Alice Cooper’s pyrotechnics, guillotines & 12-foot tall creatures

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Photos by Sterling Munksgard

Alice Cooper
Wells Fargo Center for the Arts – Santa Rosa, CA
November 25, 2013

Alice Cooper wowed an enthusiastic and diversified Wells Fargo Center for the Arts crowd, Monday. This action-packed musical adventure featured a smartly curated setlist of classic hits, filled with clever theatrics that included pyrotechnics (a first for the Wells Fargo Center), guillotines, and twelve-foot tall creatures.

Browse shots of the wonderfully goulish legend below, shot by Sterling Munksgard.

Geographer finalize tour full circle at Bimbo’s 365 Club

Geographer_postPhotos by Sterling Munksgard // Written by Nikki de Martini //

Geographer with Bad Suns //
Bimbo’s 365 Club – San Francisco
November 23th, 2013 //

The SF-based band that describes its sound as “soulful music from outer space” have been on tour in support of 2012’s Myth pretty much since its release, and Geographer brought their dream-pop rock back home to Bimbo’s 365 Club on Saturday night.

The crowd was still situating into the shoe-gazey scene enjoying “Verona” off of 2010’s Animal Shapes before the usually modest Michael Deni dropped an F-bomb before the song ended. Explicitly inviting SF fans to “bring it to the mother fucking floor” for the last show of their tour, Deni was obviously and understandably excited. Who wouldn’t be?

In January, Geographer kicked of this leg of the tour at SF’s most culturally historic concert venue, The Fillmore, before hitting the road, playing across the states and then up into Canada. Now, almost a year later, here they were playing a sold-out show at Bimbo’s 365 Club, one of the swankiest places in SF to see a live show.

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Following the fan-favorite ditty “Life of Crime” came a more poppy version of “Paris”, and Geographer carried on, alternating between songs from their 2012 and 2010 albums for a good first half of the show. Deni did a good job connecting with the muted crowd without pausing for typical banter. For instance, he didn’t prep fans for his theatrical stage dive during “Kites”, the most well-received song of the night.

Ending their tour in the city they now call home, Geographer’s artistic allure shined at Bimbo’s 365 Club with impeccable lighting and almost unblemished sound. Working on new material while touring, Geographer will surely hit the road yet again upon the arrival of their impending fourth studio album.

WIN TICKETS: The Limousines & Mona at the Indy 11/27

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The Limousines & Mona with Dresses
The Independent — San Francisco
November 27, 2013

The Limousines formed in 2007, and shortly thereafter the multi-faceted duo of instrumentalist/producer Giovanni Giusti and singer/songwriter Eric Victorino catapulted to local fame through Bay Area radio airplay from their critically acclaimed Scrapbook EP. Signing to and releasing their debut album Get Sharp on Dangerbird records in 2010, the band gained international attention with singles “Very Busy People” and “Internet Killed the Video Star.” Featured as an artist on MTV’s Push Week and touring as an opener for The Sounds and Neon Trees brought the Bay Area locals unique brand of dance rock to audiences on a global scale. On tour currently promoting the release of their entirely Kickstarter funded, second full length album Hush, the boys return home for the holidays this week to rock the intimate local venue.

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!

Nashville rock foursome Mona had an equally rapid rise to fame when after simply two years of playing together, they were signed to Island and Mercury Records after nailing an online introduction to Nude Records founder and band manager Saul Galpern in 2010. That November, the band appeared on the BBC’s Later…with Jules Holland and we’re nominated for an MTV Music Award. In 2011 Mona released their self-titled debut in Europe, spending most of the following year playing large scale festivals such as Glastonbury, Reading and Leeds, Splendor in the Grass and more gaining traction overseas. They also headlined their own tour that summer, culminating in a sold out show in London’s O2 Arena. They brought their debut album to the states in 2012, performing on nationally syndicated late night talk shows and supporting Noel Galagher’s High Flying Birds side project. Nick Brown, Vince Gard, Zach Lindsey and Jordan Young are currently on tour promoting their second full length, Torches and Pitchforks as they finalize their North American Tour Wednesday at the Independent.

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win 2 Free Tickets!
Enter to win if you can attend this show Wednesday, November 27 at The Independent in SF.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Wednesday, November 20 at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one. 21+ only.

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WIN TICKETS: Azari & III at Mezzanine 11/27

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Azari & III
Mezzanine, Nov. 27
WillCall + Lights Down Low proudly present a DJ set by Azari & III! A night of house heaters, bongo beaters, and pure pandemonium.

Lights Down Low favorites and dance party pioneers Azari & III are taking to Mezzanine Wednesday to help partiers shed some unwanted pounds dancing before Thanksgiving. LDL friends Split, Myles Cooper, and Connor will pump up early arrivers with tasty appetizers while LDL boss Richie Panic brings the sweet dessert after the main meal.

Known for bringing some of the best music and parties to the Bay Area, this night is going to be one for the record books — It’s most likely Azari & III’s last show ever in SF, as they recently announced their breakup. They’ve performed all over the world, from the biggest stages to dirtiest basements, and their production has influenced countless DJ’s. Say goodbye to the visiting relatives for the night and plan on wearing your sunglasses to Thanksgiving dinner, you don’t want to miss this one.

Buy tickets via WillCall if you know you want to go.


Win 2 Free Tickets!
Enter to win if you can make it to this show Wednesday, November 27 at Mezzanine in San Francisco.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Wednesday, November 27 at 11am. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one. 21+ only.

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CONTEST COMPLETE

Challenging ‘the nature of man’ with Deltron 3030

Deltron-3030_postPhotos by Kory Thibeault // Written by Molly Kish //

Del the Funky Homosapien, Dan the Automator and Kid Koala brought their brand-new album Event II to their hometown audience at The Fillmore last Saturday. They joined forces once again as Deltron 3030, and a full orchestra accompanied the Hieroglyphics labelmates.

Directly after the Joseph Gordon Levitt-narrated “Stargate” intro, the Deltron 3030 Orchestra, conducted by a maestro clad Dan the Automator, fittingly broke into “Return”. Bringing life to old classics with the help of top-notch turntabalism from DJ and local legend Kid Koala, the full band and vocal ensemble took the fully packed Fillmore to a whole new astral plane.

Smoke hung languidly in the air as the crowd rocked to the interstellar groove and futuristic lyrics brought hard by Dan and Del, whose undeniable chemistry commanded the stage and was backed by an all-star cast of bay area producers and immensely talented touring bandmates.

After a full set and two-song encore, Showbams got a chance to catch up with the hip-hop royalty. Kicking it amongst Bay Area friends and family in the legendary Fillmore balcony, we sat down with Del the Funky Homosapien and Dan the Automator to rap about the post-apocalyptic past, the “fucked up present” and the chicken-masked murdering future of Deltron 3030.


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Showbams: Del, I know today is kind of a big day for you. Twenty years ago your second album, No Need For Alarm came out, it was the first release after you parted creative ways with your cousin Ice Cube and ultimately was the official introduction of the Hieroglyphics crew. What ultimately was the reason you wanted to branch out on your own as an artist and producer?

Del: Um, it’s kind of funny but basically my peer group at the time with my first album, they kind of made fun of me. You know what I’m saying, because I guess in their minds it wasn’t like real hip hop or whatever. Because Cube was on board it was a shinier sound and I was using P-Funk, so I guess to them it meant that it wasn’t “real hip hop”.

So after some time it just kind of depressed me, you know what I mean. Because you know, you want your peer group to like what you’re doing and whatever. So from that came No Need For Alarm. Really, I was just trying to prove a point to people. Now looking back, it was just so foolish, it’s like, “Wow, I was depressed for years because of that.” Now it doesn’t even matter. They were probably just hating because I was on the scene at the time, and they weren’t doing nothing. Looking back at it now, that was pretty much what it was.

For Cube, it wasn’t like I just didn’t want to work with him, I actually really enjoyed doing so on that first album. It is still one of my favorite experiences in the studio ever. I learned a lot of stuff them. They taught me a lot and I had a lot of fun with them, they were hella funny. But on the second album, I just wanted to go back to what I was doing, like at the Onion Lab (shout out to Onion). I used to go to his house and make demos, basically. You know practice our craft before we came out, that’s how we started getting known around the Bay Area.

So, I went back to more of that style just to let people know, I’m still there. I didn’t sell out or whatever you think and I’ve just been going harder and harder ever since then.

Showbams: Did you always want to do something like Hieroglyphics, with a whole rap collective in the East Bay, or was this something that just kind of naturally transpired?

Del: You know what? It wasn’t really something that I made, that was something that just kind of happened. There was only so many people that were just about “really rapping” in the Bay Area anyways, it wasn’t like there was hella’ us you know? But really whoever was close knit and got together the most, I guess became the general band, Hieroglyphics. That’s just the way it was, it wasn’t really a creation of mine.

But if I want to be real about it, me, A-Plus and Tajai is pretty much Hieroglyphics, because we’ve know each other the longest since like second and third grade. We was always into hip-hop, so it was from the beginning never about money or nothing like that, because that wasn’t even a dream back then. It wasn’t even a thought in our mind that could ever happen. We were just doing it because we loved it so much.

Showbams: That whole album in general really helped to expose the regional sound of Bay Area hip-hop, the style of the era, and eventually in 1997 the formation of your own record label. As an artist in charge of their own label, what can you say are some of the positive aspects of assuming complete responsibility over your work and what you put out?

Del: I guess it’s like anything you take total control over, it’s all up to you. So, if you know what you’re doing and you’re good at it and can stay on top of it, it can be great! But, you know you’re still going to need help from other people, no matter what you do. You’re going to need distributors, somebody to press something up or to make something happen for you, or whatever. So, it’s never just on you, but your creative output is.

It’s up to you whether people buy it or not, whether you’re hip enough to really communicate with your fans and be able to translate that into something people are going to want to buy. If you sign to a label, they’ve definitely got the money and the power to make you omnipresent. You can be everywhere at once, you know. Which might help you sell records or might not help you sell records, but if you’ve got something going they can help you take it to the next level.

I’m not against major labels, it’s just that they have so much money and stakes behind whatever it is they feel like they can have a say in the creative process. That’s pretty much the basis of it, everything’s got it’s ups and downs, pros and cons, you just gotta take it the way you want to take it. If you want to be a real big star then go and do it. Personally, I need some of my freedom and my privacy so I’m not really going that route.

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Showbams: A few years later, you synced up with Dan and Kid Koala to form Deltron 3030. Dan, you had been on the local scene for a minute working with Kool Keith on the whole Dr. Octagon project and Prince Paul on Handsome Boy Modeling School, along with various other collaborations. How did you guys meet up and eventually start Deltron 3030?

Dan: I mean we’re both in the Bay Area, so we probably knew a little bit about each other before we started working together. I originally got Del to work with us on Handsome Boy Modeling School, he did a couple songs on there and Del has always been one of my favorite rappers because he approaches it his own way, which kind matches in a sense to what I do because I approach it in my own way. Then, we got together and we’re all doing it our own way, and it works out pretty well. I mean, it could not work out, but it happens to work out.

Showbams: You guys have obvious commonalities between you three (Del, Dan, Kid Koala) evident in your musical background — locality and expertise in your crafts. How did you ultimately come to the decision to release your debut album in 2007 (Deltron 3030), as a concept album, something really different from what was going on stylistically within the industry?

Del: The “concept,” if you want to call it that, the major characterizations and stuff I guess you can say I created but really the continuity of the record, that’s all Dan.

Dan: Yeah, but it’s always like that. Del’s got this creative mind, like Del’s a poet who comes up with these great ideas that I can bring to life musically and in some ways conceptually. But it’s like he comes up with this stuff, like all the Deltron lyrics, (I mean I guess I do some of the choruses), but all the lyrics, like the rhyme lyrics are all Del. When you listen to them, he paints this incredible dystopian or futuristic or whatever thing and I just try to hang on for dear life and run with it.

You know, I think we challenge each other in a good way. Particularly, I don’t think it’s hard I think it’s just challenging, you know what I mean? Then we go and make records that are just the same. Even the second Deltron record, that wasn’t a challenge from me to him, it was a challenge from us against the world. What science fiction represents and what we thought we were doing. What I mean by that is like our first record was kind of a fun futuristic romp, but because of Del’s nature he had a lot of poignant points in there. Some people kind of took those to heart and we realized really that’s kind of the basis of science fiction and all the stuff that you roll with.

So then all of the sudden we have to be a little bit more cognizant of not just current events, but all events in general to be able to address the record the way it should be addressed. Quite frankly for me, it’s not whether it’s easy or hard, but those particular issues don’t affect me, they affect him more because he’s the one who has to come up and say the stuff. So, it was a matter of getting that to work, whereas for me I’m just sort of continuing to advance the craft.

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Showbams: Del, we know you’re a big video game and comic book fan …

Del: Yep, I just got a new one! It’s called “Hotline Miami” and basically you’re a dude, I guess it takes place in the 80’s in Miami and it’s like hella criminal activity. It looks like top-down graphics, like the first “Grand Theft Auto” before it was 3D and all that shit, like an Atari game. That’s kind of what it looks like. You’re basically a killer, wearing these different animal masks, like a walrus mask, a tiger mask, a rabbit mask, a chicken mask, and you go in these places. Somebody calls you and they give you some cock-a-meme story like, “OK, you got a date waiting for you at this address, hurry up. Don’t be late, make sure you do it good,” or whatever. Then, you go down there and you gotta murder all these fools.

Showbams: In a chicken mask?

Del: Haha, yeah in a chicken mask. But if you get hit once, you’re dead basically! So, you’ve gotta get through a whole level without getting touched. You gotta sneak around, kill one person and make sure they dead. You gotta jump on top of them and beat ‘en to death. It’s crazy, it’s super crazy. The music is good, everything.

Showbams: Is this a common interest of yours, Dan? Are you into video games or no?

Dan: No, not at all. Haha! I actually like video games, but once they got a little too in terms of uh … (Del shows the video game interface), see I can play something like that. I can’t play like the new, fluid graphic shit. I can play it when it’s pix-elated, but not when it’s all smooth, because then it just doesn’t seem right to me, I don’t know.

Showbams: Yeah, it gets a little too intense at that point.

Del: Yeah, yeah, yeah! It can make some people have like seizures and shit. They like have warnings about that.

Dan: I don’t think I have that kind of fear, but I just don’t like the vibe.

Del: I got an Xbox at the house though, I’m about to get the Playstation 4 and I’m about to get the Xbox 1. Playstation 4 is like, “Woah, I didn’t think games could get any better, right? Then I’ve seen the graphics and I was like, “Oh, oh okay.” It’s ridiculous, actually.

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Showbams: Now over a decade later, the long-awaited follow0up to your self-titled album, Event II finally dropped, the production of which has been rumored to have started as far back as around 2004.

Dan: It’s possible, yeah!

Del: I had the music for a long time.

Dan: But it’s changed a lot of course!

Del: The lyrics changed because pretty much everything I wrote got destroyed on a disc drive.

Dan: What we did was like we tried, but it wasn’t the right time. We tried and then it became the right time, but then the right time happened to be a lot longer than we thought it was going to be. When the fact of the matter is, not like it was better to take long but I got to say those years between doing it, a lot of shit happened in society that really … not like it gave us something to write about because we were planning on writing and talking about it anyway. But it kind of eventually, not proved what we were thinking but was really very illustrated points to what we were thinking.

Del: We had time to sit on it and think about it. Kind of reflect on that and the world. Let me say this too, it gave me a chance to really think about how I wanted to present this album. From my experience, sequels just really don’t come off that well. People always have a tendency to feel like their first experience was the best and nothing can ever top it no matter how good it is. So, I’m thinking about that and I’m like, “OK, I really want to make it to where people are going to really dig this.” Also, I wanted to think about how to come with it and how to write it.

I actually had to study how to write science fiction, and I just really thought about it because I noticed a lot of people who are really into sci-fi and may not even be into rap or music like that at all, but they were into Deltron. I wanted to come with it and kind of appeal to them as well. I recognize it’s kind of like a different thing that I’m challenged with and am glad that it took that amount of time. Then, when we really sat down and got to work and I lost my raps or whatever, he was coming with new music. It was so much more incredible than what he had before, so I was like, “OK, I’m going to write some more now!”

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Dan: The thing about Del is, it really only takes him about 10-15 minutes to come up with these incredible thoughts. Maybe you have to hone them or whatever, but it’s like me to where the genesis of getting to the point where you can do it is what takes a long time. The actual “doing it” part is just doing it. At the time, there’s always moments where you say, “I wish we could finish this or get started.” But in the big picture, you realize how complicated it is, especially when you see the final results. You realize how … it’s funny because he explained something to me, not that I didn’t think it was true, I just never really thought about it, in that everything’s not really that complicated. It’s all just the nature of man, you know? The basic tendencies — greed, power, money — and when you get down to that, it’s kind of like the crux of everything that happens.

I mean, even historically speaking, from England taking over 70 percent of the world, it’s the nature of man. Conquer, power, greed, destroy and the thing is, I always thought it was more of a complex thing. But really, it always comes down to that. When we’re thinking about this stuff and writing about this stuff, all these various things are coming true.

Then, when it actually came out, even stuff we wrote about that we had on the record came true after the record was released. It’s one of those things that’s a constant. It’s great to see that and get it. To be able to go, “Ahhh, I got this. I understand. This is the nature of man.” I feel like I became smarter making these records and that smarter isn’t unfortunately always good. It’s more like street smarts, where you realize everything’s fucked up.

Del: Nah, but it makes you appreciate the good things, though.

Dan: But you get what I’m saying, though. Like, as the layers unfold from shit, you realize it’s all the same fucked-up shit all over again. That’s all I’m saying.

Del: Now you see why I’m so dark with my shit. He was real helpful in keeping the project from getting like very dark and morbid. Even early on in the writing, he was like, “That’s cool, but you know maybe we should try to balance it with something a little bit less … ” You know what I mean?

Dan: And it is a balance and that was even proven, too. You got countries like Egypt having revolutions and you know Twitter is having a part of that. The man can’t shut down the information, or like Wikipedia, information is that power and the people have it because they can’t be subverted. You see all that. It all takes place. But although you have that power, you don’t necessarily have that money or that other kind of power, so you see the … well, not the negative because it’s all negative. It’s just, you see the hope, you know.

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Showbams: What’s interesting about your records is that there are sci-fi, fantasy and surrealistic themes running throughout the content. Do you feel like it’s easier to convey those messages and sociopolitical commentary through such mediums?

Del: I’ll tell you this, because last night after the show somebody came up to me and said, “You know, Del. I appreciate this album coming out, and I really dig the message that you have. I feel you, and I’m glad you’re getting it out to the people.” And in my mind, I’m thinking, “OK, I’m really glad you liked that message, but I’m not really even trying to put that out there.” Whatever you think the message is, I’m glad you love it so much. I wasn’t really trying to relay no message.

Dan: I think you’re right and that’s all true, what you’re saying I mean. But I think you do have a message in there and what I mean by that, you’re shit is not random thought. I think it ties together and when I say that … see the funny thing about Del is that this guy, doesn’t even own a TV.

Showbams: That’s good, that’s good.

Dan: Well, whatever. I own a TV, I watch a lot of TV so fuck you (laughs). Nah, just playing.

Showbams: You’re the first official “fuck you” I’ve had in an interview, I like it.

Dan: Nah, but like what I was saying is that he’s so astute with what’s going on. I don’t know how you get your information or where it trickles or siphons in from, there’s just tons. You know what I mean and I’m into that, I’m just saying.

Showbams: It does come through in a serious way, but like you were saying, not too dark.

Del: Yeah, I’m not trying to preach to nobody. I’m just getting my view out there and how I view it. I feel like I’m being correct, you know what I’m saying? Maybe other people don’t look at it the same way I do. But it’s out there for however you think, to interpret it any way you want to. I’m just trying to make it entertaining for people.

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Showbams: You’ve been on record saying that this album, especially Event II, is an album that has a full story to it. Can you give us a little “cliff notes” version if possible?

Del: Well, it basically has to do with what Dan was saying about power and corruption and how at the very essence it makes people do crazy stuff. In this situation, it just happens to be planetary cataclysmic, you know what I mean? It’s bigger than just a war on Planet Earth, they fucking everything up all over the galaxy. It’s like the stakes are higher, but still at the very essence, what we’ve always had to deal with. That’s pretty much what I want to try to illustrate. I want to get away from so much of the laser fire and super big whatever, all the technical stuff.

I wanted to get down to more the humane part of it so that anybody can listen to it and kind of feel it even if you aren’t a sci-fi fan. That’s one thing that I really wanted to get there, that the first one didn’t have. I’m not going to say it was “techno babble” because some people, I’ve read some reviews for it and they were kind of alluding to it as “techno babble,” which it isn’t. I was just kind of stream of consciousness using the vocabulary of science fiction and just having fun with it.

Dan: But see, there’s where I don’t … I mean, I was there and I’m not going to say that’s not all true, but the thing that’s different about it is just because of the way Del thinks the message gets in there. He may not be going, “Alright, I’m writing the message now,” but it works its way in there. Then, some stuff like “Virus”, where you’re right on top of things and even though you might be having fun with it, the fun you’re having is very profound. That’s what put us in our own trap. We trapped ourselves in the way that there’s a lot of message in this record, so we need to address the message, you know what I’m saying?

Showbams: On that note, what are your predictions for the future of Deltron 3030 and your role in the music industry within the next few years?

Del: Well, you know what at first I kind of was like “naaaahhh” because it takes too much work. But now, I kind of realize and I got this from skateboarding. I’m learning how to skate and trying to learn how to ollie, which takes a helluva lot of work! I kind of learned from that, that once you do “that,” you’ve done all the preliminary work. You don’t have to start over again. So you know, who knows? I like working with Dan a lot, though. I even like being on the road with Dan for this length of time, the whole band really. I’ve hella enjoyed it. I’ve been having hella fun with these guys. I would definitely like to work on some more stuff with them.

Dan: Yeah, you know me and Del have been around each other for a long time and I always feel good when we do stuff. It’s always good stuff, you know quality wise, but also there’s a certain … I mean, I’m a record producer and I work with a lot of people and you get what you get out of enjoyment or whatever. But we have a really good group of guys and we’re going out and having a great time. We’re smashing places, it’s a good combination, you know?

I think also the other thing is that we finally know what we need to do. I think it’s not that complicated on one level, it’s complicated on other levels, but on one level, we’re good. I think we had a lot of trouble breaking through on the second record, just understanding your place of what it means and what it is. I think that’s all done now. From that point, it could continue that way, it could jump off that way, but we now understand what it was.

If we did another record and everything blew up and we were all starting over, that’s a fantasy record again. But at least you know where you were standing to get to the next place. You know just taking what was the original Deltron 3030 that had a lot of thoughts in it, to where it is now and it really does have a moment and you get to where you are. You now have a solid platform to jump off of.

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Live music artists ignite the dawn of a smartphone backlash

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By Mike Frash //

Mobile technology and social media have advanced exponentially the past five to ten years, connecting scores of individuals that would have never met a decade ago, enabling us to share narcissistic musings and photos at a moment’s notice. (Unsurprisingly, “Selfie” is the “Word of the Year”.) Bottom line — It’s mostly a glorious thing to live in the age of information and rapidly expanding technology.

But holy shit do we misuse it sometimes. Our social behaviors frankly haven’t caught up to our relatively newfangled devices that are always available in our pockets and purses.

The Pope’s inauguration at the Vatican, in 2005 & 2013.


It’s all changed so quickly, hasn’t it? Communication abilities, access to content & opinions, the structure of web-based writing itself and a pervasive social media mentality have all collided and intermingled magnificently since Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone in 2007. Consequently a massive smartphone market has flourished, and a large majority of us have gotten a bit more ADHD.

Our collective focus and attention span have changed significantly, taking a turn for the horrible. It’s become second nature for many to plug-in to their smartphones while mentally checking out of their immediate surroundings, whether we’re riding the bus, enjoying drinks with friends or experiencing a concert.

Daniel Goleman, author of Focus: The Hidden Driver of Excellence, recently said, “We have a world that’s been engineered to distract us.” This can’t be denied when a Facebook update, tweet or Instagram upload is always only a finger tap or two away.

One of the most contentious issues revolving around smartphones today is crowd-based photography and videography at shows. A continuous lack of technology awareness from just one individual can inhibit the live music experience for those around the bright screen being held just above eye level. Not only is the screen-addicted cinematographer distracted, but so is everyone else, including the artists on stage.

So is this the new normal, or is this a trend that can be addressed and changed? There are a handful of artists that have spoken out this year, igniting what might be the roots of a mainstream “be where you are” backlash in the world of live music.

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In the year that Arcade Fire’s Win Butler crooned, “We fell in love when I was nineteen / And I was staring at a screen,” many artists have fought back against concert camera phone use, putting their proverbial foot down explicitly, politely and absurdly.

UK-based Savages fired the loudest, most forceful warning shot of 2013. The all-female foursome released their debut album Silence Yourself to critical acclaim, taking the ethos of the record on the road with them by banning phones based on the idea of immersion. For every show, they put up signs that read:

Our goal is to discover better ways of living and experiencing music. We believe that the use of phones to film and take pictures during a gig prevents all of us from totally immersing ourselves. Let’s make this evening special. Silence your phones.

That show at the Independent in San Francisco was special because of Savages’ intense, smart use of contrast and due to the room’s communal, energetic focus. The phone ban helped, keeping most devices out of sight.

Savages haven’t been alone this past year shaming phones at shows. Prince threatened to boot any patrons caught playing director on his west coast club tour, and the Artist excluded all media photographers outright. Yeah Yeah Yeah’s phone ban sign was way more punk than Savages’ nuanced approach, advising that ticket holders “PUT THAT SHIT AWAY.” Neko Case stopped her show in Cincinnati multiple times October 22, threatening to end the show early because of flashing phone photos, finally saying “Just put away the cameras. It isn’t going to kill you, but it might kill me.” David Byrne & St. Vincent, She & Him, The Polyphonic Spree & Bjork all prohibited phone photography or asked for devices to be put away mid-show this year as well.

Ever the groundbreaker, Jack White was the one to get the ball rolling in the summer of 2012. Rumor spread that the young living legend demanded that fans avoid social media and not take photos during his show, and the public backlash was surprising brutal. White’s label Third Man Records later clarified, “the only thing that we’ve ever asked of the audience is to not take pictures or videos while holding up their camera phones, etc that block other peoples view or otherwise hinder other fans concert experiences.” The message continued, “Along with that, the bigger idea is for people to experience the event with their own eyes and not watch an entire show through a tiny screen in their hand.”

Father John Misty performed through a giant iPhone on his recently wrapped solo tour. Perhaps J. Tillman wanted to treat the audience to the same visual that has been thrown in his face the past two years. But Father John Misty gets bonus points for referring to himself as “content.”

Father-John-Misty

Some artists are using mobile technology to enhance their live performance. Dan Deacon told his fans to download his interactive app before his show via a projected message at the venue. Then during one song late in the set, he instructed the audience to pull phones out, launch the app, and dance with it. Deacon controlled the color blasts and strobe effects that emanated from scattered smartphones, using the devices to bring the collective attention of the crowd together. Pretty Lights followed suit this year at Outside Lands with a much bigger audience.

So the possibilities for using our pocket computers to enhance the live music experience are out there and will likely gain steam.

Author Daniel Goleman explains the phenomenon quite effectively:

We all are carrying technological devices, our phones, our iPads, and whatever it may be, and they are diabolically designed to take advantage of the weaknesses of our attention system and nab us, and keep us nabbed. And so we’re constantly fighting distractions. That’s why, I think focus is more important than ever.

Phones-at-Shows

Certainly there is a difference between popping out your Android for 10 seconds to snap off a couple shots versus literally shooting an entire concert on your smartphone with it’s shitty sound recording capabilities.

The Festival Lawyer explained this best in his Upgrade article:

Maybe you might want to record the whole show on your iPhone (or now iPads? seriously?) and just stand there and focus on getting the best video and pics. I’m not here to judge or scold you. Although I do feel the need to point out that you will NEVER watch that stupid motherfucking shaky video again and you are watching something through a tiny screen that is actually happening really big and loud RIGHT IN FRONT OF YOU LIVE!!! (Umm…actually maybe I am judging you a tiny bit. Sorry.)

Ultimately, it’s about finding balance between capturing the moment and immersing in the moment.

When someone is shooting a song-long video during a show, staring through a screen version of their current reality, and thinking about their friends watching it on YouTube later, that person is simply not in the moment.

The musical moments that give us auditory pleasure and ingrain in our memories are significantly more powerful and important than anything that can be captured on a phone.

Just take a look at the Jimmy Kimmel crowd at their outdoor stage…

This is the new normal — we’re all photographers. (Granted, people that go to a free taping in Los Angeles don’t represent a typical concert crowd.)

We are moving toward a world where we are more connected to our phones than each other. Many of us (yes, including myself) are too damned dependent on digital devices.

It’s a bit scary to contemplate a generation born with Facebook accounts. A generation of kids that are given tablets to stop them from crying at a restaurant. A third generation that is routinely fed amphetamine-based drugs when focus is an issue, even though we don’t teach attention-based skill strategies (yet).

In his book, Goleman wrote, “Today’s children are growing up in a new reality, one where they are attuning more to machines and less to people than has ever been true in human history. That’s troubling for several reasons. For one, the social and emotional circuitry of a child’s brain learns from contact and conversation with everyone it encounters over the course of a day. These interactions mold brain circuitry; the fewer hours spent with people— and the more spent staring at a digitized screen— portends deficits.”

The problem here is way bigger than just experiencing a show through a smartphone.

Phone zombies can SnapChat all day if they want to, but it’s critical that we live in the moment as much as possible and enjoy who we are with. The key is to identify screen addiction, set new habits through cognitive control & repetition, and be where you are to the best of your ability in this distracting age of information.

Be-Where-You-Are


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WIN TICKETS: MellowHigh at the New Parish Tuesday, 11/26

MellowHigh_post

In a year where the Odd Future collective saw more focus on sub-groups and solo efforts, it’s no surprise to their fans when a newer project took spotlight over Tyler and Earl in the last few months of 2013. What do you get when you add Domo Genesis to the successful OFWGKTA offshoot called MellowHype? Well, you get MellowHigh (word play at it’s best?).

This trio featuring Hodgy Beats, Left Brain and Domo Genesis recently released a well received full-length self-titled album on OF Records. Their supporting road effort wraps up in Oakland at the New Parish and is sure to be a quality display of these 3 MCs. A more polished sound awaits fans of MellowHype while retaining their resin-infused stoner-gore raps that have put them on the map.

Buy tickets if you know you want to go.


Win 2 Free Tickets!
Enter to win if you can attend this show Tuesday, November 26 at the New Parish in Oakland.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Tuesday, November 26 at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one.

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CONTEST COMPLETE

WKEND MIXTAPE: Flume – The Mixtape

FLUME

Flume‘s four-disc deluxe edition released earlier this month, and it includes a jam-packed mix tape that layers male hip-hop, R&B and rap vocals over his self-titled debut, an album that has made the Australian DJ one of the fastest rising producers on the planet. Special guests include Killer Mike, How to Dress Well, Ghostface Killah, Autre Ne Veut, Twin Shadow and more.

It’s just over 20 minutes and length, yet it packs a wallop. In many ways, this makes Flume’s original record seem incomplete now that some of today’s fastest rising stars have added song-dominating rhymes — honestly, listening to the Flume originals feels a bit bare and empty after you hear this. Although, these masculine vocal stems should make Harley Streten’s live performance that much better.



TRACKLIST
Intro [feat. Stalley]
Space Cadet [feat. Ghostface Killah & Autre Ne Veut]
Insane [feat. Killer Mike & Moon Holiday]
Stay Close [feat. Boldy James, Alexander Spit & Aaron Cohen]
Holdin On [feat. Freddie Gibbs]
Change [feat. How To Dress Well]
Warm Thoughts [feat. Grande Marshall & Goldie Glo]
Sleepless [feat. Twin Shadow & Jezzabell Doran]
Hermitude: HyperParadise [feat. M.O.P.] (Flume Mixtape Version)

PHOTOS: JJ Grey & Mofro with The Stone Foxes at The Fillmore 11/15

JJ-Grey

Photos by Sterling Munksgard

JJ Grey & Mofro with The Stone Foxes
The Fillmore – San Francisco, CA
November 15, 2013

JJ Grey & Mofro, along with local favorites the Stone Foxes, lit up the Fillmore stage with a blend of rock and roll tinged with Southern blues, funkified soul and folky americana. This national tour has criss-crossed the states touring behind the release This River, and a ruckus crowd ate up JJ’s heartfelt ballads and grooved away to his jammed-out sonic odysseys.

WIN TICKETS: NOBUNNY at Brick & Mortar 11/23

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What does it sound like when gritty lo-fi garage is sweetened with a dose of bubblegum pop? Well, it sounds like a guy wearing a bunny mask losing his beans on stage on a regular basis under the moniker, NOBUNNY. Juston Champlin, aka NOBUNNY, has been cranking out a fully unique vision of poppy punk jams for over a decade via a bevy of buzzed indie labels such as 1-2-3-4 Go! Records, Burger Records, Third Man and most recently, Goner Records.

NOBUNNY thrives on the stage, and anyone in attendance at Brick and Mortar on Saturday night will be fully entertained. Hell, most will likely be bopping around in psychotic ecstasy along with this local San Francisco act. Support will be handled by Nubs, Primitive Hearts, G. Green and DJ Spaghetti Kevin so get there early to see these eclectic new bands.

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win 2 Free Tickets!
Enter to win if you can either show Saturday November 23 at Brick and Mortar Music Hall in San Francisco.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contests end Friday, November 22 at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one.

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CONTEST COMPLETE

WIN TICKETS: Albert Hammond Jr. at Slim’s 11/21

Hammond_post

Hot off the release of his solo EP on fellow bandmate Julian Casablanca’s Cult Records label, Strokes guitarist and keyboardist Albert Hammond Jr. will be headlining Slim’s this Thursday night! On tour promoting AHJ, the third release outside of his work with the iconic New York five piece, Hammond Jr. will be taking over SF’s gritty little rock club with opener Rathborne.

Following commercial success from his two previous efforts, (Yours to Keep and Como Te Llama?), Hammond Jr. takes a sober approach to songwriting with principle themes of love, growth and his recently publicized battle with drug addiction serving as the focal points of his five song AHJ EP. Filled with his signature guitar riffs and pristinely belting vocals, AHJ effortlessly delivers a polished, hook-laden collection of pop bliss compositions.

Getting ready to start the European leg of his tour, this Thursday will be the last stop of the AHJ run in CA. Shifting gear up to the Pacific Northwest before globetrotting overseas, you’re going to want to catch this pedigree of rock star when you can.

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win 2 Free Tickets!
Enter to win if you can attend this show Thursday, November 21 at Slim’s in San Francisco.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends November 21 at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one.

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CONTEST CLOSED

MDMA safety: Practical medical tips for ravers who choose to use ecstasy

1.Ravers

Follow the Festival Lawyer on Twitter // Photo by Sterling Munksgard

In writing the second part of this article about “Ecstasy Safety”, I found almost as many urban myths surrounding the medical aspects of Ecstasy as there are surrounding the legal aspects of the drug.

That’s why I’m super fortunate to be able to collaborate with Stefanie Jones and Missi Wooldridge from DanceSafe.

DanceSafe is a grassroots organization that promotes health, education and safety within the rave and festival community. DanceSafe is also one of the leading groups promoting “harm reduction” policies in the rave and festival community.

“Harm Reduction” is a public health philosophy that encourages policy choices at raves and fests that reduce the risks associated with the use of MDMA.

Think of this article as a form of ”Personal Harm Reduction”. What specific, practical medical tips should ravers who choose to use Ecstasy know?


2.MDMA_bag_commons

RAVER MEDICAL TIP #1
The Number One Risk in using MDMA isn’t actually using MDMA.

Woah. This first tip reads a bit like a Zen Koan. Allow me to explain what I mean.

People make irrational and illogical decisions when it comes to weighing perceived risks all the time.

I mean, we have a 5 second rule for foods because, “Oh God! I couldn’t possibly touch a Fig Newton off that disgusting floor.” And we put dainty paper rings down on our toilet seats to avoid the rampaging public health threat of TSTBDs (Toilet Seat Transmitted Butt Diseases).

But pass around an unknown powder which may or may not contain any active ingredient other than rat poison? All of a sudden it’s, “Let me hit that shit!…Is there enough for me?”

In preparing this article I had a chance to speak to Dr. Julie Holland, who ”wrote the book” on Molly in her book, Ecstasy: the Complete Guide: A Comprehensive Look at the Risks and Benefits of MDMA.

Turns out Dr. Holland puts “ingesting unknown substances into your body” into the “risk” rather than “benefit” category of Ecstasy usage:

What’s happening these days, though, is you have no idea what you’re taking. Maybe it’s MDMA, but it could also be any other number of drugs, research chemicals, or prescription drugs. When someone buys “Ecstasy” or “Molly” maybe it’s MDMA, but it’s very possible it could be anything else you can think of. A bag of white powder is inherently very dangerous since you have no idea what’s in it.

Missi Wooldridge at DanceSafe makes the same point. Unless you have a testing kit, you literally have NO idea what you are putting in your body

What is sold as Molly is often a mystery powder and may not contain MDMA at all. Most frequently, it contains a new psychoactive substance such as those from the family of Cathinones (i.e., Mephedrone, Methylone, Butylone or MDPV). Other common adulterants include 2C(x); PMA/PMMA, mCPP, and other Piperzines; and Methamphetamine. NEVER obtain drugs from a stranger!

In his recent article for Forbes Magazine, Jacob Sollum put it this way…. “Molly these days is the shit… but not in a good way”.

(PS – Here is a bonus Zen Koan tip. That tree falling in the forest without anyone there? It definitely makes a sound. Leave your iPhone in the forest and hit that red “record” button if you don’t believe me…Boom. Done. I just totally saved you a trip to a Zen monastery.)


3.dancesafe_test-kit

RAVER MEDICAL TIP #2
Unless you happen to be crazy, test your Stuff.

Okay, so Ecstasy/Molly may contain things you had no idea you were putting in your body. Like what? Well, for example, there are synthetic Cathinones, a common ingredient in those “bath salts” that supposedly turn people into flesh-eating zombies. (FYI, Stefanie Jones says that of all the pills tested by DanceSafe, less than half contain actual MDMA.)

Given that, Tip 2 should be pretty obvious — You have to be crazy to use an unknown powder without having it tested.

I asked Missi why she advocates so strongly for testing kits to be available for use at raves and festivals:

I advocate for testing kits because NOT providing them is morally and medically negligent. The other side of this is how highly adulterated substances are now. Until we screen/test people’s substances, we aren’t doing anything at all to reduce the risk of people taking adulterated substances at these big events where we are seeing tragedies.

Another huge reason for testing your stuff is the danger of unintentionally mixing substances. Experts usually have some idea what one drug may do to you. But when you combine it with another drug, you are basically a “drug guinea pig”. That’s because it’s so difficult to predict how two drugs will react together in an individual.

This issue of these so called “drug cocktails” came up in the Electric Zoo deaths as well. Toxicology tests showed that the young woman (Olivia Rotondo) died from acute intoxication after taking pure MDMA. However, the young man (Jeffrey Russ) had actually taken a fatal mixture of MDMA and Methylone.

Missi uses the term “morally and medically negligent” to describe the decision not to test an unknown substance. I would describe the decision to not to test as falling into the “Don’t you know I’m loco? Insane in the membrane. Insane in the brain!” level of crazy decision-making.

DanceSafe provides adulterant screening on site at events when they are allowed to do so. But if you are going to “roll responsibly”, you need to buy and use your own test kits.


5.Chill-Out-Area

RAVER MEDICAL TIP #3
Take steps to properly hydrate and chill out.

Every music audience seems to have it’s own mood altering substance of choice. When I saw Snoop Dogg at Coachella, he came out with a gigantic blunt and encouraged the audience to “light up”. This might have been the most unneeded direction given by a performer to an audience ever. I don’t think there was anyone there who was NOT smoking weed.

On the other hand, if you go to a “rave”, chances are high some folks will be using Ecstasy. But the combo of high-energy dance music and “rolling” can be dangerous without taking precautions.

That’s because MDMA (and Methylone, which is one of the most common things in Molly), and Methamphetamine all work in part by increasing your heart rate and blood pressure and body temperature. Dancing for hours uninterrupted by breaks, especially in hot temperatures and with other people packed together does the same thing. It’s this combo of raving and rolling that can potentially be lethal.

I asked Dr. Holland what she would tell a raver taking MDMA to do to increase their safety:

To increase safety, there needs to be chill out rooms, free water readily available, and a lot of outreach and education. People need to be instructed to take breaks, drink water or electrolyte solutions, not alcohol or energy drinks, and also not too much water, which can be dangerous. Try to only replace fluids lost by sweating.

As Jules Winnfield would tell you, “we all have to be like Little Fonzies…and what’s Fonzie like? …Cool.”

So everyone just needs to be cool and everything is fine, right? Well not really. That’s because you can’t just hydrate and chill out and solve the danger. The problem is that MDMA causes fluid retention, especially in women, and hyponatremia (overhydration) can also be lethal.

For a while, people in the community were treating water like a “toxic drug flush”. The myth has been floating around (ha! see what I did there?) that if you just drank enough water that it would flush out the bad stuff in your body. But that’s not true. Water is an antidote to dehydration, not to the effects of Ecstasy or other drugs. You have to be careful hydrating too.


4.Chill-Out-Area

RAVER MEDICAL TIP #4
Make sure your Festival buddies are okay.

As I mentioned in a previous article, making a commitment to be responsible for your friend’s safety at an event is the “Golden Rule” of being a good Festival Buddy.

I asked Missi Wooldridge what a Festival Buddy should know to be able to take care of their buddy who takes Molly:

This may be stating the obvious, but LOOK OUT FOR YOUR FRIENDS and never let someone wander alone. Drink water and replenish electrolytes. Take breaks and cool down. Communicate with someone around you if you start to feel overwhelmed or are having a difficult experience. If someone around you seems fatigued, confused, or is having a difficult time breathing and/or standing on their own two feet, get them somewhere safe to sit and cool down. Seek onsite medical personnel.

I started to dedicate a portion of this article to talk about what symptoms or signs people should be looking for when it comes to determining if their fest buddy is overdosing or having a bad reaction. But I realized it would be safer and smarter to direct you to two resources that answer these questions in more detail.

First of all, I encourage you to look at the DanceSafe advice page talking about how to avoid dehydration, heat exhaustion, and heat stroke.

It’s also a good idea to download the DanceSafe app. (it’s just Android App right now but IOS shortly). The emergency response sections of the app talks a great deal about what to do if you feel your friend is overdosing or having a “bad trip”.


Boom Festival, one of the largest Psytrance Festivals on the planet, is a great example of how drug checking has been integrated into a festival event.

Boom Festival, one of the largest Psytrance Festivals on the planet,
is a great example of how drug checking has been integrated into an event.



RAVE MEDICAL TIP #5
Festivalgoers should only attend events where the promoters encourage “harm reduction”.

In 2002, Senator Joe Biden attempted to pass a bill called the RAVE act in Congress. When opposition to the bill started to organize, they changed the name to the Illicit Drug Anti-Proliferation Act of 2003, attached it to the popular Amber Alert legislation and quietly snuck it into law.

The bill basically makes it illegal for for anyone to “knowingly” put on an event that has the purpose of “using, distributing or manufacturing any controlled substance.”

This is why promoters and festival organizers are in such a tough spot. They know that if they allow test kits and other “harm reduction” activities they are potentially exposing themselves to civil and criminal liability.

Why? Well, because someone after the fact may say, “see they KNEW there were going to be people using Ecstasy at this event. They even had test kits to help them use it!”

On the other hand, if they don’t take basic “harm reduction” steps (chill out rooms, medics on hand, plenty of water available) they get accused of not taking care of their audience and could potentially end up with people getting hurt or killed.

Missi Wooldridge thinks the key is for promoters and raves and fests to integrate “harm reduction” services while at the same time adopting a “zero tolerance” drug policy:

There is a thin line, but the line is walkable. If you familiarize yourself with the NEWIP and TEDI project, these are great examples of how government, public health officials, and the nightlife industry can come together to improve the quality of life for this community. Boom Festival in Portugal is a great example of how drug checking has been integrated into the event.

Remember a few articles back when I wrote about needing to bring back the second “R” in PLUR? The one promoting “Responsibility”? To me the “Second R” means encouraging promoters and club/venue owners to adopt and promote harm reduction practices and policies. It also means not supporting or attending events that don’t follow these practices.

I’m trying, Ringo. I’m trying real hard with this article to be the shepherd. But honestly, people in the dance community themselves are the only ones who can fix this problem. They can do that by demanding safe events. And if they don’t see harm reduction policies in place, they can force change by not going to that event again.


7.DanceSafe-Table

RESOURCES
Join and promote organizations like Dance Safe that promote harm reduction

As you can tell, I am a big fan of DanceSafe. I have all their albums.

DanceSafe provides on site harm reduction services, both stationary and mobile to events. Typically, they will set up a table and provide patrons with condoms, water, ear plugs, sunscreen, unbiased drug information, and adulterant screening (upon approval). They also provide a safe space for people to cool down and have healthy conversations about the drug use and their health.

Go like them on Facebook or follow them on Twitter @dancesafe.

Once again, huge thanks to Missi Wooldridge and Stefanie Jones for all their time and attention to this article. This is collaboration in the best sense of the word.


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Steve Aoki gives SF champagne wishes and cake-in-your-face dreams

Aoki_post1Photos by Sterling Munksgard // Written by Mike Frash //

Steve Aoki with Borgore, Waka Flocka Flame, Keys N Krates, Kryoman //
Bill Graham Civic Auditorium – San Francisco
November 16th, 2013 //

Steve Aoki did his best to prove the internet wrong last Saturday in SF by mashing together old favorites with new jams for a hyperactive, sold-out performance on his “Aokify America Tour.” But that’s not to say his Bay Area stop wasn’t layered in sweet and sticky spectacle, too.

In the world of EDM these days, Aoki and cake have become somewhat synonymous as you can see from the crowd signs in our photos below. The genre-bending, Grammy-nominated DJ, who began his music career while in college at UC Santa Barbara, has made a habit out of tossing a huge cake in the face of whoever he thinks deserves it the most.

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His cake-lore spread further this past summer at VELD Music Fest when Aoki caked a dude being held up in his wheelchair 80 feet away from the stage. Bullseye! Aoki also brought along his massive neon-lit robots and inflatable rafts for ragers to go on faux whitewater adventures above the crowd.

Israeli multi-hyphenate Borgore, a DJ, producer, singer-songwriter and rapper, preceded Aoki with stage aesthetics that revolved around strippers, poles, pasties and champagne that kept the young crowd in a hyper-sexualized state of mind. Waka Flocka Flame, meanwhile, curated the crazy early on with a high-energy set that forced the Kandi kids and cake heads to pump and jump early.

Big Freedia bounces through the City

Big-Freedia_post

Written by Kevin Quandt // Photos by Pedro Paredes

Big Freedia with NanosauR, DJ Morale
The Independent – San Francisco
November 15th, 2013

Big Freedia knows how to throw a party. Fact. His dancers have supernatural control over their midsection. Fact. Bounce music is played loud. Fact. These are just a few of the truths that one comes across while at a Big Freedia live show. Luckily all were splendidly present at the Indy on this Friday night. It was pretty clear to see that folks in attendance were looking to cut loose as the dancing and revelry before the headliner was through the roof. Cliques of friends got down to a mix of trap and booty bass from opener Nanosaur before the Queen Diva took the stage around 11:30.

He, and his dance crew, jumped onto stage in a flurry and hopped right into what they do best: shaking ass and takin names. “Na Who Mad” was the first track of the night, and it got a massive response from the boisterous, widely eclectic crowd that jumped about and did their best to emulate the ‘pro twerkers’ up on stage (they would later have there time to shine). But, valiant efforts all around San Francisco.

@KJQuandt

WIN TICKETS: Latyrx at the Independent 11/20

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Bay Area Hip Hop duo Latyrx (Lyrics Born and Lateef the Truthspeaker) bring their brand of alternative hip hop to The Independent Wednesday in support of their newest record, appropriately titled The Second Album. With this full length, the pair display a more mature and politically charged message, while still being thankful for their roots. These legendary local MCs have been dealing rhymes for decades, first collaborating in 1996 with their debut titled The Album. The pair went their separate ways for nearly 16 years and now they have returned to spit fire for local fans November 20th in SF.

Supported by Forrest Day and hosted by The Gift of Gab & Chief Xcel of Blackalicious, this show will showcase of some of the Bay Area’s finest hip hop talent, so get on it!

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win 2 Free Tickets!
Enter to win if you can attend this show Wednesday, November 20 at The Independent in SF.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Wednesday, November 20 at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one. 21+ only.

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CONTEST COMPLETE

Anna Calvi’s vocal range & intense guitar mesmerize in SF

Anna-Calvi_postPhotos by Marc Fong // Written by Nikki DeMartini //

Anna Calvi with Sandy’s //
The Independent – San Francisco
November 17th, 2013

Crimson-lipped and humbly fashionable Anna Calvi graced the stage with her band just before 10 p.m. on Sunday as the hauntingly alluring “Suzanne and I” opened the show.

The captivating performance yielded respect from the audience as they quietly watched, letting Calvi shine. Comparable to the likes of pint-sized heavy hitter PJ Harvey, Calvi’s powerful and eclectic vocal range consistently mesmerized, especially during “Eliza” and “Suddenly” on her 2013 LP One Breath.

Anna-Calvi

The only element that came close to outshining Calvi’s singing were her own guitar licks. Intense riffs laced just about every song of the set, and “Sing to Me” delivered an aggressive solo that reaped an appreciative applause from engaged fans. This type of dominant guitar playing from a woman evoked memories from Liz Phair’s 1993 debut Exile in Guyville, which paved the way for female musicians to rock hard in the 21st century.

With her rich range of falsettos and baritones, Calvi’s intricate, bluesy vocals and pop undertones are a unique pairing, striking a soulful cord that will stick to your bones.

Toro y Moi showcases live music progression at Fox Theater Oakland

Toro-Y-Moi_postPhotos by James Nagel // Written by Molly Kish //

Toro y Moi with Classixx (live)
Fox Theater Oakland – Oakland
November 15th, 2013

Toro y Moi emerged at the Fox Theater Oakland last weekend with a charming aura of confidence he communicated through his beaming, mile-wide smile. Just one week after his 27th birthday, Chaz Bundick looked happy to be home, celebrating belatedly amongst his East Bay friends, family and fans. Traveling non-stop throughout 2013 promoting his critically acclaimed third studio album Anything in Return, Bundwick embraced the local love Friday at the band’s final West Coast date of their tour. Following an electronic amuse-bouches of a set from Los Angeles-based DJ duo Classixx, Toro y Moi wasted no time continuing the dance party already set in motion by the opener.

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Jumping straight into back to back tracks off the 2013 release, Toro y Moi got the crowd immediately moving with Anything In Return party-starters “Harm in Change” and “Never Matter”. The enthusiastic audience immediately responded, singing and bobbing along to the band’s funky signature style. Heavily influenced by jazz, two-step and elements of deep house, Toro y Moi’s live show usually highlights the group’s steamy R&B tracks and chill-wave dance favorites. Riding off of the energy of the nearly packed house though, saucy songs like “High Living” and “Grown Up Calls” remained on the set list but we’re revamped into much harder hitting, fast paced jams. Pulsating baselines, heavy synths and disco percussion filled the air, amplifying the groove-induced venue into a hot mess of pheromones and funk.

The theater’s general admission area got real sexy, really quick and only further intensified with Chaz Bundick’s intoxicating vocals and penchant for extended live mixing. By the time the opening notes of the set finale “So Many Details” drifted across the crowd, the audience had fully ignited. The climactic bongo crossed over into a psych-rock jam, playing out as a testament to Toro y Moi’s genre-bending capabilities and incredible aptitude as musicians. Showcasing the diversity of the band’s material, Chaz Bundick exhibited his expertise as vocalist, producer and overall center-piece of Toro y Moi.

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Nowhere near ready to call it an evening, the packed venue screamed the band back onstage for a dance-heavy encore. Featuring club banger “I Can Get Love” off the 2011 EP Freaking Out, along with two more newer cuts, Toro y Moi kept the party going for a full hour and a half set. Growing leaps and bounds since we’ve last seen him during his First City Festival set and Noise Pop showcase, Chaz Bundick seems to have truly come into his own as an artist.

Rounding out the rest of their current tour at festivals and in Europe, it would be wise to catch Toro y Moi while they’re still playing mid-sized venues comparable to Fox Theater Oakland. Chaz Bundick shows no signs of slowing down — he has branched out already into several dance side projects and he’ll continue to produce as Toro y Moi. A natural born tastemaker, he has predicted and influenced what is most likely the next wave of dance music to break through to the mainstream.

@MollyKish

Quit your job and travel: 11 songs for inspiration

Travel

Let’s be honost, traveling is a pretty awesome experience. If you have the opportunity to abandon life’s routines and take on adventures far from home, you probably should do it.

So many countries actually encourage young people to go traveling abroad before settling down into a job and a family life. The United States has never embraced this, which isn’t surprising for a country that doesn’t value vacation or family proximity like other countries (see everywhere else).

Sometimes you just have to take a leap. Quit your job, say goodbye to your friends, spend most of your money and go have the time of your life. Experience new things and meet new people.

Listen to these 11 tracks from the last year for further inspiration.

Travel


John Talabot – “Journeys” feat. Ekhi

If you are doing it right, travelling is a collection of journeys, or one long journey. “Journeys” is one of the standout tracks from John Talabot’s 2012 record fin, and “running away with me” is the repetitious hook that will ingrain in your brain until you book your one-way flight.


Wild Nothing – “Paradise”

The best part about going on an international journey is discovering an ideal place that is hard to leave. It’s often good policy to keep moving if you don’t like a shitty destination, but settle in if you find your version of paradise.


Hot Chip – “Look at Where We Are”

That moment when you look around, make eye contact with your travelling partner, and acknowledge the overwhelming beauty around you – this moment is irreplaceable. And this usually only can happen if you challenge yourself to get somewhere.


Van She – “Idea of Happiness”

To those stricken with wonderlust, the idea of happiness is not knowing where you will go, where you will stay, or who you will meet.


Delicate Steve – “Positive Force”

Travel has it’s ups and downs, especially if you are going for an extended adventure. Shit happens, like missing your bus and sleeping at the station all night or you might get swindled or robbed. It’s OK. Be the positive force of your travel group.


JJ – “Beautiful Life”

You have no responsibilities except where you are going, what you are doing, and what you are consuming. It’s a dog’s life. It’s a beautiful life.


Vacationer – “Good As New”

Sometimes the best reason to go on a jaunt or extended travel is to get rejuvenated, to reboot your mentality or shake things up. This cut from Vacationer will make you feel as good as new, even if you’re stuck in a cubicle.


Liars – “No.1 Against the Rush”

Methodically moving with no set schedule can be key to freeing yourself. Don’t rush it. Take time to look around and absorb your surroundings.


Conner Youngblood – “Australia”

While this track from Australian singer/songwriter Conner Youngblood may be specific to a certain place, it’s sure to help you break out of your bubble.


Kavinsky – “ProtoVision”

Need a more upbeat kickstart to leave it all behind? Get your kinetic energy flowing in the form of crunchy beats. If life is static, break out of your mold and change something.


Bright Moments – “Tourists”

There are travelers and there are tourists, and the difference is that tourists don’t adapt. So many aspects to travelling absolutely suck, but focus on the good things when you get low and want to head home. You’ll wish you kept moving once you give in to being homesick.

Thundercat’s intergalactic funk takes flight

Thundercat2Photos by James Nagel // Written by Kevin Quandt

Thundercat with Real Magic and The Seshen
The Independent – San Francisco
Novemeber 13th, 2013

So, most guys born in the early 80’s automatically think of Lion-O, Tygra and WilyKat when they hear the word Thundercat, and though those cats were pretty radical, they don’t quite thrill the adult-in-me as much as the bass playing namesake. Children’s cartoon comparisons aside, Stephen Bruner, aka Thundercat, brought the progressive space-funk to the Independent in a very big way. A chilly fall evening didn’t stop the incredibly diverse crowd from showing up early and staying till the last note.

Direct support to Thundercat was handled by Oakland’s own Real Magic. Yes, another live producer who sings, but this one brings something a little different to the table. Though Real Magic did have an large array of mixers and synths on hand, it was his singing that tended to be the emphasis in this performance. He occasionally strapped on a guitar, but it didn’t add a whole ton to the amalgam already being pumped from various digital sources. Luckily, Real Magic represented a decent variety of sounds; from Matthew Dear-inspired microhouse to higher BPM takes on jungle music. Expect to hear more from this Bay Area producer as he starts to gain more fans and play larger rooms.

Thundercat

Thundercat is truly a chameleon. Whether it’s a past stint as drummer for punk outfit Suicidal Tendencies or as studio session cat for the likes of Snoop Dogg and Erykah Badu, Stephen Bruner cannot be confined to one direction. Some folks might know his name from his production/DJ persona, too, but it’s the fully live setting that he shines as a leader, writer and performer. The trio cruised out, and the first thing the crowd noticed was the gargantuan 6-string bass attached to the headliner. At times it looked, even sounded, more like a sitar than a bass guitar.

Once tuned up, the band launched into the space odyssey entitled “Daylight”, which stretched well past it’s studio length as Bruner flexed his chops as his phalanges danced up and down the exaggerated fretboard. The occasional lyrics were smoothly crooned out as the frontman repeated phrases like, “Open up your mind.” Other song highlights included a take off his latest release Apocalypse, that goes by the name “Lotus and the Jondy”. Bruner wasn’t the only talented member gracing the stage, because his band had serious chops, especially the touring drummer who had a nice little solo in the previous song. “We’ll Die” is a heavy-themed song that relies heavily on Thundercats’ soaring vocals. Subject matter in the lyrics tends to run the gamut of subjects, but no subject is off limits, whether it’s casual drug use or the loss of a dear friend and fellow musician (“A Message for Austin”).

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Though the songs are stellar, it was musicianship that was the headline for this evening. The arrangements were very complex and masterfully played as the majority of those in attendance were more into gawking at the chops than moving their dancing feet. Hell, there were segments that were almost too fast to move your feet to. The jazziness of the playing might have caught some ‘first-timers’ off guard, but it was a pleasure to this writer who couldn’t help but hear some comparisons to progressive funk acts like Garaj Mahal. The keyboard player was a master at pitch shifting his notes, which added to the overall feeling of the music taking flight, basically orbiting in deep space. “Oh Sheit It’s X” would close the show as Bruner wanted to do his best leaving the crowd enthused, maybe even euphoric on a chilly Wednesday.

@KJQuandt

WIN TICKETS: Anna Calvi at the Indy 11/17

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British singer/songwriter Anna Calvi will bring her unique brand of ominous tango to the Independent this Sunday. Known for her beautiful yet tragic vocals and intensely masterful guitar playing, Calvi’s talent has attracted attention from fans worldwide as she embarks on a worldwide tour through Spring 2014.

Releasing her self-titled debut in 2011 on Domino Records, Calvi impressed the masses, including her mentor and album-background vocalist Brian Eno. After winning accolades from the European press and receiving award nominations, including the Mercury Music Prize, Calvi hit the ground running. She returns to the Bay this weekend celebrating the release of her second full length, One Breath. Drawing inspiration from composer John Adams, Steve Reich and hours choral music immersion, Calvi recorded her latest work in just six weeks. Focusing the running theme of “One Breath” relates to the act of opening oneself up and embracing the exhilaration and fear that can often produce ambiguous outcomes — Calvi’s fearlessness as a performer reverberates throughout.

Her live show is lauded for echoing cinematic overtones and offering an operatic-based motif, so commit to spending a hauntingly lovely Sunday evening with Anna Calvi. Register below for your chance to win tickets, courtesy of Showbams.

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win 2 Free Tickets!
Enter to win if you can attend this show Sunday, November 17 at The Independent in SF.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Friday, November 15 at 2pm. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one. 21+ only.

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