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Jackson Deep: Depth Perception

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Blog Name: Jackson Deep: Depth Perception
Url: http://www.jacksondeep.com
Language: English
Topics: electronic music, san francisco, clubbing culture
Description: Observations of the Quantum Culture is my contribution to bringing awareness to San Francisco's Electronic Dance Music Community through discussions of music, technology, the future, clubs, sound, events and culture. In addition, I focus on new forms of media, events, philosophy and science.
Popularity: 2 Followers

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Random thoughts: harmonics, ratios and dark matter
I’ve been playing a lot with harmonics lately with DJing. I have a less than precise ear, so I use a program (Virtual DJ) to name the keys of the tracks for me. I then discovered the Camelot system for mixing keys. Since I’ve really been into melodic tech house lately, it’s really opened my eyes (and ears) to the beauty of music. Harmonics are the ways the frequencies of certain sounds interact, creating the beautiful and sometimes challenging chords found in most music. Something I found of in
You, Me, and a Party it be
Photo by Guzman This photo is all about context. My good friend, Robert Guzman, took this photograph last Saturday night at Red Sky Record store. It was a Dubstep after-party for the night. I started DJing at midnite, thinking I would be spinning for about an hour. Keep in mind, this is an afterhours – as in, after the bars close at 2 am, so there were only a few chill cats the
Quantum Observations
I am completely fascinated by the alternate reality of Quantum Mechanics, the machinery beneath the matter. The inability to resolve Newtonian Physics with the subatomic world – and really, to even imagine how the two are even related – belies the only truth: we can never really know anything. The Nobel-prize winning physicist Richard Feynman once stated, “If you thought science was certain – well that was just an error on your part.” Although we may never fully understand the machinations of the universe – currently, we understand extremely little. In fact, the matter we are made of is only five percent of the known universe. Thirty

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