Brenna O'Brien

Web Development & Design

Interlude: Top Albums of 2011

28 Dec 2011

A holdover from my days working at a record store, the year end top 10 list has become a personal tradition. This one was tough. It was a good year according to my musical tastes, plus I’m notoriously indecisive when picking favourites (“I love all my children equally!”).

After countless edits, I give you my — loosely ranked in order of preference, liable to change at any second — top 20 albums of 2011:

  1. Destroyer – Kaputt
  2. St. Vincent – Strange Mercy
  3. Childish Gambino – Camp
  4. Beirut – The Rip Tide
  5. Tune Yards – WHOKILL
  6. Braids – Native Speaker
  7. Kurt Vile – Smoke Ring for My Halo
  8. Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues
  9. Toro y Moi – Underneath the Pine
  10. Little Dragon – Ritual Union
  11. Timber Timbre – Creep On Creepin’ On
  12. Feist – Metals
  13. Lykke Li – Wounded Rhymes
  14. Noah Gundersen – Family EP
  15. Bon Iver - Bon Iver
  16. Panda Bear – Tomboy
  17. Real Estate – Days
  18. Cave Singers – No Witch
  19. Atlas Sound – Parallax
  20. YACHT – Shangi-La

Bonus! A few choice tracks from said albums, some of them with excellent videos:

more…

Dynamic Logos

9 May 2011

logos

Toronto art school OCAD University has an innovative new visual identity, courtesy of Bruce Mau Design. The simple black and white logo includes a “window” that will house variable content, including student artwork that is selected each year. Take a look here.

MIT Media Lab came up with an equally impressive dynamic identity earlier this year. The algorithmically generated logo has 40,000 (!) unique permutations based off a few simple shapes and colours. I’ve never seen anything like this before and was instantly impressed.

Both techniques are wonderfully clever ways to keep a logo fresh and lively. It’s also great to see dynamic design like this applied to traditionally static content. Welcome to the 21st century, logo design. It’s nice to have you here.

(via Torontoist and FastCompany)

Torontork

27 Feb 2011

Toronto Ork Poster

I love my city and I’m quickly developing a love of typography. Ork Posters makes wonderful typographic renditions of cities and their neighbourhoods, including Toronto (pictured above).

Check them out here.

Beck + Demetri Martin

26 Feb 2011

Two of my favourite entertainers sit down for a chat about Richard Feynman, mustaches, Yanni and lots more. It’s philosophical, funny and will make you feel like you have two really cool friends in the room.

Are you intrigued yet? Click it.

Epic Reads: Mountain Edition

24 Feb 2011

in the mountains

I recently finished reading both Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert Pirsig and The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac (which is far superior to On the Road, by the way).

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance completely blew my mind. Without giving too much away, it’s a great travel story (including some time in the mountains) with a crash course in philosophy expertly woven in. A lot of it is philosophy of science, and although it was written in 1974, the reflections on technology’s place in society are still very relevant.

The book’s central philosophical dilemma is the conflict between the “Classical” and “Romantic” (think logic vs. emotion, science vs. art) schools of thought. Like the narrator, I’ve wondered why the two can’t be reconciled, as I can’t easily place myself in one category or the other. One of the reasons I love web dev and design is that it allows me to be both logical and creative. And this is just one of many things I personally identified with.

I had a similar experience with Dharma Bums, and the more Kerouac I read, the more I dig his worldview. Again, the book seeks reconciliation between disparate lifestyles, but this time it’s Beat culture and Buddhism. Most of the Buddhism was new to me, but the characters are approaching it from their western background, so it’s quite accessible. Like Zen and much of Kerouac’s other works, there’s lots of traveling, and my favourite parts of Dharma Bums are Ray’s journeys into the mountains and the insights he has there.

Which brings me to what got me thinking about writing this in the first place. All this reading about climbing mountains sort of makes me want to go do it myself. Add it to my to do list…

(photo: tiny me and mountains just waiting to be climbed, somewhere in BC, west coast roadie in summer 2009)