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Pittsburgh's Ear for Music

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7.31.2008

Who's in the Header?

Just designed a new header for this blog. It features some of my favorite performers, producers and projects from the city. OK, it's a bit sloppy, I'm working on it... This whole blogging thing is a lot harder than I thought it was gonna be! 

In the meantime, here are the people pictured. Thanks to Kevin Ross, among many others, for being members of the Pittsburgh Paparazzi Project.

EMay (that's me in the top left spinning fire)
Pittsburgh Skyline

My one hope, by doing this blog, is that my list of favorite things in Pittsburgh will expand well beyond this list (though it is much longer already, to be sure... these were just photos I had available). OK, my second hope is that fans and musicians and promoters and spaces can coexist in perfect harmony to create a perfect pittsburgh scene.... Did I mention I'm an optimist?

7.30.2008

The Police = Arresting

Har har har, how I do love those puns...

We missed most of Elvis Costello's set after getting side-tracked into West Virginia, because the idea of buying beer at a gas station is delightful to us drinkin' folks from Pittsburgh. And because, until walking towards the PGP, I didn't think I knew any of his songs. Of course, as soon as I heard "Allison, you know this world is killing you", the synapses began firing. I never knew how much I liked that song! The finalae I also knew, "(What's so funny 'bout) peace love and understanding", though I know it better as a Perfect Circle cover - a cover so good evocative that it is a bit hard to appreciate the original form. Obviously, I am in no great position to judge Elvis' performance, but it did seem everyone was having a great time.

After the perfect amount of time for a set-break (read: few were rushing to get back to their seats after the concession lines, few were still reeling from EC's set), The Police come on with "Message in a Bottle" to thunderous applause. They were last in town the year I was born, over 2 decades ago, and everyone - EVERYONE - from the bathroom to the front row, was singing along. Nice choice, guys.
Really, just a very tight and interesting set. A lot should be expected from veterans such as the Police, and a lot was indeed what they delivered. The highlight of the evening was a superb performance by drummer Stewart Copeland during "Wrapped Around my Finger". He started out playing on the 5'+ gong behind his drum kit, and proceeded to masterfully use every piece of percussion equipment on stage - which included many different types of

Perhaps the cheesiest moment was "Roxanne", where their stage show turned into entirely red-lights. However, I happen to enjoy good cheese. To the delight of all the 40-and-50-somethings that were getting higher than they have in years (I merely assume, due to the 2nd hand buzz I was getting), was a nearly Grateful-Dead caliber space-jam in the middle of this field of color.

Despite the wonderful evening, unless I get a full 8 hours of sleep the night before the show, I will not attempt to go to a PGP concert. We did a bit of fire-dancing in the parking lot, but left no later than 11pm. At 1:30, we arrived at home, after the insane amount of construction, car accidents, and intoxicated people slowing down to 40 to pass parked police. I could understand if the band was at the side of the road, but seriously people! If you were that drunk, you could've slept in your cars for a few hours. There were a group of young, intoxicated chaps hanging while we were fire dancing who were *smartly* discussing this option. And I didn't see their car making out with a guardrail. Way to ruin a great night for yourself, dumbass. However, if you were in this traffic too, I was talking about ramming my car into yours the whole way home (emay + tiredorhungry = mean ol' ho).

Ravenstahl, if you read this blog, please consider massive amounts of PGP traffic due to sold-out-near-to-Pittsburgh-shows when you schedule road construction. Please!!!!

7.27.2008

House of Assassins, Buddy Nutt and the Gothees

With an opener like Buddy Nutt, how could I possibly miss my first House of Assassins show?

I just found out recently that Buddy's first live performance was at an open mic I hosted at Squirrel Hill's tiny-and-sweet Te Cafe. He played a song on the saw, and we were impressed enough to call for an encore, but with a humble shrug he says "that's all i've got" and leaves the stage. A few months later, he shows up at the first Globalista Jam with a three-ended didgeridoo and proceeded to play a 10-minute instrumental piece that ended with coins spewing out the end all over the floor.

That being said, Buddy is one of the best entertainers in Pittsburgh. Whether his set is strictly his (un)usual one-man-band-insanity, or the even-more-wonderful experimental side of things, he has yet to disappoint an audience.

Saturday was no exception. Starting out his set by saying he's never peed on stage at the BBT (or any other BBT for that matter) was not his usual introduction, but you can never expect something to be expected at a BN performance. The set included most of my favorite songs, including "To Watch Her Blow", a sing-along song about a girlfriend who plays the euphonium, creates balloon animals, and acts in amateur porn); "Open Mic King", a telling song about a man ("say what?" "Buddy Nutt!") who goes from zero-to-royalty due to "this tiny guitar" (read: ukulele); and the "Ping Pong Song", which aptly describes a (different?) man's journey from the underbelly of American vices to the zen of table tennis. Yes, another extraordinary set from a man who is easily one of the best performers in Pittsburgh.

Additionally, his stage antics would teach even seasoned performers how to play off things you just can't avoid easily (like having to sound-check with an audience present, or having your phone go off in your pocket). I have seen people answer their phone on stage. This is simply a bad practice. Not only does it totally bore your audience, it also tells them that your friends don't even show up for your shows. The only time I've ever seen Buddy pull out his phone was at Lawrenceville's Art All night, where he followed the action with "It's my mom. I'll have to call her back." I'm actually convinced he was simply checking the time to see how much of it he had left. Bravo, Buddy, well played.

Comedian Zack Weston kept people laughing during the set breaks, with such humorous lists as World War II pornography titles ("Torpedo your U-Boat"), and names of songs on an if-I-wrote-a-blues album ("This god-damned train is too loud"). A story about the trash-eating lion at kennywood and a nasty little kid kept the audience in stitches.

The same cannot be said for the other comedians, however. Didn't quite get the mathematician humor, but perhaps I just need to be broken in to the idea of laughing at a math teacher talking about her students. I can't even remember what the third comedian was poking fun at.

The Gothees weren't all that much more impressive. Self-described as "bubble-goth", they may be interesting to someone who loves Bauhaus, has a fetish for cardboard cutouts, or secretly wants to play Theremin in a rock band. I fall into only the later category, and therefore cannot say a whole lot here without feeling like I'm talking without authority about something which I could simply care less about. In that case, on to something else to dig my teeth into...

House of Assassins' myspace page self-proclaims them as sounding like "Yinzer Bukowski". This simple statement helped bring about a thought I've been having for a while on Pittsburgh Music. Just refer to the city in a genre-title, and, to those in the know, it becomes a bit more defined. Devilish Merry as "Traditional Pittsburgh", Girl Talk as "Pop-burgh REEEmix", the 9th Ward as "Larryville Punk", etc. It's a nice reflection of the city, from the immigrant/freedom-trail/religious-mecca/nativeland roots, to our blue-collar golden-years (perhaps steel-years is a better choice for this), up to the present robo-silicone boom. There are so many small genres in Pittsburgh, and so many variants of the more common genres, that it may come as a suprise to folks from here and beyond that there is a common theme running through. We're from Pittsburgh, the music says it whether we do or not.

This genre may be even more real than that little synopsis. Ethnomusicologist Robert Metil has defined it for a class at Chatham College. I'm in the process of defining it in my own way, with an essay on the history of music in Pittsburgh. Give me a few years, though.

Featuring Jason "The Underwater Culpret" Baldinger on vocals, Rob "I Do Everything" Grey on bass, and Alan "Drummer" Butera, House of Assassins do have a true-to-yinz, interesting sound. There are elements of country and psych-rock that are obvious (and delicious, i say!), but dig a little deeper and you find some goth, punk, and vague trip-hop elements. Very Pittsburgh, to combine such diverse sounds. Or very dork-music-fans, as their collective album collections can attest to.

Chad described their sound as "Crunk Punk-try", which seemed very appropriate. We also decided that if Mazzy Star had in fact been three male love-children of O'Death and . However, I did not, off the top of my head, recognize any of their myspace influences.

HoA spent much of the night redefining what a beginning and end of a song should sound like (whether or not this was on purpose is still, from this vantage point, indeterminate). My only major tsk-tsk is that the audience mainly saw their backs. Even if that was on purpose, it still does a band no justice at all.

The audience very well could have been packed with a rowdy college crowd, screaming back the obscure and poetic lyrics while drinking. I do hope, come fall, this happens. This music would indeed go great in a dank and crowded basement with a few kegs of Pabst. Or licensed for Quentin Tarantino's next film.

"Singing like an Albatross at a funeral for a friend" : what a beautiful line! Chad thinks it was a Superman reference, which i could not validate as fact or fiction. HoA plays again at Howlers in Bloomfield on August 10th

An important note: Several ConclusionsRob Grey's haunting solo project should be immediately recognized as a force to be reckoned with. Another band that sounds very Pittsburgh, with a bit of old-timey roots, a few eerie samples, on a solid foundation of 90's alternative. I look forward to seeing this project progress.

As for "Maudeville"? Well, I am a bit miffed about the whole Bea Arthur, or Maude of Golden Girls fame, thing. After a bit of internet searching, it doesn't seem like she has the type of cult fan-base that would inspire whole evenings of bizzaro music at staple Pittsburgh venues. Perhaps that is just the point: find someone/thing interesting to idolize, find the best/most quirky parts of that person, and run with it. Create weird evenings. Call it beautiful. That I do like. Like Princess Di with less of the humanitarian aspect, or Harry Potter on a smaller scale.

After a bit more research, I find out that Bea is a renaissance woman not unlike myself: commedienne, singer, actress, activist. Call me converted!

7.25.2008

Savage Chickens

7.24.2008

Centipede E'est and Japanther rock it like it's art

I've found a new favorite place to see live music in Pittsburgh - the Carnegie Museum of Art's Sculpture Garden. On an evening when the stars are bright even through the trees, when artists, musicians and hipsters alike all come out to play, where better to combine cutting-edge sounds with visuals that speak distinctly of the contemporary culture.

While I'm ashamed to admit I missed the talk with Barry McGee , the art that he displayed really did speak for itself. Anyone who has ever experience "fine art" will know that this is not the most common of experiences. Barry, originally a graffiti artist and skater known as Twist, is a fine artist who has found and erased the line between "white cube" gallery art and "off-the-wall" commentary about art practices. Instead of taking grafitti, the actual art you'll find in city transit stations, train cabs or large warehouse walls, and creating it in the gallery, he instead turns the people involved into the art. With a human totem-poles of taggers to greet you as you enter his wing, you get the sense that he is not simply glorifying the punk and folk art sensibilities, but taking the purpose for tagging into the gallery: in his "anarchic multimedia installations", you will find discarded and recycled objects, archaically motorized wood-carvings, photographs of the homeless and property owners, and other oft' forgotten elements of urban culture. As the CMoA's website aptly says: "The temporality of his visual language and the immediacy of its communication convey a history that is continually written, erased, and written again."

Curator Douglas Fogle does a truly amazing job of pairing the outsider art mentality with one of the most reputable art galleries in the United States during Life on Mars, this year's Carnegie International exhibit. Until early 2009, the CMoA will remain a colorful and chaotic look into the bright and thriving underbelly of our culture, which has always been where art becomes birthed, demolished, and come again.

Funny enough, no piece summarizes the impending doom held onto strongly by the zeitgeist in quite a succinct a way as the billboard-like painting of radiohead-like words facing the sculpture garden. A definition of nihilism by Raoul Vaneigem painted by Christopher Wool, the statement resonates in these dark hours where we are plagued by fear, war, disease, and 2012's impending prophecies.

Oh, yes, ahem, this is a blog meant to be about music... Excuse me. But perhaps I will now introduce a concept which will also forever be embedded in this blog: Music exists because of life, because of every other element in our culture. While one man could forever play guitar in his room, the fact that music exists as it does comes from its roots in communication, celebration, exposition, or consolation. Without a continuous dialog, music would be talking to itself, and as poets know, poems about poetry are rarely engaging and often numbingly enraging. Even that man playing guitar in his room desires to perform, to share his musical story, and will not be complete until the circle is. Therefore, I will not simply write lingual songs about CD's I've listened to, but I will also strive to write about whatever it is that provokes music, and will focus especially on the moments in the crux, last night's concert being an ideal example.

Extreme Animals [Paper Rad] started the evening with danceable, catchy beats, and the unusually quirky energy. There were some moments that looked like low-budget theater or BFA performance art, and a few dance moves that looked like robots trapped in a broken human body. I was sorely disappointed with their inability to sync their backing-track rhythm with their live percussive elements. It just hurts my soul. But perhaps it was part of the aesthetic, as the Paper Rad American Art collective is known for its brightly contrasting colors and odd 80's-inspired 8-bit art. I wish their light show looked more like their website, as that may have kept my attention better. They did succeed in warming the crowd up for the next act...

Japanther, of NYC (because any band that comes from the big apple should put these letters at the end of their name, for the same reason a person with an advanced degree in their field can put PhD or MD at the end of their name: it (typically) proves that they have the guts and gusto to get to the top of their field). What was most stunning about this pop-punk phenomenon was that they *completely* tore down the illusive 4th wall that separates so many musicians from their audience. People were dancing on stage, and not just the occasional crowd-surfer that gets to be part of the act for a minute:everyone that was part of the audience was on stage dancing. While, at many shows, people are shooting photos for the whole set, there will be less "I was in the first row for this band" photos on myspace than there will be memories that read "we were banging on the band's drums", "here we are singing into the band's old-telephone microphones" and "dude, they were so rockin I had to give the drummer a massage during his set". In my case, I will even get to say "I rode a dinosaur."


Yes, I rode a dinosaur. Did Doyle, vagabond out of NYC, and creator of this awe-inspiring contraption, know that it would be just yards away from the natural science museum which holds one of the best dinosaur exhibits in the country? He did mention that it was touring next to the Seneca Reservation, where he was concerned that, since music was a language, and his dinosaur was an extreme machine dancing to the beat, it may not be received well. Not the case in Pittsburgh. This insane machine the best view of what was happening in the crowd, and it was also simply designed as to where I could open and shut the mouth, rear it's head right (and left when there weren't several people crowding the stage), lift it up and down with lights flashing on command. Whether or not it spoke of the beauty in the natural world, what a heck of a lot of fun it gave at least half a dozen brave souls (it was particularly scary to mount). They did receive one of the most unique concert-going experiences they will have in their lives.

What a hard act to follow. Who, without visuals like Sigur Ros or a stage act like Motley Crue, could bring more to that crowd? Centipede E'est, Pittsburghers who truly understand the pleasure of loud music. While Japanther's set was mostly a fun mosh-up of screaming punk sounds and extreme participatory stage antics, Centipede E'est rode the waves of music between thick, melodic rock and sparse, ethereal soundscapes. They sung, sometimes in the anthemic punk way, but it was secondary to these musical scenes they were creating, different with each song.

While listening to their set, there was a discussion about what happened to the Jam-Band scene, which still kicks around in the form that I listened to growing up, but is now more the butt of jokes than a scene anyone who's not drugged out wants to be a part of. Since I last attended a show by Moe. or the Disco Biscuits, the best musicians of this scene have split off into two distinct directions. The first direction, with keynote PA bands like As Human from Philadelphia (PHILA is becoming almost as notorious a postscript as NYC) and Omega Love from Pittsburgh (a scene perhaps to indy-DIY-fantastico to ever have this high-brow a reputation), relies on the same catchy hooks that music always has. The key to the successful bands here is simply talent: if you're a good musician, as are the two bands above, then the jammy parts work. If you're not, you are considered stoned-out losers these days (and while that was cool for musicians ten years ago, the times do change.)

The second direction, which Centipede E'est embodies nicely, is simply an extension of the far-out jams. It relies less on the hook, less on verse-chorus structuring, and more on the mood of the music. They take these space-jams and run with it, filling almost an entire set with punchy and groovy phrases that repeat until the scent on the wind takes them elsewhere. Depending on the band, the songs may be composed or entirely jams, but it appears CE falls nicely in the middle. They had the heavy-hitting rhythmic sections (which could have been better presented if the drums some additional amplification), strong melodic sections, and ambient noise moments: the best-of-the-best when it comes to jams. They also had one of the single coolest chimes to appear on stage: a simple 3-foot long-tube chime whose emboldened sound could be heard above 5 instrument cabinets.

I look forward to seeing Centipede E'est again with infamous Pittsburgh Rockers Don Caballero at Mr. Smalls on September 6th. In the meantime, check out this video:

7.23.2008

Buddy Nutt & Ukelizzy at the Children's Museum

What is the best meat to put in a day-sandwich, stuffed between slices of pouring-rain-on-a-bike and paying-a-sh*tton-of-loochie-to-get-your-license-reinstated? Ukelizzy and Buddy Nutt performing at the Children's Museum!

What an awesome backdrop for Buddy and Lizzy - less the kids, and more their parents who were totally engrossed. There was an explosion of kid-cheers from the side of the stage which got Lizzy to stop in the middle of the song, saying "I could've just kept going, but I wanted to hear that one through". And Buddy performed some of his more experimental songs, slightly reminiscent of the first Globalista Jam, which were perhaps more appropriate for kids, employing birdcall, saw and slide-whistle just slightly more than the delicious witty satire we've come to expect.

As usual, I hope to see much more from this delightful duo! Buddy performs this weekend at the Bloomfield Bridge Tavern with House of Assassins and the Gothees

7.21.2008

WWWWWhy: July 21st - 27th

If you're looking for things to do this week, feel free to join me...

W/W/W/W: SIC ALPS, Centepede E'est, Harangue, and Dean Cercone
Tuesday, July 22nd @ Garfield Artworks
Why? I've been told I need to check out Centepede E'est, a local experimental rock group making thick and solid glass-like waves on the underground scene. And because, as you may well know, the most strangely beautiful things come out of concerts at the GA.

W/W/W/W/: Buddy Nutt & Ukelizzy at the Children's Museum - Lunchtime Show

W/W/W/W: Sound and Vision: A Night With Barry McGee, Japanther, and PAPER RAD
Thurs., July 24, 8:30 p.m.: Discussion; 9:30 p.m.: Concert
Sculpture Court (rain location: Carnegie Music Hall)

((Curator Douglas Fogle teams up with Carnegie International artist Barry McGee for a conversation about his work and about artists’ responses to the phrase “life on Mars.” ))
Why? Centepede E'est is performing (See above). Also, artists talk!, seeing a concert at the CMoA, and an international exhibit bound to impress your inner rock star.

W/W/W/W/: Encyclopedia Destructica:: Release Party & Open Studio ~~ 156 41st Street, Lawrenceville
Friday, July 25th at 7:30 pm
Why? These are the same people who brought you "Wolfman's Got Nards! A compendium of New American Monsters". Also recommended if you like reading 'zines whose names are difficult to pronounce, and even more amusing to define.

W/W/W/W: Documentaries & Discussion at Your Inner Vagabond, July 25th: King Corn, The High-Price of Low-Cost; This Film is Not Yet Rated
Why? Showing your disgust with Wal-Mart by only shopping there at Christmas (maybe just a few other times a year)? The ghosts at Dixmont have been staging their own, more successful, rebellions.... And because my boyfriend owns a cornfield.

W/W/W/W/: Intro to Dragon Boating @ the Fox Chapel Yacht Club, 10am on Saturday, July 26th
Why? When else are you going to go Dragon Boating?

W/W/W/W/: House of Assassins, Buddy Nutt and the Gothees
WHY? House of Assassins, Buddy Nutt (and the Gothees)

W/W/W/W/: Blueberry Pie Hike with Venture Outdoors: Sun Jul 27: 3PM
Why? (insert any excuse for eating blueberry pie here)

W/W/W/W/: Blues Fest @ Hartwood Acres


Monday and Wednesday, Between Liberties will be in the studio recording a few extra tracks for our first little album due out in September. Stop by our myspace page to send your love!

7.19.2008

"You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become the villain"

Time stops, when you experience something which resonates to your deepest core, beneath your physical or mental self. Time becomes motion. Our heart is what perceives this motion, physically experiencing this swirling energy. This living dance is what we experience, and how we perceive this experience sometimes tells us more about the experience than however we, individually, interpret it. (alas, perception is reality...)

When the Whirling Dervishes of Rumi first came to Pittsburgh, I believe in 2003, I had my first lucid experience of this idea. Sitting nearly on top of the stage, I had an incredible view. And, at the start of the performance, I watched these dancers twirl. I interpreted the sounds from the instruments, tried to learn about this foreign music from the notes they played. I read the messages of Sufism and the explanation of the inundated symbolism. I was quiet, and observed.

At some point in the performance, I was no longer sitting, no longer listening and observing. I understood, without the words on the screen, without the program in my hands. I became aware of the dancer's feet, the sound they made while pivoting. I became aware of their breathing, their very muscles. The glances shared, if any physical glances were shared, were another form of language. But the words they spoke were quiet, understanding, more about training and strengthening than mastering or perfecting. They were individual glances, but one that everyone on stage seemed to relate to. They were made by one person, but they were made also by the person receiving the gaze.

The dervishes danced, to be certain, but they danced to find the way they wanted to live. The lived so they could experience this dance. They shared it, not to perform, but to share. To train and strengthen us to the task of living. So that our lives could be this whole, this pure of intent and purpose.

I don't remember the show ending, though there may have been some confusion about applause, being that we are trained to applaud at things that are presented to us. Perhaps there were some applause, perhaps not. I was, again, sitting. But still I was not. The connection they forged was intact, long after they left the stage. And all I could do was continue perceiving, without action or judgment, but with the senses that I was born into.

My senses owned me, but they gave me back everything I would ever need.

And what I saw, what I heard, what I likely smelled, was people. Though people perceived as drops of ocean: people moved, they moved together, they created a crowd that then became its own being. The crowd dispersed. The smell of the crowd lingered. The sounds I was hearing was the band, still on stage in some indescribable way, mixed with mettled voices that were also still beside me. There was one man who stayed beside me, perhaps waiting for my experience to conclude, perhaps out of his own traditions. I looked at him, I believe, and I saw him.

We were the last in the house, people had begun cleaning up: a new type of ocean, this more atomic and scattered. More chaotic and sparse. More "job to be done" and less "now we discuss what we've just experienced".

I wonder if I've ever discussed this experience with people. I feel like I must tell them the moment I meet them, in some base way. It has, obviously, become a part of me.

So, when I dance, when I sing, I try to share this. Sometimes my ego, my consciousness, they get in the way. Occasionally, they help. But I find, when I get off course, a mantra: "Let the beauty you love be what you do" (also a quotation from Rumi, the Sufi mystic). Since, or perhaps due to, the dervishes: I understand that beauty. I seek it whenever I am making a conscious decision derived from the direction my heart is pulled.

Sense of time becomes an imposed moment of reflection. The world says, "Hey! Stop and think about this for a while. We'll make up the time for you." Much like the way adrenaline can change your perception to help you avoid automobile accidents. Much like the way intuition often seems to be just a thought out of time.

The Dark Knight served me with an imposition. "Think about Chaos, and Order. Think about it how you always have, but this time have some words for it. Give it a face, and a name, and understand the distinction between the two. Give it character - and understand that Chaos and Order are interchangeable."

They are, ultimately, reliant on each other to achieve their goals. One only makes a goal to superceed the other, to cling to inspiration and inclination in the first place. They can easily take the populous into this ocean, the ocean which is ultimately one or the other.

Within the Dervishes, like any production I've been a part of, is a great, and simple analogy. Work for the show, the chaotic appeal of starting with nothing. Then take this idea, for the sake of those who will eventually see it, and begin another grueling task of making decisions, sticking with schedules, ultimately making order from chaos. The show becomes all that matters, the penultimate judge for all decisions. And, the show from this angle also includes the audience. Faces, expressions, reviews, this sort of thing all get tangled up in what it means to be a successful show. And, typically, this side is looking for success.

The other side is, typically, looking for devastation. They walk into the situation with a clear grip on reality, as clear as any other day, expecting to be entertained. Sometimes expecting the unexpected, but more often than not expecting to have a similar reaction to the person who told them they should be there (or, if they're expecting to be telling other people their reactions, they are expecting to be moved. Frightened, enlightened, or at least amused.) In either case, knowingly or not, people enter with a sense of control, and leave with a perception entirely different. The more successful the show from the first category's point of view, the more changed the later category upon leaving.

Chaos, with a vision, is lead into order by our actions and decisions. Control is, by nature, always shattered by such direction.

This is, however, simply the world that I live in. Perhaps there are places where human beings experience life without a duality: Without having to decide between hero and villain. Where going with the flow is based less upon human experiences and more by the shape of the world. I think this is why I dance, why I sing. Feed from the flow, be grace to the space we are given. This is what I believe.

It is also why movies with such strong and believable characters, in this case personifying characters personifying the elements of our zeitgeist, are so devastating, so successful at portraying their message, so time-stopping and heart-pulling. These characters are simply doing what they have to do.

This is only the surface of an ice burgh that has, again, infected my soul with a knowledge of the world even I myself cannot fully comprehend. Ultimatly, it has brought out another mantra: "Be the change you wish to see in the world". Since I cannot see the world as a whole, I can only change those parts which I myself am pushing and pulling on. I only know what I want around me, what I am drawn to, which is more descriptive of myself than any other concoction of the imagination.

Any individual devastation can easily break any individual. That is part of the nature of our fragile existence. We feel these things deeper than words, deeper than what we can fix with science, organized religion, language, or other man-made things. Because the fabric that is broken is not man-made. And while these man-made things cannot fix this fabric, it can lead us to the truth, lead us to the fabric itself, which is mended at the moment of our visit. If we leave, that tear can return, as it surely does. But the more time we spend within these folds, feeling the fabric, the more at peace we can become with these personal devastations.

Perhaps the end of the human world as we know us is looming. It certainly feels like it. But is it our attachment to ourselves and our culture, or the loss itself, which causes the devastation? Is it the chaotic nature of the world or our fine-tuned reality which will receive the hardest blow? Or doesn't it always come full-circle in the end?

And how, in the name of Hollywood, can a feature film tap me into Buddha's well? Believable characters, brilliant special effects, and a superbly developed plot line. Bravo to the entire production team of The Dark Knight. 10/10.

http://thedarkknight.warnerbros.com/media/production/tdk-production-notes.pdf

7.11.2008

Born on the Fourth of July!

That's me! This past few weeks were great cause to celebrate, as it is my birthday, Chad's birthday, our anniversary, both of my niece's birthday, and about 20 other birthdays and holidays. It's been a crazy long time, but I got to spend a good amount of time writing new songs, thinking about what I want out of my life, and thinking about Pittsburgh from afar. This city is great in so many ways, but it also needs our elbow grease to make any kind of gears that move.

My niece Michelle has been practicing with her bands at a space called Band Stand Live. What an artistic utopia! An all-ages all-the-time venue that had art hanging, practice spaces, a recording studio, and supported local musicians. They pay musicians based on their draw, and sound like they can offer riders and guarantees to some touring acts as well.

Why not Pittsburgh?

The Creative Treehouse in Bellevue does a great job for artists, dancers, photographers and designers. There is one more floor that needs a bit of work to become fully functional as a performance space too. This is a good start though, and I suggest everyone check it out.

Mr. Smalls funhouse is a great stage with full a/v options, a recording studio, and artists lofts. There are practices spaces that are communal, you have a set time to practice every week, though most of the lofts are more studios anyways. It's just a nearly-inaccessible space for local musicians to perform at. However, I do believe in setting goals for yourself, and I have (twice) seen a local showcase pack the joint. I have seen many others who have fallen very short of that.

Smalls does have an interesting project with comcast to showcase the local acts on the television giant's "My Town" on-demand station. Artists get a short interview aired, followed by a few live songs. It's pretty neat to see these bands on TV, I will admit, having re-watched a Phat Man Dee / Celloforte / Ishtar / Bicicleta Blanca / Ana Vey show shortly after seeing the real deal. The interview was cute, and these acts may be the only 5 in Pittsburgh able to hold their own to a Q&A session. Props to Mandee for setting it up, and to Smalls for doing what they can.

Ultimatly, it is simply hard for fans to access the music. The radio stations in Pittsburgh play little local music (though some of them, WYEP as one instance, do have an end-of-the-year review that will feature a top-local-picks list. Bands often site the venues as being counterproductive or even discouraging, which I cannot entirely deny, but I say if a band is willing to do a lot of legwork, or find a friend or fan who will help out, the possibilities will open up. Bu fanst, with only a few places to read about music, hardly anywhere to hear it, and the ability to make their own with garage band or find good live shows on youtube, a band also has to be damn good. It's the combination of a damn good band and a talkative fanbase that is rare in this city. And unless you're getting reviewed in the City Paper (or your college's alumni magazine, like Cellofourte), you don't have me convinced that you're trying hard enough. And if you are, well, that still doesn't mean you're any good.

As a side thought, I realized recently how hard it was for people to get around this city. Pittsburghers hate going through a tunnel or a bridge to get somewhere, and avoid these places as much as possible, although at least one out of every three roads comes equipped with these barriers. Sigh. As the hours went by in Boston, I realized just how often I drove 45 minutes to get somewhere. Every day, many times a day often. And it was always worth it.

PS - I got Chad a bike for his birthday. He got me a unicycle and a poi practice video. Look for our traveling circus on a potholed street near you.

7.01.2008

San Fransicso knows where Pittsburgh is on a map!

So far, this blog is pretty much just about things seen in-the-flesh in this city, but having just been turned on to Girl Talk, a crazy mix-and-match sampling musician from Pittsburgh, I happen to stumble across a blog from a Pittsburgh-bred Friscan. In the interview, the two discuss the scene here in the burgh, with an eye not unlike my own...


A: Was the Pittsburgh scene—what do you think of the Pittsburgh scene, basically?

GT: Right now?

A: Yeah.

GT: I think it’s great. I’m not part of any scene, necessarily, but I’m friends with a lot of bands and there aren’t other people that sound like me in the area. You know what I mean? There’s plenty of other electronic acts and plenty of other weird bands; there’s plenty of DJs, but there’s not a crew doing this sort of thing, which, I think is good and bad. I think it’s healthy to have your own world to be in. And that’s the best thing, I think, about Pittsburgh: there’s a whole bunch of weird and great bands here, but no one sounds like anyone else. It’s easy to start a band and no even worry if you’re crampin’ anyone else’s style. Yeah, I think it’s really good right now. There are a bunch of bands making a dent a national level like Zombi, and Grand Buffet, and Modey Lemon, and Wiz Khalifa. Those are, like, rap groups and bluesy garage bands and psychedelic bands. It’s all over the map and everyone’s kind of doing their thing and everyone’s kind of friends with each other, but no one necessarily—there’s not too camaraderie as far as—people support each other but it’s not like there are too many Pittsburgh-based tours or anything. The bands individually are all doing their own thing and it’s cool: my next upcoming Pittsburgh show, I’m playing with a whole bunch of random acts and they’re all different genres and are all my friends, all doing pretty cool things with their bands...

Read the whole darn thing