Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Dave Barry's year in review: 2009


The Miami Herald published Dave Barry's always excellent, always funny year in review today:

The big health story in April is the rapid spread of swine flu, a dangerous new virus strain developed by the makers of Purell. Public anxiety over the flu increases when Vice President Joe Biden, demonstrating his gift for emitting statements, declares on the Today show that he would not recommend traveling by commercial airplane or subway. A short while later, White House spokesperson Robert Gibbs assures reporters that he is "not aware of any 'Vice President Joe Biden.'"

Read the full story here.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Christmas mix tapes!

Almost every year during the holidays, I make a mixtape to send out to my friends. I've always thought that the gift of new music was just about the best thing you could get, and this is just my way of sharing the wealth. My friends are increasingly spread out all over the world, but I still like to keep the tradition alive. So this year, I made an MP3 mix (which turned into two mixes, because my tastes are too diverse to make one coherent mix!), and sent them out digitally. Here's the playlists:


Rewind, it's 2009
01. Amores Bongo : The Herbalizer
02. Hip Hop : N.A.S.A
03. Joyride : Giovanca
04. Champion (Remix) :  Brother Ali
05. Requiem For a Neo-Con : General Elektriks
06. Warrior's Dance : The Prodigy
07. I Like It, I Love It (Fumbata mix) : Fumbata feat. Lyrics Born
08. Dirt off your Android : Jaydiohead
09. You're Not All That : The Herbaliser feat. Jessica Darling
10. Small Axe : The Wailers
11. Haus Am See : Peter Fox
12. You Can Do It : Giovanca
13. City Livin' : G. Love & Special Sauce


Relax, it's 2009
01. United States of Eurasia/Collateral Damage : Muse
02. Teardrop : Jose Gonzalez
03. Isn't It a Lovely Night? : The Decemberists
04. The Hazards of Love 4 (The Drowned) : The Decemberists
05. Ley De Gravedad : Ojos De Brujo
06. Deep Water : Portishead
07. The Lowest Lows : Fumbata
08. Paper Bag : Goldfrapp
09. Exogenesis: Symphony Part 3 (Redemption) : Muse
10: Out of This World (Version 138) : The Art of Noise


Send me an email if you like the mix!




Monday, December 14, 2009

Reco: Peter Fox

Peter Fox is my new fave. His orchestrial take on hip hop production just blows my mind. Add in a drumline in monkey masks and I'm hooked.







And lest you think this blog is becoming too multi-cultural, I promise to feature an english-speaking artist on my next reco. Maybe.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Need music for your next movie or YouTube video?


If you are looking for free, legal music for your next video production or YouTube movie, look no further than www.fumbata.com.

As an independent producer, I am always looking for ways to spread the word, and I'd love to hear my music synched your next video. The music on www.fumbata.com is naturally cinematic. There are many different styles, tempos, and moods to choose from. And the best part? It's all completely free. Just download the MP3s and use them. All tracks are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, so as long as you aren't making commercial work, you are completely free to use the music however you want.

The same goes to you commercial producers, excepting the "free" part. But don't feel left out! You are also more than welcome to use these tracks for commercial works: my licensing fees are very reasonable, and clearances are simple and immediate. I'm even available for contract work.

Happy filming!

Food, Inc.



Food, Inc. is a beautifully made, though-provoking movie about the food production industry.

This is no Micheal-Moore schlock-fest. It's a highly polished review of some of the atrocities committed by the people that make our food. And by the "people who make our food", I'm not talking about the hard-working farmers, low-wage workers and illegal immigrants that actually make our food, but the four to six powerful corporations that have those workers, our government, and us securely under their thumbs.

It's definitely an important movie, one that every American should see. And don't worry: it's not all doom-and-gloom. Although it presents us with (yet another) shocking and disheartening issue to worry about, it also shows us the solution.

Simply by choosing organic, natural foods more often, we can send a clear message to the food industry, and eat healthier, yummier food in the process! What's to lose? The only downside I can see is that organic food usually costs more. But consider this: for every 25 cents that you pay extra now, you're probably saving yourself thousands on future healthcare and prescription drugs to combat the damage that you are doing to your body by eating non-organic food!

Monday, November 16, 2009

Reco: Cornelius



Cornelius is a Japanese guitarist/producer that makes beautiful music. He uses clean, minimal sounds and has a glorious way of looking at music. Many of his songs feature delayed bleeps and percussive sounds, with layered vocal harmonies that build up almost mathematically.

His first album is a psychedelic romp that sounds like the Beach Boys experimenting with a sampler, and his albums become progressively more subtle and melodic after that. This video is Cornelius at his best, from his latest album, Sensuous.

Monday, November 09, 2009

Reco: Giovanca


Giovanca Ostiana is a soul singer from Amsterdam. She's enjoyed mild success here in the Netherlands, but this will probably be a nice surprise for you non-Dutchies. Her music is an uplifting, jazzy take on that new-soul-that-sounds-like-old-soul thing.

We saw her perform last year at the Amsterdam Roots festival, and she was every bit as warm and lovely live as she is on the album. Great band, too. Her second single, "Joyride", is the one that's been stuck in my head all day, but I also love her first single, "On My Way". The very nice video is by local Amsterdam photographer Yamandu. I like his style, and I swear I'm gonna hire him first opportunity I get.

ADE NEXT
















A few weeks back, I attended the Amsterdam Dance Event NEXT conference. The Amsterdam Dance Event (ADE) is the world's premier dance music conference, a 4 day conference and performance festival that attracts all the biggest names in the dance scene. ADE NEXT is their platform for new talent, and takes place on the last day of the conference.

I attended a few workshops to learn more about the ins and outs of the music biz, and had 2 one-on-one review sessions with A&R reps. They both gave me good reviews, and confirmed what I already knew: that the most suitable commercial application for my music is synching to film and TV, and not really suitable for mainstream dance floors/DJs.

The best part of the day was ironically the part I was most nervous about: the Demolition Room. At the end of the day, a panel of 5 industry heavyweights (Moderator: Dave Clarke (GB) With: Hidde Pluymert (Melkweg, NL), Stacey Pullen (US), Jonty Skrufff (Skrufff Media & Skrufff.com, DE) and Tommie Sunshine (Brooklyn Fire, US), pictured above) auditioned demo CDs that the attending producers submitted earlier in the day. Their favorite track would win a prize package including studio time and a bad-ass custom bike.

They had pre-selected about 12 demos. As they cued up the first one, Dave Clarke asked if the producer was in the crowd of about 200 people. No one answered, and as he proceeded to critique the track, Clarke sneered, "you'll probably be here if we decide we like it". Now I was really nervous. Lo and behold, my CD was next up! I cautiously identified myself and answered a few questions, and they played the track "Ghost". I thought it sounded like shit over that sound system - too much high end - but to my surprise the entire panel liked it and gave it high reviews!

After going through the rest of the other CDs, 2-3 of which I would have voted for over my own, they announced the 4 finalists, and I was one of them! I'll be honest, I didn't go there expecting or even wanting to win anything, but now that bike was looking awfully nice. They gave each of the finalists another listen, and mine got another round of favorable head nods, but in the end they chose one of the other tracks, all of which were quite deserving.

I left with some new contacts and a good feeling in my heart. I have a better idea of where I fit into the music world, and the whole experience re-confirmed that I'm exactly where I want to be. See you at ADE NEXT year.

Sunday, November 01, 2009

Fumbata.com is green!




I just found out that www.Fumbata.com is 100% powered by wind power. How cool.

Friday, October 23, 2009

The Fun Theory



We'd all like to make choices that are good for the environment, our health, or our communities, but we're lazy bastards. The good news is that people are willing to do the right thing, as long as it is fun, too. The Fun Theory did a few social experiments to prove the point, and their results were more than conclusive. I posted one here, but you can check them all out at their website.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

The Heist Series



Brian Gossett makes excellent mix tapes. He's made a whole series of them, called the Heist Series. Each is a soundtrack to a different fictional film, and conjures the feeling of the titular cities. The music's great, the cover art is top-notch, and you can download it all at his blog.

Blue Hawaii

Abigail Prentice: Mr Gates, are you sure you can handle a teacher and 4 teenage girls?
Chad Gates (Elvis): I'll sure try... 



Wednesday, October 21, 2009

The best bike I've ever owned

...is also the crappiest bike I've ever owned. It has backpedal brakes. It has two gears, which you change by backpedalling, which means that it changes gears every time you brake. All the chrome bits are rusted. It squeaks when you pedal, and clicks when you don't. It is too tall for me. It has a big, very non-aerodynamic crate strapped to the front for the dog to ride in. It used to have mudflaps, but they fell off. The entire bike is worth less than the two locks I use to lock it up at night.

I absolutely love it.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Untitled Sound Objects by Swiss artists Zimoun and Pe Lang


Untitled Sound Objects (Installations 2005-2008) by Zimoun + Pe Lang from ZIMOUN VIDEO ARCHIVE on Vimeo.


Untitled Sound Objects, Zimoun and Pe Lang, 2008

District 9


We saw District 9 last night. It was a gripping movie, but the melodramatic script and numerous gross-out moments kept it from being great.

The hidden message is what made it worthwhile. Like all the greatest science fiction, the premise was a thinly-veiled metaphor for a pressing social issue in current events. In the case of District 9, I saw it as a metaphor for the refugee situation in Africa right now. Hopefully others will also see this message, and it will call new attention to the horrors that persist to this day all across Africa.

Maldives holds underwater cabinet meeting to highlight global warming threat


In a moment of sheer PR brilliance, the Maldives government held an underwater cabinet meeting to highlight the threat of global warming and rising ocean levels to this low lying nation.

President Mohamed Nasheed and his cabinet signed a document calling for global cuts in carbon emissions, and spent half an hour on the sea bed, communicating with white boards and hand signals. Only three cabinet members missed the stunt.

The Maldives sit an average of 2.1 metres (7ft) above sea level, and would be one of the first countries in the world to be wiped out if sea levels do rise. President Nasheed has started a fund to relocate the country should this happen. Will the Maldives be the first entire country to become global warming refugees?

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Side Effects

By Steve Martin
This article originally appeared in The New Yorker , April 13, 1998


DOSAGE: take two tablets every six hours for joint pain.

SIDE EFFECTS: This drug may cause joint pain, nausea, head-ache, or shortness of breath. You may also experience muscle aches, rapid heartbeat, and ringing in the ears. If you feel faint, call your doctor. Do not consume alcohol while taking this pill; likewise, avoid red meat, shellfish, and vegetables. O.K. foods: flounder. Under no circumstances eat yak. Men can expect painful urination while sitting, especially if the penis is caught between the toilet seat and the bowl. Projectile vomiting is common in thirty per cent of users-sorry, fifty per cent. If you undergo disorienting nausea accompanied by migraine and raspy breathing, double the dosage. Leg cramps are to be expected; one knee-buckler per day is normal. Bowel movements may become frequent-in fact, every ten minutes. If bowel movements become greater than twelve per hour, consult your doctor, or any doctor, or just anyone who will speak to you. You may find yourself becoming lost or vague; this would be a good time to write a screenplay. Do not pilot a plane, unless you are among the ten per cent of users who experience "spontaneous test-pilot knowledge." If your hair begins to smell like burning tires, move away from any buildings or populated areas, and apply tincture of iodine to the head until you no longer hear what could be taken for a "countdown." May cause stigmata in Mexicans. If a fungus starts to grow between your eyebrows, call the Guinness Book of World Records. May induce a tendency to compulsively repeat the phrase "no can do." This drug may cause visions of the Virgin Mary to appear in treetops. If this happens, open a souvenir shop. There may be an overwhelming impulse to shout out during a Catholic Mass, "I'm gonna wop you wid da ugly stick!" You may feel a powerful sense of impending doom; this is because you are about to die. Men may experience impotence, but only during intercourse. Otherwise, a powerful erection will accompany your daily "walking-around time." Do not take this product if you are uneasy with lockjaw. Do not be near a ringing telephone that works at 900 MHz or you will be very dead, very fast. We are assuming you have had chicken pox. You also may experience a growing dissatisfaction with life along with a deep sense of melancholy-join the club! Do not be concerned if you arouse a few ticks from a Geiger counter. You might want to get a one-month trial subscription to Extreme Fighting. The hook shape of the pill will often cause it to become caught in the larynx. To remove, jam a finger down your throat while a friend holds your nose to prevent the pill from lodging in a nasal passage. Then throw yourself stomach first on the back portion of a chair. The expulsion of air should eject the pill out of the mouth, unless it goes into a sinus cavity, or the brain. WARNING: This drug may shorten your intestines by twenty-one feet. Has been known to cause birth defects in the user retroactively. Passing in front of TV may cause the screen to moiré. Women often feel a loss of libido, including a whole octave lowering of the voice, an increase in ankle hair, and perhaps the lowering of a testicle. If this happens, women should write a detailed description of their last three sexual encounters and mail it to me, Bob, Trailer Six, Fancyland Trailer Park, Encino, CA. Or E-mail me at hot-guy.com. Discontinue use immediately if you feel that your teeth are receiving radio broadcasts. You may experience "lumpy back" syndrome, but we are actively seeking a cure. Bloated fingertips on the heart-side hand are common. When finished with the dosage, be sure to allow plenty of "quiet time" in order to retrain the eye to move off stationary objects. Flotation devices at sea will become pointless, as the user of this drug will develop a stone-like body density; therefore, if thrown overboard, contact your doctor. (This product may contain one or more of the following: bungee cord, plankton, rubber, crack cocaine, pork bladders, aromatic oils, gunpowder, corn husk, glue, bee pollen, dung, English muffin, poached eggs, ham, Hollandaise sauce, crushed saxophone reeds.) Sensations of levitation are illusory, as is the sensation of having a "phantom" third arm. Users may experience certain inversions of language. Acceptable: "Hi, are how you?" Unacceptable: "The rain in Sprain slays blainly on the phsssst." Twenty minutes after taking the pills, you will feel an insatiable craving to take another dose. AVOID THIS WITH ALL YOUR POWER. It is advisable to have a friend handcuff you to a large kitchen appliance, ESPECIALLY ONE THAT WILL NOT FIT THROUGH THE DOORWAY TO WHERE THE PILLS ARE. You should also be out of reach of any weapon-like utensil with which you could threaten friends or family, who should also be briefed to not give you the pills, no matter how much you sweet-talk them.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Sony Ericson headphones animation



I'm lovin' this animation for Sony Ericson headphones by Swedish animator Kristofer Strom. The sound design and music are so very nice.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Chinza Dopeness



Chinza Dopeness is a Japanese rapper who just released his first album: 100% Rap. He's got a nice video-based website to promote it. But first, check out these dope videos!

Friday, September 18, 2009

Incredibox



Check out this delightful flash beatbox remixer thingamabob!

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Total surface area required to fuel the world with solar power

We don't have an energy problem - we have a conversion problem.

Many people don't know that I'm an avid environmentalist and proponent of sustainable choices. So it's nice to see that there are smart people well on the way to solving our conversion problem. I get really inspired when I see stuff like this.

CDR


Last friday we went to the CDR night at Trouw, a relatively new restaurant/club in Amsterdam by the creators of the excellent-but-no-longer-existing Eleven. They have a big dance floor and a restaurant on the main floor of this reclaimed industrial building, and a second dance floor in the basement , but we didn't have a reservation, so we didn't get to try their street food themed menu.

We headed straight to the basement (because that's where all the bass went) for the monthly CDR night hosted by Juha from Viral Radio. CDR is a new club night concept they brought over from the UK where indie producers can bring in their own tracks on CDR and the Viral radio DJs will play them. I read about it in Time Out Amsterdam, and jumped at the opportunity.

The night had it's good and bad points. Time Out made it sound like a bustling club night, but the reality was a room populated by about ten DJ/producers and their girlfriends. We sat on wooden benches while the DJ played our tracks. I think the low turnout was partially due to the horrid weather and the very early 20:30 start time, but there is definitely room for improvement.

On the other hand, the quality of the music that people brought was consistently good, and it was great to hear my tracks played on a professional club sound system. The tracks tended towards dubstep, but there were also some house, hip-hop, and electronica tracks to spice things up. Viral Radio is a dubstep night, so they had the bass cranked up nicely. I brought two tracks, Ghost and Spaghetti Western Style, and I am proud to report that even on a night full of bass-heavy sounds, my tracks were the only ones that made the air conditioning system rattle!

Ghost

Spaghetti Western Style


Even though this first CDR outing was a bit of a bust, I'll be going back again. I think they should make it less of a "producers only" night, and really sell it as a way to hear fresh new sounds from up and coming producers. One day, I like to see it filled with a crowd of eager young listeners that are there to dance and enjoy the music.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

The old Fumbata blog

BTW, if you want to check out older Fumbata blog posts, head over to blogs.myspace.com/fumbata. I know, I know, Myspace. But, I've still got a couple interesting things over there, including a review of North Sea Jazz 2007, and a lovely Jack Johnson/G Love show in Den Haag.

There are also a bunch on Fumbata album announcements there, but it's better to skip the middle man and just go straight to Fumbata.com for that.

Reco: General Elektriks

I've been a fan of General Elektriks since I heard a track on 88.5 back in Atlanta. Funky, soulful, hip-hop electronica with lots of nice vintage keyboards (GE is a french keyboardist who tours with a bunch of hip-hop groups).

I recently stopped by http://www.general-elektriks.com and discovered that he has a new album coming out. Better yet, there are free MC collaboration tracks on the website under the heading "a pocketful of MC's". Very nice stuff featuring Mr. Lif, Pigeon John, and his old friend Lateef! Be sure to check out "requiem for a neo-con": it's got the funkiest keyboards I've heard since Propellerheads.

While I'm on the General Elektriks tangent, head over to http://www.solesides.com/ , the unofficial home of Quannum Records (GE's US label). They've got a ton of free tracks and podcasts to download, including the new Lyrics Born/Lateef tha Truth Speaker collab. I can't say I'm a fan of LB's new 80's funk style, but it's still a good track, and maybe it will grow on me.

Welcome

This blog is a place where I post new Fumbata announcements, music reviews and recommendations, and various other rants and musings. The posts will be few and far between, but I'll try to make them good!

Yours truly,
Fumbata