The Soundtrack of your Life
Che Grimsdale writes: Now that Simon Cowell's stolen Everybody Hurts, tell us about songs that mean something to you - good, bad, funny or tragic, appropriate or totally inappropriate songs that were playing at key times.
( , Thu 28 Jan 2010, 13:30)
Che Grimsdale writes: Now that Simon Cowell's stolen Everybody Hurts, tell us about songs that mean something to you - good, bad, funny or tragic, appropriate or totally inappropriate songs that were playing at key times.
( , Thu 28 Jan 2010, 13:30)
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An evening of electronica
One Friday afternoon, a bunch of us went for a post-work beer, and a friend said her and her husband were going on to another pub later to an electronica gig.
Fancying ourselves as open-minded types, and having enjoyed boshing pills and dancing at various clubs to various electronic-type music during the late 90s and early 2000s, and since we were getting steadily inebriated, my friend and I decided to join them.
Dear Jesus Christ.
It was a geek at the front with a bloody Apple Mac. Making noise.
Now - don't get me wrong - I remember the days when bands didn't play a tune you could whistle, and you couldn't hear the words.
I've been to drum n' bass nights where there's been mass throwing up because the frequency was so low.
I experimented with LSD, with friends that wrote lyrics about pixies living among the stars.
This was simply just fucking noise. Quite literally. There wasn't even a vague semblance of rhythm, or of beat. VERY ocassionally the operative would bring down a frequency that quickly swooshed through a sound that was vaguely frenetic drum n' bass on speed-sounding. But really - it was just electronic noises.
It was art, I presume.
What interested me was that the populus of bespectacled, bearded geeks wearing t-shirts bearing witty fucking HTML slogans on them* would regularly:
A: try to dance - I don't have a problem with that, but I honestly have no idea what they were dancing to
B: Would nod and clap enthusiastically in unison at certain points
C: Would tell each other that this one coming or that one he just played was absolutely superb.
Afterwards, trying to investigate, someone told me I should investigate Squarepusher.
Dear Christ. I mean - really - what?
*Actually true - I honestly saw a geek walk past another wearing such, and laugh and compliment him on it.
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 10:46, 8 replies)
One Friday afternoon, a bunch of us went for a post-work beer, and a friend said her and her husband were going on to another pub later to an electronica gig.
Fancying ourselves as open-minded types, and having enjoyed boshing pills and dancing at various clubs to various electronic-type music during the late 90s and early 2000s, and since we were getting steadily inebriated, my friend and I decided to join them.
Dear Jesus Christ.
It was a geek at the front with a bloody Apple Mac. Making noise.
Now - don't get me wrong - I remember the days when bands didn't play a tune you could whistle, and you couldn't hear the words.
I've been to drum n' bass nights where there's been mass throwing up because the frequency was so low.
I experimented with LSD, with friends that wrote lyrics about pixies living among the stars.
This was simply just fucking noise. Quite literally. There wasn't even a vague semblance of rhythm, or of beat. VERY ocassionally the operative would bring down a frequency that quickly swooshed through a sound that was vaguely frenetic drum n' bass on speed-sounding. But really - it was just electronic noises.
It was art, I presume.
What interested me was that the populus of bespectacled, bearded geeks wearing t-shirts bearing witty fucking HTML slogans on them* would regularly:
A: try to dance - I don't have a problem with that, but I honestly have no idea what they were dancing to
B: Would nod and clap enthusiastically in unison at certain points
C: Would tell each other that this one coming or that one he just played was absolutely superb.
Afterwards, trying to investigate, someone told me I should investigate Squarepusher.
Dear Christ. I mean - really - what?
*Actually true - I honestly saw a geek walk past another wearing such, and laugh and compliment him on it.
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 10:46, 8 replies)
a lot of it is very emperor's new clothes...
but lend your ears to this:
Beep Street by the aforementioned Squarepusher...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7U9jVvbvBU
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 11:05, closed)
but lend your ears to this:
Beep Street by the aforementioned Squarepusher...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7U9jVvbvBU
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 11:05, closed)
Also by Squarepusher
Version of Love Will Tear Us Apart - I frequently think I prefer the Squarepusher version to the original... hmmm.
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 11:38, closed)
Version of Love Will Tear Us Apart - I frequently think I prefer the Squarepusher version to the original... hmmm.
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 11:38, closed)
now that's taking it too far. electronica artists thinking they can sing = FAIL
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 15:10, closed)
Oh come now - what about Everything But The Girl?
Or Massive Attack?
Or Leftfield?
Or Afro Celt Sound System?
Or Asian Dub Foundation?
Or DF118?
That's a rather broad generalisation, I'd say.
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 16:07, closed)
Or Massive Attack?
Or Leftfield?
Or Afro Celt Sound System?
Or Asian Dub Foundation?
Or DF118?
That's a rather broad generalisation, I'd say.
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 16:07, closed)
that's not what i mean
having a vocalist is fine, but being a blippy bloppy instrumental performer type person and then after moderate success in a achingly cool sub genre deciding that the world needs to hear your autotuned nonsense from your own flacid vocal chords is a very very bad idea.
massive attack, adf, leftfield et al either use other people or have always been vocal performers.
and everything but the girl were utter gash :)
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 17:07, closed)
having a vocalist is fine, but being a blippy bloppy instrumental performer type person and then after moderate success in a achingly cool sub genre deciding that the world needs to hear your autotuned nonsense from your own flacid vocal chords is a very very bad idea.
massive attack, adf, leftfield et al either use other people or have always been vocal performers.
and everything but the girl were utter gash :)
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 17:07, closed)
Yeah - that's alright.
That's the sort of chill-out stuff we'd listen to on the comedown through the morning.
But the stuff on this night I described - in all honesty - had no apprent cohesion about any part of it whatsoever.
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 11:42, closed)
That's the sort of chill-out stuff we'd listen to on the comedown through the morning.
But the stuff on this night I described - in all honesty - had no apprent cohesion about any part of it whatsoever.
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 11:42, closed)
maybe
something a bit more like this?
www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbo0wjAjzXQ
the inimitable Aaron Funk
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 15:13, closed)
something a bit more like this?
www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbo0wjAjzXQ
the inimitable Aaron Funk
( , Tue 2 Feb 2010, 15:13, closed)
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