Archive for September, 2009

Joshua Bell is a fantastic violinist – what if you dont like violin music?

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

I got this in the mail the other day, and as atrained classical musician I want to share this with you. I am sorry if you all saw this already. Here goes.Washington, DC Metro Station. Its a cold January morning. A man with a violin
plays seven Bach pieces for  about 50 minutes. During that time approx. 2 thousand people passed through
the station, most of  them on their way to work. After 3 minutes a middle-aged man noticed there
was a musician playing.
He slowed his pace and stopped for a few seconds and then hurried to meet
his schedule. 

5 minutes later:
The violinist received his first dollar: a woman threw the money in the hat
and, without stopping, continued to walk.
 
6 minutes later:
A young man leaned against the wall to listen to him, then looked at his
watch and started to walk  again.

10 minutes:
A 3-year old boy stopped but his mother tugged him along hurriedly. The kid
stopped to look closely at the violinist again, but the mother pushed hard and the child continued to walk,
turning his head all the time. This action was repeated by several other children. Every parent,
without exception, forced their children to move on quickly.

50 minutes later:
The musician played continuously.  Only 6 people stopped and listened for a
short while. About 20 gave some money but continued to walk at their normal pace.

 The man collected a total
of $32.

1 hour:
He finished playing and silence took over. No one noticed. No one applauded,
nor was there any recognition.
No one knew this, but the violinist was Joshua Bell, one of the greatest
musicians in the world. He played one of the most intricate pieces ever written for violin, with a violin valued
at $3.5 million dollars. Two days before, Joshua Bell sold out a theater in Boston where the price of
seats averaged $100.
This is indeed a true story. Joshua Bell playing incognito in the metro station was
organized by the Washington Post as part of a social experiment aboutperception, taste and people’s
priorities. The questions raised:
in a commonplace environment at an inappropriate hour, do we perceive
beauty? Do we stop to appreciate it? Do we recognize talent/excellence in an unexpected context?
One possible conclusion reached from this experiment could be this: If we do
not have a single moment to stop and listen to one of the best musicians in the world, playing some of
the best music ever written, with one of the most beautiful instruments ever made… what else are we
missing?

<a href=”http://www.ganga.dk”>Ganga – Downbeat / Chill Out Music</a>

Friday, September 11th, 2009

“The wills and the wonts the does and the donts” – James Curd - my morning listening today.

Sneaks in under the hood and works on my brainwaves with his strange sounds. Not that strange actually – but just not ordinary.

Lovely downbeat track to start the day – in a smooth but energetic way.

Nice very straight beat and a funny bass line is what makes this track what it is. His voice fits perfectly with this music for the slow ones.

Then there is the Enzo  Ponzio remix, that takes the oddness out a little further. Its still not VERY odd – odd in a normal way.. hehe. Is that possible? I guess here it is.

The timing of the words reminds of the first hip hop stuff from the est coast “Dont push me cause Im close to … the… edge” was it Grandmaster Flash? I think so. Nice timing – works all the time…. when it works. Confused? What I mean is, this kind of old school hi hop timing is almost archetypical, so if you dont use it the right way it will stick out and bite you in the nose..

Next track on this little James Curd trip is called “Back off move away”.

The timing is still very nice and thisn track is a little bit more busy – with a very active electronic arpegiator bass line. The production is very minimal – very tight and well defined roles that all sits well together. This track is not so chilled as the other tracks, but still nice. Funny Phil Collins like drum breaks and a nice little synt line that stops JUST before it gets annoying – so thats how its supposed to be.

I will trow myself out into this new day now – loaded with some new fresh old sounds.

Some strange track is waiting for my reptile brain to work on it in the most mysterious ways.

<a href=”http://www.ganga.dk”>Ganga – Downbeat / Chill Out Music</a>

Biosphere is in my ear

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

Sorry about the wording – couldnt help it.

I just purchased the Biosphere album “Dropsonde” and I am listening to the track called “Birds fly by flapping their wings” .

Some nice breaks riding along in this track. Some repetitive synt stuff and a kind of spooky pad is also there and makes it al sound very snowy white and nordic – melancholic but in a happy way, if that makes any sense.

Next track on the cd is “Warmed by the drift” – the same atmosphere (or Biosphere maybe) is present here, but a little more dark maybe. Synt drones evolving and some random small noises creeing into the mix here and there. Its still repetitive and reminds me a bit of Murcof – the mexican electronica wizard. Not much going on in this track and thats great. It all warms up a bit in the end where he introduces some synt bass sounds and small pizzicato like figures – gives it a new more human feel at the end. Its actually just the transition to the next track – he tied them together.

In the next track “In triple time”,  he is ofcourse in tripletime as the title says, and we are back at the breaks again, exept last time the rhytmic flow was in 7th (means 7/4 or 7/8) – well doesnt mean so much to a non musician maybe, but its a bit no so obvious to compose in this time signature – in this genre anyway. Peolpe has a tendency to stick with 4/4 – how little adventorous that may sound.

This track is in triple time and a little dark also – fast and with a very old school synt sound and still very repetitive. Very melancholic.

The track “From a solid to a liquid” is almost ambient in the old way – like Brian Enos “Apollo” f.ex. – very little movement and sporadic synt lines and a background drone noise thing that prevails the whole track – like planets turning or something – a very beautiful track. Perfect for a nap on the couch after a hard days work.

On ”Arafura” he breaks op the structure with “broken cd”  loops. STill very repetitive but moving in its own crooked way. Sounds like broken equipment somehow – nicely done.

In “Fall in fall out” there is a jazzy feeling and even some vinyl noise  – love this one. Could put anyone to sleep in under ten minutes. Lovely track.

All in all a great album for home listening, falling asleep, staring out into space on a rainy day.

<a href=”http://www.ganga.dk”>Ganga – Downbeat / Chill Out Music</a>

DJ Krush is old news ofcourse

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

but never the less GOOD old news.
And as with most other good music,  it doesnt matter so much how old we are – I mean – the tracks are.
In this case the tracks are 8 years old.
So they just started school I guess. Lets see how they look when they look at the retirement age – are we still listening to them, or do we think they are out of style and place them on a shelve.
I think not, these are all great track from the downtempo maestro DJ Krush.
Its hip hop, but with so much other stuff added to the production, so it could have fooled your ears here and there.
Listening to “Danger of Love” – great voice – Zap Mama I think provides these chilled vocals. They really have a nice edge to them – the Horace Andy quality.
This must be a downtempo classic if there ever was one. Really smooth and mellow grroves and nice voices and instruments – some ethnic sounding stuff as well. And vibes – playable vibes that is – starts out the whole thing with the flute track “Song 1″ (Cant imagine it took so long for an artist to finally have the guts to release a song with a name like that). Nice ethnic flute and breaks that fits perfectly.
Some hypnotic synt or lower vibes get your mind confused and it all ends up in a beautiful corner of your mind – blocking your view of all the small parts its put together from- like it should be.
Okay, moving down the track line, here is a bit of humor in “Duckchase” – with a strange duck sound continuing throughout the track – I can see where the name came from, but its more funny than good in my opinion. Nice production though – really cool rhytmic flow – ….hmm. okay, I give up… its actually also a very cool track with some fantastic scratching – sound slike scratching anyway – sscratching a … yes scratching a duck ofcourse. Christmas tune maybe (danish christmas ritual)
Here is the list of personnel on the cd:
DJ Krush, Black Thought, Zap Mama, Tunde Ayanyemi, PhonosycographDISK, Company Flow, Kazufumi Kodama, N’Dea Davenport, Boss The MC, Ahmir “?uestlove” Thompson, Kukoo Da Baga Bonez, Sunja Lee.
I can recommend this journey – its a nice one, with just enough of surprises to keep you interested – even if you are not into hip hop, you can definitely chill on the couch to this one, or take a little slow dance on the coffee table.