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Cultural Stimuli in LA
Issue 103: sing-song flavor

The hills of Los Angeles are alive with the sound of music. Cat Power puts it down for the ladies, while Carlos D, Matthew Herbert, Norman Jay, and Joe Claussell all get straight to the booty-shaking. Guerilla Black takes over the Sunset Strip, while Sleepytime Gorilla Museum just take over. For those looking for something more prosaic, reach back into your memory and fall in love with Camper van Beethoven all over again. Meanwhile, fine artists from all over the world sing along, as Visual Music and Percussion Music get underway. With all this magical mystery melody flying every which way, it's like your own private soundtrack, so turn up the volume, celebrate flavorpill's rebirth, and spread it.
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flavorpill is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.
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They say you only live once. Fools. We can start life anew whenever we choose. This time around, let's not suffer fools gladly. Let's make new friends, find new flavors and drink to the miracle of rebirth with ABSOLUT RASPBERRI. |
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| FILM |
Bad Education
| when: |
Tue 2.15 (1:45, 4:25, 7:15 & 9:55pm) |
| where: |
Laemmle's Sunset 5 (8000 Sunset Blvd, W Hollywood, 323.848.3500) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Laemmle's Sunset 5 |
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Pedro Almodóvar's gorgeous and emotionally wrenching films often focus on misguided but powerful love and those damaged by it. Bad Education is no exception, but, true to Almodóvarian form, it also provides more than a few surprises. Focusing on a young movie auteur in 1980s Madrid, the film finds protagonist Enrique Goded at a loss for a compelling subject for his fourth feature. His director's block is interrupted by an unexpected visitor claiming to be his first schoolboy love, and luckily for Enrique, he's arrived with a potential script in hand the story of their shared Catholic school childhood, and the events that led to their separation. (EC)
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| MUSIC: Hip-Hop |
Guerilla Black
| when: |
Wed 2.16 (8pm) |
| where: |
House of Blues Sunset Strip (8430 Sunset Blvd, W Hollywood, 323.848.5100) map |
| price: |
$20 |
| links: |
Event Info | Guerilla Black |
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There's no easier way to get into hip-hop's fast lane than to sound like Biggie. And one thing you can't deny about Compton-raised Guerilla Black is that he channels Smalls' laid-back drawl like no man since Shyne. It's one reason he's become ubiquitous on WC mixtapes in the past 18 months, and why his joints "Uh Oh" and the Beenie Man-assisted "Compton" were getting local love from Power 106 long before his debut, Guerilla City, dropped last year. Though the hype on his national roll-out paled in comparison to that of the Game, Black can more than go pound-for-pound with Dre's boy any day. (PO)
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| COMEDY |
Mortified: Doomed Valentine
| when: |
Wed 2.16 (8pm) |
| where: |
M-Bar (1253 N Vine St, Hollywood, 323.856.0036) map |
| price: |
$5 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Whoever said humor is based on the pain of others may well have had Mortified in mind. This comedic collective takes schadenfreude to a whole new level, as its performers bravely bare their souls just for kicks. Alone on a spotlighted stage, these folks share their desperate diary entries, very bad poetry, and unattainable dreams of happiness, as well as heartbreakingly hilarious tales of personal woe and social catastrophe. From the embarrassing to the eternally horrifying, our all-too-human foibles and fumbles finally get their chance to shine. This special post-Valentine edition is sure to be especially cringe-inducing. (SND)
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| MUSIC: Post-Punk |
Prosaics
| when: |
Wed 2.16 (9pm) |
| where: |
Spaceland (1717 Silver Lake Blvd, 323.661.4380) map |
| price: |
$8 |
| links: |
Event Info | Prosaics |
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Face it: there's no end in sight to the Big Apple's rock band invasion, and sometimes it's better to accept the inevitable, rather than fight it. The latest salvo is courtesy of Prosaics, a 21st century power-pop trio with all the fashion-conscious attitude of the Strokes, but who love the unadulterated jukebox heroics of early '80s alternative labels such as Flying Nun and 415. Though the current Against Agape EP is brought to you by the local talent-spotters at Dim Mak, the band's future lies with the indie powerhouse that is Matador. That's basically a guarantee that they'll graduate to larger venues, so take advantage of the Spaceland gig tonight. (PO)
Where did Prosaics play their first live gig? The first two correct answers each win a pair of tickets to the show.
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| FILM |
The Best of Slamdance 2005
| when: |
Thur 2.17 (7pm) |
| where: |
Egyptian Theatre (6712 Hollywood Blvd, Hollywood, 323.466.FILM) map |
| price: |
$9 |
| links: |
Event Info | Slamdance |
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If you didn't make it to Park City, Utah last month for Slamdance, the renegade little brother of the invidious and insouciant Sundance film festival, here's your chance to see the Grand Jury Prize winner for Best Documentary, Abel Raises Cain. It's the story Alan Abel, a professional hoaxer who campaigned to stop women from breast feeding, argued that animals should wear clothes, and even faked his own death. The film was lovingly made by the great prankster's own daughter. While big-time brokers at the Berlin Film Festival are drooling over this wacky family, you catch the flick at the Egyptian. Or just show up and pretend to network without having to drop any money on a flight to Utah, or share a room with drunken slobs who know people who know people. (PN)
What film won for Best Narrative Feature at this year's festival? The first, third, fourth, fifth, and ninth correct answers each win a pair of tickets to the screening.
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| MUSIC: Avant Hardcore |
The Locust
| when: |
Thur 2.17 (7:30pm) |
| where: |
The Troubadour (9081 Santa Monica Blvd, W Hollywood, 310.276.6168) map |
| price: |
$10 advance |
| links: |
Event Info | The Locust |
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You don't so much listen to the Locust's music as you absorb it like a severe blow to the head. Prepare to be pummeled by a high-volume apocalypse of sci-fi electronics, gruesome guitars, and barely discernible lyrics but within this brutal noise, you can also make out some beautiful aural arrangements. Or not. These San Diego-bred punks are a bit hard to swallow. After all, their new EP, Safety Second, Body Last, is out on Mike Patton's Ipecac Records. Expect weirdness on stage, starting with matching masks and larva-like bodysuits. This is a band that hides from fans perhaps for good reason. (PXC)
Note: Ex Models open the show.
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| DJ |
Carlos D (of Interpol)
| when: |
Thur 2.17 (midnight) |
| where: |
Beauty Bar (1638 N. Cahuenga Blvd, 323.464.7676) map |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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You could say turntable culture has come full circle when bassists from living, successful bands have DJ careers as well. Interpol havemade the leap from '80s-tinged indie rock to full-fledged, radio-ready stars, so it makes sense that Carlos D is playing the poster boy for the bedroom-DJ/rocker set. Following Interpol's live show with Blonde Redhead downtown at the Grand Olympic Auditorium, Mr. D takes to the decks at the hip kids' favorite watering hole, Beauty Bar. Shoegazer enthusiasts needn't fret, as he's bound to play your favorite moody classic at least once, amidst many more to get the people moving. C'mon, dancing is good for you. (TCR)
Note: Doors open at 10pm.
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| FILM |
Pandora's Box (1929) and Diary of a Lost Girl (1929)
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Silent-film star Louise Brooks is probably best known by our generation for her hairdo. The pixie with the Dutch bob had a face that the camera loved, and a career full of accomplishments. Her most famous role was that of "Lulu" in G. W. Pabst's Pandora's Box. While the film was unsuccessful in its native Germany and barely noticed in the US, today it's considered a landmark in silent film for its racy themes and provocative look. Brooks also made Diary of a Lost Girl in Europe, during her rebellion against the Hollywood machine. Tonight, the Egyptian presents both films as a tribute to the late leading lady, accompanied by live music from Robert Israel. (TCR)
Note: This program also plays at the Aero on Sat 2.26.
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| FILM |
The Animation Show 2005
| when: |
Fri 2.18 - Thur 2.24 (7:30 & 9:50pm) |
| where: |
NuArt Theatre (11272 Santa Monica Blvd, 310.281.8223) map |
| price: |
$9.50 |
| links: |
Event Info | The Animation Show |
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For Mike Judge (Beavis and Butthead, King of the Hill, Office Space) and stick-figure maven Don Hertzfeldt, gut-busting content is worth a lot more than style. But the toon festival the duo curate together, The Animation Show, features both hilarity and artistic chops aplenty. Almost every form of animation is represented, from Jen Drummond's F.E.D.S. a 2D CGI exposé of grocery store sample-hawkers to the Kafka-meets-Marx Brothers claymation of Ward 13. The highlight is Hertzfeldtz's own The Meaning of Life, a traditional work that took over four years to complete. (JCF)
Note: Don Hertzfeld will appear in person at both opening night shows.
What was the first theatrical animation festival called, and when did it appear? The first three correct answers each win a pair of tickets to an opening night show.
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| DJ |
Norman Jay
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For those who can't make it to Carnaval in Rio, Sir Norman Jay brings the party vibes to LA. Aside from being an icon of London's annual Notting Hill Carnival, Jay is also a member of the Order of the British Empire (for his contribution to music) and a co-founder of both KISS FM and Talkin' Loud Records. Much like his life which has been immortalized in Good Times, The Movie his musical selections read like a history of groove; tonight should play out the same way, as the original crate-digger excavates esoteric funk, '60s soul, and house remixes. With his Good Times compilation series already on its fourth volume, it looks like we still have a lot to learn from this anthologist. (CN)
Which soccer star asked Jay to DJ his wedding? The first ten correct answers each win a pair of tickets to the event.
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| MUSIC |
Sleepytime Gorilla Museum
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Sleepytime Gorilla Museum is no picnic. Complete with outfits reminiscent of a GWAR concert and instruments made from anything imaginable inanimate or otherwise they shred your ear like a cheese grater. But it's not all bike horns and spatulas with this quintet of shock artists they can actually play, and they draw a mean crowd. Their newest album, Of Natural History takes the group to new heights of dissonance, and tonight, the Echo hosts a cacophony to be reckoned with. (JC)
Tell us the most bizarre band name you can think up, and we'll give each of our five favorite answers a pair of tickets to the show.
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| ART: Opening |
Don Ed Hardy: Ghost Writers and Automatics, Cheryl Dunn: Bicycle Gangs of New York, and Fat Mark: The Spin Cycle
| when: |
Sat 2.19 (6-10pm) |
| where: |
Track 16 Gallery (2525 Michigan Ave, Bergamot Station, Santa Monica, 310.264.4678) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Don Ed Hardy combines his experience as a tattoo artist with Asian mythology and symbolism to create his "ghost writings" white line images dreamily populating darkened backgrounds. These paintings draw inspiration from calligraphy, ancient scrolls, beach culture, and hot-rod art. Marking a departure from her commercial work, photographer and filmmaker Cheryl Dunn concurrently shows her photos of New York's bicycle gangs, while Fat Mark further expands upon the two-wheeler theme with his installation of lowrider bikes customized in collaboration with graphic designers, tattoo artists, and skateboarders. Definitely a show for beautiful loser lovers. (TCR)
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| MUSIC |
Camper Van Beethoven
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Purveyors of laid-back, psych-country irony long before Stockton neighbors Pavement found their perfect sound, Camper Van Beethoven now seem most remembered for a semi-hit joke song about goofing on Nazi punks ("Take the Skinheads Bowling") and for singer Dave Lowery's subsequent leadership of platinum alt-roots combo Cracker. Which is too damned bad, 'cause CvB not only thoroughly defined the late-'80s Northern California strain of indie dilettantism, but also helped make it acceptable for hippies and hardcore types to share drugs and laugh at each other. Their 21st century reunion hasn't generated the glee of the Pixies' revival tour, but their golden sounds continue to ring true. (PO)
What misfortune did CvB have to overcome on their current tour? The 14th correct answer wins a pair of tickets to the show.
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| DJ |
Matthew Herbert
| when: |
Sat 2.19 (10pm-2am) |
| where: |
Little Temple (4519 Santa Monica Blvd, Silverlake, 310.396.5130) map |
| price: |
$15 |
| links: |
Event Info | Matthew Herbert |
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DJ, producer, and composer Matthew Herbert (aka Herbert, Doctor Rockit, Radio Boy, and Wishmountain) is renowned for his idiosyncratic style, his love of sampling everyday sounds, and his penchant for turning uninspired noise into surprisingly beautiful music. Whether remixing tracks for fellow vanguard artists such as Bjõrk, Moloko, and even Serge Gainsbourg, or getting personal with his sometime lover and frequent collaborator, vocalist Dani Siciliano, Herbert exhibits an uncanny ability to move a crowd while simultaneously creating an intimate sonic affair. Live the magic tonight at the Little Temple when he hits the decks with an eclectic mix of genre-busting dance tracks for LA's true believers. (AM)
On which mix CD does Herbert deliberately mismatch beats and tempos? The sixth, seventh, and ninth correct answers each win a pair of tickets to this event.
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| FILM |
Instant Films 17
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It's all over in the blink of an eye. No, we're not talking about your New Year's resolutions or your last relationship, but rather the deadline-driven spectacle of on-demand innovation known as the Instant Film Festival. By giving participants (selected from the entertainment industry) only 48 hours to create a concept, write a script, film scenes, and put the whole thing up on the big-screen for an audience to critique, this stopwatch competition has eliminated the second-guessing that usually plagues bigger productions, and fostered some first-rate, renegade filmmaking along the way. With so much talent and so little time, you'll want be there at the finish line. (KH)
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| DJ |
Deep feat. Joaquin "Joe" Claussell
| when: |
Sun 2.20 (9pm-2am) |
| where: |
1650 (1650 Schrader Blvd, Hollywood, 323.960.2088) map |
| price: |
$20 / $15 before 10pm |
| links: |
Event Info | Joe Claussell |
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Conversations are better deep; sex is better deep; and house music is definitely better deep. Joe Claussell is sure to satisfy at least one of the above when he spins at LA's very own Sunday night ritual of house hedonism that might not bring you closer to god, but will certainly leave you feeling saved. A pioneer in the New York club circuit, Claussell launched Spiritual Life Music in 1996. The label unleashed new beats into the global dance scene and laid down the blueprint for the tracks we now jump and thump to. Be there as he helps Deep celebrate its six-year anniversary, with resident DJ Marques Wyatt providing the warm-up action for this turntable veteran. (KH)
What was special about the drinks at Body and Soul, the NYC Sunday club residency where Clausell held court? The first five correct answers each win a pair of tickets to this event.
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| MUSIC: Singer/Songwriter |
Bart Davenport
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Cynics be damned! Charming, engaging, and as whimsical as a cliché about love in the springtime, Bart Davenport's music is reminiscent of a Moondance-era Van Morrison, with a slight indie-Beck affectation that only adds to the singer's swank. Though his hands are immersed in various musical honey pots, on his third solo endeavor, Maroon Cocoon, the Bay Area artist has mastered his own brand of folky pop-rock; and on songs such as "Beg Steal Borrow" and "Euphoria," his lyrics and melodies are so sweet and playful, they become downright sexy. Relax at the Tangier and absorb a little nostalgia. (KH)
Note: Wilie Wisely open the show at 7:30pm, and Fun Machine follow at 8:30pm. Wifey play at 10:30pm, after Bart Davenport.
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| MUSIC: Nu-Gazing and Dance-Punk |
The Secret Machines w/ Moving Units
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We're calling it the Big Bang tour. The swirling, squelchy universe of post-punk rock explodes tonight at the Avalon as dream-pop purveyors the Secret Machines join homegrown talent Moving Units for a show that's equal parts shoegazing and ass-shaking. The first act has a penchant for slow-burning songs that lift off into atmospheric realms thick with effects-heavy guitars, feedback distortion, and bombastic drumming. Moving Units break up the concept-heavy cacophony with a gleeful dose of '80s-influenced dance-punk fun. Taken all together, it's a ridiculous night of all-out heavy rockin'. (PXC)
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| MUSIC: Indie Rock |
Cat Power
| when: |
Mon 2.21 (8pm) |
| where: |
Knitting Factory (7021 Hollywood Blvd, Hollywood, 323.463.0204) map |
| price: |
$15 |
| links: |
Event Info | Cat Power |
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In this era of faux celebrity and American Idol, an artist who wants no part of the spotlight is almost shocking. Cat Power's Chan Marshall is infamous for her aversion to live performances; her onstage meltdowns and nonsensical mid-song banter have been known to upset fans in the past, and it's difficult to predict what she'll play on a given night, as she sometimes avoids fan favorites altogether. No matter what, though, Marshall's music sparkles with folky intensity occasionally rocking out, and always leaving you aching from its intimate beauty. (JS)
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| DANCE |
Contradanza and World Wide present Aura
| when: |
Wed 2.16 - Sun 2.20 (8:30pm) |
| where: |
REDCAT (631 W 2nd St, 213.237.2800) map |
| price: |
$28-32 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Carlos Fuentes' novella Aura provides the textual leaping-off point for this cross-cultural collaboration between two daring companies: Rosanna Gamson's World Wide in LA and Cecilia Appleton's Mexico City-based Contradanza. Through rich stagings of dramatic, compelling tableaux, the choreography exudes a striking theatricality that elegantly merges movement, opera, music, and text. This approach is heightened by the unique WW/Contradanza process that brought the two companies together for extended rehearsal periods in one another's respective countries for this US Premiere. (ASM)
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| THEATRE |
Apartment A presents: An Evening... on the Brink
| when: |
Now through Sat 2.26 (Thur-Sat: 8pm) |
| where: |
Electric Lodge (1416 Electric Ave, Venice, 310.306.1854) map |
| price: |
$20 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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While an evening featuring seven new short plays by different writers is inevitably going to be a mixed bag, the good news is that the quality of tonight's performances only ranges from good to great. Apartment A the West Side's most consistently innovative repertory company of actors, directors, and writers once again demonstrates its originality, talent, and fearlessness with a program that romps unselfconsciously from sex to politics, from artistic egos to emotional blackmail, and from families in crisis to comedic riffs on the small injustices of capitalism. Best of all, it's presented in manageable 15-minute chunks, with the intervals punctuated by a live ragtime pianist and the creeping sensation that at least one of these shorts is bound to be the next big thing. (SND)
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| MULTIMEDIA |
Percussion Music
| when: |
Sat 2.19 - Sat 3.19 (Tue-Sat: 11am-6pm) |
| where: |
SolwayJones (5377 Wilshire Blvd, 323.937.7354) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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This innovative group show features work by nine artists who engage the dynamic relationships between sound, movement, and visual art. Featuring such experimental luminaries as John Cage and William Anastasi, the work in Percussion Music ranges from the creative misuse of materials (drawing with drum brushes) to all-out conceptual symbolism (amplifying natural objects). Much of the pieces on view are kinetic, noisy, and participatory, there are obviously insightful and physical senses of humor behind many of the wackier experiments — even though they present cogent arguments of the potential for an aesthetic of synesthesia. (SND)
Note: The opening is Saturday 2.19 (6-8pm).
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| MULTIMEDIA |
Visual Music
| when: |
Now through Mon 5.23 (schedule) |
| where: |
Museum of Contemporary Art (250 S Grand Ave, California Plaza, 213.626.6222) map |
| price: |
$8 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Visual Music is kind of like a weekend at your grandparents' — if they busted out the bootleg jazz records or fired up the '67 Mustang for a trip to the mall. Investigating the complex and sometimes psychedelic interaction between the abstract visual art and music of the last 100 years, the exhibition might be expected to lean toward new media. But there's a plethora of paintings by 20th-century masters, such as Kandinsky, Klee, and Fischinger holding their own beside later generations of comparatively flashier work. Both educational and entertaining, the exhibition suggests that grandpa's still got a brand new bag. (SND)
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STATION TO STATION: The Relay Project |
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As sound art gains gallery cachet and NPR recontextualizes documentary as a radio-friendly genre, the Relay Project steps into the murky world of non-musical audio with a unique proposition. Packaged in a long, rectangular folder designed to be displayed amidst print rags, the Relay Project presents itself as an audio magazine, combining music, found sound, and interviews. Mark Greenberg's quirky interludes and E*rock's naive electro-pop situate the magazine's musical interests comfortably left of the dial; radio art experimenter Gregory Whitehead explores the "Axis of Evil" in a cryptic burst of blackboard scribbles; and in one of the disc's most fascinating segments, sound artist Stephen Vitiello speaks with I Am Sitting in a Room composer Alvin Lucier about sound and the avant-garde. (PHS)
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CD REVIEW: LCD Soundsystem, LCD Soundsystem |
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Capitol
Released February 2005
$13.49 (Amazon)
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With his string of subversive singles as LCD Soundsystem, James Murphy has heaped upon himself the collective guilt and glee of the entire post-punk revivalist scene. On his first full album, the DFA's cheeky and knowing messiah serves up more wry post-pastiche disco than you can shake a schtick at and collects his essential, vinyl-only singles on a second CD. As Murphy's hectoring vocals inch ever closer to Mark E. Smith's yelp, his production effortlessly churns through robot electro, chugging industrial, italo disco, synth-pop, frenzied garage rock, and prog ballads without ever feeling like a history lesson. Just when you start to wonder whether spot-on homage can be more than just clever, in come the warm jets of the closer, "Great Release." Sure, it's a shameless rip of Eno's glambient transcendence, but its warm, expanding synth wash cleanses it of irony. (TW)
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STREAMS: Fabric |
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If the world had more people like Keith Reilly, the state of clubbing (and arguably electronic music in general) would be better off for it. Reilly opened London's Fabric to champion scenes that he felt weren't getting the support they needed. The owner of close to 300,000 records, his boundless passion for music could only be sated by building his dream venue, complete with a custom-tailored sound system. Five years on, Fabric's made an indisputable impact on the city's nightlife by providing a space to showcase forward-thinking electronic music in all its forms. Here, indulge yourself in exclusive mixes from the club's residents. (CJN)
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Adam Freeland: Exclusive radio mix (Breakbeat)
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Michael Mayer: Exclusive radio mix (Minimal techno / house)
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Fabio: Exclusive radio mix (Drum 'n bass)
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| Header Design: |
| Macchio and Sons | Jared Tarbell | | |
| Editors: |
| The Heavy Sleepers | Shana Nys Dambrot | | Seven Ate Nine | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Laptop Lover | Paul Laster | | Shifty Terrapins | Sascha Lewis | | The Marks | Mark Mangan | | Raspberry Jones | Piotr Orlov | | White People | Colin J. Nagy | | The Moose | Lauren Ragland | | Chocolate Thunder | Todd C. Roberts | | Buffalo Schaffel | Philip H. Sherburne | | Pimp Lemonade | Peter D. Stepek | | Vikings Don't Spank | Toby Warner | | Special Patrol Group | Doug Levy | | |
| ABOUT US |
| flavorpill LA is a free weekly mailer covering music, arts, and cultural events in LA. All listings are pure editorial, never paid advertisements. No money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us, and spread it... |
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| FEEDBACK |
| Please let us know what's on your mind, any and all feedback comments, questions, ideas, or rants.
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| EVENT SUBMISSIONS |
| To let us know about an upcoming event that you think belongs here, please email us at events. |
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| Contributors: |
| My Lovely Daughters | Phat X. Chiem | | Genital Chunk | Hilary Craven | | The Subscription | Quinn Doan | | File Me to the Moon | Josh C. Forbes | | Simon Cowbell | Menaka Gopinath | | Iheartanal | Kate Hewitt | | The Hampered | Lara K. Kelley | | A Team | Amanda M. | | The Smear | Allen S. Moon | | Smarty Ants | Steve Nalepa | | The Calories | Drew Neuhues | | Well Hung Jury | Pete Nicely | | Thin Lizzard | Catherine Nguyen | | Nice Jeans | Jeremy Sampson | | The Helpmates | Michael Shawver | | E-O-S | Eve Smilack | | Furious Dudes | Christy Wegener | | The Saviors | Erika Christiansen | | |
Production: |
| Drooling TouTous | Anjuli Ayer | | Prefix/Suffix | David Morrow | | The Sh*tty Zoo | Gerry Mak | | Pants de Leon | Todd Goldstein | | Blogger the Destroyer | Jake Lancaster | | |
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