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Transcription
bALLrOOm DIps INTO ThE mAINsTrEAm
DAILY NOTE THURSDAY, MAY 23, 2013 16 22 of VOGUING ballroom dips into the mainstream nile rodgers is terrified / the ramones / basquiat makes noise THE DAILY NOTE LAST NIGHT You better work! Today’s Daily Note presents the story of voguing, a movement that brims with energy, creativity, passion, fierceness, and the ego of New York City. Voguing is more than just a dance, it’s a lifestyle—one that brings pride, peer recognition, and a strong sense of self. The scene has bubbled back up recently, but in the beginning it was about young people from society’s margins flipping their limitations and using whatever they could to express themselves. That’s what art is all about. Also in this issue, Michael Holman talks about the night he started a band called Gray with Jean-Michel Basquiat, a Brooklyn kid who wrote poetic graffiti as SAMO before going on to become an art-world superstar and getting posthumously name-checked by rap moguls like Jay-Z, Kanye, and Rick Ross. (Rozay even has a tattoo of Basquiat on his thigh. You’re welcome.) The members of Gray embraced their inability to play their instruments and found new ways to get unexpected sounds out of them. It’s a good reminder that being without is sometimes the best starting point for creative expression. ABOUT Red bull music academy MASTHEAD Editor in Chief Piotr Orlov Copy Chief Jane Lerner Senior Editor Sam Hockley-Smith Senior Writer/Editor Vivian Host Contributing Editors Todd L. Burns Shawn Reynaldo Staff Writer Olivia Graham Editorial Coordinator Alex Naidus Creative Director Justin Thomas Kay for Doubleday & Cartwright Art Director Christopher Sabatini Production Designer Suzan Choy Photo Editor Lorenna Gomez-Sanchez Staff Photographer Anthony Blasko Top row: AnnaLove; Squalloscope; Kaan Düzarat and Carrot Green tag-teaming. Second row: Julian Cubillos; De La Montagne crowd-surfing; Pleasure Cruiser. Third row: André Laos; De La Montagne, Kaan Düzarat, and Mr. Selfish; the crowd at Tammany Hall. Fourth row: Crowd at Tammany Hall; Simonne Jones; De La Montagne. Fifth row: Sinjin Hawke; DJ Slow. Sixth row: Hudson Mohawke, Nick Hook, and guest; Brenmar, Hudson Mohawke, and Nick Hook; DJ Slow and Sinjin Hawke. All photos by Anthony Blasko and Dan Wilton Contributors Sue Apfelbaum Marina D Adrienne Day Michael Holman Krisanne Johnson Mike Rubin Julianne Shepherd Nick Sylvester Cover Photo Krisanne Johnson Escuelita’s, NYC 2008 All-Seeing Eye Torsten Schmidt Correction: Our May 21 story on the passing of Anthony ‘Romanthony’ Moore misstated his age at the time of his death on May 7; he was 45. The Red Bull Music Academy celebrates creative pioneers and presents fearless new talent. Now we’re in New York City. The Red Bull Music Academy is a worldtraveling series of music workshops and festivals: a platform for those who make a difference in today’s musical landscape. This year we’re bringing together two groups of selected participants — producers, vocalists, DJs, instrumentalists and musical mavericks from around the world — in New York City. For two weeks, each group will hear lectures by musical luminaries, work together on tracks, and perform in the city’s best clubs and music halls. Imagine a place that’s equal parts science lab, the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, and Kraftwerk’s home studio. Throw in a touch of downtown New York circa 1981, a sprinkle of Prince Jammy’s mixing board, and Bob Moog’s synthesizer collection all in a 22nd-century remix and you’re halfway there. The Academy began back in 1998 and has been traversing the globe since, traveling to Berlin, Cape Town, São Paulo, Barcelona, London, Toronto, and many other places. Interested? Applications for the 2014 Red Bull Music Academy open early next year. The content of Daily Note does not necessarily represent the opinions of Red Bull or Doubleday & Cartwright. 2 3 FROM THE ACADEMY UPFRONT Boi-1da: It’s funny, my mom started making beats. It’s the weirdest thing ever, her making beats on Reason one day. She was trying to show me how to use it and I was like, ‘This is confusing.’ I don’t know, man, I’ll just stick with what works for me. Q: Does your mom have some bangers? Boi-1da: She had one track that was kinda crazy. It was kinda sloppy and all-over-the-place, but it was going somewhere... My mom, a 40-year-old Jamaican woman—[it’s] the most hilarious thing to me. — Producer Boi-1da, May 22, 2013 TONIGHT Santos Party House United States of Bass Brian Eno’s 77 Million Paintings at the Fabrica gallery in Brighton, England, 2010. Almost Infinite Brian Eno quiets the mind. amongst the tightly controlled chaos that is city life, a moment of clarity or sanity can be hard to find. Quiet time becomes yet another thing to rigorously schedule into your day. It’s exhausting. But sometimes these moments pop up unexpectedly—you’ll be riding the subway or walking on a relentlessly crowded street, both hyper-aware of your environment and willfully ignoring it at the same damn time. 77 Million Paintings, an audio-visual installation by Brian Eno, is a place where New Yorkers can take pause. Showing in the former location of Café Rouge on West 32nd Street, this marks the New York debut of Eno’s piece, and is also the largest indoor version that’s been produced since the piece premiered in 2006. 77 Million Paintings is a “generative work”—a term coined by Eno 20 years ago to describe art that makes itself as you watch it—that explores vast combinations of visual and sonic elements. Images are chosen at random and then laid on top of one another, so that the final output is a continuous stream of ever-changing material. There aren’t many of the initial “primitives,” as Eno calls the original paintings, but when overlaid four at a time, the number of possible distinct combinations is a whopping 77 million. Eno is fascinated by combinatorial mathematics. His idea of generative art takes “a systems approach to making art,” as he explained during his recent lecture at Red Bull Music Academy, “where essentially you are creating a conceptual machine, which then keeps producing stuff.” This effectively ensures that the same image or soundscape never repeats. Despite the constant mutation of the piece, the effect is one of stillness. Eno is known as the godfather of ambient, a genre which, at its most basic definition, is music that creates an environment. With his art, Eno is interested in creating moments of meditative respite, spaces that spark reflection or just inner quiet. “It’s slightly religious, perhaps,” he says. “It’s not dissimilar to the feeling I was having in Lincoln Cathedral in England—a place where people come and sit still. Probably some of them pray but I would imagine quite a lot of them don’t. They’re just enjoying a place where you can be in that space, and surrender to it. I am concerned with making something that is of some kind of spiritual and even therapeutic use to people.” -Olivia graham 77 Million Paintings is open Tuesdays– Sundays from noon to 8pm through June 2 at 145 W. 32nd St., Manhattan. FROM CROYDON WITH DUB Essential tracks from dubstep’s early history. L ong before Snoop rapped over Flux Pavilion and Skrillex was a household name, Mala, Hatcha, Plastician, and Skream built the foundations of dubstep by playing with half-time structures of gigantic bass and massively reverbed snares. These four pioneers touch down at the Roots of Dubstep show at SRB tomorrow night— here’s a primer on some early dubstep anthems you’re likely to hear. Big Freedia Afrika Bambaataa Egyptian Lover DJ Magic Mike DJ Assault DJ Funk + Many More! MAY 23 UPCOMING EVENTS SRB Brooklyn Santos Party House Plasticman, “Pump Up the Jam” Right before he changed his name (so as not to be confused with Richie ‘Plastikman’ Hawtin), grime and dubstep pioneer Plastician issued this snaky, 4/4-touched roller with oozing bass loops cut through by gunshot-sharp snares and menacing atmospheric leads. Hatcha & Benga, “10 Tons Heavy” Digital Mystikz, “Anti-War Dub” Hatcha helped shape dubstep, working at the scene’s crucial record store (Big Apple), releasing on the seminal Tempa label, and becoming one of the first DJ residents of Rinse FM, a pirate-turned-legal radio station that is the genre’s key transmitter. This track finds him teaming up with former protégé Benga for a gurning slice of liquid low-end straight from the darkside. Mala and Coki run DMZ, a party and record label dedicated to exploring dubstep’s roots in Jamaican dub and sound-system culture. Probably their finest hour, this track is a smoky, melancholy slab of roots consciousness underpinned by a warm blanket of sub-bass. The Roots of Dubstep Skream Mala Plastician Hatcha MAY 24 Grand Prospect Hall 12 Years MAY Of DFA The whole label family on four stages 25 The Well Brooklyn The Roots of Dubstep Friday, May 24 10 PM to 4 AM at SRB Brooklyn, 177 2nd Ave., Brooklyn Skream, “Midnight Request Line” Arguably the most famous song of dubstep’s formative years, by one of the genre’s biggest stars. Croydon native Oliver ‘Skream’ Jones was only 19 when he crafted this mysterious missile for Tempa, a deceptively simple mix of arpeggiated sonar sounds and submarine reverb. Benga & Coki, “Night” The combination of Benga’s techno sensibilities with Coki’s dark and dubby style produced one of the most enduring dubstep tracks (and an instrumental people always sing aloud, weirdly). It’s an iconic raft of bleeps floated atop a gangster’s bounty of head-nodding bass. The DoOver NYC Special Aloe Blacc & Many More MAY 26 Saint Vitus Oneohtrix Point Never Evian Christ Bill Kouligas More MAY 26 NYU Skirball Center Down and dirty A tale of beats and booty with Miami bass don Magic Mike. Do you remember the first time you heard 808 bass? Being from Florida, everything had the 808 in it. We always knew the sound from “Planet Rock” onwards so there wasn’t some [epiphany] like, “Oooh.” But when you start talking about sustained bass and modulating it and all of that, the first time I really heard that was ’84 or ’85. The Beastie Boys did “Slow and Low” and I think that was the first time that I really heard low-end put to the test… and the Beastie Boys wasn’t even from Florida! Then after the fact, a lot of other groups started picking up on it, in ’85, ’86 with Shy D and MC ADE and all these other different groups that was coming out of Fort Lauderdale and Miami. That’s when everything just kind of changed. Given that you lived in Miami for at least part of the ’80s, you obviously saw a lot of crazy things. Aw yeah. I think the craziest party I’ve ever seen was Luke from 2 Live Crew’s party at Jack the Rapper. That had to be in ’91, maybe ’92. Jack the Rapper was one of the first original 13 black DJs for radio back in the day. He would do this convention every year called the Family Affair; it really catered toward people who wanted to promote music and he would always have the ballroom for different big groups. Anyway, Luke had the whole ballroom rented out and turned it into a strip club. No one had no clothes on, and all I could do was scratch my head and say, “Wow.” Once the common folk left the party and just industry people were there, then it got really crazy. A TALK with James Murphy MAY 27 Deviation @ Sullivan Room Benji B FaltyDL Dorian Concept More MAY 27 West Park Church Pantha du Prince & The Bell Laboratory MAY 28 RECORDED LIVE FOR RED BULL MUSIC ACADEMY RADIO TUNE IN AT RBMARADIO.COM Magic Mike plays at United States of Bass on May 24 at Santos Party House, 96 Lafayette St., Manhattan. 4 5 FROM THE ARCHIVES Q&A NILE RODGERS The super-producer goes from Sesame Street and the Apollo to living Chic. In the past, you’ve talked about jazz, about being a big Temptations fan, and being obsessed with that whole era. But when you met Bernard Edwards, Chic’s bass player and producer, you were actually the hippie and he was the R&B guy. Completely 100% correct. Bernard Edwards was so old-school R&B. He really fit in. I did not fit in. My first real job was with Sesame Street. I got that gig because I auditioned and they didn’t care that I had green cornrows, and when I undid the green cornrows I had this big green afro. I only did that gig for a year because the guy who vacated it was Carlos Alomar and he went to play in the Apollo Theater house band. Then David Bowie hired him with my other buddies, Luther Vandross and those guys, and they became the Young Americans. There was an opening at the Apollo and I auditioned for that. It wasn’t much of an audition—I was recommended by the woman from Sesame Street, whose husband was the manager of the Apollo Theater at that time. She told them that I was a really great guitarist and a fantastic reader, and I got the gig with the house band. It was a revue format. Every now and then they’d have one band that would do a bunch of songs, but typically you’d have one-hit wonders—a person would come out and do their one or two songs that were hits. All the audience got were songs that were pretty familiar. Everyone had their little routine and shtick, but the band had to be ready for anything. as soon as he does that, this coffin opens and it’s Screamin’ Jay Hawkins. I don’t know if you’ve ever seen his routine, but he looks like a skeleton, he’s got this rattle in his hand. I’m terrified. And I jump up and grab my guitar, take the cable out, and I’m running around with my big jazz guitar across stage, and Screamin’ is running after me. And I run stage right but now they’re blocking me, ’cause all the people waiting to go on are standing there. And I run to the other side and the audience is crying with laughter ’cause they know it’s totally real. Meanwhile, the thing that made it funny to my friends is, at that time, I was a kung fu master. I was studying kung fu, and I’m running across stage like a total chump. Screamin’ Jay just nailed the performance that night and the old guys in the band decided, “Let’s teach this young blood what it’s all about.” That was my first day. Everybody had planned it; everybody was in on it. They couldn’t have done it without a rehearsal—they just wanted to show me what the Apollo was like. Trial by fire. At this point had James Brown already recorded the Live at the Apollo record? Oh yeah. What was it about your relationship that made you click? We wanted to be professional. In those days a lot of bands were sloppy and we were playing in the hood at dives, what we’d call the Chitlin’ Circuit. We were getting $15 a night and we had to do four or five sets. They expected a show. Bernard and I always wanted to be good. Some of the guys would just get through the show ’cause they figured they’d never be back, but Bernard and I had a powerful work ethic and we always wanted the shows to be great. If he didn’t know something, I would tell him. We were bandleaders and we didn’t know it. So when you were walking into the Apollo on 125th Street, were you walking in with pressure on your shoulders, knowing what amazing stuff had already been recorded there? Not only that. I knew about Jimi Hendrix winning the talent show. Don’t get me wrong—even though I was a jazzy guy, everybody went to the Apollo every now and then. A lot of the bands I was playing with would wind up playing at the Apollo. So it wasn’t like when I got the gig as the house-band guy that I’d never been to the Apollo. Luther Vandross was my friend and he took me there to see Patti LaBelle and the Bluebelles. I never saw anything like that. So it was our place to hang. 6 Often the rhythm section—the drums, the bass—can be the heart of the band, but it’s interesting to hear you talk about the solid relationship between guitar and bass. It’s funny, a few weeks ago a friend of mine I haven’t seen for years found an One thing that’s synonymous with your productions is the breakdown. Can you talk about the breakdown and why it’s so infectious in club culture? Even in live R&B the breakdown is important. What we do is we break it down to almost nothing and then we rebuild the track in the listeners’ ears—that’s the Chic formula. You hear one instrument coming in at a time. You hear it on “Dance, Dance, Dance,” our first single, but you really hear us take it to a higher artform in the song “Good Times.” The Chic motto was: a song is an excuse to go to a chorus. That’s why our songs start with the chorus—that’s the hook, that’s what gets you. So the song is just an excuse to go to the chorus and the chorus is just an excuse to go to the breakdown. What was New York like in the ’80s? I know you were a regular at Studio 54 and all those classic spots. It was probably the most fun I’ve ever had. If you took that chunk out of life, you boys and girls wouldn’t be who you are. That era was so powerful and so bohemian, so revolutionary and so open, it gave us probably a false sense of power, a false sense of what we could do. In fact, the big companies were still in control but we felt like we were able to push against the boundaries. The great thing about music (unlike the other electronic arts) is that it doesn’t have to be translated. We can all understand it. I can go and play “Le Freak” in Russia and sing it just like that and everyone sings the songs. Think about it… How profitable is that? If you do a film, you’ve got to put in subtitles. If you do a book, in Spain no one can read it unless it’s translated. A record is super-profitable ’cause once you make it and you hit that number, you just ship it out the door. You don’t have to do any more work. Obviously, the powers that be really want to protect that business and I understand why that type of greed is very seductive. People who are in the business or want to get into the business: the first thing you have to do is make sure you love this. I never believed I’d make it to the level I made it to, but I always believed I’d be a working musician and be able to pay my bills and live the life I wanted to live, and that I’d be able to play music for a living. And if you want to do that, that’s absolutely achievable—you can do it, be you a DJ, singer, musician, whatever. It’s great to set your sights on the brass ring, but make sure you love what you’re doing, that even if you don’t get paid you still show up for work. Interviewed by Benji B at Red Bull Music Academy Madrid 2011. For the full Q&A, head to redbullmusicacademy.com/ lectures. inset Photo: Gianfranco Tripodo. opposite photo: Dan wilton The crowd at the Apollo was famously unforgiving. How did it feel when you walked on stage and saw the unforgiving, thumbs-up, thumbs-down audience? I was lucky. The very first show, this is what happened to me: I go and do the audition and it’s Betty Wright’s “Clean Up Woman,” which is in F-sharp and it’s 15 pages long. You have to have three music stands taped together. The bandleader tells me I don’t have to make the rest of the audition ’cause, “Wow, that’s incredible! You played ‘Clean Up Woman’ for 13 pages! You’re the man!” So they let me go walking around and told me to be back an hour before showtime. At the Apollo—I don’t know if they still do this—but they’d go, “The half is in,” then there was this siren sound and we’d all run around getting ready to play. There are a couple of guitar players, and we’re waiting to go onstage and I’m so focused ’cause this is the Apollo. I don’t want to lose this job. I’m getting $375 a week. I need to do this. I didn’t pay attention that they’d rolled in a coffin on the side of the stage. I’m looking at the conductor… He goes “Bang!” and So how do we go from that initiation experience to you starting your own band? At that point, I’d already been with Bernard Edwards and another guy named Harold Alexander and a guy named Gylan Kain who was in the Last Poets. So I was already gigging in New York and I had lots of other gigs, but I always tried to bring Bernard in. It just sounded better. early videotape of me and Bernard and the band that eventually became Chic. You could tell from that tape how we clicked. We carried this thing. We could’ve just been a trio, but there were five of us: two guitars, bass, drums, and a lead singer. We didn’t need horns—we had it in the parts and that’s what people were used to in the hood. If it didn’t sound like the record, you would get booed. Bernard and I were responsible for the melodic, the harmonic, and the bass parts. The drummers we figured would learn the grooves. We thought about doing it as a duo, because if Bernard and I showed up, we had it covered. And that’s basically why we were so tight. 7 feature feature NEW YORK IS BURNING Voguing moves out of the ballroom and into the limelight. WORDS Julianne Escobedo Shepherd PHOTOgraphy krisanne johnson 8 All photos taken at the Lab in Brooklyn, and at Vogue Knights at Escuelita’s in Manhattan, NYC 2008. feature feature D istilled to its core, voguing is ultimately about the look: having it, giving it, working it. Although it’s usually difficult to pinpoint the exact moment a street movement becomes a worldwide phenomenon, voguing’s roots in the mainstream can be traced to a single street address: 72 Thompson, a boutique in Soho where, in 1981, Swiss culture-maven Susanne Bartsch first started importing high-end clothing for nightlifers. (She would eventually expand to 465a West Broadway with help from silent partner Peter Gatien, the notorious proprietor of New York clubs like Limelight and Tunnel.) Decorated “like a Dali-esque funeral parlor,” according to fashion iconographer Simon Doonan’s Wacky Chicks, Bartsch’s store was the first place in New York City to sell clothing by then-burgeoning London avant-garde designers like John Galliano and Vivienne Westwood. Whatever was new and fashionable, the voguers coveted. Cutting-edge designs went a long way on the vogue runway, down which those with the most stylish walk, dance, and face won trophies and prizes—but most of all bragging rights—at drag balls that took place first in Harlem, then all over the city. Because many of those in the mostly poor, gay, trans, black and/or Latino ball scene weren’t moneyed enough to pay for a Galliano gown, they would descend on Bartsch’s stores to shoplift the next-level pieces she stocked. They’d drape themselves in designs that sparkled and flowed as they fashion-posed for uptown fame. Bartsch, familiar with “mopping” (stealing in drag parlance), learned to recognize her own grifted garments on the vogueball runways. “I would go to the balls,” she laughs, “and they would be wearing the items they had mopped from me!” Rather than disassociate with ball culture and the disadvantaged fashionistas who appreciated her taste, Bartsch felt her calling was to be in nightlife. Inspired by her “shining star”— the legendary vogue dancer Willi Ninja—she organized the Love Ball, the event that set off the fuse that exploded voguing all over the world. “I was blown away by the way this extremely socially and economically challenged community overcame their ob- 10 stacles,” says Bartsch. “They transformed potential roadblocks into brilliant creativity, art, beauty, and success.” Staged on May 10, 1989, the Love Ball was a high-end, celebrity-studded charity affair to raise funds for the Design Industry Foundation for AIDS. It was the first large-scale vogue ball that exposed outsiders to the culture en masse. Where balls had been held mostly in Harlem community centers or, on occasion, Midtown clubs, the Love Ball’s competitions were now being judged by the likes of supermodel Iman and Vogue magazine’s editor-at-large Andre Leon Talley. Never before had so many of New York’s wealthy and elite been exposed to ball culture. Legend has it (and Susanne Bartsch agrees) that the Love Ball was where Madonna saw voguing for the very first time. They raised $400,000 for AIDS research that night. Chi Chi Valenti, a journalist and the “Brooke Astor of New York nightlife” (as Marc Jacobs called her), would write in the program for the Love Ball’s 1991 sequel that the first event was “simultaneously a massive coming-out party for the uptown ball culture, and the end of a certain naiveté that had been inherent in that culture.” A year later, Madonna would release “Vogue,” with a David Fincher-directed video starring Ninja and voguers Jose and Luis Xtravaganza of the House of Extravaganza. Another Love Ball judge, Talking Heads’ David Byrne, told the New York Times, “It was kind of confusing. I saw things I never saw before.” What Byrne saw then, and what he might see at a ball now, are two entirely different animals. Ball culture has traced an unexpected path: voguing went from underground balls at local VFWs to dancing with Madonna on the Billboard charts before diving back underground. In 2008, the culture began bubbling up outside itself once more—interest is presently at its height, mostly owing to the increasing popularity of vogue house DJs like MikeQ and Vjuan Allure. Consequently, voguing has branched out as well, split up into subcategories of style and execution for the purpose of the dance battle. Vogue Femme and Vogue Dramatics are two of the most popular categories among younger voguers today, while Old Way and New Way are categories that delin- eate specific eras. Old Way, the fundamental platform of voguing, developed in the 1970s with poses cribbed directly from the extreme modeling in Vogue— hands on hips and elbows out in a turkey splay—but always incorporating balletic grace, Fred and Ginger’s creamy swiftness, and the strength and vim of martial arts. An Old Way voguer sliding down the runway might punctuate a catwalk with a pop, dip, and spin. New Way began developing in the 1990s and is more gymnastic than Old Way, with emphasis on elasticity and floor moves that incorporate splits and other leg contortions. With Vogue Femme, there are fluid moves like the duckwalk, a plié shuffle accompanied by butterflying hand language—its lucid femininity makes it especially appealing. “When you get into vogue categories, there are so many guidelines and rules for Old Way and New Way. Voguing Femme has more expression and elements to it, and a lot more people can do it because it’s more interpretive,” explains Vjuan Allure, who’s been DJing balls since 1999 and invented the mutation of Masters At Work’s “Ha Dance” (sometimes known as the “Allure Ha”) that most voguers still move to in 2013. If Femme is the least rigid, Vogue Dramatics is the flashiest style, and the one that most of America would recognize, thanks in part to Leyomi Mizrahi’s acrobatic, star-turn suicide dips (also known as “sha-blams”) on 2009’s America’s Best Dance Crew, which gave voguing its most visible mainstream platform since 1993 or so. Though Madonna had given vogue an unprecendented level of attention, the shallow exposure ultimately positioned it as a fad. Because most of America thought voguing was simply a dance—and weren’t invested in the culture from whence it came—it fell away from mass consciousness almost as quickly as it came. For some, this was fine: drag-ball culture had flourished since 1920s Harlem, and a lack of interest in voguing from outsiders didn’t change its path. But it had its own negative effects. As DJ Sprinkles wrote in the liner notes for his 2009 exegesis “Ball’r (Madonna-Free Zone),” “[Madonna] had taken a very specifically queer, transgendered, Latino, and African-American phenomenon and totally erased that context with her lyrics, ‘It makes no difference if you’re black or white, if you’re a boy or a girl.’ Madonna was taking in tons of money, while the Queen who actually taught her how to vogue sat before me in the club, strung out, depressed, and broke.” “What do you get out of [sha-blamming]? Slamming your fucking body on the floor,” laughs Michelle Visage. Where there is history, there will be traditionalists. Visage was first taught to vogue by Willi Ninja in the mid-’80s and, with the House of Ninja, was the first-ever biological woman to walk in a vogue ball. (True to her name, she was a face-and-body queen, and she often won her categories.) “Not to take away anything from these kids, and there is a talent to it, but I think there is not as much thought into it [now]. You gotta evolve, but where it came from is missing in New Way. Voguing has a base—it’s emulating models in a magazine. I think that’s really where my problem is. If somebody can morph the two, and keep some of the old aspects with the new sha-blamming death drop, that could be really interesting.” Visage still does Old Way, and performed in clubs several times a week through the ’80s, while both attending college and being the bleached-blonde lead in the freestyle trio Seduction. (Madonna once accused Visage of trying to steal her look, though watch the video for 1989’s “It Takes Two”—which is full of voguing—and it seems like it might be the other way around.) Some of the New Way acrobatics—and, to some, the de-purification of the dance—point back to its mainstreaming, as well as more formally schooled dance students joining the culture. Salim ‘Slam’ Gauwloos was one of them, a young professional dancer who joined Madonna’s troupe and became the handsome white face of her “Vogue” video. Jose Xtravaganza taught him the moves, which Slam now incorporates into his contemporary dance classes at Alvin Ailey Extension School. Most recently, a Longchamp ad starring supermodel and dancer Coco Rocha gave a touch of secret Old Way and catwalking to high-end handbag consumers. The mainstreaming of vogue was always something Willi Ninja saw from the corner of his eye. After Madonna’s house hit blew up, his dancing and style a crucial part of it, he became a fixture in music videos and walked the runway for Jean-Paul Gaultier. Most significantly, Ninja was the first voguer to bring the dance to an institutional-art level when he collaborated on postmodern works with choreographer Karole Armitage. He would later perform with Doug Elkins at the Joyce Theater, and take his work “The House of Ninja” to Summerstage in Central Park and to the prestigious Théâtre de Suresnes Jean Vilar at the Sorbonne in Paris. Ninja, who passed away in 2006 from AIDS-related heart failure, is remembered not just because he was one of the most beautiful dancers ever, but because he had the foresight and confidence to know that voguing could be preserved as an important American art form. Mainstreaming ball culture didn’t have to be solely about commerce. In the 21st century, painter and performance artist Rashaad Newsome understands this as Ninja did, and is a descendant of his legacy, preserving voguing and ball culture in institutions as much as possible. In 2010, Newsome brought voguing to the Whitney Museum via a multimedia performance and through two videos that showcased New York voguers Shayne Oliver and Twiggy Prada exhibiting Vogue Femme and New Way styles. “I think the reason voguing remained underground was because it was tied to the black and Latino gay community,” says Newsome. “The vogue scene came out of a need for a safe space for the black and Latino gay community to express themselves... As an artist, I feel that the practice of vogue is very much a part of performance-art history, and as museums care for, conserve, and collect artifacts and objects of artistic, cultural, or historical importance, I can think of no place better for the pieces to live.” The first time Newsome ever saw anyone voguing, it was 1993. He was 17, at a house party, and over the moon. “I was a huge hip-hop fan and I had never seen anyone ‘break’ like that,” he says. Though breakdancing and voguing are two entirely different styles set to entirely different music (hip-hop and house, respectively), there was a time in the 1980s when the two intersected and informed each other. Long before the dances were immortalized in museums and NYC’s hallowed dance halls, they criss-crossed on the streets and, most significantly, the clubs. The locus points were multigenre venues: voguers were at Red Zone, the Underground/the Sound Factory, Latin Quarter, and Escuelita; they bumped up with b-boys at the Loft and, later, the Tunnel. “Straight up, it all came up in the clubs and the streets,” says Jonathan Lee, who learned to dance from Robin Dunn, Crazy Legs, and Mr. Wiggles, and now teaches hip-hop dance at the Alvin Ailey Extension School. “Especially with voguing culture and the gay community, but people would dance in the club the way they wanted to dance. That’s where everyone could and can meet. People in the club are gonna dance regardless of their style. Even now, people who are lockers will lock to the music and voguers will vogue to the music—it just comes down to the DJ. At the club you can find everyone.” The Loft during the 1980s was the most significant intersection of b-boying and voguing, in which breakers and banjee boys— gay men who dress socio-typically “masculine”—would combine elements of Old Way and popping and locking, creating a still-enduring style known as “lofting.” But in the late 1980s, as b-boying’s popularity waned and voguing’s phased in, the denizens passed each other on the way. As voguing has been codified in museums and commercials, one important aspect to Newsome is how its past speaks to its future, and vice versa. “My interest in vogue is how it functions as a language that is constantly in a state of flux,” he says. “One cannot really go to a school and learn how to vogue. You go to where it’s happening, learn the language and make it your own. So in a lot of ways, whenever you encounter vogue, you’re encountering what’s in front of you and everything that came before it. [We should encourage] more experimentation of the language of vogue, so that it can live forever.” 11 COLUMNS COLUMNS L A N D M A RKS A column on the gear and processes that inform the music we make. par q uet c ourts ’ light up gold, one of 2013’s most celebrated rock albums, was recorded in the band’s practice space on a Tascam 388 eight-track reel-to-reel. Jonathan Schenke, who engineered and mixed the record, explains how the limitations of budget, space, and equipment forced him and the band into a number of unique creative decisions. RBMA: You do a lot of off-site recording. Jonathan Schenke: I started doing mobile recording out of necessity. My friends didn’t have money to rent a studio, so we’d record where we could. You can get solid sounds wherever, it just requires a slightly different approach. I generally close-mic everything, baffle the amps to cut down on bleed, and ditch the room mics. LO G O S The origins of iconic images from NYC's musical history explained. for original punk rockers Johnny, Joey, Dee Dee, and Tommy Ramone, less was more. Their economy of dress—tight tees, biker jackets, ripped jeans, and canvas sneakers— matched the efficiency of their sound: fast, compressed, unadorned rock ’n’ roll. An odd bunch from Forest Hills, Queens, the Ramones banded together in 1974 as brothers in musical ambition (if not blood). But friend and artist Arturo Vega visually communicated a “more is more” approach in their logo, enlarging the Ramones name in a heavy, highly visible typeface and incorporating the Great Seal of the United States. Vega designed many of the band’s graphics throughout the Ramones’ 22-year career. Born in Mexico, he was enamored with symbols of power, specifically the bald eagle in US heraldry. “I always thought of the Ramones as… an all-American band,” Vega told the Fringe Underground site. In a 2012 podcast interview with Going Off Track, he described modeling the eagle on the Ramones t-shirt design from the reverse side of an Eisenhower dollar. An early poster centers on Vega’s midsection and his eagle belt buckle, blown up from a photo-booth 12 self-portrait. Punk magazine cofounder and Ramones illustrator John Holmstrom recalls that image: “There was a vague feeling of S&M about it, and its simplicity to me defined the New York punk rock scene.” In 1976, the bicentennial year, Vega decided upon the eagle from the US seal, modified the iconography, and added the band members’ names (which would change with the lineup over time). The emblem first appeared on the back of the Ramones second album, Leave Home, released in January 1977. “Using a national symbol was a perfect move back then, because the punk scene was trying to distance itself from the hippie scene,” says Holmstrom. “What better way to do so than embrace patriotism?” For the band name, Vega wanted to be simple and direct with an all-caps sans serif, eventually settling on Franklin Gothic, the same font that would appear on the Run-DMC logo a decade later. Most of the original Ramones have passed on, but Ramones t-shirts are as present as ever. The logo, Holmstrom says, “has become so iconic, not just for the band but for all of -Sue Apfelbaum punk rock.” RBMA: Where did you track the Parquet Courts record? JS: We recorded Light Up Gold in the band’s practice space. We had the drums on one side of the room with the amps along the other, baffled with blankets and the other amps left in the space. We made a vocal-booth situation with some blankets hanging from a lofted storage shelf, and I had my setup on a table in the corner. It was all live-to-tape, but we were able to get enough isolation to do punch-ins and keep the mix tight. I was monitoring on headphones, which was the hardest part. RBMA: You recorded on the Tascam 388. How did the limitations of eight tracks affect your process? JS: It forces you to commit to your decisions, whether it’s combining multiple things on one track or just choosing a take. I love it. It makes us all work that much harder to get things right. Most of the percussion and background vocal takes are just one mic with everyone spaced around it to get a good blend. Or we’d have multiple instruments on the same track but in different sections of the song, like background vocals in the chorus and a guitar solo in the bridge. It’s kinda crazy how much you can fit onto eight tracks if you really try. RBMA: Would you say there’s a 388 sound? JS: The 388 definitely has its own sound, no doubt about it. It’s a quarter-inch eight-track, so you’re dealing with 1/32 inches for each track to store sound. Like any other form of compression, you start to lose detail in the low and high frequencies as you cram sound into that tiny space. The 388 does it in a cool, unique way—really thick, compressed, and midrange-y. There’s also this little bump in the upper frequencies before they roll off that makes the cymbals on Light Up Gold sound like static, this wild sounding ssshhhhh. It sounds “wrong,” but in a really good way. Crotona Park Jams The places, spaces, and monuments of NYC's musical past, present, and future. a p r evi ous edition of this column focused on Queensbridge Housing Projects, the largest housing development in North America and the onetime residence of hip-hop legends such as Marley Marl and Roxanne Shanté. If raw talent came from the projects, that talent was honed during park-jam sessions that would unfold in public spaces like basketball courts and parks across the city. One such public-gathering place is Crotona Park in the South Bronx, a few miles to the northwest of Queensbridge. Crotona was a major locus for jams in the ’70s and ’80s, but as hip-hop became a global phenomenon, the original park-jam scene faded. Christie Z-Pabon, an events producer who came to New York in 1996 from the Pittsburgh suburbs, was determined to maintain the tradition; she and her husband, Jorge Fabel Pabon, founded Tools of War, a grassroots organization devoted to preserving and promoting early hiphop culture. This summer marks the tenth anniversary of their Crotona Park Jams, a party for DJ pioneers that has featured Grand Wizard Theodore, Kool DJ Red Alert, Grandmaster Caz, Biz Markie, Grandmaster Flash, Jazzy Jay, Kurtis Blow, and Afrika Bambaataa, among others. “I think we’ve done great for Bronx tourism,” says Z-Pabon. “People can see what a true old-school park jam was like back in the day.” Why invite just legends? Z-Pabon says that, to her, it seems only right to do so. Tools of War hosts other, more intimate park jams in Harlem, such as Spanish Harlem Hop in White Park, and Digger’s Delight in St. Nicholas Park, but Crotona belongs to what Grandmaster Caz, the event’s longtime MC, calls the “big-boy stage.” “We give them space so that they don’t have to compete with Skrillex,” Z-Pabon says with a laugh. “Not that I’m inviting Skrillex.” Z-Pabon and her husband host the Crotona Park Jams every Thursday in July (because of the Fourth of July holiday, the 2013 season begins on July 11), so that you can personally witness history in the remaking. One thing has changed, however: “Grand Wizard Theodore says that he looks out into the audience and sees all the people from back in the day, but now they bring their kids,” says Z-Pabon. “We make it so everyone feels welcome.” -Adrienne Day Top 5… INFLUENTIAL NYC Nightclubs PRESENTED BY Though not a complete history of nightlife in New York, a handful of clubs have impacted the music world in such a way that their presence is still felt to this day. Here are Turntable Lab’s top five. THE BRONX past featured landmarks 1 max neuhaus’ 12 Daptone “times square” 2 The Thing Records 13 The Village Secondhand Store Gate/Life/Le Poisson Rouge 3 The loft 14 The Anchorage 4 Marcy Hotel 15 Electric Lady 5 Andy Warhol’s Studios Factory 6 Queensbridge Houses 1 7 7 Record Mart 8 Deitch 6 5 8 5 Projects 9 Area/Shelter/ 7 Vinyl 10 Studio B 15 11 Market Hotel QUEENS 5 13 3 9 8 2 10 8 MANHATTAN 4 12 14 12 11 What: Crotona Park Jams Where: South Bronx Why: Hip-hop legends spin for a new audience When: 2003-present STATEN ISLAND BROOKLYN 1 2 3 4 5 The Mudd Club It was the crossroads of the uptown and downtown scenes: punk rock, no wave, and everything in between. Cultural icons such as Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Byrne, and Madonna were all part of the historical transitional period exemplified by the Mudd Club. The Roxy The roller disco turned dance party supported hip-hop just as it was finding its voice and on its way to becoming a full-fledged cultural movement. Limelight The most notorious of Peter Gatien’s nightclubs, Limelight opened in a renovated gothic church in the early ’80s. The club hosted the quintessential ’90s club-kid scene. Techno, house, and industrial drew the masses, but it was the drugs that made the headlines. Tunnel Mecca Sundays at the Tunnel are forever marked in hip-hop history. Funkmaster Flex on the decks, Mobb Deep, Jay-Z, and thousands of others in attendance every week. It encapsulates the transition from Golden Era to jiggy in all its glory. APT APT was one of the last true Manhattan spots to offer quality music pre DJ-overload. It featured a lineup of solid selectors including our own Snack N Cmish, DJ Spinna, Bobbito, In Flagranti, and Lord Finesse sometimes all in the same week. -Nick sylvester 13 New York story Gray band members, clockwise from left: Vincent Gallo, Wayne Clifford, Nick Taylor, Michael Holman, Jean-Michel Basquiat, NYC 1981. new york story Going Gray The night I started a band with Basquiat. WORDS Michael Holman (as told to Mike Rubin) photo marina d Michael Holman played a key behind-the-scenes role in the explosion of New York City’s hip-hop culture in the late ’70s and early ’80s. Among his accomplishments, Holman introduced Malcolm McLaren to rap music; was the first writer to use the term “hip-hop” in print while at the East Village Eye; and promoted shows by artists like Afrika Bambaataa, Grand Wizard Theodore, and DJ Kool Herc at the East Village club Negril. Before all that, however, Holman brought uptown graffiti writers and the downtown art scene together for the first time. Holman shared with us the story of how he threw the historic Canal Zone party and the night he met artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, his future partner in the experimental noise band Gray. i was a wall street banker when I first came to New York. When I tell people that, their mouths drop. It’s hilarious, I know, but the first important job I got was as a junior credit analyst at Chemical Bank. [I was] ready to rise up the ranks because I graduated from the University of San Francisco with a degree in economics, so it was kind of a normal thing to do. I was there for a year, and on the weekends I was smoking pot with my friends. [During that time] I helped create the Canal Zone party, which brought the downtown and uptown artists together for the first time; [it was] a massive, historic party—and the first time I met Jean-Michel Basquiat—created by myself, Stan Peskett, and Fab 5 Freddy. Stan Peskett I knew from San Francisco. He was friends with the Tubes, and the Tubes were a band that I was in—that was my baptism into show business. When I came to New York, Peskett was like the only person I really knew. So, I’m working at Chemical Bank and on the weekends I’m hanging out with him and smoking pot and helping him with his installations that he’s doing for Fiorucci and Canal Jeans and things like that. One day I’m reading in the Village Voice a little article about the Fab Five graffiti group which was made up of Lee Quiñones, Slave, Doc, Mono, Slug, and Fab 5 Freddy, and what they were offering in this little article was, “We’ll come to your home or place of business and do giant graffiti burners for a price.” That was the little blurb that they had; it was really funny, and I called them up and invited them over. Now Stan and Freddy and I are hanging out, talking about cool ideas, talking about what [Freddy] was into, which was this whole urban uptown hip-hop thing—they were from Brooklyn mostly but I’m talking about Harlem and the Bronx—and so he’s hipping us to that world and we’re hipping him to our world and back and forth. We thought, “Why don’t we put on a party and invite all of the Fab Five crew to do giant burners and invite the downtown artist world so they can see what this is upfront and meet these guys—so that these artists from two different worlds, two different walks of life, can meet each other?” And so we did. [Canal Zone] happened on April 29, 1979, in a loft building on the north side of Canal Street. [It was at] Canal and Greenwich, about two blocks west of the river; it wasn’t too far off the West Side Highway. The Fab Five crew did these giant graffiti burners on giant sheets of clear plastic, which was a kind of novel thing to do, and we invited the whole downtown scene and it was an amazing party. Jean-Michel Basquiat had heard about this—he didn’t know any of us and none of us knew him, but we had heard of him because we had all seen the SAMO graffiti tags everywhere that he was doing with Al Diaz. Jean shows up early at the party, at the beginning before it really got started, told us who he was, and demanded to have participation as an artist in this, so we were like, “Yeah, sure.” That was the nature of those days. Somebody shows up with a shaved mohawk hairdo, a black guy looking so weird and different and avant-garde and says, “I want to be down too. I want to do something too!” The nature of that time was like, “Okay, sure, what do you want to do?” And so we got him a big nine-foot-wide roll of photo-grade paper, and he did a piece that said “Which of the following is omniprznt? A. Lee Harvey Oswald, B. Coca-Cola Logo, C. General Melonry, D. SAMO ©.” [Meanwhile] I was doing all these interviews on video as Word Man. I’m interviewing Lee Quiñones and I’m interviewing this person and that person and then I interview Jean. I was kind of doing this goofy thing where I would ask people questions and then pull the microphone away before they could answer and then ask another question. I don’t even know why I was doing it. I was just being a dick, being a California kid not knowing how to be cool in New York. So I’m interviewing Jean and I’m doing the same thing and he’s excited because he’s never been on video camera being interviewed. He was so far ahead of everyone; he was like five years younger than me, maybe 19 at the time, but he was 14 50 years older than me in terms of sophistication and understanding and making it as an artist. He was 50 years in front of everybody. And he knew, “I have to be at this party, I have to be videotaped, I have to be there.” And it panned out. It became part of his legacy, part of the fodder that built up his life story and career. I went up to him off camera and apologized, and he said, “No, that’s okay. You wanna start a band?” And I was like, “Sure.” I was off the hook—I was given this second chance to be cool again. In the beginning of Gray, it was myself, Jean, an old high-school buddy of Jean’s named Shannon Dawson (who would later go on to create Konk), and then Wayne Clifford. We played this angry, blaring, loud, confrontational music. Sometimes it was kind of mellow too, but it was very minimal, and I thought it was really good. It was like nothing anybody else did. Shannon played trumpet, Wayne played a keyboard, I played some drums, and Jean played either clarinet or this Wasp synthesizer that I got him. Shannon [eventually] left the band because his horn playing really wasn’t fitting—it was forcing us into a groove that wasn’t allowing us to really experiment and explore, so we kind of kicked him out of the band, I hate to say, and then we brought in Nick Taylor, who played guitar. Our attitude was like, “Let’s embrace the idea that we don’t know how to play our instruments and let’s only have people in the band who don’t know how to play instruments. Let’s approach the instruments in a new way. Let’s play them as if we were aliens from another world and we had no idea how the instrument was meant to be played, but we knew beautiful music and sound when we heard it.” We were completely turning the meaning of the instrument on its head and finding new ways to create unexpected sounds from the instruments, and that became the real cornerstone of our music. Sometimes we’d play our instruments in a conventional way, sometimes we wouldn’t. Jean started to play the electric guitar with a little file, on the floor, with the strings completely loose; he’d be pulling this metal file across the guitar strings and it would be making these plink-plunk-plink-plink-plunking sounds. [He would also] play the Wasp synthesizer in such a way that… I have that same synthesizer and I cannot figure out how he got these sounds, just brilliant sounds. “Ignorant” was a term that we used back then that kind of captured who we were. A carelessly done or casually created work of art or sound or music that should not have worked but [actually] worked brilliantly—that was our definition of ignorant. So like a Godard film would be, “Oh man that is so ignorant,” or a piece of music or sound you made or the way you were dressed or painting or whatever. The greatest compliment you could give it was ignorant. It was something that shouldn’t work, [that] should be horrible but is brilliant, and that was our favorite aesthetic. It was our aesthetic: ignorance. If we had stayed together at this critical juncture in ’81, we probably would have released music. But here’s what happened: Jean blew up as a painter. He did that PS1 show and his career just exploded. He was like, “I’m not going to be a famous painter who’s in a band.” That [would have been] okay [for an] unknown in the early days, in the late ’70s, but by ’81 or ’82, for Jean to have blown up the way he was going to, he had to design his career correctly. He had to be very calculating, and one of the calculations was that he had to leave the band, and it kind of spread us to the far corners. I got heavy into film, Nick got heavy into DJing, Wayne got heavy into painting, so we kind of all went our different ways. But we would have released music if we had stayed together a little longer. Michael Holman is a visual artist and filmmaker who teaches at the School of Visual Arts. He was one of the authors of the screenplay for Basquiat and the host of the pioneering early ’80s hip-hop TV show Graffiti Rock. 15 Brian Eno 77 Million Paintings "disorienting, challenging, and—after a few minutes of concentration— beautiful." -Huffington Post THROUGH june 2 145 W 32nd St Red Bull Music Academy New York 2013 April 28 – May 31 236 ARTISTS. 34 NIGHTS. 8000 ANTHEMS. 1 CITY. www.redbullmusicacademy.com HERALD SQUARE (B D F M N Q R) 77MP 31 ST Discover More On Red Bull Music Academy Radio TUNE IN AT RBMARADIO.COM 7 AVE 32 ST 7 AVE 12pm-8pm (Closed Mondays) suggested donation $5 PENN STATION ( 1 2 3 A C E ) 33 ST