Wednesday, August 28, 2013

LVN LGT Minimixes // Series 1



The homie Danny DVINCI over at LA-based creativity output LVN LGT has been a long time supporter of my shit for awhile now. He even was kind enough to send over some awesome stickers and labels earlier this year (shown below) ...




Danny also mentioned earlier this year that he wanted me to contribute a lil, itsy-bitsy 11-min minimix. I found this pretty hard to do. Having listened to all of the LVN LGT mixes in succession (as Danny told me they should be), this all became clear to me. They all occupy a certain place in modern music and manage to fit together without stepping on each other's toes.

















Hope you don't get bored.

Be sure to follow LVN LGT


Monday, August 26, 2013

Watch Danny Brown get cray on Sway in the Morning


Danny Brown kicking a little freestyle on Sway in The Morning



Watch Mr. Brown kick his ridiculously nasally flow in this freestyle he kicked on Sway in the Morning.

Photo by Dave Lichterman
Danny Brown
Photo by Olly hearsey

Speaking of Danny Brown, be sure not to sleep on my remix of grown up.

 Have fun peoples.


Saturday, August 24, 2013

808 Roundup 2 // Evil Needle, HxdB, B.YRSLF

On the second edition of my 808 Roundup posts I included some slower, smoother bass-driven tracks.

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The first song I found today was by a producer that I've been sleeping on for the past year or two now: Evil Needle. Evil Needle is a German-born, France-residing producer that makes what could best be described as music within the range of soulful R&B and trap-esque bangers. I say 'within the range' because this guy is super versatile, yet ALWAYS consistent. Almost every track I've found from him I like, if not love.






Be sure to check out his other stuff on his website here.

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Next up is a compilation of mixtapes from Vancouver, B.C. house/bass/techno producer HxdB. Sev's production is super deep and on-point while his mixes are patchwork of originals and homie exclusive previews. I saw him a-grip ago at a club in my college town of Bellingham when he performed with my homie Cedaa / Simon Ho. Having heard his shit, I went on my mobile soundcloud and immediately started harvesting free cuts from his profile. His cuts are perfect for danky clubs and headphone meditations alike.

Here's a fat 4+ hour block of HxdB mixtapes to get acquainted if you aren't already.


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The final entry is from another one of my favorite labels. The ubiquitous, Parisian bass music imprint, B.YRSLF division. I got to say this these guys exposed me to a lot of very talented producers. Last summers 'Summer Crisis' mixtape was on heavy repeat during intra-city bus trips and 6am walks through campus. Now we have Summer Crisis vol. 2. Another set of 20+ free tracks that I'll probably be rinsing a whole lot in the weeks to come. My favorite so far off this release might be "Swift" by Yoin. Bouncey 808s and summery synth stabs is almost always a good recipe.


Sunday, August 18, 2013

Zenojimesis EP

Cop a free download of my new release, Zenojimesis EP.

 I released this EP to get rid of some remixes/edits and older cuts, as well as some newer stuff.
Its mostly for just head-nodding purposes. A lot of these tracks are on the more hip-hop side of things for me.

 Would love if you showed the release support by following me on soundcloud

 Preview the track "Lunar Shit (ft. Antwon Vinson)" here 



I also just posted this Danny Brown remix up on my soundcloud


Enjoy

Zenojim Monthly Mixes

Lately I've been sluffing. I intended to get my latest monthly mix published up on Soundcloud but I have it stashed on my external up at my house and have been couch surfing around Seattle for the past two weeks. It really sucks because there are some really cool original tracks and cuts from close homies within the new mix. I'll post it up on my twitter (@zenojim) as soon as its up.

In the mean time here's some older mixes from past months. Be sure to follow me on mixcloud



Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Cosmology // Large-Scale Structure of the Universe

In taking a minor of astrophysics, most students usually capstone their minor by taking a class on cosmology. This subset of astrophysics can best be described as the one that deals with the large-scale structure of the universe and looks at universal phenomena through the eyes of the Cosmological principle. Their are plenty of details to get into, but to sum up the main points, when looked at through very large scales the universe looks the same in all directions and has no central location.

Image of the Carina Nebula

Okay..

What does that even mean? Well if you are in the middle of the ocean and see no land anywhere on the horizon, then everything looks the same in all directions. So the first point does make some sense. But what about the universe having no central location? That is pretty strange to me. Almost every physical thing has a central location. One could try to maybe make the case that 'the internet' has no central location, but then someone else comes along and says that "Well, it's safe to assume that as far as we know, the internet can be centralized to the planet Earth." So how do you visualize something with no center?

Well here is one way to do it...
This is a huge computer simulation of a bunch of 'gravitational-bound' particles interacting with one another, as the computer program is run, they begin to coalesce into a certain structure at different scales.

The diagram below shows how objects at these different scales look like compared to one another.



If the video above reminds you of neurons, you are not crazy. Almost everyone I've showed this video to says this about it.

One of my favorite conversations - Neil Degrasse Tyson vs. Joe Rogan - Joe Rogan Experience Podcast

One of my favorite podcasts to listen to is the Joe Rogan Experience podcast. A couple months back Mr. Rogan interviewed Dr. Tyson for some very interesting conversation..

Here's the whole thing:


Also, the moon landing was not faked. 

808Roundup

Some stuff I found this morning on soundcloud. I'll tend to do this alot.

This first track is by Mr. CARMACK, a producer who makes these sort of heavy drum-pattern hood anthem type tracks. The kind of stuff that would look great cued up to And1 mixtape or the battle scenes in Pacific Rim. These tracks aren't just dumb bangers though. There is a lot of crazy little sound effects and bits of complexity sprinkled through-out. Carmack's style is def sophisticated.




Here's an EP preview from another one of my favorite producers in the past year, 813. 813 really explores a whole range of blings, blips and bell sounds with straight-forward drum patterns. I don't like the T word when it comes to trying to classify this release, but it definitely appeals to the times.. albeit the production is really good and creative.



Another producer that I've listened to a lot in the past year is Obey City. With all the recent releases of his Astro Nautico label, it seems hard to imagine how productive he stays. This new EP from him I found on soundcloud the other day is a testament to this. Exploring all kinds of modern funk, 90's & 80's nostalgia, on-point, clubby drum-patterns and wavy synthlines, Melted Magic seems like the perfect name for this EP. I probably like the track "Intrigue" the most. It reminds me of an older Ginuwine/Timbaland-type track that had a baby with the Paper Mario soundtrack.



The last track I wanted to share was a dreamy little 808 track called "Aurora" by Sipp & Thomas White. Love the atmosphere and the little part that comes in around 2:17 before they let the drums come back.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

A few tracks

A few tracks from myself...

...more stuff from me at www.soundcloud.com/zenojim

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Feynman

As all you do not currently know, I am a student of physics and astronomy and I am working on my Bachelor Degree in the subject. After the difficulty of my last quarter in the Spring, I decided that I would get a head start on my studies before the Fall quarter is to start. Among the courses on my schedule is a subject that tends to have many popular connotations that, at this point in my science career, I now know are erroneous. That subject is called "quantum mechanics".

By some strange free association, the first phrase that floated to my mind after the name of the course was "Feynman".

If you know a moderate amount of physics, the history of science, or great names of the 20th century, you would happen upon prolific physicist Richard Feynman. Now, we've all heard of Isaac Newton, Galileo, Copernicus and Einstein, but Feynman is a name that often isn't as readily spoken in many households. He was a brilliant, fun-loving, and critically-thinking mind who made vast improvements to the field of modern physics, won  the Nobel Prize and worked on the Manhattan Project with many the great names in science.

So who is Richard Feynman to me?

Well I've heard his name quite a lot in my years of studying physics but only until about four months ago did his name really mean anything. I went onto to audible.com and downloaded all of the Feynman Lectures on Physics. And to anyone who wants to know physics...I can't think of a better, more concise explanation of all of the fields up until that point in 1962.

Here is a great BBC documentary on him (I honestly haven't watched the whole thing but I watched the first half before bed last night):

Here are some great Feynman quotes:

"It doesn't seem to me that this fantastically marvelous universe, this tremendous range of time and space and different kinds of animals, and all the different planets, and all these atoms with all their motions, and so on, all this complicated thing can merely be a stage so that God can watch human beings struggle for good and evil — which is the view that religion has. The stage is too big for the drama."
Statement (1959), quoted by James Gleick in Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman (1992)

"To those who do not know mathematics it is difficult to get across a real feeling as to the beauty, the deepest beauty, of nature ... If you want to learn about nature, to appreciate nature, it is necessary to understand the language that she speaks in."
The Character of Physical Law (1965) Ch. 2

"The worthwhile problems are the ones you can really solve or help solve, the ones you can really contribute something to. ... No problem is too small or too trivial if we can really do something about it."
Letter from Feynman to Koichi Mano (3 February 1966); published in Perfectly Reasonable Deviations from the Beaten Track : The Letters of Richard P. Feynman (2005)

Feynman is a good example of how to see the world like a child but to solve it's mysteries like a scientist.


Ello'

I'm starting this blog as sort of a brain dump. I will post up random thoughts, ideas, music I've made, articles I read, things I've made, and life that I've lived. I hope it helps /entertains someone.


I make modern music of all types, be sure to check out my Soundcloud

Also make sure to follow me on all those other social media platforms out there:
twitter: @zenojim
facebook: www.facebook.com/Zenojim