Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Wednesday

Killer Machineri

Machineri's debut album has just been launched in South Africa and it's obviously brilliant. This is the first official music video off the self-titled album. How foxy is it?! It's no secret how massive a fan I am - nothing to do with my bias towards being able to call both Sannie and Andre family. Beaming with pride, shouting it from the ether waves, give em' all the support you have, no one deserves it more!
Find out more about the band and follow gig updates at http://www.myspace.com/machineri

Friday

Edward Sharpe developed

 I finally got seven spools of film developed. Completely overdue and lagging behind in blogposts, these pictures I am the most excited to show. I am constantly surprised by how well my little shit box of a camera performs, these were taken with the flash taped shut on a 400 speed film. Not bad, right? 



Tuesday

Monday

Delightfully Monday

I am not a fan of reblogging other people's ideas and thoughts, but this one I could not help. Sent to me by my friend at Nowness, Hannah Cohen's Child Bride aids a gentle ease into the week, another week. This one has started sunny, London's breezy and the skies are blue. I am looking forward as job hunting requires endless planning - lots to be accomplished this week.  With this melody in my ear, I will remember to keep things on the lighter side always, even if the thought of laying myself bare to prospective employers can be weighty indeed.

                          
                                             Hannah Cohen: Child Bride on Nowness.com.

Wednesday

Space is only noise if you can see

Nicolas Jaar -


Haus des Meeres rooftop. Vienna June 2011

GQ City of Pretty Week 14

I am flabbergast by how quickly time is flying, mapped out by the speed at which my column deadline comes around each week. Tirelessly chasing a good time in search of a better story – and with the rub of an eye we are in August. London’s summer is in full swing and city life feels light, and muggy. 

The past week is tainted with some sad news – the untimely passing of our favourite Winemouse. Regardless of whether you were a fan or not, Amy Winehouse’s smothering voice was as encapsulating as her melodies are catchy. She was just one year older than me short one day, joining the club of influential musos kicking their own bucketload of excess at 27. It is rumoured that she died from a dodgy ecstasy pill. It’s quite possible she could have consumed a complimentary sample from the same ‘unaccounted for’ batch that three X-enthusiasts fell into a coma from at Fabric on the weekend.

Three stories beneath London’s Smithfield’s meat market, Fabric plays host to 5000 visitors on any given night. With nights like ‘Wet Yourself’, the institute of loud beats encourages a culture of dancefloor hedonism. It’s the sort of club I avoid at any cost: sweat drenched dickheads throwing shapes on a dance-floor mapped out by laser beams allow my flailing curiosity no room for temptation. When I am invited to watch Nicolas Jaar there on Thursday night, I sacrifice my scepticism only for the sake of your vicarious entertainment, obviously.

Bouncers at the pinnacle of their profession funnel us into the club through a wide staircase divided by steel separators. Like animals we are herded down the rabbit hole. With every step the bass jolts my sternum. I beeline for the bar manned by flashy barmaids in hot pants and trucker caps to throw back my claustrophobia, as the awareness kicks in that we are now 80 meters underground. The club is ram-packed, and smells like farty gasses. By now the bass is so loud that the mass unanimously gyrates to and from the speaker, orchestrated by the heaving beat. When Jaar comes on with his three-piece band, we worm our way to the side of the stage. It’s competitive placement, the feet of ephedrine have no mercy on the sober girl in a crowd this dense.

I befriend the tallest guy in the club to be my pillar of solitude in the tumultuous crowd as I anticipate the drop that never comes. I haven’t heard Jaar before and it’s quite a revelation. His music is subdued and bass heavy, melodic and jovial. The crowd, in turn, responds with lively enthusiasm rather than grinding jaws. I manage to throw a few shapes myself before I’m pushed out to the side by a group on 30-something women ogling the tall guy with widened pupils, bringing me back to reality. I fight to the surface in desperate need of a lungful of air, and also to escape the persistent fart smell.

There’ll be plenty of fresh air for me to catch as I head to the Big Chill this weekend. The Chemical Brothers open the festival on Friday eve, and I imagine this time around the crowd won’t be so subdued. I’ll need to find myself another guardian angel I think, or some elbow pads at the very least. Oh boy, the things I do for a juicy read...


Friday

RVCA launches Artist Network Program ANP


RVCA is finally launching their Artist Network Program in South Africa. This is a noble cause - unlike most lifestyle brands that use 'artist' culture as a springboard for marketing, RVCA has a longstanding initiative called the ANP that supports, develops and enables creative souls to keep doing what they do best, without having to sell out or compromise on integrity. The ANP aims to give back by providing a voice for the creative growth of the artists and musicians it represents.

If you can make it (and onto the guest list), check out this event at the Labia in Cape Town on the 17th of May. Artists represented by RVCA's ANP are Taxi Violence, Haasbroek, Jade Klara and Senyol.

Icon du jour - Jade Castrinos



Jade Castrinos is the Jade whom Alexander Ebert from Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes has written many songs for. Her muse status is unquestionable. Always slightly more shy and outshone by Alex in the Magnetic Zeroes, Jade's voice is Janis, Joni, PJ Harvey - and then some. She's is massively inspirational. And she looks like and reminds me so much of my dear friend Serena.

Also, have a listen to Alexander Ebert's self-titled solo album. More to bemuse <3