interview Music RJD2: The Solution to Your Music Snobbery

October 21, 2010 - 10:24 am

RJ at the Ready...

This may be a somewhat hastily-conceived notion, but DJ RJD2 might be the best thing to happen to the ever-expanding genre in years. He may be even the way to bridge that widening gap between the terminally unhip and old-fashioned instrument players (read: music snobs), and the countless DJs also slaving at their craft and bringing their own variety of musical influences into it all. Ramble (as people call him) is no exception.

The man is truly a diverse musician who explores nearly every conceivable musical classification — from jazz to trip-hop, from 80′s synth tinkery to film scores and soundtracks, from country licks to stand-up comic bits, he always manages to make it all blend together perfectly. And RJ’s worked hard to get this far, beginning nearly 20 years ago, steadily climbing his way to the top of that mountainous pile. From the jazzed-out funk of soul of “Here and Now” to the Kill Bill-worthy, exploitation film-soundtrack reverberations of “Take the Picture Off”, should you talk to anyone worth their weight in music criticism, you’ll hear nothing but the best about the guy.

Clever, diverse, and lending that certain undefinable, sprawling epic-ness to his mish-mashes, RJD2 is ahead of the game. Recently Ramble sat down and chatted with ChinaShop about his history, his influences, and how he’s gotten so far.

Read the full story

Gallery Music Sunday Roast with Paul Oakenfold

October 20, 2010 - 11:02 am

Paul Oakenfold is considered to be one of the best DJs and remixers in the world.  He was the A&R rep who signed DJ Jazzy Jeff, the Fresh Prince, and Salt-n-Pepa.  He’s scored top box office films, toured with Madonna, and remixed early records for legends such as U2.  He’s toured all over the world and DJ’d in countless places, including the Great Wall of China.  He continues to break the boundaries of conventional dance music and is known for his individualistic style that dates back to his days spent in the Ibiza club scene.

Saturday night the Music Box was graced with the presence of Paul Oakenfold, as he brought his Facelift Tour to Los Angeles after a three year touring hiatus.   Accompanying Paul were special guests like Netherlands mixing hero Chuckie who warmed up the stage for Paul’s 2:30am to 4:00am set.  With a new studio album on the 2011 horizon, Paul treated fans to a road test of potential new material and showed off his legendary mixing skills amidst a laser light show cascading from a giant headset stage set.

Before his set, ChinaShop kicked it with Paul in his dressing room to discuss hot off the press topics such as his current obsession with the word fugly, Vegas vs. Ibiza, how to cook a proper Sunday roast, and his guilty TiVo-ing habits.

Read the full story

Fashion Featured Gallery LA Fashion Week: A.Che’, Teeki, and Kooey

October 20, 2010 - 10:57 am

ChinaShop’s coverage of LA Fashion Week kicked off on Friday at Sunset Gower Studios in Hollywood.  Bright blue spotlights flashed through the sky, alerting civilians that a very important event was indeed going on inside.  The guest list was tight, the check-in line was long, and the bouncers were not budging.  As I waited for my moment of credential testing, I witnessed a burly bouncer remove three people in front of me that tried to pass for being twenty-one and had all conveniently left their IDs at their apartments.  The leader of that pack squealed out, “But I’m on IMDb, look me up” as she was swiftly removed from the vicinity of the velvet rope.

L.A. Fashion Week

Read the full story

Art/Design Featured Gallery Charmed by Lomography

October 19, 2010 - 10:40 am

If you’ve spend most of your days behind the viewpoint of a camera lense, you’ve probably heard of Lomography Gallery Store.  It’s a snazzy two-story camera/accessory store meets photo gallery that overlooks the bustling Santa Monica Boulevard.

For those that are not camera privy, the lomography movement is centered around the use of Lomo cameras and the idea of approaching photography with an emphasis on more casual and spontaneous snapshots, from a closer range.  The concept is governed by “The 10 rules,” which are inscribed on a wall within the Lomography Gallery Store:

Read the full story

Music The Temper Trap Create An Audio/Visual Stir

October 19, 2010 - 10:34 am

The Temper Trap Chicago

Bands who bring their own light setup to a show in a modest-sized venue clearly have an appreciation for their audience. In a sense, it’s a statement that the live show experience is about more than the music—one that young Australian rock quartet The Temper Trap regularly makes on stage.

After being intrigued by the band’s highly visual set at their Hard Rock Lollapalooza after show, I made sure to catch their next Chicago appearance at Metro. This sold out performance featured lead vocalist/guitarist Dougy Mandagi and bandmates recreating their debut and only album, Conditions (along with a couple new, unreleased tracks), with each song enhanced by an all-out light spectacle—one that gave this photographer a welcome challenge to keep up with.

Read the full story

Music Tuesday Newsday: New Releases from Sugarland, Elton John, Bob Dylan, Glee, and Johnny Locke

October 19, 2010 - 10:31 am

Sugarland's The Incredible Machine

To make up for a rather lackluster last week, today some of the bigger names in rock give us a few fairly-hyped new releases: Elton John’s collaboration with Leon Russell is already garnering some serious acclaim; Roxy Music vocalist Brian Ferry releases Olympia; and some guy Rod Stewart gives us a brand new album of covers. That guy really likes covers. On the other side of the spectrum, steampunk-y, foot stomping Sugarland releases The Incredible Machine; the Glee Cast salutes The Rocky Horror Picture Show, and Kings of Leon are back with Come Around Sundown, their best album so far.

Sugarland – The Incredible Machine
Elton John and Leon Russell
– The Union
Kings of Leon
– Come Around Sundown
Rod Stewart
– Fly Me To The Moon… Great American Songbook Volume 5
Bob Dylan –
The Bootleg Series: The Witmark Demos: 1962-1964
Ne-Yo - Libra Scale
Steven Page [Barenaked Ladies] -
Page One
Various Artists – Hannah Montana Forever Soundtrack
Bryan Ferry
– Olympia
Liz Phair -
Funstyle [CD release]
Johnny Lokke – Promises and Lies
Third Day
– Move
Baptized In Blood
– Baptized in Blood
Glee Cast
- Glee: The Music, The Rocky Horror Glee Show

Art/Design Ron English: The Popaganda Master

October 18, 2010 - 10:04 am

This past Saturday, the preeminent pop-artist Ron English had an amazing viewing of his retrospective “Status Factory” exhibition at the spacious, 3-floor Opera Gallery in Soho, NYC. Whenever the term “Pop Art” is brought up, people’s minds inevitably go to Andy Warhol, the Pittsburgh-born, NYC icon who initiated the movement. But in present times, it’s impossible to find a pop artist with a body of work more influential, wide-reaching, and thought provoking than the dazzling paintings, screen prints and sculptures Mr. English has been cranking out since the ‘80s.

Read the full story

Music The Black Seeds Sow Messages of Hope

October 18, 2010 - 10:02 am

The Black Seeds

Packed with positive messages, powerful dubs and pulsing and quick-paced rhythms, The Black Seeds are already being heralded as part of  “the forefront of the New Zealand reggae/roots scene” — and damned if I knew there was even such a thing — but after hearing this 8-piece, all of whom provide a spectacular cacophony of drums, keyboards, bongos, trumpets, and one of the best voices in modern reggae, I’m on board.

From the Wailers-tinged, slowed-down, brassed-up groove of “Send a Message” to the more Specials-ized “Rotten Apple,” and the Funkadelic-ish “Afrophone”, you’ve got a reggae group which has wisely — if brazenly — chosen to wear their influences much like they wear their emotions: unabashed, on their sleeves, and touting a hopeful outlook on life in songs like “Love is a Radiation”, “One Step at a Time, ” and “Strugglers,” which hopes that the listener will “give what they can” and  be a contributing member of society even throughout their own respective hardships.

The point is: This is great, if somewhat rehashed, modern reggae, and you can get a little of the new and a lot of the old right now on Red Bull Music Academy Radio. As a random side note, Flight of the Conchords member Bret McKenzie is one of the original members of The Black Seeds. It’s kind of interesting to hear his somewhat-more-serious side, and hearing yet another facet of his multi-talented musical personality come out.

Music Friday’s Fantastic Music Magic!

October 15, 2010 - 11:43 am

Kings of Leon

What’s a perfect remedy to a less than stellar start to a morning when one is woken up at 5am to a ludicrously loud garbage truck that beeps incessantly for (no joke) 30 minutes? Discovering the full album stream for Kings of Leon’s Come Around Sundown a full week before it’s release! I have been looking forward to this for months and totes did a little (okay major) happy dance upon said discovery.

As a whole, the album doesn’t sound all that different from Only By The Night, but that doesn’t bother me in the slightest as I loved OBTN. It really frustrates me when people complain how their new stuff sounds so different from albums past and they refuse to like it purely on that basis alone. It’s a good thing that it sounds different. Their first EP, Holly Roller Novocaine came out in 2003, and frankly, if their sound hadn’t grown and changed, they wouldn’t be as successful and people would be complaining that every song sounded the same, and to be honest, their music hasn’t changed that dramatically – which is one of the great things about KoL, in my opinion – they continue to grow and try new things, yet are still able to maintain a distinctive sound. 

Read the full story

Music Herbie Hancock

October 15, 2010 - 9:55 am

Herbie

Well, he’s Herbie Hancock. And what have you done with your life, mister? Obviously there’s something to be said for being the first jazz artist to win a Grammy for Album of the Year in nearly half a century (if you’re curious, the last were the legendary Stan Getz and Astrud Gilberto, for their self-titled bossa nova masterpiece, way back in 1965).

Most famously, Herbie was hand-picked by God himself, aka Miles Davis, to tickle the ivories for him at the ripe age of 23 — a slot that led to him being the first pianist to incorporate his synth playing with jazz, a huge feat when you think about it –I mean, what would smooth jazz be without it? On the positive side, Herbie and Miles really gave us the embryonic stages of Davis’ Blue Note label, churning out such classics as “Time, No Changes” and others, before he eventually left (of his own accord) and produced a string of hits, including “Watermelon Man”, Maiden Voyage’, and ‘Dolphin Dance’.

If you’ve sat in a Starbucks for any considerable length of time, chances are you’ve heard him. But if you haven’t, there’s still time — head over to Red Bull Music Academy now for a brief memoir of his Miles Davis days and more.