Music The Charlatans are Anything But

June 18, 2010 - 11:48 am

Charlatans

There’s reason for music critics to want to get to know UK-based group Charlatans, and that is mostly because they were unofficially part of the famous Manchester scene back in the 80s. The now-famous Steve Coogan movie 24 Hour Party People helped bring about a resurgence of early New Wave music initiated by the likes of Ian Curtis and Joy Division, and though groups like The Happy Mondays and The Stone Roses got a lot of credit for solidifying the sound, The Charlatans shouldn’t be overlooked: they’re amazingly talented. Here’s a band that grouped elements of English alt-rock, progressive rock, and the poppier, more mainstream sound of UK bands like Squeeze and Split Ens with their own straightforward rock sound, and was ahead of their time in doing it. At times, Tim, Mark, and the band seems about to channel Gospel, then new wave, then they’re genre-jumping to the next sound already. There’s the pseudo-industrial vibe of “Weirdo”, and then there’s the poppy sound of “The Only One I Know”; if The Charlatans have stolen from anyone, they wisely selected from a lot of different sounds and bands, so many in fact that their sound becomes meshed into one bizarre and multi-headed monster that is all their own. Get a taste of the thievery on Red Bull Music Academy Radio.

Featured Urban Exploration The Heidelberg Project: Home Sweet Home

June 17, 2010 - 12:24 pm

The Heidelberg Project - Detroit Rock City

The Heidelberg Project was created in 1986 by artist Tyree Guyton and his grandfather Sam Mackey as a form of political protest to the deteriorating Detroit neighborhoods of his youth. It is comprised of numerous decrepit houses adorned with stuffed animals, brightly colored dots, and strange number patterns. The main goal was to develop the city’s first indoor/outdoor museum, creative center, and neighborhood gathering space.

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Music Homeboy Sandman: Where the Dust Settles

June 17, 2010 - 11:24 am

Homeboy Sandman

“The title of the new album is The Good Sun and it signifies several things,” Homeboy Sandman begins. “It symbolizes a new day, a new beginning. The sun provides illumination and energy for all forms of life on this world, and even though the songs cover various subject matters, the theme of optimism runs throughout the album. Also, Hip-Hop has been often defined in classic songs and by classic groups as a woman, and I feel that the culture has so many bad sons that defile her and make her cheap, and I’m one of the good sons trying to give her the respect and honor she deserves – so there’s a little play on words going on there too.”

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Music Kirk Degiorgio

June 17, 2010 - 11:20 am

Kirk Degiorgio

While his own bio may describe him as edgy, soulful and funky, this really doesn’t do the man justice. Kirk Degorgio got his start as a DJ way back in the 80s before becoming a house name as an electro producer in London. His beats are frantic and undeniably easy to get down to — here’s a guy who lives what he’s practiced, and teaches his skill to others: all those years on the dance floor and behind the DJ table has clearly proved valuable; the man’s worked for everyone from Elegy to Aphex Twin and runs the gamut from simpler and minimal beats to the more complex and, yes, edgier and more complex, almost thrashy stuff. Truly a man ahead of his time, Mr. Digiorgio has come a long way since ’83. It’s good to see the man finally getting his due. You can check it out right now on Red Bull Music Academy Radio.

Featured Gallery interview Inside a Burlesque Queen’s Closet

June 16, 2010 - 12:13 pm

Amber Ray is one of the world’s top burlesque performers.  She jets from Australia to Vienna’s Life Ball, leaving a trail of glitter in her wake.  Amber’s a chameleon, known for her exquisitely surreal costumes.  She’s been a lotus blossom and a danger-tape wrapped dominatrix, a peacock and the showgirl whose tassel twirling set off a raid of one of New York’s most infamous speakeasies.

For the first time ever, Amber lets fans peak inside her bulging closet. We dish on her art, her costumes, and her Swarovski crystal addiction.

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Music Get Yourself a Whole Lotta CocoRosie

June 16, 2010 - 10:32 am

CocoRosie

For those of you who ever wondered what peaceful and serene music might sound like if it were punctuated with screams from the lowest circle of hell, (or maybe just mistook those screams for your own), I give you: CocoaRosie. Ok, that particular Satanic cacophony only lasts one song, but serves as a perfect introduction to the band’s disdain for the traditional verse/chorus/verse formula. And an amazing hodgepodge of sounds from all over the world that coalesce in the form of one amazing pair of voices. Upon first listen, you might equate the duo’s music with that of New Age-y, Pure Moods sort: lots of lush, almost Yanni-esque synths, falsetto wailing, and excessive piano tinkering. But CocoaRosie ups the hipness by adding hip hop beats and human-voice percussion that sounds suspiciously like Rahzel, video game samples, harp-playing, and plucking away at instruments which can be fashioned from ordinary household objects. Bianca and Sierra (the real-life names behind ‘Coco’ and ‘Rosie’) grew up with a Native American father who often whisked his unwilling daughters away to religious retreats, though they still credit such excursions as influences on their sound. They speak with what sound like Irish accents. They are…all over the place. And they’ve given us, quite simply, the best thing on Red Bull Music Academy Radio right now. If you can make it through the screaming.

interview Nerd Alert: Nar Williams… Too Tall To Fit in Your Local High School Locker

June 15, 2010 - 3:27 pm

Nar Williams

Voted one of Wired.com’s “Top 150 Geeky Media People to Follow on Twitter,” Nar Williams has made quite the name for himself in the sci-fi and technology world. Although sci-fi and technology have a stigma of being… well… excruciatingly nerdy (insert pocket protectors here) – Nar’s new online series with Crave Online, Fanboy Funhouse, takes geek-chic to a whole new level. …Their set includes a giant blue playground SLIDE.
Described as “Pee-wee Herman meets Mystery Science Theater 3000,” Funhouse gives their audience the inside scoop on movies, games, comics, and all things that would make Patrick John Luc Picard do a cartwheel. Between waxing his blue playground slide for Funhouse guests to come flying down and sculpting his celebrated indie rock hair-do, Nar answered these questions for us…

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New York City Hotel Chelsea: Rock and Roll Digs

June 15, 2010 - 3:09 pm

Hotel Chelsea

No other hotel has as much rock ‘n’ roll history.  So, it’s not perfect — or particularly opulent.  There is no room service, some of the rooms are more “grunge” than chic, & there is a bullet hole in the door in the 5th floor corridor.  But it’s absolutely worth a visit to soak up some atmosphere.

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Music Tuesday Newsday: New Releases from We Are Scientists, Cowboy Junkies, Devo, Tom Petty, and Laurie Anderson

June 15, 2010 - 11:36 am

We Are Scientists

It’s a pretty scarce Tuesday as far as new releases, but a couple of living legends are giving us some long-awaited new gems: Devo releases Something for Everybody, there’s a new one from Tom Petty, and even from eccentric electronica goddess Laurie Anderson. There’s also been a lot of talk and hype surrounding We Are Scientists’ Barbara.

Laurie Anderson – Homeland
Cowboy Junkies – Renmin Park
Devo – Something For Everybody
Drake – Thank Me Later
Foals – Total Life Forever [Digital: May 11th]
The Gaslight Anthem – American Slang
In Fear And Faith – Imperial
Light Pollution – Apparitions
Sarah McLachlan – The Laws Of Illusion
The Steve Miller Band – Bingo!
Papa Roach – To Be Loved
Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers – Mojo
Pitbull – Armando
Rasputina – Sister Kinderhook
Robyn – Body Talk Pt. 1
Stewart – Kicks
We Are Scientists – Barbara

Art/Design “Melting Flesh” : The Art of Ellen Stagg

June 14, 2010 - 5:32 pm

Mandy Morbid

May was a busy month for Ellen Stagg.  Stagg, photographer behind erotica site Stagg Street, not only opened her first solo show, but also released her first book.  When we meet up at Fuse Gallery, she runs in a few minutes late, long platinum hair flying behind her.

Stagg’s been shooting since she was 16.  She studied art at SVA, went clubbing with Scarlett Johanssen, and developed a name shooting editorial and fashion.  But she was always drawn to the erotic.  Starting with her muse Justine Joli, Stagg developed a name for herself shooting intimate, sundrenched nude portraits of adult models, and posting them on her website Stagg Street. This outlet has 
garnered international exposure, including a documentary series on IFC.com .

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