Here’s what @djspooky and @internetarchive are doing with their #Hewlett50 Arts Commission. https://hewlett.org/50commissions/

Sampling Digital Music and Culture
Edited by Paul D. Miller aka
DJ Spooky that Subliminal Kid
Foreword by Cory Doctorow
Introduction by Steve Reich
“Paul Miller has grabbed disparate philosophies and references from the past five hundred years and tied them into a neat and interesting narrative on music, sound, and current thought in our time. Sound Unbound is an excellent reference on art–in the popular context–in the twenty-first century.”

by Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky that Subliminal Kid
The conceptual artist Paul Miller, also known as Dj Spooky that Subliminal Kid, delivers a manifesto for rhythm science–the creation of art from the flow of patterns in sound and culture, “the changing same.”
Winner of American Institute of Graphic Arts Book of the Year Award.
PURCHASE BOOK
Mondays 10/9C
Twitter: @AMC_TV
Facebook: @AMC (https://www.facebook.com/amc/)
Official hashtag: #CameronSciFi
Show site:
http://www.amc.com/shows/james-camerons-story-of-science-fiction

DJ Spooky new album project with VP Records Debuts on Billboard in the Top 5!!
// GET THE ALBUM HERE

The Hewlett 50 Arts Commissions: supporting the creation and premiere of 50 exceptional new works by world-class artists in partnership with Bay Area nonprofit organizations.
Launched in 2017 in honor of the Hewlett Foundation’s 50th anniversary, the five-year, $8 million initiative awards 10 commissions annually in five performing arts disciplines. These artworks will bring communities together in the Bay Area and go on to inspire, engage, and challenge audiences across the country and around the world in years to come.

Brown welcomes Distinguished Media Innovator, DJ Spooky
Every year, Brown seek new ways to connect research with leading media innovators, and we are happy to announce that we named DJ Spooky, aka That Subliminal Kid, Paul D. Miller, as the Brown Distinguished Media Innovator for 2017.
DJ Spooky’s work ranges from creating the first DJ app to producing an impactful DVD anthology about the “Pioneers of African American Cinema”. According to a New York Times review, “there has never been a more significant video release than Pioneers of African-American Cinema.” The prolific innovator and artist also created 13 music albums and is about to release a fourteenth. Called “Phantom Dancehall”, it is an intense mix of hip hop, Jamaican ska and dancehall culture. Paul D. Miller will engage in Brown-related collaborations all year, and his residency will culminate in a week-long series of lectures, workshops and performances at Stanford University starting April 10, 2017.
DJ Spooky’s lectures are part of the new Brown Institute Lecture series at Stanford, which we launch with Internet pioneer and founder of archive.org Brewster Kahle on October 11, 2016.