Ariel Pink Readies Tour Dates

Since he first got his break in 2004, Ariel Pink has been hard at work assembling a collective of veteran musicians and attempting to recreate the avant-garde compositions found on his records. Fans will be able to judge the success of the operation this month when he hits the road for the Thanks Mom I’m Dead tour.

Joining him will be keyboardist Kenny Gilmore, White Magic bassist Tim Koh, Jimi Hey, who has played the drums for everyone from The Rapture to Indian Jewelry, and guitarist Cole M. Greif-Neill (who wins the prize for the best name ever). The crew will be traveling with rare vinyl copies of 2004’s The Doldrums to hand out, along with limited edition, tour-only records.

07/19 San Francisco, CA: Cell Space
07/21 Salt Lake City, UT: Kilby Court
07/22 Denver, CO: Larimer Lounge
07/24 Omaha, NE: Slowdown
07/25 Minneapolis, MN: 7th Street Entry
07/26 Chicago, IL: Empty Bottle
07/27 Toronto, ON: TBA
07/28 Montreal, QC: Zoobizarre
07/29 Boston, MA: TT The Bears
07/30 New York, NY: Knitting Factory
07/31 New Haven, CT: People’s Center
08/01 Philadelphia, PA: M Room
08/02 Baltimore, MD: Sonar
08/04 Atlanta, GA: Eyedrum
08/05 Tallahassee, FL: Beta Bar
08/06 Baton Rouge, LA: Spanish Moon
08/07 Houston, TX: Walter’s on Washington
08/08 Denton, TX: Hailey’s
08/09 Austin, TX: Hailey’s
08/11 Tucson, AZ: Plush
08/12 Los Angeles, CA: Echo
08/13 Costa Mesa, CA: TBA

MP3: “L’estat (According To The Widows)”

My Milky Way Arms “Sunshine”

According to a press release (and the group’s MySpace page) the creation of My Milky Way Arms came about due to MilkMan and Tim2K meeting in the Tundra and discovering a snow and ice castle filled with frequency producing crystals. Interpret that as you will, but all you really need to know about this Houston-based duo is that they make ambient, shoegazy electronic music that goes well on the headphones and work and would also be appropriate while trekking through an Arctic setting. “Sunshine” is one continuous chord accompanied by lighter melodies and with a blizzard’s worth of feedback on top.

My Milky Way Arms – Sushine

DFA Digs Up Supersoul Recordings

Furthering its quest to find the most compelling dance music overseas and bring it Stateside, DFA Records offshoot imprint Death From Abroad now turns to Berlin-based Supersoul Recordings, with a two-disc compilation showcasing that label’s finest cuts.

Supersoul founder Xaver Naudascher, along with producer Paul Mogg, Terranova, Strangelets, and others contributed material to the release, which is not only a very danceable one, but also a fairly comprehensive sampler of how many genres exist within this label’s discography. Techno, acid-house, Krautrock, electro, and others make up the 19 tracks here, and if your ass isn’t shaking when the comp’s September 2 release date rolls around, it could be that you just don’t care for dance music.

Tracklisting
Disc One
01 Xaver Naudascher “Lost”
02 Mogg & Naudascher “Moon Unit Pt. 2
03 Mogg & Naudascher “Moon Unit Pt. 1
04 Walter Jones “Deuteronomy Brown (I-f Edit)”
05 Plastique De Reve “Resist feat. Radical Cheerleaders”
06 Strangelets “Riot On Planet 10”
07 Xaver Naudascher “Afterlife”
08 Max Brannslokker “Stropharia”
09 Walter Jones “The Odyssey Sound (Mogg & Naudascher Edit)”

Disc Two
01 Skatebård “Marimba”
02 Plastique De Reve “Lost in the City feat. Ghostape”
03 Xaver Naudascher “Motor City”
04 Strangelets “Riot on Planet 10 (Blitz Gramsci Remix)”
05 Mogg & Naudascher “Moon Unit Pt. 4 feat. Rosalind”
06 Skatebård “Pagans”
07 Mogg & Naudascher “Moon Unit Pt. 3 feat. Arthur Hornig”
08 Maxx Brannslokker “Solar Trip feat. Katya Tyukova”
09 Skatebård “Flexy”
10. Walter Jones “A.I.P. (X.L.N.’s Maison Vumbi Edit)”

MUTEK Grows Older and Wiser

XLR8R TV heads to Montreal to check out this year’s edition of MUTEK. Spotlighting digital music and culture since 2000, the five-day festival has helped turn Montreal into a Mecca for electronic and experimental artists. While the programming has become more varied and accessible over the past eight years, the event has never lost sight of its boundary-pushing roots. Here, we to talk to the artists and musicians behind MUTEK and give you an exclusive peek at several of this year’s highlighted performances—everyone from Modeselektor to The Field.

Alva Noto “U_08-1”

Signal member Carsten Nicolai is something of a sound engineer under his Alva Noto moniker. Relying heavily on precise hooks and loops, Nicolai produces with sequencers, then uses mathematics to give each track a precise, intentionally off-beat rhythmic structure, rendering each and every sound of any given cut a necessity. This track finds vocalist Anne-James Chaton reciting the numerical sequence of The Golden Ratio concept over fractured electronics. Sound-wise, It’s sort of the aural equivalent to an epileptic seizure inducing light show.

Alva Noto – U_08-1

Apparat Things to be Frickled: Parts & Remixes

Often spoken of in the same breath as Ellen Allien, on accounts of their 2006 arterial-meets-ethereal collaboration Orchestra of Bubbles, Germany’s Sascha Ring has a rep as a consummate colluder, liberally applying granular resonance. Now Ring offers up 22 further name-dropping opportunities, compiling one disc of artists’ works he has remixed and another of associates’ remixes of Apparat tracks. Among the names getting their brumes dusted are Swayzak, Boys Noize, Nathan Fake, Lusine, Meteo, Telefon Tel Aviv, Thomas Fehlmann, and Monolake. At his best Ring prepares his immersive trills sous-vide–the resulting rhythms not wanting for even a smidgen of texture and kept circulating at a deliberate pace. And on Disc Two, roughly hewn to immaculately poised transformations take Apparat anamorphic.

A-Trak Running Man: Nike+ Original Run

Over the years, Montreal’s A-Trak has gained more acclaim as a battle-tested turntablist and club DJ than a producer. But on his debut LP, created specifically for the Nike+ Original Run series, he proves to be a consistently capable beat-maker. Considering that A-Trak was asked to make this recording precisely for the enjoyment of runners, his synth-soaked electro creations work pretty well here. But a mellow single with his recent Fool’s Gold signee, Kid Cudi, sounds out of place sitting right in the middle of this oft-pulsing album. Minus a few missteps, for a first full-length effort crafted for such a focused audience, A-Trak gets the job done.

Artist Tips: Bostich & Fussible

As members of Tijuana’s Nortec Collective, Bostich (Ramón Amezcua) and Fussible (Pepe Mogt) gave Mexico’s traditional accordion- and horn-heavy Norteño sound some mass appeal by fusing it with electronic beats. With their recent collaboration, Tijuana Sound Machine (Naçional), the production tag team goes for a more organic sound, putting extra emphasis on acoustics. There may be obvious hints of house, techno, and D&B peppered throughout, but it’s the use of live instruments that gives TSM its futuristic mariachi swing. Here, Fussible breaks down how they gave traditional instruments the Pro Tools treatment.

Tuba
Some of the tuba sequences on Tijuana Sound Machine were sampled from previously recorded albums. We cut them up in Ableton Live and completely changed the melody and rhythm. We recorded other tuba lines with a Rode mic to then be processed through the SSL Channel Strip compressor. On songs like “Norteña del Sur” and “Rosarito” we used the Walfdorf D-Pole filter plug-in to give a more deep, rough sound.

Bajo Sexto Guitar
For this instrument, we usually recorded chords first with a synthesizer or piano. Then the guest musicians interpreted those chords with the bajo sexto(it looks like a 12-string guitar but the sound is much deeper). We then passed the music through various effects like the Sherman Filterbank, Electro-Harmonix Memory Man delay, and the Frostwave Sonic Alienator, giving it a rough, space-alien sound. In some songs, the bajo sexto was transposed 12 semitones lower to give it a sound similar to a bass.

Accordion
We always record the accordion directly to Pro Tools, using the Waves Reverb and OhmForce OhmBoyz delay plug-in. On some tracks, there were microseconds of accordion that were processed with Ableton Live’s Beat Repeater. Sometimes the accordion didn’t have the tone that we needed, so we had to transpose the accordion’s sound. On “Jacinto,” we transposed the accordion an octave or more to give it a more atmospheric sound.

Clarinet
The clarinet has a very delicate sound, so we were very subtle with its use on songs like “Wanted” and “Brown Bike.” Sometimes it’s not even recognizable even though it was recorded very clean. We used a lot of Memory Man delay on it, ending up most times with an ambient sound with significant EQ changes through the SSL Channel Strip.

Drums
When it came to the percussion, we first recorded various sessions on the Roland TR-909 Rhythm Composer, then showed them to a live drummer so that he could interpret them. The bass drum–which is played by hand and brought through an integrated ride (like the ones that marching bands use, but much larger)–and the snare and cymbals were recorded to Pro Tools and later processed through various external effects like the Sherman Filterbank, Soundcraft Folio SX EQ, and the Sonalksis KB3 plug-in. Many rhythms were processed with distortion filters. Those acoustic rhythms were eventually mixed with the TR-909, TR-808, Linn Drum, and the Sequential Circuits DrumTraks.

MP3: “Brown Bike”

Dizzee Rascal to Party “Every Night”

If you visit music sites, you’ll likely know that U.K. MC Dizzee Rascal‘s “Dance Wiv Me” track is currently sitting comfortably at number one on the U.K. Singles Chart. What you may not have heard, and what sources are reporting, is that Dizzee plans to party every night the track–which he made with producer Calvin Harris and Chrome–stays at that spot.

“I’m gonna have another drink tonight [Tuesday], all week really. I’m just gonna keep going for it until someone knocks me off,” he told NME.

Now, this could pose potential problems if the hit turns out to be one of those types that rules the charts for weeks on end, but as it turns out, the MC is well aware of this, and stated that if it matches the-16 week run Bryan Adams had back in 1991, he’d kill himself. We’re going to assume that’s the booze talking.

Catch him on tour and hopefully still in party mode later this month.

Video: “Dance Wiv Me”

Photo by Dean Chalkley.

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