MP3 2531 mb.
Performer: uns
Title: What Does The Brain Have To Do With It
Country: US
Catalog Number: CIPCD24
Label: Crippled Intellect Productions
Released: 24 Feb 2010
Style: Industrial, Spoken Word, Experimental
Rating: 4.6
Votes: 961
| 1 | Says #1 (Savoy Tivoli, San Francisco, CA, Feb. 12 1981) | 35:36 |
| 2 | "Check It" (Target, San Francisco, CA, Feb. 24 1980) | 26:25 |
| 3 | Says #2 (Savoy Tivoli, San Francisco, CA, Feb. 12 1981) | 12:53 |
| 4 | "When You Look At A Thing" (Ritzy Cinema, Brixton, Oct. 2 1982) | 22:33 |
Track 1-1 "was the public debut of uns. Brief selections originally appeared on the Live At Target LP published by Subterranean Records in 1980."
"As all efforts have been made to reproduce the work accurately, some of the limitations of the original recording technology may be revealed due to the quality of the digital medium."
Info from cipsite.net:
- This 2 CD set was released February 24, 30 years to the day when uns was realized live.
- 50 copies are signed: "Z'EV 2-19-10 Chicago" (Performance with Travis Bird and Vertonen at Enemy, Chicago.)
Check It Target, San Francisco, Ca, Feb. When You Look At a Thing Ritzy Cinema, Brixton, Oct. Track Listing - Disc 2. You may submit artist- and album-related corrections to the TiVo data team by following the steps on this page. For other feedback please visit our GetSatisfaction page. Please note that we cannot respond to address or phone information requests for any person identified in our database, nor can we forward fan mail. Due to the extremely high volume of messages received and the small size of our team, we unfortunately cannot guarantee that we will be able to respond or take action in every case. Main Album. What Does the Brain Have To Do With It. Release Date. Although best-known for his metal-based percussive performances, uns, his electronics and vocal-based whirlwind, was one of the most innovative and individual audio experiments of the early 1980s. uns's combination of sound poetics and voice treatments with dense sonic landscapes resulted in challenging, unique, and rewarding audio. A historical testament to the challenge uns presented appears on the first track of this 2 CD set, when some of the audience members - in addition to repeatedly shouting 'Die' as the set concluded - shout out for Flipper. How can coronavirus affect the brain The BBCs medical correspondent investigates. One of the report authors, Prof Tom Solomon of the University of Liverpool, told me, It's clear now that this virus does cause problems in the brain whereas initially we thought it was all about the lungs. Part of it is due to lack of oxygen to the brain. But there appear to be many other factors, such as problems with blood clotting and a hyper-inflammatory response of the immune system. We should also ask whether the virus itself is infecting the brain. Media playback is unsupported on your device. In philosophy, the brain in a vat BIV is a scenario used in a variety of thought experiments intended to draw out certain features of human conceptions of knowledge, reality, truth, mind, consciousness, and meaning. It is an updated version of René Descartes's evil demon thought experiment originated by Gilbert Harman. Common to many science fiction stories, it outlines a scenario in which a mad scientist, machine, or other entity might remove a person's brain from the body, suspend it in a vat of. If I am not able to provide yo. Поиск презентаций, докладов, научных статей, публикаций и других образовательных материалов по запросу album uns What Does The Brain Have To Do With It. The early signs of a brain have begun to form. Even though the fetus is now developing areas that will become specific sections of the brain, not until the end of week 5 and into week 6 usually around forty to forty-three days does the first electrical brain activity begin to occur. The frontal and temporal poles of the brain are apparent during weeks 12 to 16, and the frontal pole which becomes the neocortex grows disproportionately fast when compared with the rest of the cortex. The surface of the cortex appears flat through the third month, but by the end of the fourth month indentations, or sulci, appear. Does this change what it means to be left-handed Being left-handed has often led to a raw deal. In many cultures being left handed is seen as being unlucky or malicious and that is reflected in language, said Prof Dominic Furniss, a hand surgeon and author on the report. In French, gauche can mean left or clumsy. What this study shows is that being left-handed is just a consequence of the developmental biology of the brain, it has nothing to do with luck or maliciousness, Prof Furniss said. And it is driven at least in part by genetic variants we've discovered. This adds to the understanding of what makes us human. Is this the end of the story Far from it. Ten percent of the brain myth. The 10 percent of the brain myth is a widely perpetuated myth that most or all humans only use 10 percent or some other small percentage of their brains. It has been misattributed to many celebrated people, notably Albert Einstein. By extrapolation, it is suggested that a person may harness this unused potential and increase intelligence