montrealbreaks wrote:
Ok, admittedly that was overstatement.
Overstated yes, but also hilarious. I can't wait to say that to somebody - "You guys aren't worthy to step on any stage without a gallows on it.
montrealbreaks wrote:- I will only go see locals....I wouldn't pay the premium to go to a place like Stereo to dance to the exact same music played by overinflated superstars when instead I can hear music just as good in Blizzarts (a small bar on St Laurent), in a more intimate setting with local performers.
Dude, Montreal seems so f@cking cool. I have been wanting to get up there for Mutek for the past three years, but every year something happens with my wifes job - she has to work that week and can't get out of it and we end up vacationing in Ocean City instead (cheesy over crowded beach resort that I have been going to since I was 1) I just got a car like 2 days ago so next year I swear I will drive up myself.
I occasionaly check out the Epsilon Lab site and just the existence of crews like that makes me want to come up there to live. I came to Montreal when I was a teenager of about 15 or 16 - (that would be about 19 years ago

) and the thing I remember more than anything else was coming out of a subway or train station or something and seeing this dude setup on the side doing a street performance with a synth of some sort - singing and playing some new wave type shit - and it totally blew my mind.......
It seems like such a great town for arts and music.
montrealbreaks wrote:As far as Hawtin goes, I don't really care about Techno, and even less for minimal techno. The sound either drives me batty or bores me. That said, I would be genuinely honoured to look over that man's shoulder for five minutes, and to thank him afterwards.
I absolutely love techno, particularly minimal stuff. And I am absolutely head over heels about the funky/quirky/zany stuff coming off m-nus these days. I'm a fan of Richie Hawtin and he has been one of my bigger inspirations for a while now. He always seems to be moving forawrd and doing new shit. Pushing boundries.
As gay as it may sound, the only reason I bought Ableton was because Hawtin was endorsing it. I while back there was an interview on this site with Hawtin and he was pumping up Live - I had no idea what the hell it was or what it could do other than the fact it was geared towards live performance. At the time I was using reason but I just had to had live. Knowing that the wife would not go along with the purchase I just said fuck it and put it on my Apple credit card without consulting her. And I am so glad I did. (I didn't get in too much trouble..

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As far as Sasha goes, it is easy for me to jump on the hate wagon because I don't like progressive house. And I have a tendency to not like performers/artists/dj's who are so well known. If I can ask 10 people and 8 of them know what I am talking about chances are I am not into it. There are exceptions, but for the most part that is how I am. My wife says I am a snob, but thats just the way I am.
The benefits of Sasha endorsing Live are that maybe a bunch of kids who are inspired by his music and mixing will hear about Live and jump onboard and experience the same pleasure that I have over these last 2 1/2 years of using this software.
I am hooked on Live enough that I do not care whether it is considerd a "serious" application, if anyone has never heard of it, or if everyone and their mother is using it, I'm just stoked to have all of this potential here. Although - if everyone in my town starts giggin with live in two years I
will be that dude saying "I've been using this software since version one....."
That's a real drag about that gig in that club. There are a lot of us here I think who instinctively strive to stay away from the main stream, including mainstream underground, to the point that we may miss oppurtunities because we refuse to "give in" and play what everyone is playing.
My advice is fuck that guy at that club. Stay true to what you do and ignore the frustration that comes up sometimes. Make your own scene - and it sounds like you already have one or at least the network in place to get somethiing bumping going. Start your own crew/collective, net label, throw your own parties. Make your own scene.
In the late 80's early 90's my friends and I, frustrated with how comercialized skateboarding had become, we just dropped out of the "scene" and created our own. we didn't buy the video's and magazines from skate shops, we made our own videos and magazines. we even cut our own decks out of blanks from a company called naked skates and did our own artwork on them. It was a great time.
Even though a few of us were definitely good enough to go sponsored amateur and in one case even professional it never happened because we were total old school "roots" skaters and we gave not a flyingshit about anything but our crew and skateboarding. Not that we were arrogant or dicks, we just dropped out and did our own thing and it was extremely gratifying.
See the example I am trying to make?
Anyway... we seem to have gone a bit off topic as this thread was originally started as a discussion about how RH is pushing boundries and how we can continue to move forward with our own work. Somehow it turned into another Sasha fest..... (thanks adam Jay

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