Archive for July, 2009

I AM A TWIT

Posted by Leigh

http://twitter.com/ouzo_one

NICE ARTICLE…

Posted by Leigh

Continuing the theme below. Check it out here: http://www.citypaper.com/music/story.asp?id=18424

PEACE

DUBSTEP ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION

Posted by Leigh

DUBSTEP ROUNDTABLE

I remembered something last week, something I thought I should share. Up until last year I worked for a music agency and was involved in the production of a music business intelligence publication. I was fortunate enough for them to allow me to help set up a debate on underground music and whether genres, such as DubStep, had the sustainability of modern pop and the mainstream market.

People involved were: Geeneus (RINSE), Del Dias (DRUM & BASS ARENA), Plastician (TERRORHTYM RECORDINGS), Martin Clark (BLACKDOWN), Dan Hancox (LOWER END SPASM), MJ COLE (MJ COLE).

It was hosted by a friend called Tim, another called James and myself. Another friend of mine, Arms, was also involved in the production of the film, (sadly there isn’t a copy). The writer was a guy called Eamonn and below you can read it!

UNDERGROUND PIONEERS?

The first truly digital music genre is rising up and it looks like the majors aren’t invited to the party.
Dubstep, a little-know underground scene rising from the ashes of a long line of other niche musical genres, is on the brink of mainstream acceptance. However, just what will this mean for the music industry and the future success or failure of underground scenes as a whole? With physical sales rapidly sliding off the scale and digital still to reach its peak, just where can innovative new underground music capitalise?

The balance between hanging onto authenticity and creating a viable revenue stream from underground movements is a tenuous one. A shift in the balance of power away from major labels brings greater control; but a scene so ingrained in the digital realm brings with it a new set of problems.

The Internet, which arguably is the catalyst for new music such as this, is also its worst enemy. Syndication of tracks is based mainly on revenue-less downloadable DJ sets passed from person to person. Is there a way to redress the balance between credibility and commercial success without diluting exactly what is innovative and genuinely exciting about new music? It’s time for underground music to grow up, but should this be at the expense of losing its roots?

We gathered together some of the critical players in the burgeoning new genre of dubstep for a roundtable debate in order to assess just where the lines are drawn. What are the dangers of crossover, just where do the majors fit into the picture and is this really the first truly digital genre?

Drum & bass: 1992-present
Emerging in 1992 from London club nights like Rage, hosted by Fabio and Grooverider, drum & bass evolved as an underground response to the increasingly commercial rave scene. Its critical innovation was the shift from 4/4 beats to the looped drum breaks already a foundation of hip-hop, here played at more than 120bpm. The scene saw major label releases from artists like Photek and Roni Size, who won the Mercury Prize in 1997.

2-Step: 1997-2002
A UK strain of house evolved from the chopped-up vocal sampling of US producer Todd Edwards and incorporating syncopated beats with plenty of swing. Also known as UK garage, the sound took root in the backrooms of major drum & bass club nights. 2-step enjoyed significant chart success and spawned pop acts like Artful Dodger and Craig David.

Grime: 2000-present
A natural evolution of the phenomenon of MCs rhyming over 2-step records, grime began to look like a home grown UK hip-hop when landmark releases from Dizzee Rascal and Wiley appeared in 2003. The most exciting productions have often been crudely minimal and technically naive, linking it back to the work of earlier innovators like Tricky. Dizzee Rascal won the Mercury Prize in 2003.

Dubstep: 2000-present
Again a response to the increasing commercialisation of a sound, dubstep was pioneered by producers like El-B and Zed Bias as a darker strain of 2-step. The scene was given a focus in 2001 with the launch of London club night Forward>> which remains the hub to this day. Recently championed by Radio 1 DJ Mary Anne Hobbs, the scene has enjoyed increasing attention since 2006.

The desire and danger of crossover
Scenes grow and develop in a bubble, far outside of the demands of the music industry with its eye on moving the underground across to become over ground. Inwardly focusing on authenticity initially, the temptation to make the leap outside of a niche exists simultaneously as Holy Grail and poisoned chalice.

At the heart of this is the fact that a few players within the scene have their eye on the bigger prize. As journalist Dan Hancox explains: “At the centre of dubstep are a lot of people who don’t like the idea of being confined by a scene.”

Producer and DJ Plastician (who also runs Terrorrhythm Recordings) explains this push into a more commercial incarnation of the scene: “The problems being when tracks start to get aimed at the mainstream. Artists start to look at what are hits in the chart, as happens in the US, to try and make money out of the scene.” This all means that some people within the scene take a short-term approach, using a genre as a stepping stone into transient success: “They are just looking for that one big hit and are not really looking for the longevity that would make them a decent living over 10 years,” he says. “They just want to make as much money as quickly as possible.”

Journalist Martin Clark takes the example of grime as a means of explaining how, especially with the glare of media attention, a scene can make that leap only to land on its face. “When Dizzee Rascal won the Mercury Music Prize in 2003,” he explains, “it’s an example of where the hype and enthusiasm around a scene can backfire. There was a mass of media interest around someone who was new and edgy, but it was like a rollercoaster where the interest shot up and then disappeared quite quickly. There was also no infrastructure in place to help it cross over.”

It’s this lack of infrastructure that is both a blessing and a curse for any new scene (as we’ll consider in more detail below). Acts are wary of dealing with the majors, but they offer a support system that new scenes lack (but which come at a price).

Who needs the majors?

Since MySpace went mainstream, it’s been hailed as the great leveller and a way of acts negating the traditional record label model. While all the ‘MySpace bands’ that have apparently broken online (Arctic Monkeys, Lily Allen, Kate Nash etc) all signed label deals, there is a case to argue that dubstep is the first truly ‘digital genre’ and could conceivably make the transition from niche to mainstream without going down the tried and tested label route.

There is, however, a wariness within dubstep about signing to a major label, having seen drum & bass’s Icarus-like rise and fall and how producers got sidelined by an industry still obsessed with artists and the star system. As Hancox explains of the scene seven years ago: “A lot of people got producer deals such as Alex Reece and Dillinger. Today you don’t get those sorts of deals any more. Producers provide backing tracks for artist-led deals. Around 2000 there was a sense that you could go with an act that’d put a track together with friends. But labels stopped signing acts like that which totally screwed underground music.”

Having frontloaded spending and failed to recoup on previous underground dance scenes, the majors are understandably wary of repeating the mistakes of the past. This is allowing dubstep a degree of breathing space to attempt to build its own infrastructure from the ground up without the large advances (and impossible sales expectations) that characterised the gold rushes of the past. As Plastician notes, the focus for many is a deal with independents: “I don’t think there’s anyone in the dubstep scene at the moment who is working towards trying to get signed to a major. There are a lot of good independent labels out there at the moment offering good deals to up and coming producers.”

While in the past, the emphasis was on signing acts with marketable frontmen, the focus today is on building a profile as a DJ, especially online. “It used to be about signing a deal for a large advance and using DJ-ing as a sideline,” says producer, DJ and remixer MJ Cole. “Now the onus has shifted to live performance and everything else supports that.”
So, with signing to the majors no longer being seen as the ultimate goal (or something to avoid completely), how are these scenes using digital to break away from (and break apart) the old model?

The first digital genre?
As a genre that has emerged in the digital age, dubstep is a perfect illustration of the alternative channels open to new acts and scenes.

“The Internet is really important for dubstep,” explains Clark. “The reason being there has been no institutional support for the scene in the traditional music industry sense; it’s only on the Internet.” As a trailblazer in this regard, Rinse FM is a shining beacon of all that can be achieved by embracing every opportunity that digital opens up. Shows on the station harness technology completely, especially instant messaging services, with fans communicating directly with other listeners and, crucially, the DJs themselves.
“Internet radio is incredibly important for dubstep now,” explains Plastician. “A few years ago, because the technology wasn’t there, you’d only have a few people listening. Now you’d do a show on Rinse and you’d put MSN on and, by the end of the show, you’d have 200 people on MSN making comments. And they’re only a fraction of the total audience that is listening.”

The artist Geeneus, who runs Rinse FM, suggests one of the biggest revolutions in the scene was the massive uptake of online radio with the listener base, leaping from a handful to over 100,000 in a matter of a few years. “In the early days of streamed radio you could only have about 50 people listening and it was capped,” he explains. “When we switched server, we got an upgrade and they told us that there was a cap but not to worry about it as it was unlikely we’d ever exceed it. We had to contact them early on as we were hearing from people that couldn’t get on the stream. The people at the server checked the numbers listening and couldn’t believe it – there were so many people on there. So they took the cap off completely.”

As young listeners get increasingly frustrated with ‘old’ media, this is an important wake up call to both traditional broadcasters and the recorded music industry. Plastician adds that one radio mix he posted last year was downloaded over 16,000 times and Geeneus adds that Rinse FM Podcasts are downloaded a minimum of 500 times each.

But it’s not all good news as this creates a whole new set of problems; namely that artists aren’t getting paid. As vinyl dominates, the space for a legal digital market here is extremely limited and this is partly down to licensing complications. “Digital sales are quite sizeable for us,” explains Del Dias of Drum & Bass Arena. “We’d love to sell dubstep on there but at the moment we can’t license it.” This is something that MJ Cole backs up when he says: “A lot of the dubstep scene is about download sets. The artists, however, are losing out as a result as people aren’t paying for it.”

Finally, blogs are increasingly peripheral to the scene. Seen primarily as a forum for writers, artists are looking to other outlets instead. “I used to have a blog,” states Plastician, “but I only used it to let people know when I was playing or to post pictures of the previous night’s gig. But I can do all that on MySpace. I can put a video from my phone straight up there with a push of a button. It’s much easier than writing and uploading content on a blog.”

The international sell through
Scenes, by their very nature, are initially confined to a specific geographic area (usually an overlooked or run down part of a city). Digital, however, means that they can quickly attract a global following (especially with online radio, forums and the rapid trading of mix MP3s).

But the opportunities to migrate the scene internationally can come with a degree of compromise. “DJ-based cultures can be transferred into other countries really easily,” suggests MJ Cole. The problems, however, arise for MCs, as he points out. “With grime, because it focuses on the English accent and cultural references, that’s its appeal but it’s also its barrier when you try and take it internationally.”

There is a temptation for acts to dilute their lyrics and delivery, removing some of the culturally-specific elements in order to appeal outside of the geographic confines of the scene’s incubation space. “When some grime acts go abroad, they water their lyrics down a little and act more like a host on stage,” notes Plastician. “A lot of the grime acts are definitely making an effort to become clearer when performing abroad so that fans, who don’t have English as a first language, can get a clearer understanding of what they’re saying.”

MJ Cole also warns that the hothouse effect of the media’s constant pursuit of the new means scenes and movements can suffer at the hands of someone else’s agenda. “The media are desperate to jump on things that are believed to have a real commercial edge; but fast-tracking genres like this and trying to push them internationally means that they really suffer. The reality is that what goes up quickly comes down quickly.”

LANCE ARMSTRONG – STAGES 2009

Posted by Leigh

lance-marquee

As an ex pro triathlete (believe it or not), I used to have a mad passion for cycling. I was very competitive and still have all of my gear, including four or five very nice road bikes. The whole ‘fixed gear’ craze that is happening, or has been happening for the two/three years, really baffles me as I used to race those things on a track (where they belong), but has also really made me take an interested in cycling proper again. This year in particular, the return of Lance Armstrong to the professional circuit, including The Tour De France, has made pay way more attention. I have ridden on some of the mountains the tour passes through in the Alps of Italy, it was pretty tough.

So then I stumbled across this… Stages 2009. It is a collaboration between LIVESTRONG, Nike, and a group of artists who came up with the idea of customising Trek bikes that Lance would ride in the tour. The artists involved were KAWS, Kenny Scharf, Shepard Fairey, Marc Newson, Yoshitomo Nara and Damien Hirst. Check out the full story here: http://www.stages09.com/stages/index.html.

It is great to see that a truly amazing sport is finally being taken seriously and that it is finally getting the recognition it deserves. Oh, and it’s for a good cause too!

Here are some pics I have found.

PEACE

WORD UP!

Posted by Leigh

IMG_0277

I have been quiet on the posting front in the last few weeks, not much writing going fown at all. This is mostly down to the fact that I have been busy DJ’ing, going away and sorting out my new mac. DO NOT FRET, this week I intend to get back on it with a few gems and a BRAND NEW MIX (it has been too long).

On Saturday I met a guy called James, very nice guy, scouser (YNWA) which always helps. James ended up being none other than ‘Darkstar’. If you don’t know Darkstar, seriously, get involved. I know, have met, many musicians but it’s nice to meet people you rate who also turn out to be down to earth, genuinely nice guys. James is definitely one of those poeple. Big up rudeboy! Listen to the clip below by clicking on the image.

IMG_0272

PEACE

JOY ORBISON

Posted by Leigh

WHAT?!?!?! How did this happen…? I have been searching for something new, something special for a while now but I haven’t been able to find it. There have been a few things I have been hyped about, Cooly G, Falty DL, Martyn, Brackles and no doubt the unstoppable productions that have been coming from Joker in the last 18 months have been good, but I haven’t been blown away by anything that has made me think, ‘damn… I really wish I had made that…’. Well not until now.

I have been reading about this guy and I cannot tell you how unbelievable his production is. THIS IS THE NEXT-STEP, literally… If anyone is gonna blow the scene to pieces, surely it will be Joy Orbison. Unfortunately I cannot find any YouTube clips and there are no releases yet, so the best I can do is send you to his MySpace: JOY ORBISON.

Here you will find a selection of clips, hopefully all to be released very soon, my favourite being “Hyph Mngo”, with “J. Doe”| a close second. I cannot emphasise how much I rate this guy, you have to hear it to believe it!!!! Also, there are a couple of mixes on there which are well worth a punt, get involved peeps!!!!

Enjoy, PEACE.

l_JOY ORBISON

ZAG – SQUIRREL

Posted by Leigh

Beautiful typeface plus free font so get involved, click here for more: SQUIRREL

ZAG05

AKA STEVEN BONNER

Posted by Leigh

I really like this guys work, good solid typographic nous! The man has talent. Check him out here:
Steven Bonner

TYPE

HEY STUDIO / OXFAM

Posted by Leigh

Intermón Oxfam
‘Branding project for Intermón Oxfam. The aim was to renew the image of Oxfam and create an emotional link between the association and its young target. To create a more visual language, the letters are converted into illustrations, which increases the signification of words and create a own graphical personality, direct and reinvidicative. Titles are reduced to one single word to communicate quicker and more directly. The all identity is based on one single black colour printed on different colour papers, to facilitate the production and lower costs.’

I have posted a lot of this studios work, so if you haven’t checked them out before, please do. I am seriously loving their work. Enjoy: http://www.heystudio.es/

57_composicion

VINTAGE CENTER DISCS

Posted by Leigh

Found this a while ago, thought I would share.

ARTWORK

JOIN OUZO ON FACEBOOK

Posted by Leigh

n662870538_2637268_6347311

Find out what OUZO is up to and where he’ll be playing next by signing up to the Facebook page. Follow this link: OUZO FB GROUP.

PEACE

OUZO @ INIGO – CHANGE OF DATE

Posted by Leigh

Hey people, there was confusion with the promoters and the event manager at the venue and subsequently the date given on the original flier was wrong. Hope this doesn’t stop anyone form being able to make it. Here’s a link to the original post for full details on the night: OUZO @ INIGO. Remember to email me for guselist here: ouzo@not-ready.co.uk

PEACE

mime

V&A

Posted by Leigh

I saw this a while ago and rather liked it. WHY NOT ASSOCIATES created this and have updated it recently, I guess. They use a very nice palette which is extremely summery. All in all, a very nice piece of design.

ENJOY.

01

FLYNN PRODUCTION RE-BRAND

Posted by Leigh

An old friend of mine, Jonny Mourgue works at Flynn and I haven’t checked them out for a while. So whilst browsing on their website I realised that they had had a nice overhaul on the design front. I like it a lot and I think that you might too. Check them out here: FLYNN PRODUCTIONS

LOGO

WHITE PACK

STATIONARY

STATIONARY_2