David Dallas

New Zealand native David Dallas has been tearing up the hip-hop scene for a few years now with his honest lyrics and solid production. Dallas shares some insight on his past, present and future in this interview with yesyesyall.  

What can we expect from you in 2012? How will it compare to The Rose Tint?

More tunes. I wanna put out 2 new projects this year. Far as how they’ll compare –  just trying to make them better than what I’ve done in the past. Not trying to take no backward steps over here.

Tell us about your production team Fire & Ice.

2 talented brothers from West Auckland. They’re dudes I actually hang out with so our tastes are really similar, and they’re pretty adept at making cool beats. That suits me just fine.

Sounds like you spend time in NYC, how does it compare to NZ?

It’s dope, way different to what I’m used to in NZ. Definitely took adjusting for me to get used to not having much personal space – going from quiet streets, backyards and driving round in your own car to living in a box, and taking packed trains everywhere was pretty gnarly. It’s nice to experience a different lifestyle though, makes you feel like you’re actually living as opposed to just going through the motions.

Did you grow up listening to any New Zealand hip-hop artists?

Yeah – I still remember hearing Dam Native for the first time and thinking “damn, people in NZ can actually make hip hop music that’s good”. Really opened my eyes.

Your work is lyrically driven, explain your writing process.

People will generally just send me skeletons of beats, which I’ll sit down and vibe with/play in the car etc. Soon as I’ve got some good ideas I’ll try and formulate a proper song. Generally I’ll come up with the verse/hook then record it on the voice memo on my phone so I don’t forget it before I get into the studio.

http://yesyesyall.org/files/music/David_Dallas-Start_Lookin_Round_1.mp3

Wes Willenbring - Close, But Not Too Close

San Francisco musician Wes Willenbring is back with his sophomore effort, Close, But Not Too Close. The album is made up of organic sounds that are processed to morph and change shape. This is a really beautiful record, I have been listening to it a lot since I got it last month. It is being released today at various online retailers. My favorite track is Oh, Most, give it a listen below. I had a chance to ask Wes few questions about the new record:

Your music has become very organic with the instrumentation. What is your relationship with technology in the making of the new album? Are you inspired by technology in music, or is it a means to an end?

It is definitely a means to an end for me. I used to be a lot more interested in the technological aspect but once I found a way to work that I was comfortable with I really stopped paying attention and just tried to get the most out of the few things I had. For me it was a real distraction to being productive, since if you are constantly looking for the latest guitar pedal or compressor or plug-in or whatever it means you aren’t focusing on the important things. I eventually figured out that for my own working method technology is best used in order to simplify certain processes that would take much longer if done in other ways. The main piece of technology I use when writing music is recording and editing audio with Apple’s Logic Studio software. It’s an integral part of how I write music, because since I’ve been using it for so long I have a lot of little tricks I’ve accumulated that can give me certain sounds really quickly, mainly by using it in ways that it isn’t intended to be used.

Would you describe your compositions and how you achieve your sound?

I have a long list of ideas that I’ve kept for years that are triggered from many sources, anything from certain sounds to films to very specific colors or designs or from things just randomly popping into my head out of nowhere. I’ll choose a few ideas from this list and try to combine them. I’ll then write a few melodies on guitar and piano that I think will fit, and then record them and create some textures in Logic. I tend to see sound as colors so really I’m just trying to create a beautiful, intricate picture that has a certain mood to it. That is another reason I like Logic- I can treat it like a blank canvas and make drastic alterations very quickly. Eventually a song starts to form and bit by bit I start taking things out and try to eliminate everything I possibly can that isn’t necessary and that isn’t helping the song…sometimes I’ll have 80 tracks in a song that I’ll cut down to 10. I’m very interested in unique song structures and have always tried to avoid standard verse/chorus/verse formats, as I feel there are many ways to write a song and have never understood why people tried to force music into that format so much. I never intended to write “ambient” music, it just sort of comes out that way sometimes.

Ambient music can sometimes be far from the mainstream eye, and good ambient music can be hard to find. Do you have any artist’s in this genre that you would recommend?

Honestly I don’t listen to ambient music very much (though I think my definition of it would differ greatly from how most people would define it), but I would recommend the Nick Cave and Warren Ellis score for The Proposition which I thought was absolutely jaw-dropping the first time I heard it. Some others would be William Basinski, Low, Labradford, Zoviet France, The Dead Texan, The Refractors, Sleeping Me, Bats and Swallows, and Cerebellum.

You used to live in Chicago, has moving to the West Coast changed your music?

I think so, from an aesthetic standpoint it’s just so much more beautiful out here that it has definitely influenced me in some ways…being so close to the ocean, mountains, and Redwood forests, as well as the landscape of San Francisco, the architecture, the people and styles…there are days when it can feel like sensory overload and I think it’s made me better realize and define my own aesthetic. I think as long as you are aware new environments and situations will always trigger a lot of ideas.

What are some things that inspire you right now?

These days film inspires my music much more than other music does…right now specifically the directors Jean-Pierre Melville, Éric Rohmer, and Antonioni. I’m mostly influenced by visual things, which can range from anything to good industrial design (Dieter Rams, for example), to certain color schemes, architecture, lighting, or photography.

What can we expect from you next?

I’ve started sketching out some melodies for a new album that I think will be much more focused on guitar. I am going to try a different method of working and hope to spend a lot more time in the studio playing with some old broken tape machines. It will probably be a bunch of really short songs with a couple of long ones. I’d also like to do more collaborative work, especially in a realm outside of “ambient” music.

Patrón or Dom Pérignon?

Usually red wine, though I have been really into Courvoisier lately…

Preview the whole record on Wes Willenbring’s website

Myspace

Buy on iTunes
Buy on Amazon

http://yesyesyall.org/files/music/02 Oh, Most.mp3

Devon | Stilllifes | Mini Interview

Fox blood bleeds talent, Rick Fox, Michael J. Fox, Matthew Fox and Devon Fox. I had the opportunity to interview mega star producer Devon Fox via cell phone. It went something like this…

Where do you see the Portland music scene (beat making) and your self in 5 years?
shit…
I hope a lot farther than it is now. Not that it’s doing terrible. Just would like to see more parties thrown… more weekly’s. Oh, and I hope to still be in Portland. I had honestly thought about going somewhere else, but I feel Portland has a strong electronic and a mediocre hip hop scene.
You done?
I’ll tell when I’m done! Understand?
Yes, I understand, sorry Sir.
Next question.
Have you ever sharted?
Never. I hope to never experience that. Straight up.
Come on? You don’t have to lie to kick it.
Maybe I’ve almost sharted. Next question. I have somewhere to be.
Devon says no to drugs because…
I never said that.
I have a reliable source that says you do.
What Jon? No comment.
This next question is for all the recording tech heads. What do you use to make beats?
Not too much, MacBook with a busted ass Edirol midi keyboard and Sony mdr headphones. I recently copped one of those Korg nano joints too. Super cheap… No speakers though. I need monitors.
That was boring, so Lil Jon reinvented the word “yeah.” Devon reinvented?
Yo, that question blows my mind.
Just answer it fool.
I think I just did. Next question.
Out side of music, who is Devon?
Things I dig: languages, coffee, women, film, beer, books (except I usually just read uni textbooks), and food. Love me some f@%king sushi. Traveling is my thing, when I have money or have a job to make money. Besides music, I’m in school to get a BA in Spanish. Already certified to teach English. Hope to get out of the country for stints. BUT I DIG MUSIC MOST OF ALL.
Blah blah blah, ok, dope. Two more.
What is your beef with Clarence?
Yeah Jon? I don’t know what you want me to say bout Clarence.
What?
Did you drink before this interview?
Maybe
Scumbag
Any last words you want to say?
Workinonit, EP. Thanks to tRUEradio, Yesyesyall, Moovment, Kenny Fresh, Jay Scarlett, Mymanhenri, and all the people listening to my shit. I mean music.
It was delightful to share this time with you Mr. Fox. Any questions you may have for me sir?
Nah, just wanted to let you know that they miss you over there man. They really do.
I knew it.
Knew what? This?
(Phone clicks, he hung up on me)

Devon emailed me a track later called, “Stilllifes.”
It made track of the day. Download it. What a nice guy.

Stilllifes DOWNLOAD
Devon Myspace

http://yesyesyall.org/files/music/Stilllifes.mp3

Obama

I think it should be noted history was made today. Made and spread across the world in real time, across all forms of media. By someone who is without a doubt the most intelligent, personable and inspiring leader a generation has ever seen, set against rapidly growing challenges and uncertainty. </p>

It is unprecedented in history in many ways. A moment in time witnessed by billions simultaneously, by three generations of all cultures across the world. A result of hard work, dedication and sacrifice of people past and present. </p>

It was a result of Civil Rights. A result of technology. An appropriate message and clever strategy. An end to a remarkable campaign that was the most organized, engaging and well thought out to date.</p>

History was made today because it was redefined. Redefined by a desire for change. Embodied in Barack Obama, the 44th President of the United States.</p>

How refreshing.</p>

I suggest going back and reading his speech word for word here</a></p>

A great video section of his speech here</a></p>

His campaign in pictures here</a></p>

A NEW</span> White House here</a></p>

You are what you spend

This site is primarily focused on music – but we are also fans of graphic rich subject manner. While perusing a recent NY Times I came across an article that I thought was very pertinent and a good example of the state of America represented in class division.</p>

Also – this is an OP-ED article. The empahsis being opinion. The graphs are the best part – so pull them up and have a look.</a></p>

Say Goodbye to High Fidelity

I found a great article in Rolling Stone about the state of recording in popular music. You know it’s pretty bad when a crap magazine complains about sound quality.</p>

Excerpt</strong>:
“Over the past decade and a half, a revolution in recording technology has changed the way albums are produced, mixed and mastered — almost always for the worse. They make it loud to get [listeners’] attention,” Bendeth says. Engineers do that by applying dynamic range compression, which reduces the difference between the loudest and softest sounds in a song. Like many of his peers, Bendeth believes that relying too much on this effect can obscure sonic detail, rob music of its emotional power and leave listeners with what engineers call ear fatigue. “I think most everything is mastered a little too loud,” Bendeth says. “The industry decided that it’s a volume contest.”</p>

Full Article</a></p>

Stereo designed by Dieter Rams >></strong></p>

Tales of Music and the Brain

Some of you may or may not be familiar with Oliver Sacks. Responsible for Awakenings</em> ( remeber the film with Robin Williams ) and The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat.</em> He is about to release a new book entitled Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain.</em> Wired magazine did a very interesting interview in which he begins to break down the subject behind the book and talk about how influential music is on the brain. Here’s an excerpt from the article.</p>

Wired:</strong> How did you discover that music can aid in healing?</p>

Sacks:</strong> The therapeutic power of music hit me dramatically in 1966, when I started working with the Awakenings patients at Beth Abraham in the Bronx. I saw post-encephalitics who seemed frozen, transfixed, unable to take a step. But with music to give them a flow, they could sing, dance, and be active again. For Parkinsonian patients, the ability to perform actions in sequence is impaired. They need temporal structure and organization, and the rhythm of music can be crucial. For people with Alzheimer’s, music incites recall, bringing the past back like nothing else.</p>

You can find the Wired article in full here.</a></p>