Caleb Landry Jones: The Mother Stone (Color Vinyl) - VINYL LP
SKU: 88103208054

Caleb Landry Jones: The Mother Stone (Color Vinyl) - VINYL LP

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Caleb Landry Jones: The Mother Stone (Color Vinyl) - VINYL LPTitle: The Mother Stone (Color Vinyl) Artist: Caleb Landry Jones Label: Sacred Bones Product Type: VINYL LP UPC: 843563126486 Genre: Rock Release Date: 2020 05 29 Number of Discs: 2 Additional Details: BLUE "I think most of it takes place in dreams," Caleb Landry Jones says of his debut solo album, The Mother Stone. "I'm talking more about dreams than I am about what's happened iin the physical realm. Or I'm talking about both, and you're not sure

Title: The Mother Stone (Color Vinyl)
Artist: Caleb Landry Jones
Label: Sacred Bones
Product Type: VINYL LP
UPC: 843563126486
Genre: Rock
Release Date: 2020-05-29
Number of Discs: 2
Additional Details: BLUE

"I think most of it takes place in dreams," Caleb Landry Jones says of his debut solo album, The Mother Stone. "I'm talking more about dreams than I am about what's happened iin the physical realm. Or I'm talking about both, and you're not sure what's what. "This is the kind of conversation you end up having about a record like this one, a sprawling psychedelic suite built from abrupt and disorienting detours and schizoid shifts of voice, it's manic energy forever pulling the tablecloth out from under classic pop orchestration. One minute you're squarely in the realm of biographical fact and a moment later you're having a discussion about lucid dreaming and how Jones once punched up a dream set on a soccer field by willing himself to experience it from the POV of the ball. But maybe that's just another story about grabbing the wheel of your own hallucination; maybe this pertains to the music after all. Some biographical facts: Caleb Landry Jones was born in Garland, Texas in 1989 and comes from a long line of fiddle players. Three, maybe four generations back, on his mother's side. His grandfather wrote jingles for commercials, his mother was a singer-songwriter who taught piano lessons in the house, and his father was a contractor who did a lot of work for the Dallas music-equipment retailer Brook Mays and knew a guy if you needed a bass or a banjo. But Jones is not sure if you can hear any of this in his music and he does not play the fiddle. What you can hear on this record are the marks left by conversion experiences, two in particular. First there's Jones' formative encounter with the Beatles' "White Album," the Fabs record most obviously composed by four Beatles rowing in different directions, and the beginning of what Jones calls "this British Invasion of my soul," which is still ongoing. Second, there's Syd Barrett, cracked vessel of Pink Floyd's most intergalactic ambitions, and the "falling-down-the-stairs" quality of his solo work in particular. "I was dating a girl who was obsessed with him," Jones remembers, "and the fact that I'd never heard him really pissed her off. So we went and got The Madcap Laughs and we listened to it and I could see why it pissed her off. " "John keeps knocking at the door, and so does Syd," Jones says of these songs. "And I'm in there somewhere. And so are a few other people, I think. It would be really boring if it was just one guy. " Jones has been writing and recording music since age 16, around the same time he started acting professionally. Played in a band called Robert Jones for a minute, lost his guitar player to higher education, moved into his own place, and broke up with somebody, at which point the songs really started coming hard and fast. "I started playing guitar and playing more keys," he says, "and then started writing record after record after record after record, because I didn't know what to do with myself. It was a good way of healing. And it felt like as soon as I started doing it, it felt like it needed to happen all the time. " In the ensuing years he'd spend a lot of time carrying unrecorded songs around in his head like goldfish in a bag, waiting for a chance to record them in marathon sessions in his parents' barn. "You gotta play the songs every day, or every two or three days, to keep 'em," he says. "Otherwise I forget them. " Sometimes the ideas fuse together, one chapter to the next; this is how songs grow into seven-plus-minute epics like the ones on The Mother Stone. His back catalog is around seven hundred songs deep- a whole discography of full albums, most of them unheard outside the barn, at least for now. Before long Jones' other job started to keep him away from the barn for longer stretches. You may have seen him playing the drums on television as a member of Landry Clarke's death-metal band on Friday Night Lights. You may have seen him in other things, too. But enough about acting, except for this: A few years ago Jones had a pivotal meeting with Jim Jarmusch, the movie director and musician. "I was a big fan of his work," Jones says, "and I know how I act with people that I'm big fans of their work. So instead of wanting to talk, I thought I'd write him a piece that would somehow let him know who I was. " So Jones spent a few nights composing a new instrumental work for solo piano, and showed up ready to play it for the director at their meeting- which turned out to be at a diner somewhere in Canada, where the amenities did not include a piano, so they had a conversation instead. Jones did slip Jarmusch Microastro and Macroastro, two collections of songs from the barn, most of them four or five or maybe eight years old at that point. Jarmusch liked what he heard, told Jones he should talk to Sacred Bones founder Caleb Braaten, and before long Jones was making the record you're about to hear- whose opening track, "Flag Day/The Mother Stone" incorporates that piano piece Jones wrote to explain himself to Jim Jarmusch. A few more germane facts: The Mother Stone was recorded at Valentine Recording Studios, where everyone from Bing Crosby to Frank Zappa once logged time, refurbished to time-capsule retro standards in 2015 by studio manager and Mother Stone producer Nic Jodoin. Jones brought his collection of battered Yamahas and Casios up from the barn and played them alongside vintage equipment from Jodoin's collection. Working in a real studio gave Jones a chance to slow his creative process down. They built the songs up from acoustic guitar, let them sit a while, circled back. Sometimes Jones and his girlfriend would decompress at the Shakey's down the street, home to a range of acceptable video-arcade options. "They got that thing where you throw it in the clown's mouth," Jones says. "That's fun. I like the look of those clowns. " Maybe the clowns are the key. This isn't a concept album, it's a parade led by multiple unreliable narrators who rail against the universe and profess their love and vacate the stage before we can ask them a question. The circus comes to town, the circus leaves town. A young man from suburban Texas winds up and a clown opens it's mouth as wide as the sky. -Alex Pappademas

Tracks:
1.1 Flag Day / The Mother Stone
1.2 You’re so Wonderfull
1.3 I Dig Your Dog
1.4 Katya
1.5 All I Am in You / The Big Worm
1.6 No Where’s Where Nothing’s Died
1.7 Licking the Days
1.8 For the Longest Time
1.9 The Hodge-Podge Porridge Poke
1.10 I Want to Love You
1.11 The Great I Am
1.12 Lullabbey
1.13 No Where’s Where Nothing’s Died (A Marvelous Pain)
1.14 Thanks for Staying
1.15  Little Planet Pig
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SKU: 88103208054

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In setting the scene, Sangeet reminds us that, in the 1960s, Singapore was a struggling port city with limited natural resources and a rather tenuous future. It's hard to imagine but true. A strategic location in South East Asia. But such location meant little if it could not draw talent and capital to develop the infrastructure needed to grow, and here a deceptively simple and modular invention helped - the shipping container. Harvard Professor Carliss Y. Baldwin, in her book Design Rules, shared with us how technology shapes organisations, indeed entire industries and societal structures, and so, as we envision and put a technology to use, who decide how organisations are shaped, who governs them, and where power and agency lies.  Yet AI is not just any other technology. We are not in full control of the technology and its power to learn, re-shape itself, and its impact on the nature of work therefore extends well beyond the individual using AI tools. This is where Sangeet takes us, into a hugely relevant and timely discussion of how AI presents immense opportunities as well as grave risks to the knowledge economy, as we know it today. The questions raised are profound: among these... - How would power shift from the current ways of work we are accustomed to, towards autonomous networks that make decisions and learn on their own (and faster than us)? - Which organizational models best capture the shifts towards AI-supported value creation? and what path could such a transition follow? - How would these impact the opportunities and risks for collaboration, within and beyond the enterprise?  A whole chapter is dedicated to strategy, and deservedly so. AI in itself does not provide a competitive advantage. Let’s not rush to appoint a Chief AI Officers or draw-up a so-called AI-strategy, for what is essentially a set of widely distributed and accessible technologies. We need a business strategy that acknowledges the deep impacts AI is and will continue to make. Before we rush to layer AI on top of org. processes and models that have served us in previous generations, let’s take an ecosystem-wide view and ask - where are we now? What is fundamentally changing, and Where can we harness its trends towards an advantage? Having read Sangeet's book, my advice is this - seize the opportunity, invite others to the conversation and be open to new forms of power and control, as the organisations that win tomorrow are already experimenting in doing things differently today. A great addition to my Kindle library and a candidate to our Best Book Picks of 2025.
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I recently used the CompTIA Security+ Get Certified Get Ahead: SY0-701 Study Guide to prepare for my Security+ exam, and I passed in just two weeks—a huge accomplishment for me! Here’s why this study guide was so helpful: 1. Clear and Concise Content The book is well-organized and breaks down the material in a way that’s easy to understand, even if you’re new to security concepts. It covers everything you need for the SY0-701 exam, from network security to risk management and cryptography, in a clear, digestible format. It’s not overwhelming, and the explanations are straightforward. 2. Focused on Exam Objectives What I really appreciated was how the guide is directly aligned with the exam objectives. It helps you focus on what’s important and ensures you're prepared for the exact topics that will be on the test. I didn’t waste time studying irrelevant material, and I felt confident on exam day. 3. Practice Questions and Exam Tips The practice questions at the end of each chapter were incredibly useful. They gave me a feel for the types of questions I’d encounter on the actual exam, and reviewing the answers helped me solidify my understanding. The exam tips and tricks scattered throughout the book also helped me refine my test-taking strategies. 4. Comprehensive Coverage with Easy-to-Understand Examples This guide provides not only the theory but also real-world examples that helped make abstract concepts easier to grasp. The examples helped me see how the material applied in actual IT environments, which made it easier to remember. 5. Great for Quick Study Sessions I had a tight two-week timeline to study, and this guide was perfect for that. The chapters are concise enough to work through in short study sessions, and the material is presented in a way that’s easy to retain. I was able to go through the entire book and still have time to review key concepts before my exam. Final Thoughts If you’re looking to pass your CompTIA Security+ SY0-701 exam in a short amount of time, this study guide is an excellent resource. It helped me prepare effectively, and I passed the exam with confidence in just two weeks! Highly recommend it for anyone looking to get certified and get ahead in their career. Pros: Clear, concise explanations aligned with exam objectives Practice questions and exam tips to reinforce learning Real-world examples that make concepts easier to understand Perfect for fast, focused study sessions Helps you stay on track for the Security+ exam Con: Some sections could benefit from deeper dives for advanced learners, but it’s perfect for exam preparation
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CompTIA Security+ Get Certified is an excellent resource for anyone preparing for the Security+ exam. The material is thorough, well-organized, and easy to understand, making complex security concepts approachable. The practice questions and exam tips are especially helpful for building confidence and ensuring readiness. Whether you’re new to cybersecurity or looking to refresh your knowledge, this guide is a must-have for passing the exam and advancing your career!
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