It is said there are no new ideas, and that seems to ring true in brand logo design as much as anything else. Al Cooper’s World of Logotypes book series was published in the early eighties and each features 3000-plus logos, a scattering of which may seem familiar not because you’ve seen them before but because many new logo designs look remarkably similar.

If you’re into logo design and have a penchant for the clean and/or old-school look, the three volumes are definitely worth seeking out.

, 23 July 2009

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A Leica the iPhone camera is not, but on the fly it can make for some great images, especially with the newly added focus points of the 3Gs model and a few apps to polish a turd. My favorite polishers include Camera Bag and Old Camera. Both are filters which aid in turning otherwise lifeless, flat photos into something a bit more magical. Old Camera gives users a selection of monochromatic options, while Camera Bag has everything from Lomo and Holga looks, to 70s style color. Are iPhones the new Polaroid cameras?

, 21 July 2009

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I don’t know about the ones on IFC, but the eleven episodes that they managed to squeeze by Fox were hysterical. You know how Family Guy and South Park are always slipping things by the censors? Well, Greg the Bunny, Warren DeMontague, Count Blah, Tardy Turtle, and their human friends Jimmy (Seth Green), Alison (Sarah Silverman), Gil (Eugene Levy) slid snide innuendo under radars the FCC didn’t even know to monitor. It’s an adult show about the making of a children’s show (Sweet Knuckle Junction) and you can get it on DVD.

, 21 July 2009

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Greg the Bunny

If The Cure were a metal band (à la Godflesh, not Skid Row), they’d probably sound a lot like Isis. An Isis record is usually a workout for your head, and Wavering Radiant is no exception. It’s their fifth long player and it showcases their strengths in spades: the solid songwriting, the slow builds, the scathing crescendos, the cathartic releases. Keyboards used to be a sign of going soft, but in the hands of Clifford Meyer, they’re as searing as the sun. With Jeff Caxide’s echoey, spaced-out bass and Aaron Turner’s gruff vocals, as well as the meandering song structures, we could consider Isis the flagship of their own genre: prog-core. Wavering Radiant is aptly named and a perfect entry point into their world.

, 17 July 2009

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Wavering Radiant

Tired of the same old nonfiction? Sick of sometimey music journalism? Seek out and acquire a copy of Kodwo Eshun’s mind-melting textual tilt-a-whirl, More Brilliant Than the Sun: Adventures in Sonic Fiction (Quartet, 1998). Eshun takes everyone from Sun Ra and John Coltrane to Kool Keith and Grandmaster Flash and sieves them through the theories of everyone from Paul Virilio and Gilles Deleuze to Marshall McLuhan and Manuel De Landa. It’s one part tradition-trouncing polemic, one part trip-hop philosophy, and one part ice-cream headache buzz, so take it slow.

, 17 July 2009

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More Brilliant Than the Sun

Since the early 90s, Steven Wilson has been The Man behind the UK’s neo-prog outfit The Porcupine Tree. With Insurgentes he steps out on his own. This is nothing new. He’s recorded under his given name in the past. What is new, however, is how big this record gets. The Porcupine Tree is a powerful band with big ideas, but Insurgentes overwhelms anything they’ve done. Wilson’s voice is as pensive and delicate as ever, but at times — the perfect times — the songs erupt in shimmering waves of guitar noise. It’s as beautiful as it is blistering.

, 02 July 2009

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Timecrimes (Los Cronocrímenes) is Nacho Vigalondo’s first non-comedic film, and wow, it’s a completely harrowing rollercoaster mindfuck. The time travel theme, if presented well (as it is here—_in spades_), never seems to wear thin. Vigalondo’s sure-handed direction makes this condensed, pressure-cooker (the film contains exactly four actors and takes place over the course of about an hour) of a temporal thriller chock full of causal loops and suspenseful twists an imminently watchable and intriguing film. It’s somewhere between Primer and Back to the Future, only much scarier.

, 02 July 2009

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