Archive for November, 2007

Feeling like I needed you

Ever since Allison Goldfrapp and Will Gregory abandoned the stretched-thin trippy delirium of her self-named band’s debut, Felt Mountain, for the roaring basslines and punishing, razor-sharp synthetic circus of Black Cherry and it’s even-more-of-it followup Supernature, I’ve been in love,madly and darkly. Allison’s off-her-gourd glitter, with sparse few moments of human emotion trampled and stomped by the now-synonmous-with-Goldfrapp animal sexuality vulgaris has always been perfectly backed by Gregory’s dance-floor destruction was Ed Banger before there were Waters in Nazareth (go listen to “Strict Machine” again, now).

But, But, But. But I must bring this talk to a halt. I don’t want to get into an overly-length history of Goldfrapp YET AGAIN, especially when I feel said discussion’s going to be necessary to give a proper, full review of their forthcoming, Feb 2008 album Seventh Tree. Instead, let’s say this:there’s as big of a leap of faith required to get from Supernature to Seventh Tree as was required to get to Black Cherry from the starting point. And, at times, it feels as though we’ve cycled back ’round to Goldfrapp the crooner, Goldfrapp whose heart is beating true blood instead of powders and neon.

This time, though, the pretty-Goldfrapp, removed from her filters and her 18-inch platforms, brings what’s going to be one of the best albums of next year.

Goldfrapp: A&E removed because apparently not ONLY does EMI not know how to market this stuff unless Grey’s Anatomy’s involved, I’m ALSO a crappy writer! HUZZAH!

God, I didn’t say any of this how I wanted to-and that’s really the effect hearing Seventh Tree’s going to have on long-time Goldfrapp fans, those who remember trying to place “Twist” into any sort of contextual discography with the band’s prior touchstones like “Utopia”. It’s off-putting…but well worth the effort. Seventh Tree, with sparse moments of electronic flourishes, whisps of orchestration and Allison slinking around an acoustic guitar as though she’d just discovered honesty, sobriety and morning light, takes a few times to accommodate. Its’ first single, “A&E”, is disarmingly true to Goldfrapp’s previous body of work in terms of heartbreaking-yet-wry lyrical content, but is also, again, an introduction to this sort of honest, plaintive landscape that Goldfrapp’s inhabiting now.

Never before would Allison’s voice have softly wrapped around a chorus like this one. Never before would her phrasing so border on alt-country. It’s fresh, still wet with morning dew, terrain. And then the hypnotic uplift of the song’s end, and you know, it’s evident, that this is a Goldfrapp composition, because it still has that amazing euphoria that they’ve built their reputation on.

I’m not really sure how Seventh Tree’s going to be received. In fact, I feel quite strange having fallen as deeply in love with it as I have, given that I’ve always shit-talked Felt Mountain and praised Goldfrapp the coked-up peacock robot with the leopard-skin boots. It’s possible that, with the over-saturation of crappy, farting electro in the musical climate right now, one of the bands that helped elevate that sound, the blood-on-the-disco-ball aesthetic, to an artform, has decided to move to something more honest, less trite, more sincere. There’s still Goldfrapp’s attention to detail, but in terms of their catalog Seventh Tree is the sunrise to the shattered, stained night that’s just now ending.

This is beautiful, beautiful stuff-risky, also, given that a Supernature re-tread would have smelled of current-’lectroca$$$h-in but would also have brought them to the bank more than once, and probably have resulted in some sort of Justice collaboration or some other horror like that. As it is, that makes “A&E”, as a single, all the more respectable, and once that’s accepted it just becomes gorgeous and shimmering, as it should be.

Am I really that concerned with how this album will be received? With, given that current musical landscape, what “the people” will think? Yeah, I am. More than being a self-styled journo, I’m a long-time fan. If you’d told me, mid-love affair with Black Cherry, that they’d be making a pastoral record after finally achieving worldwide dancefloor success, I’d have laughed at you. Now, I’m in love. After having begged and pleaded for 2007 to do something for me, musically, stuff’s finally starting to happen, and Seventh Tree feels both like a detox and a second chance. Do I re-visit Felt Mountain? Do I write up the new turn of sound as a (literal) sobering affair? I have absolutely no clue, and I’m anxiously awaiting words. I have none for now, none that say how utterly great this stuff is, so I’ll leave it to Allison’s lyrics to do that, and I’ll just listen to the album again. And again.

It’s a blue, bright blue Saturday
And the pain’s starting to slip away

I’m in a backless dress on a pastel ward that’s shining
They gotta watch you still
But there may be pills at work

Do you really wanna know how I was dancing on the floor?
I was trying to find you when I’m crawling up that door
I won’t tease at you the things you say that you don’t do
Why don’t you wreck?

I was feeling lonely, feeling blue
Feeling like I needed you
Like I’m walking up surrounded by me…a&e.





They Are Spitzer

Spitzer!

Spitzer… they are brothers, from France! And they make some of the best damn tracks to land in my inbox in quite some time. In fact they landed in there twice, but the first time some un-named person (ahem.. Trixie..) didn’t follow up with them as she should have. But luckily they emailed us back so that means some awesome music for you!


Spitzer - “Avida Dollars”

“Avida Dollars” is this slowly building, hands in the air stormer. Its one of those tracks that sneaks up on you when you’re not looking and, before you know it, everyone is dancing with hands in the air on smiles on their faces. Slip it into your next set and see how it fares. I know I am.

They run the gambit from soft and soothing melodies to grungy electro riffs to “almost trance but not really but maybe it is i just can’t tell what the hell just dance” tracks. Within 20 seconds of hearing “Rainbow Warrior” on their MySpace player I was totally hooked. Its my personal favorite of everything I’ve heard and is a must listen (so go do it!). While you’re there leave them a friendly message saying how you’re hooked and how you want to dance with your hands in the air.

Accept no imitations: http://www.myspace.com/therealspitzer

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Just an update

I’ve now killed 2 MacBook Pros in under 6 months… that brings my total of computer deaths in the past year to 4… Yes, 3 laptops (if you include one getting stolen in this count) and 1 desktop. Sometimes I think I need to find a job that doesn’t involve technology.

blah.

Anyway, trying to get back on track, have some good music lined up to post over the course of the next week, using my “emergency desktop” that I had to go out and buy on Monday.

For now here’s something that’s been keeping me sane:


Xinobi - “BMX (Moulinex Remix)”
LINKS: Xinobi MySpace | MoulinexSpace | Love to Disco Dust

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Like kissing wet stone

Oh, thank god it happened. The call was answered. a real, honest-to-god electronic ALBUM (read as: not a collection of singles to be skinny-jeans’d) has been released this calendar year.

Now, I have to say that not only am I pleasantly surprised but I didn’t see this one coming. A year or so back, when the enigmatic figure known as Burial’s self-titled debut album was released on Brit-label Hyperdub Records, it was a disc that got a moment of my attention, two handfuls of my respect and not very much more. What I heard in Burial (and from Burial) was a ghostly transmission, a hybrid of my beloved 2-Step (which had fatally bloated itself on cocaine and overpaid vocalists with delusions of US pop-radio success) and UK Garage, Progressive House and minimal Techno, all seemingly radiating from a burning alien radio. It was dark and moody without once ever venturing into rote, treading territory and creating new ground for all of its’ encompassed and assimilated dance genres akin to Superpitcher’s seminal Today mix.

My major problem with Burial: the facet of 2-Step that made it my admitted drug was its’ ability to bridge R&B and dance-though those vocalists cost the genre any credibility, they also proved the emotional lynchpin to the music. Burial lacked any vocals whatsoever. So, for all its’ greatness, for all its’ vast expanse of soundstructure, it mostly felt like listening to Music For Airports inside an echo chamber.

Untrue doesn’t just follow Burial, it perfects it. Just in the knick of time, in a year when electronic music proudly thrusts the virtue of bass-farting and face-chewing without spending a single moment on song-craft, Burial the producer has turned “Burial’ the sound into a universe of dubby, echoing bass, closed high-hats, muted woodblocks and silken, Special Dark vocals.

It sounds naive and plebeian to suggest that the missing ingredient from the first Burial album is the human voice, and after listening to Burial and Untrue back-to-back it becomes apparent there’s both a case for and a case against that frame of thought. While if Untrue had never existed Burial wouldn’t be given a second thought, it is true that when placed in chronological context, the first album feels like a stranded hour of stark and epic loneliness, so much so that the first trickle of voice on Untrue comes across like the oldest friend-until it becomes apparent that it is, in fact, trying to break your heart, a task on which Untrue succeeds too many times to count within its’ hour running time.

Manipulating his drowned take on northern soul songs, pitch-shifting and vocoding to levels of gender neutrality, Burial’s otherworldly electronic love-lorn soul ballads (which, ultimately, is what this album is a collection of) sound ghostly and immediate, a specter of memory. Whereas Telefon Tel Aviv, on Map Of What Is Effortless (one of my favorite wrist-slitting albums of all time, ever) placed their heartbreaking singers and their heartbroken songs upfront, Burial drowns the voices, drowns the ghosts, drowns the pain-in static, in reverb, at times even in silence-and the result is that much more compelling.

It’s easy, really, to underestimate the sheer genius (and sheer beauty) of Untrue when immersed in the first half, all of which centers around the loss of love. Once the title track takes over mid-way through, though, it’s evident that Burial’s crafted something specific: a study in the ways love and the lack of such influence everything, from the color of the sky to the sound of the wind. The dual-pairing, then, of “Untrue” and “Shell Of Light” is like kissing wet stone: reinvigorating, reviving, a reminder of all things human and all things natural. I challenge anyone to find something more gorgeous on any electronic production this year.

Untrue closes mostly restorative, with half-light giving away to a darkened warehouse in the aptly-titled “Raver”, the album’s most (read as: only) uplifting moment. It’s fitting, because as Untrue closes it’s impossible not to think back to “Archangel” and its bleakness, the hopeless beauty of the album’s beginning, the vital, impressive restoration that is the middle and the reminder of small constants-breathing, smiling, days turning into one another-that comes from the ending.

Untrue is an album, a masterful one at that, one that’s earning praise left and right cross-genre for being what it is: a quenching rain in a music landscape desperate for something authentic, emotive and real. This is gonna fight tooth-and-nail for my top album spot of 07.

Burial: Etched Headplate

A true masterpiece of aching soul, the closest approximation of the epic, lost feel of the entire album that can be distilled into one select song.

Burial: Shell Of Light

Untrue’s very real, very intense turning point. I’m not going to sully this with words: hit “play” and close your eyes.

Bloc Party: Where Is Home (Burial remix)

It’s amazing, what happens when this is left in an iTunes playlist to appear as though it’s attached to Untrue: it fits, Kele’s vocal given the drowned-treatment and the U2-aping of the original album version turned inside itself. The Untrue version makes this true, so to speak.

You can buy any and all of this stuff at Boomkat, who, honestly, are cooler than any of the other music stores we could possibly link to when it comes to cutting-edge electronic stuff. I also can’t recommend to you enough that you sign up for their weekly newsletter: you may *think* you know what’s going on, but unless you see what they’re plugging every Friday, you really don’t.





Tonight: Enter the Afterlife

Tonight plays host to another night of the newly started Afterlife party and yours truly will be opening the night off right. I’ll be starting around 11 and then the night continues with Treasure Fingers, Preston Craig and 1 other guest. So come check it out if you haven’t!

–WE CELEBRATE THE BIRTH OF PRESTON CRAIG AND ALL HE HAS BROUGHT TO ATLANTA.
–WE WELCOME BACK TREASURE FINGERS FROM HIS TRAVELS TO BRING US THOSE WONDERFUL JAMS.
–WE EAT ALL 200 COOKIES TO GIVE US A SUGAR HIGH.
–WE USE OUR SUGAR HIGH TO DANCE TILL THE LIGHTS COME ON.

…SEE YOU TONIGHT ATLANTA





Mobius Set

Here’s my set from The Mobius on Weds. Thanks again to them for letting me play!


Choyce Hacks! - Live on The Mobius(2007-11-14)

Tracklisting:

01) O-Zone - Dragostea din tei (SebastiAn remix)
02) ediT - Crunk De Gaulle (ft. TTC, Busdriver and D-Styles)
03) Boys Noize - Deny Selected
04) Duke Dumont - Final Level
05) !XO - Sweating Tar
06) Trash Fashion - Evapor8 (Hooker and De Freitas Remix)
07) Crystal Method - Trip Like I Do (Tom Real vs The Rogue Element Remix)
08) Jark Prongo - Movin’ through your system
09) Xinobi - BMX (Moulinex Remix)
10) Bonde Do Role - Gasolina (Fake Blood Mix)
11) Ursula 1000 - Kaboom (Easy D remix)
12) Teen Video - Heart Attack 2007
13) VNDLSM - UH OH!
14) Just a Band - We Are …
15) Muscles - One Inch Badge Pin (Vanshe Tech City Gym Remix)
16) Daft Punk - Rollin’ & Scratchin’
17) Rex The Dog - Circulate (JBAG Edit)
18) Toxic Avenger - Superheroes (Toxic Self Remix)
19) Future Cop! - 1984

If I get a chance I’ll post up some of the individual mp3s, but for now work > all. Sorry kids.

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Tonight!

Tonight between 7pm - 9pm EST, check me out on WREK Atlanta (91.1 on the FM dial) or http://wrek.org on the interwebs.

Its last minute but I totally lost track of time. Listen.. you know you want to!

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Sonic Generator

Sonic Generator

Georgia Tech’s chamber music ensemble in residence, Sonic Generator, presents their first concert of the season:

Monday, November 12th at 8 p.m.
Georgia Tech Alumni House
190 North Avenue
http://www.sonicgenerator.gatech.edu

Admission is free and no reservations are required.

The concert features The New Math(s) (1999), a collaboration between filmmaker Hal Hartley, Dutch minimalist composer Louis Andriessen, and electronic sound artist Michel van der Aa, in which the live performers and an electronic soundtrack underscore an acrobatic battle over the solution to a complex mathematical problem in an urban warehouse-turned-classroom.

Other works exploring the music of urban places include an arrangement of Brian Eno?s Music for Airports (1978), which launched the ambient music genre, Donnacha Dennehy?s post-minimalist Glamour Sleeper (2004) for amplified ensemble and electronics, and Jacob ter Veldhuis? energetic Grab It! for saxophone and boombox.

The program also focuses on places important in non-Western musical traditions. Javier Alvarez?s Temazcal (1984) combines the sound of live maracas with processed sounds of the harp, folk guitar, and bamboo rods reminiscent of the Venezuelan flatlands. Emory professor Steve Everett?s Ladrang Kampung (2003) blends the sounds of a flutist with live and processed sounds of the gamelan, drawing inspiration from Indonesian shadow plays.

Sonic Generator, Georgia Tech’s chamber music ensemble in residence, explores the ways in which technology can transform how we create, perform, and listen to music. The ensemble, comprised of six of the top classical musicians in Atlanta, works closely with Georgia Tech faculty and students in the GVU Center and the Music Department to present concerts that bring cutting-edge technologies to the world of contemporary classical music.

Sonic Generator is sponsored by the GVU Center, which seeks to advance the state of the art of the interaction between people, computing machines, and information. The concert series is organized by the Music Department in the College of Architecture, which pushes the boundaries of musical expression and creativity through technology.

For more information about Sonic Generator and this concert (including directions), please visit:

http://www.sonicgenerator.gatech.edu

We hope to see you there!

On a personal note: I’ve seen them twice now and its quite the interesting performance. My former music professor heads up the ensemble and I’ve been following it for quite some time. If you’re in the Atlanta area then I highly recommend you check it out.

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Nobody (and I mean NOBODY) Does it Better

It’s tomorrow. At Cielo with their custom built bazillion dollar perfect sound system. And it’s the rarely seen in the US, most legendary, former resident of the Hacienda, marathon man Laurent Garnier.

Garnier at Cielo

It’s also sold out as a motherfucker (not a Motherfucker party– it’s MORE sold out than that), so get begging and pleading with everyone you know because you do NOT want to miss this.

And for your aural pleasure:

Laurent Garnier - “The Sound Of The Big Babou”

From Unreasonable Behaviour, released in 2000. And its STILL good.





Yesterday fever, tomorrow St Peter

It would be relatively simple to proclaim Final Fantasy’s too-brief, strikingly intimate in-store appearance yesterday afternoon at Wordsmiths Books as, simply, the most moving show I’ve taken in this year.

Or maybe that would just make sense to those 30 or so who were there-the soaring, swooping orchestration that is Owen, his voice, his violin and his loops of both, put in the confines of a bookstore with high ceilings and a lovely echo.

To those lucky few, by god it was freakin’ magic.

The folks at Wordsmiths have yet to begin recording a single freaking thing, despite their continuous pull of massive A-list musical talent, so instead of being able to present you with a recording from Owen’s closing song yesterday, his massive, emotional version of Beirut’s “Cliquot”, instead all I can give you is the best that my Youtube scouring has uncovered-something from somewhere that wasn’t Wordsmiths:

Try to not get chills.

(His version of “Peach, Plum, Pear” stopped my heart.)

For more photos, check Wordsmiths’ blog. If you weren’t there and you’re reading Res, you probably can’t feel authentic emotion anyway, so no worries.