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(idm) [Boston-Raves] "Blech" at Vinyl in the New York Times (long) (fwd)

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◇ merged from 2 subjects: (idm) "blech" at vinyl · (idm) [boston-raves] "blech" at vinyl in the new york times (long) (fwd)
1997-01-06 21:31Aran M. Parillo (idm) [Boston-Raves] "Blech" at Vinyl in the New York Times (long) (fwd)
└─ 1997-01-06 22:43Zenon M. Feszczak Re: (idm) "Blech" at Vinyl
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1997-01-06 21:31Aran M. Parillowowser! tp _________________________________ H a r r i s o n & T r o x e l l Aran M. Paril
From:
Aran M. Parillo
To:
it.doesn't.matter
Date:
Mon, 6 Jan 1997 16:31:56 -0500 (EST)
Subject:
(idm) [Boston-Raves] "Blech" at Vinyl in the New York Times (long) (fwd)
permalink · <Pine.GSO.3.95.970106163117.12053A-100000@columbus.hnt.com>
wowser! tp _________________________________ H a r r i s o n & T r o x e l l Aran M. Parillo------aran@hnt.com # 2 Faneuil Hall Marketplace Boston, MA 02109 (617) 523-7356 ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Mon, 06 Jan 1997 15:26:19 -0400 (EDT) From: Steve Hoey <HOEYST@hugse2.harvard.edu> To: boston-raves@ccs.neu.edu Subject: [Boston-Raves] "Blech" at Vinyl in the New York Times (long) Hi everyone. I'm sending along a full review of Blech at Vinyl from the New York Times. I was staggered to read a review of an event like this in "the paper of record" for the USA...but I guess New York's media should be expected to be way ahead of the rest of the nation's... At any rate, if anyone's interested feel free to forward this to NE-Raves or anywhere else... Maybe someone who knows more about hyperreal than I do might find an appropriate home for this there as well. This is reprinted without permission but with respect and attribution, so please be kind :) From the New York _Times_, Monday, January 6, 1997, Page C12, Column 3 pop review AT VINYL, FAST-PACED TECHNO FOR DANCERS ONLY by Ben Ratliff The new electronics-based club music is all about liquidity, and journalism is about solid blocks of text. So every clumsy attempt to affix labels to the music's subgenres (Is electronica the correct umbrella term, or techno? Is ambient techno related to trip-hop? What makes "intelligent dance music"?) produces howling complaints from the figureheads of the scene, who prize the movement's amoebic culture. But only a dummy can't recognize intelligence. Blech, an electronic-music party that takes place every other week in Sheffield, England, was transplanted to New York for a one-shot evening on Friday night from 10 to 6 am at Vinyl. Warp Records, a leading imprimatur of what has been quite rightly called intelligent dance music, sponsored the evening, and most of the composers, performers and disk jockeys (some writers have taken to describing them gingerly as "sound artists") were associated with the British label. The blunt economic truth governing the evening was that Vinyl is a dance club, not a salon for experimentation, and some of the regulars like their techno straight: presumably, they couldn't have cared less about Warp's crew of genre-stretchers. So the music in the club's large room often approached the brutish, thudding simplicity of the popular club music known as trance. Autechre, an English electronica duo, performed a live set behind DAT machines; there was some artful cross-fading and effects, but for the most part it was fast, evenly paced, single-minded techno for dancers only. The large floor was full, its occupants only visible by strobe-light and red, pinpointed beams. In a smaller room, after D.J. Frank O's turntable set of cocktail exotica accompanied by a seminude dancer, Jimi Tenor began an act that was much more personal. He is a small, slight Finn with oversized plastic-framed glasses, and he wore a woman's pink bolero jacket over his bare torso while performing a kind of smooth internationalist 1960's soul music. There was Georgie Fame in his sound, and Sun Ra, too: as he sang the melody in tandem with his organ and lingered over mantras like "Can't stay with you, baby," he would periodically turn the echo control on his rhythm machine to full, slamming a wrench in the groove and achieving an outer-space shock effect. There were no announcements and nothing like a schedule; attending an electronica party is like swimming through a sea of rumor. It was known that the Aphex Twin, whose real name is Richard D. James -- the brilliant rascal of electronica, and one of its true artists -- would head the bill with a disk-jockey set, but nobody had a clue when he would start. Gossip had it that he came on at 3:30, and was stopped after 15 minutes by management because regular patrons started to flee from his tortured, skewered beats. At 5 A.M., Mr. James finally appeared behind the dark glass of the raised D.J. booth, signaling his arrival with the sounds of a Ping-Pong game, and produced music utterly different from what had come before. The dancing mostly stopped as the floor reoriented itself; in his work there are so many textures within a four-beat sequence that it stretches the brain and dancing becomes an afterthought. An earth-shaking bass and a sampled siren copmpeted over beats that sounded like spawning locusts; each measure of the music had humor and personality, and a fading minority heard the best hour of the morning. [end of review] Well I'm not sure how much in agreement I am with Mr. Ratliff, but I know he got one thing *dead-on*: "attending an electronica party is like swimming through a sea of rumor" Cheers! =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Steve Hoey Internet: hoey@noiselabs.com Chief Safety Inspector, n o i s e l a b o r a t o r i e s , i n c . http://www.noiselabs.com -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= To unsubscribe from this mail list: Send mail to <majordomo@ccs.neu.edu> with the message: unsubscribe boston-raves
1997-01-06 22:43Zenon M. Feszczak> There were no announcements and nothing like a schedule; attending an >electronica party
From:
Zenon M. Feszczak
To:
Date:
Mon, 6 Jan 1997 17:43:18 -0500
Subject:
Re: (idm) "Blech" at Vinyl
Reply to:
(idm) [Boston-Raves] "Blech" at Vinyl in the New York Times (long) (fwd)
permalink · <v03010d14aef72f0481d1@[128.91.202.157]>
quoted 8 lines There were no announcements and nothing like a schedule; attending an> There were no announcements and nothing like a schedule; attending an >electronica party is like swimming through a sea of rumor. It was known that >the Aphex Twin, whose real name is Richard D. James -- the brilliant rascal of >electronica, and one of its true artists -- would head the bill with a >disk-jockey set, but nobody had a clue when he would start. Gossip had it >that >he came on at 3:30, and was stopped after 15 minutes by management because >regular patrons started to flee from his tortured, skewered beats.
Reminds me of the Aphex Aphectations at the Trocadero in Philadelphia about 2 years back. Orbital opened the show, all were dancing like headless chickens or flopping around like headless fish, a melodic dance-oriented lush (sic) set from the bug-eyed aliens on stage. Aphid hit the stage with a dancer who seemed to be experiencing a prolonged seizure, though no one seemed concerned enough to phone a medic. Actually, one could hardly see Aphluent in the darkened space behind racks of decks. His music began as an amicable segue from the Orbital dancefriendliness, and rapidly (d)evolved into artful noise. The floor cleared. We retired to the upstairs balcony to watch the mayhem. Migraine-inducing feedback and sirens over overdriven effects-processed beats. People were dying, if not leaving. Poor popstar Melville Moby had to follow this exodus-induction! 3