Showing posts with label Django Django. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Django Django. Show all posts

INTERVIEW: Slow Thrills meets Kim Coleman

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Towards the end of 2011 I was invited to go and see Django Django play a gig in Hoxton. Although there was quite a buzz around them, I had only heard a couple of their singles and I wasn't sure what to expect. Needless to say I enjoyed the gig (reviewed here) but I was also impressed with the visuals which seemed an ambitious step for a band who were then still to release their debut album. Of course, the Djangoes have become a lot bigger and they have been touring for almost the entire year. I finally saw them again in Heaven last week, and was so pleased to see those visuals get another outing. A few months ago I contacted Kim Coleman, the artist responsible for the visuals and she was kind enough to answer some questions for me.

Primarily I became interested in talking to you because of your work with Django Django. How did you get involved with those guys?
We're friends. We met after art college in Edinburgh. When the band were invited to do a Blackbox session for the Roundhouse in 2010 they asked if I would like to create a set for them to play in. Since then I've done a number of projects with the band, including creating their most recent touring live show and making the video for Waveforms.



Is there any collaboration between you and them in terms of what you provide for the live show? Are they mostly your ideas or do they contribute?

Most of the ideas come from my art practice but there is collaboration too; I worked with Tommy's lettering and The Lonely Piper's acid smiley (both from the Waveforms single artwork) when creating the recent live show. Tommy also made stills from the Waveforms video into the poster to accompany the vinyl album. We collaborated on artworks and projects before the band so are used to it.

I know a lot of stage shows are incredibly complex and thought that doing something using simply executed ideas, videos and lighting would be effective. Basic lighting is used to brilliant effect in French New wave films such as Alphaville, the swinging light bulb and video for Intro / Love's Dart was inspired by a scene from that. I'm a big fan of Grace Jones' collaboration with Jean Paul Goude and know how provocative Grace Jones standing on stage holding a just a sparkler is, and it's not hard to do.
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What were the logistics of working with a band like that, because I assume there wasn't a big budget for such works and the live venues are relatively small scale compared to what we often think of when we think of artists and musicians working together with arena shows and so on.

Most of the venues this stage show has been to have been quite small. The budget isn't huge but the band must have decided that the visual part of their show is worth focusing on. I agree that it's a live sensory experience with a great deal of potential. I remember reading this article a few years ago (not 1999) when I was reading up on the Boyle family and Andy Warhol, both of whom did work with live music that I really like . The author concludes that bands who capitalised on having psychadelic, immersive light shows in the mid 60s (often working with artists) dumped the shows for various reasons, including wanting to be more visible on stage. I'm not sure if this was the reasoning, but I wonder if things have gone the other way and that the live performance is something people like because it's an experience you cant get listening to an album.




It seems you have used lighting and projections a fair bit in your past works. Does this help when you are trying to work around a band?

Yes I've made lots of performances where light is a crucial element. Like artists and others now and in the past, I'm fascinated by the drama and meaning that can be created through contrasts between light and darkness. I've made performance mimicking lighting spectaculars such as a firework ('Untitled' with Susie Green) and an atomic bomb ('Demonstration' with Jenny Hogarth). Much of my work now uses projected video, I like how a projected image can be used a light source and malleable element separately from, or in conjunction with, the content of the video itself. The show for Django Django is a mixture of light, projections and sculptural elements so has a close relationship to these other experiences.

That's quite a lot of questions about Django Django. Let's talk about your work as Kim Coleman the artist. What other things have you done?
I like working in collaboration with other artists and much of my work is made with fellow artist Jenny Hogarth. My first works outside of college were made for exhibitions in my flat where my flatmates and I had an occasional gallery called Magnifitat. At college I was interested in works that were time-based physical experiences. I liked the work of American artists such as Chris Burden, Michael Asher, James Turrell and Nancy Holt and wanted to make works that were experienced in similar ways. When went back to college to study for my Masters degree I thought more about performance and started to make videos documenting real life 'performances' for example using the CCTV cameras in the college libraries and videoing people having their hair dyed. Performance is something both Jenny and I have thought about a lot when making our recent works. Over the last few years we have been thinking about performance in relation to camera technology and have made works using recorded Skype video conversations and live streamed CCTV footage as well as recorded video.

Have you worked with any other musicians in this field?
I put on a music event in London a few years ago where I did created staging designed individually for each band's performance. The performers included artist/ musician Jo Robertson and Die Die Deneuve (now partly reformed as Plug). That event got me thinking about making work in conjunction with live music. Apart from that, my twin sister Zoe runs the great The Wheel festival at Cecil Sharpe House every Hallowe'en and I design the staging for that.

Do you mostly work with Jenny Hogarth? How did you meet her? And why do you work so well together?
Jenny and I met just after we graduated (from Edinburgh College of Art) we set up and ran a gallery (The Embassy) with a few others, including Dave and Tommy from Django Django, and started making work together at the same time. We did a group show called Assembly at the Jerwood Space recently. The work for that exhibition explores our working method and aims to open it up to examination. It's an expanded presentation of our blog, a chronological compilation of short videos we have each made over the past few months. We were interested to see how posting the videos as we made them showed the direction the works took as the content influenced, and was influenced by, the other's. We would like to keep developing this work as it has the potential to be an ongoing project in a slightly different way from anything we have made before.

You were born in Northern Ireland - do you ever feel an urge to go back there and do you feel that you could work as an artist there?
Jenny and I were in the group show 'Together' at Catalyst in Belfast and I spent some time staying with a friend on Catalyst's committee so I got an insight into what it might be like living there as an artist. Some of my family are in and around Belfast so it's good to see them, and of course it would be incredibly cheap compared to living in London. But I enjoy living in London at the moment.

Kim Coleman and Jenny Hogarth's new installation
If You Can't See My Mirrors, I Can't See You
at CIRCA projects, Stephenson Works, South Street entrance, Newcastle on Tyne, NE1 3PE.
It is open between 29 November - 1 December
(Thursday 11am - 7pm and Friday & Saturday 11am - 6pm)

An online video chat generates two live portraits with changeable backdrops. It is a digital two-way mirror, a self-reflexive feedback loop wherein we witness ourselves talking back.

‘If You Can’t See My Mirrors I Can’t See You’ invites the audience to eavesdrop upon the artists’ Skype conversation. The dynamics of the dialogue are recorded and reassembled, to reveal spaces between and around objects and subjects. The computer screen operates as both a mirror and lamp, whilst acting as a frame into another world and a mimetic means of duplicating information

Coleman and Hogarth have recently shown work at MK Gallery, Milton Keynes; Jerwood Space, London and V22, London, They have recently completed the LUX Associates scheme and a fellowship at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art.

http://kimcolemanjennyhogarth.co.uk/
interview by Jonathan Greer

A Mercury Music Prize nominations knee-jerk post

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As you may have heard, the annual Mercury Music Prize shortlist was announced yesterday (12th September) in London. Twelve albums were chosen to be judged as the "album of the year". I am not alone in being underwhelmed by the shortlist.

To qualify for the shortlist, your album has to be performed by an act originating in the UK or Ireland and it must have been released between 12 July 2011 to 10 September 2012. Record labels can only enter one act per year, and they also have to provide a sizeable amount of CDs for judging purposes. This leads to some labels not bothering to enter, so it's possible that a well-reviewed album may not even be in the intial running. I wonder do the labels still have to cough up loads of complimentary CDs to enter, or can they just say, "the album is on Spotify, here is the link" ?


Anyway, as someone who "works" as a music journalist (it's not my main job by the way), I have been privileged to hear something in the region of 150+ new albums this year. A fair percentage of these have been non-UK and Ireland releases, but I really did expect to have heard more than FIVE out of this shortlist!

Some colleagues think it has been a lean year for albums. I tend to disagree, but if I work within the confines of the rules for Mercury acceptance, I would struggle to come up with ten albums, never mind a dozen. The real oversight this year is the complete shunning of recent British electronic music, which is arguably as strong as it has ever been. The exclusion of near masterpieces by Actress, Shackleton, Holy Other and Rustie, all of which were recipients of 9/10 and 10/10 reviews from a wide range of publications, suggests that the selection process for this award is in need of a shake up. And if they are keen to acknowledge some veteran UK performers who have never won the award, well, Orbital have released their finest album for a very long time this year.

So last night, with the aid of Spotify, I waded through this shortlist and decided to share my reactions with you. I've included odds for the gambling types amongst you. (odds are from Paddy Power, other bookmakers are available)

Alt-J 'An Awesome Wave'
odds: 6/4
worth a flutter: No
had I heard this before today: Yes
what is it?: experimental indie
initial reactions: "triangles are my favourite shape" - seemingly obsessed with triangles which is a little unusual - their name is Apple code for the triangle, and the most immediate song on the album is called 'Tessalate'. I like some of their edgy arrangements and they take a lot of chances with vocal arrangements in particular, but overall the songs haven't clicked with me.

Ben Howard 'Every Kingdom'
odds: 14/1
worth a flutter: No
had I heard this before today: No
what is it?: Ben Howard is an acoustic singer songwriter in his early 20s.
initial reactions: Hints of a young John Martyn in some of the vocal stylings, and a maturity beyond his years. Possibly unfair to lump him in with the likes of Newton Faulkner and co.

Django Django 'Django Django'
odds: 4/1
worth a flutter: yes, though the odds are short
had I heard this before today: Yes
what is it?: an art-school troupe taking their leads from surf guitar, Krautrock, techno and Afro-pop
initial reactions: possibly my favourite UK/ Irish debut album of the year. There is so much going on, such strong tunes and even after many listens I'm still hearing new things.

Field Music ‘Plumb’
odds: 14/1
worth a flutter: No
had I heard this before today: Yes
what is it?: prog-rock meets pop
initial reactions: deceptively short songs with an awful lot happening in them. This reminds me of a lot of bands I don't like (10cc in particular). It has some strong songwriting but I just can't warm to it.

Jessie Ware ‘Devotion’
odds: 11/2
worth a flutter: Yes
had I heard this before today: No
what is it?: an accessible pop/ soul record
initial reactions: This has wide appeal, pop hooks, and is possibly the only link on the shortlist with the recent resurgence of electronic music as Jessie has often sung with SBTRKT. It washed over me however.

Lianne La Havas ‘Is Your Love Big Enough?’
odds: 14/1
worth a flutter: No
had I heard this before today: No
what is it?: a talented vocalist pitching herself somewhere between soul and new-folk
initial reactions: definitely worth listening to again as it is quite a subtle record. Fans of Bon Iver could do worse than check this out.

Michael Kiwanuka ‘Home Again’
odds: 14/1
worth a flutter: Yes
had I heard this before today: No
what is it?: 25 year old singer songwriter who sounds curiously out of his time, steeped in organic arrangements with flutes and brushes on drums
initial reactions: sounds like Moondance-era Van Morrison and is therefore worth further investigation. Ironically he won the BBC Sound of 2012 award. This could have been written and recorded in the late 1960s.

The Maccabees ‘Given to the Wild’
odds: 16/1
worth a flutter: Long odds, so maybe
had I heard this before today: Yes
what is it?: an indie band who have expanded their sound this time around
initial reactions: ambitious attempt at widening their basic indie-pop template, a lot of previous winners have come from the same sort of area, but ultimately this didn't grab me either

Plan B ‘Ill Manors’
odds: 16/1
worth a flutter: Yes
had I heard this before today: No
what is it?: the only hip-hop record here, and arguably the only record to deal with socio-political matters
initial reactions: a conceptual, cinematic drift through post-riots, pre-Olympics east London

Richard Hawley ‘Standing at the Sky’s Edge’
odds: 11/2
worth a flutter: Yes
had I heard this before today: No
what is it?: Highly regarded, previously nominated singer-songwriter. Lots of people think he should have won in 2006 with 'Coles Corner'.
initial reactions: surprising and interesting change of direction towards electric guitar based psychedelica

Roller Trio ‘Roller Trio’
odds: 25/1
worth a flutter: No
had I heard this before today: No
what is it?: (token jazz act) raucous jazz-funk, or so I am told
initial reactions: I haven't heard this

Sam Lee ‘Ground of its Own’
odds: 33/1
worth a flutter: No
had I heard this before today: No
what is it?: (token folk act) traditional folk-song narrative
initial reactions: authentic folk music, sounding technically very good and more interesting on first listen than some of those pop records up the page.

Conclusion? This is the weakest list for many a year. Time for a shake-up.

Looking forward to Field Day this weekend? Here's a playlist and a preview

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Something that interests me as a voracious consumer of new music is the rise of multi-venue festivals where you can try and cram as many acts into your day as possible. The SXSW festival in Austin, Texas is the best example of this, but this year already many UK events have taken this as their lead, with the likes of Brighton's Great Escape, Liverpool's Sound City and the long established Camden Crawl booking a huge range of bands over a variety of venues.

With literally hundreds of music festivals competing for space and attention over the summer months, this seems to be a succesful model. This year larger events such as Sonisphere have been cancelled, whilst even legendary ones like Glastonbury have taken a year off.

One event that has moved from its normal slot in the festival calendar is London's Field Day; a one day outdoor event that has steadily been building an audience in Victoria Park in Tower Hamlets since 2007. This multi-stage music festival traditionally takes place in August, but this year it has been pushed forward to the first Saturday in June due to the huge presence of the Olympics taking over that area in August.

Field Day always boasts a cutting edge line-up of both established and breakthrough acts, and as it is all compressed into one day, you don't have to camp or bring anything with you. For me, it works brilliantly as a showcase; an excellent way to see quite a few new bands in one day as you can cover the ground between each stage in a few minutes.

The festival emerged from small grass roots venues and promoters working together and has grown into something much larger. In 2006, it began in the car park of the Griffin Pub in Old Street as the Return of the Rural and took the format of a village fete with live acoustic acts such as James Yorkston and Beth Orton, as well as Clinic and Four Tet. These acts were large enough to pull a decent crowd back then, and the promoters decided to do something bigger the following year they booked space in Victoria Park, joined forces with other promoters and announced the first Field Day, which sold out to 10,000 people in August 2007.

The festival has evolved and grown in size to 20,000 and has now played host to the likes of Florence and the Machine, Phoenix, Santigold, James Blake to name just a few.

Last year's festival was the largest yet and there were some issues with overcrowding. These have been addressed this year with a new layout to help the flow between stages, although the capacity remains the same.

The close proximity of the stages gives the organisers another headache, specifically how to reduce the bleed-through of sound between venues. Over the years they have taken various steps to address this and with some clever positioning of each PA plus a capacity crowd in each tent, the colouration is negligible.

There are around 60 acts on the bill, so I thought I would try and pick out some highlights. There are inevitable clashes of course, but I reckon on a carefully planned day you get to see around 8 or 9 acts. A clashfinder is essential but here are some suggestions.
Grimes – one of the breakthrough acts of 2012, Grimes is the alias of Claire Boucher, a young prolific talent from Canada, who manages to straddle the genres of dance music, lo-fi indie and witch house with ease
Peaking Lights – a husband and wife duo who make a lo-fi mix of dub, krautrock and psychedelic pop
R. Stevie Moore – a prolific but wilfully obscure DIY musician who has been making music since the mid-70s but is only just coming to a wider audience now thanks to the likes of Ariel Pink
The Men – high octane punk rock, noisy and brash, which sounds like it was recorded with all the needles on red
Summer Camp – duo Jeremy Walmsley and Elizabeth Sankey are building their indie-pop origins into something very special,as last year's Welcome to Condale album showed.
Fennesz – legendary Austrian guitarist now firmly established in the world of ambient electronica, he makes some lovely noises
Andrew Bird – an amazing talent who plays superb violin, writes great songs and does clever things with loops. He is also a fantastic whistler!
Tortoise – the guys who brought dub, jazz and krautrock to the world of American indie-rock in a rescheduled show from last year
Mazzy Star – newly reformed,this duo made three classic albums in the 1990s, featuring the distinctive voice of Hope Sandoval and the psychedelic fuzz guitar of David Roback.
Liars – one of the finest experimental rock groups of the last 10 years, showcasing their new album WIXIW.
Papa M - the alias of David Pajo, best known as guitarist of the post-rock group Slint
Django Django - last but not least, one of the bands of 2012, on a mid-afternoon slot so look sharp.

Just in case you missed the clashfinder, click here to get the official one.

The Field Day line-up was hard to pick ten or twelve acts from, so I've made a 25 track playlist on Spotify. Enjoy!

Listen: 11 of the best album releases of the month

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Django Django 'Django Django'
Listen via Spotify
The long awaited debut from this arty four piece doesn't disappoint. Packed with tunes, some of which will be familiar to anyone who has seen them in the last few years, and rich in ideas, this is really only the start for these guys.

Francois and the Atlas Mountains 'E Volo Love'
Listen via Spotify
My review of this can be found on the 405. I concluded "Ultimately E Volo Love is a collection of pretty and occasionally melancholic tunes weaved over a backing of skilful percussion and shimmering guitars. It is remarkable as it is the sound of an indie-pop band immersing themselves in European and African music and getting it totally right. "

Guided By Voices 'Let's Go Eat The Factory'
Listen via Spotify
A fine comeback album from the 'classic' mid-90s line-up. I reviewed it here and I said "Although the prolific output of Robert Pollard and his many varied offshoot bands has kept a lot of Guided By Voices fans satisfied in the last few years, there is something pretty great about having the real band back together. I did approach this album with trepidation, but it is rewarding me with each new listen. I'm unsure if it will win many new fans, but those of us who love those mid-90s albums should find plenty to enjoy here."

RM Hubbert 'Thirteen Lost and Found'
Listen via Spotify
A collaborative effort from this Glasgow based guitarist. The list of guests reads like an A-list of Scottish indie cred, with Alex Kapranos, Emma Pollock, Alastair Roberts and Aidan Moffat all lending a hand. Moffat steals the show a bit on 'Car Song' but all of the tracks gel together as a whole.
Leonard Cohen 'Old Ideas'
Listen via Spotify
I wonder did Mr Cohen ever think he would be releasing new material at the age of 73? This is a new recording collected from some 'old ideas' that have been kicking around as long ago as 1970. His voice has actually got deeper with age, and this is his most immediately impressive album for a few years.

Islet 'Illuminated People'
Listen via Spotify
Debut full length from this Welsh band. There's a lot going on here, from abrasive indie-pop to challenging prog-style time changes, and occasionally folky vocal lines, it certainly rewards repeated listening.

Errors 'Have Some Faith in Magic'
Listen via Spotify
Probably the album I've listened to most this month, this latest release from the Glasgow band sees them adopt a more melodic approach to their music, with emphasis on anything based tunes not unlike New Order. Initial reservations that this may have softened their edges have gone, and this is well worth your attention.

Imbogodom 'And They Turned Not Where They Went'
Listen via Spotify
The most experimental release on this list. I reviewed it here. I said "This is a sinister, challenging listen, but one that stretches the boundaries of post-rock or psych-folk. However you wish to label it, these guys have taken that kind of music somewhere else and are moulding it into strange new shapes."

Darren Hayman 'January Songs'
Listen via Spotify
I listened to this double album a lot this month. I wrote some words about it here, and said "January Songs is uneven but fascinating. Anyone who enjoys the work of Hefner or the solo Hayman should investigate."

Chairlift 'Something'
Listen via Spotify
I'm not as gushing in my praise for Chairlift as some other blogs, but there are some great pop songs on this second album. Slightly wary of the glossy 80s influence, but this album will be one that we will be talking about all year.

First Aid Kit 'The Lion's Roar'
This second album from the Swedish sisters is a much more countrified effort than their delicate folky debut. Their harmonies work so well together and are a joy to behold. The album has a gloriously retro production feel, it's warm and full of reverb on the voices. I keep thinking about Lee Hazlewood's 'Cowboy in Sweden' when I hear this. Country songs set in Stockholm, no less.





The observant ones amongst you will now notice that there are 11 albums in the list, as First Aid Kit is back on Spotify. The only album I haven't got around to hearing is Gonjasufi's new one, and I will give it a review when I've finally got my hands on it. Looking forward to February and the likes of Sharon Van Etten, the Twilight Sad, and of Montreal to hear yet....

Spotify playlist no.3

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The one regular feature on this site that I have managed to stick with is the weekly Spotify playlist. The third instalment features acts that have been mentioned on the site over the last week. There's a live track from the National, Josh T Pearson plays an electric version of a song from his album, there's another Guided By Voices album track, new releases from The Shins, Francois and the Atlas Mountains and Django Django. This week's token oldie is from Prolapse. Next week's selection will have 30 mins and join up with the others to make a 2hour playlist of highlights from the month on here. Listen up!

Watch: Django Django, 'Default'

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In my great blog plan, Thursday is new music day. So far this has involved searching the recently played list of my last.fm friends to discover Idiot Glee, and trawling through the shortlist for Ireland's Choice Music Prize to chance upon the impressive but new to me Patrick Kelleher and His Cold Dead Hands.

Today is a little different, because although Django Django are new to some people, they have been around a couple of years and have released some decent singles. Their last show in Hoxton Bar & Kitchen was a sell out and I raved about it here. If there's any justice, by the end of 2012 they will be very well known.

I need no excuse to write about Django Django, and I'm including them today because they have released a stunning video for new single Default, which is easily the best promo video I've seen this year so far. It must have been a headache to edit, as it includes over 4000 stop-motion images which have been painted over. You can view it below or at www.nowness.com

Django Django: Default on Nowness.com.