Archive

Archive for the ‘Music’ Category

DubFX: A New Favorite Artist

August 25th, 2009 1 comment

I’m not not big into “beatboxing”.  Whenever I do hear that style of music an indelible image of Biz Markie is instantly formed in my brain.  I’ll admit that some of the people who beatbox have a fair amount of talent, but I never thought I’d sink any money into an album that focuses on this form of music…that is until I heard DubFX.

I even can’t begin to describe and do justice to what this guy can do with a microphone.  I’ll just ask that you take a few minutes to watch this video:

DubFX incorporates dubstepping, taking beatboxing to a whole new level.  Using no instruments he’s able to craft a beautiful song on the spot while standing on an anonymous street corner.  I was so impressed I followed the links and purchased a copy of his album Everythinks A Ripple.  This thing has been on heavy rotation for a few days now.  It reminds me of Recoil and Tweaker, but with a complete lack of any real instruments and possessing more of an urban flair.

Now, I know that Bobby McFerrin has been known to put on a concert or two sans instruments, but he never utilized that talent to the effect that DubFX has.  Everythinks A Ripple is one of those rare albums with not one clunker song in the bunch.

Again, I’m amazed at the complexity of this album, given the fact that it’s nothing more than DubFX and his voice.  The live videos of DubFX available on the ‘net sound awfully raw, but the studio album EaR (his first!) is genius.  It’s rare that I gush so much over an artist, but mark my words, this album will go down as one of the gems from 2009.

Categories: Music Tags:

The Past, Present, & Future Of Music

August 10th, 2009 1 comment

I love music.

It wasn’t until I started attending high school that I really fell in love with music.  When I was a kid I listend to the radio and spun a few Kiss albums.  That was about it.  I was a sheltered child, I know.  When I started high school I abandoned the bus in favor of a daily car ride from an older friend of the family who was in his final year of high school. 

This friend had a healthy collection of cassette tapes in his car, and every day I was exposed to music I had never heard of before; music by bands such as The Cramps, Kraftwerk, David Bowie, Bauhaus, The Jam, The Damned, Operation Ivy, Yello, Agent Orange, Talking Heads, The Stranglers, Violent Femmes, The Replacements, and Sisters Of Mercy flowed over me and  through me.  I was absorbed, entranced, and joyfully enraptured by it.  These artists (and many, many more) helped me to define myself in a way that nobody and nothing else could.

Into the trash went the radio, and in its stead stood a larger dual-cassette tape deck with 8″ speakers.  I finished high school and started college.  Around that time I began to collect compact discs.  This was the era of Nine Inch Nails, Pop Will Eat Itself, Ministry, Nitzer Ebb, Elvis Costello, and Jane’s Addiction.  I finished my first year of college but somehow felt as if I was missing…something. 

I was unsure whether or not to join the priesthood, team up with the Peace Corp, or become a circus carnie.  I looked at all of my options then decided to enlist in the Air Force, hoping to find some direction in life.  It was during time this that I purchased a huge component stereo system with giant Infinity floor-standing speakers through which I blasted Nirvana, Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Descendents, Smashing Pumpkins, Jesus Jones, STP, Live, The Pursuit Of Happiness, and Primus.  Needless to say, the military didn’t completely destroy my soul nor my love of music.

 

A lifetime of music in one location

A lifetime of music in one location

Four years later I found myself back in the real world and involved in computers.  I picked up a Macintosh G4 and began to digitize my now extensive CD collection.  I got into mobile DJing, playing gigs around town for a year before running out of time, patience, and energy.  I sold my gear and picked up my first iPod, then finished college (I guess it was a case of “music first, education second”).  And now, here I am, years older and more than a bit wiser, yet still in love with music. 

Some will say that the music of today doesn’t compare to music from our younger days, but I have to disagree.  Those who say such things really don’t put any effort into finding the great bands that exist right here, right now.  If you haven’t heard any good music lately, then may I suggest you give a listen to Underworld, Muse, Death Cab For Cutie, Eels, The Avett Brothers (a bit of country/folk never hurt anyone), Wax Tailor, As Cities Burn, Wilco, Vampire Weekend, The Shins, Andrew Bird, The Whitest Boy Alive, Rotersand, Decemberists, and The Editors?  Go on…just give ‘em a shot.

And now that I think about it, the evolution in the way we consume music has dramatically changed.  For me it began with a small radio, then a boom box, a full-fledged stereo system, then finally on to a quad-speaker DJ system.  Eventually the whole kit shrunk down to a tiny iPod, with my entire collection housed on a hard drive connected to a computer based system with powered speakers.  Music started with the LP, then the cassette (I skipped the 8-Track on purpose because, frankly, I never owned one), then the CD, then the physical media disappeared completely, replaced by digital code.  Record stores are now few and far between, replaced with WalMarts and online services.  I wonder how my kids will listen to their music.  Personally I’m hoping for data crystals and in-ear bone speakers.

It’s amazing how drastically things can change, yet the music keeps playing on.  

Categories: Music, Personal Tags: ,

New Coldplay Video: Strawberry Swing

August 5th, 2009 2 comments

I saw this and just had to share.  Not being a big Coldplay fan, I still appreciate the amount of talent, sweat, and tears that must have gone into the making of this video:

When I was a kid I think I might have drawn a few crude figures on the neighbor’s driveway, but my chalk drawing abilities end there.  To the folks who made this video…*golf clap*.

Categories: Music Tags: ,

Friday Confessional

July 10th, 2009 2 comments

Alright, I’ll be the first to admit that this video instantly shot up to the top of my “that’s cool” list the instant I watched it.  Talk about a band getting their fans involved in the creative process!  

From the description:

This music video was shot for Sour’s ‘Hibi no Neiro’ (Tone of everyday) from their first mini album ‘Water Flavor EP’. The cast were selected from the actual Sour fan base, from many countries around the world. Each person and scene was filmed purely via webcam. 

I couldn’t help but smile as I watched this.  I don’t know about you, but I’m actively hunting down this EP with a vengeance. Bands like Sour deserve our support.  Throw this video up on MTV and you’ve got a hit.

Makes me long for the days when I got hit in the head by bits of plastic as Trent Reznor destroyed his keyboards on stage just five feet from where I was standing.  Now that’s how you connect with your audience :lol:

Oh, before I forget, I must mention that I live with an unnatural, unhealthy fear of losing my hair.  If I ever…evar…find myself sans follicles, I’ve made a pact with God and all that’s holy and wonderfully sublime that I’ll grow a mustache equal or greater in stature to that of my new found hero:

The way I figure it, once I get the ‘stache, all I’ll need is some booze, a bike, and some broads to make the entire ensemble complete.

Knowing my luck, here I am not-so-subtilely mocking a complete stranger simply because of his looks, when in fact he’s probably a Nobel prize winning laureate in the field of quantum atomic superstructures, and yes, as a matter of fact, he is a rocket scientist.  *sigh*

Oh well, whatever.  Nevermind.  Happy Friday!

Categories: Friday, Music Tags: ,

Doing More With Less

July 1st, 2009 2 comments

It seems…no, I take that back…I *know* that we’re being asked to do much, much more at work with fewer and fewer resources.  For the past several weeks I get home in the afternoon and I’m just spent.  But I guess I really shouldn’t complain.  I’m sure many of you out there are in the same boat.  I do appreciate the fact that I have a sit down job, and don’t have to do much heavy lifting unless a server needs to be built or moved.

My Cubicle

My Cubicle. Spot Locke and win a prize!

If I was given the opportunity to drop what I was currently doing, selecting a brand new job of my choice, and could jump ship into any other career path with no questions asked, I guess I’d have to go with:

- Killer whale trainer at Sea World
- Voice over actor for infomercials
- Ice Road trucker
- Breakfast cereal taste tester
- Anagram spellchecker
- Zamboni driver
- An undercover asset
- The guy who makes up names for bands
- Master of time, space, and dimension

But I guess I’ll be stuck administering computer systems, forever tasked with finding the quickest and most cost effective way to get more done with less.

Oh, before I forget, I must implore you to pick up the latest album from Street Sweeper Social Club.  Don’t think, just do.


Tom Morello from Rage Against The Machine and Boots Riley from The Coup have put down some solid,  tight tracks reminiscent of Rage’s revolutionary vibe, but with less screaming. Clap For The Killers is without a doubt the standout track, but Megablast, Fight! Smash! Win! and 100 Little Curses drill through your speakers with driving Morello-signature guitar work (seriously, Morello is a guitar genius).  Eric Gardner holds the entire thing down with fantastic drum work.  No driving bass speakers here, that’s Gardner all the way.

Along with Vampire Weekend’s self-titled Vampire Weekend, Elvis Costello’s latest effort Secret, Profane, and Sugarcane, Kasabian’s The West Rider Pauper Lunatic Asylum (Kasabian is back to old form!), and Placebo’s newest Battle For The Sun, Street Sweeper has been on heavy rotation these past few days.

I’m amazed at how many great albums have been released recently.  If you’ve been away from the music scene for any amount of time, now is a perfect time to come back.

Categories: Music, Work Tags: ,