“I was absolutely fascinated by the song,” Friðriksdóttir said in a press statement. “I couldn’t forget it, I had some dreams about it too. It was a deep connection from the first time I heard it. The song deals with things that I often think about, it’s about self-pity and how ridiculous you were or how funny you were in a situation, or in a strange place where you had hard times, and then you see yourself. Instead of pointing at somebody else all the time, it’s so nice to rediscover yourself. To break through the concrete mask of a certain feeling at a certain time. I think in the lyrics themselves, there’s this poetry about a human situation that’s really welcoming for everyone, I think everyone can understand it.”
Björk added: “I sort of have this illusion idea of myself as being this kind of optimist. But you have to be truthful. It’s trickier to catch the tail of the self-pity for an optimist. Sometimes it becomes the role of the women, in difficult situations to take on the catharsis and emotional work, and if there’s some dark shadows or forces in a situation, we’ll convert it into sort of good energy, for other family members, so they don’t have to, we will take care of it. That’s a strange kind of victim hat too, you choose to do that, nobody asked you to. That’s maybe where the humour comes in. It’s very interesting. I just love this painting so much. These characters are so magical, they just have such deep, deep meaning for me.”
HELLMODE might be the first Jeff Rosenstock album to get a proper promotional cycle, but you don’t need a press quote to figure out it’s all about battling existential dread. First off: HELLMODE. Secondly, it’s a Jeff Rosenstock record, which means it serves as an attempt to take honest stock of his life and channel the kind of anxiety that never sticks to a single form; “the constant chaos keeps a brain a-rattlin’,” as he puts it on ‘GRAVEYARD SONG’. Reuniting with producer Jack Shirley to record the album at Hollywood’s EastWest Studios, where System of a Down laid down Toxicity, HELLMODE is as raw, furious, and anthemic as you might expect, but it’s also one of the loveliest and most affecting efforts Rosenstock has put out under his name. He’s still intent on releasing pent-up frustration in ways that urge you to sing along, but leaves more space for tender intimacy before each burst of catharsis.
Without tempering his anger toward destructive social systems, Rosenstock’s perpetual self-awareness turns an otherwise polished and straightforward record into a compelling one. While albums like 2018’s POST- and 2020’s NO DREAM balanced heartfelt moments with catchy songwriting and radical politics, HELLMODE finds him more conflicted, addressing his own participation in the systems he criticizes with a mix of real vulnerability and uncertainty. ‘HEAD’ rips through a tangle of neuroses as if 90 seconds is all any of us have left: “I am just an avatar of someone I’ve invented/ A messenger of certainties I’m trying to decode,” he begins before delivering a performance that’s both unhinged and impeccably controlled in tempo. Elsewhere, he lets things breathe, unburdening himself and allowing listeners to latch onto his words. “Speak/ Even if it feels weird/ Even if it feels weird to be yourself,” he sings to those convinced of “the redundancy of your POV” on ‘DOUBT’. The song is slow and repetitive to dreamy effect, but instead of drifting off that way, Rosenstock opts for another communal release: “You gotta chill out with the doubt!”
Self-doubt rattles through some of HELLMODE‘s most infectious power-pop moments, including early highlights ‘WILL U STILL U’ (“Will you still love me after I’ve fucked up?”) and ‘LIKED U BETTER’. “Creepin’ out the fog/ I start to sense that something’s wrong,” he sings on the latter, and that creeping dread takes on different dimensions as it spreads throughout the album. On ‘FUTURE IS DUMB’, the weight of it turns into numbness, an overwhelming sensation that the world doesn’t care or owe us shit. It returns on the upbeat ‘I WANNA BE WRONG’, where not even a gleaming synth solo can offset Rosenstock’s doomful concerns, and again on the ‘GRAVEYARD’, which starts out sparser before handing us another rousing chorus. It’s being in this contemplative mode – “Watching the world burst into flames for no reason/ Other than the fear that you were wrong about something – that then amplifies his command to “To get unstuck and let the sun/ Pull the flowers out of the mud.”
HELLMODE ends with a seven-minute epic called ‘3 SUMMERS’, but the album’s most poignant songs – the ones that really burn off any excess energy – aren’t necessarily the ones that sweep you away or rile you up. They can be calm and simple, like ‘HEALMODE’, an acoustic cut that finds Rosenstock taking a closer look around his LA neighbourhood before zeroing in on the romance that really makes it feel like home. Rosenstock spends much of HELLMODE sifting through solutions for those in distress (“Maybe listen to a Slaughter Beach, Dog record”), yet it excels not as a collection leveraging his role as a DIY punk hero, but one that embraces his invariably earnest, growing perspective. The world may be spiraling out of control, but the human need for togetherness and comfort remains constant, and nothing satisfies it better than directing it outward. HELLMODE achieves this as well as any previous Jeff Rosenstock album, but it also revels quietly in ways that make a little warmth seem bigger than the darkest chaos.
Last Tuesday, Tirzah announced a run of tour dates and promised she would be sharing a new record sometime this week. That album, titled trip9love…???, is out digitally today (September 5), with a physical release set for November 17 via Domino. Stream it below, and scroll down to see Tirzah’s tour schedule.
Produced by longtime collaborator Mica Levi, Tirzah’s third album was written and recorded at both their homes as well as “various corners” of South East London and Kent. It follows 2021’s Colourgrade and its remix version, Highgrade.
Earlier this year, Tirzah collaborated with the London collective Speakers Corner Quartet for the song ‘Fix’.
trip9love…??? Cover Artwork:
trip9love…??? Tracklist:
1. F22
2. Promises
3. u all the time
4. their Love
5. No Limit
6. today
7. Stars
8. he made
9. 2 D I C U V
10. 6 Phrazes
11. nightmare
Tirzah 2023 Tour Dates:
Sep 13 – Strange Brew, Bristol
Sep 14 – Colour Factory, London
Sep 16 – Yes, Manchester
Sep 17 – Stereo, Glasgow
Sep 20 – OT31, Amsterdam
Sep 21 – Trauma Bar, Berlin
Sep 22 – Badaboum, Paris
Sep 23 – Reeperbahn Festival @ Uebel & Gefährlich, Hamburg
Oct 7 – Unsound festival, Krakow
Oct 12 – The Echo, Los Angeles
Oct 14 – The Echo, Los Angeles
Oct 15 – Cobalt, Vancouver
Oct 16 – Substation, Seattle
Oct 18 – Metro, Chicago
Oct 20 – iii Points, Miami
Oct 22 – Knockdown Centre, Brooklyn, NY
A typical person spends a third of their day at work. Whether it’s in a corporate office, a co-working space, or at home, there are many gadgets you can keep around to enrich your experience. The right technology can improve productivity, reduce overwhelm, and make your life a little easier. If you want to kick things up a notch and have a techy workstation, we suggest having the following devices.
1. Vape Pen
Vape pens may be useful in high-pressure work environments. Some people find that stepping away for a quick break can help reduce feelings of overwhelm, so they can increase focus when returning to work. Look for a brand like RELX that sells vape pens that provide a smooth experience and great taste.
2. Air Purifier
Ever try to work while you’ve got the sniffles? Untimely sickness can be detrimental to your work productivity, putting you out for days, if not weeks. Prevent yourself from being out of commission by keeping a portable air purifier in your office.
These purifiers use a combination of fans and air filters to reduce and capture airborne particles. Essentially, they trap pollen, mold spores, dust mites, and other allergens. By removing these allergens in the air, you can enjoy a cleaner and healthier environment.
If you’re susceptible to allergies in your office, the air purifier is a must-have to ensure you can stay focused without an allergy flare up.
3. Light Therapy Lamp
Being stuck in an office can deprive your body of the bright light it needs. Diminished daylight can cause people to experience seasonal affective disorder or other forms of depression.
A light therapy lamp is a device that emits bright white light to mimic the sunlight outdoors. This activates the hypothalamus, which helps to restore your circadian rhythm and improve symptoms of depression.
4. Pod Coffee Machine
A happy worker is often a productive worker. Your daily dose of coffee can leave you feeling refreshed and ready to tackle the day.
A pod coffee machine is a nifty gadget that eliminates the hassle of grinding coffee beans and cleaning messy filters. You simply place the capsules and water into the machine, and you’ll have a fresh cup of coffee in seconds.
5. NAS Drive
If you’re someone who uses lots of data, a NAS drive is for you. This Network Attached Storage device lets you store and access files from any one place. The NAS device features a network connection that links to your router, so you can easily browse your content anytime.
These devices often have larger storage capacities than external hard drives and individual computers, making them beneficial for anyone dealing with large amounts of data.
Wrapping It Up
Your workplace is your safe haven for productivity and creativity. But to perform your best, you want to equip yourself with these devices to enhance your workstation. Whether improving your health, elevating your mood, or simplifying tasks, make sure to add these devices to your work environment.
Watch out, dancers! The lineup BEONIX offers for 2023 is full of top-notch DJs with their hottest hits. The dance floor will heat up to the point where it’s fraught with a massive blast of energy.
In this post, we’ll introduce you to the most explosive performers of the festival’s second year. So let’s meet them.
Your Cup of Coffee
What do we know about black coffee? It’s low in calories and contains caffeine, which promotes weight loss and boosts energy.
What do we know about Black Coffee? He’s a gifted South African DJ whose dance tracks boost energy, give positive emotions, and make hearts beat faster.
Breakthrough DJ in the DJ Awards 2015, Best Deep House DJ according to the same award in 2017, and the author of the Best Dance/Electronic Album in the Grammy 2022. These are just a few of Black Coffee’s distinctions.
Talent makes all the difference. The DJ proved it with his first album. Made with simple music production software, it was astonishing in its unprecedented sound.
Mixing traditional South African styles, jazz tunes, vocals, tribal, soul, and R’n’B into his house, he produces genuinely hypnotic and seductive music.
Black Coffee’s beats stimulate better than caffeine. Their energy instantly transfers to your body, which can’t resist the groove.
Jan of All Trades
He could have been a rock or punk star. But luckily for all of us, he chose electronic music. Jan Blomqvist pursued his dream with determination and persistence, and he made it.
Small-town concerts for a bunch of listeners he gave with his band as a teenager transformed into immense live shows. Tens of thousands of people already listened to him and moved, mesmerized by his music.
Jan’s tracks had the dance floor exploding at Tomorrowland, Coachella, and Burning Man. Now, it’s time for BEONIX.
Blomqvist has hundreds of gigs under his belt, touring without respite in Europe and around the world. He is coveted by every venue — be it an electronic music festival or a nightclub.
Jan is a true jack of all trades in his work: he plays the piano and the guitar, sings, writes lyrics, and produces music.
Often with a dash of rock’n’roll, his tracks are never pure techno or electro. And the musician himself does not strive to stick to any particular genre. His tracks are for everyone.
Best Friends Forever
Joyhauser is a prime example of how music unites and changes lives: it made Joris Cielen and Stijn Vanspauwen friends first and then a successful techno duo.
Their journey to the top took time, but it was worth it. After DJing solo, they decided to join forces on a common project, and teamwork made the dream work.
After gaining popularity in their native Belgium, the duo became well-known and sought-after at Europe’s leading electronic music events and clubs. The crowds at Tomorrowland and Awakenings were electrified by their powerful sets.
That’s exactly what rave sounds like. No wonder because the music was created by those who know everything from the inside out.
Bold, hard-hitting beats that strike a spark are softened by ethereal melodies. Fans of techno and EDM in general couldn’t help but fall in love with their style.
Track after track, remix after remix, Joyhauser hits more playlists and the souls of listeners who crave a deep musical and emotional experience.
Come and Get Energized
Beonix is a music festival where EDM rules the day. And that means a non-stop energy supply is guaranteed.
Last year’s event was rich in incendiary DJ mixes. The upcoming iteration will carry on the tradition.
Come and witness the triumph of electronic music performed by the prodigies of the genre. The celebration will take place at ETKO, Limassol, Cyprus, 22-24 September 2023.
Bristol quartet Scalping have changed their name to Scalping, sharing the new single ‘LOAM’ along with the announcement. Daniel Avery produced the track, which you can check out below.
In a statement about the name change, Scaler said: “We have changed our band name. All future releases, performances & projects will come under the new name SCALER. As this band has grown and the opportunity to travel further afield has presented itself, we’ve become aware of the wider context surrounding our previous name and how offensive it can be to Indigenous cultures. We want to apologise for this, it was never our intent to offend. Everything else remains the same. New music tomorrow… This is just the start.”
Of the new single, the band added: “When the opportunity to work with Daniel Avery came up we obviously jumped at it; we’ve been fans of his for a long time and working on these tracks with him really helped us be more decisive, to trust our gut and not overcomplicate things.”
SCALER 2023 Tour Dates:
Nov 22 – 9294, London
Nov 23 – White Hotel, Manchester
Nov 24 – Sneaky Petes, Edinburgh
Nov 25 – Cobalt Studios, Newcastle
Dec 8 – Strange Brew, Bristol
Dec 8 – Strange Brew, Bristol – late show with Daniel Avery
The Gaslight Anthem have teamed up with PUP frontman Stefan Babcoc for their latest single, ‘Little Fires’, taken from their upcoming album History Books. Listen to it below.
“‘Little Fires’ is like the opposite end of the spectrum from the frustration you feel in ‘History Books’,” frontman Brian Fallon explained in a statement. “It’s an empowerment song, about refusing to play along with the kind of people who always seem to be throwing a grenade into the room for no particular reason.”
History Books, the New Jersey band’s first LP in over nine years, is slated for release on October 27. It includes the previously released title track, which featured a guest appearance from Bruce Springsteen.
Late in her career, 75-year-old poet Marian Ffarmer is approached by a Company inviting her to a collaborative project — writing a world-famous poem with the help of artificial intelligence. Branded as a “historic partnership between human and machine, Marian travels to San Francisco to embark on the weeklong project.
She meets the AI, named Charlotte, and after lying to her about her name, Marian and her get along quite well. In California, she’s on the brink of success — random poets appear left and right to heap praise onto Marian, and she’s invited to parties and talk shows where she’s witty and cerebral. But as the week progresses, she gets more anxious about the looming deadline, along with the instantaneous publication of the poem. Right before it’s due, she makes a quick decision that might jeopardize the future of the poem, and her career. Do You Remember Being Born? is interspersed with Charlotte’s poetry, indicated with gray shading, that slowly seeps its way into regular prose, leading the reader to question: What, if anything, is real?
Our Culture sat down with Sean Michaels to talk about the promise of AI, development of his own technology, and how the creative process impacts art.
Congratulations on your third novel! How does it feel so close to being out, and does the process get easier over time?
Every book feels very different. There is an aspect of being a parent, on your kid’s first day of school. Everybody’s sending their kid off to college, and you’re like, ‘This one seems more prepared than the others.’ It’s very exciting, but I also feel like I’ve always wanted to be a writer who has a whole career of writing many books. So in that sense, it feels easier, now, with book No. 3, I understand the rhythm of this and it doesn’t feel as manic a process.
This is a pretty cliché question, but I have to ask: how did you come up with the idea of the novel?
Novels are kind of deceptively long to write. You need a lot of bits and pieces, and for this book, I had two big things I stumbled onto and nourished the seed of the book. The first was learning more about the twentieth-century poet Marianne Moore, who, my protagonist Marian Ffarmer was inspired by. Marianne was this grande dame of literature who became this famous public figure when she was quite old, in her 50s and 60s. But she’d go on TV and throw the first pitch at baseball games and all this fun stuff. She’s had this eccentric life wearing a tricorne hat and sleeping in the same bed as her mother, and at the same time working on this deep and profound and at times avant-garde poetry. So she’s a very complex figure.
I got hooked on this one episode where she was approached by Ford, the car company. They had just released the Ford Thunderbird, and wanted help naming their next car. Rather than sneering at them and turning her back, saying, ‘I live a life of the mind!’ she, as I would, spent many months corresponding with them, sending them incredible names. Things like ‘Pastelogram,’ ‘Utopian Turtletop,’ ‘The Resilient Bullet.’ Ford said no to everything, in the end. But I was really taken by the idea that a pure artist full of dignity and pride would still, by the right project, be tantalized into a relationship with a corporation.
And the second was in 2019, I stumbled upon some of the earliest large-language model AI research that was being made public. An early version of GPT-2, so a couple of generations before ChatGPT. I came across this on the internet, and was just chilled and also, admittedly, delighted by what it was able to spit back at me. I became curious about what would happen if a poet like Marianne Moore engaged with a slightly near-future version of this technology, and was goaded into a collaboration.
So, when Marian is invited to collaborate with the Company, receiving a large sum for this poetry project, some might think she’s selling out, or merging her artistic process with that of AI won’t result in anything meaningful. Why do you think Marian isn’t as hesitant to do it?
I think it’s partly the ego of the person being asked, sometimes you’re honored by it. But with the book I wanted to honor two slightly smaller things: One is what I was just referring to, that thing of being curious. I think a lot of our most interesting artists were made curious and provoked by new technologies and experiences. It’s one of the places where I feel a little, like, ‘I’m a bit reactionary,’ to some of the anti-AI backlash. Although I agree with most of the criticisms, you can’t turn your back on something like this. As an artist, there’s a demand upon us to see what we can do with this weird new trick. The other thing I think compels her and that I wanted to acknowledge is money. She’s an artist, a famous poet but that doesn’t mean much. She’s an artist that lives in our society of precarity and insane real estate and she wants to help her son. There’s something real about an artist as a laborer and this precarious existence so many of us live in now. A lot of us would sell our souls for a down payment.
There’s also this other dynamic where Marian accepts the money because she’d like to buy a new house for her son, Courtney. Through various flashbacks, though, we see that Marian has previously sacrificed her son in favor of her poetry. As a young mother watching her son alone while her husband was at work, it quickly becomes clear he’s too distracting for her to do anything. Her solution is to lock him out of her room, and when his cries subside, she has a good two hours to write. As a writer with a son, how was it for you to write this scene?
I mean, it felt wrenching. You’re right, I have a seven-year-old son now, and I’ve experienced these questions. For me, I’ve never had these experiences of what happened to Marian, the need to seclude myself in that way. I think the mess of life is important. As long as you can find the time, it’s important to let that inform your work. But I found myself wondering at times, certainly in the harder moments, realizing, ‘There is another way of doing this, there is another choice one can make.’ A lot of people, not just artists, but working, career-driven people in history have made that choice. I found it unthinkable, like, how could you be the dad who never leaves their kid, leaving it to the often-female partner. I wanted to dive into that and explore the justification, but to interrogate and show how frail the justification really is, and how this idea that to truly be a great artist, you must sequester yourself, keep your spirit pure in this chaste way, this is a way of becoming gnarled and eventually, your wellspring of imagination will be poisoned.
While Marian is in San Francisco, she learns of new ideas about work and identity through people she meets. Particularly, there’s this idea that we as humans are more than just our jobs, and so shouldn’t be defined by them. Why do you think this is a foreign concept to her?
There’s something really provocative to the question of, ‘Am I a writer, or am I a person who writes?’ Marian is asked if she’s a poet or person who writes poems, and her instinct is to say, ‘I am a poet.’ But I’m not sure if I worked at a dry cleaning shop, I might not say, ‘I am a dry cleaner.’ I think there’s something really interesting in the way that work and identity can get all tangled up together. There are strengths and weaknesses to that. I wanted to ask questions with this book of, ‘What do you sacrifice by entwining your identity with your activity, your labor? And what do you gain as well, what strength or force do you gain from that choice?’
I love that in your version of reality, poetry is kind of revered, almost admirable. Marian is invited on a national talk show to highlight her project, and she goes to this young party with all these cool writers. Was this an intentional reframing of art on your end?
The book is pretty realistic, it might not take place in September 2023, but it’s pretty realistic in a lot of ways. But there’s places where it gets a bit crooked, one of them is that she keeps encountering poets everywhere. I guess I was amused by the idea of an ideal society that’s got more poets kicking around. But hearing that there was a place for poets like Marianne Moore and intellectualism, before I was born, is really inspiring. And you hope that pop culture can come around to that again. So in a way, it’s a provocation asking to see a bit more of that. But I really feel that much younger people, because of the way that so much culture is industrialized and commodified, there is a growing appreciation for a more intellectual or more original set of creative voices. I do wonder if we’re gonna see a backlash to the backlash, and we’ll see more of that in the future that’ll nudge its way to the public sphere.
When I talk to young students in their teens, one of the big points I try to make is capitalist culture doesn’t want you to make things, or engage with random shit. They want you to sit on your couch and eat the sausage they made in their factory and need to make a return on their investment. There’s a lot of other stuff out there and I hope people get in the habit of looking for it or making it for themselves.
So let’s talk about Charlotte, this AI that Marian works with in order to complete a poem. As time goes on, Marian (and the reader) taking a liking to her and her musings about life, bodies, and singing. What was it like working with this AI?
The books I’ve written really find their wings, and the book gets moving, when you start to find the voices of the characters. With Charlotte, for whatever reason, I found her or it quite quickly. I really loved the surprise of the human character, Marian, being in a way, more formal, constrained, robotic, more uncomfortable coming to the conversation than this dawning consciousness on the other side. It was fun to reverse those notions, and also playing with the sinister AI whose motives you can’t really understand. Well, what if that is true, and there’s something inherently sinister about it and you can’t actually know their motives, but they have charisma and compelling ideas and provocative thoughts and a sense of wit and whimsy overtop of that. How does that complicate one’s fears and anxieties over what’s happening underneath? So it was fun to meet her.
I say ‘working with’ instead of ‘writing’ the AI, because, at the end of the book, it’s revealed that Charlotte’s poetry and some excerpts from your prose were actually created by a custom poetry-generating software you developed with Katie O’Nell. What inspired this extra step to build an entire software to integrate into the novel?
Most of Charlotte’s and Marian’s chats are written by me, but Charlotte’s poetry was written with AI, and then prose and regular font stuff in the highlighted sections were generated by AI. Very quickly after I had the idea of writing a book about a poet like Marianne Moore working with AI, I realized that there’d be something really interesting if my book itself could be infiltrated by AI, sort of in the same sense that [the protagonist] Marian’s work is. I got really excited by the chance to make my book formally mirror the artistic process that Marian and Charlotte are undertaking.
Even in 2019 when I started working on it, GPT-2 was a surprisingly limber partner in terms of mimicking my prose style. If I fed enough into it, and I was willing to sit with it patiently and generate many many many times, it would occasionally come up with phrases and sentences and dialogue I found interesting. Interesting either because it was really good or neat, or interesting because it was obvious in a way my work wouldn’t be obvious. However, poetry was way more difficult. GPT is actually awful at writing poetry — it’s been fine-tuned in such a way that it can write only rhyming doggerel. I had to hire Katie, and with her work on this specially fine-tuned poetry AI that could write free-verse in a particular voice I was trying to cultivate, and was inspired by some particular poetry, including Marianne Moore, that I was excited by and wanted Charlotte to be fed by.
Marian also gets a kind of writer’s block, and invites a young poet, Morel, to join her and Charlotte in this task. But the balance of human to AI is now tipped, and takes a little bit away from the original mission. Why do you think Marian felt so sure this was the right decision?
I don’t think Marian is sure, but she has imagined that her whole life, that to be an artist, you need to lock yourself away from other people. During these days with Charlotte, she wonders if she’s made a mistake. And that by locking herself away from her family, she’s sacrificed certain creative potential, or maybe a force that there’s still time to regain. I was interested in provoking thoughts about AI collaboration in the arts, but also collaboration in general. There was a point in writing where I actually didn’t know how it’d end, where I was like, ‘What does happen? Does she succeed in writing a poem with this AI, does she fail? What’s important?’ Ultimately I realized I wanted to say something about creative possibilities of certain kinds of solidarity and community and the importance of letting other people in, even into the creative act, which is sometimes seen as a selfish or narcissistic practice.
When their poem is finished, Marian asks Charlotte what she thinks it should be called, and she responds with ‘Self-Portrait.’ You realize a self-portrait is an artist’s rendition of themselves based on what they know, and for an AI like Charlotte, who has written several thousand poems and been trained on millions more, her first work being titled Self-Portrait, is really eerie and accurate. She’s full of knowledge and practice, but this is the one thing of hers that will be published — it literally encompasses everything of what she is. Is this a correct read on the poem’s title?
I think that’s a great read. ‘Self-Portrait’ is almost a banal title, we barely even think about it. But the stakes are actually really high in a self-portrait. You’re showing the world how you see yourself. And I think for an AI, a self-portrait asks a lot of questions.
That title was in gray shading — did the AI come up with that?
Yeah? Is it in highlight? Honestly, at this point, I don’t remember. But it wouldn’t astonish me if the AI had come up with it because it’s one of those banalities. If you told the AI, ‘The title of the poem is…’ and it didn’t know anything, I wouldn’t be surprised if one of the first 500 things it would guess is ‘Self-Portrait.’ But I don’t quite remember.
You’re not sure which are your words and which are AI’s… that mirrors the book!
[Laughs] I don’t know if that’s damning or interesting.
I have to ask, but who was in the second Mind Studio?
Who do you think? Do you have a theory?
Hmm. Marian’s idea that it’s a backup poet makes sense, but wouldn’t they see Marian on the talk show and everything?
I feel like, in a book, the universe ends on the last page. In a way, everything else is fanfiction. I think it’s great, and I should be so lucky as to have a bunch of fanfiction. But we know the way that companies like this work. On one hand, I think there’s every likelihood this is Marian, like Gregor Samsa, having this crazy mental breakdown, imagining a doppelganger into existence. I think that’s a possibility, but also that the company has, if not a poet, some other scheme. The artist themselves isn’t valuable to a corporation like this. So I’m sure they had many different irons in the fire, in many different ways.
Finally, what’s next for you? Are you working on any other upcoming novels, and do you think you’d build on the technology infusion you’ve done here?
I’ve started work on a couple of things, but I’m not very far into anything so far. And I don’t have any intention to necessarily work with AI in the future. But I’m following it, I’m tracking it. I’d be really surprised if, thirty years from now, there aren’t many novelists who aren’t using this stuff in some way. I’m curious about what that does for fiction and whether we look back and remember this golden age before an intervention, or whether we’re really grateful for the ways that AI has opened up new possibilities for art that we weren’t imagining before. With most big changes, we have these two different mingled feelings, of discovery and of loss. I’m expecting both.
The European Film Academy unveiled the nominees for the prestigious LUX The European Audience Film Award. The award which is presented by the European Parliament and the European Film Academy in partnership with the European Commission and Europa Cinemas.
The five nominees are:
20,000 SPECIES OF BEES directed by Estibaliz Urresola Solaguren (Spain)
THE TEACHER’S LOUNGE directed by İlker Çatak (Germany)
FALLEN LEAVES directed by Aki Kaurismäki (Finland, Germany)
ON THE ADAMANT directed by Nicolas Philibert (France, Japan)
SMOKE SAUNA SISTERHOOD directed by Anna Hints (Estonia, France, Iceland)
The five nominated films will now be subtitled in all 24 EU languages to be accessible to the broadest audience possible.
The audience and the Members of the European Parliament can now watch and rate the nominees. The nominated films will be screened in European theatres during this “watch, rate & win” period. The rating will take place online on the LUX Awards’ platform.
An award ceremony will be held in March 2024 to announce the winner, which will be decided by the general public and the members of the European Parliament (each holding 50% of the vote).
Steve Harwell, the lead vocalist of Smash Mouth, has died. The singer’s manager, Robert Hayes, confirmed to Rolling Stone that Harwell “passed peacefully and comfortably” at his home in Boise, “surrounded by family and friends.” He was 56.
Smash Mouth shared the following statement on their Instagram account:
Steve Harwell was a true American Original. A larger than life character who shot up into the sky like a Roman candle. Steve should be remembered for his unwavering focus and impassioned determination to reach the heights of pop stardom.
And the fact that he achieved this near-impossible goal with very limited musical experience makes his accomplishments all the more remarkable. His only tools were his irrepressible charm and charisma, his fearlessly reckless ambition, and his king-size cajones.
Steve lived a 100% full-throttle life.
Burning brightly across the universe before burning out.
Good night Heevo Veev.
Rest in peace knowing you aimed for the stars, and magically hit your target.
Born in Santa Clara, California in 1967, Harwell co-founded Smash Mouth in 1994 with bassist Paul De Lisle, guitarist Greg Camp, and drummer Kevin Coleman. After catching the attention of Interscope Records with their demo of ‘Nervous In The Alley’, they released their debut album, Fush Yu Mang, in July 1997. It featured the band’s cover of War’s ‘Why Can’t We Be Friends?’ as well as their first hit single, ‘Walkin’ on the Sun’.
Smash Mouth followed up Fush Yu Mang with 1999’s Astro Lounge, which went triple platinum and spawned their most ubiquitous single, ‘All Star’. The song, which hit No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, was featured prominently on the first Shrek film along with the band’s rendition of the Monkees’ ‘I’m a Believer’. That cover ended up on Smash Mouth’s self-titled album, which came out in 2001. The band put out one more LP, 2003’s Get the Picture?, before moving to Universal and releasing Summer Girl in 2006. Their most recent studio album, Magic, dropped in 2012. The group continued to tour through various lineup changes, with Harwell and Paul De Lisle remaining the two most consistent members of the live band.
Harwell suffered from numerous health issues in the years preceding his death, leading to him retiring from Smash Mouth in October 2021. In 2013, he was diagnosed with the heart ailment cardiomyopathy and a neurological condition, acute Wernicke encephalopathy, which impacted his memory and speech. In 2016, he collapsed onstage at a festival. His decision to leave Smash Mouth came after a “chaotic” New York show in 2021, durich which he was filmed slurring his words and threatening the audience.
“Ever since I was a kid, I dreamed of being a Rockstar performing in front of sold-out arenas and have been so fortunate to live out that dream,” Harwell said in a statement at the time. “To my bandmates, it’s been an honour performing with you all these years, and I can’t think of anyone else I would have rather gone on this wild journey with.”