Whether it's your first Bonnaroo or you’re a music festival veteran, we welcome you to Inforoo.
Here you'll find info about artists, rumors, camping tips, and the infamous Roo Clues. Have a look around then create an account and join in the fun. See you at Bonnaroo!!
What was everyone's favorite bit of #content this weekend? For me:
1. Oh My God - Kevin Morby 2. Avengers Endgame 3. The NBA playoffs 4. ChrasH Talk - Schoolboy Q 5. Game of Thrones 6. A cute picture of our family dog dog that my sister took
I didn't get around to Barry, Veep, or Aldous Harding so apologies to those folks.
What was everyone's favorite bit of #content this weekend? For me:
1. Oh My God - Kevin Morby 2. Avengers Endgame 3. The NBA playoffs 4. ChrasH Talk - Schoolboy Q 5. Game of Thrones 6. A cute picture of our family dog dog that my sister took
I didn't get around to Barry, Veep, or Aldous Harding so apologies to those folks.
this came out a couple of years ago. i think i originally dismissed it because i thought it was just going to be fluffy piece about contemporary EDM, so I didn't watch it until this weekend.
in reality it was an excellent narrative about the push and pull between underground dance music and popular EDM, using Carl Cox and Martin Garrix as the symbols of the genres, respectively. Timeline-wise it uses Carl Cox's last show at Space and Martin Garrix's first time performing on the main stage at Ultra as story-line destinations. But the majority of the doc is a damn good history of dance music, from it's origins in disco, to house and techno in chicago and detroit, to the field raves and rise of legit clubs in the UK, to the late nineties early 00s raves in the US, the moral panic that killed electronic music in the US shortly thereafter, to rise of dance music in the US eventually infiltrating top 40. Obviously it can't cover everything, and is very US/UK centric, but at a high level it did a good job of delivering a history lesson.
Lots of great interviews with artists ranging from David Guetta to Seth Troxler. I'm not a fan of Afrojack but his insight into what underground dance music is was one of my favorite bits of the doc. But in addition to artists equal time was given to promoters, like the guy who started Ultra, the guy over Insomniac, Disco Donnie, and the president of electronic music at Live Nation (who surprisingly knows his shit).
I learned a lot and it was super entertaining, downright emotional at times. Recommended to music nerds of all stripes.
So pretty much:
1. What We Started 2. Game of Thrones 3. S3 finale of Vanderpump Rules
What was everyone's favorite bit of #content this weekend? For me:
1. Oh My God - Kevin Morby 2. Avengers Endgame 3. The NBA playoffs 4. ChrasH Talk - Schoolboy Q 5. Game of Thrones 6. A cute picture of our family dog dog that my sister took
I didn't get around to Barry, Veep, or Aldous Harding so apologies to those folks.
this came out a couple of years ago. i think i originally dismissed it because i thought it was just going to be fluffy piece about contemporary EDM, so I didn't watch it until this weekend.
in reality it was an excellent narrative about the push and pull between underground dance music and popular EDM, using Carl Cox and Martin Garrix as the symbols of the genres, respectively. Timeline-wise it uses Carl Cox's last show at Space and Martin Garrix's first time performing on the main stage at Ultra as story-line destinations. But the majority of the doc is a damn good history of dance music, from it's origins in disco, to house and techno in chicago and detroit, to the field raves and rise of legit clubs in the UK, to the late nineties early 00s raves in the US, the moral panic that killed electronic music in the US shortly thereafter, to rise of dance music in the US eventually infiltrating top 40. Obviously it can't cover everything, and is very US/UK centric, but at a high level it did a good job of delivering a history lesson.
Lots of great interviews with artists ranging from David Guetta to Seth Troxler. I'm not a fan of Afrojack but his insight into what underground dance music is was one of my favorite bits of the doc. But in addition to artists equal time was given to promoters, like the guy who started Ultra, the guy over Insomniac, Disco Donnie, and the president of electronic music at Live Nation (who surprisingly knows his shit).
I learned a lot and it was super entertaining, downright emotional at times. Recommended to music nerds of all stripes.
So pretty much:
1. What We Started 2. Game of Thrones 3. S3 finale of Vanderpump Rules
Oh wow I've never heard of that before but it sounds awesome. I've got the Studio 54 doc on my Amazon watch list. It would make a good companion piece to this, I imagine.
this came out a couple of years ago. i think i originally dismissed it because i thought it was just going to be fluffy piece about contemporary EDM, so I didn't watch it until this weekend.
in reality it was an excellent narrative about the push and pull between underground dance music and popular EDM, using Carl Cox and Martin Garrix as the symbols of the genres, respectively. Timeline-wise it uses Carl Cox's last show at Space and Martin Garrix's first time performing on the main stage at Ultra as story-line destinations. But the majority of the doc is a damn good history of dance music, from it's origins in disco, to house and techno in chicago and detroit, to the field raves and rise of legit clubs in the UK, to the late nineties early 00s raves in the US, the moral panic that killed electronic music in the US shortly thereafter, to rise of dance music in the US eventually infiltrating top 40. Obviously it can't cover everything, and is very US/UK centric, but at a high level it did a good job of delivering a history lesson.
Lots of great interviews with artists ranging from David Guetta to Seth Troxler. I'm not a fan of Afrojack but his insight into what underground dance music is was one of my favorite bits of the doc. But in addition to artists equal time was given to promoters, like the guy who started Ultra, the guy over Insomniac, Disco Donnie, and the president of electronic music at Live Nation (who surprisingly knows his shit).
I learned a lot and it was super entertaining, downright emotional at times. Recommended to music nerds of all stripes.
So pretty much:
1. What We Started 2. Game of Thrones 3. S3 finale of Vanderpump Rules
Oh wow I've never heard of that before but it sounds awesome. I've got the Studio 54 doc on my Amazon watch list. It would make a good companion piece to this, I imagine.
Good reminder re: the studio 54 doc, I need to watch that.
What was everyone's favorite bit of #content this weekend? For me:
1. Oh My God - Kevin Morby 2. Avengers Endgame 3. The NBA playoffs 4. ChrasH Talk - Schoolboy Q 5. Game of Thrones 6. A cute picture of our family dog dog that my sister took
I didn't get around to Barry, Veep, or Aldous Harding so apologies to those folks.
this came out a couple of years ago. i think i originally dismissed it because i thought it was just going to be fluffy piece about contemporary EDM, so I didn't watch it until this weekend.
in reality it was an excellent narrative about the push and pull between underground dance music and popular EDM, using Carl Cox and Martin Garrix as the symbols of the genres, respectively. Timeline-wise it uses Carl Cox's last show at Space and Martin Garrix's first time performing on the main stage at Ultra as story-line destinations. But the majority of the doc is a damn good history of dance music, from it's origins in disco, to house and techno in chicago and detroit, to the field raves and rise of legit clubs in the UK, to the late nineties early 00s raves in the US, the moral panic that killed electronic music in the US shortly thereafter, to rise of dance music in the US eventually infiltrating top 40. Obviously it can't cover everything, and is very US/UK centric, but at a high level it did a good job of delivering a history lesson.
Lots of great interviews with artists ranging from David Guetta to Seth Troxler. I'm not a fan of Afrojack but his insight into what underground dance music is was one of my favorite bits of the doc. But in addition to artists equal time was given to promoters, like the guy who started Ultra, the guy over Insomniac, Disco Donnie, and the president of electronic music at Live Nation (who surprisingly knows his shit).
I learned a lot and it was super entertaining, downright emotional at times. Recommended to music nerds of all stripes.
So pretty much:
1. What We Started 2. Game of Thrones 3. S3 finale of Vanderpump Rules
i def need to check this out. i've seen the clip of afrojack before (also not a fan), but he did speak really well to what a "pre-recorded" set really is now a days and why it can be like that
Post by postreznorjack on Apr 30, 2019 8:24:24 GMT -5
Finally got my avengers tickets. This saturday at 10am. I've done a good job of avoiding not just spoilers but reviews altogether.
Some random asshole on Reddit in a completely unrelated auto thread tried to spoil it. Started reading the comment then stopped and immediately went to another Reddit and read something else furiously to erase what I read from my short term memory. For once all the damage acid did to my short term memory paid off.
I have to send my volcano classic back to Stortz and Bickel for them to repair it. I've been using this thing exclusively for over a year now, and am sad to think of three weeks without it. Going to use the time to T break I think, as switching to combustion at this point just seems gross and wasteful. Wish me luck, gang.
Update: volcano classic is on the truck for delivery to my residence this afternoon. Stortz and Bickel did a fantastic job taking care of it while it was away at summer camp in Oaksterdam, RMA was free besides shipping one way, and the experience overall has been an incredibly smooth one. I was aware when I bought the volcano that the expense was mostly for German tariffs and the warranty - worth every penny. Cheers everyone.
I’ve been watching this dude pull pompano out the Gulf for like an hour. It’s almost as if he has magnets on his fishing pole. Pompano is an underrated fish to eat.
I’ve been watching this dude pull pompano out the Gulf for like an hour. It’s almost as if he has magnets on his fishing pole. Pompano is an underrated fish to eat.
I take it that it’s a gulf fish. Everywhere we went to eat they served “gulf” fish. We wanted to know what the hell that was.
Yeah. Gulf fish are those pulled out the Gulf of Mexico. They (pompano) are similar body shape and color to an amberjack but more silver and smaller. They have the yellow fins.
Also if a restaurant has an otherwise static menu but buys fish on the open market, some preparation could say fresh gulf fish beurre blanc or whatever. They’ll tell you what fish it is if you ask. Generally it’s going to be snapper, tuna, redfish, black drum for more standard fish and maybe like triggerfish amberjack or pompano if they have it.
Also if a restaurant has an otherwise static menu but buys fish on the open market, some preparation could say fresh gulf fish beurre blanc or whatever. They’ll tell you what fish it is if you ask. Generally it’s going to be snapper, tuna, redfish, black drum for more standard fish and maybe like triggerfish amberjack or pompano if they have it.
It’s on par with snapper. Also I love black drum if it’s fresh caught or from a reputable place. It’s almost the same as red drum (aka redfish), but I think black drum has better filets.