Thursday, December 17, 2009
Kicked in the head.
I call Mr. Moonshiner to curse him for bestowing this menacing disruption upon me. He laughs at my struggle. I try out some Air songs, which could possibly pull the mix in a completely different direction. These songs are not working so I take a couple of days off from the mix, during which I receive several harassing emails from the moderator. I contemplate choosing “Interstellar Overdrive” by Pink Floyd to explain the nervous breakdown I am experiencing or “Sister Ray” by the Velvet Underground because nothing says “Fuck you” like a 17 minute long VU noise blast. I purchase the new Blakroc cd and dig the Mos Def track, which reminds me of his The Ecstatic release from this year. No Age’s organ fade out fits nicely with the slow drum roll that leads into “On the Vista”, and Mos’ singing brings me back to equilibrium. I am at peace with the world and our mix, at least until the next song.
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Saadiq's Solid Gold Soul.
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Welcome, Old Friend
Saturday, November 28, 2009
The Art of Ba Ba Ba Da's.
When Gered sent me the Girls track "Lust For Life" I first thought, "What a nerve these dudes have naming a song after the classic Iggy Pop track". I mean, is it really okay for bands to cop the names of previous classic songs? I think I might write a song and call it "While My Guitar Gently Weeps". What?!? Que es un problema??
I like listening to Gered's songs a couple times by themselves and then the whole mix, to see what thoughts naturally pop up in my head. With the Girls track, I started singing "Ba Ba Ba Da" in between the verses and immediately thought of the Pavement B-side "No Tan Lines". It was either going to be a Pavement track or a Stereolab song, and Pavement one out. Stereolab will most likely find its way onto this mix though.
This mix is a slow burner so far. Usually I will start a mix off with a banger to get your head bobbing. If this mix is a gradual climb to faster BMP's, then look forward to my last song being from the Dillinger Escape Plan.
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
I'm not big on sharing...
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Hip-Hop Indie Collabos
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
New Music Tuesdays
Fighting Words
Passed the Bar
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Wher ya at?
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
New Mixes begun, new contributor coming soon!!!
This month Gered asked if I would be interested in making a “correspondence mix”. I was intrigued to make a mix with Gered based off of the many conversations about new bands and concerts we have had in the past. Also since I was a young kid (dubbing mixes to skateboard to) I have been a fan of the art, but a collaboration mix is different. Comparable to a chess game, one reacts to their opponent’s move by evaluating all possible outcomes of their own potential move. What elements of your opponent’s song will cause your brain to react and what will be an appropriate countermove?
I delayed a while before picking the first song of the mix. Most of it was procrastination, but some of it was actually thinking about my first move. I chose the song “I and Love and You” by the Avett Brothers, which leads off their new album of the same title. The elements that make up this song are very calming to me; the soft piano, restrained drums, and vocal melody. “Oh Brooklyn, Brooklyn, take me in”, he sings. The song feels to me like a warm blanket on a cold, cold night. Like a soothing glass of hot green tea or that first glass of red wine with dinner. I believe that starting off calmly is a good idea, giving the listener time to settle in, then building up and slowing down energy as the mix goes on. Now that I have finally kicked off this mix, I believe it is your move, sir.
You can take the italics out of you want.
Regards,
Big C
Look out for his posts, and links to hear his music and see his artwork...
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Judge Not...
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Second Time Around
Sunday, October 11, 2009
The REAL Pink Martini Story
Saturday, October 10, 2009
On the Merits of Genius...
Friday, October 9, 2009
Mix No. 1 Track List
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Closing Time
Wrapping it up
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Putting the Pieces Together
Stereolab's Cybele's Reverie took me by surprise. I was expecting Gered to start with something acoustic and aggressively melodic (like Come to my Senses). I have to be honest, it's not my favorite tune on the mix, but as a first song it's perfect. It's the cornerstone; it's electronic sensibility doesn't limit the mix to singer/songwriter type music, and the tempo gave me the freedom to go up or down with the next pick. I went down with A Century of Fakers. I started listening to B & S right after they released The Boy with the Arab Strap. I bought the album in Boston. I remember waiting on a friend and popping it into my Discman. There was a soft snow that night. I can still remember hearing them for the first time. I've been a fan ever since. A Century of Fakers is actually a B-side. I love how it captures the young angst of a band on the rise.
Jacksonville is my favorite track on the mix. A friend of mine described Sufjian Stevens music as "slit your wrists tunes." I haven't checked him out before, but this song just makes me want to sing along.
Way You Walk is another discovery I made in Newbury Comics in Boston. The guy behind the counter was playing it, I loved the sound, and picked up the album on the spot. I haven't kept up with Papas Fritas (according to the band, the name's real meaning is "pop has freed us"), but they always pop up on my iPod.
I couldn't think of a better answer to Papas Fritas than Tally Hall's The Bidding. The chant-like intro and hip-hop grooves gives the mix more sonic depth than it had before. I took down the tempo a bit with my favorite Yo La Tengo song, Season of the Shark. Don't get me wrong, I love the YTL hard stuff, but the gentle melodies and atmospheric vocals of their last few albums just hit home for me.
More to come...
Saturday, October 3, 2009
Editor's Note
Friday, October 2, 2009
Back and Forth
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Old Friend Checking In...
But music for me has always been about making connections with friends...
There's nothing better than discovering (and rediscovering) songs or artists to share with the friends you know are going to love them, or even better, finding songs that will push their tastes a little bit outside the lines. The music a man recommends says a lot about him. Everyone knows the guy who just memorizes lists of every underground band that's put out an album this month, so he can win the band naming game, but he's not the true player. Take the time, find the songs.
Beginnings
So I want to do a playlist by correspondence.... I'll hit u with a track, then you take some time and find the next track... If you've got a nice 1-2 punch, hit me with two tracks. Whatcha think?
Honestly dude, sounds like something I'd be terrible at keeping up with...and maybe a little gay. We have all the same music, don't we?