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1




Æppreciation VII
by Leaether Strip

https://leaetherstrip.bandcamp.com/album/ppreciation-vii




• The seventh and hardest hitting volume in the much heralded covers project from industrial music pioneer, Leæther Strip!

• This edition brings out more of LS mastermind Claus Larsen's new wave influences with covers of B-Movie, Eurythmics, and M PLUS David Bowie, PJ Harvey and a cover of Tennessee Ernie Ford's "16 Tons" that you have to hear to believe!

releases May 31, 2024


Aeppreciation VI
by Leaether Strip





released November 24, 2023


ÆPPRECIATION V
by Leaether Strip





Æppreciation IV
by Leaether Strip





ÆPPRECIATION III - DEUTSCHE W​Æ​LLE
by Leaether Strip





ÆPPRECIATION II
by Leaether Strip





Æppreciation
by Leaether Strip


2
What Trump promised oil CEOs as he asked them to steer $1 billion to his campaign

Donald Trump has pledged to scrap President Biden’s policies on electric vehicles and wind energy, as well as other initiatives opposed by the fossil fuel industry.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/05/09/trump-oil-industry-campaign-money/





As Donald Trump sat with some of the country’s top oil executives at his Mar-a-Lago Club last month, one executive complained about how they continued to face burdensome environmental regulations despite spending $400 million to lobby the Biden administration in the last year.

Trump’s response stunned several of the executives in the room overlooking the ocean: You all are wealthy enough, he said, that you should raise $1 billion to return me to the White House. At the dinner, he vowed to immediately reverse dozens of President Biden’s environmental rules and policies and stop new ones from being enacted, according to people with knowledge of the meeting, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe a private conversation.

Giving $1 billion would be a “deal,” Trump said, because of the taxation and regulation they would avoid thanks to him, according to the people.

Trump’s remarkably blunt and transactional pitch reveals how the former president is targeting the oil industry to finance his reelection bid. At the same time, he has turned to the industry to help shape his environmental agenda for a second term, including rollbacks of some of Biden’s signature achievements on clean energy and electric vehicles.

The contrast between the two candidates on climate policy could not be more stark. Biden has called global warming an “existential threat,” and over the last three years, his administration has finalized more than 100 new environmental regulations aimed at cutting air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, restricting toxic chemicals, and conserving public lands and waters. In comparison, Trump has called climate change a “hoax,” and his administration weakened or wiped out more than 125 environmental rules and policies over four years.

In recent months, the Biden administration has raced to overturn Trump’s environmental actions and issue new ones before the November election. So far, Biden officials have overturned 27 Trump actions affecting the fossil fuel industry and completed at least 24 new actions affecting the sector, according to a Washington Post analysis. The Interior Department, for instance, recently blocked future oil drilling across 13 million acres of the Alaskan Arctic.

Despite the oil industry’s complaints about Biden’s policies, the United States is now producing more oil than any country ever has, pumping nearly 13 million barrels per day on average last year. ExxonMobil and Chevron, the largest U.S. energy companies, reported their biggest annual profits in a decade last year.

Yet oil giants will see an even greater windfall — helped by new offshore drilling, speedier permits and other relaxed regulations — in a second Trump administration, the former president told the executives over the dinner of chopped steak at Mar-a-Lago.

Trump vowed at the dinner to immediately end the Biden administration’s freeze on permits for new liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports — a top priority for the executives, according to three people present. “You’ll get it on the first day,” Trump said, according to the recollection of an attendee.

The roughly two dozen executives invited included Mike Sabel, the CEO and founder of Venture Global, and Jack Fusco, the CEO of Cheniere Energy, whose proposed projects would directly benefit from lifting the pause on new LNG exports. Other attendees came from companies including Chevron, Continental Resources, Exxon and Occidental Petroleum, according to an attendance list obtained by The Post.

Trump told the executives that he would start auctioning off more leases for oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, a priority that several of the executives raised. He railed against wind power, as The Post previously reported. And he said he would reverse the restrictions on drilling in the Alaskan Arctic.

“You’ve been waiting on a permit for five years; you’ll get it on Day 1,” Trump told the executives, according to the recollection of the attendee.

At the dinner, Trump also promised that he would scrap Biden’s “mandate” on electric vehicles — mischaracterizing ambitious rules that the Environmental Protection Agency recently finalized, according to people who attended. The rules require automakers to reduce emissions from car tailpipes, but they don’t mandate a particular technology such as EVs. Trump called the rules “ridiculous” in the meeting with donors.

The fossil fuel industry has aggressively lobbied against the EPA’s tailpipe rules, which could eat into demand for its petroleum products. The American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers, an industry trade group, has launched a seven-figure campaign against what it calls a de facto “gas car ban.” The campaign includes ads in battleground states warning that the rule will restrict consumer choice.

“Clearly, if you are producing gasoline and diesel, you want to make sure that there’s enough market there,” said Stephen Brown, an energy consultant and a former lobbyist for Tesoro, an oil refining company. “I don’t know that the oil industry would walk in united with a set of asks for the Trump administration, but I think it’s important for this issue to get raised.”

3
Interlinked
by ghstprxy





released May 10, 2024
4
Hawaii’s Mauna Loa Observatory just captured ominous signals about the planet’s health

Carbon dioxide is accumulating in the atmosphere faster than ever.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2024/05/10/carbon-dioxide-record-mauna-loa/





Hawaii’s Mauna Loa’s Observatory just captured an ominous sign about the pace of global warming.

Atmospheric levels of planet-warming carbon dioxide aren’t just on their way to yet another record high this year — they’re rising faster than ever, according to the latest in a 66-year-long series of observations.

Carbon dioxide levels were 4.7 parts per million higher in March than they were a year earlier, the largest annual leap ever measured at the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration laboratory atop a volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island. And from January through April, CO2 concentrations increased faster than they have in the first four months of any other year. Data from Mauna Loa is used to create the Keeling Curve, a chart that daily plots global atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration, tracked by Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California at San Diego.

For decades, CO2 concentrations at Mauna Loa in the month of May have broken previous records. But the recent acceleration in atmospheric CO2, surpassing a record-setting increase observed in 2016, is perhaps a more ominous signal of failing efforts to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions and the damage they cause to Earth’s climate.

“Not only is CO2 still rising in the atmosphere — it’s increasing faster and faster,” said Arlyn Andrews, a climate scientist at NOAA’s Global Monitoring Laboratory in Boulder, Colo.

A historically strong El Niño climate pattern that developed last year is a big reason for the spike. But the weather pattern only punctuated an existing trend in which global carbon emissions are rising even as U.S. emissions have declined and the growth in global emissions has slowed.

The spike is “not surprising,” said Ralph Keeling, director of the CO2 Program at Scripps Institution, “because we’re also burning more fossil fuel than ever.”

Why carbon dioxide levels keep rising

Carbon dioxide levels naturally ebb and flow throughout each year. At Mauna Loa, they peak in April and May and then decline until August and September. This follows the growth cycle of northern hemisphere plants: growing — and sequestering away carbon — during the summer months and releasing it during fall and winter as they die and decompose.

Once CO2 makes it into the atmosphere, it stays there for hundreds of years, acting as a blanket trapping heat. That blanket has been steadily thickening ever since humans turned materials that were once dense stores of carbon — oil and coal, primarily — into fuel to burn.

That means the Keeling Curve reaches new heights each May, forming a new peak in a sawtooth-like pattern.

The chart originated when Charles David Keeling, Ralph Keeling’s father, started recording atmospheric concentrations of CO2 atop the Mauna Loa volcano in the late 1950s. It was the first effort to measure the planet-warming gas on a continuing basis and helped alert scientists to the reality of the intensified greenhouse effect, global warming and its impact on the planet.

Each annual maximum has raised new alarm about the curve’s unceasing upward trend — nearing 427 parts per million in the most recent readings, which is more than 50 percent above preindustrial levels and the highest in at least 4.3 million years, according to NOAA. Atmospheric CO2 levels first surpassed 400 parts per million in 2014. Scientists said in 2016 that levels were unlikely to drop below that threshold again during the lifetime of even the youngest generations.

Since that year, carbon dioxide emissions tied to fossil fuel consumption have increased 5 percent globally, according to Scripps.

The increase in carbon dioxide from year to year is not precisely consistent. One factor that tends to cause levels to rise especially quickly: the El Niño climate pattern.

El Niño is linked to warmer-than-average surface waters along the equator in the eastern and central Pacific. That warmth affects weather patterns around the world, triggering extreme heat, floods and droughts.

The droughts in particular contribute to higher-than-normal spikes in atmospheric carbon dioxide, Keeling said.

Tropical forests serve as reliable stores of carbon because they don’t go through the same seasonal decay as plant life at higher latitudes. But El Niño-linked droughts in tropical areas including Indonesia and northern South America mean less carbon storage within plants, Keeling said. Land-based ecosystems around the world tend to give off more carbon dioxide during El Niño because of the changes in precipitation and temperature the weather pattern brings, Andrews added.

That can allow CO2 concentrations to rise especially quickly on the tail end of El Niño events — such as the current one, which NOAA scientists said Thursday is likely to end this month.

The increase observed at Mauna Loa over the past year is some five times larger than the average annual increases seen in the 1960s, and about twice as large as in the 2010s, according to NOAA data.

A record surge in early 2016 was also at the end of a historically strong El Niño.

It will take some four decades to stop the annual growth in CO2 concentrations, even if all emissions began declining now, Andrews said. Because Earth’s carbon cycle is so far out of its natural equilibrium, plants, soils and oceans would give off stores of extra CO2 in response to any reduction in humans’ emissions, she said.

And for CO2 concentrations to fall back below 400 parts per million, it would take more than two centuries even if emissions dropped close to zero by the end of this century, she added.

In the natural carbon cycle, the element passes through air, soil and water, and plants and animals, eventually making its way into deep ocean sediments and fossils deep underground. Carbon’s movement throughout Earth systems helps regulate our planet’s temperatures — unlike on Venus, for instance, where CO2 accounts for most of the atmosphere, making that planet’s surface hellishly hot.

But human emissions of CO2 throw that system out of balance. It’s like adding more and more trash to a dump, Andrews said. Even if each load of trash gets smaller, “it’s still piling up.”
5
General Discussion / Re: EUROVISION Song Contest Highlights
« Last post by droidrage on May 10, 2024, 05:05:31 PM »
Sweden celebrates ABBA at this year’s Eurovision Song Contest

It has been 50 years since the iconic quartet’s pop confection ‘Waterloo’ won the competition and propelled them to international fame.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/music/2024/05/10/abba-anniversary-eurovision-waterloo/




Swedish pop group ABBA, from left, Benny Andersson, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Agnetha Faltskog and Bjorn Ulvaeus after winning the Swedish branch of the Eurovision Song Contest in 1974.


MALMÖ, Sweden — The Eurovision stars aligned last year as Sweden claimed its seventh victory — a feat shared only with Ireland — bringing the song contest back to ABBA’s home country this year, just in time to celebrate the 50th anniversary of their 1974 win.

In tribute to the band — Benny Andersson, Björn Ulvaeus, Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid “Frida” Lyngstad — Malmö is playing homage as the southern Swedish city hosts the 68th annual competition, which opened Tuesday and concludes with Saturday’s grand finale, for the third time. The celebrations coincide with a particularly fraught Eurovision after weeks of calls from artists and activists to ban Israel from participating over the war in Gaza.

Decked with tinsel and paper pompoms, Malmö’s Folkets Park has been transformed into Eurovision Village. On the “Dancing Queen Stage,” a roller disco pumped out Eurovision classics while a live band across the park got the crowd dancing to covers of ABBA hits. Even after 5o years of ABBA-mania, it seems fans will never tire of Sweden’s biggest musical export.

“I heard ABBA for the first time when I was four,” said Ellen Williamsson, 12, on the lawn of Eurovision Village. “I listen to them with my friends. It just makes me want to dance.”

For her dad, Dan Davidsson, 47, ABBA have “just always been there.”

“I think the ‘Mamma Mia!’ musical helped bring the music to the next generation, too,” he said.

Author and ABBA historian Carl Magnus Palm said Swedes are a lot prouder of ABBA than they used to be.

“In general, they’re kind of national heroes, but also in a sense, taken for granted — like a comfortable old armchair in the corner of your living room. It’s just there. It’s nice that it’s there.”

“I always come back to the sheer quality of the songs,” said Palm. “It’s the same with the Beatles or any legacy acts. The music was well written and expertly recorded. So that’s why it still sounds fresh today.”

“They also provide something that’s been missing from most popular music today: Strong melodies. They are like a human need.”

A year before the band’s breakthrough, the foursome, who performed at the time under their first names, tried their luck by entering Sweden’s Eurovision pre-election competition, Melodifestivalen. They finished third, with their 1973 hit “Ring Ring.” Still, in Sweden, both the song and album of the same name were the biggest hits of that year.

A year later, renamed ABBA — an acronym of their first names — the group returned to Melodifestivalen with “Waterloo” and never looked back. The song was a risky choice at a time when Eurovision was still largely dominated by tuxedos and ballgowns.

“This is Sven-Olof Walldoff who’s really entered into the spirit of it all,” said BBC commentator David Vine as the Swedish conductor appeared before the orchestra — standard at Eurovision until 1999 — dressed in full Napoleon garb.

“Watch this one,” Vine said.

Dressed in gem-studded, glam rock-inspired outfits, Fältskog and Lyngstad bounded down the sloping stage in platform boots and burst into song. Over the next three minutes, led by Andersson’s iconic piano opener, the foursome charged through the story of “surrendering” to a lover — an analogy to Napoleon’s surrender at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. The performance, complete with the simple choreography that would become synonymous with their performances and music videos, blew voters away.

“How about that for an onstage performance?” said Vine as ABBA took a bow.

“The song, as a pop song, was very much right for the time,” said Palm, citing the glam rock influence of the early ’70s.

“Waterloo” reached No. 1 on the charts all over Europe — even breaking into the Top 10 on the U.S. Billboard chart. Since then the band has sold nearly 400 million albums worldwide and scored 17 No. 1 hits.

The repeated revival of ABBA’s music over the past five decades — prompted by the release of “ABBA Gold” in 1992 — has contributed hugely to the longevity of the band’s popularity, said Palm.

The wildly popular 1999 jukebox musical “Mamma Mia!” and its two-and-counting film counterparts gave ABBA fandom yet another boost. Over the years, they have achieved pop cultural ubiquity. They turn up, for example, on Madonna’s 2005 hit “Hung Up,” which sampled the 1979 chart-topper Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight). In an unlikely trend last summer, TikTokers jumped onto the ABBA train after a sped-up version of “Angel Eyes,” also from 1979, became a trending audio.

In downtown Malmö, the chance to see the band’s iconic Eurovision outfits and other memorabilia at a pop-up ABBA World had fans, young and old, queuing down the street as “Voulez-Vous” blasted through the open doors.

Waiting in line, Otto Remitz, 16, who usually listens to Swedish DJ Avicii, said ABBA’s music is “just different” from contemporary offerings. “They have great melodies,” he said.

Outside the mini exhibition, friends Therese Dahlström, 35, and Sanja Sannstrand, 53, posed for a selfie in their newly purchased gray ABBA sweaters.

“I always heard ABBA when I was a little girl. It was always on when my mom was cleaning and at family parties,” recalled Dahlström. “It’s the beat that pulls people in.”

“Sometimes it’s happy, sometimes it’s sad. But in the end, it’s just good music,” said Sannstrand.

Over the decades, ABBA have also carved out a steadfast base among LGBTQ+ fans. “We found out quite early that ‘Dancing Queen’ had become an anthem, and we were very proud that we’ve been chosen by the community,” ABBA’s Ulvaeus told Gay Times in 2019.

“As a Swede, long before most others, we had a much more open society and open attitudes. This is, in a way, a liberating anthem and it makes me proud. It’s a wonderful thing, it really is.”

The fact that ABBA never had a reunion before its 2021 album “Voyage” also played a role in maintaining interest in the band, said historian Palm. “That created a kind of mystery around them.” The band’s ninth studio album was the group’s first new material in four decades. Since 2022, a virtual concert of the same name featuring virtual avatars — or “ABBAtars” — has also been transporting fans back in time at a purpose-built arena in London.

The exact date of ABBA’s 1974 Eurovision win — April 6 — was celebrated last month with flash mobs and singalongs. Swedish Television hosted a tribute concert to the band attended by Sweden’s King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia, while self-playing pianos in several European cities simultaneously played a special arrangement of “Waterloo” created by Andersson himself.

To mark the occasion, the band also released a rare statement to thank fans for their “steadfast loyalty and support.”

“It’s slightly dizzying and deeply humbling to think that millions of you who saw us for the first time in the Eurovision final 1974 have passed our music on not only to one generation, but to several,” the band said.

“I think they’re here to stay,” said Palm. “There have been so many opportunities for their music to disappear and it hasn’t. It’s just grown bigger and bigger and bigger. And I can’t see it stopping anytime soon.”


The return of ABBA

6
Promote Your Project, Label, etc. / Re: Upcoming EVENTS thread
« Last post by droidrage on May 10, 2024, 04:50:31 PM »



Tech Noir! July 20th, Glitchmode Media is throwing the ultimate Cyberpunk Festival. Derision Cult, Cyanotic, Accucrack, Nevada Hardware, Subspace, Roybot, Conn.RAR, Ecto and The Boundless are all playing, there'll be an immersive video/film experience throughout the event and the one and only Joe Bob Briggs - Legend of the Drive In and host of Shudder TV's At the Drive In will be hosting the festivities! Not only that, but we've brought in Food for Thought Catering to create Glitchmode themed appetizers and finger food which will be served throughout the night. Everyone will leave with exclusive goodie bags and all of this (and this is probably my favorite part) is taking place in the historic Mae District! This facility once served as Al Capone's private club and has now been fully renovated into a state of the art prime event location.

You can pick up tickets in 3 versions. There'll be no day-off purchases (we actually need the final headcount 10 days in advance to make sure the chefs and event facility know what to do). Super VIP -which is extremely limited - includes early hang time with all of us and Joe Bob! We're expecting the event to sell out once the film fans get word. Hope to see you there!

Tickets:
www.eventbrite.com/e/glitch-mode-presents-technoir-2024-tickets-895033859367
7



Tech Noir! July 20th, Glitchmode Media is throwing the ultimate Cyberpunk Festival. Derision Cult, Cyanotic, Accucrack, Nevada Hardware, Subspace, Roybot, Conn.RAR, Ecto and The Boundless are all playing, there'll be an immersive video/film experience throughout the event and the one and only Joe Bob Briggs - Legend of the Drive In and host of Shudder TV's At the Drive In will be hosting the festivities! Not only that, but we've brought in Food for Thought Catering to create Glitchmode themed appetizers and finger food which will be served throughout the night. Everyone will leave with exclusive goodie bags and all of this (and this is probably my favorite part) is taking place in the historic Mae District! This facility once served as Al Capone's private club and has now been fully renovated into a state of the art prime event location.

You can pick up tickets in 3 versions. There'll be no day-off purchases (we actually need the final headcount 10 days in advance to make sure the chefs and event facility know what to do). Super VIP -which is extremely limited - includes early hang time with all of us and Joe Bob! We're expecting the event to sell out once the film fans get word. Hope to see you there!

Tickets:
www.eventbrite.com/e/glitch-mode-presents-technoir-2024-tickets-895033859367
8
Falling Back to You (Myon Remixes)
by Delerium feat. Mimi Page





released May 10, 2024



Remember Love (Zanias Justified Remix)
by Delerium





released May 10, 2024


Falling Back to You (Daniel Wanrooy Remixes)
by Delerium Featuring Mimi Page





released December 1, 2023
9
Whorticulture - “Faust” (Official Video)





Faust
by Whorticulture





No one sees you
No one knows you
No one else could understand

I can give you
What you yearn for
All I ask is take my hand

And I’ll make you want it
I’ll make you need it
I’ll make you love it

I will love you
I will save you
Just pledge your heart, give your soul
And I will take you

I will hold you
I will transcend you
And you can trust everything that I tell you

I assure you
I will show you
I will make you understand

If you promise
I will offer
All I am, just take my hand

And I’ll make you want it
I’ll make you need it
I’ll make you love it

I will love you
I will save you
Just pledge your heart, give your soul
And I will take you

I will hold you
I will transcend you
And you can trust everything that I tell you

Nothing to fear
Nothing to hide
Nothing is left for me to find

I will love you
I will save you
Just pledge your heart, give your soul
And I will take you

I will hold you
I will transcend you
And you can trust everything that I tell you

You can trust me, trust me

released May 10, 2024
10




Capacitor
by Bad Guys Get Dead





With 10 tracks pulsating with dark synthwave vibes and metal undertones, "Capacitor" is a sonic spectacle that transports you from the adrenaline-fueled confrontation with a rogue AI to the darkest depths of space. Immerse yourself in the expansive soundscapes, fueled by colossal synthesizers and heavy beats, delivering a relentless energy that keeps you on the edge of your seat.

Whether you're seeking rowdy grooves or late-night driving anthems, "Capacitor" promises an exhilarating journey through the realms of cyberpunk and beyond. Strap in and prepare for a ride that takes you to the deep inner workings of technology and back.

releases May 24, 2024



New Album: Capacitor - Listening Party!
https://badguysgetdead.bandcamp.com/merch/new-album-capacitor-listening-party
Listening Party
May 24, 2024 at 10:00 AM MST
It's my birthday! Come join me in the chat for a listening party for my noisy new album CAPACITOR! --

Introducing "Capacitor," the electrifying new album from Bad Guys Get Dead that plunges you into a thrilling Darksynth odyssey.

With 10 tracks pulsating with dark synthwave vibes and metal undertones, "Capacitor" is a sonic spectacle that transports you from the adrenaline-fueled confrontation with a rogue AI to the darkest depths of space. Immerse yourself in the expansive soundscapes, fueled by colossal synthesizers and heavy beats, delivering a relentless energy that keeps you on the edge of your seat.

Whether you're seeking rowdy grooves or late-night driving anthems, "Capacitor" promises an exhilarating journey through the realms of cyberpunk and beyond. Strap in and prepare for a ride that takes you to the deep inner workings of technology and back.
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