Tuning is a Function of Time

That Guy Doing The Audio? His Name is Dustin.

Posted in Uncategorized by acsmith on September 6, 2009

Eclectic Method

Brooklyn Bowl, Williamsburg, Brooklyn

“The guy at the door usually knows my name, but I haven’t been here in a few weeks,” this girl says. Seriously? I don’t care that the VJ’s name is Dustin. I don’t care that you know him (or his name), or that your flannel shirt has never been near the forest. Seriously. Haven’t been to Williamsburg in a while, and it just reminds me why I never go. This place is a bowling alley slash local microbrew-only bar slash hipster dance floor, with an ironic disco ball and exposed brick walls, and I don’t actually recall hearing much of that duo, Eclectic Method. They did some mash-up stuff, usually with videos that were unrelated to the music, but it didn’t even touch these two (Lucky Dragons), or really much else. Also, $50 for BOWLING? It’s per-lane and a two-hour block, but still. $50? BOWLING? It’s only ironic until it becomes expensive.

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Drop Beats Not Bombs

Posted in Uncategorized by acsmith on August 23, 2009

The Tank: 45 W. St., Hell’s Kitchen

Bobby Previte and Benton-C Bainbridge

The second set at The Tank, with the shape-shifting percussionist Bobby Previte and visuals by Benton-C Bainbridge was energy fused with enough anarchy/coherency that it started to make sense by the time it ended.  While in most cases it would be easy to pin the politics (the “message”) on the one in control of the visual cues (that is, the mosque moving back and forth across the bottom of the screen, shooting down Jesus-fish space invaders) Previte’s pounding, terrifying electronic drums shocked and awed as much as Bainbridge’s epileptic flashes across the screen.  Add to that the occasional W. sample and you have a full-on polemic.  But it would only be a polemic, after all, if it weren’t done so well; if the electronic chaos hadn’t made me think of 80s Berlin long before W. came into the picture, I don’t know that it would have had the same effect.  The strategy: go for the jugular, then let us know you don’t like U.S. foreign policy.  Aside: one of Previte’s long-running bands, Bobby Previte’s Coalition of the Willing, is on my must-see list.

(left to right) Bobby Previte, W., Benton-C Bainbridge's Son, Benton-C Bainbridge

(left to right) Bobby Previte, W., Benton-C Bainbridge's Son, Benton-C Bainbridge

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