other music new york city: a documentary

a young chloe sevigney shopping at the other music store in noho new york

other music a documentary film official trailer 2020

if you can afford it, i do suggest you rent it and support the peeps, i will def do so myself

we used to shop at “other music” on east 4th just above houston near lafayette, across the street from tower records… i bought over a 100 cds and records from “other music” through the years, along with my top favorite “jammyland records nyc” which was then located at 60 east 3rd street in the east village and a few others… funny enough i never thought of “other music” as this super cool place, it was a bit broad – or so i thought, but i loved the people who worked there, and i surely was recommended some of my favorite records at “other music”… like rhythm & sound featuring tikiman and fela kuti & the africa ’70 V.I.P. / authority stealing long play rare release… and many others. i personally have not seen this documentary film but will definitely look it up maybe this very weekend. if you hate the concept of spotify and apple music as much as i do, you may find this interesting

here is a little blurb on the documentary: “other music was an influential and uncompromising new york city record store that was vital to the city’s early 2000s indie music scene. but when the store is forced to close its doors due to rent increases, the homogenization of urban culture, and the shift from CDs to downloadable and streaming music, a cultural landmark is lost. through vibrant storytelling, the documentary captures the record store’s vital role in the musical and cultural life of the city, and highlights the artists whose careers it helped launch including vampire weekend, the rapture, animal collective, interpol, yeah yeah yeahs, william basinski, neutral milk hotel, sharon van etten, yo la tengo and TV on the radio. the film opened theatrically in new york city at IFC center on april 15th 2019 and played in theaters in over twenty cities around the world. the film is digitally available on Vimeo On Demand, Apple TV, Amazon Video, and Fandango at Home. produced and directed by puloma basu and rob hatch-miller. by uh

memories of jimi hendrix: ellen mcilwaine

this is the tune that’s been playing on repeat in my head for the past three weeks: back in the 60s at the night owl café, ellen mcilwaine and jimi hendrix crossed paths on the same stage.

the song reflects mcilwaine’s friendship with—and memories of—the one and only jimmy james. by tnt

Time for a new phone: Nothing Phone 4(a)

nothing phone 1

nothing phone 2

nothing phone 3

nothing phone 4

some other products from nothing (r)

 

nothing is a consumer technology company founded by carl pei that focuses on minimalist, design-driven electronics. its products include the nothing phone series with a transparent design and glyph lights, as well as wireless earbuds like ear (1) and ear (2).

the nothing 4(a) phone just came out and word on the street is that the build quality on it is excellent.

this question still persists… “does it steal my information?” by tnt

A.I. retro revolution: follow me, I am technology… angie bee italo disco track I am your plastic doll

swiss-italian angie bee plastic doll album 1979-80

ah choo.. bless ya! did serge write this song too?

you know where this is probably going…

good moves for an ex model… angie bee (often credited as angie b.) was actually the stage name used by swiss-italian actress and model monica zanchi for her brief career as a disco singer. she is best known for the 1979/1980 italo-disco single “plastic doll”, which became a hit in italy and for some reason… mexico.

angie bee was born monica zanchi, in bern swwitzerland. she moved to bergamo, italy, at age eight. at 15 she left home, and spent three years backpacking across europe and morocco. before releasing plastic doll she was a prominent model in milan and a cultish b-movie actress.

she starred in various exploitation, erotic, and horror films throughout the 1970s, including such oscar winning films as “the nun and the beast” and “emanuelle and the last cannibals” this one was also nominated for the peace prize. strangely enough, monica eventually stepped away from the public eye after 1982, making a final television appearance in 1996. this was puzzling to everyone, as no beautiful woman had ever entered modeling and entertainment, only to run away and disappear form it all. she eventually moved to zurich and has been running an antique shop. monicas name was not on the epstein list. by ac

before iphones there was Airfix: it was how you shut-up little boys for a few hours

1:24 scale british super marine spitfire model kit by airfix

1:72 scale bristol superfreighter model kit by airfix

1:76 scale german reconnaissance set model kit by airfix

the story of airfix: the bankruptcy that destroyed britain’s model empire

the cheaper packaging created for department stores in london, insuring every kid could empty the change in his pocket and leave with a dream.

another british super marine spitfire model kit by airfix but this one is in the original 1:48 scale

you must have come across these in your life or you aint living… “in the heart of wandsworth, london, there once stood the architectural heart of british boyhood imagination—the airfix factory at haldane place, where the iconic plastic model kits with roy cross’s action-packed box art were manufactured, where the smell of polystyrene cement and the pride of building a lancaster bomber from scratch defined generations of british boys.

airfix wasn’t merely a toy company; it was a rite of passage, the maker of meticulously detailed scale models of spitfires, tiger tanks, and hms victory that taught patience, precision, and british military history through careful assembly. these were kits moulded with such detail and quality they became collector’s items, symbols of british engineering education disguised as play, where every rivet and panel line was faithfully reproduced in miniature. but in 1981, catastrophe struck—not because boys stopped building models, but because corporate executives spectacularly mismanaged the finances, driving the beloved company into bankruptcy.

the tragedy deepened as airfix became a zombie brand, passed between foreign owners like a corporate football—the original master moulds were scattered across the globe or literally lost at sea during shipping disasters. today, the kits are manufactured in india, and modern purists complain bitterly about softer plastic, missing details, and simplified tooling that betrays the precision that made airfix legendary. the wandsworth factory site is completely erased from history, replaced by modern development with no trace of the place where british boyhood was moulded in plastic.

airfix still exists as a brand, but it’s a hollow shell—a name that once defined britishness now entirely outsourced, producing kits that old-timers claim lack the soul and detail of the originals. this is the story of how mismanagement bankrupted britain’s model empire, how master moulds were lost at sea, and how a brand that taught british boys to build spitfires now manufactures in india with no connection to the wandsworth factory that started it all.” enjoy by ar