Gallery E3 is War

June 8, 2009 - 12:32 pm

If you are in the video game business or a gamer, then you already know that the Electronic Entertainment Expo is war.  And not just one war, there are multiple wars being waged on many fronts.  There is the war over console dominance, the war over the latest tech add-ons, the war over the best exclusive content, the war to stay ahead of the trends, the war over the best games and the war over which booth has the best babes.

This year’s battle took place at the Los Angeles Convention Center where I took up arms myself, well, a camera actually.  War at E3 is not exactly hell.  In fact, it’s more like Nerd Heaven and the only injuries might be sore feet from walking.  Or perhaps a sore thumb from gaming.  At least, I think the sore thumb is from gaming.

Onward soldiers!

By Chris Gore

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Music Ancient Astronauts

June 8, 2009 - 8:38 am

ancient2

Their very name, “Ancient Astronauts,” implies a mash-up of the distant past and the far future; traits exemplified in their melding of old school hip hop, funk, and dub reggae with forward-thinking flair and production technique.  The Ancient Astronauts are Kabanjak and Dogu hailing from Cologne, Germany . . .via outer space!  Coy with their true origins, the duo can only confirm that they returned to planet Earth in 2001 after traveling the musical cosmos for thousands of years.

Ancient Astronauts – I Came Running

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Music Twin Atlantic Plays the Viper Room

June 8, 2009 - 8:35 am

Twin Atlantic at the Viper Room

One of ChinaShop’s favorite new bands is Twin Atlantic.  They play the rock-n-roll and all the little girls scream. Traveling all the way from Scotland to Los Angeles to record their first full length LP, they played an impromptu set at the world famous Viper Room. Since we first met up with Twin Atlantic in Austin, and since we have sentimental feelings for the Viper room it turned out to be a fortuitous happening.

The Viper Room

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Fashion Moda Magazine Turns 1

June 8, 2009 - 8:33 am

Moda Magazine

Moda magazine Fashion Gazette celebrated it’s one year anniversary last Saturday. The magazine was coneptualized by a college student who had a passion for fashion and music.  Creating a newsletter as a class assignment, it’s popularity grew so large she decided to launch a national publication a couple years later.  Only one year in circulation, the magazine has found its way into homes and boutiques across the United States including Los Angeles, Chicago and Las Vegas.  DJ Jamal Smalz kep the energy going throughout the evening.

More than 350 people turned out for the evening soiree that hosted a bevy of talent, fashion and music. Chiago’s own, Bright Like Japan and LA’s own, Bitter:Sweet both performed.

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Event Gallery Moving on…

June 5, 2009 - 3:29 pm


If you love dance music, Detroit on Memorial Day weekend is like Christmas, Thanksgiving and July 4th rolled into one.  This year was no exception, both for what happened and what didn’t at the Detroit Electronic Music Festival, or Movement 09.

Of the numerous firsts: Carl Cox and Derrick May’s festival debuts. Although both had been scheduled to play in previous years, Cox cancelled because of stomach problems (caused, some speculate, by the news that Carl Craig, his long-time friend, had just been fired). And May, the last of the original techno trio and only one to never play the festival, got rained out by a thunderstorm. To sweeten the pie, Carl Craig was named creative director of Movement 2010. On this last year of the festival’s first decade, history was well served.

Movement 09 in Detroit

Hip-hop was better represented than it has been. Rising talents like Flying Lotus, top-of-their-game superstars like RJD2 and Z-Trip, and a visit by no less than Afrika Bambaataa, one of the men who started it all, kept the Red Bull Music Academy stage packed both day and night. The reception proved that the festival can easily accomodate diversity, especially when the genres share the same roots.

That stage’s success points out one thing that didn’t happen: drum and bass.  Lots of out-of-towners were missing as well. Most of the people who come regularly from places like California, New  York and even Chicago didn’t make it this year. When people have to give up something so close to their hearts like the festival, you realize how bad things really are.

Detroit's Movement 09

But mostly what didn’t happen this year was the array of all night parties the festival was famous for. This time, the blame goes straight to the city of Detroit, for refusing to let the bars close at four. While there were plenty of private and underground parties, much of that  action took place behind closed or suburban doors, and the 24/7 freak show was conspicuous by its absence.

Finally, there was no Richie Hawtin, who was wrapped up in the launch of his fancy fashion line. A genuine Detroit hero, in spite of his triggering a mass exodus to Berlin, his year off was taken in stride, with the tacit understanding that he would be back bigger, better and, presumably better dressed next year.

Movement 2009

But those a quibbles in an otherwise perfect universe. The level of talent, the quality of the music, and the intelligence of the audience has made Detroit a juggernaut. A feather in any DJ’s cap, its survival assured, there’s no surprise that talk is already turning to next year’s tenth anniversary edition. Here’s what they are saying in four words: Make your reservation now.

Movement Festival in Detroit

Words by Neil Feineman, photos by Dustin Downing

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Music Fix the Glitch: Glitch Mob Shows You How

June 5, 2009 - 3:20 pm

Glitch Mob Remix

Just give it a listen…it’ll have all you down-beat Mother-F!@#%&s turning hard, with your windows down and your systems up!

Music Ghostly International’s 10th Anni-insani-versary!

June 5, 2009 - 3:20 pm

Ghostly International

Words by Ryan Patrick Hooper, photos by Dustin Downing, Additional photos by Joe Gall

For the past ten years, Detroit’s Movement festival has been notoriously fond of after parties. Whether they be of the renegade rave, abandoned factory sort or the most official, posh push-pop you can come by, the entire city becomes blanketed in non-stop nightlife until the sun comes up and the festival grounds once again reopen. Saturday was no exception as the Magic Stick (regularly voted in the top ten best venues in the country by Rolling Stone and Paste, home to the oldest bowling alley in the country) in Midtown Detroit welcomed nationally renowned electronic label Ghostly International’s 10-Year Anniversary to a packed house after tearing apart the Red Bull Music Academy stage earlier that day with the likes of The Sight Below, Lusine, Kate Simko and Ryan Elliott.

“It has been ten years of the festival, and it’s our ten-year anniversary,” points Sam Valenti, owner and founder of Ghostly International, hours before the showcase at the Stick backstage in the green room.  “It’s fun to run into friends that Ghostly has had for six, seven years all day at Movement.” And with Ghostly International Tycho by his side, it’s easy to see just what Valenti is getting at. “It’s exciting to be back where it all started over ten years ago,” adds Tycho. “To be right in the middle of it all…”
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Music Landstrumm Lands

June 5, 2009 - 3:20 pm

Neil Landstrumm Photo Gallery

It’s not like we love Neil Landstrumm — it’s like the man lives inside of our ear drums, pounding out his innovative, hybrid cocktail of dub and grime powered auditory awesomeness. His Sunday set at Movement ’09 was certainly no exception. Although the poor dude was set up to the side of the stage, he made up for his lack of strategic positioning that lives in the world kick snare, kick snare — but stands tall in an ocean of imitators who chase his sound but continually fall flat. When you’ve been it for as long as Landstrumm has, you’ll run it into that … but you’ll also learn how to run directly over it, reverse and repeat a few times until you stand adjacent to only your own legacy and a long line of DJ road kill. For what seemed like an eternity (but was probably closer to an hour if we settle down and face the facts), Landstrumm transformed his daytime set into a time bending performance that turned the audience into midnight marauders of the sexist sort, Landstrumm’s often space age slugtone beats unleashing some of the weirdest, most sensual dance moves we’ve seen in quite sometime.

Words by Ryan Patrick Hooper, photos by Joe Gall

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Event Music Sweet and Sticky: Bassnectar Delivers the Juice

June 5, 2009 - 3:08 pm

Bassnectar at Red Bull Music Academy

Whether you were grinding along with the heaps of patrons in the audience, sacrificing your drinks to the Gods above in the VIP lounge or planted on boxes of gear backstage, everyone was smothered in a sticky, relentless coating of thundering bass as Bassnectar closed the Red Bull Music Academy stage on Monday night. Unleashing his Whip-It brand bass lines (imagine those adolescent wah-wahs magnified by a million) and eclectic dub step to new wave mash up style and you’ve got a good reason why the majority of the independent vendors were shut down as the sun set and the more hair than flare DJ took to the stage — who would want to miss it? But Bassnectar’s set wasn’t without complication as Lorin Ashton, the California-based multi-instrumentalist behind the name, is quick to point out.

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