The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Shudder to think

Chill out this summer with Goose Bumps, Vol. 3
By SAM PFEIFLE  |  July 8, 2009

goose main

With the tools available to electronic musicians — software and limitless collaborators available through the Internet — the only limiting agents are ambition and work ethic. Well, talent, too, but that can be as easily wasted as ever if you don’t know how to use the platforms available to you for putting it on display. 
Goose Bumps 3.0 | Released by Milled Pavement Records | Web site | MySpace  

In building his Milled Pavement label, Moshe has shown a penchant for repeatedly upping his game, building a label that’s as much community as it is a showcase. He’s teamed with Jason Hjort and his brick.city.media to offer the world a spectrum of music that encompasses just about every digitally influenced genre, and he’s reached out across the globe to find and connect artists and fans.

The Goose Bumps compilation series, the third volume of which Milled Pavement debuted at the end of June, offers a snapshot of a moment in musical time, using Moshe’s taste for the dark and brooding to group some 70 artists over three albums totaling 44 tracks that are sometimes as disparate as day and night, but generally question established rules for what is “music” or a “song.” Even if you’re deep into house or underground hip-hop or trance or other types of electronic music, it’s likely you’ll find something here you haven’t really heard before.

Which isn’t to say this stuff is all unlistenable for pure-pop types. Or that these artists are intentionally pushing the audience away. There just aren’t that many choruses or bridges or melodic access points.

Local Syn the Shaman is methodical, with a delivery like he’s a bit off in front of a spare digital beat as he profiles something like a suicide bomber in “Satan’s Angel”: “He’s the reason why you’re shaking in your bed/With your head under your blanket/Scared to fucking death.”

France’s Motionless is the polar opposite, with an alt-rock opening to “Garden Dwarves” that might remind of Air, drums paired with a pretty keyboard line. As the song builds, layers are added of manic intensity — a deep bass line, a DJ cutting up the tables, two or three vocal tracks, lines like “the garden dwarves are racist/I’ve never seen a black garden dwarf.” When the fade-out comes after five minutes, leaving the listener with hammering cymbals, you’ll find yourself out of breath.

And even if you find the music not to your taste, it’s just a cool project in the abstract, with tracks like “Apallonia Dreaming,” which teams lmntl819 (if you’re looking for random band and artist names, this is your place), reindeer, JamesPHoney, and Wormhole, who represent Canada, Hawaii, and the UK between them. It’s a virtual band, creating a mix of British high-brow, island organics, and Canuck craziness.

The press bio Moshe supplied calls this project “post-post modern,” but I wonder if it’s really just the new modern. The place and time where it’s completely normal and easy to create music with people you’ve never seen or talked to in time zones you may never visit.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Like Woe? Like, Whoa, Moshe and Milled Pavement curate the downtrodden, Hot, hot heat, More more >
  Topics: CD Reviews , Entertainment, Science and Technology, Technology,  More more >
| More

[ 02/12 ]   Becky Shaw  @ Mad Horse Theater Company
[ 02/12 ]   "Continuing the Conversation: OccupyMaine"  @ Allen Avenue Unitarian Universalist Church
[ 02/12 ]   Dan Williams: "Can U Here Me Know?"  @ Johnson Hall Performing Arts Center
ARTICLES BY SAM PFEIFLE
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   FOR STEVE JONES, IT'S DIFFERENT EVERY DAY  |  February 08, 2012
    For a guy whom just about every true Maine roots fan knows on sight (and by the first five notes or so of a guitar solo), Steve Jones sure is a chameleon.
  •   EXPLORING THE COUNTRYSIDE WITH MAX GARCÍA CONOVER  |  February 01, 2012
    There are so many guys with guitars nowadays.
  •   10 SONGS TO GET YOU, AND THE PATS, FIRED UP  |  January 25, 2012
    While most Patriots fans this past weekend watched with glee as Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis was denied a return trip to the Super Bowl, I couldn't help remember the time 11 years ago when I didn't completely detest the guy.
  •   ROY DAVIS DITCHES ELECTRICITY FOR THE COLORADAS  |  January 18, 2012
    I was really digging the brand of alt-country Roy Davis was dishing on 2010's We Are a Lightning Bolt , all kinds of melancholy and down in the mouth and drenched in warm electric guitars.
  •   DREADNAUGHT’S JUSTIN WALTON HAS A SOLO RELEASE  |  January 11, 2012
    If you've followed Justin Walton's work in the likes of Dreadnaught and the old Actual Size, you'll probably be comfortable with the scope and variety of his sprawling debut solo release, It Takes a Toll .

 See all articles by: SAM PFEIFLE



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group