TRANSISTORS, or, acoustic cultures of transference resisters and empire deserters
PR No. 2.02 "Transistors"
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PR No. 2.02.002
Release Date: January 1, 2005
Artist: Elliot Perkins
Title: Eurodac Express
Series: Transistors
Description:
Elliot Perkins (fka Phonem) returns from a three-year hiatus with the opening chapter to his epic "Eurodac Express" project. Originally a collaboration with internationally-renowned Bangladeshi photographer Shahidul Alam, the project follows migrant struggles against the techno-bureaucratic controls on migration in Europe.
Soundfiles:
01. A Hole In The Fence
Item: Audio File 2-02-002-01.mp3
Format: MP3 224kbit/sec
Size: 35,953K
02. A Song About Freedom
Item: Audio File 2-02-002-02.mp3
Format: MP3 224kbit/sec
Size: 20,410K
03. Non EU
Item: Audio File 2-02-002-03.mp3
Format: MP3 224kbit/sec
Size: 21,876K
Graphics:
2-02-002.jpg
Item: CD Insert 2-02-002.jpg
Format: JPEG (RGB full-color)
Size: 800K
Description: High-resolution image for full-color printing.
Text:
Press Release
Item: Press Release 2-02-002PR.DOC
Format: DOC (Microsoft Word File)
Size: 29K
Description: "Eurodac Express" press release. January 1, 2005.
Researched and developed through Arts Council England's International Artists Fellowships Programme.
INSTRUCTIONS: In order to create your own copy of this release, download the files above to your local hard drive. You can then create a CDR of the audio files, and print the graphics file to make your own CD cover art. For best playback results, when burning a CDR of this album eliminate the spaces between tracks by setting the default pause between tracks to zero (0) seconds.
NOTE: If the files are opening within your web browser, save them to your local hard drive by placing your cursor over the link or opened file, click-and-hold until a pop-up menu appears, and select the option "Save file as..."
Reviews
The Wire
Item: Review 2-02-002wire.pdf
Format: PDF
Size: 316K
Description: "Eurodac Express," "Ultra-red Play Kanak Attak," "Movement For Airports," and "border sounds" combined review by Ken Hollings in The Wire (UK). Issue 257, July 2005.