Tuesday, August 30, 2011

[color keys]


There are quite a few cases in our society today that confuse many of us in terms of how we should behave or what we should think in regards to race. What is okay for black people to do? For white people to do? Should there be a difference?

One example of a debatable issue of this sort is the rap/hip-hop music industry. Some think that because it was started by black people who were trying to express their frustration and joy in a unique way, that white people have no buisness involving themselves in it or attempting to express themselves in the same way. Others say that it doesn't matter who you are, but if you're good at it then do it. Let me explain both sides briefly.

For black people: They understand that this form of expression was one of the few that they had, and for them it constitutes not just an expression of independence, but independence itself. It is a mark- a stamp and a reminder of where they have been and how they got to where they are now. And so, when it affected and even controlled by white people, that is understandably percieved as a threat. It happened with Jazz and Rock n' Roll, when they were started to be viewed as white dominated genres instead of being appreciated for their black roots. They want to keep what is theirs, and have those who used it be remembered.

For white people: They see an art form that they can express any variety of different views, ideas, and sentiments in and are undeniably good at doing so in some cases. They have a desire for success and improvment and have seen in that industry vast opportunities to do both. It also, by neccessity, is appealing to pretty much any person with the right ear and the right attitute. And thus, they have set their sights on it and there is very little anyone can do to stop them.

For both: White people need to first understand and appreciate that they did not fight for what they have on the same scale as the majority of the black population has. The first black rappers, standing on their porches and street corners in Brooklyn, had to do it in secret, underground, with no opportunity for mass success as is so available today. They were the ones who fought for it, and they were the ones who won it. White rappers might be great as spitting rhyms and keeping up a flow, but they were not the ones who did it first, and their claim to it is secondary. Now, black people need to understand that just because they did fight for it, and they did win it for themselves, that they are not the only ones who can rap. No one color is always better or worse, and in that sense it doesn't matter what color you are. But if you're black, don't get angry at a good rapper just because he is white and he doesn't know about struggles in life or growing up in the hood. He's good, maybe better than you, so just get over it. You have to be better because you're better, not just because you're black. And if you're white, understand that no matter how good you are at rapping, the only reason that it's the art form it is today is because it was fought for by the Black community.

This was not meant to arouse problems, or give anyone a reason to for even harder hearts on this issue. If you have an opinion or question, I'd love to hear but please don't argue on here. Feel free to e-mail me or call me or whatever. Thank you for reading.

J. Galindo @ The Productions

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

[rise of the knowmads]

“Rise”
by J. M. Galindo
at
The Production

SEATTLE, WA- The Northwest, and Seattle in particular, is widely known for two things: its underground music scene and smoking weed. And while the former may be the more acceptable of the two, they are equally relatable to many of the people here.
So when I heard there was a group that seemed to have a familiar understanding of both of these staples, I figured it was worth taking a look.
For months since this past summer, I had noticed an increasing interest in a Seattle rap group called the KnowMads. Clever name, I thought.
Their music would be at parties or in cars, people inquiring who it was that was playing. Some kids sitting in their classes would mumble the lines from their tracks, their heads bobbing up and down, as if in approval of what they were hearing.
Any band that makes an impact like this is worth a listen, so I went on iTunes and bought their “Seattle” album and immediately was struck by a subtle difference in how they sounded- not just in the lyrics, which used Eminem-esque internal rhyme and 3/6 accents on the up-beat, but also in the retro beat that many of their songs employ, reminding me closely of something straight out of Philadelphia.
These things combined to make a sound that seemed to actually capture the cold rain, bad traffic, and looming clouds of the city we both called home. This being no small feat, I wanted to look up more info on them and some lyrics to their songs.
But when I went to do this, I found nearly nothing about them. Beyond a myspace page and some YouTube videos, there was little evidence they existed on the vast expanse of the internet. Even my English teacher has a Wikipedia page- but these guys had virtually nothing.
Wanting to know more and seeing that I had to find it out for myself, I decided to try and line-up and interview with the group. I contacted KnowMads frontman Tom Pepe on facebook (not so shocking in this day and age) and got in touch with their manager.
I told her I was a writer who wanted to do a piece on them, and we immediately set the interview up. The following Monday, my friend Tony and I drive down to Seattle through the typical rain and clouds, and arrive at the address, decorated for Christmas with lights hanging and a mini-tree on the porch.
The door opens and we are greeted by a five-foot-four blonde who invites us in and introduces herself as Camilla Koon, the KnowMads’ manager. We say hello and wander into the house as she goes off to try to find Tom Wilson, whose house we were apparently at.
It is a bachelor pad, through and through, with somewhat futile attempts at creative decoration and aesthetics mixed with male essentials like the X-box 360, a flat screen TV, and a pack of juice-boxes on the ground next to the couch.
We take a seat, and in walks Tom Wilson wearing stained basketball shorts, a hoodie, and a Santa hat. He takes a seat. Then comes Tom Pepe, in a Seattle Mariners hat and sweatpants. Classic.
We say hi to them both, and they sit tensely down. Nobody really knows how to act yet, and I am probably the most nervous one there. So I take a deep breath, and start.
“Ok, so this all is going to be super informal. I’ll kind of ask you guys some questions, just to kind of intro the conversation, but then you can just go from there”.
They immediately look more relaxed and kind of laugh, apparently relieved that they could just be normal, and do what they wanted. Tom Pepe looks at me.
“So informal that I could… smoke weed?”
 I smile.
“That’s fine. Just do whatever you guys want- that’s what I’m here to write about.”
He goes and gets a bong from the back room and lights up, beginning to cough and wheez as I get my notes together. I get their names and ages, as well as the absent ex-member of the group. Tom “Pepe” Pepe and Tom “Cheef” Wilson are both 20 years old. The other member’s name is Jesse “Jester” Judd but he officially left the group about eighteen months before.
Camilla curls up on the couch a seat away from me with her laptop. Working, I assume.
I ask them if they have any shows planned as of yet, and they say they don’t but they hope to have one sometime in February.
Turns out they’re doing a show at the Nectar Lounge on the 4th of February, opening for Scribes with an all-ages show.
I make a note to get some tickets to that, and take a couple more notes as Pepe hits the bong again.
They start to go into the history of how they all met and when they started rapping together, giving some background to the two men before me.
Their experiences were fairly different, especially from one another. Wilson had different priorities than academics in high school, and used rapping at places like football games as a creative outlet. Pepe was more successful academically, getting good grades but being something of a social critic at school. This changed when he discovered rap.
They both had known each other since high school, but didn’t really begin to get closer until sophomore year when Judd introduced them and they battled for the first time.
Pepe- “I tried to find a path that went outside of the expectations of my parents and school. I wanted make a positive impact on the world, so I started taking the road less travelled and rapping about my life.”
He takes another hit out of the bong and the smoke curls out of the corners of his mouth and around the back of his neck. Wilson chuckles.
They tell me about how they started rapping just for fun- as a way to express what they were seeing and feeling about the world. After a while, however, they knew it was more.
Pepe- “We knew it was something long-term, and it became central to our lives and dreams.”
They talk about some of the recent shows and awards they have received, including 2nd place at the 2007 Soundoff at EMP. They also just found out that they had won the Supernova Battle of the Bands for December this year, this decision being based, apparently, off hype for the KnowMads specifically and the turnout they encouraged at the event. I asked them about this show.
Pepe- “It wasn’t one of the cleanest shows…but we thought we was gonna get a 30 minute set…but we got like an hour and a half”
They both start to laugh a little about the show.
Pepe- “Sometimes it gets crazy, but this was just…nuts. Most of the kids knew all the words to our songs and some of them were younger and getting wilder than us. Honestly, we f***** up some of our lyrics and had to freestyle. Our fans were dope though.”
 Wilson- “But we were also able to see how dedicated our fans were, I signed like 20 pairs of shoes and gave away all the CDs we brought; it was all gravy.”
They seem to have a positive attitude about the show, but still see some ways that it could have been better or will be better in the future- both good skills for performers.
After Pepe taking another pull from the bong, we move onto another subject. I ask them about how all of this history had affected their music and lyrics. Up to this point, Wilson has been relatively quiet, commenting in every once in a while with a minor correction in terms or clarifying remark. On this subject though, he seems to have a bit to say.
Wilson- “Even back in high school we were never tryn’a rap about bulls***, there was a conscious message behind all the weed and alcohol that came into our lives. Sometimes that gets misinterpreted, as if all we rap about is drugs and weed and getting drunker than a lumberjack."
Pepe- “Yeah, I mean after our SEATTLE album we found that kids were taking ecstasy or smoking bud and connecting that to our music. I would never want to influence someone to use drugs, that was just part of my path. So it came out in our music. But still kids are drawn to the fact that we tell the truth of what it’s really like to be a kid growing up in Seattle. So maybe kids relate since they smoke as much bud as us.”
They laughed a little bit. He continues.
“We got hella support in this city right now. I mean, influence is power; the power is in the people, ya know?”
Pepe wheezes from the weed once more.
Wilson- “But, on the other hand, we’re not, like, wanting to negatively affect people, ya know? Like, that’s not even the point, like drugs can be either a positive or a negative thing, depending on how you use them.”
They go on to clarify that they don’t have all the answers right now; that they constantly have to be questioning and critical of their own work and what they represent, even while feeling contradicted about practice vs. promotion.
Wilson- “You really do feel both ways sometimes. Sometimes we really do get too f***** up” (a reference to their song ‘FlipCup’ from their SEATTLE album).
They seem done with the subject, so I move on to another. I ask about their influences and who has inspired them throughout the years. They both lay out a short list of high-name Rap artists including 2Pac and Jay-Z.
Wilson- “Yeah, like Em said ‘don’t give a f***, which was the opposite of what everybody else was sayin’ at the time about ‘you gotta live the life’”.
Wilson continues on to say that Eminem’s whole story inspired him. The fact that he had repeatedly made it over barriers, over and over, helped him when things got tough.
Wilson- “Like, back when his s*** was first comin’ out, in like ’96 or ’97, it sounded different so it didn’t sell that well. But like, if it was released today, people would still appreciate, and like, still wanna listen ya know?”
Pepe- “There was something unreliable about what Em[inem] was telling me in his music though. He didn’t give a fuck about his own life or anything and that’s not how I feel at the end of the day, like you still have to care about life and try to make the most of it.”
Pepe sits up and sets down the bong and goes over to his computer and begins looking for something. He plays an old track from Eminem, and we all sit there in the living room listening for a few minutes, as I watch Pepe and Wilson bobbing their heads to the beat, and muttering the raps, more quietly sometimes but then stronger and louder on certain parts.
When the track is done, Pepe sits back down and I begin to wonder about what it’s like when they write their own raps. I ask them if they write them sober or high or both.
Pepe- “I write both ways, like, sometimes I’ll smoke weed or take adderall while I write, but not always. I’ve never really done drugs like Eminem did or anything like that.”
I notice him look at the bong, then look away, noticeably not taking it back up for another hit.
They talk about what they are trying to do more generally with their music, talking about the motives behind what they do (or don’t) say.
Wilson- “We’re trying to relate to the sound of the fans. Like, sometimes we can’t even define if how we relate impacts people in a positive or negative way, but at least we connected, like we’re still connected to people and that’s what matters”.
Pepe (laughing)- “Weed might be the most relatable topic that we write about. A lot of kids smoke weed and think in a way that connects them to our thoughts and ideas. And relating to the people you tryn’a have hear you, is the only way to succeed”.
I ask him how he would define success.
Pepe- “Success, to me, is just the music, ya know? Like, no matter what, the money can always be there. But success is just not worrying about anything but the music. When kids tell me they listen to my music to help them get through the day, that means I’ve already succeeded in my main goal with this hip hop… But I want to go national or global, impact the world- that’s my dream.”
I turn to Wilson, asking the same question.
Wilson- “My success was when I was first identified, as a rapper first, before, like, anything else. But it’s really just about making dope music. Even if there was no money in it, it’d still be worth it”.
Pepe nods and adds:
Pepe- “You gotta aim big to have people know who you are and take you seriously. You gotta believe in yourself if you want others to believe in you and carry you there”.
I look at my phone and it’s been just over an hour, just about the time I was aiming for. I’m satisfied with what I’ve got, so I ask them if they have any questions for me. They don’t really seem to, so Tony and I get up to leave.
Pepe to runs to go get some CD’s for us, and comes back with two for each of us, a copy of Seattle by KnowMads and CupaTea by Tom Pepe. They both sign both CD’s and I try to not make my excitement too apparent.
We thank them again, and I say thank you to Camilla Koon for the opportunity and tell her I’ll be in touch soon. She thanks me again and we walk out the door back into the light rain and head home through the traffic.
The KnowMads have something that is ultimately necessary for any musical artist who wants to succeed and leave their name in the ears and minds of their audience. They have a pure, unadulterated desire to do what makes them truly happy. And lucky for all of us, that happiness comes from making music.
From the first time you hear one of their tracks, you can tell that something significant has just struck you. Whether it comes from the incessantly pertinent and eclectic lyrical references, or the smooth, gripping beats that accompany them, the KnowMads will leave their mark. For them, it will not be a matter of being given the opportunity for success. They will make this opportunity for themselves. All that we need to do now is sit back, listen to the sound, and watch them rise to the fame that they deserve.

2.01.11
The Production
J.M. Galindo

Saturday, January 8, 2011

[the black keys]

[the black keys]
          It is ironic that one of the most impressive bands on the American music charts is comprised of only two men. Often, it is the diversity and the synthesized talent that many artists find when they come together that is what most helps them to be successful. From their first album released only one decade ago, they have made a statement and impression that some bands don’t make in twice that time.
            Television shows like Hung, Eastbound & Down, Big Love, Lie To Me, and Friday Night Lights have featured their music. Many movies, including I Love You Man, The Twilight Saga: Eclipse, School of Rock, Cloverfield, Black Snake Moan, and Zombieland have included various songs on their soundtracks. Their smooth but edgy sound has been heard on commercials ranging from Sony Ericsson to Victoria’s Secret, and has helped us live out our wildest fantasies on video games like NHL 11, NASCAR 09, and Grand Theft Auto IV.
            A consideration of the demographics represented in all of these broad and varied cultural examples will tell us that this band sounds pretty good to a whole lot of people. The fact that their newest album Brothers sold over 73,000 copies in its first week, making it the #3 ranked on the Billboard Albums chart and that the single Tighten Up reached the number one spot on the US alternative charts, tells us that this band is only gaining fans and climbing the charts. They also helped judge the 9th annual Independent Music Awards, which also tells us that the music community actually cares what they think- no small feat for a ten year old rock band from Akron, Ohio.
            With guitar riffs that melt slow but cut like a new razor, and understated but irresistible beats on the drums, this band does not claim a brand new sound, but it seems to have nearly perfected the sound it is trying to capture.
            Perhaps it is the irony in and of itself that helps us to better appreciate the complexity and intricacy of this group. Their talent speaks for itself, not only as performers and musicians, but as producers as well. The fact that they can produce such a sound argues that contrary to modern ideas of ‘quantity to prove quality’, the talent, desire, and pursuit of a certain type of music is what it actually needed to produce that music well.
            If ‘Booker T & the MGs’ and ‘Blue Cheer’ had donated their talent to future rock groups, it would have been used for ‘The Black Keys’. Their veins are full of soulful, bluesy guitar riffs and percussion that Phil Rudd just might want back one day. Their lyrics of dusky, dusty life and all its complications are relatable to (either in fantasy or reality) nearly everyone who could listen. Heavy does not begin to describe them.
            This rock duo will undoubtedly keep us happy for some time, giving Rock-lovers everywhere a reason to crank the volume.
All info courtesy of wikipedia.com.

[sleepy sun]

[sleepy sun]
            Once every few years, there is a band that comes into the mainstream spotlight and completely changes the way we see a certain genre of music. Sleepy Sun is not that band.
They do however, live up to many of the varied criteria we ask for in a true heart and soul rock group. This six man group from San Francisco has one of the rare abilities to take us from sounds reminiscent of Hendrix to Jefferson Airplane to something African, all in the confines of a single track.
But it does not stop there. Acid-trip songs like Desert God and Wild Machines remind us of a revamped version Zeppelin’s Heartbreaker. Easy wa-wa peddle ridden tracks like Sandstorm Woman make any rock fan yearn to be sitting at the live concert, feeling the vibration in their chest from the bass.
The musical review website explodinginsound.com referenced the American music and entertainment publication Filter Magazine, saying “One of the band’s strongest features lies in the emotional vaporous vocal of vocalist Bret Constantino and the sweet and soulful voice of Rachel William whom complimented the overall sound of Sleepy Sun” (Exploding).
But this varied and remarkable band does not abandon after the concert is over. Other sounds like those on the piano-lined track Lord promise us that they will stay with us, even after the haze is gone.
Bands like this are what give some people headaches. But for some, they are the only things that can make the pain go away. Songs that rock us like Peter Frampton, but soothe us like Elton John, are all we need ask for a band in this day and age.       
Virtually everything has been done- every sound, every chord, and every twisted lyric. There is truly nothing new under the sun. But we find the fulfillment of nearly everything we have learned to love in Sleepy Sun, and we hope to hear much more from them in the future. 

[the black angels]

[the black angels]
A psychedelic rock group from Texas, many of this band’s songs play in the modern darkening-yet-irresistible themes that make us think of sexy vampires and ironically funny zombie movies.
Tracks like Yellow Elevator #2 and Young Men Dead seem to fit perfectly into an epic soundtrack of bad-ass shoot ‘em up scenes, and slow motion explosions, but despite the genre they appear to fit into, they repeatedly deny the necessity for drugs in their vein of music.
In an interview with Andy Greenwald of Rolling Stone magazine, Maas (TBA’s front-man) said, “The music is supposed to take you there, to make you feel messed up. It’s a bad misconception that all psychedelic music creators are doing drugs.”(Rolling). Well put, sir.
With the slow and steady pace of tracks like Manipulation, you may feel your eyes beginning to half close in the haze of a smoky bassline, as the smoke of a re-verb vocal mic slowly curls around the back of your neck.
After a concert in 2007, J.D. Roth wrote on his website Folded Space, “I didn't know anything about the group going in — hadn't heard a single song — but after the concert, I'm a convert. These guys rock”(Foldedspace).
With virtually no hooks, and intros that blend almost seamlessly into the rest of the song, it’s easy to become a part of the music, and truly be carried away for just a few minutes.
In lyrics like “Hit hard with harm//She loves to off you then yawn//Never disarm, you know she loves to be drawn//You're leaching hard friend//I'm feeling down again”(Black), we are free to dabble in the darker, more sinister aspects of our basic psyche.
Trudging through the bleak lyrics, and dark sounds, we find that we are not alienated from the sound, because we know that many situations come to mind which warrant this unabashed view of our modern world.
But it’s also a sound that helps us cope- a song that would be playing in the dusky bar of the abandoned town, just as the hardened hero strides through the door in the final scenes of the movie.
And so, we tip our hats to The Black Angels, not only for their homage to Velvet Underground on numerous different occasions, but for giving us an outlet for our desire in devilry, while still making it fun as hell to listen to and jam with.

Sources

[sources used]
   -the black angels
                Roth, J.D. "Foldedspace.org: Concert Review: The Black Angels at The Doug Fir." Foldedspace — Musings of a Middle-aged Geek. 25 May 2007. Web. 10 Nov. 2010. <http://www.foldedspace.org/weblog/2007/05/concert_review_the_black_angel.html>.
     
               Greenwald, Andy. "Band of the Week: The Darkly Psychedelic Black Angels | Rolling Stone Music."                    Rolling Stone | Music News, Reviews, Photos, Videos, Interviews and More. 1 Nov. 2010. Web. 10 Nov. 2010. <http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/51942/229478>.

               "The Black Angels - Bad Vibrations Lyrics." The Black Angels - Phosphene Dream | "Telephone" Video - Directed by Oswald James. Web. 10 Nov. 2010. <http://www.theblackangels.com/forum/comments.php?DiscussionID=303>.

    -sleepy sun
             Goldin, Dan. "Filter Magazine Offers First Look at New Sleepy Sun Album." Exploding In Sound (delivering Good Rock Music since 2008). 29 Mar. 2010. Web. 10 Nov. 2010. <http://www.explodinginsound.com/2010/03/filter-magazine-offers-first-look-at.html>.
           
-the black keys
                "The Black Keys." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Web. 08 Jan. 2011. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Black_Keys>.