Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky's blog
I'm throwing a party on November 9th, to debut a contemporary artists residency program and digital media lab in the South Pacific island nation of Vanuatu.
In the wake of Republican Governor Jan Brewer's anti-immigrant law, DJ Spooky and Chuck D decided to put together an update of the classic track "By The Time I get To Arizona." [Free Download]
DJ Spooky and Critical Beats invite you to participate in an Earth Day 2010 remix contest, using tracks from Critical Beats' library of Amazonian recordings. The winning track will be promoted and performed live by DJ Spooky!
Free Tix for Terra Nova at BAMMy Antarctica project, Terra Nova: Sinfonia Antarctica, opens at BAM in NY this week. Win tickets with a poem!
Dziga Vertov wanted to use cinematic realism to find freedom in a world where anything was possible. To me, DJ culture has inherited that same impulse -- "keeping it real" is a mantra one hears in Hip-Hop at every level. [Video]
North Koreans in ExileOn July 13, check out a screening of Kimjongilia, a documenatry about the brutal repression and harrowing escapes experienced by those defecting from Kim Jong II's dictatorship. NYC.
A Spooky Earth DayIf any of you are around Washington, DC this weekend, we're having a large concert on the DC Mall with me and The Flaming Lips for Earth Day.
In this interview with Elena Glasberg, I discusses my new multimedia performance work Terra Nova: Sinfonia Antarctica, open-source media, music history, new relativism, the need for more paradox, and the sound of no government.
Rebirthing a NationI'd like to invite you to participate in a unique experiment: Would you host a screening of my new film, Rebirth of a Nation, in your hometown and invite friends over to check out the new project?
Local Voices for ObamaSundance winning director Lee Hirsch is creating local videos of real people in battleground states talking about why they support Obama, and then buying ad time to air them in local markets.
I get asked what I think about sampling a lot. Think of this essay as a soundbite for the sonically perplexed.
The Prolonged Present[Burning Briefs] • In this video, Paul D. Miler aka DJ Spooky that Subliminal Kid brings us all the way back to when Burning Man was young and feral with only 4,000 attendees -- "the ancient mid-nineties." After a romantic break up, Paul leaves New York to relax and "deprogram." But his attempts are thwarted by Pippi Longstocking's playa-wide hunt to prevent him from playing "commercial music" at the festival. With the help of laser-frisbee wisemen, steaming mud baths, crystal-structured art cars, and an otherwordly sonic landscape, Paul is not only able to relax, but to hit "the reset button on the entire imagination of what [he] even can vaguely think of as America." [Video]
Harry Smith: American Media ArtistHarry Smith was a walking remixologist. His idea was to apply DJ technique to film – he wanted to show that film collage could be edited in a way that speaks about myths and the way people can understand the rapidly changing world around themselves from the information they record.
Ghost World Mix: A Story in SoundDigital Africa is here, and has been here for a while. The "Ghost World" mix is all about the multiple rhythms and languages of Africa, but it makes no attempt to give you everything – it's from my record collection. That's why the "story" of the mix is about: polyrhythm, multiplex reality. There's current material, like the Kuduru sounds of Luanda (who says Techno doesn't exist in Africa!?) and old school hip hop like Zimbabwe Legit from the early 90's of classic "conscious" school hip hop. Yes there's material from Akon, but he gets mixed with Nelson Mandela, or MC Solaar. Listen to it here!
Kehinde Wiley's New World PortraitureWhen I think of Kehinde Wiley's paintings, a couple of affiliated effects come to mind. In his work we look at history juxtaposed with a really unstable relationship to realism. But I don't want to start an essay with quotations from history – after all, that's what Kehinde Wiley's paintings are already doing. The essential issue at hand is to give some context to portraiture, hip hop visuality, sampling, collage, and quotation. I want to unpack some of the issues that Wiley engages in his work.












