Schaffnerin im Zug unterhält sich mit Mitreisenden: "Ich mag meinen Job, ich finde es sind durchwegs eher angenehme Menschen die bei uns mit der Bahn reisen. Schlechte Erfahrungen hab ich selten."

Das ist doch mal schön zu hören, oder? #oebb #ilovewhatido

on a music website I found the category:
"incredibly strange music"

I can totally relate 😍😆

#experimentalmusic #ilovewhatido

War grad auf Sommerkurs. Bei der Evaluation schreibt der Prof aus Bergen, der neben mir sitzt:

"What could have been done better?

"less potatoes, more fish"

ich liebe es :)

#peopleareawesome #ilovewhatido

so I make a horrid rumbling every day 😅

"...by giving divided Basses to be play’d on the Violone or Double Bass, which makes a horrid rumbling, whereas if the Violoncello’s, and other such Bass-Instruments only, did play those Divided Basses, and the Violone or Double Bass play’d a Fundamental Bass under them,... a much finer and more agreeable Harmony would ensue..."
(J.C. Pepusch, 1731)

#ilovewhatido
#musikgeschichte
#basslife

also wenn #Musik und #Softwareentwicklung was gemeinsam haben könnte man sagen, ich geh jetzt mal bughunting in "beatfurrer" und mein Testtool wiegt 15kg und ist 2m groß

#ilovewhatido #musicianslife
#thedarksideofscrum

habitats: diy radio studio unterwegs

-> Montag 29.1. 19.30h #kopfkino auf @radiohelsinki - "Kollektive Verkabelung" von Trio werken

#RadioHelsinkiGraz #ilovewhatido

@nene if we want to try another framework with the team one day... maybe this could be fun:

https://slap.pm/

😂

#ilovewhatido

Sweary Lightweight Agile Planning

#soundsoftheday
#archaeosonicecology
#ilovewhatido

"...long-term persistence of eutrophication from historical sheep concentrations" 😆

sprich: man kann hören wo früher Schafe gewesen sind!

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10021-020-00581-w

Romans Shape Today’s Vegetation and Soils: Two Millennia of Land-Use Legacy Dynamics in Mediterranean Grasslands - Ecosystems

Archeological investigations in one of the most species-rich French Mediterranean dry grasslands (La Crau, Southern France) revealed a dense network of ancient sheep corrals dating from Roman to modern times. By analyzing soil chemistry and vegetation across abandonment dates spanning two millennia, we bring to light a persisting signature of Roman, eighteenth century and modern corrals on present-day ecosystems. Community composition and species-richness reflect time after abandonment of sheep stables and are linked to long-term persistence of eutrophication from historical sheep concentrations. Our data highlight changes in vegetation that persist two millennia after human impacts ceased. Small-scale pastoral legacies from Roman times continue to have significant impacts on present-day herbaceous plant communities. Our findings point to a need for greater consideration of persisting eutrophication in dry grasslands and of the conservation value of these long-term legacies.

SpringerLink

Spielanweisung in der Partitur:

"vermehrt organisches Wabern"

😀

#newmusicnotation
#ilovewhatido