É uma pizza? É um cachorro quente? Não…
Só imaginar um conceito desses já é de virar o estômago. E é da Pizza Hut! Via G1.
Só imaginar um conceito desses já é de virar o estômago. E é da Pizza Hut! Via G1.

Sábado catorze! E Gente Bonita em Belo Horizonte. Pela primeira vez em nossa meteórica ascensão à dominação mundial através do ferormônio exalado em celebrações noturnas em alto astral, saímos de São Paulo rumo à mais uma nova festa que celebra as virtudes de se ouvir diferentes estilos musicais que exaltem o prazer de viver, independente de época, gênero ou parte do planeta em que ele foi feito. A Aglomerado é formada por Jefferson Santos e Rodrigo James, que intimou Gente Bonita pra um duelo para destruir as coxas, batatas-das-pernas, calcanhares e solas dos pés de todos que ousarem se soltar e deixar seus sentidos guiar os quadris. Se você estã em Belo Horizonte neste fim de semana e nunca sentiu o tremor de terra provocado por uma profusão de hits do passado e clássicos do futuro numa mesma noite, seu caminho é o Up! Bar, no Savassi, para tudo que você entende por diversão ganhar dimensões de parque temático sobre o seu gosto musical.
Gente Bonita @ Aglomerado
Belo Horizonte
Sábado, dia 14 de julho de 2007
Discotecagem: Jeff Santos e Rodrigo James (residentes) e Luciano Kalatalo e Alexandre Matias (Gente Bonita Clima de Paquera)
Local: Up! Bar – Av. Getúlio Vargas 1423. Savassi.
Telefone: (31) 8404-8134 ou (31) 9635-7151
Horário: A partir das 23h
Preço(s): R$ 10 de
Dinheiro e cartões de débito e crédito Visa, Credicard, Mastercard e Dinners.
‘- “Stand By Be” – CCC
– “My Moon My Shawty” – DJ STV SLV
– “The Melee” – Beastie Boys
– “Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again” – Bob Dylan
– “Do It Again” – Steely Dan
– “I Can’t Go for That” – Darryl Hall & John Oates
– “Smooth Operator” – Señor Coconut
– “Tudo Bem Malandro” – Curumin
– “É Necessário” – Tim Maia
– “Fluorescent Adolescent” – Arctic Monkeys
– “It’s Getting Boring by the Sea (Blamma Red Shoes Mix)” – Bloody Red Shoes
– “Diskobox (feat. Jon Spencer)” – Beck
– “Office Boy (Shir Khan Mix)” – Bonde do Rolê
– “D.A.N.C.E. (Extended)” – Justice
– “Don’t Stop the Music” – Rihanna
– “Tony The Beat (Rex the Dog Mix)” – The Sounds
– “Funk-o-Fizz Tribute (Parte 2B)” – Bionic & Split
– “Strings of Death” – Krazy Baldhead
– “We Are the Night” – Chemical Brothers
– “Time to Get Away” – LCD Soundsystem
– “Dude You Feel Electrical” – Shout Out Out Out Out
Hoje indo pra Minas, primeiro prum bate-papo sobre música digital e web 2.0, ao lado da professora Gisela Castro, do Rodrigo James (do Alto Falante) e do Jefferson Santos, que tá organizando essa brincadeira. O papo faz parte do Festival de Inverno da Savassi e no mesmo evento ainda conta com nomes como o Marcelo Godoy (do Mobilefest), o Claudio Manoel (do Pragatecno), o Ronaldo Lemos (do Creative Commons) e o Daniel Poeira (do Esquadrão Atari). Como depois à noite rola a primeira Gente Bonita Clima de Paquera fora da cidade de São Paulo, aproveitei pra escalar o Luciano (o Kalatalo) pra falar sobre conteúdo gerado pelo público e cultura mashup no papo da tarde. Se você está em BH, essas são as coordenadas:
– Alexandre Matias (trabalho sujo)
– Gisela Castro (ESPM – SP)
– Rodrigo James (portal 180/alto falante)
Evento Gratuito
Data: 14 de Julho
Horário: 19h
Local: Oi Futuro – Multiespaço (Avenida Afonso Pena 4001 )
Telefone: 3229 3131
Site: http://www.oifuturo.org.br
Saiu na Wired, bem foda.
***
Paul D. Miller, also known as DJ Spooky, That Subliminal Kid, has been producing beat-heavy electronic music for more than a decade. From his early solo trip-hop efforts to his more recent collaborations with jazz giants, Spooky has always approached music from multiple angles at once. He has the chops of a musician, the genre-blending ear of a disc jockey and the conceptual vision of a performance artist.
It was therefore no surprise when Trojan Records, a reggae label entering its 40th year, asked DJ Spooky to put together a mix showcasing tracks from its massive archives. When assembling >In Fine Style: DJ Spooky Presents 50,000 Volts of Trojan Records, one of several mixes commissioned to mark the Trojan birthday, Miller found countless parallels between the Jamaican reggae scene of the 1960s and ’70s and the digital mashup ecosystem of today. (See Upgrading Jamaica’s Cultural Shareware: Trojan Records at 40.)
In his liner notes, DJ Spooky writes, “you can think of the whole culture as a shareware update, a software source for the rest of the world to upload.”
Wired News asked DJ Spooky to elaborate.
Wired News: Jamaican culture as “shareware update”? Brilliant. Please tell us more.
DJ Spooky: The whole idea of people like King Tubby or Prince Jammy (reggae producers who pioneered the “dub” remix) was to use technology to show their community how to make music for the world. Jamaica is the loudest island in the world! Dub used tech of the day — analog tape loops, old-school mixing boards, you name it — to create a radical departure from music made in the main areas of 1960s pop music.
Forget Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Band or Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland as studio masterpieces, I’m talking about rare dub tracks that cut across the whole idea of what a song was meant to be. It changed the way people listen to music and the way that music was produced. Trojan was at the heart of all these changes, and I wanted to go through their archive to show the hidden connections between dub, techno, hip-hop, drum and bass, dubstep and more. I guess you could say I wanted to show how to connect the dots.WN: Many of the songs on your reissue, and I imagine the others in the series, are covers of American standards (“Summertime”) or pop classics (“Come Together”). Was reggae way ahead of today’s culture mash?
DJ Spooky: Reggae is all about the mashup! The Caribbean is a place where so many cultures were in collision: Spanish, Portuguese, Indian, British, Chinese. People tend to forget that one of Bob Marley’s producers (Leslie Kong) was Chinese-Jamaican, or that Lee Gopthal who was one of the co-owners of Trojan Records was Indian. Even the term “Ganjah” is pronounced Hindi style; it’s the Ganges river! And don’t even get me started about dreadlocks. Any holy man on the Ganges could tell you that they’re Indian too. ?
Everyone borrows from everyone. That’s what digital culture is all about. Information, the cliché goes, wants to be free. I guess Jamaican culture got there a little before everyone else.
One of the funniest things I noticed when I was going through Trojan’s archives is how many cover versions of American pop culture were in play. Jamaica was tuned into all the pop music coming in over the coast from Florida, and the songs people heard really left an impression. I mean, c’mon, a whole box set of Jamaican covers of The Beatles? Every possible James Brown song you can imagine has a Jamaican cover version; ditto for Curtis Mayfield. Trojan put out a lot of that kind of thing, which is very, very cool.WN: How has the technology used by the music business changed since these songs were made?
DJ Spooky: When you think about it, so much music is mediated by software these days, and that’s a mixed bag, at best. One of the things that made early dub so unique is that even though everyone had access to the same rhythms, they really made different “versions” of the songs by using special effects as a new kind of instrument. .
The problem with today’s music is that so many people are using the same software. I can hear it when someone uses the ProTools edit, or when someone like Paris Hilton has so many pitch corrections on her last album, she might as well as have had the computer sing everything and just stand back, kind of like Warhol or something.
The U.S. government has the Library of Congress, Jamaica has dub. That’s one of the best things the 21st century can offer: Wikipedia, Youtube, MySpace, Facebook: All these say “Do it your own way, but there’s a formula.” King Tubby and Scientist, and all these producers, singers and MCs were saying the same thing.
It’s all about pattern recognition. Call it Wikinomics: Mass collaboration changes everything, and that’s a dub plate special y’all!
Carlão (também conhecido como guitarrista dos Netunos, mas atualmente o capo do Lost in Lost) tirou da cartola uma teoria bem foda sobre as aventuras dos passageiros do vôo 815: eles não estão na superfície do planeta! Comece clicando aqui, depois leia esse post pra finalmente chegar no apanhadão sobre essa teoria aqui. Não vi essas referências em canto nenhum e se pans o Carlão matou a charada. Se não, viajou bonito e exatamente como quer o povo que faz a série. Afinal, “o que importa é a viagem, não o destino”.
Aumenta o som e bom dia…
“It’s Getting Boring By The Sea” – Blood Red Shoes
“Club Action” – Yo Majesty
“DVNO” – Justice
“Fancy Footwork” – Chromeo
“Pogo” – Digitalism

Contrariando todas as expectativas vamos de festa-relâmpago pra aproveitar esse calor do meio do inverno e comemorar o aniversário da Luciana e do Lucas. Começa cedo, mas vai saber que horas que acaba… E no som, só a nossa finesse clássica. Quinze contos pra entrar, mas destes quinze, dez são de consumação. Vê se aparece…
Gente Bonita @ Bar Treze
Terça-feira, dia 10 de julho de 2007
Discotecagem: Luciano Kalatalo, Alexandre Matias
Local: Bar Treze – Rua Alagoas, 852 Higienopólis (em frente à Faap)
Telefone: 11 3666-0723
Horário: A partir das 23h
Preço(s): R$ 15,00 (Sendo que R$ 10 de consumação)
Capacidade: 150 pessoas
Pagamento: dinheiro, cartões de crédito (Mastercard e Diners) e débito (todos).