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HDL - Whales Have Hind Legs album

HDL - Whales Have Hind Legs album

  • Performer: HDL
  • Genre: Electronic / Audiobooks and files
  • Title: Whales Have Hind Legs
  • Released: 2018
  • Style: Industrial, Experimental, Field Recording
  • MP3 version size: 1514 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1287 mb
  • Other: AIFF DMF VOC MP2 AA FLAC AHX
  • Rating: 4.1
  • Votes: 464

Description

Проектные поставки и дистрибуция KNX оборудования. nbsp;· 100% наличие · Техподдержка · Шоу-рум

Cassette + Digital Album. C20 white cassette tape with risograph cover and insert by the artist. Limited to 50 copies Includes unlimited streaming of SAC - Whales Have Hind Legs via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more. Previous performances by HDL include ‘Whitechapel Presents 01’ at Whitechapel Gallery as well as shows at Kelder Projects and The Hive Dalston. HDL also has a vinyl release due on Calling Cards Publishing. With special thanks to KD.

That fits the classic scenario of how natural selection works. If you can swim faster, you can catch more food, escape predators (such as sharks) more easily and therefore you live longer and have more offsprings. The loss of the hindlimbs would be advantageous to the survival of whales. It is favored by natural selection.

The ancestors of whales once strode on land on four legs, just as other mammals do. Over time, as they evolved to dwell in water, their front legs became flippers while they lost their back legs and hips, although modern whales all still retain traces of pelvises, and occasionally throwbacks are born with vestiges of hind limbs. A great deal of mystery surrounds how the anatomy of the first whales changed to propel them through the water. A key piece of that puzzle would be the discovery of when exactly the wide flukes on their powerful tails arose

Whales evolved from land mammals who did have hindlimbs  . The smaller the hind limbs, the better the whale was adapted to its environment and so better to compete for resources, and better able to have more baby whales to pass on its "short limbs" genes. It was such an advantage, and over such a long period of time, that soon enough, the whole whale population had this advantage of no hind limbs. The "buds" you are seeing are vestigial, they once offered an advantage on land, they offered a disadvantage in water so evolution selected them to become smaller and smaller.

Whales Have Hind Legs, a new C20 from multi-disciplinary artist Hannah Dargavel-Leafe (HDL), collects tracks made using recordings of an old whaling station in Iceland. These recordings are largely unmanipulated aside from layering and sequencing, and because of this Whales Have Hind Legs is able to paint a vivid picture of this mysterious location.

Snakes and whales do not have hind limbs. They do have certain bones in the hinder part of their bodies, but they do not use them for walking or locomotion. What evolutionists claim is that these bones are vestigial organs that used to be hind limbs and they lost the use of them. Now, they are said to be useless, and are pointed at as proof of evolution. It is important to understand that loss of legs does not prove evolution, that would be the opposite of evolution.

Whales' Legs What early scientist believed to be leg bones turned out to be a key anchor for the reproductive system. the largest rodents, Canberra's. Most large mammals have four legs, with the exception of birds  . They have hind legs slightly similarin structure to kangaroos' hind legs, but they do not hop. Insteadthey move with a running gait, or canter, with their forelegs moving alternately and their hindlegs moving in unison.

Hind Hind Legs is an album released by Montreal-based indie band The Lovely Feathers by Equator Records on April 18, 2006 (see 2006 in music). The Only Appalachian Cornfield". Ooh You Shocked Me". "E Man Sorrow". Lion Eats the Wildebeest". Mark Kupfert - Vocals, Guitar.

Tracklist

A1 Jetty One 0:10
A2 No Seals 4:30
A3 Leather Chair 0:12
A4 Laying Egges In The Exhibits 3:16
B5 Jetty Two 0:10
B6 Flies Got Up Our Noses 5:42
B7 Jetty Three 0:07
B8 Tectonic Gap 0:48

Notes

A collection of tracks made using sounds recorded at a former whaling station in Iceland. The tracks themselves were produced over the course of a year alongside a body of sculptures and drawings.

White cassette tape with risograph cover and insert by the artist. Limited to 50 copies. Announced as a C20, but it's a little shorter in reality.

Continuous track-numbering on release.

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
SAC #040 HDL* Whales Have Hind Legs ‎(8xFile, FLAC) Sacred Tapes SAC #040 2018