Friday, January 27, 2012

Opening Today: For Rent

Taken from press release:

The Transients present their first group exhibition:

For Rent

Opening Friday, January 27th, from 8 p.m.-1 a.m.
Open hours Saturday from 4 - 6 p.m.
3224 Indiana Ave, 2nd Floor
St. Louis, MO

For the exhibition For Rent, Travis Howser and Gina Grafos have transformed their soon-to-be former apartment into a temporary gallery space.

There is a time when domestic and commercial spaces sit vacant in anticipation of their future occupants. Spatial vacancy is an ephemeral period of time potentially ranging from hours to days to years. This exhibition is a result of planned choices manifesting an opportunity to consciously inhabit this space during a time of vacancy.
For Rent will include works by Jessi Cerutti, Jake Cruzen, Bryan Eaton, Dani Kantrowitz, Kelda Martensen, Dan Solberg, B.j. Vogt, and letters to Mick Jagger (collected by Travis Howser). 

In addition, J. Taylor Wallace will host a “Tea Parody” and Sarah Palin will be cooking up more phallacies.

To gain access to 3224 Indiana Ave 2nd Floor, please follow the posted 'for rent' signs through gate to the rear of the building.

For more information about this and other events organized by The Transients please visit: http://thetransience.blogspot.com/
Please also visit the Facebook event page for updates and to RSVP: http://www.facebook.com/events/327372650617049/

The Transients are a collaborative team, currently consisting of Gina Grafos, Travis Howser, and B.j. Vogt.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Review: The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past (WiiVC/SNES)

Should we review old games as artifacts or in the same light as their contemporary brethren?  Even if a new title is released with decidedly retro stylings, does its position upon release matter more than any time in the future?  The relevancy of art often fluctuates based on where a society or individual is in their lifespan at a given point in time.  I wonder how people 10 years from now will view retro-styled games produced in 2010, 2011, or 2012.  Will they be seen as artifacts the same way as games from the 1980s, or has this pixel-art fetishism somehow put things on an even keel?

I've now played every console Legend of Zelda game with the exception of Skyward Sword.  Most recently I took my maiden voyage through the oft lauded SNES entry: A Link to the Past.  It's impossible to view this game in a vacuum where I can unremember collecting the Triforce some 7 times prior.  Yet it's also unrealistic to expect this game to be iteratively better than say, Twilight Princess.  Considering these factors and most of all my general adoration for the Zelda franchise, I was still truly stunned to find myself in an early dungeon of LttP almost totally lacking the desire to continue forward.  Ultimately I did push on, partly due to my self-inflicted charge to finish games that I purchase, but also because I possessed optimism that this version of Hyrule could grow on me.

LttP is the template for almost every Zelda game that has followed it.  I had assumed that these precursory duties belonged to N64 showpiece Ocarina of Time, but now understand that game more for what it did to change how the series' core mechanics were implemented.  The structure of the Zelda game and its modern tropes fall square on LttP's shoulders.  Master Sword?  Check.  Parallel worlds?  Check.  Spin attack?  Check.  Some of these traits are more integral than others, but my point is to illustrate how far-reaching and specific LttP's role as a mold for the franchise was and how difficult it is to play in 2012 as anything other than a piece of history.

In light of Nintendo's recent bend of pedantic in-game instructions for how to use Wii controls, it's refreshing to play a Zelda game that hearkens back to simpler times when you could press "start," enter a cave, pick up a sword and begin an adventure.  A pitfall of this strategy is that it requires a high level of preconceived curiosity and exploratory desire on the part of the player that is more difficult to achieve when the world is somewhat familiar and lacking the visual "awe" factor that usually accompanies these flagship titles at initial release.  Additionally LttP offers a decent amount of player choice, which is always neat to see in older games, but once again this relies heavily on your own initiative since the game merely suggests where to try next, rarely narrowing where you can actually explore.

Put in perspective of the whole Zelda bloodline, LttP feels the most unique in its dungeon layouts.  You know the drill when it comes to the objective list in a given dungeon: fight enemies, locate map and compass, unlock doors, pull switches, discover special item, and defeat the boss.  However, the physical blueprints for these levels use verticality to add a dimension that was not a part of previous 2D Zeldas (I can't speak to DS entries).  This is implemented in individual spaces with ladders and staircases that lead to higher ledges and walkways, but also on a more macro level with the dungeons being multiple stories high.  In a single room this changes the way you approach enemies, perhaps prompting you to remain on higher ground, hurling pots at enemies below instead of jumping down into a sword fight.  Considering the entire dungeon as a puzzle, some rooms are placed directly above others, encouraging you to blow holes in the floor to gain access to depths otherwise unreachable.  This puzzle design sensibility has been carried into the polygonal Zeldas out of necessity to make a compelling three-dimensional experience.  In LttP the verticality feels truly innovative; it's version of Hyrule might not be "round," but it's definitely more than just a flat surface.

I began to approach sitting down to play more LttP similarly to filling out a Sudoku, as it required me to be in the mood for solving that particular brand of puzzle.  I feel a little bad constantly conjuring up references to other Zelda games in this review, but how else can a game like this be evaluated in 2012?  It's a franchise so staunchly rooted in its formula that it would almost be like writing a Madden review that doesn't acknowledge the previous year's game's existence.  Often with Zelda games, style differentiation is enough to warrant giving each entry a try.  Nintendo consistently trots out top-notch art direction no matter how underpowered the hardware they work with may be.  Perhaps Zelda games really are meant to be played exclusively around the time they originally come to market.  This allows enough time between doses to build the demand for a new version, while the visual changes make things appear just different enough to distinguish it from the last one.

On the other hand LttP is still a game worth playing on its own merits, as many of my gripes are personal in nature.  Uncovering the original appearances of so many Zelda standbys was a pleasant surprise.  The overall difficulty was spot on.  There's little more thrilling in an action sequence than besting a powerful foe by the skin of your teeth, which LttP offered more than a couple times.  I wouldn't say the game ever really got its hooks in me, but it came closest with its brainteasingly tricky puzzles.  I faulted LttP's early game for asking the player to bring too much curiosity to the table, but once I began accomplishing the games tasks, their occasionally harrowing nature had me intrigued enough that I was eager to see what else those clever Nintendo developers had up their sleeves.

Completing Twilight Princess granted me with a cautious optimism for the future of my beloved franchise, but A Link to the Past has left me with a sense of acceptance that Zelda is what Zelda is.  What it is is something pretty grand though.  It may be built around a formulaic structure, but it's a system that works.  My only fear is a personal one: that I've exasperated this series' magical hold on me.  Though, since I've laid out that I think these games are optimally played when they're most current, I suppose I should withhold judgment until reporting back post-Skyward Sword.  The fact that I'd even seek to play more Zelda after this must count for something, right?

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Best Music of 2011 (Part 3 of 3)

10. Africa HiTech - Out In The Streets VIP
This year I learned that VIP can stand for "variation in production."  This is mainly used in drum n' bass circles when a producer remixes his/her own track drawing from mostly the original components.  "Out In The Streets" isn't the first time I came across this, but it was the first time when a VIP blew me away to such a degree that I had to uncover more about what's going on behind it.  Africa HiTech's self-titled debut LP is solid all the way through, but "Out In The Streets" is the footwork-y standout.  The VIP takes that flurry of skittery snares and cymbals and straps them to a dnb rocket.  AHT's post-LP single asked "Do You Really Wanna Fight?" in a way that talked down aggressors by puffing their chests.  "Out In The Streets VIP" shows that they were serious when they coyly asked that.

9. The Field - Looping State of Mind LP
I've gushed so much in the past about how great Axel Willner is at what he does, that I honestly don't have all that much more to say.  When I first listened to Looping State of Mind I simply thought of it as more music from The Field, and I'm perfectly happy to have it.  That said, LSoM doesn't hit the pleasure centers quite as hard as some of the producer's previous long players, opting for a more sustained bliss than the hills and valleys of his more dramatic pieces.  The Field has produced a more balanced album as a result, which I imagine has to be part of the reason I've seen it showing up on other people's lists who I've never known to be Field fans.  If broader appeal(?) means Willner can continue on with his practice though, I eagerly await the next dose.

8. Zomby - Dedication LP
Zomby is one of the most difficult producers to pin down in a genre.  He has tropes that recur here and there (8-bit blips, gunshots, airhorns), but to say that this collection actually defines what Zomby sounds like is a gross over simplification.  On Dedication we're turned in yet another new direction, and this one's pretty dark (see song titles in the album art).  It's hard to listen to Dedication and not feel a sense of lurking.  Ghostly synths haunt some tracks juxtaposed with poppy hi-hats that make me sense one sound is hunting the other.  Dedication is music of contained unrest, possessing the ability to remain calm in the face of pure terror.  Playing this while driving at night out in a rural area might be the ideal way to listen to it, but I don't think I have the constitution for that sort of thing.

7. Cut Copy - Zonoscope LP
2011 was more of an "album year" than one of singles for me, and I think that changeover is easily paralleled with the way I listened to Cut Copy's latest.  The reason I never clocked a multitude of replays with In Ghost Colours had most to do with the fantastic remixes that were being released of that album's singles, which were more attractive to me at the time.  Now in 2011, I still DJ, but it's not the primary reason I'm seeking out Cut Copy tracks.  I think the singles simply got stuck in my head and I found myself cycling choruses in my mind, which drew me into Zonoscope enough to realize that every song on it had an infectious hook somewhere.  I may still seek out remixes that have risen to the top, but I feel like my heart has already staked its loyalty with the originals.

6. James Blake - Limit To Your Love
Reactions to James Blake's reintroduction to the world as a pretty boy, piano bar crooner have been incredibly varied depending on which circle you travel in.  With this emergence, Blake was suddenly on the big, Pitchfork-christened indie music circuit which many latched on to, some of whom would then turn around in traditional, popular backlash form.  I liked James Blake as an underground UK "dubstep" producer, and was really more shocked than anything else when his first true vocal outing, "Limit to your Love" was shared around the Internet.  Perhaps even more surprising to me, was that this Feist cover was the best thing Blake had yet produced.  There's a variety of great elements to dissect here, but none more impactful than James Blake's use of silence.  When all of the sounds drop out, that silence perfectly encapsulates the depression of being left behind, only to have those old hopeful feelings rush back again when those familiar piano chords signal the music's return.

5. Pictureplane - Thee Physical LP
I wish I had it in me to attempt to create music the way Travis Egedy of Pictureplane does, but I feel like only some bizarro world version of myself would actually be of a mindset of produce and perform this kind of stuff.  Egedy's meditations on the ways human relationships evolve amidst oceans of technological advancements are messy in the best way possible.  The sampling techniques employed here are very DIY, laying out repetitions that are pretty raw in a way that nicely reflects on the digital production process.  The samples themselves are pitchshifted diva calls, paired with sped-up and slowed-down trance synths, a nice correlation to the current US pop landscape which itself is basically a form of trance music.  Egedy's breathy vocals are the cherry on top, rounding out Thee Physical as a concept album that absolutely delivers on its core ideas without sacrificing any of its hooky madness.

4. The Rapture - How Deep Is Your Love?
Great singles can sometimes serve as enthusiastic hype-men for upcoming albums.  A couple years ago when M83 put "Couleurs" on the band's website prior to Saturdays=Youth, I was ready to preemptively grant it "album of the year" status.  Though my expectations were a bit more reserved for The Rapture due to their extended hiatus and member shake-up, "How Deep Is Your Love?" had me as juiced to see what else the band had in store as I could have hoped.  After repeat listens, In The Grace Of Your Love may be kind of a mixed bag, but that lead single still shines brighter than perhaps any other individual song released in 2011.  Almost all of The Rapture's best traits are on exhibit with this one: Luke Jenner yelping at top-range, infectious piano-stabs, music-centric chanting ("Let me hear that song!"), and a saxophone breakdown.  The band may have shed their punk-infused adolescence, but they've kept their ability to make a track that is equal parts charged rock song and heart-wrenching dance cut.

3. Andy Stott - Passed Me By / We Stay Together LP
Andy Stott's 2011 output feels like it was made just for when I'm in a "music-listening" mood.  The compiled EPs isolationist aesthetics are perfectly suited to the earbud-donning lifestyle.  It's amazing how cold and distant the music comes off despite all the vinyl scratch and static fuzz on display here, which normally lend a homespun warmth the the proceedings.  Stott slows his tempos down to gurgling chugs that sound as if the inertia continues to fight back.  The beats hit like implosions, gasping for air instead of rippling out across the dancefloor.  The same way The Field floored me with their debut by producing sample-based techno music that sounded like nothing else, Andy Stott has done likewise here with Passed Me By / We Stay Together, a combination of the two EPs released separately this year, along with a couple very worthy bonus tracks.  I'd like to convince more people to give this stuff a spin (that's why I include the YouTube links), but I also know this is the type of music that's already in my wheelhouse and probably in few others.

2. M83 - Hurry Up, We're Dreaming LP
Another year, another M83 album in my top 2.  Anthony Gonzales was heavily influenced by the stadium-filling rock bands he was touring with as he conceptualized this double LP.  I totally understand where this is coming from in terms of his bold vocal performance on Hurry Up, We're Dreaming, but everything else about the album reads as studio wizardry, not live performance improvisation.  "Wizardry" is actually an understatement as the diversity of instruments and styles M83 pulls together here is masterful.  Woodwinds, strings, guest vocalists and more are culled together to form a truly bombastic soundstage.  Gonzales hasn't forsaken the signatures of his past work either, giving shoegaze, 80s synth-pop, and cinematic dreamscapes equal footing.  Hurry Up, We're Dreaming basically has everything an M83 fan would have already wanted, plus Gonzales showing off his pipes like never before.  This album showcases just how great a work of art can be when an artist bares their soul to craft it.  M83's latest is a testament to dreaming big and following through on that vision to the fullest.

1. Gang Gang Dance - Eye Contact LP
In interviews, members of Gang Gang Dance have spoken of this year's album as being a moment of clarity for them.  Signs of this are apparent even before listening to Eye Contact, from the song titles ("Glass Jar," "Thru and Thru") and sharp cover art.  In comparison to their previous LP, the experimental Saint Dymphna, Eye Contact definitely has a direct focus; a successful melding of bizarre vocal stylings, pan-global tribal influences, and modern electronic instrumentation.  Perhaps it goes without saying that everything works well together (there are even designated interludes), but the real reason this album is so good is that every song is fantastic in a totally different way than the last.  Leaving things here, the decision about whether to put this or M83 on top might as well been a toss-up.  The scales tipped in GGD's favor primarily based on the incredible strength of the 11-minute epic, lead-off track "Glass Jar."  The first half of the track is all build-up; constantly evolving and reshaping, but always growing.  It would be all for naught if the payoff weren't so huge when the drums finally kick in, but GGD delivers on this too, offering up a psychedelic whirlwind of synths, beats, and voices that a lesser band would have had to divide amongst three or more pieces.  If GGD has one core strength, it's their ability to draw from influences that have very concrete connotations, and redefine them.  "Glass Jar" and the whole of Eye Contact performing this feat would be impressive enough, but to do so under the "guise" of clarity shows they trust their listeners to trust them back, which I certainly did.