Showing newest posts with label interviews. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label interviews. Show older posts

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Jeff Mills for Resident Advisor & Fuck The Facts for NoiseCreep

One of my highest priorities is to post my writings right about the time they're published, but from time to time it's difficult to stay on point. I'm still living on a fantasy summer island, but have been keeping myself plugged into my two favorite genres: metal and techno. Before I left for Fire Island, I spent my final, epic weekend with a string of memorable nights. On Wednesday, my friend Mattis and I drove up to Boston for a RBMA Thomas Oberheim workshop and Le Loup at Midweek Techno. Thursday was Raster-Noton at Make It New, and Friday - the day the up button broke on my car stereo's volume - we drove back to Brooklyn with a full car for Bunker, which featured R-N and Insideout (I think Grant is my new hero) and an epic 6hour tagteam between Jan Krueger and Derek Plaslaiko. The following night was Jeff Mills at the Sullivan Room, topped with a Cadenza party on the Bar 13 rooftop the following afternoon. Easily one of the best (and longest) weekends of my life. My review of Mills was a feat - making sense of one night amongst all of that can be difficult when you consider how much one event will blend into another. It was truly a weekend of loving life, and Mills' set (especially when he played "The Bells") was the opposite of a heartbreak.

True love?

Secondly, I'm on the verge of digging into new metal, and I have big plans with NoiseCreep that hit on a very personal level in the near future. Still, we wanted to know what Fuck The Facts couldn't leave home without - aside from, of course, instruments and merch - because they are just an awesome band. Please go see them if they're coming to your town.

You can read the reviews, posted here:
Jeff Mills @ Sullivan Room for Resident Advisor
Fuck the Facts Hit the Road With Five Essential Items

Monday, April 13, 2009

Kode 9 Interview For Boston's Weekly Dig

Continuing my recent words on dubstep, I also had the pleasure of speaking with Steve Goodman, who is better known as Kode 9 in the music world. His credits include: DJ, producer, college professor, academic writer and record label owner. In most of these fields, he is renowned for his ability to carve a unique niche, and establishing himself as a creative artist whose art - be it music or the written word - stands out on its own.

Bassic, the dubstep night in Boston, which I've seen grow and grow over the last year, celebrates another month of projected success by booking Kode 9 at the Good Life this Wednesday. One of its resident DJs, Pandai'a - the first female to play Dub War (NYC) and a fierce personality for the burgeoning presence of women in dubstep - also commented on the healthy community in New England, and reflects on how the subculture has rapidly expanded over the last year or so.

Last but not least is the Weekly Dig, an independently owned alternative weekly newspaper for which I still have a very great affinity. I've had the pleasure of working there, and can vouch for the passionate staff that run the operation. Perhaps one of my most missed facets of being a former Bostonian, I'm happy to remain a contributor to their weekly pages.

You can read the interview in this week's issue, or posted here: Kode 9 Interview For Boston's Weekly Dig