Archive for the ‘nyc’ Category

Returns

Monday, November 17th, 2008

O Cabidão caught an overnight flight to Rio on Saturday, rather gladly saying farewell to the U.S. and returning to “a minha terra, o meu Brasil!” Too cold, volume too low, clubs too small (and my basement not the nicest place to live either, granted). After three weeks as the ad-hoc tour manager of the first non-Marlboro DJ to play for American audiences, I now have a more realistic perspective on the viability of bridging the divide between global ghettotechnicians and their northern fans, at least in the case of funk carioca, really completing the circle from wide-eyed onlooker to direct intervener.

I don’t want to declare the tour a failure. There were plenty of highlights: Global Frequency, MoFo Radio, Invasores do Baixo, Mudd Up!, TTL in-store, Batida do Funk. And the tour really brought out the best of some fine folks like wayne&wax, Lone Wolf, DJ Ghostdad, and DJ Comrade, all of whom put their time/money/effort/talent into collaborating. Kosta of Bananas even used his west coast contacts to score a show in Seattle on three days notice.

Still, a tour remains an economic proposition, and one that fell fairly flat. It seems that playing the Brazuca circuit (Hyannis, Newark, Bridgeport, Boston, etc.) pays for the plane ticket and is a prerequisite to being able to afford other shows for the knowing gringos. Unfortunately, this means Brazuca crowds will also be driving who gets brought up. Most are not carioca, but from other, poorer states in Brazil, and get their funkeiro fandom from the web, where heartthrobs like Mulher Melancia (the Watermelon Lady) are the top draw. Cabide, in fact, was a relative unknown, so he didn’t bring out the Brazilians en masse in New England.

While this tour was a half-and-half proposition, in the future I expect funk DJs and MCs to mostly play for the brasileiros and then, if possible, an interested party like myself, the Boston Bouncers, Xão Productions, or Masala (who had expressed interest, but we had some visa issues) will cobble something together.

The “Batida do Funk” party by Xão at S.O.B.’s was, admittedly, my favorite of the tour. To trot out an old cliche, in the melting pot of New York we were able to find the mixture of gringos in the know, global music aficionados, and plain old Brazilians to make the show a real crossover audience. The addition of Brazilian dancers and a baile funk slideshow by Vincent Rosenblatt of Agência Olhares made for an odd refraction.


Dancers juxtaposed with the image of dancers. A baile funk americano (Cabide repeatedly referred to shows as “bailes”) juxtaposed with a baile funk carioca. We were both interviewed for the upcoming film Beyond Ipanema, about Brazilian music in the U.S., whose directors were in the audience. I was unable to tell who was Brazilian and who was American. It’s difficult math when a club that serves $10 caipirinhas can’t pay the DJ as much as a favela in Rio can, but that’s the strange inversion for you. Who mediates, who performs, who speaks (Cabide was mute without English and I was left to translate for film, radio, conversation). He opened for Diplo on the penultimate show of the Mad Decent tour, playing the first set even before some indie band from Brooklyn came on. The headliner later worked in a tamborzão, but he was temporally separated as much as possible from the real performer. Worried about being upstaged the next night, cutting the volume, sucking the life out of the music. Metaphor and fact. Who controls and who performs. The tours are over, but the film will linger.

Nova Iorque

Friday, November 7th, 2008

The other direction on I-95 tonight & tomorrow — Cabide DJ live in-store at Turntable Lab and then a Saturday midnight show at S.O.B.’s.


Hudson Airwaves

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Yes we did. (Now here’s what the rappers have to say about it.) And on that musical note, can’t stop won’t stop w/r/t Cabide DJ’s tour. He was sending international chirps all night to Brazil about Obama, now he’ll be crashing the NYC airwaves today for some more MPC-banging beats.

First up: The Big Cover Up with $mall ¢hange on East Village Radio (interwebs only) from 4-5 pm with the lovely Zuzuka Poderosa translating.


Then he’ll cross the Hudson for an appearance on Mudd Up, the show hosted by DJ /rupture on venerable freeform station WFMU from 7-8 pm. 91.1 FM on your Nova Iorque radio dial or ao vivo online.

DJ Showcase Latinoamericano

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008


This week is the Latin Alternative Music Confernece in el Manzana Grande. As part of it, global music purveyor S.O.B.’s is hosting a DJ showcase of Latin America’s musica digital-bass-club-mashup on Thursday night. I’ll be holding it down for the Brazilianists with plenty of funk and hip-hop brasileiro, but the rest are a strictly castellano affair — Mexico, Chile, and Argentina.

The Zizek boys and their cumbia digital should be a big draw, especially on the heels of their monster write-up in Urb. Toy Selectah also has been mining the urban/rural frontiers for many years now and has hopefully cooked up something special for the evening.

Meanwhile, Refusenik and I keep wondering how a couple of white Jews of Eastern European descent (or birth, in his case) ended up on the bill . . . until I discovered my secret identity c/o TimeOut New York. Apparently I’m now from Sao Paulo! All the reason to rep Rio even harder.

In all seriousness, I understand it’s going to be the party of LAMC, so if you’re in Nova/Nueva York, stop on by.

DJ Showcase Latinoamericano
S.O.B.’s at 204 Varick St.
$10, 21+
Doors at 8:30 pm, show at 9:30 pm

Favela Keeps Getting Chicer

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Paris and London have long had their own corner favela serving up $10 caipirinhas made from $1 bottles of 51 cachaça. Tomorrow, the NYC crowd will be able to get its own first-world favela fix.

Among Brazilian immigrants in the U.S., at least in the plentiful Brazilian Boston (or more accurately Cambridge/Somerville) community, the universal referents for Brazilianness are fairly typical: futebol, Rio, samba. But it seems the CDD phenomenon definitely had an impact: Among the chic, favelas are the real stand-in for Brazil.

I don’t doubt they deserve visibility, but consumer consumption at expensive nightspots is hardly a helpful way of getting it. When it comes to favela chic, this is more my style.

RVNG Orgy

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

Orgy season kicked off yesterday at WHRB, featuring hours upon hours of steamy college . . . radio.

I have three lined up for May: RVNG, Juan Maclean, and Nu Whirl Music. RVNG — that’s Revenge without the E’s — is coming up tonight. If you’re local to Beantown, tune your dial to 95.3 FM, or listen in via the e-radiowaves.


Celebrating this NYC label whose mixes and 12″s explore the blurry lines where old school and avant-garde techno, Italo/twisted/not so twisted disco, krautrock, 80s new wave/industrial, ambient, and mash-ups slide together in the capable hands of expert DJs

South South Bronx [ed. Northwest South]*

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008


Buried in a thesis avalanche and will come up for air sometime after the magic date of March 14. Made it home from Carnaval in one piece, sem passaporte (another story), and Beija-Flor took the win.

Closer to home, some curious real estate wheelings&dealings — over an affordable housing rec room. Mitchell-Lama, the unsung hero of hip-hop? The comments, if anything, are as interesting as the story. New York bias, Chicago inferiority complex, Bronx vs. Jamaica, it’s all the Republicans fault . . . a classic NYC soapbox.

Not something you see everyday on a prominent NYT page.

P.S. See where the 1520 Sedgwick “rec room” led — support artists in Rio and deepen your funk crates with some vinyl that can only be described as sinístro, mano: Funkeiros e Progresso EP

Massive CD with knowledge jewels galore dropping soon, more info when it arrives.

*Thanks to commenter Richard S. for correcting my geography.


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LES no estilo FUNK CARIOCA

Monday, May 7th, 2007

Sporadic event announcement appear to be Beat Diaspora’s life support strategy as of late. Not a very thrilling one, I admit, but a good a time as any to announce that the tickets have been booked and I’ll be back in Rio for round two during July and August. With another South American winter criss-crossing the fair green hills of Rio, I promise some serious eyes&ears to the ground. Hold tight, hold tight.

and if you’re in the big NYC, drop by the LES for some FUNK. wednesday night, supposedly sweet little spot called Baraza. the night’s called Liberation Sound and the rez DJ is a big fan of Brasil-JA connections. I told him to cop MPC’s baile-dancehall mixtape and you should too (big ups to Maga Bo for spreading the Rio love worldwide). honestly, we should probably just put that on repeat and call it a night. but expect some Brasil riddims to keep the hip-hop paulista sounding fresh and dub out the harsher ends of the booty bass spectrum.


p.s. debuting “GRS-One” after several other failed iterations. clever or just as bad as what elvis did to chuck berry?

Saturday Night Fever

Monday, December 4th, 2006

Obviously been lackluster on the blog front, but I’ll try and get out a few small items before endlessly delaying the big stuff (the rest of Rio, I Love Techno, other Parisian happenings).

Saturday a week ago found me at Paris’s newest and biggest (an anecdotal claim, but trust me most clubs here are tiny) night spot: Showcase, creatively situated in an old sewer duct under Pont Alexandre III. Watch the virtual tour for a stylized take, but be warned it doesn’t show, for example, how water (I hope not of the sewer variety) still drips down the walls and onto you, if you’re not careful.

The video’s soundtrack — is that Lenny Kravitz?! (L’As du Falafel notwithstanding) — I assure you, has nothing to do with what they play regularly, or at least what I came for. Rather, DFA maestro James Murphy (downloading frenzy commence: OTD claims the new album by LCD Soundsystem leaked today, although I haven’t turned up paydirt yet).

While LCD Soundsystem has had a considerable run so far as either everyone’s favorite object of hipster scorn or champion of post-ironic musical synthesis, James Murphy’s DJ prowess is less known stateside (even if his music collection is a matter of public record). My best exposure to it was via Tim Sweeney’s unparalleled Beats in Space radio show on WNYU, a latter-day incarnation of the Midnight Funk Association that blends a treasure trove of new & used techno, house, disco, and The Holy Mountain samples (cf September 26’s broadcast).

James Murphy - Beats in Space, April 11, 2006

His label’s remixes have been celebrated for bringing the neo-disco heat of the last few years, as the Pitchfork review of DFA Remixes: Chapter 1 eloquently elaborates. Ever since the summer I’ve stopped checking Pitchfork with any regularity, but I recall this review from last spring for its engaging analysis of the extended (re)mix: “The ’song’ remains as a corporeal latticework, holding everything together with personable charisma, while the ‘track’ elements (riffs, beats, noisy eruptions) are marshalled into elaborately staged configurations [. . .] At their expansive best, the DFA’s remixes can resemble gleaming, lavishly detailed architectural structures.”

It’s a logic that was clearly at work in his DJ mix at Showcase, where he quickly salvaged a night that would have otherwise been ruined by an awful Matisyahu-esque opener. It was well after sundown, so he wasn’t violating the Sabbath rules, but DJ Tevya (I’m Jewish, I can make these jokes) made me wish it were Friday night. There was nothing wrong with his selection of old-school R&B and soul tracks — even if they were CDs and not 7″s — but his habit of abusing the CD-J and “scratching” without any rhyme or reason (or rhythm) was aurally abusive. Neither his drastic fiddling with the volume nor his pièce de résistance, a “scratch”-filled “99 Problems” with lots of gratuitous dancing on his part, helped matters. I was ashamed that he was sporting a BoSox cap.

Luckily Murphy’s lush disco saved the day with several hours of synthesized strings, groovy bass, and diva vocals. While he can obviously crate dig far better than I ever will, I did recognize a few songs, albeit c/o Mr. Sweeney and his aforementioned radio show, so I’m afraid I don’t have any track names to share.

One observation I can make, however, is how clear at times the lines are between his cache of disco gems and his post-2000 production work. Several times my ears perked up at the opening bars of a new track he was mixing in because it sounded like one of the DFA remixes. I’ve never been a Murphy detractor, but it was particularly gratifying to hear how his mind and ear have been at work these past few years, how closely he’s listened to his old records and internalized their sound structure for his remixes. Far from the ephemeral trendsetter he may sometimes be deried as, there’s a definite appreciation for the remix as artform that shows dutiful homage to his predecessors.

I remember hearing parallels most often to an early number, a slowed-down mix of the dance hit by electrofied riot grrrl faves (or has-beens, if you disapprove of major label jumps) Le Tigre.

Le Tigre - Deceptacon (DFA Remix)

When I first heard it a few years ago, my ear was still more attuned to the frenetic pacing of punk and thought this decelerated version sucked all the manic energy out of it. But attaching it to the durable musical legacy of disco has arguably given it more longevity — elevating it above flash in the pan trend status (”discopunk”, “dancepunk”, “hipster[anything]“, etc.) by adding it to the bibliography of dance music’s long long arc in America.
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A quick p.s. to Saturday Night Fever. While discussing disco as gay music with Luis, a much more dilligent blogger than I will ever be, he explained to me how Travolta’s breakout was in many ways an attempt to masculinize and heterosexualize disco, paving the way for the social acceptability of endless “Disco Saturday Night” throwbacks of the same two dozen songs on commercial radio stations. This conversation coming, of course, after our own fantastic night of watching gay disco on the silver screen thanks to French blockbuster Poltergay.

And so almost three decades later, a disco popularization crosses the East River yet again, thankfully with less polyester and less of a conquering eye toward sexual politics. Groove on, DFA, groove on.