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Man finds his life passion in cleaning and restoring gravestones

Meet Wade Fowler, a very kind human who cleans gravestones that have fallen into disrepair. He's based in Iowa, and documents his projects on Instagram, where he calls himself "Millennial Stone Cleaner." He also researches and tells the stories of the people whose gravestones he's cleaning. โ€” Read the rest

Trance Is Backโ€”and Itโ€™s No Joke

Trance music never went away, writes Philip Sherburne, and I agree. But Iโ€™ve not progressed with the sound since I first fell for it 25 years ago, when I was a wide-eyed, impressionable teenage raver. Whenever I listen to my โ€œOld School Trance Favoritesโ€ playlist on Spotify, Iโ€™m whisked back to 1998 โ€” on some dance floor in some dark warehouse, with a classic track like Three Drivesโ€™ โ€œGreece 2000โ€ or Veracochaโ€™s โ€œCarte Blancheโ€ blasting in the room. The trance we danced to in those years was uplifting, life-changing. But as I ventured deeper into this world, the sound was a mere step in a longer journey โ€” it marked a period of raving with training wheels, of hours-long DJ sets of spoon-fed transcendence.

Still, as some of Sherburneโ€™s sources perfectly put it in the piece, thereโ€™s just something about trance, and listening to a โ€œvintageโ€ trance anthem from the late โ€™90s and early โ€™00s, however schmaltzy it may be, can give me shivers like no other type of music.

Sherburne writes a fun piece about the revival โ€” or perhaps reimagination โ€” of trance among a younger generation of producers and DJs who are outside the scene and, thus, more open-minded and experimental.

But where those projects carried a whiff of mischief, the new wave of trance feels like a more earnest and direct homage. Perhaps itโ€™s a generational shift, as artists who first discovered electronic music from their friendsโ€™ stepdadsโ€™ Tiรซsto CDs begin to look back on their own musical upbringing. Maybe itโ€™s just that people are jonesing for all the euphoria they can get right now.

Vestbirk believes that the shift is partly generational. A new wave of clubbers doesnโ€™t have the same prejudices about trance that the old guard did. And the artsier end of the scene is bored with techno, whichโ€”in its overground, festival-filling incarnation, with an emphasis on formulaic structures, identikit sound design, and gaudy spectacleโ€”has become as stale, commercialized, and ridiculous as mainstream trance once was.

APA Member Interview: Troy Seagraves

Troy Seagraves is a Ph.D. student in philosophy at Purdue University, entering his fifth year in the program. His research is in metaethics and normative ethics, focusing on how agent-relative facts contribute to a permissivism for actions. What are you most proud of in your professional life? Iโ€™ve a heart for teaching and helping students [โ€ฆ]
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