User: SpiraliNeurali |
time displacement experimental video
distorsions Tags: experimental installation dance music |
User: ijustine |
Experimental Girls
I went to Wal*Mart yesterday to buy a few things and some creepy guy proceeded to question me about buying a glass container. I wanted to test out my new waterproof case for my flipvideo camera. Tags: ijustine so says to this guy experimental girls girl justine ezarik waterproof |
User: te2rx |
Detours - An Experimental Dance Collaboration - Parallels
"The Parallel Scene" from Detours created by Midus. There's an interview with him I crammed at the end of the vid, barely under the 10-minute Youtube limit :) song is Dobie - "B-Boy Anthem Part 2" Tags: b-boy bboy dance breakdance Detours Midus |
User: druman44 |
National Health : experimental prog fusion group
National Health was a progressive rock band associated with the Canterbury Scene. Founded in 1975 by keyboardists Dave Stewart (from Hatfield and the North) and Alan Gowen (from Gilgamesh), the band also included guitarists Phil Miller and Phil Lee and bassist Mont Campbell as original members. Bill Bruford was the initial drummer but was soon replaced by Pip Pyle. Campbell was replaced by Neil Murray and then John Greaves. A frequently changing lineup toured extensively and released two LPs of often lengthy, mostly instrumental, complexly scored compositions before splitting up in 1980. After the May 1981 death of Gowen, remaining members reconvened to record the album D.S. Al Coda, a set of compositions by Gowen, most previously unrecorded. The original albums and additional archival material have subsequently been released on CD. Their 1978 record Of Queues and Cures, which included Peter Blegvad (guitar, vocals) and Georgie Born (cello), is currently held as the third best record ever (of 53,000 candidate records) on the Gnosis web site. wikipedia weird shit, i like it. Tags: National Health band music weird experimental jamrock prog progressive crimson beauford fusion art rock shit fuck ass |
User: bry3500 |
X-23B Nasa Experimental Craft
A fleet of lifting bodies flown at the NASA Flight Research Center, Edwards, California, from 1963 to 1975 demonstrated the ability of pilots to maneuver (in the atmosphere) and safely land a wingless vehicle. These lifting bodies were basically designed so they could fly back to Earth from space and be landed like an aircraft at a pre-determined site. (In 1976 NASA renamed the FRC as the NASA Dryden Flight Research Center in honor of Hugh L. Dryden.) In 1962, FRC Director Paul Bikle approved a program to build a lightweight, unpowered lifting body as a prototype to flight test the wingless concept. It would look like a "flying bathtub," and was designated the M2-F1. It featured a plywood shell, built by Gus Briegleb (a sailplane builder from El Mirage, California) placed over a tubular steel frame crafted at the FRC. Construction was completed in 1963. The success of the Flight Research Center M2-F1 program led to NASA development and construction of two heavyweight lifting bodies based on studies at the NASA Ames and Langley research centers--the M2-F2 and the HL-10, both built by the Northrop Corporation, Hawthorne, California. The Air Force also became interested in lifting body research and had a third design concept built, the X-24A, built by the Martin Company, Denver, Colorado. It was later modified into the X-24B and both configurations were flown in the joint NASA-Air Force lifting body program located at Dryden. The X-24B design evolved from a family of potential reentry shapes, each with higher lift-to-drag ratios, proposed by the Air Force Flight Dynamics Laboratory. To reduce the costs of constructing a research vehicle, the Air Force returned the X-24A to Martin for modifications that converted its bulbous shape into one resembling a "flying flatiron" -- rounded top, flat bottom, and a double-delta planform that ended in a pointed nose. First to fly the X-24B was John A. Manke, a glide flight on August 1, 1973. He was also the pilot on the first powered mission November 15, 1973. Among the final flights with the X-24B were two precise landings on the main concrete runway at Edwards, California, which showed that accurate unpowered reentry vehicle landings were operationally feasible. These missions were flown by Manke and Air Force Maj. Mike Love and represented the final milestone in a program that helped write the flight plan for the Space Shuttle program of today. After launch from the B-52 "mothership" at an altitude of about 45,000 feet, the XLR-11 rocket engine was ignited and the vehicle accelerated to speeds of more than 1,100 miles per hour and to altitudes of 60,000 to 70,000 feet. After the rocket engine was shut down, the pilots began steep glides towards the Edwards runway. As the pilots entered the final leg of their approach, they increased their rate of descent to build up speed and used this energy to perform a "flare out" maneuver, which slowed their landing speed to about 200 miles per hour--the same basic approach pattern and landing speed of the Space Shuttles today. The final powered flight with the X-24B aircraft was on September 23, 1975. The pilot was Bill Dana, and it was also the last rocket-powered flight flown at Dryden. It was also Dana who flew the last X-15 mission about seven years earlier. Top speed reached with the X-24B was 1,164 miles per hour (Mach 1.76) by Love on October 25, 1974. The highest altitude reached was 74,100 feet, by Manke on May 22, 1975. The X-24B is on public display at the Air Force Museum, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio. Tags: nasa aircraft Space |
User: ronaldjenkees |
A fun beat from outer space (an experimental improv jam)
Preview my CD: http://ronaldjenkees.com/music-store/ This beat is in the very early stages. As a matter of fact, there are only two chords being played in the background. But it's fun to jam out to. Also, this will be on my next CD (out hopefully in the summer). Thanks for watching, folks!!! Tags: ronald jenkees weird beat fun FL Studio Korg Triton LE making beats outer space cool happy accident whoa |
User: fanfaz |
Jim Henson's Time Piece
Dislocation in time, time signatures, time as a philosophical concept, and slavery to time are some of the themes touched upon in this nine-minute, experimental film, which was written, directed, and produced by Jim Henson-and starred Jim Henson! Screened for the first time at the Museum of Modern Art in May of 1965, Time Piece enjoyed an eighteen-month run at one Manhattan movie theater and was nominated for an Academy Award for outstanding short subject Tags: Jim Henson Time Piece |
User: Zaetar |
First Experimental H-Bomb Test
Sequence representing the first test of an H-Bomb or Hydrogen Bomb in 1952 during Operation Ivy. The Mike device exploded with a yield of 10.5 Megatons. 50 times larger than a nominal atomic bomb. Sequence from the film "Trinity and Beyond." Tags: Atomic Hydrogen bomb tests Nukes Nuclear Operation Ivy The Mike Trinity and Beyond |
User: tuutuutango |
Avid Experimental Aircraft
Let's go for a ride in some Avid Flyers. I shot and produced this for my client, Avid Aircraft of Caldwell, Idaho. 100% of the aerial video I shot from an Avid, all handheld. The ground scenes were shot on my tripod. Tags: Avid Experimental Aircraft Flying Homebuilt |
User: swissdots |
Helvetica documentary clip - Experimental Jetset
A clip from the feature-length documentary "Helvetica", featuring Amsterdam design team Expreimental Jetset. DVD OUT NOW http://www.helveticafilm.com Tags: Helvetica graphic design typography fonts modernism |
User: gilbohadana |
experimental music instruments
Gil playing music on some of his self made instruments in his studio. The instruments you see are: PVC drainage pipes African Kalimba made of bob pins (using Boss lopp machine) A tin whistle flute A wooden door A Door lintel (...yep) More info at: www.eco-music.org Tags: Eco music recycled instruments lintel tin whistle kalimba pipes Boss loop machine gilbohadana |
User: dunlap31 |
Experimental Video Feedback
I first learned about video feedback earlier this week. I spent a couple of evenings experimenting with it in my living room and made this little video. This is the effect that can be acheived by plugging a video camera into a TV monitor, then pointing the camera directly into the monitor, creating a closed loop. Tags: experimental video feedback best of youtube sexy fractal mandelbrot |
User: te2rx |
Detours - An Experimental Dance Collaboration - Midus (1/2)
Part 1 of 2. This is from an out-of-print David Elsewhere-produced DVD called "Detours - An Experimental Dance Collaboration - Extended Trails". This is Midus, the first of the four dancers in Detours. He's awesome. Tags: b-boy bboy dance breakdance break breaking midus popping liquiding david elsewhere Detours |
User: nostalgist |
Experimental Conversations (2)
Extract from EXPERIMENTAL CONVERSATIONS (Fergus Daly, 2006), featuring Philippe Grandrieux and Nicole Brenez. http://www.corkfilmfest.org/2006/exp-con.html Tags: Philippe Grandrieux Nicole Brenez Fergus Daly La Vie Nouvelle |
User: hank2953 |
WEST COAST POP ART EXPERIMENTAL BAND / TRACY HAD A HARD DAY
song ... tracy had a hard day sunday / wcpaeb (1967) (l-r)in the band photo shaun harris,dan harris,bob markley,john ware and michael lloyd Tags: west coast pop art experimental band psychedelic |
User: antonKASA2007 |
UFO - Experimental
Ufo is the most mysterious secret of the Army and Nasa since the World War II untill now. There are many individuals and companies which are trying to build a ufo or flying vehicle but still there is nothing showing from both; the "secret Ufos" and the flying vehicle created. Air Rotators and Helium ballon must be used both in creating a new flying vehicle that can use helium (ring around vehicle) for antigravity and rotators for moving of the vehicle from free energy. Here are some new ideas. www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBAOx98n4Hw Tags: ufo flying platform device design project |
User: peters8100 |
2005 Experimental Video: 'Ghana is not African'
In the piece 'Ghana is not African' the listener is subjected to an ongoing downpour of steel string rain punctuated by random door bell-like melodies via an electrical guitar. Meanwhile, the visuals display images of Maltese folk singers (ghana) melting into each other and suddenly provide a musical addition leading the piece to its climatic end. Oral poetry survives as a living tradition in the Maltese Islands. It is still one of the main sources of popular folk entertainment. The Maltese word for orally-performed poetry is ghana, or song, which covers a wide range of poems in sung form with musical accompaniment by guitarists. Tags: video art audio sound ghana malta short creative film experimental guitars contemporary folk music modern |
User: cinema16 |
The Dickson Experimental Sound Film - 1895
The Dickson Experimental Sound Film is a film made by William Dickson in late 1894 or early 1895. It is the first known film with live-recorded sound and appears to be the first example of a motion picture made for the Kinetophone, the proto-sound-film system developed by Dickson and Thomas Edison. (The Kinetophone—consisting of a Kinetoscope accompanied by a cylinder-playing phonograph—was not a true sound-film system as no attempt was made to synchronize image and audio throughout playback.) The film was produced at the "Black Maria," Edison's New Jersey film studio. There is no evidence that it was ever exhibited in its original format. Newly digitized and restored, it is the only surviving Kinetophone film. The movie features Dickson playing a violin into a recording cone for an off-camera wax cylinder.[1] The melody is from a barcarolle, "Song of the Cabin Boy," from Les Cloches de Corneville (literally The Bells of Corneville; presented in English-speaking countries as The Chimes of Normandy), a light opera composed by Robert Planquette in 1877.[2] In front of Dickson, two men dance to the music. In the final seconds, a fourth man briefly crosses from left to right behind the cone. The running time of the restored film is seventeen seconds; the accompanying cylinder contains approximately two minutes of sound, including twenty-three seconds of violin music, encompassing the film's soundtrack. After its restoration in 2000, the Dickson Experimental Sound Film was selected for inclusion in the United States National Film Registry. Tags: cinema16 experimental 1800's vintage |
User: rocketpunch12210 |
Mugen RR Experimental Spec
visit: http://rocketpunchautoblog.blogspot.com/ For more information on the Mugen RR Experimental Spec Machine. An experimental FD2 by Mugen as a platform to explore new technology. Tags: Mugen RR Experimental Spec Honda civic JDM FD2 FN2 racing special tokyo auto salon japan |
User: zlojmoderator |
russian experimental tanks
some interesting experimental military projects of USSR Tags: russian experimental tanks |
User: SirMixItAllUp |
1952 newsreel- latest futuristic and experimental aircraft
-- Bill Horton's "wingless airplane". Bill entered into a partnership with Howard Hughes, and legal wrangling from that (still ongoing!) stopped all development of this plane. -- "Sky Baby" the world's smallest homebuilt biplane, 1952. Made it in the "Guinness Book of World Records", but not practical for the homebuilt market and designer Ray Stits donated it to the National Air and Space Museum. -- the Fulton Airphibian, the first roadable aircraft (designed to be used as a car or an airplane) to be certificated by the Civil Aviation Administration. -- XH-17 "Flying Crane", by Hughes aircraft. It still holds the record for the largest flying rotor system that ever flew. But was not practical for production. go here to see piece on the Sky Baby: http://www.airventuremuseum.org/collection/aircraft/Stits%20Sky%20Baby.asp go here to see an article on Horton's "wingless airplane": http://home.att.net/~dannysoar/Horton.htm go here to view article on the Airphibian: http://www.nasm.si.edu/research/aero/aircraft/fulton.htm go here to read about the XH-17 "Flying Crane": http://avia.russian.ee/helicopters_eng/mcdonnel_crane.php Tags: aircraft 1952 HowardHughes airplane flight flying newsreel |
User: te2rx |
Detours - An Experimental Dance Collaboration - Others (1/3)
The "others" scenes from Detours, showcasing an assortment of dancers picked out by David Elsewhere, Midus, Rawbzilla, and Kujo. Part 1 of 3. Tags: b-boy bboy dance breakdance Detours popping locking liquiding liquid David Elsewhere |
User: megaloo |
Scrubs: J.D.'s Experimental Film
Scrubs clips to 'Experimental Film' by They Might Be Giants Tags: scrubs jd experimental film tmbg |
User: KevinBrownsvideos |
EXPERIMENTAL DENTAL SCHOOL
LIVE AT 21 GRAND OAKLAND,CA. 2006 Tags: Live Bands 21 Grand Experimental Dental School KevinBrownsvideos |
User: gnawrm |
Experimental Industrial Music
A snippet of an LCDA recording session Tags: Industrial Experimental Rivethead |