Moby Keeps It Simple

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On Wait For Me, Moby’s latest, and perhaps quietest, most cinematic album, the unassuming, million-selling DJ/producer renews his love affair with New York while embracing the simple life.

Image: Alex Cao

I’ve come of age with Moby. He graced the cover of the first magazine I ever edited, and his music has been the soundtrack of so many life-changes. I remember getting test pressings of “Go” and “Next to the E,” and later watching them explode on the rave scene. When Play was released toward the end of the electronica craze of the late ‘90s, its critical and commercial success helped legitimize the music in America. 18 was a star-studded affair, and it contained “At Least We Tried,” a wrenching song inspired by news footage of a man and woman falling hand-in-hand from the burning World Trade Towers. With 2008’s Last Night and Last Night Remixed, Moby wrote a virtual love letter to New York and rekindled his ongoing affair with dance music. A return to DJing has revealed that he’s not as young as he used to be, as he admits during this conversation at his apartment/studio in Little Italy.

You Can Always Go Downtown
I was living uptown, and I got really lucky that I was able to sell the place that I had bought after it being on the market for 17 months. Every time I found a buyer, the co-op board rejected them out of spite to punish me. It’s a fancy co-op board, and they hate turnover. They want people to buy an apartment and stay there for 50 years. I was there for two years, and I didn’t like it up there. They also have really strange criteria when deciding who can get into the building. But I finally sold it in October, and I rented an apartment down in Chinatown. For the longest time I lived and worked here, but I really don’t like living and working in the same place. I start to get that Ted Kaczynski syndrome—all of a sudden it’s 10pm, and I haven’t had any contact with any human beings. Now I’m down on Orchard and Canal, so my commute is walking up here. There’s something really healthy about walking to work. I stop at Gimme Coffee on the way, and I feel a sense of solidarity with everyone else who is commuting. Even when I had the apartment uptown, I spent all of my time here. That’s one of the reasons why I got rid of it. I would sleep uptown, then hop on the B or D train—I always forget which train to take and sometimes wind up on 125th Street—then I’d spend 10am to midnight here. My old place was sort of like a hostel. Being in Chinatown is sorta remote, but I love it because the majority of people down there are Chinese, and they have no interest with you if you’re not Chinese. There’s the Chinatown for tourists, where the signs are in English, but all of the signs are in Chinese in the area where I am. I find it really interesting, because I feel like a tourist, and I discover something new every time I walk out my door. There’s a store that sells nothing but paper replications of things people can be buried with—paper Rolexes, Armani suits, Mercedes Benz’s, and huge stacks of money called Hell Notes for buying your way out of hell, apparently. I went into the store, and they were all laughing at me in a polite way because I clearly had no idea what this is about. Something that’s no normal in their culture is so different for me.

Waiting Is The Easiest Part
I’m probably the worst person to deconstruct the creative process. When you do anything, if you publish a magazine or make a record, part of it is your creative expression. But part of it is like a time capsule or snapshot of the time and context in which it is made, and a lot of times we’re not even aware of that. When I made a rave record in 1991, I was just making what I thought was a fun rave record. Now I go back to it and it just reminds me of that time when George W. Bush was President and kids were wearing big baggy pants and waving glow sticks, which they still do. So in ten years, assuming that I will be alive, I will look back on this record and remember this specific time and context, which I’m not aware of right now because I’m in the middle of it.

“Putting out About Last Night and the DJ album was really fun; if anything, it was too much fun. I’m 43, and I’m not supposed to have that much fun.”

Party Boy
Putting out About Last Night and the DJ album was really fun; if anything, it was too much fun. I’m 43, and I’m not supposed to have that much fun. Physiologically and neuro-chemically, my liver isn’t young and pink anymore. When I was 23, after staying up until 6:00am, the hangover would be gone by noon. Now the hangovers were lasting 24 hours, and they were soul-destroying. It would be 5:00pm the next day, and I would just be crawling out of bed. Whatever fantastic fun was had the night before was destroyed by lying in bed where every cell hurts. So maybe this is a hangover record.

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Single review: Logicalgroove feat. Diana Waite / “Pieces” (Gotta Keep)

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Garage house vocal delivers with a sweet performance from Ms. Waite and several mixes that also make the grade.  From the soulful groove of Pablo DJ & Pako Sax Soulful Main Mix, with its bouncy piano driven rhythm, to the deep progressive vibe of the Andy Roberts Sax Dub, it all works. With plenty of jazzy overtones and six mixes to boot, “Pieces” keeps that Garage energy alive.

Phil Turnipseed
File under: Ron Carroll, Tony Humphries, Roland Clark

Frost Is In The Air

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Australian born, Icelandic-based composer/producer Ben Frost burst into the spotlight with his breathtaking Theory of Machines. Where does he go next?

“Music for me is most certainly a cold-blooded and premeditated crime, but that is not to say I don’t often get very lost in the passion of it,” Ben Frost writes via e-mail, his words a sharp contrast to the images of killer whales he includes to illustrate concepts from his forthcoming album. That album, due out later this year from Bedroom Community, has a lot of pressure on it already. Frost’s last album, 2007’s Theory of Machines (Bedroom Community) received international praise seldom doled out for experimental noise albums, including the claim that he was the future of electronic music.

Perhaps Frost’s music won over disparate audiences because it is so far removed from molds cut by other electronic artists. He is not even quite sure why he’s considered an electronic musician at all: “I find it very hard to reconcile the origin of my work with its public perception. When I listen to my music, I hear The Cure, Penderecki, and Burzum, but somehow it ends up in the dance/electronic section in many a record store. I have bought like five records in the last 12 months and most of them are by dead Eastern European composers.”

While the dead Eastern European composers may be comfortable on Frost’s forthcoming record, they share space with referents from myriad art forms. “Looking at the working titles I have used for this record, I see a lot of use of the word Black, stolen lines from Disintegration and a mildly disturbing number of Twin Peaks references,” he says, then quickly abandons David Lynch for modern art. “Sonically the record is much darker in hue. Where Theory of Machines was very clean and sort of lit in fluorescent clinical light, this record is sort of bathed in shadow like a Rothko painting. It is a far more primal and visceral record both sonically and conceptually.”

“I have many friends who make an album every year, sometimes many albums in a year. I am in many ways envious of that relationship to music.”

The primal and visceral impulses in Frost’s music come not only from the animals that guest-star (lions, sperm whales, orcas, gorillas, and wolves are all slated to appear on the new album) but from Frost’s creative process as well. “There are five pieces of music I began work on for this album and there will be five pieces on this album. I rarely abandon a piece of music. That struggle with my work is probably at the heart of its sound, a sort of fight with it. It is grueling and often there are painstaking changes and mutations and the risk of sort of sucking the life of the music is a very real threat.”

Frost reflects on his more prolific colleagues. “I have many friends who make an album every year, sometimes many albums in a year. I am in many ways envious of that relationship to music. I just need the time to fight with my ideas. I don’t spend every day on my album, far from it. It’s a very dysfunctional long-distance relationship most of the time. We meet for a couple of days, fuck and fight and then run off crying. And spend the next month waiting for the other one to call back.”

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The Reinvention of AC Slater

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After making a name for himself on the happy hardcore scene, AC Slater—the DJ, not the character from Saved By the Bell—decided he had had enough of playing and producing frenetic tracks spiced with chipmunk vocals and piano riffs. He quit the genre and reinvented himself in bassline house.

Conventional wisdom says that it’s difficult for a DJ or producer to make a lateral career move in dance music. Make your name in one genre and it’s difficult to find acceptance in another. Aaron Clevenger, who is better known as AC Slater, is the exception to the norm. While the past two years have consisted of a flood of high profile remixes for Moby, Robin S., the Freestylers, Stanton Warriors, and Schwayze, as well as other of floor-rockin’ productions and DJ gigs all over the world, few know that before this phoenix rose from a loft space with a low ceiling in Bushwick, he was a major player on the happy hardcore scene.

“I had a moment where I was playing a big rave in Brooklyn at Club Exit; the club was packed, and everyone was 16, and I’m 27 at the time,” says Clevenger over a cup of green tea at an eatery in Williamsburg. “I didn’t want to be there, and I was getting sick of the music. I felt weird, out of place, and creepy. I needed something new.”

In what now seems like a former life, Clevenger started DJing at parties when he was 18 or 19. He grew up in a small college town in West Virginia, about an hour’s drive from Pittsburgh’s then-happening party scene. The city was known for throwing huge rave parties and was also the home to popular weeklies like Steel City Jungle. Clevenger was so enamored with the energy and sound of dance music that he decided to pursue a career as a happy hardcore DJ; he  later launched Pitched Up Records, one of the few domestic labels championing the sound.

Though his career was holding steady, he had an epiphany two years ago that changed his life. “I had a moment where I was playing a big rave in Brooklyn at Club Exit; the club was packed, and everyone was 16, and I’m 27 at the time,” says Clevenger over a cup of green tea at an eatery in Williamsburg. “I didn’t want to be there, and I was getting sick of the music. I felt weird, out of place, and creepy. I needed something new.”

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