TRMW Archives

* Hello there! You've stumbled onto the archived bloggage of TRMW aka The Real Matt Wright (wait... who?). This site contains posts from my stints blogging at Metempsychosis and Urban Honking, before I moved TRMW over to it's current home. Enjoy!

May 20, 2005

Team Tinnitus

I just redesigned Team Tinnitus and blogged the A-Frames show. Check it out if you have a sec? Schweeeeet.

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A-Frames, Towne Lounge, 5/18

[This post originally appeared on Team Tinnitus]

You might be thinking, “Where the hell is the Towne Lounge?”. You think that because it’s a very new venue and it’s hard to find. It’s right by PGE Park on a little side street kinda and until recently there was no sign, just a small green lite on a post telling you you’d found it (now there’s a sign that simply says “Lounge” which is probably still mysterious enough to retain cred).

The inside of the place is pretty awesome. It has a kind of dark and musty feeling that reminds of the ever-more-dearly departed Blackbird. The walls are green and the ceiling is gold, which is a very decadent and weird combination that somehow works. There’s tables and a very small stage. I really like the feel of this place, so when I found out the A-Frames were playing there I pee’d a little.

I pee’d because the A-Frames’ new album, Black Forest, is one of the coolest things I’ve heard this year. It gets me all pumped up in the same way I got pumped up singing “Your God is dead” etc with Trent Reznor in high school. That pump comes from the deep deep post-apocalyptic pessimism running through the lyrics and the death-knell machine-punk that backs it up. Part of me also wants to see all of humanity erased, and the A-Frames let me release that beast while simultaneously bopping around my living room.

I saw them live a while ago, opening for Country Teasers (awesome band) at Dante’s. I hadn’t heard any of their albums at that point, and was kind of interested in the live show, but not super impressed. My friend thinks their live show sounds like “just another punk band” and I can see how one might. Maybe it takes the solitude of home listening to understand this band’s icy brilliance, or maybe their new stuff is just significantly better than the old. Both probably.

Anyway, this show was really fun. The sound system seriously sucked – you couldn’t hear the vocals at all, turning up the level led to feedback = LAME – but no one really cared. The drummer smacks the living bejeezus out his drums, sometimes laying down a cymbal over the tom for added industrial krrrang. The singer/guitarist guy can whip out some lazer-sharp anti-riffs. They played mostly older songs that I didn’t know and wasn’t as into, but which were still fun to move around to. People were drunk and some people were being loud and the singer smiled at all of it, so I guess they’re not total death-to-humanity assholes. Whatever they are, they’re awesome. See? Woop woop A-Frames, my death-disco release since 2005.

Drinks drunk: 2 beers (read: hella trashed)

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May 18, 2005

Autechre (mp3)

In honor of Autechre’s show at Berbati’s tomorrow night, here’s a couple totally amazing mp3s. Autechre were/are torchbearers of the electronic / IDM genre, right up there with Aphex Twin, mu-Ziq, Black Dog, etc. They started out by simultaneously slowing down and slicing up techno, making room for desert-landscape melodies and sci-fi noir ambientude. That phase peaked with the amazing Tri Repetae++ album. Then they got really really into their DSP plugins, released the equally amazing LP5, and gradually disappeared up their own cyborg asses (taking pretty much the entire IDM scene with them). That’s not really fair though; I listened to their new one Untilted (NOT “Untitled” – tricky!) the other day and it’s actually pretty good. OK, here’s some music:

Gescom - Viral Rival (rmxd by ae)

Gescom is Autechre plus a rotating cast of friends, so this track is essentially Autechre remixing themselves (confusing, right?). It sure sounds like Autechre, and my favorite kind – perfectly anti-funk machine beats and lonely cellphone melodies peeling out over the void. It’s taken off the This 12″ they released on Skam in 1998. I just discovered it in the back of my hard drive, dusty and digital, waiting to blow my mind. So good.

Autechre - Second Scepe

I don’t know where to start with this song. Taken from the Anvil Vapre EP (also on the second disc of Tri Repetae++ in the USA), this is definitely my favorite Autechre track, and yeah probably one of my favorite pieces of recorded music ever. The five notes that come in towards the end are sublime. Locking into stumbling cricket-snap percussion and mournful synth pizzicatos, they pin the tail on the mechanical donkey and peer out over galaxies with a tear in their eye. OK, so notes don’t have eyes but I can only blabber and efuse and say beautiful over and over again, so you’re probably better off just listening to the song. (The Wire described it perfectly in their “In Praise of the Riff” issue, which I unfortunately can’t find online.)

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May 12, 2005

ATOM SMASHER VS HELIX COUNTER (mp3)

Here is an mp3 from a Clap Amp practice sesh. The song is called Atom Smasher vs Helix Counter. I’m pretty stoked on this recording, especially the middle-to-end part. Pat’s singing and lyrics are awesome, and Ryan’s beats be bangin’. Keyboard player sure sucks though. The awesome dudes over at 20 Jazz Funk Greats are diggin’ it, which makes my heart swell with evil pride.

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Gang Gang Web

The new Gang of Four website just went online. Click the Indian to stream the first single off the re-recordings album (which you can also get on iTunes), and two remixes from the Dandy Warhols, the first of which is suprisingly good, the second kinda blah. I’m guessing these are candidates for the disc of remixes that will accompany the re-recordings. Website here, more info here. Archived audio from KEXP in-studio here.

ps: i swear i’m gonna review the filmore show for team tinnitus, which btw just moved to urbanhonking = awesome!

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May 10, 2005

Infoverloaded

This doesn’t need me to point it out, but there are some pretty interesting thoughts buried in this James Murphy interview. Towards the end he gets right down to the deeply spooked soul of the Pitchfork / mp3 blog generation (and me), that being the unprecedented and ever-expanding pile of creative information available, and how to make/consume art in that context. Murphy barely gets past pointing at the problem, but he makes good points while doing so. Too much love, indeed.

Assuming you care, how do you all deal with this stuff? Do you focus on new music, and ignore the old? Or vice versa? Or do you tear your hair out trying to hear everything? Does checking mp3 blogs feel like staring at the void? And does that make you feel like a priveleged little fuck with no real problems?

I think about this stuff, probably too much. At one point I almost suggested the band I’m in adopt the name INFOVERLOAD in honor of this crisis/”crisis”, but decided it sounded too sci-fi. With that as our central premise we’d probably end up just sounding like LCD Soundsystem anyway. Which is not necesarily a diss.

Otherwise: I just got back from a deeply beautiful trip to San Francisco. I saw Gang of Four at the Filmore (AWESOME + my first time there), met all my girlfriend’s friends, hung out with Sonia, saw Shaun O’Dell’s amazing art up in SFMOMA (damn boy!), saw my dear old friend Emily Prince marry him while simultaneously turning 24 (my birthday was May 7th), and had mother’s day dinner with the fam. It was like this crazy this-is-your-life extended weekend, and I’m still catching my breath. More soon.

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May 1, 2005

Frozen Music

Today I witnessed Frozen Music, the latest production from Portland’s modern chamber ensemble Third Angle. The title is a reference to a Goethe quote – “architecture is frozen music.” In keeping with this theme, three works were presented in three architecturally distinct buildings, and attempts were made to match the style and period of the music with the physical setting.

I was late so I missed the first piece, which revolved around “Northwest Modernism” and took place at Fox Tower, but I did catch most of “Neo-clssicism” at the fancy US Bank off 6th and Burnside. They played some Stravinsky, which I actually recognized without the program notes (woo college!), and a sextet by Francis Poulenc. This was really beautiful and very well-played, but my mind was wondering. My girlfriend had the same experience, and we got to talking about whether this is a modern condition – not being able to focus on anything – or if the original audience for these works had the same experience. It’s probably a combination of both; people are more distracted now, less blown away by the sheer radness of hearing and seeing music performed live AND people are just dumb animals that can’t focus for shit. Maybe?

After that the crowd ambled over to Hilton Tower’s unfinished basement for the somewhat cheesily titled “A Virtual Concert Hall” performance. This is really why I came; my friend from college, Brede Rørstad, had a piece in this show, which he also performed in. I would never have remembered this awesome thing without some email prodding from Brede, so yeah, thanks dude.

The first piece was totally charming. It was called Onomatopoeia and it was written by Nigel Westlake in 1984. It featured Brian Quincey on electric viola, an instrument which brings me back to the John Tesh concert I went to with my mom (I shit you not) and Yanni at Red Rocks, but which Mr. Quincey reclaims for the good. He starts out playing these gorgeous soaring scales through a delay pedal (I lack any terminology to acurately describe what he was doing here), then eases off the pedal and plays fast repeating lines. After a while a screen to his right lights up with a video recording of him playing the passage he just played, which he in turn accompanies. This keeps going until there are four Quincey’s, all but one digital. The cumulative effect was of a mass of sustained unresolved beauty, kind of like Steve Reich’s epicly wonderful Music for 18 Musicians delivered with a digital wink.

Then it was time for Brede’s piece, entitled Five Remixes of a Forgetten Theme. Quincey also played on this one, accompanied by Brede on latop. Brede manipulated Quincey’s viola in real-time adding in pre-sequenced beats and samples (at least I think they were). The music kept tumbing and transforming, evading any sense of forward and backward while orbitting around a central riff. And what a riff: mournful and transcendant at once, it was one of those pieces of music that feels plucked from the ground. You could call it elemental.

Behind all this, four screens were projected with underwater castles and sea creatures overlayed with boroque patterns. The whole thing ended perfectly with some unresolved loops and a perfect image: folding chairs (like the ones we were sitting in) floating in an underwater industrial space (like the one we were sitting in, except for the underwater part). Really, really nice.

Click here to listen to an excerpt from Brede Rørstad’s Five Remixes of a Forgetten Theme.

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April 28, 2005

CATCH THIS THIEF

Yesterday (I think) somebody stole a 12″ Apple G4 laptop from the home of Brian Foote of the band Nudge. This was taken from Brian’s house along with some X-Box games. The laptop is titanium/grey finish with no stickers or anything on it. If you see or hear of anybody who’s recently come into possession of these things please call the police (at least I think that’s what you’re supposed to do).

This is a seriously crucial blow: all of Nudge’s music files for their new album were on this laptop. This is basically ruining Brian’s right now so please if you know this person get in touch ASAP.

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Two Percent Majesty (…Woah)

This reminds me of staying up late in junior high watching Beavis and Butthead and seeing Bjork for the first time ever, sharing their wtf? sentiments and being totally intrigued at the same time. What is this? Where do these people come from? Answers: Two Percent Majesty, Portland, Oregon. They’re playing at Holocene tomorrow with Mirah, Wet Confetti, and Horns & Claws (ex-Intima peeps, awesome website). I’m going.

bb2pm

In this picture we see Beavis and Butthead (the video game version) watching Two Percent Majesty on TV. I am a complete and total loser.

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April 24, 2005

Evidence of Actual Freedom

While I was busy watching The Big Sleep with the most wonderful girl in the world, these people were playing music under a bridge. I’m going to the next one.

ps: young Lauren Bacall = so so hot

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