Thursday, November 28, 2013

All Your Tracks Are Belong To US

      My earliest tech memory was sitting in my Dad's makeshift office playing a primitive Lion King video game on PC. I think it was Timon and Pumba’s Jungle Games but I can’t be sure. It was some sort of educational game wherein you had to match bugs or something pattern based like that.


    Games like this would come and go for most of my adolescence. No firm's titles more frequent than The Learning Company. Their discs would eventually fill my CD library at a frequency almost eclipsing the abhorrent amount of AOL trial discs that would become used for nothing more than throwing ninja circles. I think somewhere in the planet there is a secret mutant underground society that still uses AIM to communicate their plans for world domination in what will inevitably be the most pitiful and choppy act of virtual terrorism ever.

    They probably have ties with the Sock Gnomes. An unruly alliance wherein they subjugate the Mole People in hopes of creating a mega-economy based on gold found by the Mole People and exchanged for socks. There's no telling what Gnomes can do with a strong enough bandwidth connection.




   
      Sure enough, my Dad got tired of cleaning my Cheeto stained fingerprints off the keyboard and bought me a Super NES and Sega Genesis. This would have made me the coolest kid in school if I had had any idea what kind of social goldmine I was sitting on. But at that time cooperative/competitive video game play was reserved for the arcade and hadn't really grown into the stuff of Bromance Date Night just yet. I was more interested in exploring this new world in my own self-imposed social exile. 
   
     The whole video game thing was in a strange place at that time. On the surface, computer games were mostly concerned with fighting the good fight trying to convince parents that games could be educational. This was the perfect cover for all the total time wasting, procrastination-yielding, ADD catalyzing, seizure inducing flashing lights that was happening on the other side of the game world. (Could you imagine somebody having a seizure while playing Duck Hunt or 64 Bit DOOM or something? How cute is that?)
   
     Soundtracks at that time were limited to whatever some dude could dream up on a makeshift synth in a cubical. We're talking Pre-Tony Hawk Pro Skater - which was arguably one of, if not the, strongest driving force for not only the punk/emo/screamo scene which would soon pigeonhole the Vans Warped Tour, but also the inception of Video Games as a platform for music discovery. Still, the Mario theme song was/is the hardest song I have ever tried learning on guitar. Which says a lot about my integrity with the instrument, but says even more about fuck you.





   
    Games became a way for me to discover the world around me. I had never seen a hockey game before playing NHL '95 (Mighty Ducks 1 & 2 not withstanding) and I was sorely disappointed when I actually did engage the sport awhile later and realized that I couldn't keep track of the puck on TV.

    My favorite Football team became the Green Bay Packers purely because they looked the coolest on NFL Blitz and Brett Favre was a fucking beast.


     I learned more about ancient Egyptian mythology and Architecture from that Cluefinders game than from any history class.


Thoth Accounting. Gettin’ you dat papyrus since 2000 BCE


     Math Blaster taught me more math than any teacher and also introduced the first case of intellectual property law into my cognition.



I see you Megaman

    Now as a teacher I see my 4 year old students playing games that I would have thought were made by extraterrestrials in my formative gaming years. I can't help but encourage their exploration. It was only years after that Lion King game that my parents told me that I had been born with poor hand-eye coordination and they had bought me these games and gaming systems as an experiment to combat my ineptitude. It didn't do much for my handwriting, but I was able to play the guitar and drums in later life with passable proficiency.

Good parents know that some nights bedtime can wait

    Games also made me task oriented, a skill that would become invaluable when I entered the job market. Namely in the vein of my (thankfully) sort lived career as a Property Manager. If you've ever had the displeasure of coming into the office after a mediocre to decent weekend to find over 200 emails that each "REQUIRE IMMEDIATE ATTN" then I don't need to illustrate how experience playing Morrowind/Zelda/GTA should be listed on your resume under: Relevant Skills. 

    But most importantly, games helped me discover music. I first heard of Bloc Party through the high-speed demolition madness of Burnout Revenge. That game had the best curated soundtrack of any racing game bar none. The Outline, Maximo Park, even a Doors "Break On Through To The Other Side" remix. That game is like a perfect time capsule of mid-aughts indie. 
   
   But what really stuck with me after all the explosions was the instantly hooking shimmer of a song flaunting Daft Punk's appearance at some dude's house party.  



    From that point on I was a card carrying LCD Soundsystem acolyte. When I spent a year in Israel (07-08) Sound of Silver was one of my most listened to records. I have distinct memories of taking buses out of Jerusalem feeling very much like a "Real life, emotional teenager." That was the last year of my teendom and this all felt way too fitting.

   Years later I would be watching the live stream of their final show, tearing my clothes in mourning and regret for never seeing them live and passing out not before my tears began to taste like Jack Daniels. 

   When I woke up the next day and moved the hot computer off my groin I sat Shiva for 3 days. Since then I still have a terribly difficult time listening to "All My Friends." James Murphy slowly became on of the most important musical figures in my life. I was amazed at his persistence and his honesty, his ability to be both hilarious and devastating at the same time.

   When I began to realize I didn't give a tailbone about Physical Therapy (tailbone, get it! isn't that humerus?!) and was making more money writing peoples essays then managing a restaurant, the idea of giving this writing thing a try seemed a little more apropos; but no less terrifying. Swimming through the interweb one day searching for "James Murphy" my search was completed with the words "... on failure." The 9 minute interview that followed was like a god send. 


I watch this at least once a month

   When I had the chance to meet Murphy in Brooklyn he was DJing at Output. It wasn't LCD but in some ways I loved it even more. He didn't play "Daft Punk Is Playing At My House", but it was dance-ably agreed that "James Murphy Is Playing" would be just fine. 

    I approached his booth when he was taking a breather and feeling totally stunned, shook his hand told him "I just wanted to let you know that your music has meant a lot to me, thank you." Which is probably the One Billionth and One time he has heard some nervous worshiper say that. But, in his ever Murphian cool, he put his hand (THE HAND I JUST SHOOK) over his heart and said, 
   
    "Thank you that means so much to me." Which, if we're being honest, is probably the One Billionth and One time that he has said that. But, ever genuine, he made it feel like the first time.


    I wonder if I would have ever had that encounter with Mr. Murphy if I had never picked up Burnout. Sure I would have heard of LCD somehow, but would they ever feel as totally MINE as they do if it hadn't been in this way? Would I ever hear Murphy saying "I was a huge failure" and feel that he was talking directly to ME?

   Good games have always had the power to completely immerse the player in the virtual experience, making each gamer's journey completely unique. But there is something else that I have learned from all those lost lives, broken controllers and late nights; something I feel James Murphy has been trying to tell us all along: It's okay if you don't believe in yourself; just keep trying.





Tuesday, November 26, 2013

A Quick Conversation





A conversation with my rival/best friend after listening to the opener of Death Grips new self-released bombshell Government Plates. 

A.A. Ron: Sounds like a slightly new take on dubstep. Like Skrillex went with a metal mentality instead of a party one. Which I kinda like better, but it’s not revelatory to me or anything.

Z.B: Death Grips is super weird to me. This is their 4th album, and I think their first was like 2010 or 2011. Just check out their wiki they are so fucking interesting.

A.A. Ron: Yeah, damn that's crazy, I remember when their first or second one was getting crazy rave reviews.

Z.B: Itt feels like they're going for some sound that lacks precedent. Like, u say Skrillex. Others say rap, others say rap metal, still others say punk. Death Metal Rap feels appropriate to me.

A.A. Ron: Yeah, so I don't know their other stuff, but based on what I do know, seems like they're taking the anger of angry metal/punk rock and superimposing it on a dubstep like electronic sound. Which works well, because that music is inherently heavy and angry sounding, with all the bass and etc. It’s just always been used for raves and stuff, so this is kinda groundbreaking to go to a break shit place with it.
I think that’s also why Sail by AWOLNATION was such a big hit. It had that sound, but went more rage with it, and it fits naturally, not exactly the same sound, but same concept.

Z.B: Yea, obviously metal/thrash/rock with rap vocals and heavy electronic. So it is a totally cool project.
 But, honestly a little too abrasive and lacking in catchy-ness for me to listen to on the regular. It's definitely important because it's a scene of rap that hasn't really been explored. In fact, its more like a direction of music that hasn’t really been explored.

And their media antics are fucking crazy. Which is great but also like akin to a slightly more self-aware GG Allin

Case in point:



Their album cover for No Love Deep Web. Which is seriously just the drummer's penis with black sharpy. Which is fucking hilarious and GG Allin is kicking so hard right now. I can't believe G.G never released an album called: Pile Of Shit EP with accompanying cover art.

A.A Ron: Totally. But be careful comparing anyone to GG Allin, because he was just a fucking insane sociopath, and they're trying to be what they are.

But, yeah, they're the new brand of punk rock. The only issue is that punk rock is mostly in the image, specifically when you play it the angry way.

They're just really difficult to listen to, because it’s just yelling and noise, and that’s head banging and all, but not particularly enjoyable.

Z.B: I never really like thrash metal for pretty much those same reasons.

A.A Ron: Yeah, especially since I find that guys like Jimi, Wolfmother, (so into them lately) etc. Dudes that rock so much harder, but actually have a pretty sound worth listening to-

Z.B: And hooks.

A.A Ron: That actually kinda elevates instead of just making you wanna punch things.

Z.B: Totally down with punching sometimes. But not on the regular. Capitalism beat all my teenage angst out of me long ago.

A.A Ron: For real. By the way, trying to work out flights back home with my mom. It’s torture, bro.

Z.B: I’m sure. My deepest condolences.

A.A Ron: Thanks. I suddenly understand the need for Death Grips.

Monday, November 4, 2013

Crossfeed: Sango and Shook



Crossfeed: Sango and Shook

 Crossfeed is an ongoing feature discussing new releases with the musically inclined.

This month we have Australia based Charlie Yedor, Founder of music sharing platforms Like Minded and Syndicate. Also weighing in is LA’s very own electro producer, Trotika. Today we explore the down-tempo space of Sango's summer mixtape North and the dance proclivity of Shook’s self-titled debut.

Spoiler: Rant on Rants on RAM.

Sango - North


Ziv Biton (OtCC): Pardon my stereotype when I say “I don’t usually do this” but… thank you for being part of the first Crossfeed. Happy Halloween.

CY: Word.

TRTKA: Thank you, Happy Halloween.

ZB: Sango is a pretty new producer on the scene what did you think of his debut?

CY: I think the album has some nice tunes, particularly “Middle of Things” and “Here With Me,” and explores some ‘future’ landscapes. That being said, I don’t understand what all the fuss is about because there's a thousand other Sangos making Sango-like music and I choose to listen for sounds that make me feel uncomfortable - something new, out of the box, and North doesn't quite stir my insides as I'd hoped it would. But all in all, it's a nice fusion of bassy-hip hoppy-electronic textures.

ZB: Totally feel you. Other than “Middle of Things” (which I have listened to somewhere in the amount of: Countless) I feel like the majority of these sounds and styles could be found if you typed "Drake Type Beat” on YouTube.

TRTKA: Yeah, I hear the Drake-y point. This album has a similar hypnotic penetrating beat.

ZB: I think the textures on this effort are really nice but it just seems a little overdone and drags on in an album format. I think if Sango released one "Middle of Things" every month he would be amazing. But, to hear all of this plod on is just uninteresting.

CY: There's no question it's good, it's just the difficulty of this style translating to a full-length album. Keeping interest and maintaining style without boring a listener is quite tough to do.

Sango - Here With Me

ZB: By the way, I was reading up a bit on Sango and apparently the title North is supposed to have some Hebrew connotations as evidenced by the albums art being "the Hebrew word for North". But I seriously have no clue what he’s taking about since the art looks like a bunch of triangles and not at all like any language I’ve ever seen.




Also, North? As if the Drake-y sound isn't referential enough it’s like, 'Let me Hashtag it with Kanye's babies name so all the bitches will love it.'


Shook - Shook

CY: I personally didn't know what to expect on this one but was VERY pleasantly surprised. There's a lot of variety to be had on this album.
ZB: I really loved this one. Some amazing pop songs. Phenomenal sounds with a consistent dance-ability. There is the obvious Daft Punk meets Deadmau5 comparison, but I feel that there is a pop quality to this that Deadmau5 could never latch on to.
TRTKA: Yea, I think you said it best with the Daft Punk/EDM comparison, but there is also a lot of Nu-Disco and Breakbot on this thing that makes it varied enough to stay fresh.

CY: Definitely easy to see the Daft influence.

TRTKA: It seems like most of this was influenced by Daft.

ZB: It’s actually kind of nice to hear somebody filling in the dance spot since DPunk isn’t really doing this sort of thing anymore.

CY: I like this album way more than RAM

ZB: Really? I liked RAM a lot. But, I do wish RAM carried the way Shook does. RAM is very personal and isn't as interested with making you DANCE the way Daft usually is. Whereas Shook is like DANce DANCE daNCE!

Shook reminded me of when I first heard Disclosure's album and I played the whole thing front to back 3 times at a birthday party and no one noticed or cared; just kept fucking moving!
CY: It sure makes you want to dance, but in my opinion, in a blind listening test, I would choose this album over RAM; 10/10.

TRTKA: I love the old Daft of course, however on RAM they seem to have created a new Daft - a group of really talented old musicians and producers to pump out disco and pop tunes. But, back to what we are supposed to be here to talk about: Shook

ZB: SO MUCH DAFT

CY: It’s hard not to get carried away on DP

TRTKA: Last say: The production on RAM is unbelievable.
So, I'm a big Album cover guy, [I think] it's a way for an artist to showcase what their about in a visual interpretation and also give the listener an experience before and during listening.  Before listening to Shook I took a look at [his album art] and thought it looked like an amateur anime sketch… not feeling that.


ZB: It can definitely come off that way. But, have you seen the dude’s website? Unbelievable. He is trying something new, fucking with the system and I think it is amazing. 

TRTKA: Okay so he’s got a cute lil theme to go along with the music. Cool.

ZB: C’mon man, it’s Halloween; it’s all about themes.

Shook - Shook