Kayaking

Kayaking
Not DJ'ing Always

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

St. Patricks Day this Saturday

One of my favorite nights to DJ... St. Patricks Day.

I used to have a semi-traditional gig at Bennigans for this date. "Semi" because I don't know how many times something has to be repeated for it to be called traditional.

And Bennigans was cool. ...the closest thing to Irish that a town of 75k people could offer. Then they closed the restaurant, and an Australian themed place sort of took the Irish crowd.

Monte Cristo = Greatest!

And now... I am playing at a bar across the street... which happens to be run by the dude who ran the bar at Bennigans.

Why is this day so much fun?

Because I get to play just about anything I want; as long as I sprinkle in some Irish stuff. My normal gig at this place is a Thursday night dance/hip hop/bass show. I usually play electro/house stuff.

But, not this Saturday!

So, here's a few songs/bands I'm thinking of playing:

Dropkick Murphys - any song
Flogging Molly - any song
Pogues - almost any song
Sick of it All - Take the Night Off
Death in Vegas - Dirt
Agnostic Front - Gotta Go
Danger Mouse & Jemeni - The Only One
Saul Williams - New Day
James Brown - Give it Up or Turn it Loose (mostly the bassline)
House of Pain - Shamrocks and Shenanigans
The Heavy - How You Like Me Now
Trans Am - Music for Dogs
Depeche Mode - Never Let Me Down Again (Eric Prydz mix)
Pailhead - I Will Refuse
...

I went blank. Couldn't think of the rest. But that's OK. I'll be carrying CDs with me (I usually just bring the computer).

Also, there are a couple of bands that I'll do a bit of matching to their style... some punk stuff.

It should be fun.

Friday, September 17, 2010

A playlist from 2 year ago, today.


Two years ago, today, I posted a playlist from an art show I got to play. The original show was scheduled during a hurricane, so we had another the next week. It's not the complete playlist, but here it is.

savath + savalas - slabulas
mum - green grass of tunnel
bon iver - skinny love
fleet foxes - blue ridge mountains
explosions in the sky - magic hours
prefuse 73 - life death
amon tobin - four ton mantis
battles - atlas (remix)
lykke li - i'm good, i'm gone
blonde redhead - missile
karen o - whenever i wake up
yeah yeah yeahs - mr you're on fire mister (liars cover)
vincent gallo - so sad
a place to bury strangers - i know you'll see me
cut copy - hearts on fire (midnight juggernaught mix)
digitalism - pogo
ghostland observatory - heavy heart
joakim - lonely hearts
idiot pilot - losing color
milosh - remember the good things
radiohead - nude (holy remix)
port o'brien - i woke up today
beirut - nantes
nick drake - day is done
mogwai - dial: revenge
ms john soda - hands
notwist - chemicals
cassettes won't listen - paper float
casiotone for the painfully alone - hot boyz
blow - hack it (yacht remix)
afx - crying in your face
spuarepusher - fat controller
sebastian tellier - roche
yelle - je veux te vair (club mix)
gonzales, feist, & dani - boomerang 2005 (monsieur gainsbourg cover)

...

feed me back. I think it's a pretty good list.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

How my favorite band got started.

I found out that it has been 20 years since the day that a cassette was mailed... starting one of my favorite bands.

Here's a picture of that cassette:


Go read the blog at: http://troubledsoulsunite.wordpress.com/ and download some songs.

Friday, September 10, 2010

16 CDs purchased and commentary (repost)

(Copied from my Facebook Notes, originally posted June 22, 2009)

I bought 16 cds at the used music shop by central market in Dallas. I only buy what I cannot find in Tyler.

Here they are:

1. Helmet - Monochrome : I’m loyal to Helmet. 90s d-tuned heaviness, Page Hamilton's concrete delivery, spin-offs include Orange 9mm, Handsome, and the drummer is now in Battles. Although the vocal production is a bit off on this album, the snare drums are as heavy as one would expect from Helmet. This was their last album, and the only one I didn't own yet.

2. Depeche Mode - Only When I Lose Myself (single) : This is the single that was tacked on to one of the hits collections. It sounds better by itself than when lumped in with the 'greatest hits'.

3. Pedro the Lion - Control : This is one of those albums I have passed up a few times. Now I don't see it available as much any more. This is basically Dave Bazan in singer/songwriter mode. I’ve heard he started as a Christian musician, but was eventually thrown out of the club for singing about topics that were too heavy (and he said a bad word on a record). So, Christian music stores pulled his cds from the shelves. Without double checking my sources, I think Bazan is also the guy behind the great glitch pop album by Headphones.

4. Cat Power - Jukebox : The beautiful and talented Chan Marshall as Cat Power and an album of mostly cover songs. One of the originals called 'Metal Heart' is floating around the top of my list of songs I love right now.

5. Radio 4 - Enemies Like This : I got into Radio 4 around the time I first heard Bloc Party, Arcade Fire, LCD Soundsystem (who remixed one of their singles)... so I had to buy the album based on my love for the scene. Ian says they sound sort of like Tokyo Police Club mixed with some of the before-mentioned bands.

6. Mason Jennings - Boneclouds : This is the second album I have bought by Mason after hearing him on the "I'm Not There' soundtrack covering Bob Dylan... and he is a great mix of Dylan vocals with a bit of Jack Johnson, while still coming out original. I have to compare him to Hayden also.

7. Broadcast - Tender Buttons : I know who Broadcast is, but would have bought this album simply because it's on Warp records. I am very loyal to certain record companies, and will buy almost anything from Warp. This album turns out to be very well produced, mixing mellow with confrontational ambience, while being saturated with Trish's smooth voice.

8. Grizzly Bear - Yellow House : Another Warp records album. This is a case of something I’ve downloaded a few years ago, and never bought. And since their new album is great, I had to backtrack a bit and buy this one. Although there were already a few other non-electronic artists signed to Warp (Maximo Park, Born Ruffians), this album is a good mark for when the label expanded far beyond their basic formula.

9. The Evens - ST : Ian Mackaye! That should be enough... Minor Threat, Fugazi, Egg Hunt... Washington DC hardcore, Dischord records. This is Ian with Amy Farina. A great project that has produced at least two full length albums. In my world, I like to imagine that Amy is a muse for Ian. They work well together.

10. Tortoise - ST : An out of print (and possibly the first) album from Tortoise in 1994. Typical of John McKentire, it's smart, jazzy, ambient, and perfectly produced. This album sounds like it has more live instrumentation than some of the latter albums.

11. Tortoise - Standards : Honestly, 'Seneca' from this album is the first Tortoise song I heard... and I was sold. Fuzzy and noisy for the first half of the song, then beautiful and odd. Side note: I’m not sure if it's John Mckentire's project also, but Sea and Cake are closely related to Tortoise, sharing at least one member.

12. The Moog Cookbook - ST : Go back to 1996; let a couple of nerds with super-awesome, expensive, vintage moog instruments play hits of the day (by Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Weezer, etc.). They make all of the songs sound like elevator music played by Daft Punk at the bar scene in Star Wars. This is cheesy at its best.

13. Jawbox - Savory + 3 : The single E.P. for the song 'Savory' which later was treated to a cover by the Deftones and Far. this is a great example of NOT grunge, NOT emo, NOT nu-metal, but somewhere great in between.

14. Elliott Smith - Division Day, No Name #6 (single) : A nice $2 find of a couple of songs by the late, great Elliott Smith.

15. Kraftwerk - Trans-Europe Express : This is the rosetta stone of electronic music. It connects early experimental with what would be everything electronic that has happened since 1977. Four German guys with keyboards, that may not have been totally human.

16. Dinosaur Jr. - Fossils - Finally! I found this album on CD. I had this on cassette 15 years ago and loved it. The album is only a few songs, but has great versions of 'Show Me the Way' by Peter Frampton and 'Just Like Heaven' by the Cure, sang perfectly lazy by J Mascis and shredded by his genius guitar. I actually made an audible noise in the store when I found this.

...if you have any questions about the 16 CDs, let me know. If you read this whole thing, I admire your patience. I will gladly play any of these albums for you.

*as always, pardon my spelling, and know that grammatical errors are on purpose to give it a more conversational feel.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Greatest Chip Flavor & Best Idea Ever that is Mine

So here I am eating some potato chips... regular flavor.

But really, regular flavor is salt.

I want to put my own cajun seasoning on it, but know that it will make the chips too salty.

So, here's my suggestion.

Unsalted chips!

But wait, there's more... (paraphrasing Billy Mays)

The advertising campaign will be as follows:

New, "Your Flavor Chips!"... flavor these chips with your favorite seasonings. We make them perfectly plain. You make them your own!

...

And the best part is, the chip guys can save a bunch on salt.

So there's my idea. I had it first.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

10 Rules for Record Buying

It's sure to happen...

You are in a great record store and you are overwhelmed with choices. You want to buy 100s of albums, but can't really afford to spend all of your money that way.

I have to make tough music decisions... and here is some criteria I use:

(I will start with just 10 rules. I could go on an on with this.)

1. If you are out-of-town, never buy an album you can buy back home. Unless the album is so cheap that you know you will save money. Remember, you spent time and money to get to this 'far away' location. You might not be back in a while (or ever).

2. Don't get too genre specific. Sometimes I will dig deep into a section of 80s dance music... or find a magical pile of experimental Japanese pop... or find a collection from a single record label... and I will get too focused on just that area. Don't forget that there is a whole spectrum of great genres to dig through. It's OK if you don't own the complete "Rap-a-Lot Records" catalog. Don't forget the big picture. There might be a great country or jazz record just one bin away.

3. Find a date (part 1). Flip the album over... look at the back. Always check for a date. This will help orient yourself... give you a point of reference. If you know that disco was great before 1980... don't buy a 1983 disco single. If you know that an artist hit their creative peak around a certain year... don't buy the stuff they were obligated to record for the next 10 years because they were stuck in a contract.

4. Find a date (part 2). If you see 2 copyright dates, chances are good that you are holding a reissue. Although a lot of albums are reissued because they were great in the original form... reissues don't have nearly as much collector value. Many reissues are not on the original label. Lots of companies buy music and redistribute (reissue) albums under new labels. And... some reissues are remastered, which can cause much of the original charm and ambiance to be lost. There's something to be said for a little crackle noise.

5. Find a date (part 3). Some genres were just better long ago. Some people may disagree with me, but some music styles were just better before they were worn out and copied... Like: funk, punk, soul, reggae, disco... So the basic rule here is (for the mentioned genres...): The older the date... the better. Buy the oldest one in the bunch.

6. If you are torn about what to buy, go with the album that the store only has one copy of. If you see 10 copies of something, chances are you will find that album again. It's better to buy the last copy of something else. There have been plenty of times that I or my friends will call each other to let everyone know that we have just bought the last copy of (whatever) in Tyler. It's a double-edged sword... You will save them the time of looking, and you get to tease them that they won't be able to get it yet. This leads me to my next point...

7. Rare is better. All collectors know this. Everyone knows this. I don't collect baseball cards, but I know that if I stumble upon a Honus Wagner card, I'm buying it without a doubt; and later selling it for way more money than anyone should pay for a card. The same should go with album buying. Even if you don't like some music... you should recognize a rare treasure. Buy that treasure.

8. Check the quality. This is a simple one. Buy the one that is in good shape. It doesn't matter how cool an old record is... if it won't play. I bought a Lenny Kravitz single that was remixed by Outkast. It was warped. It will never play right. I will never be able to show off that album because I bought it without checking the quality.

9. Trust the record label (sometimes). I know this contradicts what I said earlier about not getting too focused on one single genre, label, etc... But certain record labels are consistent. Some labels will almost always put out quality. A lot of times I will find an artist that I have never heard before and will buy their album just because of the record label. Look at the music you already own. If you start to see a certain label show up over and over... you might want to shop specifically for that brand. I should note that this rule works best with independent labels. Beware of huge record labels that sign hundreds of artists a year. Some of my favorite labels are: Warp, Anticon, Kill Rock Stars, Secretly Canadian, Matador, Astralwerks, Def Jux, Morr, Sub Pop... actually it's a really long list.

10. Ask somebody. This is another simple rule. Don't be afraid of other music fans. Well...actually this is a bit tricky. You might get some great advice or you might run into a crazy person (like myself) that will get a bit too excited that you asked them for help... and get a biography about 20 different artists that you don't really care about. You might run into a music snob. You might accidentally talk to a 'scene kid' who hates the idea that anyone has taste similar to their own... thereby destroying their fragile sense of originality that they have spent so much time and money developing. Still take that chance of asking someone. It flatters me when I get a call about which album to buy. And I promise that I won't steer you in the wrong direction. That just makes me look like I don't know what I'm talking about.

...that's it for now. If you read this whole thing; thanks. If you didn't... then I'm probably not the person you would ask about music anyway.

More later...

Friday, December 4, 2009

Update and a Promise

I'm guilty. I've ignored my blog for a while... stretched myself out thin or just plain been lazy about it.

I am starting a podcast as DJ Santschi. The first things i will talk about will be my favorite albums of '09.

DJ Santschi's Podcast

In January, Daniel (Gutierrez), Wade (Mullins) and I are going to attempt to take over the world via our podcast about 'stuff'.

So if you found this page from my link at facebook... just be patient. I will get busy on it soon.

Update: Dan took over the podcast and it is now The Butchers Block... link above still works.