18/12/2013

Who Said Record Stores Are Dying?

My first thought after hearing that Rough Trade was planning to open a 15,000 foot record store — the biggest record store in New York City — near the waterfront in Williamsburg? Good. Luck. But maybe I’m pessimistic. After all, the store did open last week, after four years of hurdling, complete with a Five Leaves coffee shop, a working bar, and a 300-person venue that hosted Sky Ferreira its first night. If I were in charge, I’d say things were looking pretty good.

But it’s a tough market. I can’t help but not buy records anymore. Sure, once in a while I’ll pick up a rarity, a reissue, or a random collector’s item. As a physical product, especially in New York, it’s not practical. I always think about the time I had to help a friend move his 200 records from apartment to apartment while I looked at my phone and laughed at the amount of music inside of it. Sorry to sound lazy or corporate, but forget about it. It’s too cheap and easy to listen to music these days. Knock Spotify and I’ll agree with you, but damn if it isn’t economical and beneficial to the consumer. Which means that record stores these days exist almost entirely to promote culture. They venues, they create an environment. And Rough Trade, which has been a pioneer of independent culture since forming in the mid-70s, is certainly good at just that.


There are two other Rough Trade shops across the Atlantic, on opposite sides of London. This one has Brooklyn written all over it: there’s the coffee shop, housed inside a repurposed shipping container; the bar, and the venue. Television (yes, that Television) will play there on Saturday. Bowery is doing all of the shows, which means that there will lots and most of them will be good. Handpainted Arcade Fire and Velvet Underground ads decorate newly coated brick walls, with record aisles scattered throughout. You walk in and you wonder, is this a venue masquerading as a record shop?

“We’ve learned how what is ostensibly a store can be so much more”, co-owner Stephen Godfroy recently told The Guardian. “Visiting us is like visiting a cultural hub; it’s not simply a place for purchasing. There’s a relative lack of places [in New York] that allow people to hang out in an environment that celebrates the art, not the commodity”.

Sales at Independent record shops across America have fallen 36.1% in the last five years. And New York rent gets more outrageous by the minute. The city’s record stores have been dropping like flies: Bleecker Bob’s, Fat Beats, Tropicalia in Furs, Big City, Rockit Scientist, Dope Jams, and Williamsburg’s beloved Sound Fix have all closed within the past year or two. There are a handful of small shops surviving in Greenpoint and Williamsburg: Permanent Records, Academy Record Annex, Co-Op 87, Captured Paws. Many of these are attached to labels, which helps. (Rough Trade is no longer attached to Rough Trade Records, the label that brought you The Smiths, The Strokes, and Scritti Politti). Many of the people behind the counter at these shops are also the owners. It’s anyone’s guess what Rough Trade’s thundering presence in the neighborhood will do to their bottom line.

At Rough Trade NYC, the records themselves aren’t an afterthought, per se, but venue, the cafe, and the bar seem to be set up to make up for the loss of record sales. Which is smart, kind of like what City Lights has been doing in San Francisco since the 1950s. If the shop works like it should — by creating a progressive environment where people want to come and see shows and talk about music and art — then it seems that the store can afford to sell some records. I hope it does, but I’m not keeping my fingers crossed. This is Brooklyn, after all.


Lane Koivu 
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29/11/2013

Upcoming Artists | JAWS

Hello, how are you and what have you done today?
Hey! Today I have been shopping in Birmingham. It was cold.

Who are the JAWS and how was the band born?
The JAWS are Eddy the drummer, Huddy the guitarist, Jake the bassist and me, Connor. We all met at the Halesowen College and shortly after decided to create the band!

Tell us about your musical background.
We’ve all been in and out of bands, before JAWS. Eddy and I used to play the drums in metal bands and Jake was a drummer in a pop punk band. Can’t go wrong with 3 drummers, right?

Has Birmingham influenced your music? If so, in which way?
I don’t know, I guess it has influenced my music somehow… A lot of things that happened in my life, happened in Birmingham. That’s the reason why I write songs about it.

What do you think about the B-Town?
No one from Birmingham actually says B-Town! In terms of scene it’s pretty great and the shows are always full of familiar faces and friends.

Is this music scene something real or is it just a kind of hype created by the media?
It’s real.

How was the experience of taking part in the Reading & Leeds festival? Was it your first time at a crowded festival? Were you scared?
It was something else! We didn’t expect the reactions that we got and I think that’s what made it all even better. It was our first time at Reading & Leeds so we were all really nervous. To me a bigger crowd is easier to play for, so when I saw how many people it turned out to be, it became such an easy show to play and a really fun one.

How has the tour in the UK been?
Now that it’s over I realize that it has been so much fun. The London show has been a crazy one. I can’t wait to go back on 2014.

You guys really take care of the graphic aspects of your videos, album covers and merchandising in general, isn’t it? Is it just one person taking care of it, or is it the whole band?
A little bit of both. Sometimes it’s me coming up with the ideas, but if the rest of the band doesn’t like them, then we don’t develop them. In the end, it’s always the whole band coming to a decision.

What are the JAWS preparing for 2014?
We are preparing a tour and hopefully we’ll present our debut album, so fingers crossed!

Enrico Chinellato 
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25/11/2013

AndréBUTZER at GiòMARCONI

Entering the Giò Marconi‘s total white-walled gallery, illuminated through cold neon tubes, you feel the urgent need to rub your eyes, hit by a blinding, snowy white light. The almost aseptic, immaculate rooms of this prestigious art space seems to actively contribute to value the concision of the forms of the latest works by André Butzer (b. 1973 Stuttgart, Germany).

For his third solo show at the Milanese gallery, the semi-abstract German painter – well known for his roughly executed repetitions of ugly, extremely coloured cartoon character paintings -, presents a series of the so-called N-paintings, in which he has abandoned figurations and showy tones for rectangular black and white shapes. These works, which name “N” stands for an imaginary destination, a non-place situated on the edge of abstraction where all colors are conserved, are made of flat stripes that creates strong geometric contrasts. Even though they look like machinelike iterations, getting closer to them you can see deep differences in the brush strokes and colour intensity, as well as in the shades and the use of space: perfectly horizontal and vertical lines alternate slightly curved contours, that create optical illusions.


Along with the N-paintings, Butzer exhibited here also some works belonging to the Post N-Paintings; small canvases that call to mind the artist’s earlier hectic compositions, featuring cartoonish renderings of various characters and objects, clearly influenced by artists such as James Ensor, Willem de Kooning or Phillip Guston. With the dark symbolism and the abstract and neo expressionism as first references, Butzer makes use of coloured motifs, hollow-eyed faces, grotesque and anxious masks mixing them with the monochrome newest researches. The exhibition will run until 1st February 2014.

Monica Lombardi – Many thanks to GiòMARCONI Gallery 
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01/11/2013

Upcoming Artists | M + A

Hi guys, how is it going?
Hi. Everything’s fine, thank you.

Who are you, and where are you at the moment?
We’re Michele Ducci and Alessandro Degli Angioli, and at the moment we are in London, we are on a small tour to present the new album here in UK.

When was the project born?
Mmh, almost five years ago now.

How are your songs born usually?
I don’t know, we don’t have a precise algorithm. We send each other a lot of emails with drafts and structures of possible songs, the rest is almost a game. Usually one sketches an idea and sends it to the other who, in turn, adds other stuff and resends it back and so on.. This sort of loop, done at a distance, colors the song with all the different shades that both of us breathe in his own life.

How did the meeting with the Monotreme Records happen?
Via email. It was very fast: we sent them some of our songs and after a while we were already signing the contract.

How is your UK tour going?
It’s going very well. We did not expect such an enthusiastic audience, that already knew the songs by heart. We enjoyed it a lot. In UK people dance at concerts so much more. For the type of music we play, seeing hopping people during our live gigs is quite helpful.

You have a very recognizable and well-studied image for your album cover, merchandize and videos. Who is behind it?
Still M+A. Alessandro takes care of the visual side. Let’s say that all these things are kind of a prosthesis to what we do with the music. The realm of imagination we succeeded to create around us made us more easily recognizable and, considering how many people approach to our merch stand after our concerts, we think we’ve made it. At the same time we’ve chosen not to show our name M+A on the t-shirts, just because we don’t see them as a mere marketing item by which we make money, but rather as a second-side of M+A, almost as if it was a fashion brand totally independent form the rest. We sell loads of t-shirts even to people who don’t really listen to our music or that never got to listen to it, and this shows our purpose.

Did you expect this interest by the Japanese market?
Yes, in the sense that we worked hard to be able to release the album there as well, but at the same time we did not expect such a positive response. It is a new market for us and certain dynamics are totally different, but it seems that people really like our music there. Now we are working to set up a Japanese tour for next summer.

What’s in the future of M + A?
Other frames, other countries, other albums.

Enrico Chinellato 
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31/10/2013

The Horrors of Irony

Irony is the master of horror. That humiliating moment of sharp existential pain that comes with the realisation that everything you once took for granted, the total spectrum of your understanding of things, is not just inaccurate, but totally laughable; ripping a crack right through the comfort of your everyday consciousness to the very depths of your cold unfamiliar subconscious (where no man has been before) and unveiling an army of skeletons in the closet, waiting to devour you.

Escape from Tomorrow is the story of Jim White, an ordinary American Joe visiting Walt Disney World with his family (the title references the 60s Walt Disney project EPCOT – Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow – a planned ‘test city’ intended to serve as an experimental platform for new innovations in city life that was never realized). On the last day of their vacation Jim receives a phone call from his boss informing him that he has been laid off. This becomes the catalyst for the floodgates of his subconscious to tear open, unleashing his demons and revealing another side to Disney World, a side Disney would certainly not want us to see. Hence why the film was shot in complete secrecy, by writer-director Randy Moore, using advanced guerrilla filmmaking techniques.

Other similar subversive attempts have been made before in Disney World. See Missing in the Mansion and Banksy‘s Exit Through The Gift Shop. The former is about a marriage proposal going horribly wrong on one of the rides and the latter includes a guerrilla project set in Disney World about the inhumane detention of terror suspects in Guantanamo Bay. All three films present the ‘super happy’ setting of Disney as a platform for the horrors of irony; the horror that things may not be as ‘super happy’ as they seem. Happy Halloween!

Peter Eramian 
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23/10/2013

Eric Jonrosh’s “The Spoils of Babylon”

Any geek who’s ever dreamt of David Lynch, PT Anderson, and Ron Burgundy collaborating on an epic American saga are likely to go bananas over Eric Jonrosh’s “The Spoils of Babylon”, Will Ferrell’s bizarre new IFC miniseries. The show, which the network is wisely calling “the century’s most anticipated television event,” appears to be a parody of the campy, grandiose TV movies of the baby boomer era. Whatever it is, it looks amazing.


“The Spoils of Babylon” was created by Funny Or Die‘s Matt Piedmont and Andrew Steel and revolves around the Morehouse clan, an eccentric Texas family who strike it rich in the oil business. Ferrell will portray Eric Jonrosh, the fake bestselling author of the fake bestselling book on which this very real miniseries is based. Tim Robbins plays patriarch Jonas Morehouse, while Kristen Wiig stars as his daughter Cynthia and Tobey Maguire as her adopted brother Devon. Cynthia and Devon fall into a deep and forbidden love that takes them across the world and threatens their family fortune. Judging from the bizarre preview, the series will touch on major events from the 20th Century through the trials and tribulations of the Morehouse family, a la Forrest Gump. In the trailer Devon goes from the family farm to Vietnam, then comes back and goes hair metal, and eventually appears to fall into a drug-infused trip across the American south. “I kicked heroin,” he tells Cynthia at one point. “I can’t kick you.”

In addition to Robbins, Maguire and Wiig, the all-star cast includes Haley Joel Osment, Jessica Alba, Carey Mulligan, and Val Kilmer. Each episode will be bookended by Jonrosh, whose other fake titles include The Spoils of The Weeping Falcon and The Spoils Beneath The Sea. “Fearing that Hollywood will sully his masterpiece,” one recent press release read, “Eric Jonrosh wrote, directed, and financed the series himself.” What could possibly go wrong here?

“The Spoils of Babylon” airs January 9 at 10p.m.

Lane Koivu 
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18/10/2013

Story of a Classic: Smells Like Teen Spirit

Many great songs have been inspired by an unlikely source, we suppose. Though, probably no other of them has been inspired by such an unlikely source, that is, a very girly brand of deodorant. Yes, the inspiration for the title of Nirvana’s biggest hit, “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, a powerful, angst-driven Rock anthem that shook an entire generation out of their decade long slumber of 80’s caricature-like rock stars, came from a cosmetic product named “Teen Spirit”.

At the time the band was very much still crafting their sound, preoccupied with their indentity, what they should and should not be doing as a band, with the biggest predicament being how to remain genuine, true to themselves as artists, while being able to appeal to the masses. Bringing a range of almost polar opposites together in the quest for their unique aesthetic – such as soft and hard, slow and fast, heavy but melodic and angry but poetic – they managed to achieve exactly what they set out to with their second album Nevermind, where “Smells Like Teen Spirit” was featured. Drawing influence from other great Rock bands that had preceded them, and although again almost polar opposites, Nirvana kind of became an amalgam of the Beatles and Black Sabbath, which is exactly what Kurt Cobain once said to his band mates jokingly, in order to explain what he was going for musically. Additionally, by using the slow-hard dynamic exploited massively at the time by The Pixies, another group Nirvana had been deeply influenced by, they put together one of the greatest Rock albums of all time.


As for the title of the album’s biggest hit, the story goes something like this. Kurt’s girlfriend at the time used a deodorant named “Teen Spirit”, triggering a mutual friend of theirs, Kathleen Hanna, to create a somewhat historic piece of graffiti as a prank. “So one night we went out and we were all fucked up. It was me and Kurt and Kathleen Hanna. Kathleen had some spray paint and she spray painted ‘Kurt smells like teen spirit’ in Kurt’s room,” Nirvana drummer and Foo Fighters lead vocalist and guitarist, Dave Grohl recalls.

A silly gesture that was made to tease Kurt, came to be a slogan for an entire generation.

Andreas Stylianou 
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17/10/2013

Costa-Gavras Does Not Like Happy Endings

Near the end of their talk at the Brooklyn Academy of Music last Tuesday night, host Paul Holdengräber leaned back in his chair and turned to Costa-Gavras. “One could say you’re quite interested in unhappy endings.” Gavras, the famed French-Greek filmmaker known for political thrillers like Z and Missing, revealed his distaste of the Hollywood tradition. “The little guy always wins,” Costa-Gavras said. “You go home feeling well and go to sleep feeling well. But that’s not real life.”

The talk was part of the Onassis Cultural Center’s Profiles series. Gavras’ new film, Capital, which opens at the end of the month in New York, takes Gavras’ hatred of political oppression into the financial realm. The movie explores the evils of capitalism, via a bank executive who lands in the CEO chair and immediately starts courting stockholders, firing underlings, and fucking up his family. Money, he explains to his distraught wife, makes people respect you. Unlike Wall Street, the little guys here not only don’t win, they get crushed. To research the film, Costa-Gavras poured over the financial pages, talked to bankers, and dove deep into economic history. One banker told him, “Democracy is a placebo. We belong not to the people, but to the most important stockholders. Because if we don’t do what they want us to do, they change us.” Fitting, then, that the first movie he ever remembered watching was Erich von Stroheim’s Greed.

Gavras has spent his life using film as a tool to expose political injustice. But now, at 80, he wants to make a musical, though he doesn’t know what about. (“If I knew,” he said, “I would have made it already.”) At one point in the conversation, Holdengräber asked Gavras, given his oeuvre, if he saw himself as a political filmmaker. “I don’t. I never accept the idea of ‘political film’. I think that all movies are political. I never say to myself, Ok, now I will make a political movie. That’s ridiculous. I say, this story interests me.”

Lane Koivu 
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11/10/2013

Where Rock is Born

From Glasgow to Bristol and everywhere in between, Britain’s music venues have played an instrumental role in the world of Rock’n'Roll, and that could easily be considered an understatement. Indispensable from the music scene, as one could not exist without them, they have played a vital, even crucial role through the simple act of cherishing and cultivating musical greatness. Whether it’s an arena, a palatial theatre or a sweat-scented club, a dingy pub or a loo-sized bar, it makes no difference whatsoever. The birthplace of copious rock-stars, in these temples of music, artists and music aficionados alike have found and continue to find a creative refuge and most importantly perhaps, a sanction to Rock.

Here are some of the most legendary British music venues to check out for yourselves. And although quite historic, as they can all boast having numerous superstars performing at their premises, they are also far from being dated, as they continue to nurture the best, most cutting-edge artists out there, as they have been doing for decades.


King Tut’s Wah Wah Hut
Glasgow
A venue with a capacity of about 300 would usually be called intimate. But in King Tut’s case, we will call it tiny, as the acts it attracts usually play for crowds of thousands. Known as the spot where Oasis were discovered, Radiohead, Pulp and Blur have all been on the line-up. Furthermore, it has also been placed at number 7 on a list of 50 places to visit in the world by New York Magazine in 2006, Mount Kilimanjaro was number 9 on the list.

Rock City
Nottingham
With 3 rooms and a capacity of around 2000, Rock City is bang in the centre of Nottingham. Some of the first major acts on the bill have included R.E.M, The Cure and U2. While George Akins who took over the venue’s managerial duties at the tender age of 19, now 39, has seen Courtney Love roaming around naked backstage, and David Bowie arriving with a truck carrying four huge couches and a Persian rug for his dressing room.

The 100 Club
London
Open since the 40’s, the 100 Club has hosted most major Blues and R&B musicians, in successive years it hosted The Kinks, The Rolling Stones, Jeff Beck and Eric Clapton and more recently Paul McCartney. Even Alice Cooper got to play a gig with his mate Johnny Depp in 2011. So it’s quite safe to say that the 100 Club is definitely legendary.

The O2 Academy
Brixton, London
From Prince to Marilyn Manson, practically everyone has played in the O2 Academy. And having hosted some pretty historic Rock moments, like the last ever Smiths show, it is one of the most well known legendary venues.

The Thekla
Bristol
With a Banksy art piece of the Grim Reaper in a rowboat on its side, Thekla is quite unique as a music venue, and not because of the Banksy piece but because it’s a boat, something that even the artists that are booked to play the venue fail to notice before showing up. In recent years the line up has included Mumford & Sons, The XX and British Sea Power.


Andreas Stylianou  
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05/10/2013

Playlist: Indie-Dance

Blending Electronica, Synthpop and Disco into one almost lubricious musical concoction, with a dash of Punk, will give you a particular strand of dance music, frequently referred to as Indie-Dance. And although we use the term “dance music” with hesitation, as they are quite clearly songs, with intricate lyrics and the typical verse, bridge, chorus structure of a song most of the times, they also make you dance quite effortlessly; Flamboyantly with moving hips and bent wrists in some cases and jumping around ferociously in other.

Chela – “Romanticise”
A great debut release by what seems to be a very promising new artist. Released by Paris-based Kitsune Maison on August 26, “Romanticise” is sweet, catchy and slightly melancholic.

Surahn – “Wonderful” (Aeroplane Remix)
A great remix by Aeroplane, featured on Surahn’s Wonderful EP which was release for digital on September 24.

Holy Ghost! – “Dumb Disco Ideas”
Disco at its best! “Dumb Disco Ideas” is the swinging single from the new Holy Ghost! album Dynamics, released on September 10.

Yacht – “Party at the NSA”
Rocking a little harder, “Party at the NSA” is Yacht’s latest track. Wild, rebellious and the most contemporary incarnation of the Punk spirit, hell yeah!

MAS YSA – “Why”
On the more emotional side, “Why” is the debut single of MAS YSA, nomadic composer Thomas Arsenault’s new project. Something tells me that we’ll be hearing much more of MAS YSA.





Andreas Stylianou 
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