This one is from Wingo Shackleford on matrixsynth:
I think our theremin-playing friend might qualify for “Tuxie Tuesdays.”
This one is from Wingo Shackleford on matrixsynth:
I think our theremin-playing friend might qualify for “Tuxie Tuesdays.”
The next contribution from our first lolcat-synth contest comes from Synthtopia. The headline is “Cat Announces Plan To Rule The World!”:
Synthtopia included this in an article promoting our contest, and they produced one of the best examples in the process.
Well, we saw a lot of great captions come out of our first LolCatSynth contest. I quite liked this one:
I'll post some of the others over the next few weeks, including some from reposts at matrixsynth and elsewhere. And stay tuned for more pics just begging to be “cap-shunned”.
Remember this photo from a few days ago?
Well, this photo has inspired several lolcat captions, including on this original post:
“im in ur ether, changing ur capacitanz”
There are several more suggestions on this repost at matrix.
So am calling the first LolCatSynth contest, to write even more lolcat captions for this photo. Please leave your suggestions in the comment section.
There isn't really any “prize” or “winner” for this particular contest, though I will be happy to do the actual captioning for my favorite submissions, as well as post them (with credit) to the popular lolcat sites.
From Brian Sacawa: Sounds Like Now:
The context for this picture is Sacawa's lament that early theremin virtuosi concentrated on trying to get the instrument to play traditional western tonal music, rather than exploring the radically new ways of organizing pitch and structure afforded by the instrument. This is indeed something that concerns me about many of the efforts going on to “de-experimentalize” computer music and simply turn it into another tool for traditional classical or popular forms. The great promise of electronic instruments is to allow people to break with the traditions of acoustic music. But Sacawa concludes:
Maybe if more cats–unlike humans, who are so grounded in western tonal music–played the theremin we might witness the instrument's full potential.
And thus we have theremin-playing cats.
Check out this feline thereminist from YouTube: