I have an app (spleeter) I use to generate stems and thought I'd share some of the better sounding ones. It's never going to be perfect but I think they're pretty neat and hope some of you do as well.
I spent quite a bit of time trying to isolate some of the synths from the vocals as they were all kind of in the same frequency but I think I got most of it.
I have an app (spleeter) I use to generate stems and thought I'd share some of the better sounding ones. It's never going to be perfect but I think they're pretty neat and hope some of you do as well.
I spent quite a bit of time trying to isolate some of the synths from the vocals as they were all kind of in the same frequency but I think I got most of it.
I have an app (spleeter) I use to generate stems and thought I'd share some of the better sounding ones. It's never going to be perfect but I think they're pretty neat and hope some of you do as well.
I have an app (spleeter) I use to generate stems and thought I'd share some of the better sounding ones. It's never going to be perfect but I think they're pretty neat and hope some of you do as well.
I have an app (spleeter) I use to generate stems and thought I'd share some of the better sounding ones. It's never going to be perfect but I think they're pretty neat and hope some of you do as well.
A website called radiooooo.com that plays random music. You select a country, select a time period, and pick the mood you want (fast, slow, weird, or any combination of them) and it plays music. It's a great way to find new music.
Adam Curtis is an interesting guy, heard an interview with him on the Adam Buxton podcast just a few weeks ago (I believe it's relatively old at this stage, it was post-hypernormalisation, but pre-Trump election, I believe). I only tell you this part because you might like a little more clarity on the man himself.
I feel that Adam Curtis tugs at strings without ever building any solid arguments, which is useful if you're particularly inductive, but can feel a bit bleak if you're not feeling particularly inductive when you watch it.
Speaking of things that might provide a clearer picture of the world, rather than a muddy one, you might want to check out "Confessions of an Economic Hitman" by John Perkins (the book, not the movie) and well, really anything by Naomi Klein (although her books tend to be extremely long). "The Shock Doctrine" is particularly depressing.