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Q1: Why did you start label?

 

A1: upitup records started out in 2003 as the musical baby of a few guys from rome (italy) and stuttgart (germany) who met each others during a student-exchange. we initially just wanted to make our sounds accessible to the public. the idea was to create an open platform for sharing ideas and staying/getting in contact with people. until now, upitup remains completely uninfected by commercial interests.

 

Q2: Why is the label called Upitup? What's behind the name of the label?

 

A2: the slogan "upitup" can be seen as a battlecry of digital culture . unless you "up something up to the network", it stays where it is, unshared (in your brain, on your pc etc.). to "up it up" equally means to "go for it", to "make it hot".

 

Q3: What tune/genre has label released?

 

A3: upitup has released mostly electronic music. in terms of genres - phew - many... acid rap, future polka, hobby house/jewish disco, bump 'n' bass... just to name a few...

 

Q4: What do you think the main difference between Net Label to Real Label?

 

A4: with a non-commercial netlabel you are not bound to release economically promising stuff. you can virtually put out anything without running the risk of going under. the only thing you have to pay for when running a netlabel is webspace. there are a lot of factors that make you much more flexible than a commercial label.

 

Q5: What do you think of Radiohead's online album, his experiment, and result?

 

A5: concerning the band's popularity, it was clear that the concept would work out. this doesn't reflect the situation of musicians that were not massively promoted by labels before. in these dimensions it doesn't make a lot of difference whether people pay a dollar just for one song or for the whole album, so the conclusions that can be drawn by political or economical respects remain exclusive to those that have already been promoted by traditional methods. as far as i know they are now selling the album as a nicely designed digipack with lots of gadgets included. it would be interesting to investigate the importance of such artifacts to the consumer compared to a purely digital product.

  

Q6: What do you think the music industry become in the future?

 

A6: if the majors want to stick to selling decomposing digital rights managed compact discs at profit margins that lost touch with reality, we kiss their fat asses goodbye. anyway, they won't be able to keep up their strategies since nowadays the real bucks are made with playback technology - and content of course. obviously in this system the musician will take the last place again…

  

Q7: What is the most important thing about Net Label?

 

A7: netlabels helped to put a different view on sharing digital files and music distribution. most netlabels don't provide solutions for the future of the music industry, but all of them are aware that digital sound and the internet are having a huge impact on society, art and economy. netlabels are just anarchically surfing on the wave of this power.

 

Q8: What is the pleasure of the management of Net Label? A8: see above

 

Q9: What's the next step for you and label?

 

A9: make the djs happy and release some funky ass vinyl records.

 

Q10: Please send a message for Japanese Music Fans!

 

A10: こんにちは日本! if you make electronic music, send us your demo - if you like electronic music, visit our page and drop us a message! 会う希望 @ upitup.com

  

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory scientist John Hubbe is interviewed by a local reporter about the Burning Biomass Observation Project (BBOP) campaign. Hubbe manages the G-1 payload and other aircraft payloads used by the ARM Aerial Facility (AAF) for airborne research.

 

From June to October 2013, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) user facility deployed the G-1 research aircraft above wildfires in the U.S. Pacific Northwest region, near Little Rock, Arkansas and in the vicinity of Memphis, Tennessee, as part of the Biomass Burning Observation Project (BBOP). The aircraft flew through smoke plumes from forest fires and agricultural field burns—types of “burning biomasses”—to measure various properties of aerosol particles soon after they form and as they change over time.

 

Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, “Image courtesy of the U.S. Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) user facility.”

 

Image courtesy of Eric Francavilla, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

Pierre Maura et Frédéric Testu de Presse-Océan

being interviewed about our library's twitter use

interview with Emblem3 @ São Paulo, Brazil

Had a job interview today, so this is what I wore.

 

Not very exciting, but then neither was my day!

  

De Italiaanse band Måneskin komt langs bij 3FM voor een exclusief interview met dj's Frank van der Lende en Eva Koreman

2022-11-17: Kelly M. Mbokeli, Regional Human Resources Business Partner, Chief, AfDB; Yuna Choi, External Relations and Communication Officer, AfDB and Philippe Djingri LANKOANDE, Succession and Career Planning Coordinator during Mock Interview.

Bernard Kouchner (Außenminister a. D., Paris), Foto: www.stephan-roehl.de

sHiZ.us

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This is the photos and unedited camera raw footage under 90 seconds from the SHIZ vlog archived on Flickr. Videos over 90 seconds are archived on YouTube. Visit the link below for more information.

vlog 20120724: Gotta Do What I Gotta Do with #capmetrorail (show gdwigdc)

 

The Moving Infrastructure

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Had to go downtown for an interview.

interview with Emblem3 @ São Paulo, Brazil

West Ham's last game at their Boleyn home of 112 years took place on the 10-05-16 against Manchester United. West Ham won 3-2. With West Ham moving to the Olympic Stadium at the start of next season, Green Street and the Boleyn will change forever.

 

This photograph is protected by copyright. Unless you have my express written permission any use is illegal.

CEO of The Business Class.Net

1 - Como foi a sua infância?

James: Tive uma boa infância. Meus pais foram muito bons pra mim. Mas quando tinha 11 anos meus pais foram mortos, então fui de Xangai para Londres onde conheci William e os outros. O Instituto em Londres se tornou meu lar. Lá tive muito apoio e me aproximei de Will.

 

2 - Se você pudesse voltar no tempo e mudar alguma coisa, o que seria?

James: Com a morte de meus pais houveram muitas consequências. Com certeza teria impedido se pudesse.

 

3 - Quanto você pesa?

James: Hummm não devo estar passando dos 70 kg.

 

4 - Alguma vez você já amou e perdeu?

James: Já...

 

5 - O que você faz para ganhar a vida e por quê?

James: Sou um Caçador das Sombras. A Clave paga por meus serviços.

 

6 - Que tipo de música você gosta

James: Clássica. Música faz parte da minha vida.

 

7 - Quantos anos você tem?

James: Tenho 20 anos.

 

8 - Qual é a coisa mais irritante do mundo?

James: William. Sem duvidas nenhuma.

 

9 - Qual é a sua palavra favorita?

James: Parabatai.

 

10 - Você tem algum hobby interessante?

James: Toco violino. A música me acalma, parece preencher minha alma. É uma janela para meus sentimentos.

 

11 - Qual é a coisa mais romântica que alguém já fez por você?

James: Não sei se posse ver tal ato como romântico. Mas a muitos anos atrás eu estava a beira da morte, sabia que minha vida não seria prolongada por muito tempo. William estava a beira do desespero, e não podia comprar mais... “remédio” pra mim, pois todo o stock havia sido comprado por um inimigo que estávamos enfrentando. Na época... em meio ao desespero e amor por uma pessoa, a pedi em casamento, e ela aceitou. Foi um ato muito nobre da parte dela, pois sabia que seu amor me dava forças para continuar em frente.

 

12 - Como você relaxa no final de um longo dia?

James: Adoro ir a cafés. Gosto do aroma que esses lugares possuem.

 

13 - Você tem obsessões?

James: Manter William a salvo de si mesmo.

 

14 - Qual é a sua nacionalidade?

James: Sou chinês.

 

15 - Que idiomas você fala?

James: Mandarim, inglês, português e francês.

 

16 - Se você pudesse ter qualquer animal de estimação no mundo, o que seria?

James: Um falcão.

 

17 - Qual é a coisa mais aleatória que você se encontra fazendo todos os dias?

James: Combatendo varíola demoníaca. Rs

 

18 - Favoritos, rápido, vai! Livro, filme , jogo, bebida, cor?

James: Não gosto de livros, mal assisto tv e jogos só de perseguição pela cabeça de William. Café e branco.

 

19 - Qual é a coisa mais sentimental que você possui e por quê?

James: Uma marca. Ou melhor tatuagem, feita para marcar minha cerimonia de parabatai.

 

20 - Você está em um relacionamento?

James: Não.

 

21 - Qual foi a sua pior lesão?

James: Uma permanente.

 

22 - O que te assusta mais?

James: Perder aqueles que me são importantes.

 

23 - Algo que a maioria das pessoas não sabe sobre você?

James: Não tenho muito tempo de vida.

 

24 - Você tem algum animal de estimação?

James: Não.

 

25 - O que você acha desta entrevista?

James: Interessante. Obrigada pela oportunidade.

 

-----------------------

 

Obrigada por taggear o James Thai!

 

Taggeados:

 

Thai - Rorona

Akari - Arya

Neko - Luke

Nina - Noah

  

David Plouffe, Senior Vice President of Policy and Strategy, Uber being interviewed during the International Transport Forum’s 2015 Summit on “Transport, Trade and Tourism” in Leipzig, Germany on 27-29 May 2015.

 

A woman behind me came all the way from Hawaii to see Grumpy Cat which is why Fox 32 picked her to interview.

All ready for my interview last Friday. I clean up good, don't I?

TV FRANCE24 interviews Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director General, during his visit to Paris, France. 1 December 2021

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

 

I interviewed one of the world's best furniture designer Vladimir Kagan and his wife Erica.

interview with Emblem3 @ São Paulo, Brazil

Yuval Noah Harari, Professor, Department of History, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel and Oliver Cann, Head of Media Content, World Economic Forum speaking during the Session "Questioning Our Human Future" at the Annual Meeting 2018 of the World Economic Forum in Davos, January 24, 2018.

Copyright by World Economic Forum / Boris Baldinger

Zagreb - Dolac market - Protest against the introduction of fiscal cash registers (Mr Linić is Croatian finance minister.)

I bounced around between interviews and photo shoots.

Photo by Diego Franssens.

From interview in Belgian magazine Knack.

The team was overwhelmed by the amount of information we got.

 

In collaboration with Agronet, the Ministry of Agriculture and a professional camera team a documentary was filmed in the countryside of Cauca (Colombia). A farmer and an indigenous farmer explained us about their adaptations to climate smart agriculture, their changes in practices and the way modern technologies such as text messages with weather forecasts have been able to help them. Photocredit: Gian Betancourt (CIAT)

Olympus Pen E-P2 + M.zuiko 17mm F/2.8

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