De La Soul classic dissected by United States of Audio

“Now waaaaaiit a minute!” People are really pulling out the stops for the Solid Steel 25th year anniversary guest mixes at the moment. Last week Gilles Peterson not only made a Brit Funk mix but also a special video promo to go with it.

This week though, sees the return of United States of Audio aka Dave Trigg with what I’m already calling ‘Mix of the Year’. Riffing off the same idea as our Paul’s Boutique’ reconstruction last year, he takes on De La Soul‘s  classic ‘3 Feet High & Rising’ LP. I’ll turn it over to Dave for the explanation:

“Several years in the making (well it’s an idea that’s been knocking around for a while anyway!), and including around 100 tracks, this is my personal tribute to De La Soul’s ‘3 Feet High and Rising’. Using original sample sources, album tracks, interviews and rarities, ‘How High’s The Water Mama’ tells the story of one of hip hop’s most influential albums.

When De La Soul’s debut album dropped in 1989 I was ten years old. Yet, by some stroke of amazing good fortune a cassette copy of ‘3 Feet High and Rising’ found its way into my hands thanks to my best mate’s older brother (though I’m pretty sure said brother had no idea of this fact!). The music was a revelation and had a significant influence in shaping my musical tastes – in fact I can’t think of any other album that has had such a profound effect on me as this one. Thus ‘3 Feet High and Rising’ holds a special place in my musical affections. Now, some twenty-five years after its original release, it’s time to pay my respect to Pos, Dove, Mase, and Prince Paul…”

The pace and flow of this mix is a masterclass in how to put songs together and the ease with which he balances the sonics of a huge number of vastly different genres can only have meant hours of mixdown time. The reconstruction of the ‘Cool Breeze On The Rocks’ section is worth the price of admission alone (with a great nod to Solid Steel too). It gives a fresh take on ‘3 Feet…’ and reminds you of how many great songs they recontexualised within it. It’s also a history lesson, with interview segments where the band talk about the making of the album, the hippy tag and the sample lawsuits.

This is the one to beat in 2013. Also, in a bizarre coincidence, the latest issue of Wax Poetics features De La talking about the making of the very same album.

Super Satanic Saturdays

It’s difficult enough to get a handle on the various activities and schemes of Psychedelic Satanism that Jason Atomic has his hand in.

Just to say that this weekend sees the first of his Super Satanic Saturdays at the Resistance Gallery.

Go to the Satanic Mojo blog for more background info on the upcoming comic and exhibition based on his exploits. The video above gives you an idea of where he’s heading, sounds right up my street.

Posted in Art, Comics, Event, Film. | No Comments |

Bonobo ‘Cirrus’ zoetrope 12″

Finally, after a couple of teases by Ninja Tune, I can show this beauty off, something that’s been in the pipeline for a while now. Today is Bonobo‘s big gig at the Roundhouse, a full day of music curated by Simon Green and rounded off with a performance by him and his band. With the likes of Gilles Peterson, Machine Drum, The Invisible, Adam Buxton’s Bug, a Boiler Room-hosted space and Solid Steel broadcasting snippets of the event on the web, it should be epic. To make it even more epic 500 lucky golden ticket winners will each receive one of these 12″ zoetrope picture discs of his already classic track, ‘Cirrus’.

I took the original archive loops from Cyriak‘s incredible video for the track and broke them down into circular visuals to make a spinning animated version. Dating back to the first primitive animation techniques of our time, the zoetrope relies on a viewer to see the action happen. This is included with the disc along with assembly instructions so that people can watch while the disc plays. See the above film for an approximation of what the disc does when spinning.

This is all rounded off by a beautiful Leif Podhajsky design on the reverse side. Lovely.

Image Duplicator Opening at Orbital last night


The Image Duplicator show opened last night at the Orbital Gallery and was a great success with artists and punters out in force. The standard of work was excellent and centre stage was Dave Gibbons with his take on Lichtenstein‘s ‘Whaam!’, retitled ‘Whaat!?’ He graciously signed and chatted to all and was a thoroughly top bloke. Rian Hughes and Jason Atomic did a fine job organising everything, as did Mark Blamire in getting all the prints made and packaged up for people to buy. Prints of selected items are available to buy online here.

Special mentions for Garry Leach who turned up with a newly finish Popeye piece called ‘Plop Art’, complete with toilet roll, and Michelle Amir‘s Barbie car hosting a couple apeing ‘In The Car’. Massive thanks to Karl and everyone at Orbital Comics as well for hosting it at their gallery and providing hospitality. I was so pleased to be a part of it and even managed to sell my piece too! Second comic-related result of the week. The show is on at the Orbital Gallery inside Orbital Comics, 8 Great Newport Street, London, WC2H 7JA until May 31st after which it moves to the A&D gallery in Chiltern St.

For more photos see Steve Cook’s ever-excellent Secret Oranges blog or Rich Johnston‘s Bleeding Cool feature
.

Posted in Art, Comics, DJ Food, Event. | 1 Comment |

Ninjas featured in new Judge Dredd Megazine story

Well, this was unexpected! Reading the latest Judge Dredd Megazine (issue 336, out today) with my kids the other day and I open it to find my name splattered on the wall of Mega City 1! Not only am I now immortalised as a minor gang (now sadly defunct) in the tangled history of the Meg but a certain Matt Black (Coldcut) and PC (DJ Food) get a mention as street names in the left hand panel too.

The story is a spin off in the world of Dredd for disgraced ex-Chief Judge Dan Francisco who has been demoted back to street duty after the events that led to the recent Day of Chaos story. Francisco – a Judge who had the rare distinction of being a prime time TV star whose popularity led to him being elected Chief Judge – is investigating multiple murders of The Kev Gang in this scene. It’s a humorous aside but a chance for the writer, Arthur Wyatt, to use my name as the basis for the gang’s rules of entry. Artist Paul Marshall drew the strip and it’s featured in the monthly Megazine which is out today.

Posted in 2000ad, Comics, DJ Food. | 6 Comments |

The Simonsound – ‘The Beam’ single on sale now

Want one of these? The new single from The Simonsound in a special 25 copy ‘Pilot Pack’ with 10″ colour vinyl, two sided colour map, sew on ‘The Simonsound Transit Authority’ Pilot patch, 1 of a kind 1/4 inch tape loop, mini booklet, Monorail ticket, all housed in a beautiful letter press printed sleeve? Better be quick – pre-orders happening NOW.

If they’re sold out or your budget doesn’t stretch to business class you can still catch the monorail in a more regular and affordable standard class version. 10″ colour* vinyl of ‘The Beam’, comes with two sided colour map. (*Colour to be confirmed.) Also, if you’ve not tried the debut LP from the group (Simon James and DJ Format) then you could do a lot worse than grab ‘Reverse Engineering’ while you’re there.

 

Posted in Design, Music, Packaging. | No Comments |

The Image Duplicator show opens this week

The Image Duplicator show opens for 2 weeks this Thursday at the Orbital Gallery inside Orbital Comics on Neal St, London. It sets various comic artists and graphic designers the task of re-appropriating, and in the process highlighting, the original artists that Roy Lichtenstein copied without credit for his most famous works.

Lining up to take part, and in some cases take the piss, are Dave Gibbons, Shaky Kane, Steve Cook, Howard Chaykin, Mark Blamire, Graeme Ross, myself, Jason Atomic and Rian Hughes – the latter two of which have put this whole event together

.

There are many more too, and a catalogue has been put together along with high quality prints with all proceeds going to The Hero Initiative, a charity that aids ageing comic illustrators who are struggling to make a living. The prints are available online for those who can’t make it and some will be sold at the opening on Thursday night at the gallery. Hopefully a late addition to the show will be this cover of the current issue of Viz by Simon Thorp and interior cartoon by Lew Stringer and Graham Dury about a young Lichtenstein at school with Warhol.

When I first saw Lichtenstein’s work, probably as a teen in the 80’s, I liked it a lot. What was not to like as I had read comics since by youth and was familiar with the ‘graphic language’ that he took from? ‘Cool’, I thought, ‘an artist bringing comics into the fine art realm. ‘Whaam!’ was fun, friends had posters in their rooms, when I first met my wife she had a postcard on her wall of ‘M…Maybe’ (‘…he became ill and couldn’t leave the studio’ – oh the irony of that later on). I wasn’t particularly taken with his style, it just seemed adequate, all I really saw were generic comic panels of a certain era, large on a wall or in an art book. You could always tell it was Lichtenstein because no one else did that in the art world, why would they? It was a great idea but anyone else would have been accused of copying Roy Lichtenstein (ironic indeed).

I, like most people I imagined, assumed that he had looked at various War and Romance comics of the 60’s – when a house style was encouraged and artists were told to draw in a certain way – and then done his own versions of the kind of images he saw. I never read these kinds of comics as a kid but saw them on spinners in the local newsagent, or at least the 70’s equivalents. I never saw the Mickey and Daffy Duck paintings and there were no references to Batman, Superman, Spiderman etc. so I figured he had his style and was doing the retro thing with it. It never occurred to me that he had literally copied panels from the issues of the day, that would be plagiarism wouldn’t it? Surely someone would sue him?

It wasn’t until I was pointed to David Barsalou‘s Deconstructing Lichtenstein site that the penny dropped – these were copies, direct lifts, but simplified to erase any traces of style the original artists had injected that could make them easily detectable. Despite this ‘blandardisation’ it’s still easy to tell what comes from where and in each case, almost without exception, the original was better than the copy. And it went on and on and on, I never knew he’d done so much work but his one idea rolled on for decades with diminishing returns. A lot of critics will bring up the amount of money Lichtenstein makes from the sale of his works, and, although it’s an unfair turn of events when the original he copied goes for a 1000th of the price of his copy, it’s not the thing that gets my goat. People will pay all sorts of prices based on the perceived resale value and no one paid more for a piece of work because it was ‘better’ than another – beauty is in the eye of the beholder and all that. It’s the high art vs low art attitude of the galleries, critics and historians that have taken it upon themselves to designate one thing as trash and another as Art.

I first became aware of this distinction in the college art class when we were asked to bring in a copy of our favourite painting and talk about it. Up until this point I had had no art history tutoring and could barely tell my Picasso from my Cezanne. I had no ‘Art’ books at home but I decided to look through the books that I did have and see if any of it took my fancy. Even then I was aware that comics weren’t considered Art so I looked through an illustrator book of Horror stories and found a painting of a gent holding a candelabre in the dark, illuminating mainly just his face. It was OK but nothing special, some nice light and shadow effects and I had nothing else so it got taken in. When it came to show my selection my tutor said, ‘but that’s not Art, that’s just illustration’, and that’s when I realised the divide existed.

Posted in Art, Comics, Event. | 2 Comments |

Adam Ant last night at the Roundhouse

Last night I finally got to see Adam Ant and his current band, The Good The Mad and the Lovely Posse. Having been a fan since I was 11 it was a long time coming after a couple of, ‘shall I? shan’t I?‘ moments over the years. Playing at the Roundhouse in London, somewhere he’d last played virtually 35 years to the day previously, it saw Adam back in fine style after his mental health problems. It was also an incredible feat seeing as he restarted his career only a few years ago, playing in tiny clubs and slowly rebuilding his rep.

The set was a perfect balance of old and new, hits and b-sides, with no song outstaying its welcome. Even the new material, a disappointing return largely down to bad production and the almost demo-like quality of some of the songs, fitted in perfectly. Favourites from his post punk, Dirk Wears White Sox era made up at least a third of the set with B-sides like Lady, Red Scab and Fall Out all received as rapturously as the ‘hits’. Well recommended if you have a passing interest, essential if you’re a fan. I was hesitant to go initially – what if he sucked? I didn’t want a childhood hero rendered a cabaret act. But it didn’t come to that and was an exhilarating experience.

Below are a series of vintage gig and tour posters from the late 70’s procured from various corners of the web. I love the way certain letters run out and are replaced, check the ‘2’s on the Zerox Tour poster dates and the ‘z’ made from two ‘v’s on the January 1st one.



Moonlight Club upgrade

Posted in Gigs. | 4 Comments |

Funki Porcini debuts ‘City’

Next weekend Funki Porcini debuts a project he’s been working on for years – it’s an interactive environment called ‘City’ and it will be installed as part of the Norfolk and Norwich Festival.
It runs from 18th-21st, opens from midday to 8pm and it’s free, there’s very little info about it but he’s assured me that it’s the best thing he’s ever done and there’s very little else like it.

There are a couple of short promos on his Vimeo page but it’s all very secretive, when pressed he won’t even give away details, saying that it has to be a surprise.

Posted in Event, Film. | No Comments |

DJ Food & DK ‘Sentinel’ for Ninja Jamm

Mine and DK‘s track, ‘Sentinel’ is now available as an in-app purchase from Ninja Jamm. Long in development by Coldcut’s Matt Black, Ninja Jamm lets you intuitively remix tracks on your iPhone or iPad (it’s Mac only at the moment, Android will be coming soon).

The app is free, and you can buy ‘tune packs’ from various artists on Ninja Tune and associated labels. The ‘Sentinel’ pack is 69p and there’s also a ‘Dark Lady’ pack as well as a free Coldcut ‘Beats & Pieces’ pack to get you started.

Posted in DJ Food, Music, Ninja Tune. | No Comments |