Music Richie Hawtin is Plastikman

June 3, 2010 - 12:12 pm

From the time the gates opened at Hart Plaza, ushering in a single-day record attendance of 35,000-plus patrons, anticipation filled the festival grounds. Perhaps it was raw excitement for the weekend ahead — dozens upon dozens of international electronic musicians from all genres were represented and ready to take the stage at Movement 2010. Perhaps it was the smell of carnie-style corndogs simply upsetting stomachs. Perhaps it was the idea that even as Detroit’s economic woes plagued the city’s day-to-day existence, Memorial Day weekend was going to be blessed with something that actually worked for once. In the end, it was all those reasons plus one more. After taking a year off, Richie Hawtin was returning to Movement and bringing his alter ego back to the stage for the first time in six years. The reason behind the crowd’s collective eagerness was unveiled — Plastikman was set to close the festival that very night.

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Music Tokimonsta: Jack-Of-All-Genres

June 2, 2010 - 11:56 am

TOKiMONSTA at Movement 2010

It’s not easy to describe the sounds of Tokimonsta. An initial impression could you leave in a world as “melodic and sentimental” as the artist herself is cute (see above picture). And even though the 24-year-old Tokimonsta’s catalog is somewhat brief, that initial impression could leave you locked into the wrong idea. Within seconds, this Los Angeles-based, self-proclaimed “jack-of-all-genres” can pull a rough, rugged and hip-hop heavy dose of remixed beats out of her bag and no, she won’t hesitate to use ‘em. “I love listening to varied genres,” says Tokimonsta, “so I wanted something with guitars. I wanted something with soul. I wanted lots of hip-hop in it mixed with that electronic, sonic value. As you create, you realize that the years and years of listening to music expel themselves into whatever music your making.” Kicking things off on Monday afternoon, this is the sort of eclectic thrill that Tokimonsta brought to yet another unique weekend performance on the Red Bull Music Academy stage. ChinaShop caught up with the 2010 Red Bull Music Academy attendee to grab up all the details on how this young deejay came to hone her craft and gain some notoriety with some help from Flying Lotus, the adversity she faced early on in the LA hip-hop community and the broad musical tastes that help keep the audience always guessing.  We had a chance to catch up with Tokimonsta at this year’s Movement Festival and this is what she had to say:

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Music Tyvek: A Smack On The Ass and A Punch In The Face

June 1, 2010 - 2:35 pm

Tyvek at Movment 2010

The culture of Detroit does not rest solely on the shoulders of the Movement festival. Like any major American city, Detroit hosts its annual beacons of pride and popularity — the lauded Detroit International Jazz Festival, downtown’s chilly Winter Blast, the prestigious North American International Auto Show. But often, the shadow cast by these behemoth weekend attractions hides a bustling culture that breeds year-round. Last Thursday evening, as the stages were being erected and the carnival food carts were still jockeying for position before the start of Movement 2010 in Hart Plaza, the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit (MOCAD) was offering a small sampling of such sophistication.

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Featured Music The Crystal Method: A Cinematic Explosion of Sound and Light

June 1, 2010 - 2:26 pm

Crystal Method Movement 2010

Most people wouldn’t throw a Crystal Method CD into their car stereo and describe the duo as “musical entrepreneurs ahead of their time.” But the oddball business description would be more than fitting. Before electronic music was granted the same avenues of exposure as your run-of-the-mill Top 40 pop hits, Scott Kirkland and Ken Jordan of the Crystal Method were exploring alternative routes of rocking the masses to great success. “We can’t help it that we’re sexy! We can’t help it that everyone wants us!” laughs Kirkland, the vodka and Red Bull rushing to his head backstage at the intimate Vain Ultra Lounge in downtown Detroit. “But we did wrestle with the concept of [commercializing our music] early on. We were like, ‘Fuck you! Fuck money! We’re hardcore!’ … We were young, dumb and passionate.”

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Gallery Music Excision: Death or Dub-Step

May 31, 2010 - 3:03 pm

Five years ago, Excision couldn’t destroy the soundsystem in your buddy’s Buick if he tried. Five years ago, the monstrous yet catchy womp-womp of Excision’s dub-step DNA was nothing more than ambitious strands left fossilized, yet to be discovered. In fact, if it wasn’t for the sparse dub-step rumble of British duo Vex’d , Excision would be drooling over a desk, trapped in a cubicle, chasing a paycheck that would help pay for the cost of dry cleaning his business casual wardrobe. Vex’d would release Degenerate in 2005, an 18-track LP that many music critics and critical bloggers claim to be one of the first “official” dub-step albums to be released. British writer Mary Anne Hobbs went as far to call the album the “single most accomplished and important record in album form of the genre.” To Excision (born Jeff Abel), the transformative Degenerate was all that lofty praise and more — it would forever change his life that very same year.

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Featured Gallery Music A-Trak: Mild-Mannered Turntable Maniac

May 31, 2010 - 2:43 pm

In the middle of the afternoon in the Red Bull Lounge at Movement 2010, A-Trak quietly weaves his way through a wave of photographers clamoring for a photo. He smiles, turns his head on command, doesn’t give much fuss if a particular shot takes longer than expected. His handler is just as tame, glancing up every now and then from his Blackberry back-and-forth to make sure everything is running on schedule (or at least running in the right direction). At the age of 28, this is already a well-rehearsed routine for A-Trak. For the past 12 years, A-Trak (born Alain Macklovitch) has flown in, enjoyed the array of catering, accommodated the press, smiled for the photographers, grabbed his paycheck and flown out. The only (and most important) part of this routine that refuses to follow a set path is when the articulate, calm yet expressive A-Trak hits the stage, combining the most appealing parts of house and hip-hop with technically savvy takes on turntablism (read: wild card, bitches!).

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Daily Dots Daily Dots: M.I.A. is NSFW, Hugh Hefner, Nas & Damian Marley, BAPE vs. Converse, MGMT on SNL, Heavy metal Cumbia, Ricardo Villalobos, R.I.P the FLoopy Disk

April 26, 2010 - 4:17 pm

savethepeak_sign

Today’s bloggin best…

- M.I.A.’s very violent video for “Born Free” is highly NSFW. MIAUK

- The video for Nas and Damian Marley “As We Enter” is pretty tame in comparison. 2DopeBoyz

- A prize to anyone who can explain the difference between Bape Ape Sta and regular old Converse All-Stars (besides price, I’m sure). Complex

- The “floppy disk” is officially dead. Wired

- MGMT weird out on Saturday Night Live. Spin

- Heavy metal-Cumbia mash-ups are the new something or another. LA Weekly

- Ricardo Villalobos finally returns to America for Detroit Movement festival. Resident Advisor

- The Hollywood sign is saved by, who else, Hugh Hefner. LAist

Daily Dots Daily Dots: Gorillaz vs. Russell Brand, Plastikman, Insane Clown Posse, Moby Is A Bloodsucker

March 10, 2010 - 5:45 pm

vampire_moby

Today’s bloggin best…

- Gorillaz like Katy Perry, but hate Russell Brand. Prefix

- Plastikman, Model 500 and Inner City all to headline Movement Festival. URB

- Someone let Insane Clown Posse onto Nightline…oh, to make fun of them. Videogum

- 13th Witness directed the new Deftones video. Hypebeast

- Kavinsky has a new track to rave to. Fools Gold

- Iggy Pop, Henry Rollins and Moby all appear in Canadian vampire flick. The Playlist

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 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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