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!

January 28, 2005

Hangar 18, OneBeLo / Majestik Legend at Berbati’s Pan, Portland OR, Wednesday, Jan. 26

[This post originally appeared on Team Tinnitus]

My friend Javan is from Ann Arbor, MI, as are my three other friends Steve, Andrew, and Mark (another one). They also all went to high school together, which is kind of weird given that they all now live in Portland, OR, but such is the strong connection between these two lefty playgrounds.

Lately, Javan has been saying how we need to go to more hip hop shows, so when I saw this one at Berbati’s I was already thinking of him. Then I noticed that openers, Majestik Legend and OnBeLo (AK One Man Army) are both on Ann Arbor-based Subterraneous Records (named in reference to their invented slang term for Michigan : “Water World”), and the deal was sealed.

I mentioned OneBeLo to Javan, and he recognized the name from Binary Star, apparently one of the bigger underground-type rap groups in Michigan. Javan said when he lived there these dudes were merciless performers, gigging any house party or stage they could get on, often multiple times a week, oftentimes donning an oven mitt as a sign of regional pride (Michigan is shaped like a glove). The result of all this was semi-legendary status state-wide (I think).

So I went. Javan did too, but only after breaking the holy “bro’s before ho’s” maxim, forgetting about the show, and going out with his new lady friend for pasta. Turns out OneBeLo and Majestik Legend were performing together, with the latter mostly performing DJ-duties, which mostly consisted of pressing play on a CD player. They were great. OneBeLo has a great flow, able to stop and turn a phrase on a dime, changing up rhythms with perfect timing. The subject matter was mostly braggadocio, except for one song equating love with extraterrestrial contact, and another about media propaganda (or something). The alien lover song was my favorite of the night, both for the clever metaphorical device and the beat, which reminded me of Souls of Mischief’s classic “93 Till Infinity”. The rest of the beats didn’t match this one, and some of them fell into the bin marked “generic underground”.

I had no idea what to expect from Hangar 18. They’re on Def Jux which is a label I know people freak out about, but I haven’t really followed. They weren’t what I think of as Def Jux sounding. They had two MCs named Winterbreeze and Alaska, so right off the bat you know it’s going to be a little less “manly” than the Michi-rap. Both of these dudes were dorky in the extreme, and slightly effeminate. Maybe they weren’t really effeminate, but in a genre as gender-loaded as hip hop, the occasional girly giggle stands way out (yeah, rock is loaded too, but we’ll leave that for now). Being an un-macho myself, I did my best to put aside whatever lame preconceptions might keep me from embracing my own, and focus on how much fun everyone was having.

Stylistically, Hangar 18 reminds me of the Beastie Boys, or maybe their little cousin, Ugly Ducking. If you hate the Beastie Boys, you’ll hate these guys; if you love them, you won’t. I’m somewhere in between, and that’s pretty much how I felt about their set.

Unfortunately, the rest of my Michigan crew showed up right after the Michi-rap and just in time for Hangar 18. This was really their own damn fault for showing up at 11:30 on a weekday for a two-act bill. Some of them were pissed, and some didn’t care.

Drunks drunk: 3 beers (brand names withheld/forgotten), I think.

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January 19, 2005

Just realized I’m mentioned by (fake) name over at Beats in Space, the radio show hosted by DFA-affiliate and all-around mega-hipster Tim Sweeney. No really, the twelfth link down here points to Metempsychosis and mentions my old production alias, Comma. So I’m cool now, guys, right? GUYS?!?!

I’ll chalk this up to Richard Caraballo aka minusbaby, long time member of the Metempsychosis Krew and super-talented designer/photographer. Rich designed a past version of the Beats in Space site, maybe even the current one, I don’t know. You can see the genius oozing out of Rich’s brain here, in a good way.

markmattkaraoke

fig 16: trmw (left) and mark rocking the human league

In other news, Justin Wescoat Sanders and Douglas Wolk have joined the PDX concert blogging action over at Team Tinnitus. This means we can now be two places at once, and still make it out for karaoke the next day (see fig 16). Watch out, Portland, the eyes of Tinnitus are upon you!

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January 14, 2005

Mirah, Tricrotic, The Blow, Rigamortis at Nocturnal, Portland OR, Thursday, Jan. 13th

[This post originally appeared on Team Tinnitus]

It’s a freezing-ass night in Portland, and I just got back from seeing Mirah at Nocturnal, a brightly-colored all ages on top / 21+ below nightclub on East Burnside. The last time I saw her was at the PDX Pop Now! festival, at the Meow Meow last summer. I was one of the organizers of that event, and I remember her set distinctly, a sweaty and still oasis in the midst of an exciting, panicky weekend. This oasis might have had something to do with drinking beer in the green room with my co-blogger immediately before the set, but I digress.

On that day she was accompanied by a full band, complete with drums, strings, the works. Tonight she was alone, just her and a guitar, sometimes a piccolo. No matter: what makes Mirah Mirah is that voice. Clear as a bell, with this gorgeous, resonate midrange. Which I suppose could also describe the sound of a nice acoustic guitar, which might explain the perfectly unified sound they make together.

Her music fits like that. The words cut deep, squaring life and death and the small enormity in between. Small enormity; that’s what I heard tonight. Her lyrics are short and sharp; stark wisdom delivered in lucid tones, over pretty, stark guitar lines, the arrangement also stark, pretty. These simple, perfect parts make room for silence, and nudge towards infinity.

But that’s a lot of words and the three that kept coming to mind throughout this show and the last are enough: such beautiful music.

Drinks drunk: 2 Pabst

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January 12, 2005

Checking Pitchfork today I found the following horrible horrible Neighborhoodie. You may recall this is the same company that makes those HAWTHORNE, WILLIAMSBURG, etc hooded sweatshirts found on every other page of every alt-weekly in every city in which the term “hipster” has geospecific meaning. Seems the market for uber-dorky ‘hood indentification clothing is drying up, and now they’re touting cute hip/indie catchphrases. Hence this:

Neighborhoodie Post Punk

fig 15: ?????

What are these people thinking? Why does this exist? Did anyone stop to think how completely absurd it is to be waxing nostalgic over a not-really-genre whose only real point of unity was a complete and total hatred of nostalgia – in 200freaking5?!?! If, as I understand it, the people who constituted this movement were reacting against punk’s slide into same-old-Rock, as typified by The Clash, then I can only imagine their distaste for any person who has ever said “punk’s not dead”, let alone worn this t-shirt. Of course, holding these people in such golden-age-ish high regard is probably some form of nostalgia in itself [turning finger toward self] but why would you buy this if you didn’t? And why would you buy it if you did? There are bigger questions to be asking, but right now I just want to shoot mental darts at this person and whatever the fuck they signify. And I guess I just did.

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January 10, 2005

Trawling compulsively through the blogosphere last night, found some cool stuff:

This is an interesting post about some current grime-influenced dance music coming out of England, and it’s potential merging with circa-93 IDM melodicism, and how cool that could be. Yeah, this is obscure to the max, but isn’t that what blogs are for? I enjoyed the mp3 samples and descriptions of interesting music I would not have heard otherwise. I like blogs when they do stuff like this.

There is an interesting little meme going around regarding the roots of IDM, it’s “social content” and “sonic form”, and whether or not these are racist. Nice to see people talking about the social undercurrents underpinning various genres. This stuff is the meat that makes music fascinating for so many people, at least me, whether or not we’re conscious of it. Here you will find Jane Dark aka Felizitas’ original post, here is Philip Sherburne’s response, and here is Simon Reynolds’. This, also, is what blogs are for.

My friend and housemate and sometimes editor Mark Baumgarten has started a blog and another one dedicated to live reviews. I will soon be joining Mark in posting reviews of shows and stuff. Collective brains and reportage on things you won’t find in print = blogs.

So what is this one for? Hopefully the same things, and that bit about “music in context” or whatever I was babbling about a couple posts ago, but today we’re just pointing the way. I think I’m gonna post something like a year-end list soon, and maybe a round up of good lists I found elsewhere. Perhaps my top ten top tens? That’s also what blogs are for, and that’s kind of why they suck sometimes.

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December 29, 2004

I’m writing this from Meadow Vista, California, USA, which is 15 minutes down Interstate 80 from Auburn, which is 1.5 hours down 80 from Sacramento. 80 spans the continental United States.

Meadow Vista is a very small town with a grocery store, a pizza place that doubles as the only place you can buy beer, a hardware store, a gas station, a coffee shop, and like three other little stores that are constantly going in and out of business because all Meadow Vista really needs is groceries, pizza, beer, and tools, and the freeway can bring them what they don’t need.

I got money for Christmas; tomorrow I hit the mall.

I saw National Treasure at the new Regal Cinemas tonight, and it was actually pretty good.

Last night I watched Varsity Blues, stoned and drunk, with my brother and his friends, one of whom used to be the star quarterback at Colfax High, which is in Colfax, which is 15 minutes down 80 in the other direction.

My brother said the high school in Varsity Blues reminded him of Colfax, because both towns worship the football team like gods. I said that always weirded me out, forgetting the star quarterback seated to my right.

[awkward silence]

“I thought it was pretty cool.”

The star quarterback is a really really nice guy.

I’m writing this from Mainstream America. I usually write from Portland, OR. Very different places, but people are cool here too.

Now, why is everything so fucked up?

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December 15, 2004

Just realized I’ve been made famous over at the Hyde Park Records website, so hello to any of you who got here that way. Also, hello to anyone who gets here via my employee picks (scroll down) in the Portland Mercury, since I think they might be mentioning this blog.

Now that you’re here, you might be wondering what this site is all about. The answer is mostly music, but not just music. You generally won’t find record reviews here. What you hopefully will find is occasionally insightful observations, centered around music but placing it in context, be that geographical (Portland, Oregon), historical, or personal. These peripheral but, to me, equally important parts of the music experience are often overlooked in offline music writing, probably in the interest of space and, uh, you know, describing the music itself. I’ll leave that part to the pros, and get right to the fluff.

About the linkers: The reason I have a Hyde Park Records t-shirt despite never having visited Chicago is dorky. I “virtually” met the man behind HPR, Derek Erdman, after I posted a link to his website featuring the entire Desperate Bicycles discography in mp3 format (also, this is rad). We got to talking about the record store he was opening up, he sent me a t-shirt, a picture was taken, and the rest is not-really-history. Derek seems like a pretty rad dude, the store looks awesome, and I’m all for more independent shops, so more power to him and it and amen.

Hyde Park Records

fig 13: hyde park records, chicago

The Portland Mercury is an alt-weekly here in Portland, OR. They have a regular Employee Picks column wherein experts in various fields dispense insider knowledge (sex shop worker lists porn/toys, wig maker lady lists wigs, etc), and they asked me to do the honors for this week. This is something I’ve been secretly craving for years (another is getting an I Saw U, put I’m pretty over that), so you can imagine my excitement. Hopefully my picks aren’t too hopelessly obscure, and I don’t look like a total geek. Is it just me, or does my head look lumpy?

In conclusion: this makes me happy, this cat is awesome, DIY FREE IPODS.

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December 13, 2004

Thinking back over this weekend’s activities, I can’t help but be reminded of how fortunate I am to live in the soggy lefty cultural paradise that is Portland, OR, USA. This was one of those weekends where every night there’s fifty great things to do, and choosing is the hardest part. Best of all, these are often local homegrown type things that could only happen here, or at least only will, bestowing a sense of pride and place that feels both totally un-2005, and just awesome.

Case in point: Friday. We started out the night at the Portland premiere of Matt McCormick’s new documentary/art film Towlines. Centered on the existential plight of humble-yet-majestic tugboat – always pushing others to sea, never making the voyage, etc – the film was full of beautiful imagery and colors. It came across like a series of perfectly composed photographs, but moving. Matt seems to favor dark, muted tones and wide spaces; buildings, giant ships, the ocean.

towlines

fig 9: still from Matt McCormick's Towlines

McCormick’s childhood friend and fellow Portland resident, James Mercer, who is also the exceptionally talented songwriter behind the Shins, provided the score, matching the tugboat theme with suitably slight and transcendent acoustic guitar interludes. Very nice, as was the hilarious American Nutria, narrated by none other than Calvin Johnson. And here I thought nutria was the plural of nutrients.

Mercer played an acoustic set after the films, but we had to run, over to the newly renovated Bossanova (ex-Viscount Ballroom), to catch the Arcade Fire. Now, this band has been hyped like crazy, with everyone screaming album of the year and such. I’d heard the record a little bit before the show, and was a little skeptical. It’s mostly that (1) I’m a nasty person, with an immature predisposition for disliking what others like and (2) I’m not so into hyper-melodramatic music, as a general rule. I’m not sure where that last one came from, but it probably has something to do with falling hook line and sinker for all that peak-by-numbers progressive trance stuff in high school. One can only sustain so many epic buildups and breakdowns before distrust sets in, especially if one is not on ecstasy.

arcade fire

ecstacy

figs 10, 11: the arcade fire on ecstacy

I should probably drop that shit; the music is impressive, especially the part about trying to create a new sound instead of simply cobbling together the requisite record geek signifiers and looking cute (see: rock music in 2004). Still, part of me thinks this band is the musical equivalent of the Oscar-winning movie starring Denzel Washington, set in the Holocaust, featuring at least one tragically gifted, mentally disabled person, released right at the end of the year (that last part is true); those string sections and genre-hops scream “Look at me, I’m the album of the year!” Which is a pretty petty reason to dislike an album, so the jury was still out when I arrived at the show.

And I enjoyed the show. Those kids have energy and they get excited. More power to them, right?

After that we headed over to Dunes for Suicide Club, the weekly dance night that is the project of Nathan from the Gossip/Die Monitr Batts (whose new album is sounding good, btw). He plays the kind of stuff Steve and I like to play when we do CUM LAZER (Pop-Rap dance hits, dance-punk, etc), but he probably has a better record collection. My only requests are that he fade the one song out before the next song comes in if he’s not going to beatmatch (which is really freaking hard, and I can’t do it either, so no diss there) and maybe that he play a little more of that freakier “mutant disco” I read about on the flier. Maybe he did play this stuff earlier, but we got there really late, and he wasn’t.

View from Mt. Tabor, Portland, Oregon

fig 12: looking east from mt. tabor, portland, oregon

My point being: that’s an awesome night! What a cool town, right? All of it was totally local, except the Arcade Fire, but the huge number of people who turned out for that show bares evidence to another local treasure, that being a large musical-loving populace out of proportion with this city of less then a million.

The rest of weekend was equal good: Saturday saw Steven Stapleton aka Nurse With Wound‘s only US appearance (disappointing but still, pretty cool that it even happened) and Friday saw the Cancer Fags (sinister and satirical gay-ish house duo) and the awesome lesbo party rap troupe Scream Club. I’d talk about these but this is already quite long, and my attention is wandering.

Anyway, yeah, I like it here.

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December 7, 2004

Last night I saw some crazy shit, shit I want to write down before I forget it really happened and start thinking I dreamt it (which will happen in about two hours). What I saw was Stephen Malkmus (of Pavement fame) and the Jicks (of Malkmus fame), concluding what I’m guessing was a high-paying gig that they didn’t seem too excited about (the Lucky Strike cigarettes service industry appreciation party) with 3 priceless covers:

1. Violent Femmes – Blister in the Sun. I thought this was a joke, and it was, but they meant it too. Never thought I’d see Mr. Pavement mouthing those immortal words, kicking up memories of adolescent nicotine fiends, 13 year old rebels swirling around at the 8th grade dance, back when this song somehow seemed dangerous, like those 60′s documentaries on VH1. It was like junior high, but more ironic, which is to say: AWESOME.

2. The Ronettes – Be My Baby. For this one the drummer and Malkmus switched places. Totally cute.

3. The OC Theme Song. Didn’t recognize this one at first, then the girlfriend clued me in. Like, woah. The godfather of indie rock tips his hat to the poster-show of the nu radio-friendly indie revolution. Half expected Doc (from Back to the Future) to show up and cut this short due to serious space-time continuum rupture type shit. The only reason I can think of for his non-appearance (besides that one about movies being fake) is that Malkmus didn’t really know the words. I don’t either but I’m pretty sure they’re nothing like, “The ocean, it sure smells likes fish.” Funny, funny shit.

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November 30, 2004

In other PDX DIY news, Nate Preston of the infamous and ambiguously spelled Die Monitr Batss pointed me (and a couple hundred other people) towards this awesome webpage which allows you and me to receive FREE IPODS. I never do this kind of thing, but my lust for the iPod has been growing steadily, even as my income has steadily shrunk. Please take pity on me and click here, sign up for
Blockbuster’s new sub-Netfllix subscription service the eFax free trail offer, recieve credit the next day, and cancel (see 3rd comment below for details). PLUS!! you’ll also be doing your part to dismantle global capitalism. Mr. Preston explains:

“I need a free iPod. If anyone else was considering doing this, PLEASE!!! sign up using my link below. Know the drill? You sign up for one of those stupid offers, then cancel. Get five friends to do the same thing and they cancel. They repeat the process. Then their referrals repeat the process. It’s a pyramid style money generator. If done correctly you’ll get your free iPod in a few weeks. If everyone does it correctly? The infrastructure of our entire civilization will collapse because all available resources and manpower are suddenly diverted into producing and processing billions and billions of iPods. So it’s not just about me.”

Please. JOIN US.

PS: I promise my next post will not involve a pyramid scheme found on a mailing list. Really.

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