TRMW Archives

* FYI, this stuff is old. The current TRMW is here.

July 6, 2005

P*L*U*R 3: Life of Brian

Brian Foote:

hey dude,

read the linked story in your PLUR post.
thought you might get a kick out this.
i got arrested and jailed for the better part of 48 hours for that huge rave bust in milwaukee that matos mentions.
i was working the fucking ‘smart bar’ at the party!
had s.w.a.t. team dudes pointing shotguns at me!!
so ridiculous….

check it

Grave flyer (front)

Grave flyer (back)

Brian Foote:

matos article is def accurate enough. mostly mike vance’s testimonial seems a little exaggerated. [e.g.there definitely weren't 50-60 cops] as best i remember, the early parties were all about lsd with ecstasy playing a more supplementary roll [no pun intended] till a year or 2 later. this lent itself to some really long weird parties.

i understand the promoters trying to distance themselves from the whole drug lean of the article. since this sensationalism always overshadowed the positives of the scene they worked so hard to build/sustain. i’m not speaking of PLUR ala matos’ talks of something that would “come along and unite everything”. [tho i experienced the same naive sentiment] i’m talking about the very real aspect of 1000+ midwesterners getting together and partying all night with no fights breaking out week after week.

you have to remember how ‘red state’ that area is/was [ridiculously overt racism/homophobia before that whole 'PC' thing came along]. in retrospect, these parties really were the only cross-cultural youth events in the area.

that said,the drugs were a central part of it. while sitting there zip-cuffed, i noticed i was sitting next about a pound of lo grade weed. there were bunches of kids working to fish contraband out of there pockets and inch themselves away from it. i always chalked the lack of evidence filed up to dirty cops. who knows?

it was definitely weird sitting in a 5 times capacity holding cell ,the ends of which were lined with angry members of opposing gangs, with a huge amount of tripping ravers losing their minds. i thankfully wasnt gonna drop that night til i was done ‘working’ or the jail time would have been excruciating.

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June 30, 2005

P*L*U*R

Homeslice Michaelangelo Matos has a really wonderful post up today. Got me all nostalgic and teary-eyed for my brief, totally amazing rave-going experience. I’m gonna have to bust out those trance mixtapes soon… if I had a tape player.

Also, super nice guy and popfest volunteer Brent Bell just started up a blog. He’s off to a good start already, connecting dots between Chekhov (whoever that is) and proper non-diaristic blog practice.

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April 20, 2005

ISREALI GOA TRANCE NU-METAL RULZ!

Holy… lately I’ve been getting these spam emails from weird electronic labels trying to get me to check out their music, and this one takes the cake. I could make fun of this but it’s like taking candy from a retarded baby with no arms. Seriously, check this out. Then listen to it (“FUCKING RAINBOW” is a rad name for a song btw; “X-BOX” not so much).

ps: i totally used to listen to this stuff in high school, i shit you not. i still have a bag full of frequency 8 mixtapes gathering dust under my bed, which i’ve been contemplating reviewing for this blog. how geek is that? (the whole sentence, the blog part especially)

beyond the mind's eye / x-tra gatuitous drug reference / holy shit i'm peaking so fucking HARD I'M EXPLODINGGGGGGGGGGWOOOOOOSH!!! - ed

The dance floor will not shut up! [also the subject line]

A 3rd album for the X-Wave project, this time Collaboration between Dj Miko, Melicia and young new Dj’s like Roi Sela and Sandman.

The full-on style plays in each one of the tracks, in a very nice clearly way.

This album represents the combination between the old and the new.

The old sound of Goa along with the new metal sound of today. [!!!!!!!]

Miko “adopted” the new generation and showed them the true meaning of trance music – the feelings, the emotions, and the togetherness – the heart of the music.

Miko himself had always created music for the soul instead of the body. His music is very loving and emotional; it caresses your ear softly, allows you to be grown into it and sweeps you inside.

The album itself is very powerful and energetic. The tracks, one by one, tells us a story that flow into each other as if they were one long track with ups and downs, sometimes hard and heavy and other times soft and clear.

But always happy ending (Just like Miko’s crowd after his sets).

Miko, that was one of the Trance genre creators, is making the old Goa style music that is rarely made these days and most of the new generation only heard about.

It full feels you and yet makes you wait for more.

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April 18, 2002

Safely back in London now, and the weather is superb. Good thing too, because after all the sun I saw in Italy and Greece (I’m super tan now), the usual greyness would have been hard to come back to. Greece was amazing. Do you, theoretical reader of my web page, want to know more? Well, read on!

Athens: Very strange mix of Western Eurpean urbanity and quasi-third-world trashiness. In a good way. Somehow ended up there at the right time to see my old London favorites, Warp Records, work some magic at this geekfest/rave thing called BIOS02 (I told you it was geeky). Richard Devine and Prefuse 73 were the only Warp people there, and although their respective musics have never really turned me on, I thought they both put on great shows. I especially liked how the former got all crazy, gratuitous signs-of-the-beast included.

Santorini: This is one of the Greek Cycladic islands. It is also one of the most beautiful places I have ever been in my short life. The whole thing used to be a huge volcano, which exploded leaving a crescent shaped island centered around the it’s now-rubble-ish volcanic remains. Add picturesque little cliffside villages, amazing sunsets, and loads of blooming wildflowers to this, and you’ve got something really special. Loved it.

Delphi: This was the rural part of the Greece tour. Delphi’s claim to tourist fame is that it contains the ruins of the temple where the Oracle (of Delphi, duh) used to reside. Pilgims from all over Greece used to make pilgrimages (like pilgrims often do) to have her tell their fortunes. So, yeah, those super old pillars and rocks were pretty cool to see. The real highlight was the amazing scenery. The town is nestled up in Mount Parnasos and overlooks a huge valley leading to the Gulf of Corinth. The goats I saw, complete with quaint sheperd boy and man, really completed the pastoral paradise vibe of the place. Nice.

And, sigh, now I am back in London. Just got some cheap new clothes at a “sample sale” right by my school, courtesy of these people. Twenty pounds for a sweatshirt and a t-shirt. Not too shabby at all. Now… about that crappy Differential Equations homework…

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Blast from the present!