September 25, 2009

Motionfield - Laponia (Thinner, 2009)

Filed under: music, review — admin @ 12:57 pm

Last year, Petter Friberg absolutely floored me with the sheer stunning beauty of Optical Flow.  As is usually the case with albums of that quality, I was quick to get it into the hands of the few discerning souls I knew who’d have an appreciation for the austere minimalist constructions Friberg’s been producing for quite some time now.  The result, each and every time, was of open-jawed awe.

Optical Flow was my favorite album of the year from the moment I heard it, and I’m sure no other album received so many front-to-back listens as it did, in as many different environments, in as many different moods.  It was, and remains, perfect.

One of those friends I’d passed last year’s release on to let me know Friberg was back with Laponia. currently out on netlabel Thinner.  I didn’t even know he had a new one on the way, so it was a greatly appreciate return of the favor.  From the very first quavering notes, it is clear that this new Motionfield album is picking up where Optical Flow left off.  That’s an important distinction, because it is not “more of the same” here  - it’s a progression and maturity of a sound that I wasn’t sure could get any more of either.

Throughout the album, sounds of daybreak dawns and distant whoops and chirps filter through a pastoral gauze of maternal comfort.  Track three, “Kebnekaise”, is the first to feature percussive rhythm, and what is present dances lightly on the periphery for, at first, only a short amount of time, echoing and delaying with a mid-stereo field drumskin tap drawing it together, until the rhythm posits itself in a central but unobtrusive place among the soundwash.

I found myself drawing comparisons to the more ambient work of Robin Guthrie, specifically the Mysterious Skin soundtrack, or a much more restrained Boards of Canada, but as with most things of this calibre, it’s best not to dwell too long on the juxtapositions and references.  Instead, I kept turning the volume up - not to overcome some production shortcoming, but to dive deeper into the layers Friberg has built his work on.  Each decibel increased seemed to provide a new subaqueous creature, visible only in the auroral halo of the imagination.

Stark, honest, intelligent, emotive - this is an album that provides an aural canvas on which to transcend humanist ideas of beauty to instead examine the greater surround.  That is, it is a truly ambient album.

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NoMathmatics, Rob Wonder, & Blu Jemz @ Czar Bar, 9/24

Filed under: kansas city, review — admin @ 11:03 am

We arrived at Czar Bar around 9:30 last night, expecting a line that would be snaking out of the door and up the block.  Four-time DMC world champion DJ Craze was the featured performer in a lineup that also included Drop the Lime, Blu Jemz, Rob Wonder, and locals NoMathmatics.  Thankfully, the only people outside were the smokers.

We walked in to NoMathmatics “banging the box”.  At 9:30pm.  Huge basslines were hanging around for a minute or two before wave after wave of synth arpeggios overtook them - rinse, recycle, repeat.

The casual dance crowd was into it, getting all hands-in-the-air and grind-y, which is fine and all, until the later moments of the set and the first several of follow-up Rob Lemon, when most of the crowd disappeared to the sides of the club.

Lemon was then put in a position to follow up this too-early climax.  While it seemed he was well aware he was following a set that was too aggressive too early, he gave it his best.  While there were several “white” Euro-sounds throughout his set, it had at least a good handful of funk which we greatly enjoyed dancing to.

As the tail end of Wonder’s set faltered, Blu Jemz took the decks.  I’d been excited to see him since I’d seen his name advertised on the first Scion event a few months ago, one I’d unfortunately missed.  The producer and dj is one of the up-and-coming names in the new weird hiphop scene, although it didn’t seem he was going to get the chance to play anything along those lines tonight.

He as well seemed forced into capitulating to the crowd who, not really knowing who they were seeing, seemed to expect the night to continue in the fashion NoMathmatics had started it off - big anthems, Teutonic trance synths, and simple bosh-bosh-bosh rhythms.  A half-hour into Blu Jemz’ set, we’d had our fill and left.

It was really unfortunate that NoMathmatics seemed to take the opening slot as an opportunity to pull out their big guns instead of work the crowd in anticipation of the headliners coming on later in the evening.  It’s the core issue addressed in this Resident Advisor article concerning warm-up djs from a few days ago, and it’s one I agree with 100%.

When an opening band has a great show or is just a better band than those they’re opening for, it’s a little easier to stomach.  Opening Djs should know better - warm the crowd up, don’t burn them down.

There’s a reason the headliners are the headliners.  Given that most people in this city who attend these events are more interested in who’s seeing them there, the process they had to go through to get there, etc than who’s actually slated to provide the entertainment for the night, maybe it’s not surprising that they’re going to be most up-for-it early (especially on a weeknight) and for the local heroes.

The thing is, the local djs should know what the crowd itself choses not to know.  I hope the rest of the night went well for Blu Jemz, Drop the Lime, and Craze - I really regret not being able to see his set.  But after an hour and a half of Rob Wonder and Blu Jemz having to deal with the  sloppy seconds of NoMathmatics’ premature ejaculation, I just couldn’t take it anymore.

Update - I mistakenly named Rob Lemon in this article - the actual dj who performed second on the bill was Rob Wonder - thanks to the anonymous commenter who corrected me on that one.

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September 21, 2009

Roc Raida has died

Filed under: news — admin @ 1:34 pm

The legendary turntablist Roc Raida, who performed both as a solo artist and as a member of the X-Ecutioners, died over the weekend due to complications from a “mixed martial-arts” incident - that’s per TinyMixTapes which is per’ing MTV.

Raida was one of the guys on Scratch that just got it.  Everybody on there was talented, yes, but he was one of the very few East Coast/NYC guys still holding it down old-school style, and his charisma on-screen was endearing.

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September 20, 2009

Architeq - Gold & Green (Tirk, 2009)

Filed under: music, review — admin @ 8:38 pm

Architeq’s Birds of Prey ep was killer but it was an ep.  Everything else happened.

I didn’t even know there was a full-length coming out, but Gold & Green is due out on Tirk shortly, if not already.  I’ve heard “Krakatoa” and “Spinning Plates” and it’s #1 of the year so far.  I haven’t been this excited to hear fourteen tracks since Paul Westerberg.

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September 15, 2009

Upcoming: Trevor Lamont @ Firefly Lounge, 9/26

Filed under: kansas city, upcoming — admin @ 8:34 am

Ten, twelve, fifteen years ago or so, when you saw the name Trevor Lamont on a flyer, there was no doubt that at least one dj’s set that night was going to send the dancefloor into the deepest groove possible and not let up for a good hour or two.

After so many years, it’s refreshing to see the man who graced so many local parties as the out-of-town draw being brought back in - if there’s anything Kansas City dancefloors need right now, it’s some fresh air.

Doors open at 8, and it’s $5 before 10, $10 after, 21+.  Angel Alanis, whose brand of Chicago hard house never took off with me, is also slated alongside locals HoodNasty (billed as dubstep - don’t disappoint), SoulSavers, and Bill Pile.

This goes til 3am so get ready.  Firefly’s at 4118 Pennsylvania.

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September 9, 2009

Upcoming: Moby @ the Beaumont, 10/2

Filed under: kansas city, shows, upcoming — admin @ 3:38 pm

Moby’s coming through town in early October, taking a night off from touring on his new album to provide a dj set at the Beaumont.

Yep, the Beaumont.  For $22 a ticket.

Remember Moby?

No, not that Moby.  Not the one that did “We are all full of Stars”.  Nope, not the guy who did Play and then recycled the same samples over again to produce 18.  Not even the guy who infamously covered “That’s When I Reached for my Revolver”.

Nope, none of that.

I mean the Moby that peaked on Everything is Wrong.

The Moby that not only did “Go”, “All that I need is to be Loved”, and “Thousand”, but what I feel to be one of the most under-rated albums of the 90’s, Ambient.  Just go put on “House of Blue Tea Leaves” and tell me it’s the same guy who has recently become the poster boy for re-re-re-re-re-releasing multiple variations of the same single with each five positions it moves up on the charts?

The guy who managed to pour more soul into “God Moving Over the Face of the Waters” than he’s managed to summon in total in the 15 years since?

Now granted, this is a dj set from the guy, not a performance of his own material.  The problem is this:  I can’t say I’ve trusted his taste in his own output in fifteen years, why should I believe he’d have any better luck with other people’s work?

While contemporaries like the Chemical Brothers and the Prodigy could be accused of staying well within defined limits of particular (sub)genres in order to boost name recognition and therefore sales, I’m not sure any act has approached the level of losing the plot in the name of commercial success that Moby has, especially here in the States.  I’m not sure Keoki ever even opened the book in the first place and only Josh Wink comes to mind after the “How’s Your Evening So Far”/”Superfreak” fiascos - neither of which resonated much further than the dancefloor in the first place.

I willingly gave him a pass on Play - I’ve even got it on double vinyl, picked up cheap when Good Times on Broadway was closing down .  He was more or less capitalizing on the Lomax field recordings at the time, placing the ethno-emotionality inherent in these sounds over a bed of milquetoast electronica as that marketing campaign was quickly realizing its descendence into permanent joke status.

But after the umpteenth countless re-whoring of the singles for that album, the guy released 18, which, in many places uses essentially identical samples as Play!  I’m not talking an Apache break here or there, I’m talking about specific vocal passages from the field recordings he was given so much praise for using on the previous release!

After that, I’d had enough, effective immediately and retroactively.  There’s nothing wrong with moving on, experimenting with different styles, but what worked for Moby on Play has become a blueprint for his output over the past decade in the same way subdivisions are designed for the miles and miles of fields around this city - with very little attention to innovation or experimentation, with an eye first towards saleability to a public uninformed and too afraid of to dare look any further than the convenience and comfort of the safe and known.

Granted, Moby got stuck as the media-annointed posterboy for the suburban electronica campaign of the late 90’s.  Old school enough and with enough amassed street credit due to his early releases to not be questioned by many of the elder statemen who were themselves looking for similar success, controversial in his outspoken political views, and a look that hadn’t changed in a decade surely made him the ideal Manchurian candidate for the AMP-canceling hacks at MTV to glom on to.

While it could be argued that Moby remains a figure on the American electronic music scene who still commands respect, I’m not sure he still warrants the attention.  Granted, he is surely among the handful of artists most American ravers can point to as a gateway into the culture, but how much encouragement has his music provided over the past 15 years to look any deeper than fashion or drugs, regardless of how poignant the co-opt’ed backstories of slave voices he’s ultimately ridden to success might be?  Indeed, the culture was more sabotaged by this influx than anything else.

Moby’s appearance in a couple of weeks is about as exciting to me as it was in 1999, when he somewhat-headlined SpiritFest on the back of Play, and I was more there at the time for the local DJ tent and Boom Boom Satellites.  He was already almost five years and several throw-away singles, eps, and soundtrack collections past Everything is Wrong, and almost a decade beyond those early pieces that were an integral part of developing an American facet to the acid house/breakbeat movement of the UK and Europe.

The emperor was naked even then, and just as the fable foretold, it would become glaringly obvious regardless how willing we were to dismiss it at the time.

Moby was once underground dance music for me, and I thank him for that and respect his contribution.  I cannot, in good conscious, continue in that mindset today in much the same way that I cannot respect the used car salesman over the person on the factory line who actually built the thing in the first place.

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September 4, 2009

Upcoming: Craze, Drop the Lime, Blu Jemz @ the Czar Bar, 9/24

Filed under: kansas city, shows, upcoming — admin @ 1:18 pm

Yep, Drop the Lime is playing the next Scion event here in Kansas City, but the big news here is who else is playing.  That’s THE DJ Craze, the DMC-winning, jungle-juggling, United Djs of America-releasing turntablist extraordinaire.

Throw in the one guy that I really regretted missing from the first Scion event, Blu Jemz, and I’m pretty sure this is going to be a party.

Again, Drop the Lime I’m more or less ambivalent about, and Rob Wonder doesn’t appear to have too much of a history per Discogs, but he could be an interesting opener.

As always, you have to RSVP ahead of time here to get in, and, as always, use a fake email address or get ready for a bunch of industry spam that you’ll be blocking/unsubbing from for weeks to come.

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The Beaumont and sound

Filed under: kansas city — admin @ 1:08 pm

Today’s Back to Rockville review of last night’s Dandy Warhols show, which I didn’t attend, mentions yet again the biggest issue I have with one of Westport’s (re-)emerging venues: The Beaumont Club and its horrendous sound.

For most native Kansas Citians, the Beaumont is more or less boiled down to the mechanical bull that used to be its main draw. For years, it was  a cowboy bar where rednecks and white trash (read: locals) could go and get drunk on cheap beer and maybe see a $20 metal show.

The location has undergone some major changes recently though - the Westport Beach Club is gone, and is now replaced with the equally frat-tastic Backyard. The addition of Sidecar as a satellite venue next door was just completed recently.

Act-wise, the venue has been on a much more aggressive booking spree in the last year-plus, getting a lot of acts that would probably be better served at the Record Bar.  Nothing wrong with a little friendly competition, though - the fewer entries on notcomingtokansascity the better, right?

Which is all well and good until you actually go in the place for a show. Granted, last night’s Dandy Warhols show was $15, which, in comparison to most shows at the Beaumont, is on the cheap end. I’m not concerned with the up-and-coming nobodies the place books to fill in weeknights, but typical covers for a national touring band worth seeing begin at $20 a person and go from there. We paid $30 apiece for Broken Social Scene last year - Lee Perry was around $30, never-weres Buckcherry are slotted at $35 next week, Tortoise and Prefuse 73 is a respectable $18, KMFDM is $25, and Dinosaur Jr is $20.

Again, all well and good - if people are willing to pay these amounts, so be it. The issue I keep seeing in every review of an event at the location mentions the negative impact of the sound. Regardless of the genre on display, the sound is, in a word, terrible. After experiencing it firsthand on a few occasions, I made a conscious decision to forego seeing artists like Perry, Tortoise, etc there because I could not justify a $50 night of essentially standing around looking at artists I admire moving around on stage going through the motions of making music, while hearing instead a swirling sludge of sound going on in the background and periphery.

It’s great that the Beaumont has essentially taken on Lawrence’s Granada by bringing in acts that would otherwise head straight to the college town out west, but they’ve got to do something about either their equipment, the room layout, or the person/persons running the board. Kansas City is unfortunately notorious for having horrendous soundboard operators, and while the Beaumont has enough flaws already, this is ultimately going to be the one that keeps the rabid music fans from coming out to pay the cover they are charging.  Nobody wants to pay $30 a ticket to see their favorite band sound like garbled shit.

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