Gallery Music Moving Units Kick Off the Coachella Main Stage

April 17, 2011 - 1:55 pm

If you’re clued into the LA music scene, you’re no stranger to Moving Units. Call ’em what you want—dance rock, post-hardcore, pop—they’ve survived all the ebbs and flows of Hollywood’s fickle tastemaking machine. They’ve also got a fresh new EP out, titled Tension War, that features four new songs (and two remixes) that are unmistakably LA in their cadence and character. Good stuff for sure. Now they’re here in the desert melting faces under the hot Indio sun. So what was it like opening up Coachella’s Main Stage on Day One? We caught up with Blake Miller, Johan Bogeli and Chris Hathwell after their set to find out.

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Gallery Music COACHELLA: DAY 1 RECAP

April 16, 2011 - 2:54 pm

So many bands, so much art, so much sun, so many people with hilarious t-shirts. The Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival is nothing if not a veritable feast for the senses, and Day One kicked off the desert party in grand fashion. The newfangled, RFID chip-embedded wristbands seemed to work perfectly fine, and we encountered no Draconian police presence demanding to see our credentials at the dreaded “one mile perimeter.” It was, as they say, all delicious, but man was it hot.

Moving Units had the distinction of being the first Main Stage artist to play on Friday, their crowd braving 95-degree temps to catch of glimpse of the longtime LA heroes. (Make sure to check out our interview with them.) The Gobi Tent was next, where we caught an earful of Omar Rodríguez-López , who has played Coachella with both his previous bands, At The Drive In and the Mars Volta. His self-titled project is nothing short of amazing; visceral, psychedelic rock and roll with guitars drenched in watery reverb and songs that unfold slowly, angrily and beautifully. At one point, his singer prowled the stage with his microphone clenched between his teeth, sweat pouring down his face to the point where electric shock was sure to be imminent. We must have stood there for at least 15 minutes taking in what felt like one epic jam, with Rodríguez-López manhandling his guitar like he was having an out-of-body experience.

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Music Paul van Dyk: Coachella and the Big Bang Theory

April 16, 2011 - 11:37 am

Paul Van Dyk

Grammy-nominated, globally acclaimed, socially conscious, dashingly handsome. These are all descriptors one could heap on Paul van Dyk. He released his first album, 45 RPM, in 1994, and since then has been an unstoppable force in dance music, consistently finishing in the Top 5 in most major DJ magazine polls. This summer he’ll release his sixth studio album, titled Evolution, and if you happen to be in Coachella’s Sahara Tent between 10:15pm and 11:30pm on Saturday night, odds are you’ll get an earful of the new material. What’s more, van Dyk is fully aware of the reputation the Sahara has for being the place to show off a killer live experience. (Daft Punk, deadmau5 and Richie Hawtin anyone?) We got a few quick moments with him to ask about the new material and stage show. It should be noted that he briefly name-checks Ollie Metcalfe, who was the lighting and video designer for Muse’s Resistance stadium tour, and has also worked with Kanye West. That alone should give you ample reason to stop on in.

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Film Fridays Study Shows Nicolas Cage’s Hair May Have an Effect on the Quality of His Films

April 15, 2011 - 7:15 pm

Bangkok D

It might be that that he named his kid Kal-El (after Superman’s real name?), and says it so casually in interviews, like his name is Mikey. Or maybe the fact that he has so much goddamn money, he bought a buncha houses and a castle, and then went bankrupt. The rumor is that if you interview the guy, and he catches you looking at his hairline, he will end the interview. It might be that.

On that same subject, a bizarre trend of recent hairstyles has recently caught many moviegoers off-guard. While many of us realize we’ll never get the pompadour of Peggy Sue or the Elvis-loving locks of Wild at Heart, it’s Cage’s recently off-kilter mugs that make his films harder to concentrate on.

3. Bangkok Dangerous (see above) — Sporting a cut similar to John Travolta’s in Pulp Fiction, this is a cut that might look cool but even someone as cool as Travolta was walking that fine line. It sort of proves that this late in life, having the long hair is more of a distraction from that face. We love ya without it, Nic. But that’s okay, cause all I had to do was see those locks on the movie poster to know enough to ignore it.

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Video Foo Fighters Live #notatcoachella

April 15, 2011 - 2:35 pm

Foo Fighters

Although I sent a lucky team of contributors out to the desert on their own personal musical journey this weekend, I am #notatcoachella. So I’m promoting all the awesome that is happening not there. If you are on twitter, use the hash tag #notatcoachella and you can contribute to the millions of us finding fun elsewhere.

In the meantime, the Foo Fighters are also #notatcoachella this year. And their new album, Wasting Light, was just released like a wild boar into my consciousness. I think these boys are onto something!

Happy Weekend Everyone!
Words by Barbie Brady

Art Global Inheritance Wants You To Get TRASHed At Coachella

April 15, 2011 - 1:07 pm

TRASHed at Coachella

No, not that way, but I like the way you think. Seriously, though, when you’ve got over 75,000 people sharing a wide open space, a lot of trash is bound to be produced. Thankfully, Coachella has made sustainability a big part of their festival experience. Since 2004, Coachella has hosted an art-walk style recycling program that invites artists to design their own refuse bins in hopes of creating an environment that makes—no, wills—people to pitch in and toss their trash where it’s supposed to go.

TRASHEed at Coachella

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Music Mandy’s Music Mail 4/15/11

April 15, 2011 - 6:40 am

Sade and Jay Z

When it comes to a collaboration between Sade and Jay Z, it’s pretty much impossible to go wrong or disappoint (according to the ever reliable and trust worthy pandabook). “The Moon and the Sky” (Remix) actually surfaced last Friday (after my glorious post was published), so if you’ve already heard this track, well, here’s a chance to bask in it once (or multiple times) more!

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Art Art of Los Angeles: Patrick Martinez

April 15, 2011 - 5:52 am

Patrick Martinez

Artist Patrick Martinez plants his flag in the Los Angeles that tourists don’t see, unless they take the Boyle Ave. exit by accident. Pawnshops, street vendors and people trying to make a dollar outta 14 cents inhabit Martinez’s colorful paintings and neon mixed media pieces. The palm trees and hills that LA is known for are always far away in the distance.

But Martinez, a graduate of the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, isn’t just an observer. He is a champion of his surroundings, humanizing the people on the street and their struggles, and a voice for their causes. He has employed foam hands, similar to those found in sports arenas but shaped as handguns, to distill the effects of a down economy and created hats for a fictitious Arizona Wetbacks baseball team to castigate the rhetoric of Arizona immigration laws.

Martinez recently opened an exhibition, “Hustlemania,” at Known Gallery in LA. It is an ambitious show. Its centerpiece is a beautifully executed sculpture made of bronze and colored resin. The subject is a thug holding two handguns, shooting streams of water that arc harmlessly into a pool at his feet. The softening of a hard archetype is a common theme in Martinez’s work, which the artist reveals in this interview to be as personal as it is political.

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Music Sleigh Bells Ho Ho Ho to Indio

April 14, 2011 - 12:39 pm

Sleigh Bells

What? Tell me you don’t think of Christmas every time you say their name? In the past year, Sleigh Bells has taken on the music industry and found themselves winning in a big, not Charlie Sheen, way. The duo, Derek Miller on guitar and synths and Alexis Krauss with her rap-esque vocals, brought about a revolution in sound. Just when you thought there was nothing new under the sun, they blast into your ear hole and rearrange your heart beat to better suit their needs.

A few weeks back I was chatting with legendary God Like Genius (thanks for that NME) Dave Grohl, and he said he only just discovered Sleigh Bells and was loving them. Mighty high praise indeed for a band on, literally, Mom+Pop Records.

Tomorrow they will be in Indio at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival. I suggest you slide into your hipster jeans and wiggle your way out there to see em. And if you didn’t plan accordingly for the journey to the desert then catch them on tour here:

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Music Country Music: Portugal. The Man Get Up Down South

April 14, 2011 - 10:49 am

Church Mouth: Waiter “You Vultures!”, The Satanic Satanist and its acoustic follow-up, The Majestic Majesty. These are all albums by Portugal. The Man, a group who appears to take just as much pleasure in titling their records as they do making them. Based in Portland but originally from Alaska—most of them, at least—the experimental rockers have released some of the most adventurous music we’ve heard in the last three years in any genre. Now signed to Atlantic Records, they’ve got a new album due out sometime in the late summer, and before that will be performing at Bonnaroo. We caught up with them the day after their big show at Stubb’s, walked ’em down an alley, took some photos and asked some questions.

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