Wednesday, May 31, 2017

Boston Calling 2017

TOOL: 

Tool are the reason I bought a ticket to Boston Calling.  I saw them on the line-up and immediately bought a 3 day pass since they hadn’t announced which day they were playing yet and I was afraid that it was going to sell out.  I looked at the rest of the line-up after I bought the ticket and was pleasantly surprised to see some other acts I dig that would also be playing.  

Tool are probably the artist most responsible for me becoming an musician/artist.  In 7th grade Pearl Jam were the band that got me to buy a guitar - In 8th grade Tool were the band that made realize music could be a spiritual thing and changed how I looked at music.  The last time I saw Tool was over a decade ago - and to me their music has only improved to me as I’ve gotten older - I’m able to appreciate it more as my ear has grown and I've experienced more things.  I consider them one of the few rock bands who are better than (or at least as good as) the Beatles - who have pushed the boundaries of their genre and perfected it more than any other band has.  

So needless to say - my expectations were sky high - and Tool surpassed them.  They opened with “The Grudge” - and it was every bit as heavy and transcendental as I could have hoped for.  Some other highlights were “Third Eye”, “Opiate” (which had a new extended jam section in it - which I almost mistook for a new song until they went right back into the hook), as well as the jam in “Schism”.  Their visuals were unreal and I can't even articulate how incredibly inspired I was by the production.  I could honestly gush on about them forever - but it was easily one of the greatest rock concerts I have ever been to and well worth the price of the Boston Calling ticket.  



OTHER HIGHLIGHTS: 

BON IVER:
I was really curious about his new live set up - The first half of his set he performed off his new record “22, A Million” which I don’t really care too much for compositionally (which I wrote about in my end of 2016 list) - so outside of a few tunes and a more improvisational extended section of “21 Moon Water” I found myself just wishing I had seen him during a different tour and that Collin Stetson was still playing with him.  But the second half of the set he played the first few tracks off his self titled record as well as a couple cuts from “For Emma, Forever Ago” which were adapted for the new sound pallet he had been working with.  These songs maintained their compositional integrity and were able to take on a new life which was dope to experience.


CHANCE THE RAPPER  
Chance was one of the closing acts on Friday - and although I was slightly hesitant with my decision to see him over Sigur Ros (the hardest decision of the weekend) - it was definitely a choice I was happy with by the end of his set.  He was backed by the live band The Social Experiment - and it was one of the best live band hip-hop set I’ve seen.

He played mostly from the gospel inspired album "Coloring Book" but also played tracks that he had been a part of in collaboration with other artists such as "Sunday Candy" and his work with Kanye on "The Life of Pablo" - such as "Ultralight Beam"

His visuals were very cartoonesque and perfectly fit the tunes - and his energy was uplifting and often reminiscent of a preacher - and he completely succeeded in bringing the positive spiritual vibes to the rain soaked listeners.


CONVERGE
Although the person mixing them did not mix them right for their sound (for one thing the vocals were way too loud) - and a 3:00 PM set isn’t ideal for this kind of music - they still delivered one hell of a performance.  The set was brutal - initially playing a lot of their faster material, opening with one of my favorites of their’s “Dark Horse”, and then going into a lot of their slower tempo compositions as the set progressed - closing with the epic “Jane Done” 

COMPLAINTS:

SCHEDULING CONFLICTS:  So this is one that a lot of people are saying - but why on earth would they create some of these overlaps?  I mean...just look at this schedule if you haven't seen it lol.  For me these terrible overlaps happened on Friday and Sunday - and on Saturday there was only one artist I actually wanted to see (Danny Brown).  And I heard many people complaining on Saturday - such as that they had to choose between The 1975 and The XX (whose music is relatively in a similar genre)…while I basically decided on the one I disliked the least between the two.  I assume their logic was that they would have the similar acts be on the same day and have the bigger acts later on in the night - but in doing so they created so many overlaps that could have been avoided if they made the things happening simultaneously on different stages be things that would definitely appeal to different audiences.  

SOLANGE: Solange backed out of performing hours before she was supposed to go on because of “production delays and complications beyond her control.”  I was super bummed about this since this was one of the acts I was most excited to see.  They got Migos to replace her whose set was boring as fuck.   

NO LOCAL ACTS: I understand that this is a mainstream festival - not one that aims at building a Boston music community - but it would have been so easy for them to have a local tent of artists from the Boston electronic music scene (or any of the Boston scenes for that matter).  Or to book some more local acts earlier on in the day.  They’ve booked some Boston legends such as The Pixies and Converge - but it would great to see this expand to some of the more up and coming acts as well.

Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Twin Peaks (Visual Album)

The visual album “Twin Peaks” is out now


The album starts as a rescore of the pilot episode of Twin Peaks and gradually spirals out in Lynchian fashion.  The first half of the album (“Dear Laura Palmer”) is almost entirely taken from live performances at Industry Lab and Jamaica House during the Fall of 2016 and is more raw and improvisational.  The second half of the album (“Fire Walk With Me”) is more composed and produced and was almost entirely created by filming and recordings from after the live performances.

VISUAL ALBUM:

Dear Laura Palmer,

Fire Walk With Me


Audio:



Origins:

One night after seeing a show at the Industry Lab I was talking to Tim Davison about an OST series he was starting through Boston Hassle.  I mentioned that I composed a piece called “Fire Walk With Me” which uses primarily Twin Peaks video samples and lyrically takes a lot of material from dialogue from Twin Peaks as well and how I was thinking about messing with the pilot episode as well.  Before I knew it, the show was set up and billed as an original score to the pilot episode - so I started working on creating more multi-media work in the world of Twin Peaks.


I started by recreating the Angelo Badalamenti scores, and then by rescoring the pilot episode with original music, and then as I became more and more immersed in the world of Twin Peaks I could no longer separate myself from the material I was writing traveled down the lynchian rabbit hole.



Dear Laura Palmer,

I have a Laura Palmer in my life - someone whose life was filled with secrets, died too young, and visits me in my dreams everyone once in a while.  She was actively dying when I first watched the series in high school and passed away shortly after. This played into my obsession with this universe in which one can walk between two worlds that can be tapped into through dreams.  I wanted to communicate with my Laura Palmer, and I feel like in some ways dreams and this music allowed me to do so.

Fire Walk With Me

The second half of this record, “Fire Walk With Me” has been existing in one shape or another for over 7 years:

This song was initially inspired by a near death experience/awakening which became “Hope I Live Before I get Old”, a song I wrote for the band I was playing in at the time, Koala, which ended up on our 2010 album “Xibalba”.

In the Fall of 2014 when the bass player of the Koala’s father took his own life by fire, I began revisiting this material - interweaving it with new material I had been writing and a collage of lyrics taken from a variety of sources (many of which are lines from characters in Twin Peaks).  This song is dedicated to all who grapple with addiction and mental illness - too all those playing with the chance to walk between two worlds - and to all those who have danced too close to the flames.


CREDITS:

Written/reimagined, performed, recorded, and produced by Mike Sim
Mixing for “Falling” (Theme) & “Dear Laura Palmer” by Mike Sim
Mixing for Fire Walk With Me by Brady Custis
Mastering by Brady Custis
Filming by Ariel Rejman & Mike Sim
Photos by Adam Blake

Video and Audio from live performances
-11/19/2016 @ Industry Lab
-12/2/2016 @ Jamaica House

THANKS: 

Thanks to David Lynch and Mark Frost for creating this wonderful and strange world of Twin Peaks that I've been living and working in for the past seven months.
Thanks again to Ari Rejman, Brady Custis, and Adam Blake for helping make this project possible.
Special thanks to Tim Davison & Boston Hassle for inviting me to participate in the OST series and giving me the opportunity to compose and perform this work at Industry Lab.

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