Thursday 24 October 2013


Metallica set to go south – for Antarctica gig

 for  Guardian Wednesday 23 October 2013 11.33 BST

Metal giants linked with December gig in Antarctica after soft drinks company launches online sweepstake in Colombia

Metallica

Riding the lightning … Metallica are set to become the first major band to play a gig in Antarctica, the world's southernmost continent Metallica appear to have booked a concert in Antarctica as part of a competition run by a soft drinks company.


With Metallica themselves yet to announce the glacial metal bash, news of the gig emerged through a rather esoteric source: the Colombian website for Coca-Cola Zero (via Blabbermouth). The Coca-Cola Company has launched a sweepstake for fans in six Colombian cities, with the chance to win tickets to Metallica's "unique concert" at the bottom of the world.


Though no specific date for the show is mentioned, contestants must be available to travel between 2 and 15 December.


Drummer Lars Ulrich may have been hinting about the concert when he made some cryptic remarks in September. "There's a very interesting thing coming our way in December," Ulrich told California's 107.7 The Bone. "If anybody [in management] even knew that I just said what I just said, they would hunt me down and silence me. But there is another frontier coming in December, which we're very excited about."


If the gig goes ahead, Metallica will apparently be the first major band to play in Antarctica, where live music has traditionally been at something of a premium. The US-run McMurdo Station has long hosted open-mic nights, and a band called Nunatak claimed to have played the continent's first rock concert in 2007. The quintet, consisting of scientists from the British Antarctic Survey, an environmental research centre, played to a "sell out" crowd of 17 people.


In March 2008, Fall Out Boy were forced to cancel a proposed concert in Antarctica when bad weather kept them away from the continent's western peninsula. Analysts blamed global warming for the collapse of the 16,000 sq km (6,178 sq miles) Wilkins ice shelf. "Essentially, our runway just fell off," Pete Wentz told MTV.

In other Metallica news, Ulrich recently revealed that the band have considered selling their leftover guitar riffs online. "We have more riffs than we know what to do with," he told Abu Dhabi's National newspaper (via Classic Rock) . "We talked about setting up a special riff thing, where maybe we could share some of these riffs with others, like an eBay kind of thing.


"Some of [the riffs] are actually quite decent, but we won't be able to use all of them."

Metallica are currently promoting their first 3D concert film, Through the Never. It is in cinemas now.

Sunday 10 February 2013

British Architects Revive “The Walking City” in Antarctica with Mobile Research Station

Original post HERE

http://blogs.artinfo.com/objectlessons/files/2013/02/antarctica.jpeg



Archigram fans, brace yourselves. As much as this project looks like a collaboration between the ’60s British pop architecture collective and some Japanese vinyl toy makers, this brightly colored train of four-legged behemoths is actually the world’s first mobile research facility. Designed by UK-based Hugh Broughton Architects in conjunction with engineers at AECOM, the Halley VI Antarctic Research Station consists of eight interlinking modules, which altogether contain 20,000 square feet of laboratories and living accommodations for about 50 scientists, as Architectural Record reports. The bright red module houses a communal space designed to fend off extreme-weather-induced depression and stress.



The herd of structures is currently located on the floating Brunt Ice Shelf in Antarctica, meaning this “Walking City” (Ron Herron’s version pictured right) won’t be walking very far. Nor is it actually meant to walk at all: The modules are designed with ski-like “feet” that allow the station to be towed by tractors over a prepared ice track in the event that it needs to be relocated inland. The design’s extendable legs also allow the station to elevate above predictably high levels of ice build-up over time, obviating a problem that spelled the early demises of previous Halley stations.
Research done on one of Halley VI’s predecessors led to the 1985 discovery of the ozone hole, one of the many environmental oopsy-daisys we laugh nervously about as we deal with devastating hurricanes and strangely warm winters interspersed with freak snowstorms.


Photos courtesy the architects.
- Kelly Chan