Hecuba “Miles Away”

When pictures of Michael Jackson, Karen Carpenter, and Walt Disney hang on the walls of the studio in which you record your album, strange things are bound to happen. Hecuba—who has just such a collection of pictures on its studio walls—makes music that’s tough to pin into a single musical category, it being an amalgamation of tribal drums, drone-like chants, and gentle horns. “Miles Away” is the lead single off the band’s upcoming debut album, Paradise.

Paradise is out May 26 via Manimal Vinyl.

Photo by Anna Webber.

Hecuba – Miles Away

Etienne de Crecy: The Shape of Things

Etienne de Crecy and Exyzt create a new way to view electronic music.

Move over Daft Punk pyramid, there’s a new hyper-dazzling techno light show in town! French electro-house man Etienne de Crecy had Gallic collective Exyzt put together an entrancing three-dimensional cube set up for his 2007 set at Rennes’ Trans Musicales Festival, and it’s presently touring the globe for whichever promoters can afford the show’s hefty pricetag (in the tens of thousands). The cube actually consists of nine blocks made from scaffolding and covered with translucent fabric onto which visuals, from gothic archways to Rubix-esque rotating shapes, are projected while de Crecy plays live in the middle. By the time you read this, he will have already wowed fans at London club Matter and will be gearing up to trip out fans at California’s Coachella Festival.

Thunderheist Thunderheist

With a name like Thunderheist, you’d better come big or not at all. This Canadian electro/raunch-rap duo has already made some noise with the angular, pulsing “Jerk It” and the relentless dancefloor driver “Nothing2Step2,” but the album doesn’t pack the same punch as those early buzzed-about tracks. Too much of this feels done already, in some cases by Thunderheist themselves, considering how little range they show here—low-end buzzing and languid vocals are around every turn. “Bubblegum” never aspires to be much more than its title suggests, and “Space Cowboy,” with its repeated up-and-down runs, is just flat-out annoying. There are good moments here, but not quite enough to give this album the thunder it needed.

What You Talkin’ Bout, Willits? Part 10

Integrating video into live performances with Ableton Live and Jitter

Guitarist and electronic musician Christopher Willits continues his monthly series from SoundArts studio. In this episode, he explains how to integrate video footage with live performance using Ableton Live and Max/MSP/Jitter.

Tune in once a month as Christopher shows us some of the ways he produces his own music, as well as the many cool things you can do with recording software. According to Christopher, “I simply want to excite people’s imaginations and creative processes so they can more easily create the sounds and music and art they love.”

Cooking Vegan with Liquid Liquid

Cooking vegan delights at the New York home of Liquid Liquid’s Sal Principato.

New York has no shortage of concept restaurants, culinary experts, and celebrity chefs. But how many of those Michelin-star chasers will invite you into their house and cook you a healthy vegetarian meal? DJ and musician Sal Principato, percussionist and vocalist of the famed No Wave group Liquid Liquid, extends that kind of courtesy to anyone looking for a vegetarian or vegan cooking class, a home-cooked meal, and company.

“It’s social—a relaxation technique and a healing technique in a way,” says Principato about preparing a good meal. “I kind of look at food as a way to counteract all the other wear and tear you put on your body.”

Principato started hosting these informal events, called Go Gather, this past winter. Guests pay $15 a head to learn some of Principato’s kitchen secrets, including how to make Nigerian bean cake and vegetarian pizza. The latter is made with almond cheese, and Sal claims it’s so good that it stacks up to a slice of NY-tstyle street pizza. He’ll guide visitors through a few steps and often broaden the context of the lesson, explaining where he purchased certain ingredients and why he uses them. He’ll have some wine, perhaps make an espresso, and wax poetic about food. “I believe, to a certain extent, that music and food are the highest extensions of a culture,” says the 30-year vegetarian. “Ultimately, cooking is more like an art in a way, and if you have a feel for it, you’ll be good at it,” he says. “I could take a tin can and cover it in animal fat and salt and make it taste good. But to make vegetables and legumes taste good and sing, that’s an art.”

To set up a group class with Sal Principato in New York, email him.

Sal’s Basic Tofu
This is how I prepare tofu prior to using it with any dish or recipe. Always use firm tofu as opposed to silken or soft. Dice the tofu in medium-sized irregular chunks. Heat up one part sesame oil and two parts canola oil (should make a small puddle of oil) in a wok or pan. Take two or three whole cloves of garlic and cook them in the oil until they’re fairly brown, almost burnt (you will discard them later). Add tofu and stir to coat it with oil. Cook over a medium-high flame and stir often, until the moisture evaporates from the tofu and it starts to turn a yellowish color (approximately eight minutes). Discard garlic. Add a few splashes of soy sauce and stir until it caramelizes on the tofu. The tofu should really resemble grilled chicken chunks (yikes!).

Tofu and Vegetable Stir Fry with Miso Sauce
1 block extra-firm tofu
2 medium carrot sticks, julienned
6 chopped mushrooms
1 cup chopped broccoli
2 tablespoons finely chopped ginger
1-2 cloves finely chopped garlic
1 small diced onion
1 cup vegetable stock
1 tablespoon blonde miso paste
1 tablespoon arrowroot
hot peppers (optional)
soy sauce

1. Prepare tofu according to the recipe above.

2. There should be some leftover oil from preparing the tofu in the saucepan. Sauté the vegetables over medium-high flame one at a time starting with the carrots and ending with the mushrooms. After cooking each vegetable, set it aside with the tofu.

3. Add olive oil to the empty pan. Heat oil and then add ginger, then garlic, then onions (and hot peppers). Cook until onions wilt. Then add a heaping tablespoon of miso. Slowly add arrowroot to thicken the sauce, adding more if necessary.

4. Add the tofu and veggies to the pan and mix well.

Vegan Macaroni & Cheese
2 cups unflavored soy milk
2 cups vegetable stock
3 cloves of garlic, chopped
Olive oil
1 teaspoon of mustard
Salt and pepper
1 tablespoon arrowroot or any other cornstarch-like thickener
1 tablespoon of whole-wheat flour
1 cup of yellow nutritional yeast
1 pound of whole wheat elbow pasta
Whole white onion, chopped
Breadcrumbs

1. Preheat oven to 425.

2. In a blender, combine unflavored soy milk, vegetable stock, garlic, a few splashes of olive oil, mustard, salt, pepper, arrowroot, flour and yeast. Blend and pulverize thoroughly. You can add a slight amount of turmeric for color. Pour contents in a pan or pot and heat on a low flame, stirring constantly, until it thickens to a cheese sauce consistency.

3. Cook a pound of whole wheat elbow pasta until its al dente and set aside. In a saucepan, sauteé the onion in oil olive until soft, then add 1 1/2 cups of breadcrumbs and cook until slightly brown.

4. Combine pasta and “cheese” sauce and pour into a baking pan. Top mixture with the onion and breadcrumb mixture and then cover with tin foil. Bake for about 20 minutes then remove tin foil. Bake until top is golden brown (approximately 15 minutes)

Aceyalone Aceyalone & The Lovely Ones

Understandably perturbed about the lack of doo-wop-influenced hip-hop, L.A.’s finest underground MC decided to do something about it—hence this tribute to ’60s soul. It’s always amazing to hear Acey shoehorn words that shouldn’t fit into his verses, and Lonely Ones has its moments: the James Brownish “Can’t Hold Back,” the Hambone-ready “Take It to the Top,” and the ’68 Olympics-style salute of “Power to the People.” But retro-soul generally works better if you can sing like Raphael Saadiq or Sharon Jones; maybe that’s why there were no rappers in the Motown era. Acey gets an A for effort—to go along with his usual A+ for lyricism—but overall, this seems like more of a curio than a classic.

Steven Harrington Does DJ Mix, Incase

Here at XLR8R, we’re often asking visual artists what they listen to while working, and it seems the folks over at Incase harbor similar curiosities. So, when commissioning L.A.-based Steven Harrington to participate in its Curated by Arkitip collaborative series, which it conducts with L.A.-based art magazine Arkitip, the accessory company also asked him to create a mix from music in his collection.

The Bang-Ga-Wrong mix proves that he likes his Jamaican sounds. The artist and designer culled from his personal collection to deliver a 45-minute mix of dancehall, dub, and roots reggae that includes names like Cocoa Tea, Barrington Levy, Gregory Issacs, and other greats. Download the whole thing for free at the Incase blog.

Fans of Harrington’s visual art (who also happen to use Macs), can snag a new Macbook computer case and/or iPhone case here.

01 Intro (’Original Sound’)
02 Eccelton Jarrett, ‘Turn On The Heat’
03 Cocoa Tea, ‘Young Lovers’
04 Conroy Smith, ‘Original Sound’
05 Courtney Melody, ‘Screechie Across The Border’
06 Pinchers, ‘Agony’
07 Little Jon, ‘Fade Away’
08 Admiral Bailey, ‘Big Belly Man’
09 Drum Break (’Whats Going On’)
10 Al Fingers, ‘Whats Going On (Truth & Rights Remix)’
11 Ecceltron Jarrett, ‘Rock Them One By One’
12 Break (’Cuss Cuss’)
13 Barrington Levy, ‘Here I Come’
14 Roots Radics, ‘Cuss Cuss’
15 Anthony B, ‘Warrior’
16 Barrington Levy, ‘Come’
17 Augustus Pablo, ‘Java’
18 Barrington Levy, ‘Murderer’
19 Flourgon, ‘Jump Spread Out’
20 Keith & Tex, ‘Stop That Train’
21 Gregory Issacs, ‘Night Nurse’ + Harry J All Starts, ‘Liquidator’
22 Junior Delgado, ‘Sons Of Slaves’
23 Upsetters, ‘Flashing Echo’
24 Daddy Lizard, ‘Run Girl Run’ + Black Uhuru, ‘Happiness’
25 White Mice, ‘Youths Of Today’
26 Outro (’Youths Of Today’ + ‘Original Sound’)

Omar Rodriguez Lopez Unveils New Band

El Grupo Nuevo de Omar Rodriguez Lopez might sound like a recently created project, but if you’ve kept your ear close to the rumor mill over the last few years, you’ll know that The Mars Volta’s über-prolific frontman has been conceptualizing the outfit since 2006. Cryptomnesia will be the group’s first release, with contributions from Hella’s Zach Hill and Jonathan Hischke, Juan Alderete de la Peña, of The Mars Volta, and vocalist Cedric Bixler Zavala.

According to a recent press release, Cryptomnesia‘s tracks are, compared to the sounds of The Mars Volta, “comparatively stripped-down and aggressive, with Hill’s presence injecting a dose of chaos and inertia that are a keystone of the El Grupo Nuevo sound.”

May 5 is the official street date for the new album, but Lopez and Co will also release 3,000 vinyl copies on April 18, for Record Store Day. Said copies will only be available through indie retailers, in keeping with the holiday. Audio snippets and some very colorful graphics can be seen here.

Cryptomnesia:
01 Tuberculoids
02 Half Kleptos
03 Cryptomnesia
04 They’re Coming to Get You, Barbara
05 Puny Humans
06 Shake is for 8th Graders
07 Noir
08 Paper Cunts
09 Elderly Pair Beaten with Hammer
10 Warren Oats
11 Fuck Your Mouth

Zizek Brings Cumbia to the North

Zizek, the famed cumbia-infused party based in Buenos Aires, will be taking on the North American club circuit with a tour that begins on April 2 at the Trans Atlantic Festival, stops at the Coachella Music and Arts Festival on April 18 and wraps up in Mexico.

As if the arrival of this hip-shaking set of dates wasn’t exciting enough, the party’s host, ZZK Records, will also be offering the chance for graphic arts buffs around the world to submit their original design for use on a Zizek party flyer through the “Remix Flyer Contest.”

Submissions may focus generally on the Zizek Club on Tour, or on a specific city that the tour will visit. Last year’s selected flyer became the basis for ZZK Records’ current institutional image.

The winners in each city will receive two tickets to a show and a copy of the label’s new album, ZZK Sound Vol. 2. The winning flyers will also be showcased on zzrecords.com.

Download some of the label’s mixtapes for inspiration while you work your draft table magic.

Tour Dates:
04/02 Miami, FL – Trans Atlantic Festival
04/03 Brooklyn, NY – Union Pool
04/04 NYC, NY – Santos Party House
04/05 Montreal, Quebec – Boombox Monthly at Zoobizarre
04/07 Toronto, Ontario – The Social
04/08 Chicago, IL – Sonoteque
04/10 Denver, CO – The Marquis Theater
04/11 Salt Lake City, UT – Kilby Court
04/13 Seattle, WA – Nectar Lounge
04/14 Portland, OR – Holocene
04/16 San Francisco, CA – Rickshaw Stop
04/18 Indio, CA – Coachella Music and Arts Festival
04/21 – 04/26 Mexico

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