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!!
Have heard that there may be Hoops, paintings, pictures, photographs, headbands, bandana's etc etc on the way. Stop by early and ofter as you ready for festie season.
Post by NothingButFlowers on May 25, 2013 16:52:18 GMT -5
I have a messenger style bag. Outside is brown corduroy. Inside is olive green. The bag is lined with fleece. It has four outer pockets (front, back, and each side) and one divided inner pocket (one big part and two small parts). Strap is adjustable.
Suggested donation $35 This one's gone
I also have a simple, bucket-style bag. Outside is a Japanese print. Inside is a neutral beige with one largish pocket.
Suggested donation $20
And I can do bandanas to order. I generally make them about 22" x 22", which makes the diagonal about 31". I can make them larger or smaller to fit specific needs. The day after any donation is received, I will send the bandana by priority mail, which usually gets where it's going in about 2 business days. Suggested donation $10
If you give me an idea of colors/patterns that you like, I can find something to suit most any taste.
I also have a bunch of this fabric:
I think have enough of this to make about 8 bandanas. 4 are gone 4 are available
I am putting up this pristine Electric Ladyland vinyl purchased when analog was all there was. It is in such good condition you may need to add your own hiss and pop. Suggested donation $25.
Post by monkybunney on May 25, 2013 18:53:40 GMT -5
I'm willing to donate my Glitch n' Groove. This is a circuit bent toy I "built" a year or so ago and it is the only one of it's kind in existence. I can safely say there is nothing else quite like it on earth!
The deets: The Glitch n' Groove is a circuit bent toy drum machine. Minus my modifications (which I'll get to in a minute) the toy features: 6 drum pads - 2 snare drum pads, Ride cymbal pad, Crash cymbal pad, High tom and floor tom pads. 8 Different pre-programmed drum beats Demo Mode Adjustable tempo* 2 volume settings (high & low) A Record/Play button** Built in 9 ohm Speaker
Fun stuff I added: 4 long stem Pots or potentiometers (or "nobs you can twiddle" in layman's terms) which do all manner of crazy shiz to the sounds coming out of it. 6 brass body contacts which also do all manner of crazy shiz to the sounds coming out of it depending on how hard you touch them and what combination of contacts you're touching. This includes slowing the sound down to the point that you get this crazy squiggly electronic static that will be music to your ears. And probably to your ears only! 1/4" mono output jack (hook it up to your effects pedals and an amp and watch you're audience run out the door!) A reset button***
The ***'s or full disclosure 6 drum pads - The crash cymbal pad on the bottom left corner and the small snare pad just above it are not functional. Due to the location of where some of the components are soldered to the circuit board they had to be disconnected otherwise when you played a pre-programmed beat all you would hear was CRASH, CRASH, CRASH, CRASH. The crash cymbal sounded like shiz on its own anyway, trust me its not a loss. The right hand snare pad still works just fine and is sensitive enough that you can do presses and orchestral or buzz rolls on it with sticks. Adjustable tempo* - You can't set an exact tempo like 120bpm (it started as a toy after all and not a serious drum machine) you just speed it up or slow it down using the green tempo buttons. The tempo is steady but not precise. In other words it doesn't speed up or slow down but the tempo is not an exact BPM, so instead of say 120bpm it's more like 120.735bpm. That being the case it's more suited to improvised live performances vs. trying to get it synced up with a MIDI composition. Of course you can always sample it and stretch the sample blah blah blah blah. A Record/Play button** - The record/play feature is functional but super wonky due to the various modifications I made to the circuit. It spits out very interesting results but nothing close to anything you recorded. At all! A reset button*** - Because the electrical current's flow across the circuit has been drastically manipulated it's inevitable that on occasion you'll do something that causes the circuit to "freeze" and it won't do anything even if you turn it off then on. The reset button disrupts the current and places the circuit into the state it was in just before it froze up. This is the most stable circuit I've ever bent so this doesn't happen very often.
This thing screeches, growls and groans like nothing else! You don't even have to make it play one of the pre-programmed beats to to get it to start making unearthly sounds, just turn it on and twiddle the nobs. The Glitch 'n Groove does not come with any instructions or explanation. It's up to your own sense of experimental creativity to figure it out. The instrument runs on 6 'C' batteries which are not included.
Considering it's uniqueness and the cause for which it is being donated I think $350 is a reasonable suggested donation price.
Pics: Top down view
Up close in front
From the right
Reset button and 1/4 output jack
Demo 1 (running it through an amp)
Of course I'll clean it up a little before sending it! Kinda dusty.
EDIT: The photos are pretty unflattering. When I posted this I figured the Glitch 'n Groove would be something of interest to musicians and dabblers in experimental sounds. However in addition to being a one-of-a-kind functional avant-garde musical instrument it's also a piece of art and could make a neat conversation piece; though I do think it would be sad if it just sat on a shelf never getting to sing the screeching growling song of its mutant people. So here are a couple of less utilitarian Objet d'art shots of it. Resting on the mantle with care:
Post by NothingButFlowers on May 26, 2013 8:46:32 GMT -5
I also am offering (well, Josh is, actually) a cd of original OatmealSchnapps music. It is about an hour long. He's still working on the cover, so I don't have a picture yet. Suggested donation is $5 to $10.