Blip Festival 2011

Posted on 21st May 2011 in Something Daily

Continuing with the collection of surreal experiences that I’ve been experiencing lately, I decided at the last minute earlier this week to stay in the city a few days longer than planned and attend Blip Festival number five at Eyebeam. First of all, that was the best decision I’ve made all week, if not all semester. For those who don’t know, Blipfest is a three-day music festival/social hub for the New York City chiptune scene (chiptunes, of course, being musics created using hacked video game hardware from the 80s and 90s). There are a ton of bands who play, some of which are relatively popular for this niche genre, and some of whom are just getting their start. Regardless, there’s lots of awesome chip music to be heard.

So I got there on Thursday evening knowing one person there, and feeling a little awkward. I knew that a lot of the designers, gif-makers, developers, and musicians who I follow on Twitter and Tumblr were going to be in attendance, and I planned on introducing myself to as many as possible and making some contacts. That didn’t really happen on Thursday nights, because I really didn’t know a single person there after my friend left.

I did say hi to the guys from Anamanaguchi though. They played an incredible set, providing what was without a doubt one of the most fun performances I’ve seen in my short life. The crowd was crazy, to say the least (a guy was crowd surfing during Anamana’s soundcheck) and no one was dancing so much as pushing people around and attempting to support the hailstorm of stagedivers.

Anamanaguchi really owned the night on Thursday, as they were effectively the headliner and also awesome, but there were a few lesser-known acts that I’m very happy to have caught. Specifically, minusbaby came out with a many-piece acoustic ensemble including a baritone brass of some type that actually proceeded to rock really hard. Talk to Animals, as well, was the first act of the show to really get the crowd going; she walked down into the audience and jumped around with them while singing, her Gameboy pulsing out beats from the stage.

Night one was awesome, I got a lot of free stickers and saw a rad Anamanaguchi set. I didn’t really meet anyone, though, and last night I was determined to change that. I talked with Diego “Radstronomical” Garcia on Twitter and we arranged a meeting, which was thankfully a huge amount less awkward than I feared it might be. He turned out to be awesome and to know or know of a lot of the same people I’d wanted to meet, so it worked out nicely. Included among those people were (by Twitter handle) DeMarko, who was sporting the “I’m Fat, Let’s Party” Seibei shirt; JimmyRepeat, one third of MisterGif who bought me most of my beer and insisted on calling me a nickname that I don’t want to mention for fear it might catch on (you can find it on Twitter if you really want to know); DoodlesAndGifs, another one third of MisterGif, who was an incredibly friendly dude, and, lulinternet, who I met briefly with Diego and stared at dumbly for a few moments, apparently in awe of her internet fame or something. Also Liz (as in My Life as Liz) was there, as well as Pete from Anamanaguchi. So I’d say mission accomplished as far as meeting people goes.

As for the night two music, I didn’t know any of the acts before the show, but I now have a lot to check out. Pretty much every act last night was worth checking out again, in my opinion. The opener was NNNNNNNNNN, this young dude from Japan who made surprisingly rocking dance music. Tristan Perich, the creator of the One-Bit Symphony, also performed a piece for harpsichord and one-bit electronics, which was likely the most conceptually-driven piece that that festival will see this year (nonetheless incredibly rad). Ten Thousand Free Men and Their Families was also an interesting shift of genre for the festival; he’s a one-man 8-bit punk/hardcore band. His set was very raw.

I spent a lot of the other sets talking and meeting people, but I didn’t miss the opportunity to dance around like a fool during the BitShifter set. The guy absolutely killed it. He made some absolutely incredible 8-bit dance music that I feel like I’d actually be able to listen to outside of a live setting, which is rare for dance music. It was forty minutes of sweaty nerd in the front of the stage, with people constantly crowdsurfing up onto the stage to dance around for a few moments. Total mindless insanity in the first few rows. But so much fun. Also, I stayed for most of the cTrix set, which was also unbelievably cool. He debuted a new instrument that looked like a guitar body with a video game console and a bunch of stompboxes glued on, which worked after a few minutes of tinkering and actually sounded awesome.

I’m a bit (hah) disappointed that I won’t be able to make it to night three, but I don’t see it as a missed opportunity. This was an incredible experience. I’m totally going back next year.

Chiptune Binge

Posted on 14th May 2011 in Something Daily

It’s been a while since I wrote anything, let alone a full blog post, but this is because I’ve come to the realization that writing about what I do every day is dumb. At least, it was nice for a while, but not really worth my time anymore, I feel. But check it out, cool stuff has been happening.

Last Tuesday was the release of GOBLIN by Tyler the Creator from Odd Future as well as Starscream’s first full album, Future, Towards the Edge of Forever. These are both sweet albums. Listening to (and buying the deluxe version of) the former has sparked a lot of heated conversation about whether or not Odd Future are actually worth listening to. When I hear people talking about them, I just get really happy for them, because six months ago they were just a a bunch of kids recording stuff in their basements and now they’re huge. I don’t mean to be condescending, seriously. Just good for them, you know? The Starscream album (which I paid ten bucks for on a whim about twenty minutes after it released) is my first exposure to really any chiptune other than Anamanaguchi, and it began a chiptune binge that’s been continuing since that point. I got some of the albums from a few years ago on which Starscream were featured, and right now, I’m listening to this British chip dude called Syphus whose music is also really awesome. Check it.

I’m living out of a suitcase since my parents took my stuff away from NYC, and that means no video games, which in turn means less distractions from playing with my sweet new Wacom Bamboo tablet. I got it because there was this picture of an excited Asian guy that I thought would look really cool with fire in his hand, so I bought a tablet and drew the fire on him. Totally a worthwhile purchase. But seriously though, it is, because it means that I can draw 100% more stupid cartoons per hour.

Trying not to kill this weirdly good mood I’m in. Follow me on Twitter.

Workaholic

Posted on 7th March 2011 in Something Daily

So I wrote another piece using LSDJ last night, and added some guitar when I was done with that. It’s “for the game”, but really, it’s just for fun. This is the music that plays during the title and backstory screens, check it out. It’s nice and epic.

Theme by Raised by Robots

I’ve been working really hard to learn as much as possible about whatever I can. It’s getting a little stressful though. I haven’t really taken a break since Saturday. I’m experiencing a strong compulsion to work as much as possible – the feeling is almost that I need to. It’s good to be productive, but I at least need to take a little break. Seriously, someone please talk some sense into me. I’m tired. And midterms are coming up this week and I need to start acting like they’re important (because I’m pretty sure they are). I’ll take advantage of this while I can and shred on a ton of work, then crash when I can’t take it anymore.

Check out the new wallpaper I found today – it’s pretty darn unsafe for work, but its awesomeness outweighs its strangeness in my opinion. It’s by Paul Robertson, who makes amazing pixel art (as you can see) and who did a single cover for Anamanaguchi’s “Airbrushed”.

The Importance of Being Tidy

Posted on 30th November 2010 in Something Daily

I’ve decided on my Secret Santa contribution. Rather, London came up with an idea and I decided on it. Since my giftee is a lawyer, London came up with the awesome idea of a custom name placard to sit on his desk with a funny phrase or quote or something underneath. My giftee is known to be familiar with Arrested Development, so I’m thinking about some different law-related quotes from Bob Loblaw or Tobias. So it would be the guy’s name (Matthew _______) in big type, and then smaller type underneath saying something clever. Some that I’m tossing around:

  • Analrapist
  • Why should you go to jail for a crime someone else noticed?”
  • No Habla Español

I can’t decide. It’ll come to me though. I’m leaning toward No Habla Espanol, because it seems like the safest and also most recognizable reference to Bob Loblaw out of the three.

It’s been two whole days since we all returned from Thanksgiving break, and already the kitchen is a horrible place. I knew upon cleaning it top-to-bottom the night before break that this would happen. I just found a half stick of butter that had been sitting on top of the microwave since last night, open and melting. Am I the only one to whom this makes no sense? Obviously not, but it can seem that way. This may seem a bit obsessive, but I really do think it’s important to have a tidy space in which to live. I think (and Eric agrees with me here) that your space acts like a mirror to your mind, and vice versa. That is, if your mind is fragmented, your space will be messy, and if you’re untidy, it can lead to anxiety and mental clutter. At least that’s how I see it. It’s not that I try to be incredibly organized and uncluttered in my spaces, it’s just that it feels completely wrong to me if I’m not. It’s not even an effort, it’s just the way I have to live. That said, I think there are definitely positive aspects to my compulsive need to clean.

Some miscellany:

  • I’m listening to the Octopus Project. If you like electronic music, check them out! Their album Hello Avalanche is what got me into electronic music.
  • This is a cool audio transcoding tool that was recommended to me. I haven’t tried it yet, but it looks very useful.
  • Found this sweet T-shirt company on Anamanaguchi’s twitter.

Wear a helmet

Posted on 24th October 2010 in Something Daily

If you’re planning on going skateboarding anytime soon, be careful. Seriously. Watch out for little rocks and potholes and stuff like that. Also cars. I ate pavement twice today – I don’t know, I guess I was tired or something. But they were both the kind where everybody stops and they’re all “OMG are you ok?” and you sort of have to get up and just keep walking even though your knee hurts like crazy and not look at anyone. That kind of fall sucks. But I think it builds character, just as Calvin’s dad would say. I skated to the financial district yesterday and didn’t fall, I don’t know what it was about today, man. Maybe it’s all the coding screwing with my head.

So I told Libby I’d mention Anamanguchi in today’s post. Honestly, even if I hadn’t, I still would, because this is becoming a blog about awesome things, and they’re completely awesome. Here’s a band with your typical rock lineup of guitar, bass and drums, plus a “hacked NES” and a Gameboy running LSDJ. It’s sort of punk-ish, but it’s also chiptune, so they’ve got sort of a future-retro feel. It’s all pretty upbeat and rockin. Rocking is certainly a good thing. And NYU Music Tech is represented in the band, too. All the more reason to commence the listening of the music. Anamanaguchi are actually, in my supremely humble opinion, totally rad, and I highly recommend their music to all. I recommend making music with Gameboys to all, in fact. It’s so much fun!

New addition to the list of things that are awesome: Hey Ash Whatcha Playin’. I just discovered this tonight, it’s pretty hilarious, and I’m jealous of this family.