to understand the long-term implications of a new change when you find it. There are first-, second-, and third-order implications, which may be either positive or negative, and you have to discuss them in a patterned way.

If you don't take the time to think about the long-term implications, you will be seduced by the short term.

... The ability to understand the long-term positive and negative implications of potential decisions, before they are made, is the new frontier. And the responsibility we have for doing that is growing every day, because our information technology is so much more powerful than it was 20 or 30 years ago.

Link:
A Look Back: Futurist Joel Barker on the Challenge of Change

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on A Look Back: Futurist Joel Barker on the Challenge of Change