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Monthly Archives: September 2021
Philly gets the first trance mural – Pennsylvanianewstoday.com
Posted: September 29, 2021 at 6:51 am
The mural was created by artist Kayanni in collaboration with the residents of Moris Home, run by the Citys Department of Health and Intellectual Disability Services (DBHIDS), as the only home restoration center in the country for transgender and gender-incompatible people. it was done.
In a city with thousands of murals, its really exciting for us to get the first mural, said Janni. I think its very cool.
The mural is on a 100-foot-long wall along Frankford Avenue on West Thompson Street, covering 2,200 square feet with bright gradations of pink, yellow, and purple. The line drawings of Moris Home residents in the shape of simple flowers, vines and butterflies resemble sketchbook graffiti. The mural features text written in a non-uniform crayon-like font.
We are transgender and survivors.
We are happy
Feel angry
We are universal.
I like to make art that looks like hand-painted. Its really warm and human, Yangni said. I think theres something that humans can actually make and feel better than really clean lines when trying to make people feel healed.
Leveraging the dedication of We Are Universal, Mural Arts Philadelphia launches the Mural Arts Month, a series of dedications and events focused on the issues of social justice at the heart of public art programs.
Mental health is one such issue that MuralArts has tackled many times through its long-standing partnership with DBHIDS.
Fifteen years ago, we partnered with mural art to create a pouch light project that combines behavioral health with art, said Laurandrum, Deputy Commissioner of DBHIDS. People who are struggling have art. There is art and overcoming. Art bridges the gap between us as individuals.
Philly gets the first trance mural
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Trance Women in the Bundestack: Tessa Cancer and Nike Slavic Chiefs – Persia Digest
Posted: at 6:51 am
Since the federal election in 2021, two trans women are entering the bandwagon for the first time. There are two new faces of green with Tessa Concer and Nike Slavic.
BERLIN Greens are writing Bundestag history: for the first time since the federal election in 2021, two will be drawn Trance women enter the Bundestack in Berlin*. For the Greens, Tessa Cancer and Nike Slavic will sit in parliament during the new legislature. Both the Conservatives and the Slavic go to their federal state via the state list. Cancer comes from Bavaria, Slavic North Rhine-Westphalia.
Although Tessa Cancer was severely defeated by CSU direct candidate Sebastian Bremmel in the Nuremberg North constituency, she was able to secure a place on the list through the Bavarian Greens. She was 13th there. Im still wholehearted, the 44-year-old tweeted Monday morning. But she is really waiting for her new job in Berlin. This tweet was provided with the hashtag # QueerRepresentanzMatters.
Nike went high house via Slavic national list. He shared his constituency with SPD health expert Carl Lauterback, who also won the Cologne IV-Leverkusen constituency. I now have congratulations from Poland, the United Kingdom and the United States. Our trance election victory is going around the world, the 27-year-old tweeted Monday morning.
Along with Nike Slavic (left) and Tessa Concer, two trans women enter the bandstand for the first time. You are MP for Greens. (Kreiszeitung.de-Montage)
Ani Daniel Kerman / dpa & Future Image / Imago
Bundestack already had a trance member, but Christian Zheng von Lincoln announced this shortly after his term ended in 2002. Along with Green Victoria Brocard and SPD politician Rhea Sybil Khair (Brandenburg), other disabled women were represented on the electoral roll in the 2021 election, but they did not include it in parliament. * Kreiszeitung.de is an offer IPPEN.MEDIA.
Rubriklistenbild: Daniel Karmann / dpa & Future Image / Imago
Incurable web evangelist. Hipster-friendly gamer. Award-winning entrepreneur. Falls down a lot.
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Trance Women in the Bundestack: Tessa Cancer and Nike Slavic Chiefs - Persia Digest
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BT and Paul Oakenfold put blockchain at the heart of new albums – Music Ally
Posted: at 6:51 am
Since the earliest days of blockchain hype in the music industry, electronic music artists have often been the first to experiment with the technology: particularly those that are most tech-savvy and who control their rights.
There are two new examples this week. First, trance legend BT is releasing whats being described as the worlds first programmatic album designed from the ground up for the blockchain.
Its called Metaversal and is being released as an NFT. The album plays differently if you listen to it in the day, at night or during a full moon, and theres a cryptographic treasure hunt built in for fans. It follows BTs Genesis.Json project in May, which was also sold as an NFT (for the ether equivalent of $217.2k).
The Metaversal auction kicks off tomorrow (29 September). In separate news, veteran DJ Paul Oakenfolds Starship Universe project is releasing thousands of NFTs with blockchain firm Cardano, including an album.
Every aspect of the event, from the cover art and sleeve notes to the tracks and remixes will be put on the blockchain,reported Crypto News.
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BT and Paul Oakenfold put blockchain at the heart of new albums - Music Ally
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Mou5ZyZZ and Lollypop Lane have come together for another enriching record ‘Only One’ – Daily Music Roll
Posted: at 6:51 am
Mou5ZyZZ and Lollypop Lane are back with a heart-pumping composition titled Only One that proves why the pair is so hyped and loved in the music fraternity.
In recent times, Mou5ZyZZ and Lollypop Lane have built quite a steady rapport as a fine pair whose productions always bring fun and joy to the scene. Their records are beyond magical and are stitched with great vibes, soulfulness, and a superb pace. The artists have yet again collaborated for their new project Only One that enthralls the fans with dramatic lyrics and feel-good essence. The enriching song is filled with upbeat musical elements and the melody line sounds super catchy and groovy to make the heart sing and dance to its compelling beat design. Lollypops delicate and intriguing vocals mix mixed with Mou5ZyZZs highly energetic rhythms allures the audience to the dance floor. Both the artists combine their musical intricacies to build a mood that seems to be much-needed after a long tiring day.
The captivating track feels like a musical ride through eccentric beats and the singers alluring vocals guides everyone along the way through loops of exotic atmospheric sounds to a trance-like state. This is a collaboration that nobody would like to sleep on! The musicians make absolute magic together and the latest record just gives a glimpse of their stunning artistry. The trance track Only One will make anyone get up and dance to its beats as the late-night vibes combine the nostalgia of the rave to loop around the listeners attention. Mou5ZyZZ is a famous DJ/ music producer whose enthralling music and infectious trap rhythms hit with impact. And, on the latest release, he has infused his unmistakable sound with Lollypops unmatched vocal intricacy to make light up the mood almost immediately. With unexpected hooks, they both have treated their fans with the absolute best on the latest one.
Mou5ZyZZ and Lollypop Lane are creative as ever and have crafted the new soundtrack with utmost passion and energy to hype up their much-loved collaboration. The single is great and makes for a perfect listen to dance the night away. Hear out the full track on Spotify now.
Check out the song on Spotify:
Alicia Parker is a fashion enthusiast studying at the University of California. She contributes to Daily Music Roll as a music blogger and writes a review of various music on a daily basis
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Big names in the race for this years Kerala state film awards – Onmanorama
Posted: at 6:51 am
The Kerala state film awards are around the corner and leading actors like Biju Menon, Fahadh Faasil, Jayasurya, Indrans, Suraj Venjaramoodu and Tovino Thomas are in the race for the prestigious best actor award.
Meanwhile, veteran actress Shobana, Anna Ben, Nimisha Sajayan, Parvathy Thiruvoth and Samyukta Menon are vying for the best actress award.
About 80 films that were released last year are in the run for the state awards. Two initial juries would watch these movies and asses them. The final jury would watch the movies that are recommended to the next round. The heads of the initial juries would be members in the final jury too.
Even though the theaters were shut down due to the pandemic situation, there was no dearth of films. Interestingly, six directors have submitted two movies each for the awards in various categories. Mahesh Narayanan, Sidhartha Siva, Jeo Baby, Ashok R Nath, Sidhique Paravur and Don Palathara have submitted two of their movies for the awards.
Biju Menon had impressed everyone with his spectacular performance in Ayyappanum Koshiyum. Meanwhile, Fahadh dazzled in Malik and Trance. Jayasurya is in the race with his amazing performances in Vellam and Sunny. With Velukakka Oppu Ka, veteran actor Indrans poses a challenge to the other nominees. Tovino has been nominated for his convincing performances in Kilometers and Kilometers and the thriller movie Forensic. Meanwhile, Suraj is nominated for The Great Indian Kitchen.
The jury cannot ignore the brilliant performances of Shobana (Varane Avashyamundu), Anna Ben (Kappela), Nimisha Sajayan (The Great Indian Kitchen), Parvathy Thiruvoth (Varthamanam) and Samyukta Menon (Vellam, Wolf) while deciding the award in the best actress category.
Late film maker Sachy might be considered for the best director award for Ayyappanum Koshiyum. He might be considered in the best screenplay category too. If he wins, it would be a posthumous honor for the director. The movie is noted for the splendid performance by its cast including actor Anil Nedumangad, who too had bid adieu to this world. Meanwhile, Mahesh Narayanan is a front runner in this category with Malik and CU Soon. The latter movie, which was filmed during the lockdown period, could be considered for best editing too.
Three senior film makers who had impressed the juries earlier with their movies and had won multiple awards are competing this year as well. Syamaprasad (Kasiminte Kadal), Dr. Biju (Orange Marangalude Veedu) and Harikumar (Jwalamukhi) are these directors. Everyone is curious to see whether Dr. Biju, who hasnt won a state award until now but had registered big wins at the national awards, would win this year. Harikumars Jwalamukhi was appreciated for actress Surabi Lakshmis incredible performance.
The songs from Sufiyum Sujatahyum (M Jayachandran) and Ayyappanum Koshiyum (Jakes Bejoy) had topped the chartbuster list. Music lovers are waiting to see whether it would be reflected in the state awards too. Young filmmakers like Kahild Rahman (Love), Rahul Riji Nair (Kho Kho) and Sidhartha Siva (Varthamanam) who had won unexpectedly in the previous years are all set to give a tough competition this year too. Meanwhile, Muhammad Mustafa (Kappela), Anoop Sathyan (Varane Avashyamundu), Shanavas Nalakathu (Sufiyum Sujathayum) are competing for the best debutant director award.
Here is the list of films that are competing in various categories in this years state awards and their directors:
Vellam (Prajesh Sen), Krithi (Suresh), Mathilukal: Love in the Time of Corona (Anwar Abdullah), Thahira (Sidhique Paravur), Bharatapuzha (Manilal), Chayam Poosunnavar (Sidhique Paravur), Insa (KV Sijumon), Sajan Bakery Since 1962 (Arun Appukuttan), Aquarium (T Deepesh), Pyali (Babitha Mathew, AX Rinmon), Far (Praveen Peter), Ek Din (Vishnu), Kasiminte Kadal (Syamaprasad), Munna (Surendran Kaloor), Thinkalazhcha Nischayam (Senna Hegde), Kakkathuruth (Shaji Pandavathu), Bonamy (Tony Sukumar), Eighteen Plus (Mithun Jyoti), Anjam Pathira (Mithun Manuel), Ayyppanum Koshiyum (Sachidanandan), Vanku (Kavya Prakash), Santhoshathinte Onnam Rahasyam (Don Palathara), Paka (Nithin Lukose), Ice Orathu (Akhil Kavunkal).
Orilathanalil (Ashok R Nath), Love (Khalid Rahman), Kunjeldho (Arun Mathew), Randam Naal (Seenath), Udambadi (Suresh P Thomas), Swapnangal Pookkunna Kaadu (Sohan Lal), Velukakka Oppu Ka (Ashok Kumar), Ennivar (Sidhartha Siva), Toll Free 1600 600 60 (KB Sajeev), Disha (VC Jose), Orange Marangalude Veedu (Dr. Biju), Kanthi (Ashok R Nath), Sunny (Ranjith Shankar), Trance (Anwar Rasheed), Kappela (Muhammad Mustafa), Musical Chair (Vipin Atlee), Paay the Great (Sreelaja Mukundakumaran), Andal (Shereef Isa), Laika (Asad Sivaraman), Varthamanam (Sidhartha Siva), Kho Kho (Rahul Riji Nair), Love FM (Sreedev Kappur), Bhoomiyile Manohara Sokaryam (Shaiju Anthikad), Oruthi (VK Prakash).
Paapam Cheyyathvar Kalleriyatte (LP Shambu), Velutha Madhuram (Jiju Orapadi), Veyil (Sharath Menon), Chora Veena Mannil (Muriyad Surendran), 1956 Madyathiruvathamkoor (Don Palathara), Moppala (Santhosh Puthukunnu), Inland (SK Sreejith Lal), Fourth River (RK Dream West), Halal Love Story (Zackariya Muhammad), Lal Bagh (Prasanth Murali), Varane Avashyamundu (Anoop Sathyan), Forensic (Akhil Paul, Anas Khan), Perfume Her Fragrance (P Haridasan), Eelam (Vinod Krishna), Article 21 (LU Lenin), The Great Indian Kitchen (Jeo Baby), Sufiyum Sujathayum (Shanavas Nalakathu), My Dear Machans (Dileep Narayanan), Divorce (IG Mini), Aanum pennum (Venu, Jai K, Aashiq Abu).
The 137 Auditions of Avrahaam Yakoob (Anup Narayanan), Pachathappu (S Anukumar), CU Soon (Mahesh Narayanan), Malik (Mahesh Narayanan), Uriyattu (K Bhuvanachandran Nair), Irul (Naseef Isudeen), Kilometers and Kilometers (Jeo Baby), Elmer (Gopi Kuttikol), The Kung Fu Master (Abrid Shine), Wolf (Shaji Aziz), Jwalamukhi (Harikumar), Kayattam (Sanalkumar).
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Jos Gonzlez: "For this album, I didn’t buy any new gear. I decided if I’m going to put time into something, it would be on rehearsing guitars and…
Posted: at 6:51 am
Jos Gonzlez has never put much faith in borders or national identity, and that principle lies at the heart of his fourth studio album, Local Valley.
Born in Sweden and raised on the Brazilian bossa nova, latin folk and Cuban Nueva Trova of Silvio Rodrguez played at home by his Argentine parents, Gonzlez's teenage years were soundtracked by US hardcore bands and post-rock experiments like Tortoise, before he began to put his classical guitar training to use in his own songwriting.
Since that point Gonzlez has seemingly never stopped expanding his musical horizons, pulling in Asian scales, sub-Saharan guitar styles and, in his listening, Ghanaian highlife, Nigerian afrobeat and more.
However, it feels as if Local Valley is perhaps the most varied, playful and successful attempt he has made at knitting it together, powered, as ever, by his unique and ever-evolving magpie-classical guitar style.
Gonzlezs masterstroke on Local Valley is using this rich, tapestry of global influences to highlight humanitys preoccupation with tiny rivalries in the face of universal challenges. Fortunately, he makes it sound good, too...
You've said that on this record you set out to write songs in the same vein as your old records, which is the opposite of what most artists say. Why did you take that approach?
Because I enjoy playing guitar and enjoy the simplicity of many of my old songs. I feel like all my songs have that ambition of simplicity. But I think this time I did look back on my first album and [spent time] remembering how I was thinking back then in terms of song length, and aiming for guitar playing that was right on the edge of my skill level.
So that was the first aim, but once I had like five or six songs, I switched to do all these other songs that are looped guitars and vocals and drum machines. So I did start with that ambition, but I didn't end up with another Veneer!
Rules are made to be broken! You mentioned aiming for guitar playing on the edge of your ability. What does that process look like for you?
I always start with guitar riffs. And at that time, it's usually stuff that's pretty easy to play. But then I always push up the ambition in terms of trying to embellish these riffs with a top line melody, or a bass line that's a bit more complicated to play. And then, usually, I reach a level where it's too hard to play, but I know I could do it, if I only practice. And that's when I start using the metronome. Sometimes it's a lot of practice before I get it and Im done with a particular song.
I want to have songs where I can focus more on the groove and trance-like states
On this album, maybe one of the clearer examples is Valle Locale, the Spanish song. It was really hard to play it and sing at the same time. Once I had a recording, I was so pleased that I actually made it, I kept it. But then, with the pandemic, I got more time to think about it.
I was listening to the song while while running, as I usually do, and it felt way too slow, so I started training guitar! Playing it faster and faster and seeing where it sounded too fast. So that's one way that I pushed myself. I find that's always been one way to bring musicality to a piece by being able to play faster than you need to, you're able to play each note with with the tone you want.
Much has been made of the Latin influences in your music, but there's not much discussion of the African influences that have come to the fore in your playing. Tell me about the impact of those musicians on you. I really hear it on this record in songs like Tjomme.
Yeah! Of course. Around my second album [2007s In Our Nature], I started listening to Ali Farka Tour, and Tinariwen. And later, I had the chance to tour with Sidi Tour and also do a guest appearance with Tinariwen in London and Stockholm. And then I had a jam session with Bombino from Nigeria. So, yeah, it started around the second half of 2007 when I made the Killing For Love and Ive just kept on introducing that influence.
That bluesy, bubbling sound, to me, it hits this nerve. It's very rhythmical and very groovy, but it has this earthiness that I enjoy so much, this certain rawness. I guess it also speaks to what I enjoyed so much with hardcore music, or instrumental post-rock, or bands like Tortoise, where there is this linearity.
So many of the songs, they're just one or two note song structures and its that sense of trance that I that I enjoy When I play live, I get a bit bored if I only have songs like Crosses and Heartbeats. I feel like I want to have songs where I can focus more on the groove and trance-like states.
Theres something universal and borderless about this record. Youve never placed much importance on national identity, but here theres a really noticeable array of influences from around the world. You have songs in Spanish and Swedish, and songs like Swing and Lilla G, which are universal in that theyre based around dance or repetitive, chanted melodies. Why did now seem the right time to do that?
Well, in a way, I felt like I've done that before. Maybe not the languages, but the styles. So a song like The Forest [from 2015s Vestiges & Claws] was inspired by Indian raga and pentatonic major scale that's so typical for Asian music. But whats new? The languages and the range of styles is even more diverse, I guess.
But yeah, the time is right for many reasons. I feel more comfortable showing more of myself and I feel more comfortable singing in these languages. I was ready to do that on the previous album, but I got stuck and and in a way lazier and when I switched to English, it just flowed easier! On this album, once I tried it, it just clicked, and I didn't feel like I got stuck anytime.
Becoming a dad changed my mindset a bit, too. Youre forced to be creative when you're around a kid, there's lots of playing and lots of singing, too. There's been so much melody going around in my mind and I guess that helps once it's time to write a song you're already being creative everyday, so it's not a big switch.
As someone who's felt like I've had constant writer's block that was the typical way of feeling when I was supposed to write a new song, back in the day becoming a dad helped me a lot.
I see the world, this earth, this planet as our local valley. I see the smallness of our Pale Blue Dot, as Carl Sagan has put it. When you zoom out into the universe, this is a very small place that we live on
And with languages, too just speaking Spanish with my daughter has sort of relaxed my sense for words in different languages. Also, your time is limited, and you have to catch sleep so it's like, it's now or never!
You recorded this album at your familys summer house in Sweden. Can you describe your space there?
Yeah. I call it the studio, but it's it's just a house with a wooden floor, a wooden ceiling, so it has nice acoustics. I was looking for a new studio in the city, but we got tired of looking and bought this summer house, where we hang out as family.
So when I was writing and recording, I went there on my own and set up my mic preamp and a laptop in the middle of the living room, with the view: the rocks and pines and birches and the birds!
So that was perfect for me as a place where I can I could write and record and then take breaks going out in nature. It's become to me a very big part of this album. When you see sunsets, you get romantic! And when I'm on my own there I also enjoy thinking about the bigger topics: about humanity and the future.
Were you doing the engineering yourself for much of this record?
Yeah, for almost all of my solo albums I have been engineering it myself. This time, I decided not to buy any new gear, not to buy any new plugins! I decided if I'm going to put time on something, it's going to be on rehearsing guitars and refining the song. So as I'm using my Neumann U67 and using Universal Audio gear and plugins, which I'm very comfortable with, to bring out this analogue sound.
Were there any guitars that you favored more heavily on this album?
Most of the time I was using one of my live guitars, an Esteve. It's a 9CB, with old strings. But I also have a smaller guitar by Cordoba. I was thinking of using more guitars, but I ended up using the same ones for almost all the songs and making it slightly different from song to song [with mics/positioning].
So most of the songs I'm [recording guitars and vocals separately] with the Neumann U67, but then on some some recordings I was doing a stereo mic on the guitar and a vocal Neumann, like a live recording setup. I guess one that stands out as fun is Swing, where I recorded the vocals with an SM57, one of the cheapest mics you can get.
I was rehearsing the loops through a Schertler acoustic amp and I ended up using a line guitar through my live setup, which is just an EQ pedal and a tube DI. A [Radial Engineering] Firefly, and putting the vocal through the 57 and then through the tape delay a [Roland] Re-201 Space Echo. And that sounded great.
What is it about the Esteve and Cordoba in particular, that you that you love?
Well, live, I'm using an Alhambra, which I've had throughout the years with a Fishman Prefix Pro Blend pickup. It's not particularly good in intonation, it has some flaws, but over the years it's been the guitar that I'm used to, so I was trying to find similar guitars and Esteve's 9CB was similar enough to it, so I bought two of those. One one with the pine [spruce] wood [top] and one with the cedar top.
I like old strings, but once in a while I really enjoy new ones not brand new but new. But it's not fun to play them in!
Theres nothing special about it. It's a very typical classical guitar, but its what I know best. Playing live, I've gotten used to the frequencies it has. So there's a resonance around the tone A, which, sometimes it's cool for boosting the sound. And, since we know the frequencies we need to notch, it's practical to use similar guitars.
Then the Cordoba guitars are slightly smaller and they have a resonance around G. And I have very old strings on that particular Cordoba guitar that I was using. So if I switched to the Cordoba, it was mainly to aim for a bit more of a lo-fi sound. So I used that for Valle Locale and for Honey Honey. It was mainly for the strings and not so much the guitar itself actually.
When you say old strings, how old?
Let's see, I think the Cordoba, I haven't changed once. And I got it about four or five years ago. But I have to add that it's one of the guitars that I don't use as much because I'm using the live guitars more. But even the live guitars, I would say I change the strings about once a year, or something.
This is reassuring for those of us who own nylon-string guitars and hate changing the strings on them
Yeah. It's horrible. Now I actually need to change them before the US tour and I hate it. Because I have to change them and play them in. And it's not fun to play them in! It sounds so metallic and, yeah, it's horrible.
But I have to say, I like old strings, but once in a while I really enjoy new ones not brand new but new. So you get that fresh tonality and sustain. Ive used that on a couple of recordings, but on this album I'm working more with the reverbs and delays to get that freshness.
It's good to know that we have your permission to leave them on for forever.
Yeah, I'm not sponsored by any string makers yet! Probably because I'm not the best promoter
I dont change strings often but once every five years, I use
[Laughs] Yeah, or I go to my guitar shop and ask if they're throwing away any old strings.
Alternate tunings have proven quite fertile ground for you before. What are your preferred tunings at the moment?
Yeah, I use the regular tuning and then I have ADA [on the bottom strings], which is one from my second album. And then for the songs that are in the Sahel Desert style, my favorite is EADA so its just the G that goes up to A.
[Two that are done] in a similar tuning [are] Fold and Far Away, where the E goes down all the way to B. So it's BADG, and with the capo on the second fret, but only five out of six strings so you get that very, very low bass and then more regular highs. Then Honey Honey is also similar with BABG.
Weve talked about the sort of borderless, universal nature of the music on this record the languages, the influences from across the globe, the universal nature of these songs about rhythms and trance states, or dance. So why is the record called Local Valley?
Because I see the world, this earth, this planet as our local valley. I see the smallness of our Pale Blue Dot, as Carl Sagan has put it. When you zoom out into the universe, this is a very small place that we live on. So that's one of the ways I think about the title, especially in a song like Visions.
Then in the song Valle Locale, I'm thinking more in terms of a local valley where you have tribes that talk past each other, they can't collaborate, they don't want to communicate and they're sort of stuck. And if you're smart, you see all these other beautiful valleys, that could be so much more comfortable if we only collaborated to go to these better, nicer places.
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After 25 Years In The Dark, The CDC Wants To Study The True Toll Of Guns In America – NPR
Posted: at 6:51 am
The conversation around gun violence in the U.S. usually focuses on homicides and mass shootings, and there is little information about the public health, financial, psychological and social toll of nonfatal gun injuries. Nicole Xu for NPR hide caption
The conversation around gun violence in the U.S. usually focuses on homicides and mass shootings, and there is little information about the public health, financial, psychological and social toll of nonfatal gun injuries.
The uniquely American epidemic of mass killings by firearms grabs most of the attention from the media, politicians and the public. And the big increase in homicides in 2020 and overall violent crime on the rise across many American cities also get their share of coverage.
But for decades, the devastating impact of nonfatal firearm injuries in the U.S. has been understudied, undercovered by the media and often overlooked. Political pressure from the gun lobby, regulations and "disordered and highly segmented" collection systems have created chronically unreliable data and information that obscure our true understanding of the public health, financial, psychological and social toll of gun injuries, according to a 2020 study on firearms.
We know from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data that just over 100 people, on average, are killed by firearms in the U.S. every day. That includes crimes, suicides, gun accidents and shootings involving law enforcement.
But how often is someone injured by a firearm in America? Why, how and what kinds of weapons are used? What are the underlying causes? What's the relationship between shooter and victim? What evidence-based, scalable programs work best to help prevent criminal shootings, accidents and suicides? On these and other questions, people in public health, criminal justice, policing and academia admit they lack full and adequate answers.
They're partly in the dark because for more than two decades, the gun lobby and Republican allies in Congress effectively blocked federal funding for firearms research, arguing that such study would undermine the constitutional rights of lawful gun owners.
As a result of that and other factors, experts say, in-depth gun-data collection and sharing in the U.S. is a tangled mess that undermines objective research on programs and policies intended to prevent firearm injury, suicide and criminal violence.
The CDC under Dr. Rochelle Walensky says that will now, finally, start to change.
And for the thousands of Americans affected, survival and recovery from gun injuries look very different for each individual. Here are a few of their stories.
Jennifer Longdon, Phoenix:
Jennifer Longdon and her fianc were getting tacos when both were shot by an unknown assailant. Today she's an Arizona state lawmaker. Gun violence prevention and disability rights are her top priorities. Michael Ging hide caption
Jennifer Longdon and her fianc were getting tacos when both were shot by an unknown assailant. Today she's an Arizona state lawmaker. Gun violence prevention and disability rights are her top priorities.
In 2004, Jennifer Longdon and her then-fianc, David, had recently returned from vacation and were about to get dinner at a local Mexican-food drive-through. They were grabbing tacos, holding hands and talking wedding details. Out of nowhere, a pickup truck sideswiped their car and someone inside opened fire with a handgun.
Five bullets later, both were near death. Both suffered life-changing injuries.
Longdon's fianc was shot three times, including once in the head and the shoulder. The martial arts instructor and former taekwondo champion suffered severe brain damage. He is medically incapacitated.
"He's now blind. He has no sense of smell. His hearing is diminished, and he has a very significant brain injury that impacts how he thinks," Longdon says.
The last bullet fired from the pickup truck struck Longdon in her back. She is now paralyzed just below her collarbone. She uses a wheelchair.
There was no discernible why to the shooting: no road rage or drug deal gone bad. The shooting was totally random and inexplicable. No one has ever been arrested; there are currently no suspects despite rewards and an investigation.
"You know, you can theorize a million different ways what was the cause," Longdon says. "I don't know. I don't know."
There would be no wedding. They didn't stay together. Their lives were soon consumed by surgeries, outpatient therapy and adjusting to life with a disability.
Longdon still finds it hard to rethink some details from the night of the shooting. With her survival questionable, her ex-husband brought their then-12-year-old son to her bedside in the hospital trauma room.
Nonfatal injuries do not get the attention that they deserve.
Jennifer Longdon
"And there's my little boy," she says, her voice cracking. "And he's trying to comfort me. And his face is so pale and his eyes are so wild. And he's stroking my hair that's just full of blood, telling me it's going to be OK. And the thing that I always remember is that he was so afraid and so brave. And that happens to children across our country every single day."
The CDC is now hoping to get a fuller picture of the data and long-neglected details on the impact of daily gun violence. The CDC and the National Institutes of Health, for the first time in nearly a quarter-century, are funding new research on guns to help reduce firearm-related injuries, deaths, crime and suicides.
Among several other gun research projects, the CDC is now providing funding to 10 state health departments so they can start collecting data in near-real time on emergency room nonfatal firearm injuries. This will allow doctors and epidemiologists to potentially identify trends and craft swift interventions, as they have done to contain the coronavirus pandemic and other national health emergencies.
Longdon was elected to the Arizona House of Representatives in 2018. Today she is the assistant Democratic minority leader in the statehouse. Among her top state priorities are disability rights and public health-based gun violence prevention. She welcomes the renewal of federal gun research but says it needs to grow far beyond the initial funding.
"Nonfatal injuries do not get the attention that they deserve," she says. "The best policy comes from having great data. And so that's the first thing that we need to fix."
Laura Morris was caught in an escalating cycle of abuse at the hands of her former husband. One night he shot her through the shoulder. Today she helps others who've survived gun injuries and domestic abuse. Laura Morris hide caption
Laura Morris, Annapolis, Md.:
In her 20s, Laura Morris was married to an abusive man with alcohol and drug problems. The physical and emotional torment, she says, steadily got worse, especially when he was drunk or high.
"He would beat me and berate me," Morris says.
One night after heavy drinking, he returned home and, as usual, began threatening and assaulting her. But this time he brandished an unregistered handgun he'd bought for $25 at a local bar.
"He pushed me on the sofa and put the gun to my stomach and said, 'Gut shots hurt the worst,' " Morris says.
Morris is not really sure what happened next. She heard the gun go off. She felt frozen, unable to move.
"And I thought, 'Oh, my God, he actually killed me.' And I just, I remember just sitting there thinking, 'OK, what happens now?' And all the thoughts go through your head: Who's going to find my body? What's going to happen to my son? You know, all these things," she says.
Her husband fell to the living room floor, drunk and despondent, shouting, "I killed her, I killed her," she says.
Then she remembers taking a deep breath.
"And at that moment I could smell gunpowder. And I looked and I could see out of the corner of my eye there was smoke coming out of my jacket."
Morris thinks that when her husband pressed the handgun against her stomach, she pushed his arm away, knocking the handgun upward as he fired. The bullet went through her shoulder, as well as the sofa, and lodged in the nearby wall.
She says her husband was contrite. But soon the routine was back. Hitting and abuse followed by apologies. Morris physically recovered from her gunshot wound without seeking medical attention. She didn't call the police either. She was too scared to leave but worried every day about the next time.
"And next time he won't miss," she remembers thinking. "He always said if I ever left him, he would shoot me in the back of the head when I least expected it. It was just that everyday, constant terror."
There's the misconception and I had that misconception: 'Well, you survived, so you must be OK.' And that's not true.
Laura Morris
One day, he came home high, and his typical pattern of abusing her followed. Her usual survival strategy involved grabbing her son when her husband went into the bathroom. They'd then drive around the neighborhood until her husband had passed out. That night, when she went into her son's room, she says, the little boy was standing there with his coat on and blanket in hand, all ready to go.
"Like he knew from the yelling that this was going to happen. And I thought, 'We can't live like this.' You know, he's growing up thinking that this is normal," she says.
The next morning, she woke up determined: I'd rather be dead than live this way.
"Three or four times a week I'd wake up and think, 'Wow, this could be the last day,' " she remembers. " 'This could be the day he [kills me].' And I thought, 'Who thinks like that?' "
She finally left.
Her life didn't get better right away. It took a lot of work and time. There was baggage to unpack, she says, "but eventually it got better. My life took a good turn."
She is happily remarried and is about to retire from a successful career in sales and marketing.
These days, Morris is active in several groups supporting people who've survived gun violence and domestic abuse, including work as a peer support group coordinator for Everytown for Gun Safety in Anne Arundel County, Md. She also helped found and run the organization's Wounded Survivors Affinity Group.
People wounded by gun violence, she says, often have a hard time talking about and unpacking the trauma. She did. She recalls the first time she told her full story in public.
"I almost didn't get through it," she says, "And I had to pull the garbage can over to the podium because I thought I was going to vomit. I just couldn't stop crying. And I think it was just that it was the first time that I had just said it out loud to people."
Survivors need places to talk and connect with other survivors, she says.
"It can be a lonely sort of place, because where do you bring that up in conversation? 'Oh, by the way, did I ever tell you that I was shot?' " And when you do tell people, she says, there's often a mixture of shock and horror. "And then they ask all these questions. And you may not feel comfortable at that moment answering questions about that."
She'd like to see these kinds of support programs grow and involve younger people affected by gun violence.
"There's the misconception and I had that misconception: 'Well, you survived, so you must be OK,' " she says. "And that's not true."
James Hinckley-Wade was paralyzed in a shooting when he was 17. These days he helps mentor young people caught up in gangs, drugs and violence so they can avoid the life mistakes he made. James Hinckley-Wade hide caption
James Hinckley-Wade, Phoenix:
James Hinckley-Wade's story starts with a routine house party.
He was 17, and he describes himself back then as "lost" and consumed by drug dealing and gang life.
One night, he and some friends, he says, were "getting drunk, hanging out," goofing off and trying to impress girls and each other. Hinckley-Wade remembers beers, weed and a back-flip contest.
"I remember tucking against one of my homeboys I went to junior high school with, you know, just having a good time," he recalls. "From there, it just kind of gets dark."
Bending to peer pressure, he says, he smoked a cigarette that had been dipped in PCP, a hallucinogenic drug better known as "angel dust," among other nicknames.
"It was like out [of] a horror movie. My body went into some kind of crazy trance, and my whole being just left me," he says.
A short time later, out on the street with friends, things spiraled further. They ran into a possible member of a rival gang. Hinckley-Wade beat him up.
"I was high. I jumped on this dude for nothing, pretty much," he says.
The bruised rival returned about an hour later with a friend and a 9 mm handgun.
"And so I start approaching that dude, and [he] pulled out a pistol Lord, forgive me, Jesus' name. Yeah, he pulled out a pistol."
They could probably prevent a lot of this [violence] just by talking to somebody before it happened.
James Hinckley-Wade
A bullet hit his spinal cord.
"He hit my main artery in my neck," Hinckley-Wade explains.
He's now paralyzed from his chest down. He uses a motorized wheelchair to get around.
Looking back, Hinckley-Wade says it all stemmed from immaturity, teenage bravado and his efforts to get the attention of a high-ranking gang member who was in town from California.
"I was trying to impress him, like I've been doing the whole time since I started gangbanging, trying to impress. For nothing," Hinckley-Wade says, choking up. "For nothing."
These days, Hinckley-Wade plays and teaches wheelchair power soccer and sits on the Phoenix Police Department's disability advisory board. He also does volunteer work with violence prevention groups and Ability360, an independent living center for people with disabilities. He says that through peer-mentoring young people involved in drugs, crime and gangs, he tries to help them make better decisions than the ones he made.
"We know people are going to get mad. We know people are going to get angry," he says. Mentoring can help young people "express that or get that out before people start wanting to pick up guns. They could probably prevent a lot of this [violence] just by talking to somebody before it happened."
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After 25 Years In The Dark, The CDC Wants To Study The True Toll Of Guns In America - NPR
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Cosmic Gate have unleashed a brand new single ‘Vertigo’ – Rave Jungle
Posted: at 6:51 am
With Chapter One of MOSAIIK their eleventh long-playing project now released, Nic & Bossi take us into the Fall with a high frequency run of singles from the album. Unleashing a new track fortnightly, first out of the gate is the dark festival anthem Vertigo.
The most diverse track of MOSAIIK Chapter One, it is also one of the best examples of the Forward Ever, Backward Never/new horizons direction the group have taken with the album.
Vertigo tilts clubfloors into deep sonic trance, with underlying techno echoes spiked throughout. No towering highs or nadirs just a DJ tool, master-crafted start-through-finish for maximum tension. Sleek & minimal, lean & linear, its hallmarked by floor-charging sub-riffs, big horns, bigger booms and a mass of warp. Built with a brilliantly tense and anticipatory sense, Vertigo develops a Cosmic atmospheric unlike any before it.
Receiving early A-list set & radio support from A&B, Armin, Giuseppe Ottaviani, Markus Schulz and Andrew Rayel, the club expansion of Vertigo goes zero gravity.
Listen to the track below.
Alex Gelevski is our official photographer. He has been listening to electronic dance music since middle school. Apart from being photographer for Rave Jungle he likes to play basketball in his spare time.
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Best VR headsets to buy in 2021 – CNET
Posted: at 6:50 am
Editors' note:A new version of the Quest 2 doubles the storage of the $299 model to 128GB, and includes a silicone cover for the foam face piece after a voluntary recall of the foam covers earlier this year due tofacial irritation concernswith a small subset of customers. Existing Quest 2 owners can order afree silicone cover.
Over the last year and a half, where people weremore distant from each other than ever, virtual reality took on a different meaning. VR has potential for the future, too, but at the moment it remains a fascinating outlier in most people's tech lives. It isn't a must-have social gathering spot or workplace yet. But: It's become a great place for games. The Oculus Quest 2 has become an excellent home VR consolego-to for the VR enthusiast, and it's one of my favorite places to play games. But VR is also still in flux, the technology ever-evolving. So, too, are the philosophies of the VR technology companies that make the headsets.
The Quest 2 remains our top pick, especially with a recent increase in storage to 128GB on the $299 model. But you do need a Facebook account to use it.
Right now, VR tech might be in a bit of a lull, which means it's probably a safe time to buy. There is an Oculus Quest Pro in the works, and a PlayStation VR 2, but neither should be arriving this year.
VR games are better than ever: from Valve's VR masterpieceHalf-Life: AlyxtoStar Wars: Squadronsand lots more on PCs, and plenty of Oculus Quest and PlayStation VR games, too. But you still have to decide whether you want a headset that plugs into your PC or console, or choose a standalone option like the Quest (which can double as a PC headset, too).
The Oculus Quest 2 is the best VR headset right now, but you may want another option if you have a PC or PlayStation 4/5.
More changes will come. Companies such as Qualcomm (which makes the chips inside most self-contained VR headsets, including the new Quest 2) arebuilding new chipsthat point to a wave ofbetter stand-alone headsetsat lower prices -- including ones that plug into your phone. The more expensive and business-targeted Vive Focus 3 shows where more premium standalone VR headsets could evolve.
Meanwhile, the mobile VR headset and phone-based VR headset -- like theSamsung Gear VR and Google Daydream-- isbasically dead. A good number of the current iPhone, Android and VR app options don't even work with the old mobile VR goggles. If smartphone-based VR comes back, the mobile headset will more likely be in the form of small headsets thatplug into phones via USB-Cfor VR content, VR gaming and other uses.
If you're a PC gamer, a solid gaming PC-connected VR headset offers the most versatile collection of software for an immersive VR experience and lets you use that headset for creative and business tools. Note that a more powerful VR system will still be largely tethered to a desktop or laptop and a PC VR headset may require external sensors, so they may not be the best option for everyone.
And what about console gaming? The aging PlayStation VR is still fun if it's on sale and you have a PS4, mainly because there are loads more great VR game options for this device than you'd think. But keep in mind that the PlayStation 5, while it works with PSVR, needs the older PS4 controller and PS4 camera in order to work. You might want to wait for the next-gen PSVR 2 (which won't be here this year).
Augmented reality headsets and mixed-reality headsets aren't ready for everyday use yet, so a solid VR headset is your best bet for escaping to other worlds in the meantime. Read on to figure out which offers the best VR experience for you. We update this periodically, but note that prices are subject to change.
Good:Self-contained and wireless; great touch controllers; comfortable design for gaming; doubles as PC VR headset.
Bad: Requires Facebook account.
At $300 with nothing else needed, the Oculus Quest 2 delivers virtual reality games and an immersive VR experience anywhere. It's faster, smaller, cheaper and more comfortable to wear than the original Quest, but you have to log in to Facebook in order to use it. The newest version has a storage bump to 128GB, fixing one of its biggest drawbacks (there's no expandable storage).
The Quest 2 reminds me of the Nintendo Switch for its versatility and fun, plus it takes mere seconds to start up and fits really well over glasses. The standalone VR headset has self-contained motion tracking and a full-motion six degrees of freedom (aka 6DoF) VR controller that is the same as the ones on the PC-requiredOculus Rift, plus a surprisingly great high-resolution display and built-in speakers. Apps are downloaded right to the standalone headset's onboard storage. Its more limited mobile processor still plays games such as Beat Saber, Moss and SuperHot VR extremely well, and it can even connect with a PC if you want to, using a single USB-C cable.
Facebook discontinued the Oculus Rift S, so the Quest 2 is the best and only option over Oculus VR right now. But PC VR users have lots of other headset options.
Read our Oculus Quest 2 review.
The good: Really sharp high-res display, great audio, comfortable design
The bad: Mediocre controllers
If you're looking for the best image quality in consumer VR, HP's newest VR headset wins. For serious gamers (or VR racing sim fans), this VR technology may be your best choice. The 2,160x2,160-per-eye resolution and 114-degree field of view are the best at this price range, and the lightweight, comfy headset also has fantastic drop-down speakers designed by Valve. It's technically a Microsoft Windows Mixed Reality headset that prefers to launch into Microsoft's native Windows 10 VR ecosystem, but it bridges with Steam VR and works with those games and apps, too. Built-in camera-based room tracking is easier to set up than the Valve Index's external base stations, but is more prone to tracking errors. The included controllers, based on Microsoft's VR controller design, feel clunkier than either the Oculus Touch controllers or Valve Index controllers. Also, the over-ear speakers are your only audio choice: there's no headphone jack.
The Reverb G2, reviewed as a sim racing peripheral.
Good: Amazing futuristic controllers; high-quality headset; works with Vive hardware.
Bad: Expensive; requires room setup and tethering cable.
Valve's headset might be the most interesting PC virtual reality experience this year, just for its fancy new controllers. Valve's "knuckle" controllers are pressure-sensitive and can track all five fingers, making them almost like gloves. Not many apps make the most of them yet, but Valve's hardware is mix-and-match compatible with the HTC Vive, which also is built on the Steam VR platform. The Index headset has excellent audio and a really sharp, wide field-of-view display.
The Index uses external "lighthouse" boxes, meaning you need to set those up in a room first. It's not as self-contained as Oculus' Rift S, which can track the room with in-headset cameras, or the HTC Vive Cosmos. It's also definitely not wireless, but if you already have some Vive hardware, you could add on parts of the Index to mix and match.
Read our Valve Index review.
Good:Plenty of games; lower price; works with many PS4 controllers like the DualShock and Move.
Bad:Resolution isn't cutting-edge; Sony hasn't yet made great VR controllers that match the competition, but a new version may be coming next year.
Sony's years-old PSVR headset is still the only head-mounted display for gaming consoles and its screen still offers a surprisingly immersive experience. Even better, this tethered headset isoften on sale for as low as $200, sometimes with games thrown in, too. But Sony's confirmed it's working on a next-gen PSVR headset for the PS5 (with a new set of controllers) that could be coming in 2022, if you want to wait. In the meantime, Sony has delivered (and continues to deliver) many excellent virtual reality games, many of them exclusives. All you need is the PSVR and a PlayStation 4and you can start playing. (A few good games to start with are listed here.) This VR system is showing its age, though, compared to the alternatives. And, the new PS5, while it'll work with the old PSVR, will need your old PS4 controllers and camera, plus a camera adapter, to work.
Read our Sony PlayStation VR review.
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Tokyo Game Show turns to virtual reality in face of COVID – Nikkei Asia
Posted: at 6:50 am
TOKYO -- One of the world's key gaming conventions is getting creative in the face of the coronavirus by offering a virtual version of the event, which kicks off in Japan on Thursday.
The Tokyo Game Show is hoping to lure gamers from around the world to its virtual venues -- a maritime fortress and a watchtower floating in the sky -- which they can access via Facebook's Oculus Quest 2 VR headset or a browser on PCs and smartphones.
The VR venues will serve as an experiment for the gaming expo, which has been forced to go online for the second consecutive year due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
Gamers can build their own avatars to roam the virtual spaces, visiting exhibition booths from their favorite games makers and interacting with other people. They might get to meet famous game characters, and will have the chance to collect special items that unlock exclusive information or the opportunity to change their avatars.
The gaming expo offered a regular online version of the event in 2020. But game developers and publishers had to rush to adapt to the new format, and many participants were disappointed as they were unable to try out new games, which has been a highlight of the show for decades.
Meanwhile, this year's expo is also holding what it describes as its first-ever music festival, with a full orchestra performing tunes from iconic games such as hit series Final Fantasy. Those who want to watch the event online will need to buy a ticket.
In a bid to make the experience even more entertaining, the convention has also teamed up with Japanese tour agency H.I.S. to offer free online tours. Tour guides will visit the physical exhibition booths so gaming enthusiasts can enjoy a simulated experience of actually being at the venue.
Over 300 companies are joining this year's event, showcasing their latest titles and technology online. For developers, the event is a chance to meet and form partnerships.
Like last year, the expo is once again collaborating with Amazon Japan. The tech giant has created a dedicated page on its online marketplace where gamers can buy new titles and merchandise while watching livestreams from developers.
The gaming industry faced unprecedented demand in 2020 following the coronavirus outbreak as lockdowns and other pandemic restrictions left people at home in need of entertainment.
The Asia-Pacific gaming market is expected to grow 3% in 2021 to $88.2 billion, according to Dutch research firm Newzoo. It says the region will account for half the world's game revenues.
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Tokyo Game Show turns to virtual reality in face of COVID - Nikkei Asia
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