Sunday, January 24, 2010

Flying Lotus Talks New LP, Lil Wayne


Flying Lotus Talks New LP, Lil Wayne

Friday, January 15, 2010

DJ Stephen R. > Tonight on KUCI's Digital::Nimbus



I am the featured artist tonight on the D::N radio program. See the post below for more information.

From Digital::Nimbus


-- --
DIGITAL::NIMBUS :: Electronic Audio Freakquencies
http://digitalnimbus.com :: http://kuci.org
KUCI 88.9 FM, Friday Nights 12-3am (PST)

-- --
DJ Stephen R. presents "Zygote - The Mixtape"
http://architectheroes.blogspot.com
http://www.myspace.com/djstephenr

"Zygote - The Mixtape" is a DJ mix compiled exclusively for
Digital::Nimbus on KUCI radio. The tracks are all original electronic
music composed and produced by Zygote (aka Stephen R.) from the
upcoming release on Architects & Heroes
(http://architectheroes.blogspot.com) entitled '00/10' that spans 10
years of the artist's career. The material spans a number of
production techniques, from sound collage, to digital sound
processing, to the use of linear sequencing tools. Everything from
analog to digital tools are used to create this look back at the past
decade of music produced under the Zygote moniker, with a eye firmly
focused on the future of what is to come.

DJ Stephen R. is a Los Angeles-based DJ and music producer. He's the
founder of Architects and Heroes a blog, record label and event
production group. He is the founder of the Hot Flash Party. He has
releases on Under the Radar Records and Alectric Records and is the
founder of The "Under the Radar" experimental music and video events
in San Francisco. He has performed with some of underground music's
most well-known names, including Kool Keith, Jeff Parker of Tortoise,
Peaches, Kid606 (Tigerbeat 6), Richard Devine (Warp) and Taylor
Deupree. Stephen R. is also the founding member of the left-of-center
instrumental band Summer of Flux and records solo as Zygote.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Vampire Weekend x Toy Selectah

So, last night I went to see Vampire Weekend at the Music Box at the Fonda in Hollywood. It was a belated Christmas gift to my girlfriend, who is a fan. I honestly didn't know much about them and didn't expect much. I was truly blown away by how good the band was live, enough to head down to the merch booth and scoop up their new release, Contra(this was after all the official record release party). As I was ripping into the package, out drops a bonus CD of remixes by one of my favorite Cumbia DJ/Producers Toy Selectah! So, as it turns out that (in the words of pitchfork) "The Mexican DJ and dance producer Toy Selectah has paid the album his own kind of tribute, turning several of its tracks into a blippy, hyperactive, Dan Deacon-esque six-minute jam." After a little digging, I unearthed this freak-out video as well.

Also, I'll be back to podcasting starting this weekend, and I'll be dropping the Cousins T.S. mix, so stay tuned!

Friday, December 4, 2009

In the process of compiling my top 10 of 2009

To be perfectly honest, I had reservations about this record. But, they were personal reasons and not very objective. This is simply an amazing record.

<a href="http://shop.overlap.org/album/flossin-serpents-ep">Crystal Cobra by Overlap.org</a>

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Greetings from the edge of the world



It's full-throttle holiday action here at camp A&H, and there's much news to report. The Summer of Flux (the collaboration between Stephen R. and Aaron Mobley) E.P. "Radio Anthems for the Newly Disenfranchised" has just came back from being mastered by 12k Mastering (run by the amazingly talented Taylor Deupree) and is slated as our first release in January 2010. There are samples of the tracks on The Summer of Flux Myspace page and the track listing is as follows:

1. Something
2. Now, all is ever
3. Love letter to Oklahoma (Part 2)
4. Smoke variations
5. I like even more now that you've started to fade from memory
6. The Golden Dragon cries for justice
7. Radical Math
8. Love letter to Oklahoma (Part 1)
9. Magical Dracula powers

The release will be on CD and digital, and there is a short film in the works that will be a companion to the film as well. More details on the album release, and subsequent DVD release in the next few weeks.

And in other news...

DJ Stephen R., yours truly, is busy producing the second installment of the Create Fixate podcast, which will be up and running by Monday. For those who simply cannot wait to hear the latest installment, then click here to check out the very first podcast every produced for C:F by our camp.

Zygote lives!

The dorment left-of-center electronic music project of Stephen R., Zygote is about to be reborn. There are plans in the works for a new mixtape, "Architects & Heroes Vol. 3: Zygote the mixtape" which will highlight unreleased material from the past decade that is slated for release on the label in Feb of 2010. Also, there is a new addition to Zygote, on vocals is Lindsey Gray Todd. There is new material in the works now which will be part of a new Zygote release in early spring.

For more Zygote information, go here:
Review of Zygote 7" split
Zygote @Pegasus News
Zygote at Discogs

Sunday, September 27, 2009

2009 Summer Rewind, or the Feel Good Hit of the Fall



Summer of 2009 has been quite a roller-coaster ride. From those of you dialed-in to the A&H camp's output, you know we've maintained radio silence for the past few months. We've been on summer sabbatical, but that's not to say we've been lazy. The summer of 2009 has been filled with our first party in Los Angeles, attending live shows, the continuation of our Packin' Heat night DJ nights and the production of the Create:Fixate podcast. We lost some exceptionally talented artists in the Summer of 2009, but there was more celebration of the work these artists left us during their time here on earth. Let's keep on living, shall we?



We had our very first (and, by all accounts, chaotic) party here in Los Angeles.

There were live performances by Mochipet and [a]pendics.shuffle, some killer DJ sets from Sodapop from Anticon and Oro11 from Bersa Discos. And the behind the scenes business? Damn. Here's some evidence. Shit's real son. But, that was our July opener...



Live and direct...

This summer there were so many shows, DJ gigs and after parties that it's hard to nail down what was best, but these were some stand-outs:

1. Black Moth Super Rainbow at the Troubadour
I first heard Tobacco and company on KCRW's Morning Becomes Eclectic, and thought that they were amazing. Like a cross between Boards of Canada and early Flaming Lips. I honestly thought they were more creatures of the studio, rather than a full band who could hold it down. I was wrong. They were fantastic live, and toward the end of the show, none other than Mike Watt jumped on stage to perform with them.

2. Flying Lotus / Daedelus destroy LA party at the Henry Fonda Theater in L.A.
So, it's safe to say that these guys started in L.A., but now have the whole fucking world in their sites. Putting together a sick and diverse line-up of talent for this show, this scene is at the tipping point. Anchored by the weekly Low End Theory club and by the extended music family that is the Brainfeeder Crew, this scene has really blown up to epic proportions in the past few years. Boosted by International DJs, connecting with a global cast of characters and releasing some of the most amazing bass-driven electronic music to come out of America, I can't wait to see what's next for these guys.

3. Flaming Lips at the Greek Theater
This is my hometown band. I first saw them play when I was 13 at the Student Union at the University of Oklahoma. The fact that these guys are now festival headliners, creating amazing music AND maintaining relevance in a scene where bands are on-and-off of the radar in a blink of an eye after being together for 25 years is proof that staying true to your vision over time can make you a star.

Oh yeah, their live show is like going to the circus.

4. Santigold & Femi Kuti at Hollywood Bowl
The Hollywood Bowl. This was my first trip to this historic Los Angeles venue. I wasn't expecting such "sit-down" venue. While the space is beautiful, I thought is wasn't really suited for the bass-hyped, blog-friendly, "friend of Diplo," internet sensation Santigold...but I was wrong. Raphael Saadiq (who say's there's not life after the 80's? Since this dude fronted Tony! Toni! Toné! and has now reinvented himself as a 60's soul dude in 2009...right on man) opened the show, which was great, but it was still daylight out, so it was the vibe was kind of flat. As the sun dropped behind the Hollywood Hills, Santigold simply burned the place down. At one point, I looked around and the entire audience at the venue was on it's feet. Lights out.

Femi was rad too. I mean, come on...he's Femi Kuti, you know?

5. Telefon Tel Aviv at Spaceland
With the death of Charles Wesley Cooper, the founder of the band, there was much speculation about what would happen to Telefon Tel Aviv. Having listened to all of their records, but having never seen them live, I'm not sure I have the best perspective on "what was" versus "what is." What I can say, is that was one of the best "electronic" music gigs I've seen in a while.



So many sounds push themselves into my ear...

Always the consummate DJ, I'm constantly listening to new stuff. A twitter link here, a burned CD there, some crazy kid in skinny jeans at the burrito place in Echo Park talking some new garage band...I'm always hunting for noise. Here is what caught my ears this summer.

1. Cex - Bataille Royale
This is like some crazy hybrid strain of pot that is shipped in from outer space. The once snot nose, shit-talking, former IDM list "it" guy, grew-up, retreated to Baltimore and has emerged with this. It's an AMAZING take on Baltimore club music, spliced with a mutant strain of electronic music (pioneered more by Jonah Sharp, FAX records and Tetsu Inoue than Squarepusher) that takes it, and pardon the cliche, "to next." It's truly ambient club music, and really a stand-out record.

2. Furious Stylz
This new bass freak-out business by Telephone Jim Jesus, from the Anticon camp, and SkyRider Riddim, has been in wide rotation on the ipod. This stuff is highly addictive, and a new twist on dub, bass, low-end and um...dub. Highly recommended.

3. The Race
I just saw the race open up for Telefon Tel Aviv. A great live/electronic act, that somehow minds the gap between Joy Division, Aphex Twin and Big Audio Dynamite.

4. Bersa Discos
With their distribution deal with Turntable Lab, these guys just keep on rockin'! Stay tuned... these guys keep bringing the Nu-Cumbia heat.

Hat's off to loss...

There were too many talented people that died this summer. There's been too much talk of Michael Jackson's death, so I'll keep this short. Since I personally don't think MJ released anything worth listening to since 1984 (U2 hasn't either, and again, that my personal opinion so please keep the hate mail to a minimum), I'll leave it at this. He was an amazing artist and performer, and he died too early. And then there was DJ AM. So many kind and eloquent words have been said about him and his passing, that I don't think I could do justice by adding more. As a DJ and producer, I was inspired by the man. I listened to his DJ sets, and studied how he operated. Diplo said it best, "Listen up. All u have when u pass away is the relationships u left behind.. AM was still friends to everyone he met. And the king of us djs." Well said. You will be missed.

Thanks Summer of 2009, you were awesome. Call me sometime.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Sufjan to Perform Seven Swans at ATP

Sufjan to Perform Seven Swans at ATP

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