the things we think but do not say

music, techOctober 30, 2007 9:00 am



_DM37934

Originally uploaded by georgeaye.

I’ve gone full circle with my Touch now.

During the first few days of ownership I was flush with pride while looking and playing with my slim little friend. Oh, how lovely it was to look at. How delicate it was to hold. How sweet it was to see Coverflow glide between albums…

But then precisely a week into my love affair, something dark inside woke up and realised how annoying it was to use. Would it have killed Apple to give me some freaking real buttons? Every time I want to change advance a track or even just adjust the volume, I have to mess with the ‘radical new multi-touch interface’. It is pretty sexy to deftly glide your fingers over the surface and have it react, but when it means I have to glide my finger to do anything, then it’s starting to be multi-pain-in-the-ass.

I started moaning to everyone! “God, it’s so slow to browse the internet, even on WiFi!”. “Why do I have to do five things before I can just go to the next song?” “Why did I pay $400 for something that’s more annoying to use than my old $200 Nano?”

But as try as I might, I just couldn’t let go of Touchy. I just relaxed, saw differently the annoyances and turned them into ‘charming quirks’ and let the Apple fanboy in me reason myself into a stupor. For about two dark days back there, I even thought about getting a Zune! I know, I know… Everyone else laughed too. Poor Zune. On paper the new Zune looks like a really good deal: 3.2″ screen, 80gb, $250. What’s not to like?! Well, the public derision for a start, “Oh you got a Zune! Wow. You’re brave.”

So, the main reasons to love my little Touch are still present: awesome video playback, svelte body, good battery life, great music playback. The other annoyances like, slow web browsing (Safari apparently has little to no cache to load pages), annoying multi-touch interface to get to the most basic functions, are still there too. I just learnt to live with them. The other said reality is that for much of my music I don’t have the album art which makes the 3.5″ screen a little redundant.

In conclusion, my Touch and I have go through some tough times, but we’re still together.

PS. I’m off to NY this Thursday to see my sister run the New York Marathon this weekend. Amazing huh? I’m also excited to see if I can kill the Touch’s battery on the trip watching Soprano’s episodes on the way over. I’ll give you a battery update soon!

talking the talk, music, design, social, photography, connectedAugust 14, 2007 10:50 am



iPhone details-0394

Originally uploaded by georgeaye.

Ugh.

Whenever I think I’m free of it’s grasp, I realise that it has still got a hold on me.

Why oh why must I be haunted by you?

Why must you be so damn attractive?

Why must you be such a compelling experience?

Ugh.

I thought the other day, wouldn’t it be cool to show someone your latest photos on this thing? It sure would dumbass. That’s what Stevie J wants you to think! But wouldn’t it be cool to just keep up on just those few blogs and sites you read each day without booting up your laptop? Yup. But wouldn’t it be cool to be able to only carry one device that had a camera, mp3 and phone in it? ARGH!

Damn you iPhone. Your day of reckoning will come…

music, social, photography, ChicagoJuly 16, 2007 11:45 am

This weekend featured two new types of photography for me: on Friday night, my first proper wedding (where I didn’t know the couple at all) and then my first indie rock concert on Saturday and Sunday. All in all, I was taking photos, thinking of taking photos, and running to get to a new place to take photos for 72hrs.

While it was exciting to take photos at the wedding, it’s hard to compare it to a two day long concert where over 30 of the hottest bands are playing. I was lucky enough to be the photographer for Gapers Block (a Chicago centric webzine) which gave me the all important “Press Pass” to the gigs. And I can tell you I was surprised how many layers of ‘exclusivity’ there is. At the bottom is the lowly, ticker holding punter of course. Then there’s student volunteer crew members, then there’s the regular crew, then there’s the press, then there’s the press with yellow stickers (for photo access), then there’s VIP, then there’s security, then there’s Artist, and then there’s Pitchfork management that truly have ‘All Area Access’. Oh and there’s all manner of combinations too.

Pitchfork 2007 Saturday-33255

Despite the layered cake of permissions and access, my ‘press pass + yellow sticker’ did let get to places that I would never have seen in the past as a normal concert goer. This manifests itself mainly in the form of the ‘Press pit’ which is a rather sweaty way to call the gap of space caught between the main stage and the crowd. I don’t know if I ever noticed before, but if you’re all the way up the front of the crowd, you’ll see all the press photographers all running around switching lens or switching camera bodies trying to get the best line of sight. Since I’m not a ‘hardened veteran’ to all this yet, I spent more than a few moments at each stage, taking photos of the press crew as they would dive in and out of each others way. Somehow, instinctively each photographer knew just how much room they need to position themselves, get the shot and not be in someone else’s way at the same time. And naturally, it’s also the best place to see the band as you’re less than ten feet from the artists. Good for photographers and great for photographers who are also fans of the bands.

Pitchfork 2007 Saturday-33122

While this is might not be true at all concerts, the photography policy at Pitchfork was a strict, ‘first three songs’ limit. I still don’t have any idea why this was in place. But the effect put every photographer into an urgent rhythm It also means that you can’t arrive late, or you’ll be shooting from the crowd which could mean being back a couple of hundred feet. Not good. Even with a 70-200L f2.8 lens plus 1.4 tele-extender, you’re basically screwed for any getting any decent facial expressions.

And while this was true for the two main stages, Aluminum and Connector, all sorts of security breaches were happening at the Balance stage. The Balance stage for the last couple of years was treated as the runt of the litter, being off to the side of the main park. Last year, someone had the idea of providing shade for everyone in the sweltering temperature but unfortunately this only created a heat sink since the tent didn’t really let the steam produced by several thousand sweaty ravers to escape. Thankfully this year saw no tent.

All of Saturday, I soon realised that I could rely upon the guys on security at the Balance stage to let me and every other press photographer do their work. At any time, for as long as we wanted. We even got to go backstage where we could hang out with the artists, get a cold drink and very importantly, use their clean porta potty. None of the heavy handed security douche bags from the other two main stages were here. Just the cool ones. Yeah for the Balance stage! And all this sweet dealyness was going great for everyone involved until Dan Deacon played his set last Saturday afternoon, where everything went nuts.

Now remember that the layout goes like this: the band plays on the stage, then there’s a four foot wide gap where the press photographers shoot from, then the front of the crow starts and goes back hundreds of feet. Three distinct zones. But for Dan Deacon, this was way too conventional. He managed to play his set from within the crowd itself, right at the front, up against the fence. Unfortunately, I get only wind of this when I arrived late and there’s a road block of people all jammed up. I start to assert my ‘press pass’ powers and shove my way to the entrance. I then see what the deal is with Dan’s set and also see that all the press photographer’s are now jam packed in the press pit, shooting ‘backwards’ toward the crowd to get shots of Mr. Deacon. Which meant that it was SOL.

Then it hit me! The only place for me to go now is onto the stage! Since no one is using it, I might as well use it to give me a good overlooking vantage point. So I shove my way to the stage staircase with some other later press shooters who have the same idea. And this is where my luck came in. I’d made friends with one of the crew earlier that day and as we all approach, he say’s, “No one getting up on the stage. No photographers allowed.”

“I’m letting only two in. You and you. Go!”

I scramble up onto the stage, I take the closest corner and start to scope out the sprawling mess of activity in front of me and it’s just plain insane. Dan is screaming into a microphone, and completely surrounding him are three thousand people all going nuts hanging on his every word. Immediately below me, in the press pit is the rest of the press shooters fighting to get a clear shot of Dan and his iPod shuffle (no joke). And every second I’m up on stage shooting down into the crowd and Dan Deacon, I’m thinking two things, “I can’t believe what I’m seeing” and “If anyone gets hurt they won’t be found until the morning”.

Total, complete, chaos with a heavy electronic beat in the background. What an experience.

Pitchfork 2007 Saturday-33622

Pitchfork 2007 Saturday-33705

For the rest of the night and all of next day, the security tightened up like a drum and to over compensate for yesterday’s debacle, the security on the Balance stage started to enforce not only the three song limit, but a new ‘four photographer’s at a time’ rule. Great. So you’ve now got three songs, about 12 minutes, spread out over a dozen photographers who now have to take turns. That gives you about 60-90 seconds each.

What do these people want from me?

Since this is not a very sustainable situation and I have a full shot list from this one stage to do, I come up with a new strategy. A strategy that only a rookie like me could have come up with it seemed as I didn’t see anyone else try it.I remember thinking during the Girl Talk set the night before, the people in the crowd are in the best position to take photos since us photo chumps were stuck on the side lines waiting to be blessed with a minute of access. So I said, sod it, I’m joining the crowd!

It takes a lot of jostling, a lot of ‘excuse me!’ and a lot of not too subtle camera nudging to work my way through the crowd and eventually I find myself at the front of the crowd, right up against the low fence that previously separated me from the crowd. And let me tell you, life on the other side is totally different. Rather than fighting for a spot to shoot from, you’re fighting for room to jump around to. I think sometime after getting my fancy schmancy press pass, I forgot what it was like to just be a fan.

Pitchfork 2007 Sunday-34440

For the next four hours, I hung out with three thousand other fans and danced, screamed, jumped and took photos like everyone else, to The Cool Kids, Cadence Weapon, and The Field. The strategy only really paid off when the final show on the Balance stage was kicked in. Klaxons is a English rock band that is apparently making kids krazy everywhere they play. And due to the fact that everyone in the crowd was really, really into the band and going totally nuts when they started their set, security wasn’t letting any press take photos for at least the first two songs. Since I was already embedded as part of the crowd, they happily admitted that they couldn’t stop me from getting my shots of the band.

And while in theory this plan sounded smart, getting in focus shots of the band in near total darkness (shooting at ISO 3200) with the weight of thousands of fans crushing you against a metal railing while supporting 10lbs of camera and lens, is not easy. Eventually they let the press in but by then I was already done and ready to be extracted. Security was kind enough to pull me out of the crush. The night ended on De La Soul on the main stage, but I’m going to remember those Krazy Klaxon fans for a long time.

The artists featured are:
Saturday
Ken Vandermark’s Powerhouse Sound, Califone, William Parker Quartet, Grizzly Bear, Battles, Fujiya & Miyagi, Professor Muder, Clipse, Dan Deacon, Girl Talk, Yoko Ono
Sunday
Deerhunter, Fred Lonberg-Holm’s Lightbox Orchestra, Menomena, Junior Boys, Nomo, Sea and Cake, Jamie Lidell, The Cool Kids, Cadence Weapon, Klaxons, De La Soul

Pitchfork 2007 Sunday-34746

All in all, a throughly thrilling, fantastic, ear drum ringing weekend of photography.

A slideshow of photos from Saturday.

A slideshow from Sunday is now up!

music, design, techMarch 1, 2007 3:35 pm



Grado RS2

Originally uploaded by georgeaye.

Grado labs make some sweet cans. They have quite a few in their range (starting from about $60) and they go all the way into the stratosphere (about $1000). For my latest project, we’re looking at the future of listening and inevitably that involves getting some kick ass headphones for research.

We’ve amassed a pretty serious collection of head gear in our studio, but by far, the most memorable experience I’ve had with a pair of headphones was with these Grado RS-2s. With the aesthetics of a World War II RADAR operator these are unique objects in themselves.

Sound quality is a terribly subjective topic and to be analytical about it, is like evaluating a new camera lens or tasting a wine. Reading a test chart or getting a chemical breakdown is only part of the picture. That being said, everyone can tell bad from good, but being able to judge good to great is much harder.

I can say that in my humble opinion, they are the greatest headphones I’ve ever listened too. And it’s only going to get better, once I’ve bed the drivers in over this week.

These mahogany retro chic beauties have the greatest range of expression I’ve ever heard. In terms of range, the sound is expansive, even panoramic.

And for $500 a pair, they had better be damn good.

music, social, travelAugust 30, 2006 4:31 pm

After working non-stop with back to back projects since January, I finally got myself out of Chicago for a proper vacation. A good friend of mine and I had talked of all sorts of fancy trips for years but never ever sorted anything out. So in typical fashion, with only two weeks planning, I booked my flights to Havana.

Since the US has a number of issues of Castro and the Cuban government, we had to fly from a non-US point of origin, namely Cancun, which we stayed in for one day and night.

Our whole trip was only six days with only really four days of being on the ground. There’s plenty of reasons for hyperbole about Cuba as it is, but walking through Havana and being on tours in the countryside left me completely hypersensitive to taking images. I took almost as many photographs in those six days as I had taken for my entire five week vacation to Burma and Asia in February 2004. By the end of it, I was frankly a little sick of taking photographs but its really easy to go nuts there. It’s simply a country unlike any other.

One aspect of Cuban life that may potentially change after Fidel’s death is the distinct lack of commercialisation. Beyond the chromed letters of the vintage cars churning smoke around town, there was simply zero brand messaging anywhere. No logos, no icons, no overt imagery that makes most of the world sensitive to corporations and their ‘public facing’ messaging. We are bourgeois capitalist pigs after all.

Walking through Havana was very exciting for me, photographically, as I got to see a level of city-wide neglect and faded beauty that I’ve only seen in a few other cities: Beijing and Rangoon. Coincidentally they too share an oppressive governmental presence. There’s simply no other way to reproduce the effects of sun bleached discolouration, grime, smog and rain damage, unless you dedicate decades of governmental neglect. The 50s and 60s architecture of the time have become so faded that it has a patina that gives it a unique, aged beauty all of its own.

On this trip, a technique that I’ve been practicing for a few years now came into fruition here: “blind shooting from the hip”. I’ve become really good (and by good, 1 in 5 are in focus and on target) at taking street photography with my camera hanging from the strap around my hip. With your camera down by your waist and your face pointing in the opposite direction, you can get away with a few shots before anyone’s noticed. Just point the camera in the general direction and with lots of practice you’ll get the hang of it. The trick is in reviewing the photos on the back of the LCD without your unsuspecting subject noticing!

The most remarkable experience for me on this trip happened as my friend and I covered the city by foot. We heard as we walked a strong live drum rhythm (not dissimilar to a Fela Kuti afro beat) and we realize that it was coming from an open window of a second floor balcony. We looked around and saw someone else on the street point to the window. They pointed and said ‘party’ and encouraged us to go have a look. We looked at each other again, then back to the window and then decided to walk through the open door. As we entered this complete stranger’s house, we saw that this was place is packed to the gills with people all at the top of the staircase. We immediately got the sense that we were not really meant to be here.

After a few awkward seconds of standing with a dozen Cubans in this cramped corridor we soon established that no one was overtly offended by our presence. In fact we asked sheepishly, “OK?” and we got a thumbs up, even if the looks on their faces was a little incredulous. We had a short conversation with a young man in English and worked out that this was a semi religious ceremony cum house party and all these sixty-odd people were family, related to each other in some way. Everyone, except us.

From this narrow corridor we could see two rooms; one to the side was full of colourful fruits and decorations and the other was dead ahead bursting with vibrancy. Between us and that room were people craning their necks to peer at the dancing that was basically going off in someone’s living room.

From my vantage point of the corridor I realized that I would never forgive myself if I didn’t get myself in that room! So after almost an hour of patiently ingratiating ourselves with the group, I start my slow advance through the threshold to see a performance that will stay with me for as long as I live.

Five bongo drum players were lining the perimeter at one end of the room and in the centre was a singer in his fifties. Surrounding the musicians are three generations of about forty Cubans. The singer’s voice was incredibly loud and it manages to stay clear and true above the incessant drumming and a room full of people singing with him. His song carried a simple “call and response” format; he’d sing a few words and then be greeted with his words amplified a hundred fold by the room who knew the lyrics by heart. I got the impression that these Cubans had heard these songs ever since they were children.

The beat, the chanting, the deep rooted culture of this experience all added to a heady mix of mystique and music. Twice during our two hour, mid afternoon adventure, we saw a young woman and an elderly woman in her sixties both dance themselves into a hazy, hypnotic, trance-like state. At times their spinning and singing would produce a freakish, startled look on their faces. We saw both woman collapse into the arms of those around them, while everyone else continued the tradition. The beat would play for long, twenty minutes lengths, through complex, improvised rhythms. But when the song finished, it finished dead. The music, the drumming, the singing, all ending together, perfectly in sync. All on one beat.

After several more songs, we slowly make our way out of the room not wanting to push our luck. On our departure we saw something that gave us a clear insight into what kind of ‘party’ we just experienced. On the back of the front door (which is way we didn’t see when we came in) was a white dove, breathing calmly, tied upside down with its feet bound together. We’d heard of something called Santería, a religion practiced by some Afro-Cubans before this day but never thought we’d see it up close and personal. I found this entry on Santería on Wikipedia. An excerpt is here: “Drum music and dancing are a form of prayer and will sometimes induce a trance state in initiated priest, who become “possessed” and will channel the Orisha, giving the community and individuals information, perform healing etc.”

I’ll tell you now, if the dove had been dead, or bleeding, I would have run like hell.

Despite the trade embargos, try to find yourself in Cuba one day. I highly recommend it.

Please enjoy the photos, they’re in three parts.

Walking through Havana, August 2006
Callejon De Hamel, Havana, August 2006
Tour of Playa Del Rio, Cuba, August

music, moviesApril 25, 2006 11:43 pm
Over a tasty, toasted sub, I watched one of the strangest movie to date. I call it a movie since it features a series of still images, played consecutively such that it appears as though the pictures are “moving” and the people are “talking”. Other than that, it’s a movie in the weakest sense as it doesn’t feature a discernable plot, cast is basically made up of Kelly’s mates and the dialogue is sung instead of spoken. In R Kelly’s own words, this movie is in fact a “hip-hopera”.

I had only heard of “Trapped in the Closet” in hushed tones to this point. Hushed tones that quickly develop into giggles once some of the gems of the story get described. (And don’t worry the link at the bottom will take you to a nice collection of clips.) I am only left wondering why it’s so strangely watchable?

Is it the way that R Kelly sings every line of every character with just continuous melody?
Is it that he can manage to make ‘bitch please you must be trippin’ into a softly sung verse?
Is it the way that each chapter comes to a nail biting teeth clenching crecendo?
Or is it perhaps that a character called Bridget is used as a cheap rhyming device to introduce a midget?

But after today I am only left wondering why did he make this film? Why didn’t someone long into the production of this say, “What the fuck is going on? This story makes no sense! Please tell me this is meant to be a comedy!”

All this and more might get answered after the jump.

music, ChicagoMarch 8, 2006 11:26 am



Dilated Peoples Live in Chicago

Originally uploaded by georgeaye.
About one in ten hip hop concerts are truly great and thankfully last nights show with Dilated Peoples, Little Brother and Defari, was one of them. The last show I saw was when MF Doom played in Chicago and while I love the Metal Fingered one as much as the next fanboy, the show I saw epitomised all that I hate about hip hop concerts; everyone and his grandmother on stage for 3 hours and the headliner act is no where to be seen.
After that experience, I was just about sworn off seeing live hip hop again.

That is until last night. Everything was on time, the sound system was loud and clear and the acts were so alive.

Little Brother, featuring Big Pooh and Phonte but missing their producer 9th Wonder, opened and performed a very compelling 45 minute set with cuts from their new album, The Minstrel Show as well as a couple of tracks from their debut LP, The Listening. The highlight was seeing ‘Slow it Down’ performed tounge in cheek as an old soul act with syncronised moves and all.

But all this was just a teaser for the main act, Dilated People. While I’ve listened to their first LP, The Platform, to death, I’ve only casually checked the next three albums, including their latest, 20/20. While the lyrics are definitely more braggadocio than thought provoking, Dilated do know how to put on a show; you would have had to been on Nyquil to not rock your head to it. MCs Evidence and Iriscience were on top form, rapping their little hearts out for their rabid fans and to us in the front rows. At one point they reminded the audience that the back bone of hip hop is the DJ. And so they should since Dilated People’s ace in the hole is DJ Babu from the World Famous Beat Junkies. While only given a few minutes of solo scratching, he showed everyone why he’s a multiple ITF and DMC world champion. (I just noticed on his bio, that he also produced the ‘Super Duper Duck Breaks’ vinyl on Stones Throw.)

For and hour and a half, Dilated dropped all manner of bangers from ‘Back Again’, ‘You can’t hide you can’t run’, ‘Worst comes to worst’, ‘No retreat’, and ‘This way’. If there was a formula to running a good show its have a crowd that knows all your lyrics back to front and only play tracks that everyone can shout along with. Simple. For me, the high point was hearing my favourite Dilated track of all time, ‘Work the angles’ which produced one of those ‘this is why I still love hip hop’ feelings. Damn it good to jump in time with a couple hundred other fans.

music, design, photography, tech, connected, shoppingFebruary 27, 2006 5:18 pm
I live a fairly modern life and I rely on the structural integrity of hundreds of devices to make my day go straight. In fact my digital life is so pervasive, when I read a headline on the BBC news website, “Amazon shrinking at 25% in a year” I immediately thought that the stock price of the online retailer was down. How sad.

But the one thing that I rely on, the thing that’s now more vaulable than almost any other object, is my hard drive. It’s got all my photos, all my music, tons of my work it’s all taken years of careful curation/creation.

And so my ‘deep in the back of my head’ worry is that one day my drive will just spontaneously and castrophically die. And I’ll be totally screwed.

So I finally bought a back up drive to my main back up drive. A second level of redundency as it were. And what’s the only hard drive out there? Why the Lacie Brick drives, designed by Ora Ito, of course.

250Gb for under $150. Sweet.

Is there anything in your life that if you could keep a perfect back up of, you would?

musicFebruary 10, 2006 8:44 pm

I walked into Reckless Records to get my copy of Donuts, the new LP from J Dilla and quite casually the sales assistant says “yeah, Dilla died today. I just heard an hour ago.”

I still can’t believe it. I just read a number of reports that are confirming his unexpected and sudden death. An interview given a few months back in XXL magazine, mentions that a ruptured liver caused him to go to hospital for an extended stay. He apparently worked on the Donuts album while still connected to various tubes, literally making beats from his bed. Rumours of his death sprung up then too. But today, I believe it’s all true. He was only 32.

I saw Dilla perform twice. Once in New York at BB Kings with Madlib and MF DOOM and the second time in Chicago with just Madlib (both times for the Jaylib/Madvillainy tours).

He was a remarkably unpretentious, perfectly cool guy that loved making music. He was genuinely excited that people were out to see him live. After the show in Chicago, I waited to speak to him and mentioned that I really loved his earlier instrumental albums. We talked some and I said that if he was ever in Chicago he should call me and I could show him around (who the fuck am I right? to show Jay Dee around?!) but I said it anyway. He then gave me his cell phone number and said that I should call when I pass through Detroit.

That’s nuts.

Name me a top hip hop artist that gives out their cell phone number to a fan? Crazy.

I’m so sorry to hear that he died today. He was a super talented producer.

music, connectedFebruary 9, 2006 9:54 pm

I almost crashed my car driving home, listening to the show. I started laughing so hard, I started to cough, almost making me veer into on coming traffic.

These recordings are apparently the world’s most downloaded podcasts and are still running. There’s about two weeks left (of a total of 12 shows). I just found out though that only the last four podcasts from each week, so now, in week ten you can only go back as far as week six, which is a shame. And since it the whole thing is free, and they’re so good, I think I’ll put together all the shows when they’re finished and I’ll make them available. Somehow.

My previous, gushing post about Ricky, Steve and Karl can be found here.