Feb 29

I wrote about Chicago’s Kyle “Kid Color” Woods as one of my first posts on this blog, and he’s at it again! This guy is so adorable, I don’t know if I want to pinch his cheeks or take a shot with him. For such a youngster though, he’s got great taste in music and an ear for how to make a great, fun mash-up. The cheekily-named “Bangalters & Cash : Digital Pussy” is quite obviously a sweet concoction of Daft Punk and Bangers & Cash and could be the secret weapon in your MP3 arsenal.


Kyle “Kid Color” Woods: Bangalters & Cash (Digital Pussy)
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Here’s my official “girl” moment - Grandtheft from the Team Canada DJ duo is one of the nicest, most enthusiastic people I’ve ever had the pleasure of chatting with. Dare I say it, a total cutie. The boys are usually on tour, bumping it for anyone from nu-rave hipsters in LA to Paris Hilton for her birthday in Vegas. Quickly on the rise, they have signed with Goliath Artists/Deckstar (DJ AM’s management) and sign artists themselves under their own management agency, The Eh! Team.

You might already have the Grandtheft version of Chromeo’s “Fancy Footwork,” but he has some new jams that he is very excited about, and I’m excited about as well. Take the time to visit his Myspace and give him a shout - he is a very talented individual who has the chops and the heart, a rare combination in this industry.


Chromeo: Fancy Footwork (GT Club Mix)
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Flow Rida: Get Low (GT Club Mix)
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Afrika Bambaataa: Just Get Up And Dance (GT Canadian Club Mixxx)
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Prepare to hold on to your seats. I was just bitching that one of the perils of having a blog is that you get insane amounts of crap sent to you, but then once in a while a gem like this comes along and the clouds part and put a little sunshine back into your life.

The Toxic Avenger met NYC based indie band The Fire and Reason by chance on Myspace which lead to a quick friendship and tons of back and forth file sending as the two began to collaborate. The end result was this remix of the band’s newest upcoming single, “NME” that boasts heavy electro synths, choppy vocals, and bass that could only truly be appreciated on a Funktion One system.

While you’re sure to enjoy the remix below, go ahead and check out The Fire and Reason while you’re at it - the tunes are boss.


The Fire and Reason - NME (Toxic Avenger Remix)
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Feb 23
NEW Track From Dani Deahl Posted by admin

 

So here’s a personal track from me! I just finished this project for California based artist/record label owner Ellee Ven. The original song, “Roll The Dice,” was a hip hop tune, and actually pretty darn cool. Ellee contracted me to make it more clubby and electro and I was very satisfied with the result. Since this is coming out on iTunes, Hot Sauce Records, CDBaby.com, etc. I have to respect Ellee’s wishes and not allow people to download it directly. However, if you are an industry professional, i.e. journalist, DJ, etc. and like the tune, contact me at dani@danideahl.com and I can e-mail it directly to you. Thanks! 

Feb 23

Preston over at KISSATLanta.com and I are friends, but like most friends, don’t completely see eye to eye on everything. He recently quoted a post by hipsterrunoff.blogspot.com, which officially makes this a blog quoting a blog quoting a blog. God I’m such a dork. In any case, here is the quote:

“I guess the problem with Pitchfork as it relates to 80% of Generation Y is that it is trying to preserve integrity and quality in both music and journalism. However, good journalism and good music aren’t terribly important to a significant sect of young internet users these days. Music should be fresh and free. Online content is usually just a picture, and an easy-to-consume blurb.

Maybe the entire problem with Pitchfork is that they mismanaged their perception. I remember I found out about Pitchfork because it was ‘a place that wrote really pretentious reviews.’ Maybe that worked in the days when it was cool to network with indie record labels by becoming Programming Director at your college radio station, but I’m not so sure about today’s zany landscape. It’s also interesting to think that Pitchfork was probably one of the first places to be universally known as ‘having an American Apparel ad.’ How seriously did you ever take Pitchfork, and when did you give up the desire to have an ultimate authority on ‘music worth listening to’?

Preston’s take on this was, well, he completely agreed with it. Me, not so much. I am in the strange position of being a blogger as well as a journalist for print publications so I have a bit of a different take. Firstly, I have an issue with the last sentence of that quote. We never gave up on the desire to have an ultimate authority on music worth listening to, that focused simply shifted. Pitchfork may not be the end all be all now, it’s the kid with screen name justiceroxmysox that somehow got a bootleg mp3 before you ever heard about it. The idea of exclusivity seems to dictate what is worth listening to instead of purely appreciating good music for what it is. In my interview with Tittsworth we discussed this issue and he had the same viewpoint - although blogs and DJs may not know/admit it, for the most part they’re more concerned about volume of content and availability (or lack thereof) over quality.

On to the subject of Pitchfork itself, if I lump Pitchfork into a larger media genre of music publications like BPM, URB, XLR8R, DJ Mag, etc., they still serve a purpose as much as some of us would like to think they’re becoming irrelevant. Here’s the thing, there is a difference between a review and a critique. A review relies heavily on personal impression, experience with the music and reactions. In other words, it’s subjective. A critique is a more technical approach that incorporates critical analysis based upon, for example, artists in the same genre or similar songs. It’s objective. These magazines have always represented a knowledgeable base of exploration and criticism that can’t generally be found in our sound-byte blog posts. Besides, I still think that tactile is valued over what we can just read on screen. When a publication has a finite number of pages to print and they decide your band is important enough to put on the cover, that carries an incredible amount of weight.

Granted, our generation might have shorter attention spans, but how much of a shame is it to dismiss the music publication and throw our hands up and say, “well, it doesn’t seem that important, we’re only interested in pictures and links.” Are we that dumbed down? Besides, lots of publications have taken the steps to integrating several types of media as well as many of the ideas mentioned in the above quote. URB.com boasts a blog where writers are free to be somewhat reactionary and RCRD LBL combines the Pitchfork news mentality with free downloads. Give us a little more credit - we’re still more than point and click. A picture is worth a thousand words, and I still want to read some of them.

Tittsworth is just coming home from his worldwide shenanigans and decided to bang out a new tune while flying back to the states. “Blitzkrieg Bop” is a Ramones cover and damn entertaining. Of course, this wouldn’t be a Tittsworth post without a photo of the man himself eating something vomit-inducing. As he told me, he ate his weight in “repugnant ass shit in asia - scorpions, snake, urchin, larva, balls, penis, you name it.” Yeah, that is scorpion on a stick in the above pic.

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Feb 21

Rihanna did a duet with the Klaxons for the BRIT awards yesterday, performing “Umbrella” in a way that actually made me like the song I’ve heard a million times.


Rihanna - Umbrella (Diplo Remix)
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Rihanna - Umbrella (Vandalism Remix)
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Rihanna - Umbrella (Kawata Remix)
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Rihanna - Umbrella (Videoband Remix)
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Feb 18
Everything Fiiiixed! Posted by admin

Sorry for the random difficulties over the past couple of days. Firefox was acting buggy, due to some faulty coding courtesy of third party publishing program Ecto…grrr. Everything is fixed now (minus some minor formatting) so dsquared should be up on Hypem.com within a couple days!!

Speaking of frustrations though, there have been some odd happenings at gigs over the past couple of days, including:

-Random guy being escorted out of club and then pulling the fire alarm because he was upset over being kicked out.

-Guy being kicked out and crashing through club’s front door (made of glass). The glass shattered everywhere…the guy got pulled back into the club via a back entrance by three security guards. Uh oh.

-Someone accusing me of being discriminatory because I wouldn’t play hip hop.

I’m curious to hear some of your tall club tales if you have any…leave in the comments below!

Considering Kanye worked with Daft Punk for “Stronger” to boost his image, then worked with So-Me of Ed Banger records on his “Good Life” video…it wouldn’t surprise me if Kanye bit yet again with his “Flashing Lights” video. The first thing I thought when I saw it was…oh yeah, Daft Punk’s “Electroma.” Could be a coincidence, but it’s a damn close one. Love how the ending of Kanye’s video, font and all, looks very similar to the beginning of “Electroma” (seen in the beginning of the PART ONE clip below). Draw your own conclusions.

PART 1 OF ELECTROMA: CAR SCENE

PART 5 OF ELECTROMA: WALKING DESERT SCENE

KANYE WEST: FLASHING LIGHTS

Feb 15

Here is an article I wrote about Chicago-run Front Forty Press. Out right now in the Jan/Feb issue of URB Magazine.

“Chicago’s Front Forty Press is undoubtedly the dark horse of the art book world. Started just a few years ago as a virtual publishing house, Front Forty has gained steam in the past two years, jumpstarted by a feature at P.S.1 MoMA, and now boasts six acclaimed titles in circulation with several more planned for 2008.

Doug Fogelson, the man behind Front Forty, is just as much of a curiosity as the press itself. The straight-laced man in a pinstripe suit hardly seems like the person who would publish the racially charged graphic novel The Hole. Other books range from the ponderings over built environments in Sonneteer to Matt Volla’s Unruly Drawings, a sketchbook chronicling the misadventures of tiny drawn creatures. However, the biggest success for Front Forty thus far has been Graffitecture, a visual thesis where Fogelson provided photographs of high end spaces to well known graffiti artists to do with as they pleased. Accompanied by four essays on graffiti, the book is as much about musing as it is markers and wound up winning best design 2007 at the Hollywood Book Festival.

A recent distribution deal with the University of Chicago Press mans that big box retailers will soon carry Front Forty releases, as well as the small independent shops and museum stores that Fogelson contacts directly. Despite the hard work, he admits the sudden success is a bit puzzling. “People have really responded to the books, which is suprising,” he says. “Everyone’s been trying to figure our who we are and what we’re about. Our philosophy is [that] if we think something is interesting enough, we make a book out of it.”

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