Joined May 2008
1,091 Photos and videos
If you have seen Souled American live, you'll understand.
I believe in Souled American but I am not alone. Despite these days of ours so crammed with eye-popping corruption, so much machine-made slop, so many anti-intellectual elites backed by white nationalist militias, I stand amid a growing legion of folks who find solace in SA (1/7)
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I appreciate how the man who was Karl Hungus in The Big Lebowski, Peter Stormare, was Dr. Solomon P. Eddie in Minority Report.
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Nicholas Dronen retweeted
Never heard the band Souled American before today but feel like I’ve been waiting to hear something like it ever since I first laid ears on Vic Chesnutts ‘West of Rome’. This is their 1st new album in 30 years. I have some homework to do 88 - 96 Souled American- Sanctions (2026)
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Nicholas Dronen retweeted
I mean this with all my soul -- Jesse Plemons should have been Oscar nominated for best supporting actor for #GameNight.
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Jason Bateman says he’s open to a “Game Night” sequel: "I think if John and Jonathan wanted to write one, I’ll bet you [Warner Bros.’] Mike [De Luca] and Pam [Abdy] will be up for it, and I certainly would be there as an actor." variety.com/2026/tv/awards/j…
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Listening to Souled American is like watching some auteur's movie and their style is unlike that of any other but it works out because they care enough to teach you how to watch it while you watch.
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Gave them a deeper listen and figured out what I like about Angine de Poitrine. Their innovation under (looping) constraints is groovy. It seems difficult but the guys seem to really enjoy playing music together and that has to make it somewhat easier. The atonality is cool, of course, but for me the kickers are the 3/4s, the cut meters, the sheer agility, the Bach-like arrangement of layers of melody and rhythm. It's like The Bad Plus (from a decade ago) gave birth to a star child who turned out to be Geddy Lee.
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Just think about the 14-year-olds who are listening to the band and getting their first double necked partially microtonal guitars. It's going to be wild!
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Did Wittgenstein have anything interesting to say about music?
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I remember reading a biography of him in which he's described as believing that some modern composers (starting when I don't know) wrote music that sounded too much like machinery.
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Nicholas Dronen retweeted
Souled American's Sanctions has been named one of @SPIN's Best Albums of 2026 (So Far). "The time off was worth it as Sanctions doesn't disappoint." Read more: spinmagazine.com/2026/06/bes…
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The Big Lebowski rings with energy when Julianne Moore is on screen.
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Nicholas Dronen retweeted
Replying to @FanSouled
Something about the most recent album is that some of the songs are expressed with anguish but are just exquisite and, consequently, sublime. The amount of humanity in them is just astonishing.
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I mean.
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If I weren't holding out for an R3X, I'd buy an R2 in an instant.
Legacy automakers have been trying to match the Tesla Model Y for years. Rivian did it. "With an unparalleled blend of incredible performance, cutting-edge software, and off-road chops, the R2 is the do-everything machine I’ve always dreamed of," writes Deputy Ed. Mack Hogan.
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While Freeing Wheels is the hit single of the album, most of the compositions demonstrate the band's maturity, mastery of song, and distinct vision.
.@humpdaynews says Souled American "delivers a kind of transcendent, salvation-ready mood" on their song "Freeing Wheels," from new LP #Sanctions. At radio now from @jealousbutcher, and on the road through the end of June. humpday.news/music/tracks-so… youtube.com/watch?v=3OCMkhfk…
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Nicholas Dronen retweeted
Hot temperatures will continue Sunday and through the week, with afternoon highs in the 90s across the low elevations. Remember to stay hydrated and limit strenuous outdoor activities! #COwx
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Nicholas Dronen retweeted
Russia: How to destroy soft power In my first book “The Great Rupture” (a.co/d/028JVw2t) published in 2020, I described Russia as follows: “Danger to its neighbors as an unsatisfied and sullen but ultimately unsuccessful and deformed giant, eventually morphing into a modern-day equivalent of Mongol warriors in the service of the Chinese emperors.” Historically, Russia never had friends with its neighbors being either vassals or enemies. Finland did manage to walk the middle line, but this was only possible because the USSR knew that repercussions will be far beyond any benefits In my second book, published in 2024, “The Twilight Before the Storm”(a.co/d/0e68JT8j), I argued that the perception of what constitutes “Russian World” do not line up with borders of the Russian Federation. While this is a common ailment of formerly great colonial empires, it has taken a more toxic turn in a centralized Russian state, especially toward what Russians regard as “brotherly” nations of Belarus and Ukraine but also Caucuses and parts of Central Asia. Ukraine being the largest and the strongest of these neighboring lands, has fought for more than five centuries to have its own space. Ukraine’s distinct culture, language and history, made the conflict inevitable. As I described: “What Russia wants, Ukraine cannot willingly accept, and what Ukraine wants, Russia can never willingly concede to”. Whenever Russia discusses “mutual security”, it invariably means subordination within Russian Empire And yet, it did not have to be this way When I lived in the Soviet Union in the 1960s-70s, there was considerable goodwill and respect for Russia. Apart from the Baltics, everyone spoke Russian and while names and accents were different (e. g. my surname and accent were dead giveaways that I hailed from Ukraine), there was a very strong cultural gravitational pull. It is likely the same was true of 1980s and 1990s. Although neither Russia nor most Soviet republics (apart from the Baltics) were good candidates for the EU, there was a window of opportunity (as late as 2008) to create an integrated market of independent states, with strong links to the EU and China. But, this would have required Russia to accept hard power limitations and allow its soft power to bridge local frictions Alas, by now it is far too late. Attacks on Georgia and the invasion of Ukraine destroyed any chance, leaving Russia as a dependency of China. If Georgia and Armenia want greater independence, the case is truly lost. But, despite sufferings, it is good news for Ukraine. While facing many challenges, Ukrainians have protected their independence and they will join the EU. Reconstruction and tapping into Ukrainian resources as well as high quality human capital will transform the EU itself. Today, the US is also recklessly destroying its own soft power, but there is a good chance that “American Fever” will break. There is no such hope for Russia, at least not for generations to come.
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Nicholas Dronen retweeted
Apocalyptic bird nest. A Russian glide bomb knocks down a tree in Donbas. From the shattered branches rolls out a tiny bird’s nest. Made of drone fiber-optic cable. Source: Oleg Malchenko
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Nicholas Dronen retweeted
This is what (pre-IPO) peak bullshit looks like. I'm really pro-AI and I'm very excited about future developments, but the catnip is clouding our judgement. Anthropic also say we should "pause" because we will "lose control" of a technology that has arguably less autonomy (now, in practice) than hand-written Python code. We are not "doing more with less" with current AI (if you take errors, legibility, time, cost and tail risk into consideration). Fundamentally new research is required, we are not even close. There is weak evidence (so far) for broad economy-wide displacement or a general AI-driven "unemployment shock". There is some (possibly transient) suppression of junior hires and contractors (for highly automatable jobs). They are now convincing Trump that nationalisation is a "good idea" for regular folks about to be "displaced" by AI. > “It almost becomes a partnership with the American public,” he said. Trump added that “the American people can benefit from the success of AI, and by that, they’re going to like it better.” [WSJ] George Carlin did say that "bullshit was the soundtrack of America". Imagine what he would have to say about all this if he were still alive. This might actually be the most sophisticated, multi-layered bullshit in human history. Book volumes, Netflix shows and management modules will be written about the 2020s frothy AI psychosis pandemic. And what makes it all the more annoying is when you strip away the bullshit and see it for what it is: current AI genuinely is innovative and useful, but its harms can only be mitigated with high levels of AI literacy. I'm hopeful that strong engineers will figure this out collectively, but I estimate it takes, on average, 18 months to 2 years of daily experience with vibe coding to properly grok it. We might not have that long. PS. Look at the leaked Claude Code source
We just published internal data on how much of Claude's development is already being done by Claude: - Over 80% of all code merged into our codebase is now written by Claude - It's been months since many researchers at Anthropic hand-wrote code - The typical Anthropic engineer ships 8x as much code as they did in 2024 - On the most open-ended engineering tasks, Claude's success rate jumped from ~26% to 76% in 6 months - When research sessions went off-track, Claude proposed a better next step than the human took 64% of the time We're not at recursive self-improvement yet, but it could come sooner than most expect. I highly recommend reading the full blog post.
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