MEDIA ROOTS- Abby Martin from Media Roots co-hosts Project Censored’s special three and a half hour KPFA program “Costs of War.” At the beginning of each hour, there is an MR report on the economic, human and environmental costs of US wars in the Middle East. During the program multiple, multiple experts in different fields of study are interviewed on the show about their research for the extensive Brown University study Costs of War. The show focuses on on the
socio-economic impacts of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and related
subjects from scholars worldwide. Listen to the show here or below.
Fund Drive Special: Cost of War – August 11, 2011 at 12:00pm
12:00-12:20 Catherine Lutz, Professor Anthro, Brown University,
Project Director, Solders and Contractors: Recommendations and Neta
Crawford, Professor Political Science at Brown University, Cost of War
Project Director,
12:30-12:50 Norah Niland: Former Director
Human Rights: United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan,
Afghanistan, social change and women, and Matthew Evangelista, Professor
of History and Political Science, Cornell University, Alternatives to
War
1:00-1:20 Winslow Wheeler, of the Straus Military Reform Project
of the Center for Defense Information Washington DC. Department of
Defense Budget, Military Cost of War
1:30-1:50 Dahr Jamail, Human
Costs of War, Refugees, Life on the Ground and resistance in the
military, Author: “The Will to Resist,”
2:00-2:20 John Tirman, MIT,
Author of “The Deaths of Others” The Fate of Civilians in America’s
Wars, Topic: Civilian Civilan Deaths In War—
2:30-2:50 Linda Bilmes, Professor Public Policy Harvard Kennedy School, Topic: Costs of Veteran Care
3:00-3:20 John Pilger, Journalist and Film Producer, covering his new documentary, “The War We Don’t See”
Abby Martin of Media Roots is featured in this RT article and video report.
RUSSIA TODAY– As the scandal over voicemail and phone-hacking by the Murdoch media
empire rages, public and political fury has focused on ruthless tabloids
out of control. But some say in this day and age, the whole concept of
privacy is falling apart.
News International chairman James Murdoch has been accused of trying
to mislead British MPs by saying he was unaware of the true extent of
phone-hacking by reporters. His testimony was challenged by two former
executives, Colin Myler and Tom Crone, who say Murdoch was informed
three years ago that the illegal practice went beyond just one rogue
journalist.
And as the scandal continues to grow, critics believe
the issue is just the tip of the iceberg in a society that no longer
values the privacy of the people.
“Everybody just clicks
through, agreeing to the terms and conditions. Well those terms and
conditions are very, very heavily weighted against you and your privacy
interest,” says Dave Saldana, the communications director of Free Press.
“We
see breaches of privacy by corporations happening all across America,
all across the world really, in every sector. Surveillance is rampant.
But really this is all a microcosm of the biggest surveillor of all –
that is, the state,” journalist Abby Martin believes.
There
is little Americans can do with the state having sweeping access to
their private information – access that followed the 9/11 terrorist
attacks, under a new law known as the Patriot Act.
The privacy of
Hasan Elahi, who is an associate professor at the University of
Maryland, was taken away from him in 2002, when he was detained by the
FBI for absolutely no reason he says, and scrutinized for months,
without charge.
His response? For nine years he has voluntarily
documented nearly every waking hour of his life on the web. He has
subsequently even turned it into an art-form. “These are all the toilets that I’ve used. You know that on Sunday, November, 24, 2007 I used this toilet, for example,” he explained pointing at a wall of pictures on his website.
He
posts copies of every debit card transaction, so you can see what he
bought, where, and when. A GPS device in his pocket reports his
real-time physical location on a map.
Hasan says his extraordinary abandonment of his own privacy stems from the ignorance of the authorities.
“In
fear they decided: ‘well that guy looks like an Arab, so he must be an
Arab. If he’s an Arab them he must have explosives, everyone knows
that.’ That’s the logic where we’re operating. You realize how
ridiculous that logic sounds. But when your own country takes that as
the basis for national policy… Ignorance as the basis of your national
policy is a pretty scary situation. And that’s how I got caught up in
it,” he told RT.
For Hasan, privacy has become a relic of
the past, and he says he’s not surprised that journalists or anyone else
really, would use the same surveillance tactics as the state.
In
that sense, it might be of no surprise that the chief architect of the
Patriot act, the lawyer who put it together, happens to be one of
Murdoch’s hand-picked News Corp board directors. Viet Dinh served as
assistant attorney general in the Bush administration, and was described
by some as the purveyor of the most sweeping curtailment of freedom in
the US since the McCarthy era.
At a time when corporations and
the government can easily hack into people’s private lives, it does not
come as a surprise when social networks give your personal information
to ad companies, or when other industries live off breaching people’s
privacy.
In the US it is so widespread, and people have gotten so
used to it, that Rupert Murdoch seems to be a perfect part of the
system rather than some special villain, whose corporation has been
undertaking some unique unlawful practices.
KPFA– Abby Martin co-hosts this edition of Project Censored radio with Peter Phillips for KPFA’s nationally syndicated show. This episode covers updates in the peace community, the Bohemian Grove’s exclusion of women, and whistleblowers who have put everything on the line.
Listen to Media Roots’s in depth update on US wars and empire at 8:00 or read the transcription below:
***
This is Abby Martin from Media Roots, reporting war and empire news & analysis for Project Censored.
A recent report from Global Research revealed that prisoners are making 23 cents an hour to manufacture weapons components for high tech missile systems for the US defense industry. The use of prison slave labor to increase profits for huge corporations, such as BP did in their clean-up efforts, is unfair to workers and is an egregious expansion of the corporate state.
In an article called The Military Industrial Complex: The Enemy from Within, John Whitehead writes:
“Having been co-opted by greedy defense contractors and corrupt politicians, America’s expanding military empire is bleeding the country dry at a rate of more than $15 billion a month (or $20 million an hour)—and that’s just what the government spends on foreign wars. That does not include the cost of maintaining and staffing the 1000-plus U.S. military bases spread around the globe…In fact, the Pentagon spends more on war than all 50 states combined spend on health, education, welfare, and safety.”
In his June 22nd speech, Obama cited the official cost of the Afghanistan & Iraq wars at 1 trillion dollars, but according to economist and Nobel Prize Laureate Joseph Stiglitz, the US has spent well over $3 trillion dollars on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq– and that assessment is three years old.
The Iraq war is still going strong, even though we don’t hear about it much through the corporate press. June marked the deadliest month for the US military in the region since 2009. And still, the corporate media touts the official death toll for Iraqi civilians at approximately 100,000, despite a comprehensive 2008 survey from Opinion Research Business that placed the number of dead Iraqis well over one million. Again, this toll is from 2008 and does not account for the last three years of combat.
In an article written for TheNation, Jeremy Scahill reports:
“Under the terms of the Status of Forces agreement, all US forces are supposed to be out of Iraq by the end of 2011. Using private forces is a backdoor way of continuing a substantial US presence under the cover of “diplomatic security.” The kind of paramilitary force that Obama and Clinton are trying to build in Iraq is, in large part, a byproduct of the monstrous colonial fortress the United States calls its embassy in Baghdad and other facilities the US will maintain throughout Iraq after the “withdrawal.”
For Rebel Reports, Jeremy Scahill writes:
“According to recent Pentagon statistics, w/ Barack Obama as commander in chief, there has been a 23% increase in the number of “Private Security Contractors” working for the Department of Defense in Iraq in the second quarter of 2009 and a 29% increase in Afghanistan. Overall, contractors (armed and unarmed) now make up approximately 50% of the total military force, meaning there are a whopping 242,657 contractors left in Afghanistan and Iraq.”
About 46,000 US troops remain in Iraq, and there are negotiations to keep at least 10,000 troops there past the December 31st deadline. In protest to this inevitable expansion of the US occupation, 100 Iraqi lawmakers recently signed a document calling on the Iraqi government to demand departure of U.S. troops from the country as scheduled by the end of 2011 according to the Aswat al-Iraq news agency.
Earlier this year, the cost of the Afghanistan war started to outpace that of Iraq by ten billion dollars a month- 6.7 billion compared to Iraq’s 5.5 billion. Even though the rhetoric coming from the White House suggests that the Afghanistan war is getting scaled down- with reductions being carried out as planned- the amount of troops remaining in the country will actually still be more than there were before Obama’s 2009 military surge in the country and more than any time during Bush’s presidency.
On another front, the America’s secret war in Pakistan has drastically escalated under the Obama administration. Every month more innocent civilians are killed by drones, and there are US troops stationed in Pakistan performing covert CIA operations against alleged militants. On May 22, Seven thousand people in Karachi Pakistan protested America’s use of unmanned drones and demanded an immediate end to the missile strikes in Pakistan’s tribal areas. Activists from the Tehreek-e-Insaf (Movement for Justice) participated in a two-day sit-in pleading the government to end its cooperation with America’s “war on terror.”
We are now coming up on the fourth month anniversary of the US-NATO’s bombing campaign in Libya, which costs US taxpayers approximately $40 million every month. Every missile being dropped costs one million dollars alone! The US is paying more than 75% of the defense budget for the 28 members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in Libya and by September the official cost of the Libyan invasion will total a whopping $844 million.
There are still covert wars and unmanned drone attacks happening in Yemen and Somalia too, which the empire rationalizes as mere police actions instead of aggressive acts of war. With all the talk about the federal deficit and the need to cut back on social programs and spending in this country, there is little discussed about cutting the Pentagon’s ever expanding annual military budget, which has more than doubled in the last decade. In 1995, when defense spending was a fraction of what it is now, a poll done by the Program on International Policy Attitudes found that a majority of Americans were “convinced that defense spending has weakened the US economy.”
Before any more bombs are dropped in our name, we must voice our opposition to end these unconstitutional wars. The American taxpayers’ hard earned money needs to be applied here at home and not to the expansion of the military industrial complex– it’s the only way this country can be saved.
This is Abby Martin from Media Roots reporting for Project Censored News & Analysis
MEDIA ROOTS- Despite the incessant commercialization of electronic music and increasing accessibility to beat making software, my brother Robbie Martin, AKA Fluorescent Grey, continues to push his musical limits while staying true to his art.
Every album he’s released has been the product of innovative conceptualizations, whether it be constructing songs from sampling the elements of fire and water or combining hertz frequencies to cancel out sounds. His music falls loosely into the genre of IDM (Intelligent Dance Music) akin to the likes of Aphex Twin and Squarepusher, but his versatility and constant exploration into new territory makes him difficult to box into a particular category.
Fluorescent Grey studied audio engineering at Expressions for New Media College in Emeryville where he mastered his technique and production skills. In an effort to remain as independent from the mainstream as possible and not have to cater toward other labels, he then pioneered the creation of Record Label Records, a bay area based record label that now represents a variety of artists worldwide.
Robbie’s non conformity has also led to his involvement with several hoaxes that have caused quite a stir in the musical and political world, including tricking Autechre fans into thinking his album was a leaked copy of Autechre’s Untilted, creating a bogus Myspace page for Aphex Twin’s side project The Tuss, and releasing a fake terrorist beheading video that got him attention from media outlets worldwide as well as a visit from the FBI.
Now, Robbie co-hosts and produces Media Roots Radio, where he incorporates unique vintage electronic music into every broadcast. My brother’s creativity has hugely inspired me in life, and he’s taught me everything I know about music, so it was a great honor to have been able to sit down with him for an in depth interview about his inspiration, his discography, his label, his thoughts on politics and on the future of electronic music.
***
MR: You have been passionate about music ever since you were
young, and you’ve always had a taste for the bizarre. Where
do you think that stems from?
FG: Probably listening to Weird Al Yankovic as a
kid. I remember getting old tapes of his Michael Jackson parodies, one song in
particular that really inspired me was his Devo parody “Dare to be Stupid.” At
the time, I didn’t know it was a parody, it just seemed like a really creative
and weird song. It was him saying all these non sequitur things over really
fast techno music, and I liked the aesthetic combination of that.
Another
song of his was a love ballad done in a 50’s-Doo Wop style, and the lyrics were
about him mutilating himself to get this girl. “I’ll jump in a pool of
razorblades for ya baby” and stuff like that. “Christmas at Ground Zero” was a
gleeful theme of post-apocalyptic nuclear fallout, and “Mr. Frump and the Iron
Lung” was a song where Mr. Frump talks to Weird Al through a disturbing iron
lung sound effect.
Weird Al Yankovic’s “Mr. Frump and the Iron Lung”
FG: Our neighbor gave me
a tape when I was eight that had the songs “Shoehorn with Teeth” by They Might
Be Giants and “Punk Rock Girl” by the Dead Milkmen, and they were both kind of
in a similar vein to Weird Al Yankovic. Those were all awesome, weird songs
that stuck with me as a kid. I remember thinking Shoehorn with teeth in
particular had some kind of double entendre sexual meaning, of course now that
I’m older I know it doesn’t (laughs). Those
songs carried a certain creative energy
to them.
MR: Who are some of your other musical influences early on
and now?
FG: A lot of older hip hop. Slick Rick’s
“La Di Dah” and “Square Dance Rap” by Sir Mix-A-Lot were two songs that were in
a higher echelon of rap music. They went beyond the genre of rap and were just
insanely infectious songs.
Later on, when
I really got into more avant-garde stuff, the main acts that influenced me were
Coil, Zoviet France and Aphex Twin. Aphex Twin was a huge inspiration for me,
but Coil and Zoviet France were more interesting to me at the time because they
were more unpredictable. Especially Coil. Some of their stuff has vocals,
some is just noise, some is totally melodic, and some is classical.
MR: In high school I remember you getting into some really
crazy experimental music where you were playing radio frequency and static
noises that were pretty unbearable to listen to. When did you venture into such
extreme territory?
FG: I think the
turning point for me is when I started making my own music. I wanted to play
guitar in a band, but I was never really good at guitar and could never get
enough friends together with the same musical tastes to form a band. The only
friends that I knew who were good at instruments, well let’s just say their
favorite bands were MxPx, Blink 182 and the Mr. T Experience.
My first exposure to
industrial music was when I heard Nine Inch Nails as a kid, and I was really
inspired by the combination of weird sounds with emotion. I remember hearing “Down In It” on the radio
and then just listening to the Pretty Hate Machine tape all the time. When
NIN’s Downward Spiral came out, I had started doing a lot of music research on
the internet. I think it was around 1994, and there were a lot of resources
online to discuss music with people in different groups.
I found the AOL
usenet section and then the rec.music.industrial news group. The people in it said that Nine Inch
Nails wasn’t real industrial music and they just rip off all these other
bands. They listed other bands like Ministry, Skinny Puppy and Throbbing
Gristle and at the time, it was a really important resource for me because I
didn’t know anyone else who wanted to explore further than NIN.
There was a record store in
Pleasanton of all places called City Records that had an industrial section,
and they let you listen to cds before buying them. I sat on the floor of
City Records and listened to almost the whole duration of Skinny Puppy’s Too Park Park for the first time, it was mesmerizing. Even though I was a little thrown off by Ogre’s
voice at first, I went with it and bought all the Skinny Puppy I could find, eventually landing on Bites and Last Rights as my
two favorites.
The first album that I heard from that
springboard was Zoviet France’s Garista. I remember hearing about Zoviet France
because they (Mark Spbyby specifically) were working with Download and I got
into Download via Skinny Puppy. I bought Garista not knowing it was Zoviet
France’s first CD, and it just sounded like people in a garage banging shit
together, just the most tribal and pure form of music. There were no rules.
There was no studio production or anything, it just sounded like anybody could
do it if they wanted to.
Zoviet France’s “Side B”
FG: It was a really
weird experience for me, because I didn’t understand that someone could just
put something like this out there and people would listen to it. It didn’t fit
into my mental vocabulary. It became really inspiring for me, because I
realized that I don’t have to play the guitar, the drums or be learned in music
theory to make stuff people will enjoy listening to.
MR: Did you start making music by sampling and experimenting
with different sounds that you found around you at the time?
FG: Yeah, it started
with just things I had around the house. One of the first songs I ever made was
with Mike Dunkley, a guy who later came on board as a contributing artist with
Record Label Records. We made a song together when were in middle school that
involved a snoring Santa robot toy. It was Santa in bed snoring, and when you
held his stomach down, it messed up and kept repeating the same sound over and
over. We made a song where we put the snoring through all these computer
effects. Back then we couldn’t afford guitar pedals or effects processors, so
we used the Sound Blaster 16 programs that came with Windows to add echoes and
stuff.
MR: That’s awesome, I remember that toy! I have always
really liked your artist name and have always wanted to know how the hell you
came up with it.
FG: It was a concept
I used to think about a lot as a child- colors that you try to imagine in your
mind that don’t exist. I would get into these weird mind fuck loops as a kid
where I would lie in bed at night wondering if are colors out there can’t see
and don’t exist… what would those look like? It’s just one of those things you
think about as a kid. When highlighter markers hit the market it seemed like
this exciting new technology. I was only five years old or something, but it
was almost magical to me how they were so bright.
MR: We did grow up in the 80s, and there seemed to be a
big fluorescent tone throughout the culture.
FG: Yeah, the
fluorescent tone was definitely a big inspiration. It goes along with the weird
mental fuck loop I would put myself in with the concept of fluorescent colors,
and imagining a color that couldn’t possibly be fluorescent, like fluorescent
grey.
MR:
What was the first official Fluorescent Grey release?
FG:
When I released the first album under the name Fluorescent Grey, I was spelling
Fluorescent F-L-O-R-E-S-C-E-N-T,
which actually means flowery. The first release under that name was called Dirk Furgonson’s Orchestral Rollercoaster of Fun & Challenge and it was a
recording of Aaron Epperson and I jamming in our garage with random shit we had
at the time. We stacked all this stuff into the mic input of a karaoke stereo
system using adapters, splitters and headphones. We didn’t even have a mixer or
anything, just spaghetti cables coming out of a mic jack. The session was
recorded on a 120 minute cassette tape as a limited edition of one.
Amoeba
Records in Berkeley used to allow experimental noise musicians to sell tapes,
so we put ours in the store, but an Amoeba employee bought it before it even
had a chance to sell on the shelves. I think the guy thought it was cool that
some 16-year-old kid was selling their own noise music to the store. Phil
Blankenship aka Lefthanddecision was the guy curating the noise section who
bought the tape. The
next album was called Swiveling Lawn Chairs, and we made it by syncing up
different Fischer Price style turntables with scotch tape patterns so they
would make a repeated rhythm every time the record rotated.
Next,
I tried my hand at doing a minimalist tone album called Twenty to Twenty
Thousand Hertz, influenced by people like Pansonic and Jean-Claude Risset. The
concept was a four CD set with each CD being a 74 minute test tone from 20
hertz to 20,000 hertz over the course of 74 minutes. One of the discs was 20 to
20,000, one was 20,000 to 20 and another was 20,000 to 20 in one channel and 20
to 20,000 in the other channel combined, so at one point in the middle of it
would actually be silent because it was face canceling itself out.
Molten
Ghost was my next release, and is probably my favorite album from this period
of time. It was a culmination of my experimentation on older Windows computer
programs like Cool Edit Pro, Vaz, Audio Mulch, Rebirth- some of it sounds like
modern Mego Records stuff, and I’m pretty proud of it (download or stream Molten Ghost).
Later
on around 2001 I was going to Expressions College for audio, I was listening
Venetian Snares’s Cats, Squarepusher’s Go Plastic and Autechre’s Confield
and Draft. But I never had felt like I was skilled enough in making beats or
programming songs to match the caliber of those artists. It wasn’t until 2002
that I felt like I had learned enough and was ready to take a stab at doing
something more elaborate than what I had been doing, production wise.
That’s
how Lying on the Floor,
Mingling with God in a Tijuana Motel Roomcame about. At
first, it was going to be a rushed album of songs I was working on at the time.
Then I realized I could use the opportunity to embark on a lot of ideas that
I’ve had for years for songs to put on the album. For example, the song made
only from water sounds was a concept I had always wanted to do.
I also wanted
to do a song based entirely around Kabuki theater sounds and a song using
spectral morphing synthesis to morph from one sound to the other. I used sounds that were personal to me too,
like the sound of me hitting the aluminum walls of a work shed with a baseball
bat. The tracks on Lying on the Floor also incorporate a lot of fast, IDM
glitchery sequencing techniques, because I’m interested in the technical
quality of beats that are too fast to play but that your brain can still follow
and process.
My
next release, Gaseous Opal Orbs,
fit as a great follow up to Lying on the Floor. It was the first album that I
started using Physical Modeling Synthesis on, which is the recreation of acoustic instrument sounds by using
only computers, equations and pure synthesis. There are absolutely no samples,
recordings, or real instruments. You simply input the mathematical dimensions
of what you want to create. For example you can make a virtual horn that is a
hundred feet long, or make the sound of a violin being strummed forever.
It’s
fascinating, because it brings you to a state of mind where your brain can’t
tell the difference between real sounds or sounds made with a synthesizer. Even
if I make the sound myself, I like to fire up an automator that will randomly
automate the parameters of the sound so that over time it evolves into an
unrecognizable texture and takes on the strange quality of a dying organism or
screaming creature. I have gotten some really strange, guttural vocal sounds by
using physical Modeling synthesis that by the end of this real time
manipulation I barely recognize as mine, they take on a life of their own.
The
way music production has evolved is almost like a magic trick. Hollywood sound
design will stack together a ton of different samples just to make the sound of
someone tearing open a bag of potato chips or something. They won’t even use
the sound of someone opening a bag of chips, instead they will layer together
sounds like crunching leaves or rubbing straws together.
That’s
the kind of artistic liberty you can take with sound that you can’t do with
visual arts. It’s much harder to trick someone visually. Brian Eno has a great
quote about this where he said imagine the impact on visual art if visual
artists and painters didn’t even have access to 50% of the color spectrum until
the year 1950. On a side note i’m a big admirer of Brian Eno the writer, but
not so much the musician.
The
same thing has happened with music. When synthesis and other music making
techniques were invented, it was similar to having all these new colors,
timbres and textures that were brand new to the human ear. It was an entirely
new set of tools that opened up new ways to make sound. The technology is still
in its infancy. We’ve only known how to create them for the last 70 years,
which is not long in the course of human history. Computer DSP technologies
have taken us a long way too.
MR: Talk about your album that you
said you made all in one continuous session.
FG: Improvised
Electronic Musiccomes from the idea of making something
with a static, rigid beat structure to it. It started as something in the 171
BPM tempo. I wanted to make really fast electronic music that started with an
empty pattern and built on top of it from scratch. Instead of going back and
erasing anything, I kept everything and forced myself to move forward while
recording the entire process.
Out of 20
hours of recording time of me on my sequencer, I got about one hour of usable
music. I didn’t re-arrange any of the music that I improvised, I only
compressed the time and delete portions in between. The overall structure and
the flow was the same, and since it was all at 171 BPM it ended up sounding
like a continuous dance mix at the same tempo with no lapse in the beat (download or stream Improvised Electronic Music Parts 1-3).
MR: That’s a really cool concept to
challenge yourself with.
FG: It was liberating to be able to make music
according to a different set of rules than what I was used to entirely. The
newest album that I just put out is through UK label Acroplane Records, called Antique Electronic Synthesizer Greats, 1955 to 1984 Part 1 (download in full Antique Electronic Synthesizer Greats).
The
album is my love letter to old electronic music- before rave, before synth pop,
before industrial, and before electronic music was set into this pattern and
absorbed into more rigid formulas. If you make electronic music now, people
will ask: Is it drum and bass? Is it dub step? I’m talking about back when it was
just music made with synthesizers or by creating tones with sped up tape loops,
and you couldn’t label it like that.
I
wanted to make new songs using all these different loops and layers from old
music I had collected over the years. Some of them have recognizable melodies
that will remind people of old songs which is the fun part of it. Another
reason I made the album was that I wanted to flesh out some of those songs and
kind of show how they were responsible for things that came later on. When I listen
to music like old Ptose, Cluster, or Harold Grosskopf, it reminds me how that,
you know, a lot of these artists that make electronic music now are referencing
either intentionally or just through the ether, these older artists and are
echoing ideas that were formed a long time ago.
Then there are artists like Justice who actually
take these old songs- like Goblin- and remix them into really hard hitting
modern dance sounding songs. It’s really cutting production, like really vacuum
sucking bass drums. It’s really pleasurable sounding, but I was trying to avoid
that with this. I wanted to just showcase the sounds as they were. The
compression I used in some tracks I wouldn’t use for effects. I just layered a
lot of these old sounds on top of each other to thicken them out, like the bass
drum from Kraftwerk’s “Radio-Activity” with
a baseline put over it from a Tangerine Dream track.
Fluorescent Grey’s “Chicken Hypnotism”
MR: You are also the founder of Oakland based
independent record label, Record Label Records (RLR), what prompted you to
start the label?
FG: I started RLR because we needed a vehicle to
launch my friend and my Great White Hype Coil parody rap album off of. Instead
of just self-releasing it, we wanted to come up with an umbrella label for it.
But at the time there wasn’t much of a plan to keep it going farther than just
releasing rap parody releases.
MR: How did it evolve into something more? When did you
start pulling other musicians onto the label?
FG: I started
getting more serious about my own music, and I knew that I didn’t want to
compromise what I wanted to do by trying to get on someone else’s label. So I
started working hard to put out my own music on my own label. Kush Arora, one
of the artists on RLR, is a longtime friend who is into similar musical styles,
so it was natural to put him on the label. RLR released his debut album
Underwater Jihad.
MR: A lot of the artists on RLR have also been your
friends growing up. It’s cool that so many of your friends just happen to be
extremely musically gifted as well, and amazing that you have given them an
outlet with RLR to put out their music.
FG: Yeah, but
that’s just a weird coincidence for me, I wouldn’t sign my friends just because
they are my friends. Like I had no idea Mike Dunkley had continued making music
from high school. Then one day I saw him in the halls of Expressions College
and found out he was taking their visual arts program. He showed me some of his
music and I was surprised because it was really good. In a way, it was really
similar to mine. We were both obsessed with a lot of the IDM music banking
techniques and sound design, and we were both huge Autechre fans.
MR: A lot of labels release only certain genres and
don’t branch out to incorporate different sounds. But RLR takes a different
approach, by hosting artists like Kush Arora and Sote, who both have completely
different sounds.
FG: RLR is a
mostly experimental label that caters to people with weird taste. I think too
many labels have the tendency to put out genres of music people are already
comfortable with, like Dubstep or garage music. I don’t want to plug RLR
into any particular genre. Genres come and go- for me it’s more about picking
music that I not only find fun to listen to, but that is also groundbreaking in
some way.
MR: So you aren’t closed off to any sound?
FG: Well I haven’t
put out anything with pop music and vocals, but nobody has sent me any demos in
that vein that i’ve loved. If someone sent me a great demo of something
like that, I would put it out. Brian E is probably the poppiest thing I
have put out. Some people might try to lump his music in with other ’80s
revival music right now, but I think it stands apart from most of that stuff.
It’s referencing all the best aspects of 70s prog, things that most retro
revivalist musicians find too difficult to even attempt. It hits a perfect
stride to me, only a few artists I think have successfully done this as of late
one of them is Dam Funk.
Fluorescent Grey’s Ice Cap Zone 2 Michael Jackson Mashup
MR: What other independent labels do you respect and follow?
FG: The top one that
comes to mind is Pthalo Records. They’ve put out a lot of music that I
happen to be obsessed with like Wobbly and OST and Terminal 11. They were probably
the first label that put out a lot of that really crazy but more specifically
unhinged experimental electronic music post digital age. Also Mego Records’s
influence is pretty huge. Another label that I think is underrated is Childisc
Records, which is Nobukazu Takemura’s label.
MR: The most notoriety you have gotten in the press
isn’t from RLR (yet), but from numerous musical hoaxes you have pulled on the
internet instead. Talk about the Autechre and The Tuss hoaxes you did.
FG: The
Autechre hoax happened when Soulseek was at its peak, now it’s dying off
because people download most of their mp3s on torrent sites or mediafire,
filestube things like that. But when Autechre was about to drop their ninth
album Untilted, I had their album name in my search terms so it would show up
once its leaked. Keep in mind that I was and still am a huge Autechre fan boy,
so usually I wouldn’t sit on the internet literally waiting for a leak to show
up in real-time.
When the first result popped up, I downloaded it and I wasn’t
sure if it was real because it sounded a lot different than I expected. It
suddenly came to me that even if it was Autechre, it sounded more stripped down
and different enough from their previous styles that someone could make
something that sounded similar and people would believe it’s real. So I put
about 50% of Lying on the Floor, an album of mine I had been sitting on for a
year, on SoulSeek with the same Autechre album song titles.
Within hours there
were 300 downloads of the album..just from my account, to know how many others
shared it and had downloads from their computers is incalculable, and it kind
of spread like wildfire across the net. Tons of people listened to it, believed
it, and really liked it. Some people even said they liked my album better than
the real Autechre album they ended up hearing. To be fair, a lot of people
didn’t like it either. Some of the comments I saw said “where did all the synths
go?” and “Autechre would never use tabla” (laughs).
MR: What equipment do you normally play with and use to make
music?
FG: Recently
I’ve been working with a lot of synthesizers and effects processors. I’ve been
moving away from the computer a bit more just to get out of my comfort zone,
but I’m moving back onto it now.
MR: When I saw you play at the Kava Lounge in San
Diego, you blew everyone away. You built up
all your beats and the sound had so many layers. When you do shows that are
interactive like that, are they done extemporaneously or do you
have a good idea of how you are going to build your songs beforehand?
FG: When I do
live shows, I like to have parts that allow me to improvise. When you’re using
a drum machine, you could just play a whole show by playing back patterns that
you’ve already made on the machine and it wouldn’t really be live. It would
just be you switching to the next pre-recorded pattern. But there are
people who make a really good show out of combining different loops and
patterns- like Daedelus. He’s really good at performing with a bunch of loops
that he manipulates and mixes together on the fly.
But to play a show
like the San Diego show, sometimes I wear a headphone to hear the beat as it’s
coming in. I’ll listen to the music in one headphone as I cue up the drum machine
and manually sync it in, most of the time I dont use headphones so I will have
to cue it in perfectly on beat and risk being off. I always start with a bass
drum, because it’s safe and easily on sync with the tempo. But I’ll usually
bring it in with a mostly blank pattern where it’s just an empty grid of 16
steps using either a drum machine or a Korg Electribe.
As the music is
going, I’ll usually make up a beat on the fly. It’s an exciting process
because you’re generating something that is unpredictable. It could either suck
or be really good. Sometimes I’ve taken people out of the moment by making too
crazy of a beat or something. But then there are other times I’m really
surprised that one base drum here and one snare drum there works and people enjoy
it.
MR: You just got a ridiculously awesome old school
synthesizer.
FG: The ARP
2600. It’s basically the world’s greatest analog synthesizer ever
made.
MR: As someone who has been into the more underground IDM
electronic scene for a while, what do you think about the fact that IDM seems
to be influencing a lot of more mainstream music? Bands like Animal Collective
and Deerhoof seem to be incorporating a lot of weird sounds and styles. And
just in general you see a lot more Warp artists headlining indie music
festivals and stuff. Do you think it’s a good thing that the mainstream is
becoming more accepting of other types of electronic music beyond just house
and techno?
FG: I think
there are good and bad aspects of it. Just like anything else that catches on
with the mainstream, it can get distilled and whitewashed. It infects
everything, like now you hear Aphex Twin production techniques on Britney
Spears songs and car commercials use glitching stuttering effects. It’s all over the place now, which makes it
boring. But in a sense that’s also a good thing because it makes people who
want to be on the tip of the spear and cutting edge move beyond those old
techniques.
Before they got
appropriated by the mainstream, people didn’t really know how to do them. They
were kind of like these secret magic tricks you’d do in a computer, but there
weren’t workarounds and tools to do those things for you. Now there are, and
everybody has access to them.
MR: The accessibility pushes the envelope for people to keep
reinventing music.
FG: It pushes
people beyond the idea that technology shouldn’t define music. The things
you’re able to do in the computer shouldn’t define the music itself. If
music is good it will move beyond those technological trappings. Just because
those techniques can be done by everyone now, doesn’t mean that people
shouldn’t be creative anymore.
MR: Agreed, I think it’s a really exciting time for
electronic music, precisely because of what you just said.
FG: I’ve also
realized that the term electronic music is becoming, or should I say is an outdated term, because technology
doesn’t define electronic music like it used to when electronic music meant
literally made by electronic equipment, like synthesizers and
samplers. Now everyone uses electronics and sampling. Take jazz- I’m sure
there are some bad jazz producers out there who take the best sounding drum
loop or snare drum sound from the whole song and replace every drum sound in
the song with that one sample.
My friends and I
have described most modern commercial rock music as cybernetic music because
it’s half-electronic / half-real, and you can’t tell the two apart. It’s been
edited heavily on protools, subtly autotuned and squashed so much dynamically
that it looses all character. So the
term “electronic music” doesn’t really apply anymore to the genre. Also, the
internet culture has sped up things so fast that more and more music fans and
hipsters are looking for the newest and weirdest type of music to be
into. That has pushed the experimental and avant-garde music into the
mainstream- it’s the last bastion of what people haven’t discovered yet.
Now, there is so
much technology available and so many ways to achieve a certain sound. You can
fake an old 1930s record now using modern technology to record tricks and make
it sound old, you know? To me, electronic music just means anything that uses
those illusions to convince people they’re hearing something that they
aren’t.
MR: Can you tell when something that isn’t supposed to be
ie: pop punk music is a sampled or edited beat just by listening?
FG: Some of the time
yeah, because it’s not very well done. But more often than not it’s hard
to tell. There are really good producers that have been able to trick people
for years. Pretty much the last 15 years of rock music on the radio has been
totally edited to the point where they might as well be using a sampling
library like the BFD series.
MR: Like auto tune- it seems to be in every pop song
out in the last two years. Shifting gears here, as a highly politically
opinionated person, how do politics fit into your music making?
FG: I’ve tried to
keep my political beliefs and my art separate, and don’t plan to inject too
many politics into Fluorescent Grey- but there’s an underlying political belief
that Record Label Records is founded on.
MR: It seems like it is the artistic integrity of
maintaining a small indie label and not selling out to multinational
corporations. RLR provides an important platform for other independent artists
to put their work out there.
FG: I try to
maintain that. I also try to maintain autonomy from the dance music culture,
which is the primary way people make money in the electronic music scene. I am
not trying to make money by compromising what I want to do. With Record Label
Records, I want to have a home for artists who are kind of making music that’s
really personal to them, and it doesn’t have to fit into any particular niche.
MR: But Record Label Records did endorse Cynthia McKinney and
Ralph Nader for the 2008 Presidential elections.
FG: Yea, I got
irritated that everyone I knew in the electronic music scene was an Obama
lover. I would go on websites like Accelerator and they would be talking about
him. So that’s why I publically endorsed Nader and McKinney. I think I’ve made
a lot of people angry by utilizing some hoaxing techniques too, things that I
learned from the beheading hoax I did.
MR: What are you working on right now, and what’s in store
for Record Label Records?
FG: Record
Label Records just released a compilation series this year of Record Label Record
artists, part one of the compilation is called Drinking the Goat’s Blood and
the second one is called Electric Carpets. Drinking the Goat’s Blood is
more of an experimental album, while the second disc shows a more poppy side of
Record Label Records.
With this
compilation we brought in a lot of new players into the RLR family. Some of the
people I have been a fan of for a long time and others are people who have sent
me demos over the years. Wobbly, who has another appearance on the RLR compilation Ghostbusters 3, but I’m really excited to have two exclusive tracks from him
on this compilation. He just came out with an amazing split album with Jay
Lesser and Matmos off Important Records that I recommend everyone to check
out.
Not Breathing is
also appearing on Electric Carpets, who makes amazing stuff. Koyxen, AKA
Kouhei, a Japanese artist is on a collaboration with hip-hop artist Sensational
and is putting an exclusive track on. Contagious Orgasm has a track on it
too.
Then there’s a track by Senryl, AKA Gunnar
Cubbins, another artist who I’m really excited to have on board. The way I
discovered him was by total random chance. A friend of mine gave me a tape of
amazing electronic music made between 1982 and 1986, and it was incredibly weird
sounding, experimental TR606 music. Senryl had made all of their music in santa
cruz, most of it at Cabrillo Junior College , and back then there weren’t a lot
of people in Santa Cruz doing EMU modular systems. In fact, some of the music
he worked on was some of the only music ever made on an EMU modular
system. EMU only put out a couple of
modulars, and one of them was at UC Santa Cruz which he had access to due to
him wooing the staff with his self made recordings.
I
also am about to release a Fluorescent Grey album called Ambiente, which was
a split release between Record Label Records and UK based Catalyst Records.
I’ve been working on this album longer than probably anything else i’ve
released. Some of the tracks on it date back to 2005, it’s going to be 2 cds
long each one 80 minutes. The second disc, titled Uncanny Valley, will
be a seamless mix of brand new ambient music, whereas the more older stuff will be featured on the first disc.
Fluorescent Grey’s Ambiente Sampler
Mike Dunkley and
Lucas, AKA Kossak, are both coming out with their first full length albums this
year. Steven Frenda AKA Scuzi is coming
out with his first full-length album too. Some more things to look
out for the future: Tomoroh Hidari’s double album is going to be
released, which will be the first double vinyl release by RLR. The Record
Label Records website now has a station player where you can upload every
single track of any release we have done and listen to it in full.
MR: And I, Abby Martin, am happy to announce that I
will be doing a special series of eight limited edition original paintings as
covers for a limited edition Ambiente release.
FG: Yes, and for Ambiente, only
one of the discs is going to be available in a digital format. The two-disc set
is also going to be a limited edition run of 50 copies or so. Besides Ambiente, I’m putting out what is supposed to be a third disc in an
unofficial trilogy that was meant to go along with Lying on The Floor and Gaseous Opal Orbs. The third disc in the trilogy should come at the very end
of 2011.
After that, I am
going to put out an album called Plunderphonics 5.1, the theme for which is
all stolen material from modern DVD recordings. Modern DVD meaning 5.1 surround
sound. It’s going to be a collage album based off of stealing weird surround
sound background tracks from different movies. Another album in the works will be a limited run and it will come with a vest- where
you can experience music tactilely, with a speaker that goes on your chest and no
headphones. It’s going to be an album that you can only feel with your stomach.
KPFA– On this edition of Flashpoints, a nationally syndicated radio show,
Peter Phillips and
Mickey Huff from Project Censored and Abby Martin from Media
Roots report the latest news and coverage from the Fukushima
nuclear disaster.
On this edition of
Flashpoints, a nationally syndicated radio show, Peter Phillips and
Mickey Huff from Project Censored as well as Abby Martin from Media
Roots report the latest news and coverage from the Fukushima
nuclear disaster.
On this edition of
Flashpoints, a nationally syndicated radio show, Peter Phillips and
Mickey Huff from Project Censored as well as Abby Martin from Media
Roots report the latest news and coverage from the Fukushima
nuclear disaster.