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Saturday 3 December 2011

Soviet Buildings









































From CCCP - Cosmic Communist Constructions Photographed, by Frederic Chaubin.

Studio 54

Well it's actual footage, so why not. Looks like World Unknown, but less smoky.


Thursday 1 December 2011

Helmut Lang

Understated 90s cool for intellecutals and art types. Helmut Lang left the brand in 2005 after the company was sold to the Prada group, and I think the label went on hiatus before being relaunched in 2007. 

These photos are from their 1997 Spring advertising campaign, back when HL was a brand with an almost invincible aura of minimalist cool. What we have below is a Robert Mapplethorpe self-portrait, and a photo of tiny swords by him too. Bruce Weber shot the photo of Kirsten Owen, which I do believe I ripped out of a copy of The Face and blu-taked up on my wall at school. 



Tuesday 29 November 2011

Sheffield - City on the Move

Came across this while looking at stuff for the Park Hill post. An amazingly well done documentary, with the perfect soundtrack, voiceover and choice of images. A reassuring and comforting exercise in public relations.. Sheffield, the city that inspires confidence and makes you sleep well at night.

Park Hill Sheffield

Park Hill, in front, and the Hyde Park development behind 



Built between 1957 and 1961, in a flurry of post-war optimism, brutalist behemoth Park Hill in Sheffield is Europe's largest listed building. The slums it was built to replace began to be cleared in the 1930s, but work stopped for the second world war before architects Jack Lynn and Ivor Smith started designing the flats in 1945.


Newspaper cutting from The Star, 15 Mar 1955 describing the new Park Hill Flat Scheme (from Sheffield Libraries and Archives)



It wasn't long before Park Hill had gotten a pretty bad name for drugs and crime (nicknamed San Quentin by residents) but is now being redeveloped so is likely to become a much nicer place to live (for those who can afford the redeveloped flats, I guess).

Brutalist archtitecture owes a big debt to modernist Le Corbusier, and more locally to the Smithsons, British architects from Sheffield and Teeside who were early proponents of raw, rough-hewn finishes, exposed workings and pipes. Modernist architecture at that time was so deeply idealistic. The attitude of the architects towards the people they were building for was unconsciously quite patronising but they did design buildings where they genuinely believed residents would have a better quality of life. After the mess of the second world war, these guys literally wanted to build a new Britain. In a programme on BBC Radio Four, one of the architects fully admitted that their motives were utopian, adding they wanted to forget the horrible things that had happened and wipe the slate clean. Misguided as their intentions may have been they were certainly a long way from the ensuing reality - the experience of people who ended up living there in the following decades as they became oppressively crime-ridden is pretty godawful. The buildings became rundown, damp infested and structural problems developed on top of the anti-social behaviour, lack of community and isolation.



The Smithsons, speaking at the International Congress of Modern Architects in 1953:

"'Belonging' is a basic emotional need- its associations are of the simplest order. From 'belonging'- identity- comes the enriching sense of neighbourliness. The short narrow street of the slum succeeds where spacious redevelopment frequently fails."

Ironic really coming from these guys, as they not only inspired Park Hill but Paul Smithson designed the hideous Robin Hood Gardens in Poplar, one example of brutalist architecture guaranteed makes the heart sink and the bile rise.


In the clip below there's some nice footage of more 'mature' Park Hill residents talking about the tenements they lived in before - the intro is well naff though so skip straight on to about 0:55. 



Friday 18 November 2011

Thursday 17 November 2011

Walter Gibbons



Walter Gibbons was a DJ/pioneer beatmatcher/etcetc producer legend etc etc. In the 1970s, he kicked it off by producing disco outfit Double Exposure's Ten Percent before going on to work with Loleatta Holloway, Salsoul and West End Records. He produced the above track, 'Moon Maiden' for the Luv You Madly Orchestra, and it's an absolutely incredible oddball disco track, with schizo layered rythmns and bonkers strings..

Strafe 'Set it Off' produced by Walter Gibbons



Strafe's Set It Off from 1984 is another track he's well known for producing.  House techno and electro blend somewhat easily - I'm utterly indifferent to the vocal myself, however i do love the laid-back but insistent drum track.. hypnotic. Anyway because of this one song he's been called a forerunner of Chicago house. Not hard to see why.


WG also produced a lot of Arthur Russel's releases, including one of the best AR tracks of all time, Schoolbell/Treehouse. If the rhythm track on Set it Off is going off, well this is literally some other planet. It starts intricate and switches up a lot but the drums just go off from about 7:00 and keep lopsidedly jogging their way through to the end of the track with a really cool manic energy.


Tuesday 15 November 2011

L.I.E.S.



I bought a 12" by Willie Burns (snigger) on L.I.E.S. a little while back. I'd like to say I've bought all their releases since, but disorganisation and laziness have led me to haphazardly follow them on Soundcloud instead.

Fantasy MD is quite a nice track from the Willie Burns release. Built from pure Chicago components, although too slow and sweet to be a real jacker, it's the keen non-stop synth lines (sometimes they go back and forth like a conversation!) that makes this gentle-hearted track endearing. Key Horizon runs on a looped piano riff, and a a stabby synth line competes for attention. A solidly polite throwback track with mildly euphoric undertones  -  I know, I know, steady on.

L.I.E.S. stand out as a label because they're making really decent house in NYC. Other neat US House labels are Future Times from Washington DC and 100% Silk who are West Coast, and of course there's Chicago and Detroit. There's Jus Ed and Levon Vincent, and obviously they are pretty damn serious about house.. but outside their boutique set-up, there's not really labels released a variety of good stuff.. except now L.I.E.S. are here to save the day. Phew.

The label is masterminded by a guy called Ron who had some stuff to release, and his friends did too. He works at A1 records, which sounds like NY's answer to the Notting Hill Music and Video record shops. Anyhow, across the label's releases so far there is a mix of more and less dancefloory stuff but I guess it could be all be described as analog house, raw and lo-fi with lots of synths, handclaps and drum machines. Some of it is definitely not designated for dancefloors, but it's still great, atmospheric and woozy. It's interesting house. It's fun and it's got a nice personality, and an aesthetic that's left of centre and a bit vintage (well, back to the future).

I could have picked any of their tracks from Soundcloud but i especially liked this expansive technoish number from an earlier release. Soo good, be sure to listen.

Steve Moore-Frigia (L.I.E.S. 003)

Saturday 12 November 2011

Julian Henrique's Sonic Dominance (Part Two)

Obviously at the heart of dance music is a primal urge to dance, be transported away in the groove, etc – but it’s also an innocent urge, and a really pure one. (Tom Lea, interviewing Amanda Brown for FACT)


This quote from the really sweet and interesting interview with Amanda Brown is a nice and unpretentious way to sum up what JH gets to later in his essay 'Sonic Dominance' (continuing from my earlier post, part one). 


Henriques basically takes the fairly common sense idea that really loud music in dark rooms late at night is an entirely opposite experience to many of the things which make up everyday life. He couches it in intellectual terms, but anyone who's passionate about music has an understanding of the way it can take you out of yourself and give you a different bit of yourself back, leaving you moved around and realigned.. whether we articulate it to ourselves or not, it's certainly true. 





It's a different kind of knowledge, not a fact or kernal of intellectual knowledge that you can hold onto, but a physical knowledge which comes with letting go and letting the physical body live a bit more fully and freely. It's not a way of relating to oneself or the world which is valued at all in the rest of life.. which is kind of a shame, and goes a long way to explaining the cult of dance. 





Tuesday 1 November 2011

Belgian New Beat






Kreem 'Triangle of Love' 1987



In honour of the reawakening of the colossus that is Metroplex, here's Kreem's Triangle of Love. It's early Detroit techno, obvs, credited to Juan Atkins, Kevin Saunderson, A. Forest and J. Johnson. Highlights for me are the incredible Blue Monday-esque synth line and the total switch just before 5.00. A gorgeous bit of synthetic warmth.

I'm posting the dub mix, if you'd rather listen to the vocal it can be found here.

Kreem - Triangle of Love (Dub Mix)

(Thanks to The Beat)

Wednesday 19 October 2011

Julian Henrique's Sonic Dominance (Part One)

Reading an insanely good essay by Julian Henriques on reggae sound systems and sonic dominance.

He says that in normal life, we are basically in thrall to sight. We privilege the sense of sight above all others, and this affects way we view the world. If we're looking at something, we're seperate from it, we have the sense of a total comprehension of it, a sense of all-seeing clarity (I'm generalising here but I'm sure you get the drift).

In contrast, certain situations offer an experience of sonic dominance - raves, football matches, political demontrations, and the example he chooses to elaborate on - the reggae sound system session. In these contexts, the sense of hearing takes precedence over all others, the power of sound being both 'hard, extreme and excessive' and 'enveloping, immersive and intense... The sound pervades the body' (1).

The sonic strength of a powerful sound system can quietens rational thought processes, leaving you free to experience immediate, imminent and unmediated involvement and presence, in your body, the sound, and the space you're in.

Henriques talks about extreme sensory deprivation leading to hallucinations such as the out-of-body experience. In contrast, sensory overload experienced in spaces of sonic dominance offer a 'grounding' experience, in which you're relating more deeply with your physical self. Movement and dancing is an obvious way the re-grounded body relates to abundant, excessive sound.

The reggae sound system in particular is also associated with excesses of another kind : 'extravagance, free flows.. surplus and an economy of pleasure'; and 'style and attiutude, lewd dances, immodest fashions, extravagant hair and make-up' (2). In Jamaica the politicians and middle class attempted to counter the perceived threat of excess with the Noise Abatement Act (1996), seeing the rampant excess and social dimension of the sonic as 'dangerous to the status quo'.

The essay goes on but I'll stop here to just say that although JH is talking specifically about reggae sound systems, everything he's saying is basically true for certain parties and sonic experiences available in London today, not to mention the late 80s British rave scene which gave rise to the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act (1994). This was the act which notoriously and ridiculously legislated against people dancing to 'repetitive beats' (3), a response to a perceived threat to the smooth working of the normal social order...Once the parties are inside licensed venues, on the map, accounted for, sanitised.. no problem. But illegitimate sound, dancing, drinking? Off the map it becomes charged and powerful - both to those who revel in the experience of it and enjoy it a regular stepping outside of the everyday in life, a shift of gears, a different experience, pleasurable and intense; and to those who patrol against it, determined to bring the power of sonic dominance back under their own legislation and control.

(1) page 451, 'Sonic Dominance and the Reggae Sound System', Julian Henriques, in The Auditory Culture Reader, editors Michael Bull and Les Back (Berg: Oxford/New York, 2003)


(2) page 455, as above


(3) From the Criminal Justice Act, 1994, from http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1994/33/section/63

63 Powers to remove persons attending or preparing for a rave.

(1)This section applies to a gathering on land in the open air of [F120] or more persons (whether or not trespassers) at which amplified music is played during the night (with or without intermissions) and is such as, by reason of its loudness and duration and the time at which it is played, is likely to cause serious distress to the inhabitants of the locality; and for this purpose—


(a)such a gathering continues during intermissions in the music and, where the gathering extends over several days, throughout the period during which amplified music is played at night (with or without intermissions); and


(b)“music” includes sounds wholly or predominantly characterised by the emission of a succession of repetitive beats.