A bilingual blog by Carmelo Ruiz-Marrero dedicated to all things fun, like music, cinema, comedy and sci-fi. Contact: ruiz@tutanota.com - Un blog bilingüe de Carmelo Ruiz Marrero dedicado a todo lo que sea divertido, como música, cine, comedia y ciencia ficción. Contacto: ruiz@tutanota.com
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Jace Clayton. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Jace Clayton. Mostrar todas las entradas
martes, 16 de agosto de 2016
DJ Rupture on The Warm Up
http://momaps1.org/warmup/podcast
https://soundcloud.com/listentothewarmup/episode-4-shyboi
In this episode, Jace Clayton (DJ /rupture) talks with Yulan Grant, a.k.a. SHYBOI, about Jamaican soundclash, the state of club culture in New York, #KUNQ, and her zine BD GRMMR.
About the Podcast
The podcast presents new interviews with musicians from the 2016 line-up. Warm Up curators speak with artists about their process, inspiration, sounds that excite them, and what's to come.
Warm Up
MoMA PS1's acclaimed outdoor series introduces audiences to the best in experimental live music, sound, performance, and DJs. The annual series is held in MoMA PS1's courtyard and complemented by the winner of the annual Young Architects Program.
lunes, 2 de noviembre de 2015
miércoles, 22 de octubre de 2014
Jace Clayton at the 2013 Creative Capital Artist Retreat
15 de octubre 2014
El polifacético y multitalentoso músico, DJ y etnomusicólogo Jace Clayton presenta su fascinante embeleco Sufi Plug Ins.
Jace Clayton presents on his Creative Capital project "Gbadu and the Moirai Index" at the 2013 Artist Retreat. Find out more about his project here: http://creative-capital.org/projects/...
lunes, 20 de octubre de 2014
Nettle & Hassan Wargui (Imanaren) live in Tangiers, Morocco
13 de octubre 2014
On September 2011, Hassan Wargui (Imanaren) from south Morocco met the group Nettle from New York City in Tangiers. A week of collaborative songwriting and recording led up to a concert outside the Cinematheque de Tanger in the medina. This is "L'Avion", one of the songs they wrote during this time.
Nettle es un proyecto de Jace Clayton/DJ Rupture.
http://www.theagriculture.com/djrupture.html
http://www.subrosa.net/en/catalogue/soundworks/nettle-dj-ruptures-band-project.html
jueves, 16 de octubre de 2014
Great Guardian article on Jace Clayton / DJ Rupture
TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE:
http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/mar/26/jace-clayton-dj-rapture

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/mar/26/jace-clayton-dj-rapture
DJ /rupture: how to sing like a sufi
He's worked with Berber tribespeople, composed for the stock exchange – and written a show about a destitute pianist. Genre-busting musician Jace Clayton talks to Ben Beaumont-Thomas

‘Many music critics still believe in magical black people’ … Jace Clayton, aka DJ /rupture. Photograph: Rocio Rodriguez Salceda
EXCERPTS:
He started doing DJ /rupture sets in Boston during the late 1990s. "Boston's extremely segregated," he says in his city's beautifully rounded, faintly Canadian accent. "And musical segregation was indistinguishable from actual segregation. You wanted to buy reggae, you had to take three buses to go to Dorchester. You wanted to hear house, you would only go to the house club. My style wasn't going to be the same all night long." Instead he drew on music from around the world: cumbia and baile funkfrom South America, dancehall from Jamaica, polyrhythmic ballads from Africa. You can hear the spirit of these genre-blind sets in subsequent generations of DJs, from Diplo and Erol Alkan, to Oneman andJackmaster.
In 2000, Clayton moved to Barcelona with his Spanish wife, became fascinated with Moroccan culture and formed a band called Nettle with violinist Abdel Rahal, cellist Jenny Jones and Khalid Bennaji on the lute-like guembri. "I was interested in acoustic instruments and having that beautiful sound, but pulling that into the computer for processing," he says. "And I wanted to create a space where the musicians were all equally uncomfortable. I'm interested in collaboration, but I'm interested in moments where the translation breaks down. You don't need 'fusion' – you can make it as old and friction-laden as you want."
miércoles, 15 de octubre de 2014
Jace Clayton interviews Pedro Canale
In the Studio: Chancha Via Circuito
- Words: Jace Clayton
- Photo: Mauro Balzarotti
Back in 2007, those looking to find Pedro Canale, the musician who records as Chancha Via Circuito, could most easily find him sitting in the back at Zizek, a weekly club night in his hometown of Buenos Aires, Argentina. (The night would eventually spawn a label and is known these days as ZZK.) There was a party goin' on, but underneath the noise and flash sat Chancha, patiently manning the merch table and selling a handful of releases from local producers and DJs. The best thing on offer happened to be the smallest item on the table: his own debut EP, which was only available as a 3" mini CD-R. Those five exquisite songs shaped fragments of South American folk into lucid-dream beat loops, the music aware of contemporary electronic production trends and a dubwise approach to space, but not beholden to either. While many of his peers in the emergent Buenos Aires scene were making mashups or cumbia dancefloor edits, Canale was crafting subtler tunes, unhurried combinations of bass, drums, and melody that seemed simple but always left the room's air charged with energy.
Seven years later, Canale is still building songs that widen to create spaces. He has no need for big drops or other dancefloor rush dynamics. Many tropical bass producers rely on splicing traditional sounds into the current hot genre—today, the rootsy Afro-Colombian female acapella gets the trap remix, two years back, it got the moombahton remix, a couple of years before that, it got the cumbia remix… and so on. People call this style of global swirl homage, but more often than not, it's a paternalistic turn, one that treats indigenous music as raw material, something that's authentic but insufficient, a resource to be extracted then improved by a stacked synth bassline or an 808 kick-and-snare combo.



Chancha Via Circuito's music takes another tack. He understands that folk music in Latin America is sustenance for those who live it, and is therefore less concerned with sonic newness than he is with maintaining a groove and communicating a sense of pride in place. And the places Canale creates are oneiric, placid, and haunted by unlikely perspectives, like the jungle paintings of proto-Surrealist Henri Rousseau or, closer to home, the Rousseau-inspired, ayahuasca-lit illustrations by Paula Duro that accompany all of his music.
Canale's studio becomes the arena where he negotiates this respect for traditional sounds and the natural world with the infinite possibilities of digital music production. On the one hand, he uses shockingly realistic German sample packs to play Andean flute melodies. On the other, he'll get up before dawn to climb Mayan pyramid ruins in Belize, digital recorder in hand, because that's when the monkeys do their most otherworldly howling. Canale is a producer who keeps a weathered African balafon next to his laptop to remind him not to fall into the computer's flattening world, and does some of his finest work in the magic pair of hours when his studio receives direct sunlight. The goal is balance.

http://www.xlr8r.com/gear/2014/10/studio-chancha-circuito
viernes, 10 de octubre de 2014
Jace Clayton
http://www.jaceclayton.com/
Jace Clayton is an artist based in New York, also known for his work as DJ /rupture. He is currently writing a book on music for FSG. His most recent project, Enkutatash እንቁጣጣሽ, debuted in Washington D.C. on September 11th, the Ethiopian New Year (Ethiopia uses its own calendar system), and featured a choir singing a musical rendition of the Homeland Security color-coded Threat Level changes superimposed with modified East African harvest songs for lute and voice.
Jace Clayton lives and works in New York City. Clayton uses an interdisciplinary approach to focus on how sound, memory, and public space interact, with an emphasis on low-income communities and the global South. A rigorous conceptual framework grounds each project it moves across areas as diverse as software design, sculptural objects, or performance. Recent projects include Sufi Plug Ins, a free suite of music software-as-art, based on non-western conceptions of sound and alternative interfaces; and The Julius Eastman Memorial Dinner, a touring performance piece for grand pianos, electronics, and voice.
Jace Clayton is an artist based in New York, also known for his work as DJ /rupture. He is currently writing a book on music for FSG. His most recent project, Enkutatash እንቁጣጣሽ, debuted in Washington D.C. on September 11th, the Ethiopian New Year (Ethiopia uses its own calendar system), and featured a choir singing a musical rendition of the Homeland Security color-coded Threat Level changes superimposed with modified East African harvest songs for lute and voice.
Jace Clayton lives and works in New York City. Clayton uses an interdisciplinary approach to focus on how sound, memory, and public space interact, with an emphasis on low-income communities and the global South. A rigorous conceptual framework grounds each project it moves across areas as diverse as software design, sculptural objects, or performance. Recent projects include Sufi Plug Ins, a free suite of music software-as-art, based on non-western conceptions of sound and alternative interfaces; and The Julius Eastman Memorial Dinner, a touring performance piece for grand pianos, electronics, and voice.
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