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Young Rival Spent Two Years On A Music Video

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Young Rival’s Elevator video was digitally shot and edited,w hich every frame of a digital video was reproduced on Oki Data Turboline 320 dot matrix printers before being scanned back into a computer to create an epic moving image. Conceptually the video was heavily inspired by the work of Canadian animation pioneer Norman McLaren – specifically his work Pas De Deux.

Young Rival bassist and music video director John Smith tells The Creators Project how the idea for the video came about: “One day a few years ago, I was reminiscing about the technology that I grew up with and specifically a memory I had of printing images on my family’s old dot matrix printer. It might seem funny now in 2017, but at the time printing an image in your own home felt revolutionary.” Smith says that he came up with lots of potential ways to turn dot matrix prints into moving images right away. “Since the paper used with these printers came on ‘ribbon feed,’ that is, one long tearable stretch of paper with removable sides, I automatically likened it to a strip film.”

Via

J.K. Simmons Used to Sing Telegrams in Tutus

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J.K. Simmons talks to Jimmy Fallon about having to sing falsetto tunes dressed in a tutu back when he did tutu-grams to support himself before his career took off.

Behind The Vinyl: “She’s My Inspiration” with Barney Bentall

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Singer/Songwriter Barney Bentall came by Toronto’s boom 97.3 studios to play “She’s My Inspiration” on vinyl! Barney talks about some of the musical influences that was put into the song, the recording/writing process and more!

The Baseball Project’s Mike Mills and Peter Buck Perform R.E.M. Songs With Corin Tucker

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The Baseball Project – Mike Mills, Peter Buck, Steve Wynn, Scott McCaughey & Linda Pitmon joined by Corin Tucker – perform a few R.E.M. songs at the 1st night of Sun Station Vadsø, Vårbrudd, Vadsø, Norway, June 23, 2017.

The Holy Grail Of Lost New Order Shows Is Now Available

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Let’s go back to New Order’s first show in Chicago. This one gig has become the stuff of legend. On June 30, 1983, the group is performing at the Cabaret Metro, and it’s hot in there. Like, so dripping-with-sweat that Bassist Peter Hook, in his memoir “Substance: Inside New Order,” calls it “one of the hottest gigs I have ever done,” and with the on-stage temperature at 118 degrees Fahrenheit. “Even Gillian (Gilbert) was sweating,” Hook writes.

Known as the lost New Order show not available for anyone to listen to until now, the group playing Blue Monday unplugged makes it worthwhile. It comes from someone named A.L., and there’s also a track list.

1. Confusion 0:00
2. Chosen Time 6:26
3. The Village 10:55
4. Truth 15:45
5. Leave Me Alone 20:37
6. Your Silent Face 27:35
7. Denial 33:45
8. Age Of Consent 39:04
9. Ceremony 44:35
10. In A Lonely Place 48:46

https://youtu.be/tROh3XXcKDA

A.L.’s Note:

“Several months ago, I had gotten into a discussion via a Facebook comment thread with a Chicago person who claimed to have a tape of New Order’s debut Chicago gig June 30, 1983 at the legendary Cabaret Metro. For background, there are two New Order sets which have long been held up as the Holy Grails of New Order tapes – this show, and their debut Beach Club performance from 1980. For 34 years, no known tape of this Chicago set had been known to exist and all discussion was essentially conjecture and long-diminished memories from club owners and punters who attended. As I had already made arrangements to be in Chicago for the weekend described up top, I made separate arrangements to meet up with this person and pick up a copy of this set. If I’m to be honest, I didn’t expect it to be much of anything. So, that Saturday two weeks ago, I did. Turns out to have been with a lovely fellow who had several entertaining stories to share about gigs and particularly this recording.

The minute I put the CD-R into the rental car’s CD player, I knew it was special.

It’s not often something like this sort of falls in your lap.

June 30, 1983 was the hottest day of the year to date in Chicago. The now-legendary venue Metro – then known as Cabaret Metro – had been open for roughly a year. While I was just an 11 year old kid cavorting on a beach across Lake Michigan from Chicago that day – or most likely asleep in the summer cottage, considering the time – New Order finally made their debut appearance in Chicago. Attendees say it was unbearably hot inside the Metro that night. And allegedly even hotter on the stage. That day, the high temperature reached near 100° F in Chicago and it had barely cooled as the evening went on. Making matters worse, the band took nearly two hours to get on stage after the opening act, which made an uncomfortable and stinky audience even more strident.

The set starts out as your typical New Order set of the era would. Things seem OK, maybe a bit rowdier crowd than normal, until late in the fourth song “Truth” when the sequencer starts to act up. They launch straight into “Leave Me Alone” which ends uneventfully. Then, the power goes out (as you’d have it). A restless crowd begins complaining amongst itself, with audible complaints about sweat dripping into eyes, another mentioning rubbing ice all over their face, and vocalized thankfulness that they brought paper towels in. Random sequencer bleats punctuate the rumbling crowd, as the roadies and venue staff try to get the power sorted. Hooky mentions needing a shower. Eventually, “Your Silent Face” starts. It devolves into a unique and fascinating exposition on what a sequencer-using band does when the sequencers are failing mid song – Steve Morris jumps behind the drum kit far earlier than usual, and essentially drives the song to its skittering end as the sequencers never recover. I think this take is spectacular and I think you’ll agree.

Barney then makes reference on stage to equipment and power problems, mentions the band’s just going to jam, and Steve then pounds out the drum riff for “Denial”. Instead of jamming, the band then finishes the set with four straight sequencer-free tracks, ending on the majestic “In A Lonely Place” well into the wee hours of the morning.

There is no jamming, no acoustic “Blue Monday” despite the venue owner’s misremembered statements made over the years since. It’s possible of course at some point these did exist and were edited out from this tape upstream, but I doubt it and all other recollections of this gig fail to mention any acoustic “Blue Monday” performances.

For the past 34 years, this set has been legendary in the New Order community due to the circumstances which befell it. And a tape was never known to exist, nor a setlist for that matter. With the 1980 Beach Club set, it was part of the Holy Grail pair of lost New Order sets. That changes today. The story of how this tape ultimately came to me is nearly as good as the story behind the gig, but to protect privacy I shall simply thank A. for this. I believe this is from a 1st generation dub of the master, and whomever the actual taper is remains a complete mystery.”

FKA Twigs x Nike – do you believe in more?

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Trip hop artist FKA Twigs conceptualized Nike’s Do You Believe in More? ad campaign for its Zonal Strength women’s training gear.

Vitamin String Quartet Performs Radiohead’s “True Love Waits”

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Another great cover by the Vitamin String Quartet, and this time we’ve got Radiohead’s True Love Waits.

The Origin of the Hip-Hop Air Horn

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Born on a B-side of a Bob Marley and the Wailers record, the air horn sound has been associated with reggae and Jamaican dancehall music since the 1960s. What was once a staple of the club scene in Jamaica has now become a global hip-hop phenomenon, thanks primarily to Luis Diaz aka Cipha Sounds. The DJ was kind enough to share the story behind the massive, attention-grabbing sound.

Exclusive interview with Nadya Tolokonnikova from Pussy Riot on Russia, Trump, and their Kickstarter campaign

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How wonderful is it to be living at the same time as Pussy Riot, the Russian feminist protest punk rock group based in Moscow, who continuously put their safety and lives on the line every single time they take a stand for what’s right. Founded in August 2011, their provocative guerrilla performances in public places, performances that were filmed as music videos and posted on the Internet, performances that mean something, is almost eclipsed by the fact these are real human beings behind their message. Instead of grumbling when we see something we don’t like, or agree with, we should just be happy that the brave and powerful Pussy Riot exist, that they changed music and politics, that they’re working towards a better world. I know many musicians inspired by Pussy Riot taking up causes like feminism, LGBT rights, and opposition to Russian President Vladimir Putin (or, in these artists’ cases, whoever is in power in their own country), to use music as a weapon, their lyrics as actions, and their voice to be heard.

This is why, right now, you need to support them. The group has a few weeks left of their Kickstarter campaign, and once I finish writing this line, I’m going over to the site to donate. I urge you to do the same.

Here’s the interview I did with Nadya Tolokonnikova last week.

How The Danish Police Get Around At A Music Festival

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The Danish Police at Roskilde Festival on a sound system while the famous tune ‘Sound Of The Police’ by KRS-One plays.