Thursday, 31 October 2013

RIP - To The Rock 'n' Roll Animal

Most of you will have heard of the passing of Lou Reed here is an LSS obituary...
Now Lou Reed has died Keith Richard's is the undisputed holder of the "Rock's Wrinkliest Man" title. But there was more to Reed than his facial creases. Many many years ago he wrote some of rock and roll's most joyous anthems. For a guy with such a curmudgeonly reputation he sure knew how to kick out the jams. Songs such as Sweet Jane, Rock and Roll, Beginning to See the Light, Satellite of Love and White Light/White Heat defined all that was great about rock music before it lost the "roll". Despite the gloomy junkie proto-goth reputation of the Velvet Underground, all dark glasses and pale faces, their music looked back to the best of Little Richard and Chuck Berry capturing the clever/dumb excitement better than any other white band until 70's Rolling Stones. While Reed's more extreme lyrics have gained the most notoriety many of his best tracks were almost straight faced love ballads or had an under current of sly humour that was lost in the controversy. The band pre and post Andy Warhol, pre and post John Cale, could not have been more different. And while the earlier epics such as Heroin and Venus in Furs gain the most plaudits they have dated rather badly, sounding immature and rather camp these days.  Also the VU may have influenced many bands but they have also influenced many rather terrible bands and movements. Shoe Gaze and Goth just two genres that worship the VU while completely missing the soul and drive of the originals. Lou and the VU felt like a band that you were obsessed with between 15 - 22, fell out of love with as you discovered a world beyond pale ale and cigarettes behind the bike shed, and then come back to as, with life experience,  you saw all the good things about their music you missed the first time round, the warmth, humour and passion of the playing and lyrics and the unexpected joy in Reed's voice.  


Sadly you could almost hear this joy drain away after the commercial failure and break up of the VU. His first two solo records contained bright moments and include some of his best, and best recorded, singing. But the stardom he had so craved did not seem to sit well with Reed. With out the anarchic but soulful playing of the VU and the calming down to earth personalities of Mo Tucker and Sterling Morrison, Reed descended into an abyss of hard drugs, big haired floral shirted session player and a series of increasingly depressing albums. His voice became a harsh dry rattle and at many concerts he seemed almost to mock the simple beauty of his earlier music. However something interesting happened. His bitterness and cynicism was perfectly in tune with the rising tide of Punk. The decadence and nihilism of albums such as Sally Can't Dance and the noise rock master work Metal Machine Music found a new generation of fans who took these feelings to the logical conclusion in the rock and roll poetry of Patti Smith and later the sneering anarchy of the Sex Pistols. Suddenly Reed's simple grinding rhythm guitar and monotone vocals became the most influential sounds in rock music, despite the basic ingredients of his style having been set in stone by about 1967. 

However Reed was always one to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. Just as he defined the era with his Street Hassle album we decided jazz fusion was his music of choice. Jazz mixed with alcoholism and self loathing is always an unhappy mix and for most of the late 70's and early 80's he became an entertaining freak show. There were sparks, for instance his album Growing Up in Public contains some of his greatest lyrics, but the music was a horrible bland mess sounding like Hall and Oates. Then the worst thing that could possibly happen happened. Lou dried out, grew a mullet and started writing songs with titles like "My Red Joystick". God awful yuppie rock with god awful yuppie videos. At least he had the decency to look completely miserable while he was prancing about in rolled up sleeve Armani suits. Even working with punk guitar genius Robert Quine failed to lead to much satisfactory music and all seemed lost. 

But like a cockroach after the apocalypse the tide turned and the eternal survivor found himself back in fashion again as yet again musical trends embraced his dark outlook on life. Grunge and Industrial were but two genres that sprang up from seeds planted by earlier Reed epics such as the grinding 17 minute Sister Ray and the splattering guitar noise of Metal Machine Music. He slowly got back on track with preposterous but exciting albums like Ecstasy and The Raven. Even the horrible collaboration with Metallica had some edge to it. At least he had lost the Armani although a modified mullet stayed as his default hair cut for the rest of his life. 

All in all an epic life and I think you can do worse for an epitaph than read rock critic Lester Bangs' amusingly confrontational interview with Reed here: http://www.theguardian.com/music/2011/nov/08/lou-reed-lester-bangs-interview 

and his hilarious review of Metal Machine Music here: http://www.rocknroll.net/loureed/articles/mmmbangs.html 

For a dip into what made Lou Reed great download these albums: Velvet Underground and Nico (the Banana Album), Velvet Underground - Loaded, Transformer, Berlin, Street Hassle, Metal Machine Music, Ecstasy....Farewell Lou! maningrey

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Thursday, 17 October 2013

Free plug ins! The AJ picks

When it comes to free plug ins, you can go into a download frenzy. It is as if someone shouted "FREE BEER!!!", you are then left with a pile of plug ins to dig through with little patience to find anything that actually works well enough to become a "go to" tool.

Recently I have tried to purge my mac book of the hundreds that I never use. This is when I stumbled upon two great plug ins from Klanghelm. They make several plug ins that are extremely affordable and probably worth picking up, but it is the two free ones on the website that I love...read on...

The DC1A (Compressor) 
http://www.klanghelm.com/DC1A.html 

How can you go wrong with a two knob compressor. This could not be more simple to use. It is a combination of Opto and Fet designs that just gives you great punch. The idea here is an input knob and output knob. Great for a drum bus, parallel punch, or individual drums. 

IVGI (Saturation and Distortion)
http://www.klanghelm.com/IVGI.html

This one is a little less simple, but give you good flexibility. The great thing is that every one is making a saturation plug in, in order to emulate that sound of running your mixes through classic consoles. Honestly this one should not be free. This is just smart, it gives lots of control for only 4 knobs, and even has modelled cross talk for those stereo tracks. If you don't have a saturation plug in to use on your drum bus to control the drums,  I would expect to see this one.

I am currently working on a new EP for Marvin Live and find myself reaching for these tools over some of the plug ins I have paid for in the past. They are available from the Klanghelm website on a free download in AU, and RTAS. I am hoping to see 64 bit AAX soon. 

You can check out some of the mixes I have done for Marvin Live at his website below. His new EP featuring these plug ins is called Butterflies and Goldfish and will drop this year!

http://www.marvinlive.com/

Enjoy! 

Aaron at LSS


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Friday, 11 October 2013

My favourite albums of the last 10 years or so..

As the school manager I get deluged in new music, mainly recommendations from students. Also as part of my job I have to try and stay up to date with what our students are listening to! Here is a selection of albums I have found myself returning to again and again. It is rather frightening that some albums I tend to think of as "recent" are often 20 year old, so I have tried to keep it within the last 5-10 years or so. Mainly electronic music as frankly I find most rock or indie music these days a bore. However this list is by no means definitive, just personal picks, so please feel free to educate me to your favourite albums of recent times whatever the genre in the comments section.

2562 - Aerial 

My all time favourite dubstep album. While a lot of Dubstep has aged rather badly, either intentionally raw to the point of unlistenability (Digital Mystikz, sorry I will get stick for this!) or so techy as it disappear in a cloud of automated reverb (Scuba), Aerial strikes the perfect balance between the icy modern digital sheen and the warm groove of bass heavy dub. While not losing the urban dread that made Dubstep so edgy it has a warm fuzzy glow that makes it enveloping rather than alienating. As a miserable old git who likes King Tubby and Lee Perry I found this album to be an excellent bridge into the new sounds of modern dub, a perfect blend of retro and modern. More importantly it keeps it simple, crisp and funky, unlike a lot of Dubstep this actually skanks!


Neosignal - Raum Und Zeit 
I have always loved Phace and Misanthrop so I was excited to hear their latest project Neosignal. Looking to branch out from their dark Drum and Bass into both Dubstep and pop their debut album throws "Numbers" era Kraftwerk, Noisia style monster beats with dashes of Daft Punk in an industrial teutonic blender. Everything is over the top, from the mysterious title of the album (Space and Time in German) to the grinding fuzzy bass riffs that tear through every track. Each song could perfectly compliment Alan Partridge's infamous leather posing pouch lap dance in "I'm Alan Partridge". If you like balls out electro then this album is for you.  

Barker and Baumecker - Transsektoral
Moody German techno is as distinctive in it's way as the pioneering sounds of Detroit. Over the years it has developed into a diamond hard music bringing together a peculiarly German love of Dub Reggae with a need to whir and clank like a Audi factory. Much like Audi's all conquering Le Mans sports cars everything here is clean, precise and beautifully propulsive.  

Instra:mental - Resolution 653 
Being a huge fan of original acid house and later abusers of the 303 such as Richie Hawtin and Luke Vibert I was turned onto this album as soon as I saw the song title "Aggro Acid"! I'm a sucker for squelching sounds so I was instantly sold. The whole album moves beyond drum and bass into the shadowy but accessible sounds of the Post Dubstep/Future Soul touted by labels such as Nonplus, Autonomic and Exit Records. After many of the revolutionary strides made in alternative ways to compose and produce music during the 80s and 90s, the 00s now seem to be an era where the basic ingredients have been set and music is now about recontextualizing and refining. This album is like all your favourite acid house records squashed into a glittering new robot body like the liquid metal, shapeshifting T-1000 from Terminator 2. 

Frank Ocean - Channel Orange
I like this album because it is the musical equivalent of Bret Easton Ellis's books, specifically his nihilistic debut novel Less That Zero. Eschewing the usual Cristal and bling blather of much contemporary RnB, Ocean's lyrics give a bleak portrayal of bored stoned teens and end of their tether strippers and junkies and makes me think of some of Marvin Gaye and Curtis Mayfield's pained socially conscious funk of the 70's. Tied to weird spacey productions that combine 80's synth funk with the jazzy darkness of Sly Stone, Ocean spins sweet melodies that twist and turn in unexpected ways. It feels like a step on from the more street and rap influenced Neo Soul movement of D'Angelo and Erykah Badu, but while that movement consciously aped 70's instrumental sounds this takes the same hard messages and attaches them to sounds that are startlingly fresh and modern.  

LV -  Routes 
A strange mixture of UK Garage, Funky and Dubstep this collaboration between LV and Joshua Idehen keeps things effortlessly foot taping while adding disorienting synth effects to produce a set of songs that sound like every 5AM post club night bus journey from hell you have ever experienced! Again it is hard to put a finger on what makes it work but Idehen's sometimes humorous sometimes pensive lyrics riding over beats that sound like a potted history of recent UK urban music just hits the mark. LV's next album on Hyperdub featuring three three South African rappers is equally good.  

Consequence - Live for Never
Another link in the Autonomic mafia's chain. This album just snuck up on me..in a dark alley with a chain! I wanted to hate it as the whole vibe is a bit portentous and twiddly. The name of the artist and song titles, everything seemed a bit arty for my tastes. However the whole album projects the attractive force of a dying star, it comes on your playlist and you grudgingly give it a listen and soon you are sucked into it's murky depths. A huge sense of space pervades it's turbid surfaces, once again it is hard to tie any of the songs to a specific genre. Elements of Photek's more housey tunes, a dash of Dubstep and elements of hardcore Moog prog rockers like Tangerine Dream and Jean Michel Jarre make up this unique meditative work.  

Kryptic Minds and Leon Switch - Lost All Faith
Drum and Bass veterans who really kicked out the jams with this album. One of the few Drum and Bass albums that manages to be "intelligent" without boring the pants of you, it realises that "jazzy" does not mean just chucking a few Fender Rhodes 7th chords about and sampling Weather Report drum breaks. One of the few Drum and Bass albums that took up the challenge of Dubstep while still keeping all the things we loved about Drum and Bass in the first place. So much modern DnB (aka Hospital) has become rigid hands in the air neo soul music, this album keeps the darkness of Dub Reggae, the space of Dubstep, and the jagged synths of classic Neuro Funk and strings them out over rattling beats worthy of Paradox to create a classic album.  

Karriem Riggins - Alone Together
Riggins is a well known beat maker and session museum for the likes of Common and Slum Village. While his debut album is certainly heavily influenced by J Dilla it has an off kilter jazzy flow to it that is all his own. I could also have gone for Damu the Fudgemunk's equally excellent "How it Should Sound" as one of the best beats albums of recent times, but while that LP stays firmly within the parameters of beat making established by golden age legends like Pete Rock, Riggins has a broader vision. Combining jazz, unusual sample sources and an odd ball but head bobbing sense of rhythm this 34 track album is a tapestry you can go back to again and again and hear something different.  

Jam City - Classical Curves 
A bit of a random one here, possibly just a flavour of the month that I will tire of soon. But for now this albums sounds like it could be the future, but a very 80's mullety future. A clattering fusion of old school rap beats, icy rave synths and a dash of Prince at his most synthetic. Many of the songs sound like music to a film that has yet to be made. However once it is made the film will almost certainly include high speed car chases through futuristic cities, lots of neon, mutant zombies, killer robots and swaggering through it all an eye patched anti hero in the mould of Snake Plissken from the sci-fi classic Escape from New York.  

Juju and Jordash - Techno Primitivism
I got into this album recently. I was digging about for some good techno but only finding boring Detroit rip offs or rather hand baggy party tunes. This album came to the rescue with weird slightly frightening textures making me think of some of Surgeon's work. Fingers Inc hollow bass lines, creepy late night synths and mystical Augustus Pablo melodica flourishes meet more far reaching influences like industrial pioneers Cabaret Voltaire and Throbbing Gristle, all mashed into a heady bitches brew.  

Kode9 and the Spaceape - Memories of the Future
The ultimate masterclass in the dark art of the infamous "brown sound" this dank dirty album positively quakes with malice and sub-bass frequencies. Kode9's excellent Hyperdub label has released some of the best dubstep music but also a lot of boring rubbish. This album however pretty much sums up what Dubstep was before it went overground. A mighty fusion of The Spaceape's Linton Kwesi Johnsonesque ramblings and Kode9's claustrophobic textures it is amazing how Spaceapes growling patios blends sonically with the bass lines. Through the despairing views on modern society a line can be drawn back to previous urban landmarks such as Massive Attack's Blue Lines and Ghost Town by the Specials, accept this is a hell of a lot more gloomy and less commercial, and all the better for it!  

Samiyam - Sam Baker's Album
Former LSS tutor Ben Wood used to react like a dog at a fireworks show whenever he heard Samiyam's berserk unquantized beats! They would drive him insane but in the right mood there is simply no one like Samiyam! After a couple of excellent EPs he burst out with an instant classic debut album. Like a demon child of J Dilla and Dabrye his music completely refines what "rap" or "beats" means, let alone what is now considered pop music. If there is a better example of how avant garde ideas from the 50's and 60's have permeated mainstream (albeit niche) music I'd like to hear it. Fragmentary ideas fly by and listening to an individual track is rather like looking at an individual square of a mosaic. Soon all music will sound like this.  

I hope you find something good in the list! Maningrey

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