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#21
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
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0x7577343536|member of "publish darc!" comittee |
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#22
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
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and anyway it's called 'hype' you eunuchs. it's an invaluable and inseprable aspect of music. i'd rather read that, being suitable to what is being plugged, rather than "i say, this is quite a cracker" |
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#23
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
Yeah, lay off A.B. for hyping it up. I much prefer wild enthusiasm to world-weary measured cynicism, and you should too. Too bad he's enthusiastic about a pretty crappy album, but hey you can't win em all.
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#24
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
dubman: As I said before, the sample tracks don't really do it justice. Clipping parts from the middle removes the context, and this album is pure context.
My brother interviewed this guy once (which is as far as my connection to him goes). I decided to post the interview here because he actually addresses Tyler's points very directly, and it also goes a long way to sort of explain what's going on, because this is awfully strange music. This will be posted in two parts, because it's long. I'd link it, but it's not online. Quote:
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on the roof again |
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#25
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
part two comin' atcha
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on the roof again |
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#26
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
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![]() *YAWN*
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UW0537 The truth, as ever, is subjective
Last edited by Rog; 06-13-2006 at 05:13 AM. |
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#27
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
GOOD.
i have friends who are like this guy, who would be considered all hipstered out simply for their strange attitudes towards media consumption. it's like if there's a disconnect between how you look or think and what media you're into, then it's supposed to be ironic, a term which both confuses and angers them. one of them: she dresses up a little odd, as white as white can get, and is super aggro, but her love for mac-dre is VERY real. cheap photo-shops, drunken freestyling, knitting, and violent bay-area rap arent some escapist uber-indie ideal to her, it's what she loves, and she can't stand it when douches with zero imagination accuse her of not being serious about it. and it sounds like this guy is coming somewhat from that. so as TACKY as it is, it's good to know that there's the same kind of LOVE put into it. and that "dream-pop" bit was dead on ![]() also, he seems to be on the same label as the bran flakes. big plus! edit: just remembered that this connected brother of yours is dr. thorpe! nice to see him write seriously (and well) about music, although his SA column (and front page adventures, these days) continue to endlessly entertain (old newspaper brawl being pretty memorable). does he actually think underworld is washed up?
Last edited by dubman; 06-13-2006 at 11:03 PM. |
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#28
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
I'm not certain the Girl Talk interview does away with one's ability to read irony into his music. Regardless of whether or not the intent of his music, or his own appreciation of his source material, is ironic--his execution arguably exemplifies ironic kitsch, haphazardly (or intuitively, if you prefer, and as he claims) setting up juxtapositions and combinations with an effect that might be characterized as "detached amusement". Comparisons with mash-up culture at large are potentially misleading, since Girl Talk's roving, more-or-less linear pastiche of references more closely resembles a hyperactive DJ mix which avoids commitment or focus, rather than the single, potent welding of two or three songs in a 'proper' mash-up (which suggests an exploration of the potential in combining entire, complete pieces of music together)--the techniques may be identical, but have honestly been around since hip-hop. Painting his music as the newest manifestation of a nascent subculture is a bit of a red herring.
The overall effect, to me, is one of distancing--Girl Talk's musical choices may sound good and be real to him--but if your music simply amounts to a rapid succession of references (mash-ups included--combining this riff with that chorus simply references both at once), and you're not personally involved in any of the musical contexts or dialogues attached to your referents, then you're simply an observer, a consumer, playing connect-the-dots from outside the pop-cultural arena. Nothing inherently wrong with that, but the article and Girl Talk's quotes seemed to me to be making much more of something that's rather simple in reality. |
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#29
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
the proper mash-up, containing two or three peices of music, is a limited process that holds up its value mainly in what it's doing but is sonically a novelty and consumer-oriented style of creation (not that there's anything wrong with that last phrase). hearing a lust for life/will smith clash is kind of thrilling at first, but once will smith gets into his second wind we become painfully aware that the creator merely put two and two together in a brief flash of great association, but imagination soon gave way to technique in an endeavour where the initial idea doesn't have the gas to last longer than that first minute or so.
i think girl talk takes that initial experience and augments it, gives it depth, by not only being oriented towards a culturally aware audience but directly engaging with it by moving at speeds that render many of its parts indecipherable, sometimes refusing a focused or deliberate style, forcing a majority of listeners to constantly feel a familiarity with what they're hearing without being able to place it (but also reaching checkpoints that are easily identifiable). in a sense this one-ups even sampling, since we now have the benefit of relevantrecontextualization, having source material for which we were around to for and know being mangled in this way. i think girl talk explicitly transcends being clever and connecting things by how its discordant nature connects nothing at all, but to me seems like a coherent and enthusiastic work. |
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#30
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
Well-put... two things to add. First, the beauty of this "attention deficit style" is that while the typical mash-up gets old as soon as you figure out what's going on, Girl Talk barely gives you TIME to figure out what's going on. He comes up with these amazing juxtapositions, but he only lets them last long enough to get the point across, then he mercilessly switches it up on you. People sometimes complain that he doesn't play enough of each song, but he's not mr. DJ here to play records for you, he's making his own music. Artists like The Avalanches and DJ Shadow are doing pretty much the same thing, you just don't normally catch as many of the references. Using immediately recognizable samples that recall whole songs is just part of his game, and it brings me to my other point.
In time, like anything of this nature, you get over the novelty of it, but that's when you realize that as music taken on its own terms, this album WORKS. At first hearing Biggie over Elton John is funny, even a little jarring, but after a few listens you're just in the groove, and that's when the real genius of Girl Talk hits. This music is "crazy" in concept, but in execution, all it is is flawless. He actually manages to keep the beat pumping for 40 minutes doing this shit. I dare any DJ to attempt it. Dubman: Thanks for reading Dave's stuff. He has been very successful lately... he has a book deal based on his ongoing "Fashion SWAT" articles co-written with the wonderful Zack Parsons, and one of his "Your Band Sucks" articles was selected for inclusion in a reputable journal of the year's best music writing, apparently beating out such luminaries as Simon Reynolds. And no, he actually digs Underworld almost as much as I do, that was just some harmless ribbing. Also: Where's Tom? I think he'd like this album too. PAGING DETOUR TO THIS THREAD
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on the roof again |
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