PARIS - Climate change and biodiversity loss are laying bare our dependence on the natural world for everything from the food we eat to the air we breathe.
Other Music’s staff tell us their Top 10s of 2020 (listen to the playlist)
We ve been asking artists and other industry figures for their Top 10 albums of the 2020, and here we have year-end lists from a bunch of staff members of much-missed NYC record store
Other Music, which closed in June of 2016. One of the first things a lot of customers did on walking into Other Music was look up at the giant white board above the counter to see the current staff Top 10 lists, so it s a treat to have a virtual version of that here. We got lists from 20 staff members, including co-owner
Posted December 16th, 2020 for Biomimicry Institute
Calling on experienced writers and social media influencers who are passionate about climate action and regenerating Earth’s natural ecosystems to join the team.
MISSOULA, MT December 16, 2020 The Biomimicry Institute is looking for a motivated and enthusiastic communicator to join its remote team. Nature thrives on biodiversity, and the Institute is modeling this universal pattern to encourage a diverse range of applicants to apply. The Communications Manager will support day-to-day operations in the communications department and help the Institute promote its programs, values, and mission. The ideal candidate for this role will have excellent written and verbal communication skills; have experience working in public relations; be knowledgeable in creating engaging social media campaigns; and most importantly, have a unique perspective to offer the community.
With artists releasing songs at a fast and furious pace, itâs difficult for the average hip-hop head to keep track of it allâno matter how tapped in they are. Thatâs why we created The Ones, a daily post to highlight the song you need to hear.
Lex Amor -â341 (Freestyle)â
To Lex Amor, âgold paved streets look like concrete in London.â On her fall release
Government Tropicana, the rapper, DJ, and producer from the cityâs north side reflects on childhood hustles and adulthood struggles over thirty minutes of bright boom-bap and dark soul with a hint of UK garage. A first generation British-Nigerian from a working-class family, Lex Amor weaves casual Pidgin English and praise for her mother into the album-closing â341 (Freestyle),â which unfurls like a roll of ribbon. She pauses in the middle of the four-minute freestyle to mutter to herself, debating how long itâs taken her to find her sound (Two years? No, four?) before meditat