Archive for April, 2008

Weekly Site Review: Fairtilizer

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Lots and lots of social networks are out there, and many of them are centered around music and art. The particular one I’m talking about has a simple premise: act as a “word of mouth” radio. Pretty simple right? Exactly, and it’s executed really well. While some sites like The Hype Machine are run by the taste-maker bloggers, Fairtilizer is run by the users and listeners of the site. The site claims that it “filters” music by allowing the good stuff to go through and the bad stuff to stay behind. Of course this is a little elitist in it’s attitude, but then again, writing for my own blog, Tiny Mix Tapes, and The Hippodrome tends to make me kind of elitist too.

So elitism might just be necessary when it comes to divulging new music, especially when your taste is carefully groomed on a daily basis by fresh and original work. By observing the site’s chart, Fairtilizer looks to be a pretty pleasing collection of tracks all across the board. Of course the most popular tracks are those from bigger indie bands, which is typical from most social music networking sites. In a way, Fairtilizer is kind of like PureVolume without all the mall punk bands and with a bigger emphasis on user interaction.

Users are able to make and vote for each other’s playlists and can subscribe to music genres, artists, and labels, making Fairtilizer internet radio on crack. The simple site does its magic when users vote for the songs, putting them up the charts. You could say that Fairtilzer is a very democratic music service without any sort of hierarchal editing or promotion. Leaving it to the people yields different results than leaving it to the taste makers and that’s not always a bad thing, especially when it gives all of the musicians a fair chance, no matter how popular initially.

Musicians can sign up for free accounts and promote their music just like they’d do on MySpace or any similar social networking site. Fairtilzer may sound similar to other sites, but don’t let that fool you. Its simple premise and excellent execution is something you need to check out. This is no throwaway link; I can say I already plan to check back regularly. To top things off, the site is gorgeous and absolutely easy to use.

Video: Mariosupa — Happy ‘08

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

Mariosupa, from the great city of Paris, has done alot of cool work for alot of cool people. This video sure is happy…

Sixty Cycles

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

In both Heaven and Hell, there is only one album that has always played and will always play until the end of time: heaven has Brian Eno’s Ambient 1: Music for Airports, hell has Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Music. If you like both of these albums and don’t believe in heaven or hell, but rather that nothing happens when you die and the only thing beyond this world is the endless stretch of cosmos in which each individual life is unfathomably small, then Helicon, the official debut by computer musician Rod O’Connor (a.k.a. Sixty Cycles or 60Hz), is for you.

Although this is O’Connor’s first official release, he’s recorded some 10-12 albums worth of material since high school, covering almost every imaginable style of electronic music, from drum and bass to ambient minimalism to psy-trance, and he’s done more than his fair share of genre-bending and experimentation along the way. His collected body of (mostly unreleased) work is approximately six days long in total.

“[This is my attempt] to make ‘noisy’ music which still harkens a little bit to this Romantic Music idea of evocation of emotions,” says O’Connor of Helicon. “But I’m not using traditional harmonies or tonal material so much, so what are those emotions that get called up? I don’t necessarily know, I just know that it’s not comfortable.”

O’Connor works primarily using a technique called granular synthesis, which is the process of cutting a sound up into lots of tiny pieces and rearranging them. While this would have meant countless hours spent cutting and re-arranging tape (see, for instance, the work of Greek composer Iannis Xenakis), the introduction of digital media completely re-formed the playing field for granular synthesis (as it did, of course, for pretty much every other medium); O’Connor uses, according to his SoundClick, only three pieces of equipment: computer, brain, coffee.

Helicon features a wide variety of source material, most of which is warped and manipulated beyond recognition into a wash of ambient textures. The title track opens the album with subtly manipulated electric guitars; “Noisey Planet” features a broken AM radio being played like scratching a turntable. Several of the tracks feature manipulated recordings of a fifteen-piece ensemble led by avant-garde jazz legend Anthony Braxton, with whom O’Connor has played live electronics at Wesleyan University.

“I included the live recordings to pay homage to his work without ripping it off per se, because I can extract the tamboral characteristics of what makes the sound a certain sound, but totally obscure any musical content that he was putting out.” He points out that Braxton’s voice is audible at the beginning of “Lacus Somniorum - Lake of Dreams.” “There’s no words, but the sound is there.”

Helicon was released for free download on Unwashed Records, a small label made up almost exclusively of psy-trance DJs. O’Connor has found a receptive audience in the dark-psy community (although some posts on the Unwashed message board complained that Helicon sounds “too harsh”).

“I was aiming for the things that I like about electronic dance music, but on my own terms,” O’Connor explains. “It has that [aggressive] sentiment, like ‘I’m a fucking sound! Listen to me!’ But it’s also got a little bit of subtlety in there. It’s not just to make you dance; it’s more about the intensity of sonic experience that I feel like a lot of the more underground dark-psy tries to have.”

O’Connor is (somewhat predictably) dismissive of any genre classifications you could apply to his music. “All these terms that you use to talk about music, they’re helpful, because you hear the term ‘bluegrass’ and you know it means something; you don’t know what it means, but it means ‘not dubstep’… the music business gives us terms like that. It’s like, how do we label this thing, this sound, this identity, that you construct by associating with this performer/group/image/whatever? How do we shape that to something that is common to all of these elements? But I guess I don’t really care about the music business. I just want people to hear it and take it at face value.”

There isn’t really much of a way to take Helicon other than at face value. When you listen to this album, it’s not hard to forget that you’re even listening to music. Like all truly great ambient music, it fills the room like a gas leak, registering subconsciously as changes in air pressure that affect you the same way a change in temperature or humidity might. The tones range from soothing and ethereal to gritty and claustrophobic, and they often change so gradually it’s nearly imperceptible until you find yourself submerged in a sea of noise that would give Lightning Bolt’s Brian Chippendale nightmares.

To be sure, Helicon is not for everybody; there is nothing to grab you and pull you in. You have to just let it happen to you. Put it on as “background music” while you do your homework or cook dinner. Don’t wait for anything to happen, just let it unfold and see where it takes you. It may not be comfortable, but it is powerful, moving, and - somehow, despite all the cold, hard zeroes and ones that went into making it - utterly, undeniably human. And besides, if all you want from music is a feeling of comfort, listen to Music for Airports.

Audio: Helicon
Audio: Noisey Planet

Guy Capecelatro III

Monday, April 21st, 2008

The diverse and humble Guy Capecelatro III is one of New Hampshire’s best kept musical secrets. Fellow New Hampshire musician Jason Anderson interviewed Capecelatro last year, and found some beautiful stories and ideas.

“Music, for me, is about sharing and expressing. I think my lack of real desire for success, musically, has enabled me to continue to really enjoy writing and playing music. If my expectations has been higher I may have fallen victim to that inevitable disappointment which many friends have sadly experienced. Hopefully I’ll always putter about,” says Capecelatro of his musical attitude.

And indeed, his music is fitting of his words. Wistful, carefully chosen words fill up the large discography Capecelatro has compiled in the last few years. This past February alone, Capecelatro finished four full length albums. He distributes under his own label, Two-Ton Santa.

Besides Jason Anderson, both Nat Baldwin and The Hippodrome’s own Jesse Rifkin have taken an interest in Capecelatro.

“My first encounter with Guy’s music was watching him and his band soundcheck at the Red Door in Portsmouth, NH,” Rifkin tells me. “Even then, with all the volume adjustments and false starts, his songs astounded me so much that I could hardly do anything but sit there stupefied and watch. When the time came for his full set that night, I figured I knew exactly what I was in store for, but still, the music that Guy and his bandmates played that night just totally crushed me on a level that I wasn’t prepared for.”

Most impressive to me is Capecelatro’s embodiment of the new musician in a new industry. His down to earth attitude and willingness to distribute his work to anyone interested are wise ideas. I hope to hear alot more from this talented artist in the future, and judging by his antithetical reaction to the pompous-rock-band-stuck-in-the-pre-filesharing 90s archetype, I don’t think it will be hard to do so.

Audio: Listing
Audio: Mrs. Armbruster 1886

Open Choir Fire

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Open Choir Fire appears, in the outset, to hold steady with well-known staple 90s indie artists including the Pixies, Fugazi and Juno. Following suit is the hefty power trio of guitar, bass and drums. Vocalist Amo DelBello mixes it up with early Modest Mouse-esque shrieks and the post-punky, pre-emo moodiness of Juno.

In “Big Regret”, there’s a light indie-pop sound familiar to artists like Baby Calendar, but with a heavier 90s appeal. However, songs like “Things You Have To Do” find an edge; here DelBello comes off as a heavier, less awkward Isaac Brock. “Candle” fits the moody Juno mold nicely.

Surprisingly, Open Fire Choir has quite a few recordings under their belt. One includes Volume 3 of Ball Of Wax. If you dig 90s indie rock, you’ll dig Open Fire Choir.

Audio: Big Regret (Live)

(This Post was contributed by Andrew Fenstermaker of FensePost)


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