Archive for the ‘Music’ Category

A Clandestine Cabaret Crowd Gets Grungy in Downtown Los Angie

Monday, February 25th, 2008

Flaunt.com, Mind[medium], and V2 Vodka, along with cabaret hosts Adarsha Benjamin, Marc Edouard Leon, and Reverend A. Pogany, presented an evening of bands and bad behavior this past weekend in industrial Downtown Los Angeles. An art-skate warehouse on 6th St. housed an evening of live performances by Voxhaul Broadcast, The Red Hearts, The Pharmacy, DJ Dorion, and DJ Jag L.A.. Guests packed the house, many dressed in their finest corsets, garter belts, bowler hats, and vests; some accenting their costumes with feathers and sequins, others preferring to entice with copious amounts of unfettered skin. Bands performed at the base of the warehouse’s indoor mini half-pipe, and walls and floors shook as the crowd calamitously danced to the rhythms and hooks of the evening’s sweet ol’ rock-n-roll jooks. Other highlights: an ugly photo booth, a cotton candy machine, a grilled cheese sandwich bar, and all the V2 vodka cocktails your tiny heart could ever desire. Despite the torrential rain, this party was definitely one of the most radical Flaunt events of 2008 to date. Rest assured there’ll be more where this came from. Stay tuned for additional pics and Youtube video coverage…Photography by Melissa Manning forTheLookPartnership.comFor additional photos from this party check outTheArabParrot.com.

Flaunt.com Rocks Downtown L.A.

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

For those of you who couldn’t make it to our Sundance soiree, here’s another chance to catch Voxhaul Broadcast in all their glory along with The Red Hearts, The Pharmacy, and sets by deejays Dorion and Jag L.A.. Come enjoy the music, kick it with the Flaunt crew, and show off your finest cabaret inspired regalia.

REVIEW: BOB DYLAN: THE DRAWN BLANK SERIES

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Bob Dylan: The Drawn Blank Series
Prestel Publishing

Separating the images in Bob Dylan: The Drawn Blank Series from the legend himself is hopeless. His mythos is unmistakable, especially due to a recent surge in Dylan obsession and fetishization spurred by the film I’m Not There. Coinciding with the first ever exhibition of his paintings at the Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz in Germany, the book reveals over 170 never-before-published fully painted variations of genre sketches he created while on tour in America, Asia and Europe between 1989-1992.

The drawings reveal similarities between his visual and musical aesthetics, sharing quirky yet pensive qualities, thereby unmasking his artistic perspective as observant yet surreal. Using a color palette similar to Matisse (though his actual skill is a scratch on the surface of the aforementioned master), Dylan’s paintings of landscapes, nudes, and portraits, are each infused with specific emotional tones that solicit various feelings ranging from melancholy to amusement.

By digitally transferring his drawings; Dylan colors the same image repeatedly using different hues in watercolor and gouache, exploring how color can denote a vibe, while usually forgoing natural representations. His figures are full of character and life, such as Portrait of a Woman Smiling, while the fluidity of his curvilinear strokes suggests motion or a sort of dance between the figures. His Corner Flat paintings are particularly intriguing as he switches both the colors and the figure from each painting to the next, drastically altering each narrative within the same setting.

The distance between himself and his subjects suggests non-involvement, perhaps connecting us to his previous personal experiences while beckoning reflection. The featured essays further analyze Dylan’s works, drawing valuable parallels between his paintings and his life, rounding out yet another attempt to grasp the inner workings of this mastermind.
-Claire Presthus

Flavorpill - One Step Beyond, One Step Ahead

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

January 25th, 2008 - New York - The American Museum of Natural History was packed wall to wall by industry insiders, the hipster set, and lovers of the underground hip-hop world for Flavorpill’s One Step Beyond concert featuring none other than Kanye West’s DJ of choice, DJ A-Trak. The show was opened by Windy City ‘flowicists’ The Cool Kids, who performed some of their most notable cult favorites. The night was brought to another level, as show headliner Kid Sister rocked the house with her tongue twisting hip-pop lyrics and a fist-pumping performance. As many thought the night was winding down Kid Sister brought Kanye West on stage to perform their duet “Pro Nails.”


Photos courtesy of Ashley Walker

REVIEWS: HOT CHIP

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Hot Chip:
Made In The Dark

DFA/Astralwerks

While much amusement befalls in darkness—and most of it naughty—Hot Chip’s latest full-length album Made in the Dark is (almost) as stimulating. The electropop Brits’ follow-up to the critically acclaimed The Warning struts their artistic credibility by utilizing dense rhythmic textures incorporating various instruments, synths, and vocals. The result is a scintillating jambalaya of repetitious layers that add thrust to their poppy songs (see Exhibit A: ‘Ready For The Floor’). These driving layers also create an engulfing trance similar to that which is stirred after hours of carpal tunnel syndrome inducing thumb gymnastics on NES. ‘Shake a Fist,’ released earlier on limited 12”, juxtaposes mechanical clashing and distortion with tribal sounding percussion, evoking feelings of a particularly disorienting spring break spent in an African factory warehouse, while the thumping beats tap into a primal urge to shake something (and possibly copulate with machinery). The quintet also proves equally apt at introspective, melancholy ballads, as on the title track, which provides a soul-filled come down to their other songs. But be warned: Hot Chip’s songs are so damn catchy; it’s highly likely they’ll be crammed in your cranium indefinitely.
-Claire Presthus

Flaunt + Dewars present…Rosemarie Fiore

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

Flaunt and Dewar’s celebrated the release of issue 89 at Gallery Bar in New York City. DJs Mike Nouveau and Mike Simonetti peppered the packed house with a stimulating set as party goers eyeballed the explosive work of cover artist Rosemarie Fiore while dangerously downing copious amounts of Dewar’s cocktails.

Flaunt presents…The Source Family @ The Echoplex

Friday, December 14th, 2007

Flaunt, Process Books, Thomas Wylde, and the Echoplex came together to present a rare performance by YaHoWa 13, the influential psychedelic band spawned from the early ’70’s L.A. commune/cult known as The Source Family (featured in Flaunt Issue #89). Sky Saxon and The Seeds delivered an impressive opening performance, with guest’s Hecuba and Entrance playing short but powerful sets. Thomas Wylde created a unique VIP area inspired by commune leader Father Yod’s prayer room, as well as specially-crafted caftans for Flaunt members to wear. Walls were covered in the amazing original photographs of family archivist, Isis Aquarian, while DJ explosions by Small Town Talk and films by DJ big TV helped in creating one of the most unique interractive music environments ever to visit Los Angeles!

Stars show at The Orpheum

Thursday, November 22nd, 2007

Last Friday night, Montreal-based pop band Stars made a memorable stop in L.A. while in the midst of their North American tour. They pulled out a lovely set of tunes from their catelogue of ditties, including from their latest release In the Bedroom After the War. Flaunt had family in the house that night - on bass- and that’s how we scored the box seats and we were out of our seats and loving every minute. Oh and the specially made hats commemorating the evening at the legendary theater were printed Stras! Stras live at the Orpheum!

Angus, the equipment do-all guy sporting the Stras hat!

Siren Festival: Not Just For Freeloaders and Followers

July 29th, 2008 by Elliott David

The 8th annual Siren Festival, presented by the hypocrites at the Village Voice, was this past weekend at sort-of-worth-going-to Coney Island. Since nobody else could be bothered to leave their air-conditioned apartments Saturday morning, we sent Summer intern Alex Gavin there for nine hours of heat-stroke and his first lesson on how to really judge people, the good-old-fashioned NYC-on-NYC way.

Did you wake up Saturday a broke-ass twenty-something with no plans? Well, me too, but The Siren Music Festival had it covered. For the 8th consecutive year, the Village Voice offered a generous sampling of live entertainment by orchestrating fourteen bands into a giant hipster-magnet just off Surf Ave. All this mobbin’ was packed into nine hours of frantically paced sets from the who’s who of the indie scene at the unobjectionable cost of absolutely nothing. That’s right, for-fucking-free. While most festivals have pawned the value of band exposure for that of AT&T, it is nice to see The Voice kickin’ it old school in the land of Christopher Wallace at the always colorful, Coney Island.

After weaving through the strollers that dotted the bustling boardwalk, I arrived at Main st. for Parts and Labor. This Brooklyn-bred quartet sprinkled rhythmic electro-subtleties over brutal riffing to create auras of an undead A/V club, and as the last chords bled out, I cruised over to Stillwell to scope the other stage. Sweeping through pockets of the deep-fried air that radiated from vendors trafficking their wares to the hungry, hungry hipsters, I found myself absorbed in two divergent soundscapes: the menacing synths of Parts and Labor yielded to Film School’s airy reverb; the dueling resonance vied for space amongst the sandy planks of the walkway. Muted tones from both stages reverberated throughout the Wonder Wheel, and with each step, Film School faded in over the unbridled glee of nearby carousel giggles. In this moment, a symbol of childhood innocence whirled in perfect rhythm with music characterized primarily by drugs and excess.
parts and labor film school

As the sun lost control of the day, the roasted-pink shoulders of a formerly pasty populace squared up for some Beach House. The dulcet duo of Victoria and Alex swayed cozily in time with their Gila opener and dedicated a haunting Heart of Chambers “to sweat, and sweating,” as the heat graciously dissipated in their presence.
victoria legrand alex scally

As I approached the only foreseeable drawback to Siren— that is, deciding between Stephen Malkumus and Broken Social Scene, my choice was clear: BSS. Not simply because BSS serves as the SNL of modern music by spring-boarding careers of former members to solo success (e.g. Leslie Feist), but, to be honest, I had snuck in [ed. note: bitch is underage] a few beers throughout the day and Stephen Malkumus was just too rigid for my buzz. Rewarding this judgment, BSS opened with a belting, horn-driven “KC Accidental”, washing down a day in the sun with a flawless set that peaked at a mind numbing “Cause = Time”. After the last encore faded, spiraling lights from nearby rides befell the area, unveiling a luminous new visage of the moon-drenched Coney Island. Siren came to a close, and a new neon landscape emerged on the horizon.
bssnight

Photos and Text by Alex Gavin

Jack The Ripper Ripped Shit Up

July 26th, 2008 by Elliott David

We emoticon-artists eat your digital sympathies for supper.

Put that in your strife and smoke it.

Summer Love Sessions II: The End of the Affair

July 15th, 2008 by Elliott David

Everyone knows that summer is for balling, and we’ve just passed the half-way mark of S’08. This means one of two things happen: either you 1) attempt to turn the sweaty sexcapades and shitfaced 6am fuck visits into some sort of “deeper” relationship, or 2) ditch the one you’re with and try to squeeze more fun and fluids out of the dwindling summer months.

Sure, you kids were having a blast after you met at 1Oak, but then suddenly he stops calling or reading his BBMs and some DJ tells you that he and this “unsuccessful but insanely beautiful” Russian model hopped on his NetJet for two weeks of premarital drugsex in the Moscow Ritz-Carlton, not to mention a quick visit to Nizhny Novgorod to meet her parents and get a hand-job in her childhood bedroom.

Or her: Her insistence for unprotected sex didn’t mean anything about trust or commitment (nor was she trying to trap you into pregnancy to hijack your 90k of student loans), she just neglected to share with you her rationale that she’s on birth-control and everyone has HPV and that’s good enough for her. But you forgot she was still in college and has zero responsibilities whatsoever so she skipped town to go get blackout wasted with her gorgeous, hedonistic, bi-sexual, common-senseless friends on some guy’s private Balearic Island eating MDMA every day until they take the superyacht of the videographer of that orgy none of them seem to remember to Saint Tropez, with a hot jaunt to Cannes to stay with the son of some Islamic Sayyid whose father rented him the Presidential Suite in the Hotel Martinez for the week.

And those are the only two situations that could possibly occur. And that’s fine. It’s tradition. But breaking up is hard to do. So for advice on responsible-meets-reckless sex, and how to break it off, we look—where else?—to the 90s.

“Three important rules for breaking up: Don’t put off breaking up when you know you want to: prolonging the situation only makes it worse. Tell him honestly, simply, kindly, but firmly. Don’t make a big production, don’t make up an elaborate story—this will help you avoid a big tear jerking scene. If you wanna date other people, say so. Be prepared for the boy to feel hurt and rejected. Even if you’ve gone together for only a short time and haven’t been too serious, there’s still a feeling of rejection when someone says she prefers the company of others to your exclusive company. But if you’re honest and direct and avoid making a flowery emotional speech when you brake the news, the boy will respect you for your frankness, and honestly he’ll appreciate the kind of straight forward manner in which you told him your decision. Unless he’s a real jerk or a cry baby, you’ll remain friends.” - Nada Surf, “Popular”

But for those of you left behind, there’s plenty of sweat in the sea. Don’t stress. Go get bizzy.

I Like to Dissect Girls. Did You Know I’m Utterly Insane?

July 13th, 2008 by Elliott David

Before Patrick Bateman, there was Lestat de Lioncourt. And before the vampire Lestat, there was Caligula. Beyond impeccable personal style, mastery at soliloquy, and refined taste for tapestries and bloodlust, these fine gents have something else very special in common: they were all misogynistic dicks. And I truly believe that, simply enough, it was just because they never met the right special little lady. A woman who could understand them. A woman they could french-kiss without feeling compelled to chew off her tongue. You know, a real keeper. And why didn’t they find these women? Not because they don’t exist. Oh they’re out there: beautiful, articulate, compassionate women looking for the right sociopath to teach how to love. No, it’s because these guys were LAZY, terrified little boys who always went for the proximity fuck/homicide, rather than try to meet someone new and really put themselves on the line.

I mean, Bateman’s secretary Jean was meek and annoying, and all those girls in his social circle were vacuous twats. The hookers seemed nice, but he really didn’t give them much of a chance (in terms of emotional bonding or escape from bondage). Lestat’s Claudia was pre-pubescent and just wasn’t that into him, a point she finally made clear after nearly a century when she slit his throat and stabbed him repeatedly. Caligula’s sisters, whom he raped and prostituted, I don’t believe tried to set him up with any of their friends. And what with the ubiquitous orgies taking place in his palatial brothel, rarely did he take the time to sit down and get to know someone face-to-face (it’s really not the most inclusive position for an orgy).

Guys guys guys. Let’s be proactive, here. Don’t settle for what’s right in front of you. There are so many amazing women out there, you don’t have to project your fantasies and desperations onto the ones immediately around you. It’s unfair to them, and it’s unfair to you. Use the internet, get on J-Date, find someone you can RELATE to, and then turn her into a vampire or kill her with a nail gun. It’s not hard. Just imagine: a splendid night at the theater, a couple bottles of Barolo, perhaps that new pheasant recipe you two have been dying to try out, and then, when you’re at home and about to film her perform cunnilingus on a whore you picked up in Hell’s Kitchen and you say “don’t just stare at it, eat it,” she’ll look back at you with eyes that say I love you I love you I love you instead of, “why do you have all that rusty dental equipment in your nightstand?”

The point of this whole rant is that, if those three boys were alive today (or, you know, ever), I’ve found the perfect girl for them. The gorgeous and talented Human Ear Music artist Geneva Jacuzzi. Check out her new video for the song “Love Caboose” directed by Travis Peterson.

So if there’s a girl out there for those three role models, there’s got to be someone for you. Go get ‘em boys. And remember: bring flowers and don’t bite unless asked to. The safety word is: romance.

Veritas vos liberabit (or, This Week In The Further Destruction of You)

July 9th, 2008 by Elliott David

The truth will set you free. My ass. Truth is a myth. Freedom is arguably tangible, in that I know other people don’t have it, and I spent the 4th of July at a Demolition Derby in Mount Vernon, TX drinking 18-year-old Bourbon, smoking a Cuban (Montecristo #4), wearing my old cowboy hat and YSL, while the woman next to me wore a sleeveless tee older than me, eating a “Frito Pie” with one hand, holding a sleeping two-week-old baby with the other. If deliberate obesity and arbitrary American smog (in the middle of a gas crisis, no less) don’t exemplify freedom, I couldn’t tell you what does. And Truth? Most people I know see Truth as a series of meticulously constructed fantasies we use to delude ourselves into waking up each morning, only to be free from them (i.e. buy into them deeper) by recklessly romanticizing drugs and alcohol. Art Collective Party/Concert? All the better to delude ourselves with. So if you’re in LA and down to breakdown, The Veritas Empire presents our boy Mickey’s band White Arrows this Friday at The Unknown Theater, right around the corner from the Flaunt LA Chateau. Bring your brass knuckles, bad jokes and anti-barber styles.


Suicide Your Eyes

July 9th, 2008 by Elliott David

Ashes to Ashes:

Shy to Shine:

Puma: From Across the Pond

July 8th, 2008 by mhenson

PUMA partnered with the Tate Britain museum in an art exhibition by Turner Prize Winner and renowned artist Martin Creed. Launched in the Central Gallery of Tate Britain, Creed developed Work No. 850, a living art exhibit centered on the simple idea that a person will sprint as fast as they can every 30 seconds. Celebrating physicality and the human spirit, Work No.850 investigates the body’s flow of nature and presents the beauty of human movement in the purist form. Each runner participating in Creed’s Work No. 850 wore PUMA’s Complete Running footwear and apparel. The exhibit runs through the Fall of 08.

Hell Naw Ho You Know They Polo™

June 26th, 2008 by Elliott David

Suffering Jukebox, Such a Sad Machine

June 26th, 2008 by Elliott David

Silver Jews - Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea


B’Ezrat Hashem: The words are Hebrew, and they mean “with God’s help” or “with the help of the Name.” You will find those words on the liner notes of the new Silver Jews album, Lookout Mountain Lookout Sea (Drag City), immediately below the dedication to Jeremy Blake, the artist who committed suicide last year by walking into the ocean. Now, I know some people are weirded out by the fact that David Berman has a newfound faith in (a) God, but you really shouldn’t act so surprised. The faith may be new, but the yearning for it isn’t, and anyone who doesn’t believe me can go throw American Water on the stereo and skip to track five. “The meaning of the world lies outside the world,” Berman declaims on “People.” Clear enough for you? Or how about the chorus to “Long, Long Gone (on the Tennessee EP)?” “Oh Lord, please come down from the mountain,” David and Cassie Berman croon slash plead, “some of us are broke and having problems.” The line is obviously intended to be funny, but where you find the humor—in the presumptive “irony” of a direct-address to God, or in the jaw-dropping understatement that “some of us are…having problems”—says at least as much about you as it does about Berman. Put it another way: when a man’s talking about—or to—his God, the assumption that he’s kidding comes at your peril, not his (or His).

What we’ve got here is not a newfound interest in seeking, but rather a long search which has—in some sense—come to its end: the sought-after has been found. Of course, as Berman sings on the very first track of Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea, “when failure’s got you in its grasp / and you’re reaching for your very last / it’s just beginning,” and I see no reason why what’s true for failure shouldn’t also be true for triumph. Apocalypse equals rebirth, ergo rebirth equals apocalypse. This notion of conjoined and convoluted beginnings and endings, births and deaths, informs pretty much every song on LMLS, even the goofy “Aloyisius, Bluegrass Drummer,” the totally baffling “Candy Jail,” and the marvelous “San Francisco B.C.,” a new entry to the Jews‘ small but remarkable catalogue of story-songs. (See also: Bright Flight heartbreaker “I Remember Me,” and the vaguely Lovecraftian vagueries of “Farmer’s Hotel” on Tanglewood Numbers.) “San Francisco B.C.” is a twisted pomo-noir in which cops and robbers and punks and barbers chase each other around the foggy city. The wacked-out detective romance unfolds over the course of six delightful minutes of rapid-fire Bermanisms: “since her dad, a local barber, had been beaten to death / she had become a vocal martyr in the vegan press.”

LMLS is a moody, weird, high-minded gem with choruses that dare you not to sing along. It’s good country music and it makes me love being alive. To all remixers, DJ’s and other arbiters of taste: if “Party Barge” doesn’t become the breakout dance hit of this summer, there’s something wrong with all of you.

Justin Taylor (www.justindtaylor.net)

Caught in the Eye of the Storm

May 29th, 2008 by Andrew Dimpfl

Flaunt joined Showtime and the Wounded Warrior Project to present the opening night of Eye of the Storm, a unique photography exhibit curated by Dane Jensen, and showing at Reform Gallery in West Hollywood. Guests enjoyed Ocean Vodka cocktails, Peroni, and Fiji Water while perusing a motley collection of war-time photographs taken by the country’s best contemporary military photographers working in Iraq and Afghanistan. One hundred percent of the proceeds from the show go to benefit wounded veterans through www.woundedwarriorproject.com.

Flaunt’s involvement corresponds with a ten page story on the exhibit currently featured in the Issues Issue #94, on news stands now.

Photos courtesy of Melissa Manning for thelookpartnership.com

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