MediaJorge

Ratatat

Posted in Uncategorized by mediajorge on April 23, 2009

Ratatat’s psychedelic circus pulled into Terminal 5 last night long enough to freak the geeks with barrages of strobe lights, confetti, poultry-head visuals, wildcat roars and body surfing.  Gaunt, grungy and sweaty, the Brooklyn duo banged, riffed, and bleep bleeped through a set fit for an off-campus rave. You don’t have to be young and chemically-enhanced. But if you were, this would’ve been the place to be it.

Starfucker Just Wanna Have Fun

Posted in Uncategorized by mediajorge on April 22, 2009

How’s this for an endorsement: Press List-addicted Media Whore spends $70 on a last minute mad dash to small, sweaty club to catch indie pop funkers. Scary, but true. A PJ Harvey concert alert led me to a listing for Ratatat tomorrow, and Starfucker – tonight! I checked the clock, put the smokes down, jumped in a cab and raced to the East Village from Harlem. Twenty five minutes (and as many dollars) later I pushed my way into the Mercury Lounge as they were warming up. Part Jeff Lynne, Beck, and Brian Wilson let loose in a Fisher Price romper room, Starfucker are not afraid to wear cheap drag and cover “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun.” Spastic hipsters, overpriced beer, work interruptions and flash storm aside, it was worth it. If  that seems like a long, expensive way to go for a spontaneous thrill – eh, I’ve spent more on less.

The Field: Tomorrow, today

Posted in Uncategorized by mediajorge on April 21, 2009
Alex Willner, the Field

Alex Willner, the Field

Swedish techno wonder kid Axel Willner, aka the Field, is back. And he’s still sounding like a fistful of top shelf E’s. The Field’s pulsating, ambient sound made ravers, critics and the indie set swoon in 2007. And then, he made them wait. Now, two years after the rapturous debut, From Here We Go Sublime, we get the coyly titled Yesterday & Today, out May 19 on Kompakt/Anti.  Tomorrow seems to be missing. Until you listen.
The advance copies are tightly-guarded by invisible flying monkeys, so you’ll have to Google it yourself. Here’s a classic from “…Sublime”.

Flavorwire: Taming the Winter Music Conference Monster

Posted in dj culture, electronic music, music, new york, personal, writing by mediajorge on April 20, 2009

Or, what I did on my winter vacation. Snippet below. Rest at Flavorpill, Earplug.

Taming the Winter Music Conference Monster
6:25 am Wednesday Apr 15, 2009
by Jorge Hernandez
Like most of the snowbirds, I was at Miami’s annual Winter Music Conference for some sun, beach, dancing, and schmoozing. As often happens, my first night descended into a series of mix-ups: was Gui Boratto playing or not? Was I “sorted” at Danny Tenaglia’s marathon? Fortunately, I’d caught both of them last year, so calling it a night (especially after a two-hour flight delay) came easy.

Thursday afternoon, I headed to an early meeting with NextAid, a nonprofit organization that works with DJs, musicians, and engineers to provide sustainable solutions to problems faced by Africa’s AIDS orphans. “OM Records just adopted this building,” said director Lauren Segal, pointing to a glossy photo of a modest structure. “It could be used for anything from a school to a clinic.” Asked where she got the idea, she chirped, “On the dance floor, of course!”

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The New Dance Show, Detroit

Posted in Uncategorized by mediajorge on April 16, 2009

Back to Ape School

Posted in Uncategorized by mediajorge on April 7, 2009

Current favorite new thing: dreamy, noisy, melodic….

Ape School – Album Stream

Ape School album cover

Ape School album cover

SOMA: Interview with MSTRKRFT

Posted in dj culture, electronic music, music, new york, personal, writing by mediajorge on April 6, 2009

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MSTRKRFT interview

BPM: interview with N.A.S.A.

Posted in dj culture, electronic music, media, music, writing by mediajorge on April 6, 2009

space-shot-2

text by Jorge Hernandez

Let’s be real: most albums featuring everyone and their mothers pretty much suck. Not because of anyone’s moms, per se, but because collaborations tend to over-reach for street cred, moving units, or redemption via some charitable gesture. So one can be forgiven for popping The Spirit of Apollo into the laptop with some trepidation. After all, how the hell are a dozen plus artists (including David Byrne, Santogold, Kool Keith, Tom Waits, RZA, M.I.A., Chuck D, Method Man) over as many tracks going to produce anything solid, let alone righteously funky? Well, shut my mouth.

The debut by NASA (North America South America) is a musical labor of love that seamlessly rolls from intro to outro, one head-scratching, head-nodding track at a time. The magic behind Sam “Squeaky E Clean” Spiegel and Ze “DJ Zegon” Gonzales’s project reveals itself within the first few moments of conversation with Spiegel. That is, once you can manage to make either of your phones work properly.
Calling back for a third time, after a day’s worth of press, he jokes, “Man, I was deep in my spiel, too. I was totally rolling. Anyway, we’d be in the studio making tracks, thinking ‘Wouldn’t so and so be great for this, or that track.’ It was basically us writing letters to people. We didn’t publicize the record, pretty much until it was done. It took about 5 and a half years to make it.”
All of the funding for Apollo came from money earned through Squeak E Clean Productions, his commercial production company. “We did enough work that we could go do whatever we wanted.” That work included “Hello Tomorrow”, a track with Karen O. that started out as music for an Adidas commercial, but wound up becoming so popular, it was eventually released as single. He’s also scored “I Heart Huckabees” director David O. Russell’s political satire, “Nailed” starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Jessica Biel, though he’s uncertain when the film (plagued by repeated shut downs) will be released. The range of work, he says, “Helps to work out different parts of your brain. You end up working on a variety of things that require different styles of music.”

Another ambitious investment they made was to the recording process itself. “We tried to be in the room with everyone when they recorded. And whenever possible, we recorded with everyone in the same room. So there was no emailing files, really.” In the case of “Strange Enough” featuring Karen O., Fatlip and Old Dirty Bastard, the approach was especially poignant. “We ended up recording with him a couple weeks before he passed away. Those are not pulled vocals from anywhere; they’re real, originals.”

The all-for-one spirit extends beyond the studio. There are 4 different covers for the CD, including one by the artist who created the iconic blue/red “Hope” Obama poster, Shepard Fairey. And they often recruit local artists and performers while on tour. “Since we can’t have all these people with us, we like to use locals, to keep the vibe going. It makes each show a unique experience. We always meet really cool people that way.”

In case you can’t make it to one of their upcoming gigs, including a stop at Coachella, there’s a documentary about the whole experience. Predictably, it features multiple directors. “Honestly, man, it’s always a different homeboy of mine behind the camera. We’ll just call someone and say, ‘You wanna go to Sweden and record with Lykke Li?’ There’s footage of us recording with George Clinton, chemically enhanced. There’s some animation in it, from some of our favorite visual artists that we work with. It doesn’t have any tour footage now, but you never know. We’re off to Europe to do a few dates, kind of a warm up. Maybe something will make it on there.”

Somehow, Spiegel still finds the time to interact with fans directly through a hype blog, which he updates frequently. Considering how hectic his 2009 calendar is looking, it may be the best way to keep up with him and NASA’s far-reaching mission. It promises to be one long, strange trip.

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