RaeBerlin
4 months ago
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I bought new rekkids! And am remembering why I don’t - mad expensive yo! But pretty excited about my personal listening party tonight. Warsaw (pre-Joy Division), Georgia Sea Island Singers (old Gullah songs and hymnals, just sweet Southern folk music), and Nina Simone live.  Pumped, Pumped, Pumped! (Taken with instagram)

I bought new rekkids! And am remembering why I don’t - mad expensive yo! But pretty excited about my personal listening party tonight. Warsaw (pre-Joy Division), Georgia Sea Island Singers (old Gullah songs and hymnals, just sweet Southern folk music), and Nina Simone live. Pumped, Pumped, Pumped! (Taken with instagram)

8 months ago
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I always forget to thank my local college radio station for all the great music they introduce to me even before there is an actual album or before anyone even knows who that band is. I remember them playing Lily Allen’s “Smile” before her name was even uttered in the States. I had already become familiar with We Are Scientists through MTV2’s Subterranean, but KSYM 90.1 was playing “It’s A Hit” and that was exciting to hear since I was still trying to get to know them. And I love them for introducing me to Pacha Massive during their Spanish Alternative hour. I need to berate them for giving up Sunday night Reggae hour (bring it back!) but overall they’ve done good by me.
And this includes hearing MUTEMATH’s “Chaos” one cold fall evening several years ago. It was a live version KSYM had played and I loved the song so much I immediately looked up the band. They had this really awful-looking website at the time with 5 songs streaming (which I would later learn was their EP). There was no album to buy, there were no songs to download. A YouTube search didn’t amount to a lot of videos of them. Some were live but the sound quality was pretty bad. So I did what any sane person would do: I waited. I waited and waited and waited to hear if this band would produce anything else. I waited to see if they were to become anything. Honestly, I didn’t know what google alerts were back then so I would just get on the computer weekly and see if anything by MM had arrived yet. In 2006 an album was finally released and I snatched it up as soon as possible.
I then went to Bonnaroo in ‘07, saw them live and had decided that they go into that list of favorite bands ever. And this can’t be judged by album alone. You have to see them live! I was introduced to MM that way; it is an even stronger point that it is necessary to see them on a stage. It will be the most exciting, thrilling and creative experiences you will ever see. They are a very technical band, which usually drives me crazy. It’s like, yeah you sound on point but you ain’t got no soul. But MM is technical with the soul. It makes sense being that they are from New Orleans. Jazz music is very technical but you must have that element of music improvisation to make it your own. Though MM has never sounded like a jazz act, there is no denying that where they come from has made its way into their post-rock sound.
So here comes Odd Soul, which has been compared to everything from The Black Keys to Stevie Wonder. It seems a little on the short side, even though most of their albums clock in around 50 minutes. I guess seeing them live so many times makes listening to them in album form more constricting. It feels a little slower at times and not as cohesive in parts. They do the whole blues rock, loud-tambourine-gospel thing that works really well but then they’ll want to remind you that they have always had a very Electronica sound. Those songs on that end are still good but don’t seem to go well with the other sound they want introduced. It’s a playlist, not an album. And even though I don’t mind when bands get big (I love telling everyone about my favorite musical artists. Can’t keep ‘em to myself!), I see MM as vulnerable. They are still this band from New Orleans, still escaping their past incarnation as a “Christian band” so they can just be a band anyone can listen to. Just touring small clubs, not a whole lot of interviews going around, and being low-key. So a song featured on the Twilight soundtrack (yuck! No worries, Muse was on it too) and being on late night talk shows, which takes their grand performances and makes them small, has irked me quite a bit. But I’m giving Odd Soul all the chances I can give it. And they’re coming to San Antonio on October 9th so hopefully I’ll catch them. Truth is, I haven’t been as psyched as I usually am when I’m about to see them. I hate falling out of love with bands. It’s a sign that I’m getting too old or am becoming less understanding of change. But I want MM to always be that band to me. I’ve traveled for them, I introduced my best friend to them and we’ve seen them live together thrice, and I even saw them all by my lonesome when I moved to Denver and hardly knew anyone yet. No matter how many times I’ve been moshing in the pit, almost died of dehydration at Warped Tour (TWICE BY THE WAY), driven up to Austin for a show (can’t even count), cried my eyes out when shows were sold out, some of the most memorable experiences have been with MM. I don’t want to give that up.
I wish them all the success with this new album, and as bad as my grammar is, I hope other music fans can understand where I’m coming from whether they’re familiar with this band or not. How do people successfully keep the music alive in their hearts? I don’t want to get jaded about this band or anything else. MM still have the passion after all these years and I admire that most about musicians who can continually put out albums and do shows with the same “family” for months at a time. I need to be that excited about things and people. I guess that’s why music comes first in the sort-of-superficial-things-to-love list. Music is everything I want to be.

I always forget to thank my local college radio station for all the great music they introduce to me even before there is an actual album or before anyone even knows who that band is. I remember them playing Lily Allen’s “Smile” before her name was even uttered in the States. I had already become familiar with We Are Scientists through MTV2’s Subterranean, but KSYM 90.1 was playing “It’s A Hit” and that was exciting to hear since I was still trying to get to know them. And I love them for introducing me to Pacha Massive during their Spanish Alternative hour. I need to berate them for giving up Sunday night Reggae hour (bring it back!) but overall they’ve done good by me.

And this includes hearing MUTEMATH’s “Chaos” one cold fall evening several years ago. It was a live version KSYM had played and I loved the song so much I immediately looked up the band. They had this really awful-looking website at the time with 5 songs streaming (which I would later learn was their EP). There was no album to buy, there were no songs to download. A YouTube search didn’t amount to a lot of videos of them. Some were live but the sound quality was pretty bad. So I did what any sane person would do: I waited. I waited and waited and waited to hear if this band would produce anything else. I waited to see if they were to become anything. Honestly, I didn’t know what google alerts were back then so I would just get on the computer weekly and see if anything by MM had arrived yet. In 2006 an album was finally released and I snatched it up as soon as possible.

I then went to Bonnaroo in ‘07, saw them live and had decided that they go into that list of favorite bands ever. And this can’t be judged by album alone. You have to see them live! I was introduced to MM that way; it is an even stronger point that it is necessary to see them on a stage. It will be the most exciting, thrilling and creative experiences you will ever see. They are a very technical band, which usually drives me crazy. It’s like, yeah you sound on point but you ain’t got no soul. But MM is technical with the soul. It makes sense being that they are from New Orleans. Jazz music is very technical but you must have that element of music improvisation to make it your own. Though MM has never sounded like a jazz act, there is no denying that where they come from has made its way into their post-rock sound.

So here comes Odd Soul, which has been compared to everything from The Black Keys to Stevie Wonder. It seems a little on the short side, even though most of their albums clock in around 50 minutes. I guess seeing them live so many times makes listening to them in album form more constricting. It feels a little slower at times and not as cohesive in parts. They do the whole blues rock, loud-tambourine-gospel thing that works really well but then they’ll want to remind you that they have always had a very Electronica sound. Those songs on that end are still good but don’t seem to go well with the other sound they want introduced. It’s a playlist, not an album. And even though I don’t mind when bands get big (I love telling everyone about my favorite musical artists. Can’t keep ‘em to myself!), I see MM as vulnerable. They are still this band from New Orleans, still escaping their past incarnation as a “Christian band” so they can just be a band anyone can listen to. Just touring small clubs, not a whole lot of interviews going around, and being low-key. So a song featured on the Twilight soundtrack (yuck! No worries, Muse was on it too) and being on late night talk shows, which takes their grand performances and makes them small, has irked me quite a bit. But I’m giving Odd Soul all the chances I can give it. And they’re coming to San Antonio on October 9th so hopefully I’ll catch them. Truth is, I haven’t been as psyched as I usually am when I’m about to see them. I hate falling out of love with bands. It’s a sign that I’m getting too old or am becoming less understanding of change. But I want MM to always be that band to me. I’ve traveled for them, I introduced my best friend to them and we’ve seen them live together thrice, and I even saw them all by my lonesome when I moved to Denver and hardly knew anyone yet. No matter how many times I’ve been moshing in the pit, almost died of dehydration at Warped Tour (TWICE BY THE WAY), driven up to Austin for a show (can’t even count), cried my eyes out when shows were sold out, some of the most memorable experiences have been with MM. I don’t want to give that up.

I wish them all the success with this new album, and as bad as my grammar is, I hope other music fans can understand where I’m coming from whether they’re familiar with this band or not. How do people successfully keep the music alive in their hearts? I don’t want to get jaded about this band or anything else. MM still have the passion after all these years and I admire that most about musicians who can continually put out albums and do shows with the same “family” for months at a time. I need to be that excited about things and people. I guess that’s why music comes first in the sort-of-superficial-things-to-love list. Music is everything I want to be.

10 months ago
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Denver via Instagram. The fest was so good. I feel enlightened! Even if I did get sick :(

11 months ago
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thesmithian:

a performance by Patina Miller singing Random Black Girl.  It’s about how new musicals all just so happen to include a soulful, sassy, big-voiced, big-bottomed black girl in the ensemble…

more, here. via RY.

I hate being sick but at least I’m catching up on all the fun internet stuff I hardly have time for anymore. And blogging like a nerd. That’s good for illness.

Anyways, this video is so funny and SO true. Maybe this is why I hate Glee or why I wasn’t crazy about many musicals we did during my 4 years at an arts magnet high school. You don’t see many of us up there unless we’re being sassy, fat and loud. This is also something that drives me crazy about Adele. I have mixed feeling about her, but she is incredible live and her ballads are pretty strong. But why are we surprised that she sings well? And why aren’t we influenced by her to listen to soul musicians who have been around longer? Why is she OK to put on the radio? Because of her skin? I never hear Erykah Badu, Janelle Monáe or Res on the radio. And I definitely never hear black girls who are in rooted in any other music besides pop on the radio. This is not just an Adele issue; this could be said of Amy Winehouse, Justin Timberlake, or Duffy. They should sing Soul & R&B if they want to, but we should have the choice not to sing it if we don’t want to. And what the heck happened to Fefe Dobson?!

I grew up listening to everything from pop to country to R&B to jazz. And some kids would make me feel like I wasn’t “black enough” just because I owned a Blink-182 album or because I really loved Loretta Lynn. Well, I’m sorry I don’t own every rap album ever and yes, The O, Brother Where Art Thou soundtrack is one of my absolute favorites. On the site listed above, a commenter put that a girl gave a performance on American Idol and sang a country song. The judges said she did good but she should have sang an R&B song instead. Why? There’s something wrong with this thinking. I love seeing my sisters in Punk bands. I love seeing us sing folk music. Soul means many things and it’s not just R&B.
Maybe this is why I think the Afro-Punk Festival is such a positive thing and I hope it brings out many people of many shades to experience it. Even though I may not go, I’m excited about it. It’s time to open people’s eyes and let them see we all aren’t Beyonce or some random black girl singing sass in a musical.

But you know, with Fela doing so well on Broadway, The Color Purple being so awesome when I saw it in NYC a couple of years ago, here’s to the hope that there will be a lot more awesome musicals with us in it and the hope that the Random Black Girl can be any Black Girl she chooses to be.

(Source: thesmithian)

Cite Arrow via thesmithian
11 months ago
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Serious Musings about Pop Music

It’s official, I really like this song. And I honestly dig kids with this kind of style. At first, I was hatin’ but it takes a lot of confidence to wear those crazy colors. Not for me, but I have to say I’m kind of glad someone is rocking it.
Yes, I do hate turning on the radio and everything sounds like 1990s Ibiza club music (Rihanna’s “Only Girl in the World”, Pitbull’s “Give Me Everything” Kesha’s “We R Who We R”, etc, etc). It gets annoying and it’s a really crazy fad. But you know, there are always going to be kids who are going to want to dance. I don’t know how popular freestyle music was elsewhere in the country, but growing up, it was really popular in San Antonio. Songs like this really defined a childhood in San Antonio I think.

So there is a reason for me to get over the Kesha’s, the constant 808s, and the electro hop and just embrace it. I mean, I don’t have to like all of it. I’m just finally getting a better understanding of it and whatever gets people moving is great. It can become overwhelmingly irritating and soon people will be over it and onto the next. But for now, it’s fun and I’m going to enjoy it.

This is an ongoing project I’m going to try to work on. I’ve been wanting to do more breakdowns of why I enjoy pop music because I’m constantly around friends who are super indie rock, underground punk, and straight rock and roll people and most don’t seem to understand the fun in it. I’m a huge fan of soul and indie dance punk bands the most, so I fit in well with this current scene. That is, until I start blaring the Rihanna. So after writing a bit of a rebuttal to some user saying everyone is copying Lady Gaga here and then writing another response to a comment she left me here further explaining my opinion about my love for music about a year ago, I’ve been itching to write some more about the topic. I’m just so tired of people saying there isn’t any good music anymore and I’m tired of people not just having good fun when they listen to a song. I’ve gone from Janet Jackson to NSYNC to Senses Fail to We Are Scientists to Janelle Monae in big leaping steps. There aren’t many artists that I used to listen to and don’t like to listen to now. Yeah, you grow up in music but feelings about songs and albums don’t change drastically. You may have a laugh about it now, but it still conjures up something. And I love that about music. Here’s to talking and writing more about it!

2 years ago
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[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

So there was a movie made about The Runaways, eh? I’m going to have to say my idea of real ladies of rock would be Julz Sale from Delta 5, Poly Styrene from X-Ray Spex, and I cannot forget Ari Up from The Slits. But hey, what do I know? I just like a funky punk beat. Cherry Bomb sounds a little too cute to me. *blech!*

2 years ago
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Since it appears The Specials have been making a bit of a comeback, I decided to post this old photo. I probably got this album 3 years ago at a book store. I jammed out to it today while I was working. Really helped keep me quite productive. :)

Since it appears The Specials have been making a bit of a comeback, I decided to post this old photo. I probably got this album 3 years ago at a book store. I jammed out to it today while I was working. Really helped keep me quite productive. :)

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