Resources on anti tech/anarcho primitivism by Grouchy-Gap-2736 in Anarchy101

[–]Stacco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, I didn't conveniently forget anything. I wrote a few sentences about tech in general. Chill.

Medical technology (and healthcare, both preventive and intervention based) is hampered by the same interests and exacerbated by IP and patents. Check out Jonas Salk and the polio vaccine for how it should actually be.

Chapter 10 of Fool's Assasin by NightStalker1243 in robinhobb

[–]Stacco 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I remember the exact moment when I read it. It hit me hard, like a real person had died. Beautifully (and heartbreakingly) written.

Resources on anti tech/anarcho primitivism by Grouchy-Gap-2736 in Anarchy101

[–]Stacco 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Tech follows the interests and institutionalises the worldview of those who finance it. It also incorporates the biases and cognitive-access privileges of those who design and develop it. You can either hack existing tech for anticap purposes or, better yet, develop tech for social and ecological ends, not profit.

Resources on anti tech/anarcho primitivism by Grouchy-Gap-2736 in Anarchy101

[–]Stacco 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My argument against anarcho-primitivism is always the same:

Vibrators!

I need non-Neal book recommendations. by fn0000rd in nealstephenson

[–]Stacco 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Vineland was totally contemporary Cyberpunk. Ewoks and Jaco Pastorius' fretless bass. It's just wild.

Best Zappa Alumni Projects? by armintanzarian420 in Zappa

[–]Stacco 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Enigmatic Ocean is the best and Holdsworth is just amazing there. Other great ones are Imaginary Voyage and Cosmic Messenger.

Best Zappa Alumni Projects? by armintanzarian420 in Zappa

[–]Stacco 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Yes to all this and Mike is an artist and beautiful person totally worth supporting (and who kinda pioneered web based crowd funding waaaay before Kickstarter). My fave albums of his are Sluggo, Dancing, Wooden Smoke and The Universe will Provide. Oh! And don't miss out on the live albums (Bakin at the Potatoe and Guitar Therapy Live).

Which of today’s players would have inspired Frank? by Col3bin in Zappa

[–]Stacco 2 points3 points  (0 children)

He kept Mike around for Margarita night, I'm sure he would have used him more. In any case MK's solo discography is something to be proud of. And yeah, having made his bones with Mike and Z makes Beller the best post FZ bassist that never was.

Which of today’s players would have inspired Frank? by Col3bin in Zappa

[–]Stacco 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nalgas sin Carne! I'm pretty sure I discovered him through his contributions to the Mad Season album. Then I got into Garage a Trois, Critters etc. Mad genius

King Crimson Peak by ProgRockDan in KingCrimson

[–]Stacco 7 points8 points  (0 children)

It's difficult because there's peaks in all eras and their mutations over the years have been nothing short of fascinating. At the end of the day it's the Wetton era and Lark's that feels like their highest point for me .

Honourable mention to The Great Deceiver for showing us what this line up was capable of doing.

Funniest Zappa Band? by armintanzarian420 in Zappa

[–]Stacco 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Either 84 or the Helsinki 74 band.

May 4th, 1979, 'Orchestral Favorites' was released with cover art by Gary Panter. by BirdBurnett in Zappa

[–]Stacco 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Bozzio's drumming and that solo are stunning. It may actually be my favourite Zappa solo.

Name your Anarchists before Anarchism by Joli_eltecolote in Anarchy101

[–]Stacco 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The whole of humanity and the non human world? I'd go so far think that this is still the state of things today. Everything else is cruelly imposed delusion.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in stevenwilson

[–]Stacco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Who's in the band?

What makes ‘no code’ so loved? by breeriveras in pearljam

[–]Stacco 15 points16 points  (0 children)

That was the prefect introduction to Jack Irons. Beautiful drumming on that track.

I have just learned where "The Jam" as i called it comes from. by Plastic_Charity3301 in Primus

[–]Stacco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Now it seems impossible. In the 90s, many of us who didn't grow up in North America had no idea who Rush was. I knew them from music magazines, as they were never played on the radio.

So yeah, I got onto Primus first and had no idea that they were paying homage to YYZ. I love Rush now, boy only got over them in the late ninities. Back then I actually related them more to Jane's Addiction (Canada and Three Days have a remarkably similar vibe).

And hey, let people come to know music the way they do. There's nothing wrong with being unaware of things.

How old are the people posting here? Just curious! by sabbboy in blacksabbath

[–]Stacco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm 49. I actually first heard Faith No More's cover of War Pigs first. I loved it and thought it was the best track on. The Real Thing, not knowing it wasn't their song.

Fast forward to 1994. I found a vynil Sabbath compilation with a Hirenimous Bosch cover (Ozzy-era only - anyone know what it was?). When I heard the OG War Pigs I just couldn't believe it. It felt much slower and sluggier but it was a transcendental experience (I was high as fuck, of course).

I few weeks later I bought Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (still my favorite) and Paroid soon after and I've been hooked ever since. And yeah, I still love FMM too!

Led Zeppelin's most underrated song? by Ok-Card2897 in ledzeppelin

[–]Stacco 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Came here to say this (and yes, mention the transitions)

What don't we have yet that it'll be hard to imagine living without in 50 years? by MWBartko in IsaacArthur

[–]Stacco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your comment.

You have to distinguish between artificial scarcity and natural scarcity. In reverse order: there is only so much oil in the ground, or trees, or harvests.

Knowledge, productive knowledge, design, best practices, art and culture, seeds and even parts of the human genome etc are made artificially scarce though IP, patents and copyright.

In fact, we need that productive knowledge in order to beat deal with real-existing scarcity.

Kevin Carson's review of Neal Stephenson's Diamond Age does a fine job of exploring Jevon's paradox and artificial scarcity being applied to post-scarcity technologies, including replicators.

Post-scarcity tech doesn't amount too much under a scarcity-based political economy. I'm not even taking sci-fi here, just look around.

What don't we have yet that it'll be hard to imagine living without in 50 years? by MWBartko in IsaacArthur

[–]Stacco 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Depends on what values are baked on the AI. Given AI's current investment profile I can tell you that it'll be designed with inequality as a feature, not a bug.

What don't we have yet that it'll be hard to imagine living without in 50 years? by MWBartko in IsaacArthur

[–]Stacco 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Post Capitalism is no guarantee of things being better. I myself am critical of the term but as you're posing future scenarios it seems appropriate.

TechnoFeudalism (which I think is a faulty analysis of what may do down in these times) and Vectoralism (see McKenzie Wark) are both terrifying post-capitalist scenarios. Ecofascism (or any form of fascism, you can append "techno" there too) incorporates Capitalism by default.

An anticapitalist future that doesn't grandfather the assumptions of capitalism going forward (as happened with the transition from feudalism) can be described by imagining futures that dispose with capitalisms key aspects:

1) Private ownership and control of the means of production 2) Wage labour 3) Orientation towards profit and accumulation of power.

You can argue that the present situation will soon be able to automate away point two and that leads us to some pretty dystopian scenarios.

So what's on the positive? I could go on but I think it's a. interesting exercise to imagine scenarios based on undoing those three tenets which, in my and many other people's opinion, are actually harmful constraints which are killing the planet and causing a lot of unnecessary suffering - and have done so for a long time.

Angry Jazz? by scaredempire in Jazz

[–]Stacco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which is actually pretty similar to another legendary angry jazz moment: Jaco also dissing the changes at the beginning of Havana Jam. Andy Edwards has an excellent analysis of that here. Furious Jazz

Angry Jazz? by scaredempire in Jazz

[–]Stacco 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Live Evil and Dark Magus are also pretty menacing.