Archive for the ‘Music’ Category

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Feature: The Artificial Sea, Indie/Electronica/Experimental

October 20, 2007

The Artificial Sea
Indie / Electronica / Experimental

The Artificial Sea is a collaboration between Kevin C. Smith and Alina Simone in which her impassioned vocals and impressionistic lyrics are set to his bedroom soundscapes and melodies. Embracing a spectrum of sounds and techniques including vintage synthesizers and drum machines, obscure samples and found sound, circuit bent creations and homemade electronics, as well as good old guitar, bass, and drums, these disparate strains are all tied together with a restrained aesthetic and fearless beauty. Recorded almost entirely at home they have rejected over-production (for aesthetic as well as practical reasons) and instead welcome any rough edges as integral to the work. The result is at once pleasing and unsettling, comforting and tense. Kevin and Alina write their parts in isolation and usually have little to no say in what the other does. Despite this isolationism (and a virtual lack of common musical touchstones) their individual contributions combine to form a cohesive, organic whole. Their first alum City Island found a home on France’s excellent Travelling Music and a follow up is currently underway.
Check out some of their tunes as well as some cool videos on myspace.

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Your Favorite Enemies - Europe Tour

October 18, 2007

Your Favorite Enemies are back from their European tour, and non other but Miss Isabel herself has took the time to tell you all about it!

October 17th 2007
My Goodness what an experience! For the very first time of my band’s life (Your Favorite Enemies) we did a short European tour that led us to the UK, Germany, France and Netherlands… Now that I am back in Canada it’s hard to believe such incredible and intense moments went by so fast… the good news is that they won’t be the last ones! But of course the first steps into an international music career are very special and I will definitely remember them all my life. Some people ask me which country or city was the best or what was the highlight of the tour, and it’s so hard for me to make up my mind on the right answer.

You have to understand that YFE wanted this tour to be the most intimate as possible in order for us to meet the people we’ve been talking over myspace for almost a year. Business wise we had important shows since many record labels and promoters wanted to see us perform, but each place we played at, we concentrated on the people… Anyway if you stop by our website you’ll notice that EVERYTHING we do is about people… We are spokespeople for Amnesty International, we take the time to answer personally each and every message we get, we are opening up on many subjects that are relevant in our generation… And we managed to keep on being so personal as well when we were on tour and THAT would be my best definition of my “tour highlight”.

In fact, during the day of the shows, myself and a couple of my band mates were meeting our “fans” (we prefer the word “friends” which is really what they are to us)…in a coffee shop or in a park, just to chat and share and then maybe go around the city a bit spending cool time together… you think it’s weird? Not only that, but after the shows we were going back in the crowd to talk with people, giving them hugs and of course the traditional pics and autographs… I don’t understand why some artists don’t like to do these things… I mean it’s true that it has nothing to do with you… once you signed a few you don’t get that “I feel so important” feeling anymore…so the next 100 autographs are purely for the person in front of you! I just love to care for someone and try to make him/her feel like the most important person on earth for a split second… We all need to feel like someone we respect or admire truly cares about us… wether it be a parent, a teacher, a boss or a girly rock singer…

Now, since you guys are hungry for everything new and up to date, here’s what is next for YFE… We are heading to Toronto on October 29th to showcase for Canadian Record labels and concert promoters… Like in Europe, this show will be very important for our us and we would love to share this moment (and stress!lol) with as much cool people as possible to transform this regular showcase into a big YFE family reunion! So… dear readers, don’t hesitate to first get on our website ( www.yourfavoriteenemies.com), listen to our music to make sure you like it, leave us a message and be surprised that we DO actually answer to each one of them!… and then drop by The Rivoli at 7pm on the 29th (”The Rivoli” 334 Queen St. W., Toronto, ON)…COME ON! Not only the entrance is FREE ( I knew you liked not only new techno gadget…but also FREE stuff!) but you’ll get a taste of a “people oriented” band…curious?… You should be!

- Miss Isabel, YFE

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Ion Digital Drum Station

October 14, 2007

The Ion Digital Drum Station - Digital synthesized velocity sensitive drums. The Drum Station features eight drum pads and a built-in electronic drum machine with professional sounds and features. You can create and record your own beats from scratch or play along with the built-in patterns. Drum sticks and DJ style headphones are included. MIDI output ensures compatibility with your other musical devices. Get your synth on for only $109.99 from ThinkGeek!

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Feature: Land of the Loops + Interview

October 12, 2007

Land Of The Loops (a.k.a. Alan Sutherland) thrives on goofy samples placed over hypnotic, sci-fi beats and tweaked bass hooks, all of which spiral drunkenly into the brain. Puttering About A Small Land, LOTL’s second full-length, stimulates serotonin and tickles sensitive spots Sutherland lines his melodic bubbles with sudsy hoops of gurgling bigbeat and mischievous humor.

Interview with Land of the Loops - Electronica / Indie / Electro.

What inspired you to start making your music?
I wanted to since high school when I was about 15 but never had the wherewithal to make it happen until after I graduated college. I tried to start a few bands with friends a few times in college but never went very far I have some crappy tapes somewhere which is about all I have to show for it.

What was your experience with Slabco like?- How did so many great musicians come from such a small label?
Friends I think it all has to do with skateboarding. At one time we were all going to school in Boulder Colorado. I was always looking for someone to skate with. I met Steve Herman from Sukpatch first through our mutual friend Ronnie because all three of us skated. Steven Nereo who started Slabco skated too and had a car so we all wanted to hang out with him so he could take us to the skate park in Denver. I also hung out a lot with Dave Fuller from Buckminster Fuzeboard, he was the best skater out of all of us. I didn’t know anyone made any music worth listening to till at least a year of skating together and school was about to end.

Do you think you would do a collaboration with any of the old Slabco bands like Casiocore Volume All Star, or Buckminster Fuzeboard ?
We would love to see a collaboration CD with all the greats from Slabco! Stephen Herman from Explosion Robinson started a Casiocore 2, I was on the first one and I gave a song for the second one but the project kept getting shelved. I’ve done some stuff with Buckminster Fuzeboard, I did some beats for his first full length and we did a song together on the hurry up and wait e.p. My last release was a split EP with him but we did our songs separately. There were some unfinished attempts at collaboration in the past with volume All-Star Stephen and Explosion Robinson. As well as talk with Sukpatch. So the intent is there but not always the product. I’m a pretty big control freak, so working with other people doesn’t always work out that well except for Buckminster Fuzeboard because our styles are so similar and we use the same equipment so we can swap files. He is a pretty chill cat which helps too.

Any upcoming albums we should look out for?
My wife and I bought a new house this winter and it is a fixer upper, which has been sucking all my free time out of me. After I lay down the hardwood floor in the living room I’m hoping for a break so I can settle in the studio and make some more jams. There are two or three songs finished and a least a dozen unfinished if that means anything. I took a break a while back for a couple years before rebuilding my studio, which needs to get reassembled in the new house but I have at least the basics up so far… I’ve been working on trying to evolve into a different sound but I think my stuff will probably just sound like more Land of the Loops.

What programs/equipment do you use to make your killer tunes?
Bundle of Joy was made using the Ensoniq EPS 16 Plus , the vocal tracks were recorded using volume All-Star’s eight track reel to reel. I then moved up to the EPS’s predecessor the ASR 10. It had just come out when I bought the EPS so it was too expensive. Now it is so old now that when you look for it on eBay it is described as a vintage sampler. A year ago or so I invested in a computer and now use cakewalk sonar 6.2 it does tons of crazy stuff, I’m still trying to figure out but I still use my sampler. Luckily they get along well in the wonderful world of MIDI. Which is a good thing because the clock on my sampler’s has been drifting in and turning my songs into jazzy improvisational messes.

Do you have any juicy celebrity encounters because of your music that you could tell us about?
I have got a few phone calls in the height of my popularity but never met anyone in person. I don’t think too many celebrities hang out in Waltham, Massachusetts. I once spoke to Sofia Coppola on the phone because she used a song of mine in a commercial in Japan. She was pretty cool, she sounded really stoned but then someone told me she always sounds that way. That was before she became a household name and she was just doing student short films.
Mike D. from the Beastie Boys called me about joining Grand Royal Records one night back when I was living at my parents house. He sounded just like my friend Ronnie so the whole time I wasn’t sure if it was him but I assume it was. Unless my friend Ronnie played a joke on me and hasn’t told me this whole time.

Finally, tell us about a cool product that you have seen or used recently that would fair well on brblife.com.
I am not sure. I Find out about all of the cool stuff on sites like brblife.com. I am going to buy a Rigid laser guided miter saw to put in the floor. Then I can feel like Arnold Schwarzenegger in Terminator when I cut some wood. Nnnnnnnneeeeeeeeerrrrrrrwwwwwwww………..

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Feature: God’s Wonderful Railway

October 10, 2007

Interview with God’s Wonderful Railway - Electronica / Alternative / Rock

Describe your music and tell us why we should listen to it.
God’s Wonderful Railway make instrumental electronica music. Its not really party music, but neither is it so avant-garde that I forget to put a groove in. Hopefully it doesn’t sound especially difficult. Thats the game-plan anyway, if there is one.

What inspires you and the music you create?
At the risk of sounding corny I just make the kind of music I’d be happy listening to. Music I don’t like inspires me as much as music I do like.

How did you first get into making music?
My older sisters like to remind me that I ruined all their records by spinning them on my knee before I could walk, so I was pretty much obsessed since then. I used to play guitar, but heard the first DJ Shadow album when it came out and switched to the sampler pretty quickly. I’ve been sampling for over ten years now.

What kind of equipment do you use?
These new tracks I am putting up as and when I do them are almost entirely done on a PC running very out-of-date software by today’s standards that I wouldn’t recommend anyone else use, but I know it like the back of my hand and don’t want to switch, even if it does take an age to do a track. There are guitars and keyboards on most of the tracks too, often courtesy of David, who lends his talents to the material when he is needed to play something that I can’t.

How does the music scene in the U.K. differ from North America?
I don’t think the music I am interested in differs that greatly from country to country, really. Most people who listen to my music seem to come from mainland Europe tho. Maybe its a language issue, what with electro being mostly instrumental, but they seem less obsessed by that English indie-rock sound that rules supreme here in the UK. As for the difference between the UK and North America? You have more bad metal bands while we have more bad indie bands.

Where did the name God’s Wonderful Railway come from?
The project gets its name from an early British rail network called GWR who were supposedly so well regarded that the people nicknamed them God’s Wonderful Railway, altho my own guess is that it was the company thmeselves who said this in a fit of self-congratulatory publicity. I have been asked before if its a christian rock band, which is slightly worrying.

Thanks, anything else you want to say to our readers?
The tracks on myspace are little more than rough mixes that I put up as and when I do a new one I am happy with. I am currently working on an albums worth of material, when thats ready I will start to get things out there. At the moment I reckon its about 80 percent finished.

Thanks, be sure to let us know when you get the new album finished.
Sure thing.

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In Rainbows by Radiohead - Free?

October 7, 2007

Radiohead’s new album In Rainbows is available for purchase exclusively from their website as a”Discbox” set, or download. The new album is going to be good if not great and I feel I can say this because, well, it IS Radiohead. Oh, and because you name your price for the download. Thats right, you can pay whatever you want to for downloading the album. Or so they would have you believe. “YOUR PURCHASE MAY BE SUBJECT TO A TRANSACTION FEE.” Is cleverly hidden out of sight. But it is still going to be a very good album for a very good price. The Discbox, should you chose to buy it, will provide you with some records (yes vinyl), a second CD with more songs, photos, artwork, hardcover book, blah blah blah. Obviously you’re just going to dl it anyway. Buy it here.

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Feature: Definition - Hip Hop/Electro/Experimental

October 6, 2007

With just finishing work on a 6 track EP, Definition is locked and loaded to blow your minds. Check out their stuff at their myspace page here, but in the meantime check this bio.
Definition is a two man hip hop and electronica project based in Tucson, Arizona. Combining both original loop-driven samples and beats, they weave an intricate gossamer of auditory ecstasy; much like that of an acid-induced spiderweb (Acid Pro 6.0, that is). Focusing on “less hip, more hop,” they bring more than just biscuits and gravy to the hip hop cultural dinner table. Despite their affinity for bumps, jams, “ill-nastyz,” freshness, and sick grooves, they often get down to a chill melody encompassing flavorful textures of the most incandescent nature — like that of a sojourn to the fruitful waterfall valleys of one’s own mind.
In their free time, Chip and Scott (the aforementioned duo), enjoy delirium and tremors caused by alcohol withdrawal and broken hearts, aiding to their already shaky psyches. When they do actually find the time to leave their humble studio-abode, Chip enjoys sailing and smooth jazz whilst Scott fancies dinosaurs and various loud, percussive effects.
Their breakout EP, titled In the Company of Owls, showcases both their love for raptorial birds and their strange, borderline inappropriate obsession with simian aestheticism. Buy it — and you too, can be one of the few, the proud, the Definition.

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Feature: Keiz82

October 3, 2007

Keiz82 - Hip Hop / Electronica
Interview

Want to do an interview for brblife.com?

Sure!

Describe your music and tell us why we should listen to it.

I try to make new sounds out of old sounds (like samples) or improvised sounds (instruments), and I guess just try to make whatever sounds good to me. I really don’t know why you should listen to it but if you want to get in the mind of a true bedroom artist then they can take a peak.

What inspires you and the music you create?

Whatever I hear purposely or coincidentally, movie films and real life inspires me. As far as other artists, I’ve been inspired by groups like Anticon, Wu Tang, and Jefferson Airplane and many others of every genre.

How did you first get into making music?

I got into making music because it was the only thing that interested me as a kid besides girls. On cable television, I would always watch the music video channel every hour that I could, and I’d see all these artists that made good music, pretty soon I started wondering if I could also produce a beat or a song just as good as the ones I liked.
I grew up with people that listened to anything the radio fed them, so when I showed them my music they would either freak out or say it’s “interesting” (who knows what they were really thinking that they couldn’t say to my face). I used to make a lot more music when I smoked weed.

What kind of equipment do you use?

I use a Dr. Sample SP303, Dr. Groove DR202 drum machine, BR1180 digital recorder, and a PSR520 keyboard (from back in 8th grade). Oh and a damn MPC2000XL which I haven’t figured out how to use yet, lol.

Cool, thanks dude!
By the way, I’ve had a creative block for the past year so most of the tracks are pretty old, I just decided to make a myspace for them. Oh and I forgot list my beat up guitar that my dad gave me a long time ago, as well as my dr-cx1 compressor microphone for when I find someone who wants to add lyrics to my beats, or when I feel the need to spit rhymes myself.
And also, I don’t have any official albums and not on any label just in case you thought I was, but I have plenty of unofficial albums in my cd crates, lol.

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Raw Radio - Killer Tunes

October 1, 2007

Raw Radio is an online radio show that produces a new episode every week. You will find that a lot of the music played on the shows cannot be found anywhere in the memory banks of your brain, and that’s because you’ve never heard it before. But that’s a good thing, because they are all killer songs, and you should hear them. The most recent shows track list is as follows:
1. garden - sugar soul
2. bangin on ya - joniz
3. song 1 - dj krush
4. hererightnow - rawbertson
5. mac dre - boss tycoon
6. seventeen years- ratatat
7. peace, love, & unity - original melody
- these eyes interlude -
8. modern man’s hustle - atmosphere
9. flashflood - aesop rock
10. black knights of the northstar
11. percee p - skills mastered
12. t biggums - oh no!
13. seein thangs - dj shadow

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Bo Burnham - Bo Fo Sho

September 28, 2007

Here is a kid that is one lyrical genius. This is one of his best songs yet, but be sure to check out his others. They are lolz.
My Whole Family…
3.14 Apple Pi
Rehab Center for Fictional Characters
The Perfect Woman