Performer: Mental Health Consumer
Title: Same Places, Different Times
Released: 2012
Country: US
Style: Downtempo, IDM
Category: Electronic
Size FLAC: 1823 mb
Size MP3: 1819 mb
Size WMA: 1151 mb
Other formats: AA RA MP1 FLAC WMA WAV AIFF
same places, different times is an album that deserves multiple listens. Whilst its variety of forms and colours is immediately gratifying, subsequent listens reveal further emotional and intellectual complexity. For this work appears to externalize the musings of a perceptive and self-aware individual, someone appraising their self and their circumstances. The album doesn’t hold back, immediately plunging us into an atmosphere of despair in the very first track. Hopelessness is soon replaced by a frantic beat-driven car-chase in which we are pursued by a threatening - and eponymous - vocal.
Listen to music from Mental Health Consumer like Bitter Creek Bluff. Find the latest tracks, albums, and images from Mental Health Consumer. Mental Health Consumer is a production pseudonym for US-based Brian Ruskin. Mental Health Consumer tracks run the genre spectrum from dance-oriented to experimental soundscapes.
Mental Health Consumer productions began in 2006. Come 2006, Brian had a Doctorate to write, and not a lot of time for much else. Same Places, Different Times (2012, archaic horizon). Secret Treetop Studio (2013, Belive in Billy). Creative Commons rcial-No Derivative Works . United States applies.
I performed a spoken word poem for her and talked with her for a few minutes and showed her my digital poems collages. This is when I started learning that I am more of a performance artist than a visual artist, because she said hearing the poem is shere she felt the power
However, our reliance on social media can have a detrimental effect on our mental health, with the average Brit checking their phone as much 28 times a da. Here are six ways that social media could be negatively affecting your mental health without you even realising.
The term was coined by people who use mental health services in an attempt to empower those with mental health issues, usually considered a marginalized segment of society.
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