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  • Moldover live at Warper Party @ The Delancey

    My favorite recurrent NY electronic music party Warper (check out their new site and amazing monthly line ups) has been going on for years and continues to serve up fresh as well as established talent. Now back at The Delancey (which I vastly prefer to the Williamsburg location) I decided to make stint to see Moldover, the founder of Warped party, the founder of the art of controllerism and the founder of the art of playing the electric guitar with a sock (his own for that matter) over his hand.
    Moldover has evolved and is walking new grounds and reaching new hights. He abandoned the concept of live remashing popular rock/pop tunes in favor of remashing his own electro/rock/pop mixture of influences and sounds. I’ve heard an advance copy of his upcoming record and it sounds very interesting (a blend of electronica, some industrial, rock, pop and metal that at times reminded me of the latest Skinny Puppy or KMFDM and other times of Tool or some progressive rock bands). His music is now as original as the music’s treatment itself and the live processing is taken to a new level through the use of his latest self-built usb/midi controller (a light weight horizontal MPC-sized metal box crowded with multiple ribbon controllers, old arcade videogames fire-type round buttons, MPC-type velocity-sensitive pads, DJ-type sliders, big vintage-analog-type knobs, small infinite-type knobs, good old faders and a big trackball). The once shy Moldover who would barely even look up to the crowd from his bent-over-the-controls position is now making more eye contact and not afraid of letting the light shine on his noteworthy guitar playing chops (can you imagine how many chicks he must get now?) and even on his vocal abilities!
    The genius of Moldover always resided in his skills as a real-time sonic manipulator of beats, sounds and music but just as noticeable and remarkable is his willingness and ability to reinvent himself and evolve, effectively moving on to a new chapter and corageously showcasing his own songwriting/production. Great show!

  • Jason Lindner’s Now Vs Now live @ Zinc Bar

    I knew Jason Linder was a great keyboard player (he also currently plays with Meshell Ndegeocello, who sat in on the first set) but tonight was the first I saw him with his own band Now vs Now (featuring the tasteful & frenetic Mark Giuliana on drums and the solid Panagiotis Andreou on bass). They recorded their CD at EastSide Sound so I was familiar with the name of the project but not with the material. Needless to say the musicians are great at what they do. Giuliana’s playing (solos, minimal, intense, fractured or around the beat but always in the groove) is soulful and articulated, continuously and reliably supported and accented by Andreou’s deep groovy lines (who also did some middle eastern singing). The backdrop of sounds, patterns, melodies, harmonies and obviously solos is of course all in the hands of Mr. Lindner, who comps nicely on his wurli and plays funky pockets and spacey leads on his other two brightly lit keyboards (often at the same time, as one would expect). Also joining them tonight is Bebe Israel, a talented young word-crafter who spits at double digits speeds or can sit back and improvise rhymes on the spot just just about anything (from newly elected Obama to the birthday girls celebrating at the Zinc bar) and who likes to remind everyone he’s a survivor because skills survive trends that’s why he won’t expire. His beat-boxing in the second set (the one I saw) was pretty sick too, I must say.

    Although their blend of acid jazz, world music, chill out lounge, progressive stuff possibly might not be as accessible for non-musicians, for those who can appreciate this was one of those inspiring feel-good nights on the town with lots of musical cats and familiar places in the crowd and good music to take with you into the dawn of a new day.

  • AntiQuark new CD with my remix

    The new CD of San Diego-based duo AntiQuark has been released in physical and digital format.

    They had asked me a while ago (when they were still a female-fronted duo) to do a remix for them and I did. Now that the main composer of AntiQuark (Ant) got herself a new singer (Sergio) they are ready to attack again with their mixture of electronica, dance, experimental.

    You can check it out and/or buy it here: http://cdbaby.com/cd/antiquarkmusic

  • Echstream live

    NJ-based Echstream put up a great show yesterday night at Andrew W.K.-owned Santos’ Party House (basically a big Soho dance club with a good sized stage, two bars, big pillars, great sound system and impressive array of hanging speakers – not used for the live performance).

    I had heard their records (now available in a remastered version) but I am happy to report that the album translated well on the stage (unlike some other similar bands who without the studio production inevitably lack live). This is probably in part due to the fact that Echostream gainfully employ, not one, but two drummers (female on acoustic drums and male on electronic). The female fronted five-piece is also backed by a skilled and glamorous Japanese guitarrist and by the main songwriter of the band Tony Grund who plays bass lines and synth lines on a small midi controller that he juggles around on a duck-taped stand as if it was the joystick of a sick action game. Last but not least the female Japanese lead singer also does a great job at keeping the crowd excited and paying attention to her melodies and words.

    Speaking of crowd, the young NY goth and loli-goth scene was all there to represent, dressed in either rigorously all black or in sparkling, super colorful short and tight outfits (imagine Tokyo fashion meets Berlin Love Parade). Given the headliners (the Japanese electro-rock band Blood) the audience was made up of a substantial Japanese envoy. The event was organized by Tainted Reality, who did a great job at putting it together.

    I didn’t stay for the other bands (when the Australian Japanese duo GPKISM took the stage with their monotone all-programmed dance beats, less than impressive vocal performance and cheesy distorted electric guitar one-note-at-a-time lines I knew that was my cue). I never saw Blood and they sound ok when I googled them today but when somebody told me yesterday that they sounded similar to GPKISM, I wasn’t about to stick around through that and DJ SiSen for a possible disappointment.

    I think Echostream would probably have turned out to be the best band of the night and that’s who I was there to see anyway. There’s just something to be said for live performances, you know?

  • The Third Mind – American Artists Contemplate Asia, 1860-1989

    Laurie Anderson invited me to the opening of “The Third Mind – American Artists Contemplate Asia, 1860-1989” at the gorgeous Guggenheim Museum. Ann Hamilton’s piece “Human Carriage” gets your attention right away. Built for and around Frank Lloyd Wright building’s unique shape, a complex system of steel wires and a long pipe is rigged with a small wheeled cart with two dangling Tibetan hand cymbals. Every time the cart is manually released from the top it spirals down the Guggenheim rotunda’s levels all the way to the bottom where it hits a hooked book that’s been previously sliced to miriads of small slips of paper held together by the book’s spine (one such books could be seen used as a clever ornament around the artists’ neck).

    Laurie Anderson’s piece “In the House, In the Fire” (what I went there to see) consisted of a Tibetan singing bowl sitting atop a circular saw blade, slowly spinning with and on top of a plexiglass or glass-looking mast. Sounds originating at the base of the mast travel across the structure and resonate through the material of the blade and the bowl. Fascinating concept and hauntingly beautiful sounds, just like everything Laurie ever produces.

    My other favorite pieces were Robert Irwin’s untitled acrylic lacquer on formed acrylic plastic circle with shadows (just beautiful to look at, while you try to figure out which part is wall and which part is on top of the wall), John Cage’s sheet music (I wish Zorn’s sheet music was there too!), Fluxus-member Nam June Paik’s tribute to Cage (“Cage in the Cage in the Cage”, which was basically Mr. Cage filmed while sitting at a piano and the shown through a small LCD TV which was housed in a bird cage which was housed in a larger bird case), La Monte Young’s omni-sensory sound and light environment “Dream House” (two rooms with florescent blu and red-ish lights and wall projections, a white carpet and a multi-channel sound system emanating loud sine waves which blend in different ways depending on where you stand in the room), James Lee Byars’ “The Death of James Lee Byars” (a huge room with walls, floor and ceiling covered with gold leaf and a gold-leaf covered coffin in the middle), Paul Kos’ “Sound of Ice Melting” (two 25lbs blocks of ice melting with eight microphones all around them to pick up the sound of the melting ice – which unfortunately could not be heard due to the loud chatter of the crowed that gathered for this opening).

  • On Ensemble with Kaoru Watanabe

    This past Thursday January the 15th, my interest in world music and japanese culture and music in particular, made me venture out into the brutal cold of these last couple of days to check out NY-based Kaoru Watanabe and members of LA-based On Ensemble give a performance/lecture at the Japanese books store Kinokuniya in midtown. This was also the closing event of George Hirose’s photography exhibit, which was to be found along the escalator and staircase and presented very beautiful night shots of places in Japan and places that look like Japan but are in New York (as well as some enchanting blueish shots of Provincetown, MA by night, which are also available in his latest book “Blue Lights”).

    Although I got there almost in time for an advertised 5pm reception that never really officially took place (that’s what you get for being on time I guess), I enjoyed a green tea frappe while waiting for the guys to take the stage, or better said, to take the corner of Kinokuniya’s upstairs. At least I got a seat (the reward for being on time!), which is good since the event turned out to be packed by a standing audience and there were only maybe 20 seats available.

    Watanabe Kaoru is a flute, fue and taiko player and teacher (he has a school in Brooklyn) so he offered a lot of information between the pieces, which made the evening equal part educational and entertaining (musically of course, but also because these guys are really pretty funny). I understand this was supposed to be his own performance but happened to coincide with On Ensemble being in town for a gig at Drom the following day, so it became sort of an improvised unrehearsed jam session with three of the four On Ensemble members offering traditional taiko drumming, traditional ceremonial music (hints of gagaku) and some traditional kabuki theater music (actually Mae, the music that is played for the space and the people passing by outside the theater, before the Nagauta performance actually starts) and more modern and/or western influences (free jazz, avantgarde, if you will). Although neither the bright fluorescent lighting nor the setting (a backdrop of plastic action figures and the Bryant Park ice skating ring) might have been the most conducive for this music, I got really into it, so much so that I decided to clear my schedule for the next day and go see the full performance at Drom.

    After a good early bird dinner at Takahachi, which is literally right on top of the Drom music venue and happens to be one of my favorite sushi spots in town (and Kirsten Dunst seems to like it too, since she walked in right when I was leaving), I went downstairs ready to enjoy this small american version of the Japanese Wadaiko festival all over again, this time with On Ensemble‘s full line up on the stage: a colorfully dressed four piece composed by Shoji (in the green), Maz (in the red), Kris (in the blue) and Kelvin (in the yellow).

    The program was similar to the one I saw the night before at the book store, with a much greater focus on the crossing over and the blending of different influences. Their stated and de facto quest is to mix the traditional instruments of Japan with influences from the west.
    Although even an out of place looking darbuka appeared on one song, most of the show was played on a variety of japanese percussions, such as large O-Daiko, smaller Chu-Daiko, rope-tied Shime-Daiko, fan-shaped Uchiwa-Daiko (which as an encore all four of them played while making percussive noises with their mouths, in an almost Bailnese kecak style), fish-shaped woodblock-type Mokugyo, wheat sticks, cymbals, gongs, rattling shell percussions and other type of drums that I didn’t recognize (like a long cylindrical Brazilian surdo-looking drum). In addition to all of these drums, On Ensemble make use of one of my favorite japanese instruments: a gorgeous koto (played by self-taught koto improviser blue Kris). However the true goal of this quartet is to mix all of this with their western influences (rock, jazz, hip hop) and so there’s actually a modern rock drum set being used as well as some scratching on turntables and some singing by yellow Kelvin (only in one song, although all four of them love to do their kakegoe shouts of encouragement and appreciation on the stage, when they play, and off, if they are not playing on a particular piece).

    One of my favorite parts of the show was when green Shoji accompanied the rest of the group with some self-thaught Tuvan throat-singing that allegedly he picked up while sitting on the lap of a NY-based Mongolian musician whose name unfortunately I can’t recall (and neither can google, can you believe that shit?).

    Kaoru (dressed in a modernized version of traditional japanese clothes) played several type of japanese bamboo flutes called fue (although no shakuhacki) in most pieces to accompany the guys. He recalled that that same Mongolian throat singer split his lip during a friendly staged fight after some too many shots of vodka, but that’s another story I guess…

    Obviously, with a multi-racial line up and all the experiences that such a richness alone brings to the table, in addition to their individual research, interests and travels and the exposure to all american pop culture (they are all US born after all), the broad spectrum of influences to draw from is obviously enormous, so these four guys HAVE fun and ARE fun (every time they take the mic between songs to give a little explanation they manage to collect more laughs and giggles than some comedians I have seen).

    The visual highlight of the evening was probably the Miyake-style taiko performance by Kaoru and Kelvin, who stand on either side of one horizontally placed O-Daiko and hit it forcefully and following patterns in what almost looks like a duel.

    On Ensemble‘s two sets of this powerful concert are like a musical chair game in which instruments and positions are constantly reshuffled to suit every new piece. They struggled to make it happen on Drom’s small and abstractly shaped stage, but they managed just fine.

    I apologize for my iPhone’s crappy picture quality (well, maybe Apple should really apologize for that), but even so, you should get an idea of how amazing these two shows have been overall! A great evening well worth the $15 cover.

    If you live in LA definitely make sure you find out when they play next, and for those of you on the east coast, get on their mailing list to make sure you won’t miss their next NY appearance (usually in January). Also, you might want to skip the gym and attend one of Kaoru’s taiko lessons to burn some fat and learn something about our brothers from the east. Both Kaoru and On Ensemble have sveral CDs released or about to be released, so definitely check them out as well.

    Sonically impressive and visually stunning, I would recommend this highly to anyone bored of the same old concerts and looking for something new to experience.

  • Grand Pianoramax + Beat Kaestli @ live at Canal Room

    This is my first post from my mobile phone so I’ll make it short. Went out to Canal Room (one of the few NYC venues with good sound system and good enginners like Sean McFaul) to see a showcase of NY-based Swiss artists organized by the Swiss Consulate. The opening act was jazz singer Beat Kaestli from Bern, who warmed up the growing crowd with some originals, some standards and some covers in English, French and Swiss German. Very skilled singer with a smooth and experienced voice backed by a great band also featuring the unique Chris Howes on violin. After another less notable act whose name I can’t neither remember nor google from a moving subway car with no WiFi/3G, Geneva’s expat Leo Tardin and his Grand Pianoramax project took the stage and lifted the spirits and the tempo with a powerful set made of his signature keys-centric sounds (moog, rhodes, piano, synth leads) and the incredible drumming of Zurich’s Jojo Mayer, subbing for usual drummer Dominik Burkhalter. A mixture of funk, acid jazz, drum’n’bass, dance and hip hop and as always Leo spiced the set up with some poetic, empowering and funny MC action provided by his usual collaborator Celena Glenn and special guest Mike Ladd. Last but not least the stage was graced by one of the most incredible harmonica players I’ve ever heard: Geneva originary Gregoire Maret, who, just like Tardin, has records out on the French/Italian Ameeican-based label Oblique Sounds who also co-sponsored the night and the cool swag bags filled with Swiss chocolate, t-shirts, CDs and hats.
    Who said the Swiss don’t know how to party? ;-)

  • Goodbye 2008… Welcome 2009!

    Wow… 2008 was a crazy one and a great one!

    I feel bad for not having posted anything to my blog in months (since last April), but that should give you an idea of how busy I’ve been. I’ve been away for a good part of this year on tour and business trips to Austin, Europe, Japan and so on and so forth… Many things have happened so, today, I want to take the time to thank all of those who have made my year special, in the hope that I have contributed some good to their 2008 as well.

     

    John Zorn at the Guggenheim
    John Zorn at the Guggenheim

     

    First and foremost I want to thank my new good friend John Zorn, one of the smartest and most talented composers I’ve had the pleasure to work with. Our collaboration started early this year with his gorgeous album “the Dreamers” and has continued ever since. In 2008 alone I recorded and mixed close to a dozen albums of his. Most importantly though I consider John a dear friend and I look forward to each and every time we get together, whether it’ll be in the studio, live or just for a dinner or a hang. Too bad Tonic is not around anymore, or else I’d know exactly what to do tonight! Dig?

    Skuli Sverisson (bass), Lou Reed (guitar), Brad Hampton (tour manager), myself, Laurie Anderson (voice, electronics), Bill Berger (lights/production), Peter Scherer (keys)
    Skuli Sverisson (bass), Lou Reed (guitar), Brad Hampton (tour manager), myself, Laurie Anderson (voice, electronics), Bill Berger (lights/production), Peter Scherer (keys)

     

    In 2008, through John, I’ve also had the pleasure to work with Laurie Anderson and Lou Reed. Laurie is an incredibly talented performance artist/composer/poet/writer/violinist/inventor/sculptor etc… I’ve always had great respect for her and liked her music and her multi-dimensional approach to the arts. I’ve been on tour with her for a few months and never grew tired of her incredibly beautiful, haunting and thought-provoking live show (now that it’s over, I feel bad for anyone who hasn’t gotten a chance to see it). She always smiles and probably is one of the sweetest and happiest people I know. Recording and touring with her and all the great people in the band and in the crew was a great experience and all the traveling and the special moments shared together (we were in Tel Aviv the day Obama got elected) brought us all closer together.  Becoming friends with Laurie and Lou was a treat. We’ve had great times together, on tour and back in NYC (Thanksgiving dinner and all that) and I look forward to spending more time and doing more work with both of them.

    Patti Labelle, myself and Liel at EastSide Sound Studios in NYC
    Patti Labelle, myself and Liel at EastSide Sound Studios in New York City

     

    Another great artist of 2008 I’ve worked with is Patti LaBelle. Producer Bob Cutarella (whom I worked with on the Les Paul tribute album) hired me to record a duet of Patti and the Israeli singer Liel (also featuring Slash on guitar). Furthermore this year I got to see the reunion of Patti’s group the Labelle at the Apollo Theater on December 19th and 20th, beautifully organized by my promoter friend Massimo Gallotta. A memorable two nights during which the Labelles literally set the Apollo on fire (the first night the sound system just shut off, allegedly due to electrical problems, which is why the show was repeated the following night). I can’t say that I became close friends with Patti or Liel, but nevertheless it was a great experience of 2008. You can also see a video of the recording session here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JZ8IJliemEo&eurl  

     

    Less than seven hours before 2009 and minutes before my good friends in Europe will pop the cork, I want to thank all the people that made my year special. I am looking forward to find them all again in 2009!

    My new year’s resolution is to post in my blog more often which, thanks to the people at Effigent (which as of now allow me to post to my blog from my iPhone), will probably actually happen!

    I leave this year behind thinking of my best friends. My thoughts in particular go to Barry and his family.

    I wish everyone all the best for 2009: much love, health, success, $$$, satisfaction and everything and more of whatever it is you wish for!

    See you next year!

  • Before the Music Dies

    I have been slacking on my blogging duties because I’ve been too busy for such a self-indulgent activity, however, every once in a while comes something that is really worth talking about, and this incredible documentary movie called “Before the Music Dies” definitely qualifies as one such thing. I just finished watching the movie and all of the special features and I am blown away! An “unsettling and inspiring look at today’s popular music industry”, this 93 minute feature film (released back in 2006) ties together a series of interviews with very very notable people to get a point across and to investigate where it all went wrong in the music industry, when we stopped caring and how we went from undeniable talent to no talent.

    B4MD coverThis movie was written, produced and directed by two regular people, music fans from Austin (Andrew Shapter and Joel Rasmussen), who without any prior experience in filmmaking created a movie that IS great and even looks great (it never looks like a low budget film, it’s edited tightly, it’s got good cinematography and never drags).

    It starts with some archival footage of Ray Charles accompanying an incredibly great singing and dancing performance by Billy Preston but soon gives the lead to interviews with Erykah Badu (who has some of the best, funniest and most controversial things to say), a very passionate Questlove, a disillusioned but re-affirmed Doyle Bramhall II (also performing with Eric Clapton), a transparent and down to earth Branford Marsalis, a comfortable Dave Matthews, an incredibly sharp and sensitive Les Paul (as always!), a knowledgeable and experienced Bonnie Raitt, short snippets of  interviews with Elvis Costello and Hubert Sumlin as well as Calexico, My Morning Jacket, North Mississipi Allstarts, Widespread Panic and some others…

    Narrated by the great Forest Whitaker, the film talks about the disappearance of talent and original music in the wake of big label marketing, the promotional power that radio has lost in the wake of its flattening content-uniforming conglomeration under Clear Channel, the fact that most of the few talented people today barely even stand a chance of being heard (although this is not entirely true if you consider and you harness the power of the internet, which the movie sadly doesn’t talk much about) and even attempts a challenge of recording and shooting a video clip with a good looking un-talented singer to prove the point that you can promote pretty much anyone that looks good even if they have no talent because the technology allows us to do so today.

    The sweet naivety and the undeniable passion shown in this movie are charming and inspiring. What really comes through and what makes this film so special is that it comes from the heart (like Sumlin says) and it really does come from a fan’s perspective, with great clarity and intelligence.

    Thanks to the internet, it is extremely easy for everyone to see this movie (thankfully!). As a matter of fact “Before the Music Dies” pioneered a very unique distribution model consisting in allowing you to buy the full DVD with all the extra content (extended interviews and performances) for $16.99 or to buy a full-resolution DVD quality download for $7.99 or a DRM-free compressed download for portable devices for $2.99. Remember this was 2006! Two years later I don’t know of anyone else who distributed their movie this way.

    Please go out and get a copy… let me rephrase… please go to the website and watch the preview and then download or order a copy of this great movie. If you are a music fan you owe it to yourself!

    www.beforethemusicdies.com or www.b4md.com or www.bside.com

  • Ennio Morricone’s Grammy Award

    I haven’t posted an update in a while because I have been way too busy working on Michael Hardie‘s new record, however many things have happened since I started recording that record back in December in good ol’ Texas.Most notably TWO (not one!) of the tracks from the Sony Classical CD “We All Love Ennio Morricone” were nominated for a Grammy Award in the same “Best Rock Instrumental Performance” category (which might sound a little strange since the album came out on Sony Classical, but whatever).

    Metallica and Bruce Springsteen were the two artists whose tribute to Ennio on this great CD were nominated and ultimately Springsteen‘s song snatched the award from Rush, Satriani, Vai and Metallica themselves. The full list of nominees and winners can be seen here.

    Unfortunately these two were not the tracks I was involved in (I recorded and mixed the track featuring Eumir Deodato and Daniela Mercury), nevertheless I feel honored to have participated in such a great tribute record and in paying tribute to such a grand composer and I want to wish Morricone all the best for an Award that is thoroughly deserved!