In the fall of 2009, my brother-in-law Weston decided to go on a little back-pack adventure, throwing planning out the {bus} window as he meandered around some great American cities. I felt inclined to meet up in order to put a little thrill into my junior fall break, so I joined him in Seattle and traveled down to LA. Wes is the creative type, so he brought along his Diana f+ to shoot some lomography style photos. Not wanting to waste a chance to test my underused photography skills, I joined in the fun and snapped a few randoms. Below is a sample of some of my favorites.
Postscript: the lomography style of photography aligns perfectly with the concept of hauntology because it is shot on 120 mm film, allowing the user to capture multiple shots at different {tastefully random} targets. Blatantly, the result is an eery combination of scratchy moments captured in one frame. Call it a memory, call it a ghost, it's not supposed to be specific. Enjoy.
2/27/11
Dust off some records
Do you have music that you are embarrassed to say you owned? I certainly did. I thought my Green Day t-shirt embellished with a Blink-182 pin somehow legitimized whatever punkrock melodies blasted through my headphones in highschool (nerd alert =>). Maybe you rocked the Strokes before they were cool, maybe you have a weird thing for Elvis, maybe your favorite record was recorded in a garage {or church...} - whatever the album, do me a favor and bust it out for a spin.
In 2004, Arcade Fire released their first LP entitled Funeral via Merge Records. On that record is a tasty ditty called Wake Up. Listen to it {loud}, sing along, It's quite nice.
This track is rife with pitched vocals, heavy guitar, and a choir of voices but still manages to fall into the hauntological category (for me). There is no sampling, no random noise, partly do to the fact that the Arcade Fire budget was much smaller than it is now, but also because the Butlers are specific with their message. Wake Up is a warning to, for, and about the state of being a kid. It reminisces of summers where trouble was the hardest thing to stay out of, especially when your mom keeps asking you: "why can't you be less like yourself and more like... a better version of you"? Wake Up reminds me to hold onto summer days spent skateboarding, spray-painting, and eating pizza bagels. Straight from 2004, this cheaply-recorded album still holds up because it got a piece of the nostalgic cake all to itself. Wake Up proves this over and over.
Shifting gears dramatically, a few more years back... for everybody.
Pogo: unsigned {props}, highly innovative, electronica hauntology to the max. The unique thing about Pogo is that they use sounds you have already heard dozens of times, as a child. Check out the track Alice. Remind you of anything? Pogo samples sounds from Disney films and then remixes them with electronica. So the next time you flashback to being five years old in front of the television while you're downtown ordering a gin and tonic, just ask the DJ to cite his/her sources, you might be surprised what you find.
In 2004, Arcade Fire released their first LP entitled Funeral via Merge Records. On that record is a tasty ditty called Wake Up. Listen to it {loud}, sing along, It's quite nice.
This track is rife with pitched vocals, heavy guitar, and a choir of voices but still manages to fall into the hauntological category (for me). There is no sampling, no random noise, partly do to the fact that the Arcade Fire budget was much smaller than it is now, but also because the Butlers are specific with their message. Wake Up is a warning to, for, and about the state of being a kid. It reminisces of summers where trouble was the hardest thing to stay out of, especially when your mom keeps asking you: "why can't you be less like yourself and more like... a better version of you"? Wake Up reminds me to hold onto summer days spent skateboarding, spray-painting, and eating pizza bagels. Straight from 2004, this cheaply-recorded album still holds up because it got a piece of the nostalgic cake all to itself. Wake Up proves this over and over.
Shifting gears dramatically, a few more years back... for everybody.
Pogo: unsigned {props}, highly innovative, electronica hauntology to the max. The unique thing about Pogo is that they use sounds you have already heard dozens of times, as a child. Check out the track Alice. Remind you of anything? Pogo samples sounds from Disney films and then remixes them with electronica. So the next time you flashback to being five years old in front of the television while you're downtown ordering a gin and tonic, just ask the DJ to cite his/her sources, you might be surprised what you find.
Labels:
Arcade Fire,
Funeral,
Hauntology,
Hauntology Music,
Pogo
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