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interview Portugal. The Man.

August 13, 2009 - 11:48 am

Portugal. The Man

You might as well get used to the odd name, because you’re going to be hearing a lot about Portugal. The Man very soon.  They’ve played more than 1000 gigs, some of them at high-profile festivals, over the past four years. The press loves them. And their new album, The Satanic Satanist, their fourth in as many years, may well be a defining sound of summer 2009.

When not in the studio, the band spends most of their time crammed up in a van, moving from town to town. But while the road has broken many bands, John Baldwin Gourley, who plays guitar and sings (winning Alternative Press’s Best Vocalist award in 2009), ain’t complaining. “Once you get used to the restrictions of space and of having less around you, living in a van is “not so far out there “

Portugal. The Man – People Say

But the van is not home. Nor20is Portland, where he lives when not on tour. For Gourley, home was, is and always will be Alaska, where his parents fled to from the east in the 1970s in search of a better life and where he grew up.

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Music Underworld LIVE: Through the Looking Glass

August 12, 2009 - 12:29 pm

Underworld Live in Oakland

That Underworld was triumphant at the Fox Theater in Oakland August 7 wasn’t really a surprise. After two decades of touring, they are self-assured, charismatic performers with a substantial army of tricks. But because they almost play in 20,000 seat venues or festivals, seeing them up close, indoors, in a beautiful venue had “event” written all over it.

So it’s also not surprising that the show was as beautiful as the venue. Underworld has long been known for their impeccable visual taste and everything, from Karl Hyde’s shiny jacket, which could have been equally at home on the shoulders of Judy Garland or Michael Jackson, to brilliant backdrops, floating balls and those moving pillars from the 2007 tour, worked in tandem to prove the point.

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Music Born in the Underworld

August 5, 2009 - 1:58 pm

underworld07_097worked
UNDERWORLD:  Coming Soon to  an  iPhone Near You

Talk about times changing. In the mid-1990s, when Underworld’s track “Born Slippy” jumped off the screen in Trainspotting, it took weeks to track down the name of the band and the song. Now, less than 15 years later, you can get that information with the wave of a hand. But that’s not all. Come this Friday night, you can watch Underworld in concert from the best seat in your house, for free, on your iPhone.

The concert, the first of its kind, is one of three prongs in a concerted Underworld assault on the technological literati. In addition to the performance, they are releasing their rich 21-year catalogue on iTunes. And, in this  “there’s an app for that” world, they’re throwing in an iPhone iDrum app that lets you remix 12 of Underworld’s most popular songs, including “Born Slippy” and “Cowgirl.”

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Music Adultnapper Ransom Notes

July 26, 2009 - 10:43 am

Adultnapper

If there were an award for best pseudonym, Adultnapper, a.k.a. Francis Harris would win in an instant. One of electronic music’s most important artists, this Brooklyn based producer and DJ comes to the scene after stints in grad school (philosophy) and hardcore punk bands. An avid reader of serious literature, he talks faster than he spins and makes you feel smarter just by being part of the conversation.

To prove the point, we begin with the sorry state of the book publishing business:
“Literature is determined by a few publications that tell everyone what is cool and what isn’t. I think Roberto Bolano [late author of 2666, which won the National Book Award this year] is a total poseur but these publications told everyone he was cool and that was it. It’s the dominance of a certain perspective, and it’s happening everywhere and causing us to lose not just real literature, but real music and film too.

Adultnapper – Echologist The Score

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Music Stellastarr Dust

July 21, 2009 - 3:14 pm

stellastar_pp_03_large
Stellastarr*, came out the gate with a roar. Now, almost ten years and three albums later, they are navigating through the realities of the new music world with their first self-released record, Civilized, and a reinvigorated sense of self. As the first few tracks hit iTunes and the band gears up for a summer tour, we talked with Mandy (Amanda) Tannen..

Stellastarr – Freak Out

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Music The Ancient Astronauts Extraterrestrial Hip-Hop

June 30, 2009 - 4:00 pm

Ancient Astronauts

The Ancient Astronauts are said to be extraterrestrial beings who briefly visited ancient civilizations on earth, only to return in modern times. If bios are to be believed, two of these, Kabanjak and Dogu came back to Cologne, Germany, in 2001, and promptly became mash-up and hip-hop experts, remixing and producing for former members of groups such as Digable Planets and The Pharcyde. On the eve of their new release, We Are To Answer on their own Switchblade Recordings, we caught up with the aliens, to glean what we could from them.

Ancient Astronauts – Classic (12 Remix)

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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 Risky Business: The Education of Jeff Risk

June 5, 2009 - 3:08 pm

Jeff Risk Interview

As Jeff Risk, Detroit producer/artist/DJ, found out, never delete your junk mail before you see what’s in it. Because sometimes, buried amidst the spam, the porn and the diet drug solicitations, there’s an email in there that might change your life.

Risk, whose taste in music is as impressive as his ten tattoos, cut his teeth listening to everything from Liz Copeland on the Detroit radio to punk rock, hardcore and death metal. Then he fell in love with drum ‘n’ bass and became a DJ. But while he loves to DJ, he’s not the guy who sends out demos and is intent on elbowing his way up the food chain. Instead, he thought his reach would be no farther than his friends.

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Music Kevin Saunderson: Triple Blessed

June 2, 2009 - 10:22 am

Kevin Saunderson Saves Movement

Anyone who loves techno owes Kevin Saunderson for three things: co-inventing techno, coming up with the anthems, Big Fun and The Good Life, and being the unsung hero of Movement, stepping in at considerable cost to save the festival when its future was bleak.

The year was 2004, and the festival, which had been free to the public for the first four years, was in deep trouble. The city approached Saunderson, a well-liked presence in the Detroit community, and begged him to come in and take charge. “I had never run a festival before, but I knew how much time it would take to do it  right. So I agreed on the condition that they officially back the festival by September,” he says.

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Music The Perfect Storm: Z-Trip Takes Detroit

June 1, 2009 - 8:51 am

Z-Trip Interview

Zach Sciacca, better known as Z-Trip, founder of the mash-up and one of America’s most influential DJs, is stoked. In less than an hour, he will walk on to the Red Bull Music Academy’s stage of Movement. Although a fixture at festivals like Bonnaroo and Coachella, he’s never played this one. And he can’t wait to get it started. “Musically,” he says, “you can get away with murder in Detroit. They are so enlightened here that you can play whatever you want and they’ll go along with you.”

But before he goes on, there’s an interview to do. An intensely political person, he had talked last summer, at Electric Daisy Carnival, Los Angeles’ big summer rave, about the election, whose outcome was not yet a foregone conclusion, and how nervous he had been about the outcome. This time around, I wondered if he seen the trickle-down effects of hope filter into cities like Detroit yet.

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