uhm.
To give birth to a new musical genre, Genomic Dub, that:
engages the interest, quickens the pulse and hi-jacks the brain of the listener.
encodes biological sequence data into dub music.
celebrates the achievements of science, particularly in the field of genomics.
celebrates the lives and works of scientists engaged in biomedical science.
highlights the common threads that link current scientific and social issues with the past, with a particular emphasis on the lives and works of Erasmus and Charles Darwin, Haile Selassie (Ras Tafari) and theeir contemporaries.
explores the interface between science and society.
brings an appreciation of science to a wider public.
brings an appreciation of reggae and of Jamaican history and culture to a scientific audience.
http://www.infection.bham.ac.uk/BPAG/Dub/dub.html
(found on the Feedback page of New Scientist [26 Febuary 2005])
To give birth to a new musical genre, Genomic Dub, that:
engages the interest, quickens the pulse and hi-jacks the brain of the listener.
encodes biological sequence data into dub music.
celebrates the achievements of science, particularly in the field of genomics.
celebrates the lives and works of scientists engaged in biomedical science.
highlights the common threads that link current scientific and social issues with the past, with a particular emphasis on the lives and works of Erasmus and Charles Darwin, Haile Selassie (Ras Tafari) and theeir contemporaries.
explores the interface between science and society.
brings an appreciation of science to a wider public.
brings an appreciation of reggae and of Jamaican history and culture to a scientific audience.
http://www.infection.bham.ac.uk/BPAG/Dub/dub.html
(found on the Feedback page of New Scientist [26 Febuary 2005])