Hope you like them as well, the pleasure is all mine.





(Source: cliffpantones, via itsalwayssunny)
“Oh goodness, what fun twitter was in the early days, a secret bathing-pool in a magical glade in an enchanted forest. It was glorious ‘to turn as swimmers into cleanness leaping.’ We frolicked and water-bombed and sometimes, in the moonlight, skinny-dipped. We chattered and laughed and put the world to rights and shared thoughts sacred, silly and profane. But now the pool is stagnant. It is frothy with scum, clogged with weeds and littered with broken glass, sharp rocks and slimy rubbish. If you don’t watch yourself, with every move you’ll end up being gashed, broken, bruised or contused. Even if you negotiate the sharp rocks you’ll soon feel that too many people have peed in the pool for you to want to swim there any more. The fun is over.
To leave that metaphor, let us grieve at what twitter has become. A stalking ground for the sanctimoniously self-righteous who love to second-guess, to leap to conclusions and be offended – worse, to be offended on behalf of others they do not even know. It’s as nasty and unwholesome a characteristic as can be imagined. It doesn’t matter whether they think they’re defending women, men, transgender people, Muslims, humanists … the ghastliness is absolutely the same. It makes sensible people want to take an absolutely opposite point of view. I’ve heard people shriek their secularism in such a way as to make me want instantly to become an evangelical Christian.”
Stephen Fry Quits Twitter
16. Make a plan. Then accept it can and will change. Making something happen is about being nimble and adaptable.
“Heroes” - Oasis



>>> Starman gets his own constellation: Seven stars, in the vicinity of Mars
DDB Brussels has detailed a fitting tribute by the Belgian music station Studio Brussels and MIRA Public Observatory for the late rock star David Bowie.
(Source: eagvlls)
COVER YOUR TRACKS: Beck Covers David Bowie’s “Sound and Vision”
David Bowie was a transcendent artist in every way. He’s the lad insane; the visitor from another planet to come to save us and love us and tell us to live as many lives as we can before this all vanishes. He was a man of many lives, of unimaginable cool and uncompromising vision, an actor who blurred the line between art and reality. He, along with Dylan and Waits and Keef, seemed to be immortal. He was an artist too big, too vital, too omnipresent to be anything but a cosmic force incarnate, the Stardust of which we are all made.
Besides being a legendary and unequaled visionary, his music, art, and even image could communicate humanity with nuance, style, and empathy. He was a trained mime whose personas spoke stronger and clearer than nearly any other artist of his generation. When critics say that a band “made a Bowie song their own,” it’s not too much of a surprise: Bowie, ever adaptive, has crafted songs that share his foremost characteristic. Go back and listen to “The Man Who Sold the World” from Nirvana’s Unplugged performance and try to separate Bowie’s words from Kurt’s performance. No one “makes Bowie their own,” they simply express his art with their own hands and mouth. He’s one of the unique artists whose works seem to grow in the hands of others; a musician who made music that infects those who listen, growing stronger and deeper and more beautiful with every soul that sings their words. Along with Dylan, his music feels like it has been inside you the whole time; he just pried it out, crafted it into form, and gave it back. His music becomes a part of you, inseparable and precious. There’s an incredible richness to Bowie covers, from the gorgeous acoustic covers of Seu Jorge in The Life Aquatic to the buzzy, paroxysmal “Heroes” by TV on the Radio, simply because of the immense talent and magnificence of the man himself.
My personal favorite cover of Bowie comes from Beck from his one-off performance for Lincoln Motor Company’s “Hello, Again” campaign. Beck performed “Sound and Vision” with an 157-piece orchestra that included traditional symphony orchestration, two full choirs, a yodeler, a man playing a saw, a fleet of heavy metal guitarists, and more oddities on a round stage that slowly revolved around the seated audience. It’s a stupendous, insane setup to showcase an innovative 360-degree audio recording technique, which uses a plastic human-head covered in ears, to capture Beck’s opportunity to perform a classic song with “no limitations or restrictions.” And all this to pitch a car company. It’s a surreal vision.
When Beck starts waving his hands to send the whole orchestra into a wave of noise, crawling whispers, or blast of horns, it’s all nonsense.. In the beginning, it sounds chaotic, as if Beck is just blowing up different parts of the orchestra - a burst of strings, a pop of choral hums, a detonation of drums. Then, everything starts coming together, syncing up, sliding together, and Beck counts down, and like magic, the “doo-doo-doo” of “Sound and Vision” swims out of noise. It’s one of the most natural, magical things I’ve ever heard - like from formless, Bowie’s cover simply crawled out. Like the song was always there, like all Beck had to do was touch it and everyone, all 157 people, would understand and come together not from practice but because they, too, recognize this song as a shared truth, simply something that is and always will be. It sounds effortless, beautiful, and eternal. As the song goes on, yodelers accompany metal guitars and chirruping xylophones before sliding into the instrumental breakdown, and it’s as if the whole venue, audience and orchestra, is united into one voice - one voice breaking across lines that divide art and audience; one voice speaking from a place deep inside. It’s a perfect cover, a performance of Bowie’s song that shows the audience what Bowie accomplished and what new, beautiful art he continues to inspire.
-Ben Summers
David Bowie
1947-2016
Still coming to terms with losing one of my heroes, but the music is so timeless & speaks much better than I or anyone else can really, so here’s a playlist for you to listen to.
- David Bowie - Moonage Daydream (1972)
- David Bowie - Rock ‘n Roll With Me (1974)
- Mott the Hoople - All The Young Dudes (1972)
- Nirvana - The Man Who Sold The World (Live & Unplugged) (1993)
- David Bowie - Somebody Up There Likes Me (1975)
- David Bowie - Ziggy Stardust (1972)
- David Bowie - Where Are We Now? (2013)
- David Bowie - Quicksand [Demo] (1971)
- David Bowie - Candidate [Alternate take] (1974)
- David Bowie - Wild Is The Wind (1976)
- David Bowie - Space Oddity (1969)
- David Bowie - Always Crashing In The Same Car (1977)
- Iggy Pop - Lust For Life (1977)
- David Bowie - The Jean Genie (1973)
- David Bowie - Rebel Rebel (1974)
- David Bowie - Drive In Saturday (1973)
- David Bowie - Heroes (1977)
- Lou Reed -Satellite Of Love (1972)
- David Bowie - Life On Mars? (1971)














