Monday, April 30, 2007
Sunday, April 29, 2007
Celtic Frost - Martin parlant de l'industrie du disque
- Martin, Celtic Frost
Merzbow - Anecdote trouvé sur Relapse
- Jisatsu
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Black Metal - Gorgoroth
Si vous avez aimé le ".... Satan" vous aimerez encore plus ce reportage (note : pas encore vu).
Viens de visionner les cinq parties et c'est un reportage essentiel pour qui s'interesse au black metal et specialement a Gorgoroth. En fait, si vous voulez voir un musicien expliquer ce qu'il est et reconnaitre les qualités de Gaahl et de Gorgoroth, alors regardez ce reportage. Difficile de prendre l'homme pour un abrutis après cela. Le reportage en lui même est assez bof mais les réponses donnés par Gaahl sont suffisamment interessante pour justifier les vingt minutes de reportages.
Des cas de rage aux Philippines
A health alert was issued after a man who took part in the traditional ceremony – where participants slash their backs with knifes before flaying themselves with bamboo whips – died from the virus on 11 April.
Mario Morales, the mayor of Mabalacat in Pampanga province north of Manila, told local media that Eduardo Sese may have contaminated up to 100 people who shared knives to cut themselves. He was bitten by an infected dog in February 2007.
[...]Self-flagellation is an annual tradition in Pampanga and other parts of the Philippines in which men whip themselves into a frenzy on Good Friday to atone for their sins.
Rabies is a viral disease that infects domestic and wild animals. It is transmitted to humans through close contact with saliva from infected animals, from example through bites, scratches or licks on broken skin.
Treatment does exist in the form of antibodies to the disease followed by a vaccine to stimulate more antibody production, but it must be administered within hours of infection. Once symptoms of the disease develop, rabies is fatal in both animals and humans. Death can occur within seven days of infection.
Monday, April 23, 2007
Sunday, April 22, 2007
Fanzine - Sgnl01
Le but est de créer un réseau pour que je puisse estimer le nombre de personnes intéréssés, les gens qui voudraient collaborer et ensuite les tenir informé de l'avancé du projet.
Pour l'instant je pense faire quelques articles sur des groupes, essayer d'en contacter pour des interviews peut être, et faire des chroniques de bande dessiné. Pas d'idée encore du nombre de page mais de toute façon ceci n'est encore qu'un projet qui avance pas à pas.
Friday, April 20, 2007
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Deux webcomics
Zimbabwe - Vivre sous le regime de Mugabe
I am buying bread at 6,000 Zimbabwean dollars ($0.34 at current black market exchange rate) for a loaf and two litres of cooking oil for 120,000 Zimbabwean dollars ($6.70).
I was only taking 500,000 Zimbabwean dollars ($28) home a month. But even that is no more. As of yesterday, I was laid off from my clerical job.
And now, because this is Zimbabwe, I know that I am not going to get another job.
[...]
My gran used to give me 50 Zimbabwean cents to go buy bread, butter and milk - all that for so little! It was easy to live well.
And when we were at junior school, five cents in your pocket could get you sweets to last the whole week. I tell you, finding a five cent piece on the pavement was like finding gold!
Now if you see a 1,000 Zimbabwean dollar note on the floor, you just keep walking. You don't stop. It is nothing - no-one will even pick it up.
[...]
Mugabe is already a hero and he always will be but there is nothing more for him to do. He must just step down.
When he was prime minister everything was fine.
But when his first wife, Sally, died, he started going the other way. That women loved our country - she did so much for us.
A lot has changed. And it all started then.
Now, our country is dead. I really want a better Zimbabwe.Sunday, April 15, 2007
Decibel - Fallen warriors of sXe
Première partie d'un article sur !e straight edge et les artistes qui furent sxe mais ont brisé leur serment au bout d'un moment. La semaine prochaine, la suite avec des personnes qui sont encore sxe aujourd'hui.
“At the time, I was already involved in a lot of what you might call DIY activities, and I felt like straight-edge was an extension of that,” he continues. “I just felt like there was a lot of apathy amongst my peers, and straight-edge was a reactionary move against that. Whether it was true or just a perceived thing on my end, I felt like drugs and drinking were connected to that apathy.”
Turner broke his edge six years later, at the age of 21. By that time, he had moved to Boston, started Isis and was finishing up art school. “I was true ’til 21, dude,” he laughs. “But I never drank—I just started smoking weed—so it didn’t really have anything to do with that age. It was more like, ‘OK, I’ve gotten what I need to out of this and I’m no longer in fear of falling into this drugged-out, pathetic state, so I’m gonna start smoking weed again.’”
Still, Turner feels that straight-edge was a positive influence on his life. “Aside from all the teenage dogma and wanting to belong and so forth, I do believe that straight-edge put me on a path that was ultimately beneficial to me,” he says. “It was part of what got me involved in the underground DIY culture, and instead of spending my time figuring out how to score drugs, I really did get more involved in the local scene and started up a distro—which eventually turned into the label—and I made contact with a lot of other like-minded individuals both within my area and outside of it. So I really do think it was a motivational force in my life. And you know, regardless of whether you endorse it or not, drinking and smoking are not good for your health. So the fact that I escaped that for a number of years was probably beneficial in that sense, too.”
[...]Pelican guitarist Laurent Schroeder-Lebec grew up in the Parisian suburbs, where there exists a considerably more relaxed attitude toward teenage (and even pre-teen) drinking than anywhere in the States. “I was always encouraged to drink beer or champagne at family functions—it was never banished or forbidden,” he explains. “Even in middle school, I’d get six-packs with my friends. Then I moved to South Korea when I was 11.
“Being in a new culture and being around people I couldn’t relate to, having to learn English and everything—all that was very conducive to drinking and doing a lot of drugs. My parents never really cared until everything else started to fall apart and I started doing really shitty in school. That was when I was around 15 or 16. And Korea was a really easy environment to get anything in. There were no restrictions, no drinking age, nothing—so I spent my life in bars with friends, even as early as 14 or 15. I was hanging out with GIs, prostitutes—just crazy, crazy shit. But to me it was normal because I didn’t have anything to compare it to.”
Then the shit hit the fan. “My sister, who is only a few years younger than me, started going to the same parties and that became a real problem for me—seeing her do the same things that I was doing didn’t make me feel comfortable at all,” he says. “One night, I wasn’t there, she passed out, and some people who I thought were friends of mine took advantage of her.
“She came home and wouldn’t name names, but I was enraged. I knew about straight-edge culture from some of the bands I had been listening to, so I just decided to embrace the complete opposite of what I’d been living—if only to show her that I could sever myself from that and to make a statement against what had happened. That was halfway through my senior year of high school, right before I came to the States for college.”
[...]oth Scofield and Schleibaum would eventually break edge. Scofield managed to hold out for two years after his Cave In bandmates Steve Brodsky and Adam McGrath started drinking. “That was hard, because I was tied to the hip with those guys at that time in my life. We’d play a show and they’d be like, ‘OK, we’re going to the bar.’ I wanted to hang out with them, but I wouldn’t even go into bars at that point. So I’d just sit in the van while those guys had beers and shot the shit and had fun. I think about some of those tours we did, and I was just sitting in the van. It’s like, ‘C’mon, man—at least go hang out with your friends.’ Which I would do from time to time, but let’s face it, it’s not that cool to order Cokes at the bar.”
Scofield eventually drank his first beer at the age of 23. “It was a Coors Light tallboy from the fridge,” he recalls. “I was all by myself. I just got so tired of being… almost afraid, you know? I think one of the reasons I had never drank or smoked pot was because I was scared. I was afraid of what would happen. Eventually, I realized that it wasn’t that big of a deal to go to the bar with your friends, have a few drinks and a few laughs. It didn’t mean you were gonna turn into a crazy alcoholic.
Friday, April 13, 2007
Idée - Appel a suggestion
Soit sur un format papier disponible dans des librairies, bibliothèque ou disquaire pour un prix de vente modique (type 2 euros, voir 1 euros).
Soit un forma téléchargeable sur un système de blog quelconque (Blogger ou livejournal) pour permettre aux personnes de lire les articles directement sur leur ordinateur ou de les imprimer aux quatres coins de la France (dans l'absolut).
Si vous avez des suggestions d'idées ou des objections a fournir, je suis prêt a les entendre. Tout demande de collaboration est accepté aussi mais je ne sais pas du tout si cette idée arrivera au bout de son chemin donc c'est a mettre en suspend pour le moment, mais pas a oublier.
Warren Ellis - Fanzine / Flyers
Here's an idea I float out there
every couple of years:
Years back, I stole a term from
Bruce Sterling, "ideological freeware"
-- this predated Creative Commons
-- and applied it to the notion of
web distribution of printed matter.
We were talking in terms of the
dearth of good writing about comics.
Simply put, one could create a small
magazine about comics and format
it for cheap copying in black and
white, and free it so anyone could
print off copies. And then put it
in comics stores. Viral distribution
from pixel to print. SAVANT was
the one that took up the entire idea,
and the first twenty or so numbers
of that were fireworks.
I'm talking specifically about web-
to-print here, rather than the mags
where the PDF was the end result,
not the intermediate form.
What occurred to me after that,
that I don't think anyone picked up,
was the broadside format. The
single sheet. The broadside has a
centuries-long history as a device
for disseminating news and ideas.
I mean, flyers go up on the web to
be printed off, sure. But it's not
quite the same thing. Getting an
idea, or a piece of writing, on a
single sheet and saying, yes, print
this off, copy it and distribute it
wherever you like -- that'd be
interesting.
In web terms, the costs are tiny --
host the image on a free hosting
site if you're worried about the
bandwidth hit. Use Livejournal or
Blogger for the whole thing.
Hell, I might even do it myself one
Warren Ellis
of these days...
Monday, April 09, 2007
Terence McKenna - Citation
-- Terence McKenna
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
Un cimetierre sur Seconde Life
“It’s the first thing like it I have seen in SL… an entire sim dedicated as a cemetery. It’s a strange virtual spirituality there, I guess… a friend of mine that departed in real life has her grave there. For me, it was nice, because she lived on other side of the world, and this was the only way for me to create something for her.”
Grant Morrison devient scénariste de film
Sunday, April 01, 2007
Le monde du traffic d'enfant au Philippines
Un interview exclusif de la BBC avec un trafiquant d'enfant aux Philippines.
Takashi Miike - Sukiyaki western
Takashi Miike adapte pour le Japon un classique du Western : Django, le cowboy qui traine son cerceuil. Bientot sortie au Japon.