01/06/2011

I credit my (continuing) time at KUCI in college for exposing me to the insane amount of music available in this world. Without it I would be nothing. Upon arriving at the station, I began to slowly ingest CDs and records, without very much rhyme or reason. One of the first CDs that I recall pulling from the experimental section was by a band called Goa. I put it on the CD player and was at first mildly intrigued by the first track, three minutes of nice synthesizer noodling up and down scales atop of washes of more synth, live drums, samples, whatever. Later I would feel this similar to Vision Creation Newsun-era Boredoms, but at the time I wasn’t so apt to make the comparison despite having heard the record.

Then I heard the second track, and I to be honest, I don’t remember what my response was, other than: “I want to hear this song again.” Now, I am at least two or three iTunes libraries and/or hard drives removed from when I originally ripped this CD to my computer, but I have to estimate that I listened to this song hundreds of times in the coming months. My search for information on Goa yielded few results, and the rest of the album, while great, did not have the visceral energy of “Biyah.”

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

This song was like nothing I’d really ever heard at the time. The processed gibberish vocals, the minimal synth melody, the unfathomably propulsive rhythm section, and perhaps most of all, the way that the song completely and brokenly raged at full volume out the gate, like an alarm alerting a imminent but not unavoidable nuclear meltdown. It’s unbearably chaotic but control is not out of sight; the rhythm section grounds the other players in a sort of limbo. The pandemonium is slowly but surely being subdued but another potential disaster might be right around the corner.

I’m pretty sure this song built some sort of chamber in my psyche, putting a sound to a thought that had not known how to express itself prior. Today, I listened to the song in the first time in a long while, and I realized almost immediately that both the music I make as part of Moon Pearl and the music I strive to make in general, and furthermore, all the qualities I love the most in music, are exemplified in total by this song. It hit really hard! New sounds, passionate playing, boundless energy, apparent positivity, in a holistic and fully dynamic multi-timbre assault. With lots and lots of repetition.

Last.fm says that this recording/album was made by some folks from Montreal’s Alien8 and associated scene. That makes sense, I think. I guess they have released some more stuff since 2002, I’m gonna buy it immediately.

01/06/2011

A couple notes on Moon Pearl:

There’s a new edition of Pearl Jams, this time in a jewel case. Features the same intergalactic bikini goddess turned to the right and sprawled across the spine and back cover. A lone rhinestone bedazzles the spine, and a small but informative insert graces the insides. 24 copies like this.

There’s a Moon Pearl tour next weekend, it’s like this:

1/13 :: Irvine / Acrobatics Everyday with Tan Dollar, Dash Jacket, The Lovely Bad Things, Ugly Girls, Airborne Age, Dagha Bloom, Martin and Joey, Coastlines / $5, 8PM
1/14 :: San Luis Obispo / Lightning Force HQ (2033 Swazey) with Magic Fingers, Siblings, Eat Tea / $3, 7PM
1/15 :: San Francisco (Early) / Sub-Mission with Religious Girls, Mason Lindahl, Tears Club / $5, 6PM
1/15 :: Oakland (Late) / TBA
1/16 :: Sacramento / The Hub with Pregnant, Appetite, Produce Produce / $5, 8PM

There are a lot of very good and dear friends playing with us on this small sojourn and it is so exciting to bring our 8-strong crew out.

I also added iTunes links to all releases in the catalog that are available there.

01/03/2011

OK, so sale’s over, also these things:

Pregnant is trekking down to rainy southern California today to play a couple sets. He will be at Origami Vinyl in Echo Park this evening, Monday, January 3rd 2011; tomorrow morning, he’ll be live at Dublab on the internet.

Friday, Dash Jacket will play Origami Vinyl to put a cap on their year-end/start travels. This is rescheduled from mid-December, and now they do in fact have their “Leisure Burn” 7″s.

Here’s a video shot by the singular TERROREYES.TV a few weeks ago in Sacramento:

I’ve spent a good part of 2011 thus far listening to Life’s Blood’s class of 2010 and being very happy and humbled to have been able to be a part of the incredible works of so many talented artists with equally friendly and idiosyncratic personalities.

I think I forgot to share this song before, but Erika from the deceased GOWNS recently put up on the internet a song from her “new”/”ongoing” solo project EMA (her initials, which in text look so commanding and unfathomable). It’s called “The Grey Ship” and it’s totally incredible both in concept and execution:

EMA – The Grey Ship by earfood99

I’ve just made this zip file of songs I liked from releases dated 2010. I’ve consciously not included any Life’s Blood material. 15 tracks that made 2010 memorable, or maybe the other way around?