Kosmos_mik

Rafal_Kosmos

9116978

Kosmos_Rafal Skoczek – Head transplant from body to Forest

You can find here a text and a zine I produced and wrote last year

http://www.poggibonsi.ch/index.php/september-22rafal-skoczek-philipp-valko/

Rafal_Kosmos – Swarm – Cyberzine by the Ccru

http://www.ccru.net/swarm1/1_swarm.htm

Rafal_Kosmos – Drexciya

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJMWzHe1vXQ

Drexciya was—and still remains—an enigma. No longer creating music, Drexciya was an electronic music group active in the early-mid 90s based out of Detroit, Michigan. James Stinson—who passed away in 2002—is their only known member, though Gerald Donald (techno producer and artist) is also usually associated with them.

Why don’t we know who they are? Because they’ve never shown their faces. They’ve never been photographed, and even though they’ve been interviewed (only a few times), they wore masks and, in some, had their voices dubbed over.

Drexciya’s music can best be described as “Electro” or “Techno.” Tracks center around a drum machine and incorporate bass, melodies, and synths. It’s rumored that they recorded tracks while playing instruments live and used sequencing methods—all pretty cut-rate music technology for the time.

They were a part of the Underground Resistance collective, “the baddest group of sonic electronic warriors in the world.”

image

                     The past + the future // Invasion + Escapism 

So how does this relate to Afrofuturism?

Drexciya is more than just a Detroit-based Techno group—their music comes along with a story. As revealed in album notes for The Quest (1997), “Drexciya” is the name of an underwater country populated by the unborn children of African women thrown off of middle passage slave ships that learned to breathe underwater in the womb.

What?

Yeah.

Critic Kodwo Eshun talks a lot about Drexciya’s role in the Afrofuturist movement. In his article “Further Considerations of Afrofuturism,” he says that Afrofuturism

“focuses on someone who is at odds with the apparatus of power in society and whose profound experience in one of cultural dislocation, alienation and estrangement”(298).

Their entire narrative is based on a historical event that forever changed the lives of African Americans in the United States—the middle passage.

Drexciya invaded the past, twisted it around and created a new present and future that attempts to dislocate and escape (both physically to a new place and metaphorically for a new experience).

 

Rafal_Kosmos – Kodwo Eshun – Further Consideration on Afro-Futurism

eshun-further-considerations-on-afrofuturism2.pdf

Rafal_Kosmos – Poor Meme, Rich Meme

http://reallifemag.com/poor-meme-rich-meme/

Article by Aria Dean

Rafal_kosmos – Greg Bear – Blood Music

hugo-1984-winner-novelette-greg-bear-blood-music

pdf version of the novel Blood Music by Greg Bear

Blood Music deals with themes including biotechnology, nanotechnology (including the grey goo hypothesis), the nature of reality, consciousness, and artificial intelligence.

 

Rafal_Kosmos – why the future doesn’t need us

https://www.wired.com/2000/04/joy-2/

Why The Future Doesn’t Need Us” is an article written by Bill Joy (then Chief Scientist at Sun Microsystems) in the April 2000 issue of Wired magazine. In the article, he argues (quoting the sub title) that “Our most powerful 21st-century technologies — robotics, genetic engineering, and nanotech — are threatening to make humans an endangered species.” Joy warns:

The experiences of the atomic scientists clearly show the need to take personal responsibility, the danger that things will move too fast, and the way in which a process can take on a life of its own. We can, as they did, create insurmountable problems in almost no time flat. We must do more thinking up front if we are not to be similarly surprised and shocked by the consequences of our inventions.

a.r. kosmos

3411