Category: Photography
The doors
Behind the scenes: Fieldwork
Baja la Tensión
Cultura Profética – Baja la Tensión
La Dulzura (2010)
“Baja la tensión – amor no es presión, no se consigue amor bajo obligación.”
If you’re in the mood for some fantastic feel-good Latin reggae.. Puerto Rican Cultura Profética is your band. It just makes sense. Lyrics, instruments and all.
“Tu dependencia no es cariño.”
“Each and every day, true player way”
Talented 19 year old Alice Jemima is doing a cover of Blackstreet’s old hit No Diggity while Camila is braiding her hair. I learnt the lyrics for the original song by heart when I was 13 so I’m singing along to this and getting thrown straight into nostalgia. I don’t always have a great memory, but when it comes to song lyrics, I have some sort of supernatural power.
Download Envy
Jagan Mai introduces himself as a 17-year-old bedroom producer but I would say the Copenhagen based artist is very much more with his experimental electronic music sampling magic tricks. He calls it ”Late night beats lingering in the air, then evaporating”, and I guess that’s about as close as we will get to defining “Envy” and the rest of his tracks.
The best thing about it? You can download it for free. Because sharing is caring.
Big thanks to Bad Panda Records once again for discovering and promoting these little gems. <3
Photo from the Yelle concert in Copenhagen, 2011.
Libres
Absolutely adoring this experimental electronic track with a touch of cumbia and some other latin vibes, released under one of my favourite labels, Bad Panda Records, by the Argentinian band Barrio Lindo. There’s an EP coming up! Photo from a hairdressing studio in Bluefields, Nicaragua about a month ago.
Now, you know it’s Friday, right? That means you get all of this – and a free download of the track! Isn’t life sweet?
Dub Side of the Moon
Easy Star All Stars – Dub Side of the Moon (2003)
This album by the Jamaican/American reggae collective Easy Star All Stars is a Dub Reggae tribute to Pink Floyd’s fantastic 1973 album Dark Side of the Moon. The original masterpiece is impossible to beat, but I like the feel of this one as well. The photo is a glimpse of Managua, as seen through rain and street light bokeh. Good night, world.
Tropical midsummer night
The night in the Ikaria eco hostel was amazing and relaxing. Being on a very small island with a group of warm and charismatic people makes you bond fast and we shared a lot of laughs, thoughts and talks while swimming in the pool under this year’s biggest moon. We slept with the balcony open, listening to the water just next to us hitting against the rock wall of the little islet – Ikaria is a truly peaceful place. We didn’t get to celebrate a typical Swedish midsummer this year either, but as a friend brought us Hawaiian lei’s, we transformed our night into one of celebrating not only life, but also diversity and opportunities.
Occasionally, things work out.
“Wiseman speculated that what we call luck is actually a pattern of behaviors that coincide with a style of understanding and interacting with the events and people you encounter throughout life. Unlucky people are narrowly focused, he observed. They crave security and tend to be more anxious, and instead of wading into the sea of random chance open to what may come, they remain fixated on controlling the situation, on seeking a specific goal. As a result, they miss out on the thousands of opportunities that may float by. Lucky people tend to constantly change routines and seek out new experiences. Wiseman saw that the people who considered themselves lucky, and who then did actually demonstrate luck was on their side over the course of a decade, tended to place themselves into situations where anything could happen more often and thus exposed themselves to more random chance than did unlucky people. The lucky try more things, and fail more often, but when they fail they shrug it off and try something else. Occasionally, things work out.”
The fantastic David McRaney from one of my favourite blogs, You Are Not So Smart, writes about Survivorship Bias and Success in his latest blog post. A bit long but definitely worth a read, along with the rest of the blog. One of my favourite of his posts on how complicated the human mind is and how it plays trick on us is that of the Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy. I see examples of this almost daily since reading it in 2010. Everybody – just read it, please.
A month left on a very exciting contract. A month of roadtrip-photography-beloved friends in Mexico + exploring NYC. And then I’m probably on the market again.
So here you have me, reaching out, looking forward to opportunity surprising me with something new.