|
Volume 3, Issue 12
June 7 - June 21, 2001
Music
X Marks the Spot
Xiren finds the sweet spot of ambient pop
Since he moved to Denver four years ago, Darryl "Xiren"
Kenny has worked hard to create original music that mixes his singer-song-writer
style with an alt-rock sound.
Known simply as Xiren, his first CD
titled Bullets and Rainbows hits the
stores this week. "In a world that honors
bigger, better, faster, I need
grace," Xiren said. "I felt this album
would not only capture a snapshot of
what is in existence but what's possible."
This nicely produced CD is an interesting
mixture of sounds, voices, and
influences. Clearly Xiren has listened
to and learned from some of the great
solo artist/ band leaders of the past
including Sting, Peter Gabriel, Bono,
and Bryan Ferry. Luckily, Xiren (guitar,
vocals) and his collaborator Ben
Jansen (piano) have the skill and foresight
to update this classic sound for
today's audience. The new record
craftily mixes acoustic and electric
guitars, soaring vocals, various percussion
instruments and some deftly
sprinkled techno gadgetry.
Xiren relocated to Colorado from
Detroit, where he was well known as
a musical innovator who performed
steadily through the early '90s.
During the last five years as Denver's
music scene grew, Xiren aligned himself
with some popular local bands
including Opie Gone Bad and Distant
Crossing. To properly promote the
music on Bullets and Rainbows,
Xiren has hired other local players to
fill in along side himself and Jansen,
including Josh Skelton (guitars), Zach
Pietlock (drums), and Cam Cross
(violin, guitars, percussion). The
energy on the record can only be magnified
by the talent on stage.
Xiren's music fits in variety of venues
for a variety of audiences. And, Xiren
can write good songs. No matter how
long a musician can jam on stage to
his own beat, we all know the great
shows are never without a catchy riff,
a breathless melody, or an irresistible
groove. "I began writing music ten
years ago," Xiren explained, "as an
answer to the question:what would it
sound like if my favorite artists collaborated?
I became intrigued by the
possibilities of simply writing music
that I wanted to listen to."
The presence of the acoustic guitar is
a refreshing element in Xiren's over-all
ambient pop sound. "Geralyn"
uses flute, acoustic guitar and edgy
vocal overdubbing to create an eerie
tribute, while "In Front of You" is
beautifully relaxing and surprisingly
sexy. "Circus" begs the eternal question
of the meaning of life without
resorting to redundant phrases or
corny metaphor.
--Judy B.
Find more at www.xiren.net
FAREWELL YALE
William Yale takes leave of Denver after creating some amazing projects
A mentor once told me good music opens doors,
and great musicians change lives. For the local musical
community familiar with bassist William
Yale, this statement rings especially true.
Yale has been involved in a number of
diverse, challenging, and "push-the-envelope"
type musical projects during the
past seven years. He is a bass player,
recording engineer, music fanatic, and
inspiration to the many who know him.
Unfortunately, he's leaving for the east
coast at the end of this month.
Although usually shy and very humble,
Yale feels proud of his musical accomplishments
and knows his time in
Colorado was meaningful and well spent.
"Before I moved out here [in 1994], I was
into all the things I am now, but never had
the opportunity to take it to the public,"
Yale explained. "You can kind of do what
you want here, and it has opened up my
life."
Yale's musical talents have opened up a
lot of things. As a bassist, he played with
Soul Jazz Massive, a funk musician's
magnet, which began at the early inklings
of Boulder's improv groove scene. On a
more avant garde jazz note, Yale played
in the Heuristic Ensemble, a group led by
guitarist Farrel Lowe. It was not an easy
gig, and the obscure nature of the music,
inspired by jazz great Ornette Coleman,
demanded a superb talent. "Bill's the kind
of musician who truly understood the
music and what I wanted to do," Lowe
said. "And, he understands the lineage
and history of it all."
United Dope Front has been Yale's latest
performance group, a future groove band
which Yale considers his most satisfying
project. Drummer Kenny James also
played with UDF and Yale. James said,
"There's a word that a lot of musicians
should study that William has and that is
'solid'. I can think of only a couple of
other musicians that I've dealt with who
are equal in that category. I'm blessed
having to play with someone like
William, and so is the rest of whatever
band may be on the stage with us."
Darrin Feder, guitarist and founding
member of local Latin sensation Cabaret
Diosa, met Yale in high school in
Paramas, New Jersey. As Yale packs his
bags and heads back to family and gig
opportunities eastward, Feder best sums
up not what it means that Yale is leaving,
but what it has meant for us as a musical
community to have him around. "He's a
sharp critic, and has that natural instinct
for playing, listening, and recording that
signals a truly gifted person. The amount
of music that he has exposed me to has
been the biggest influence. He's also a
collector of music, a musicologist ... I'm
still blown away by all that he can do."
Hey, Darrin, I don't think you'll be the
last.
--Judy B.
BEAT DIET
INTERVIEW WITH
FOREST GREEN
The first time I heard of Forest Green I was
at the Mayan theatre, watching the movie Groove.
For those of you who don't know, she was one of the DJs featured
in the movie along with Wish FM,
Pollywog, Snaz, and internationally recognized
DJ, Digweed. Being a fellow
female DJ, I was of course interested in
finding out more about this aspiring talent.
When I saw her name on the Tracks
2000 flyer, I was ecstatic. Then the
reporter in me spoke out, and suddenly
the flyer I was holding turned into a golden
opportunity. I contacted Forest via the
all-girl DJ mailing list, Sister DJs, and
proposed the interview. She was totally
agreeable, and we made arrangements. I
was greeted at the hotel with a happy
smile, and a joking offer to order out for
some hookers and coke, which immediately
lightened the atmosphere. After a
few more laughs, we began the interview:
Go-Go:Give us a brief history of DJ
Forest Green.
Forest:I started DJing in 1996. The first
time I ever played I played out at a party.
I had been collecting records since I was
13, and that's part of DJing, right, is the
collection of music, but the first time I
ever played out, like beat matching
records, was at a party called the Goddess
party in Oakland in in a little warehouse
space with a group of people that are part
of the underground scene in San
Francisco and are part of Friends and
Family. From there I was obsessed, and I
just kept playing out, and I probably
shouldn't have been playing out yet to be
completely frank. I think I was a little bit
rough (laughs), but that's okay. It threw
me in and I had to learn how to swim
really fast. I would say within four
months I was pretty solid. It's gotten progressively
more and more. I mean, I think
in the first year I had like two gigs, and
from there I would have like one or two a
month, and now it's like two to three
bookings a week.
Go-Go:How did you come up with your
DJ name?
Forest:I actually named myself before I
was DJing when I was doing video art
because I thought my real name was kind
of boring.
Go-Go:What's your real name?
Forest:Melissa Green ... I sat around
screwing around with names, thought I
would go with green:Army Green, Pea
Green, Gangrene (laughs), just all the different
things that could go with green. I
like Forest. I was just going to be DJ
Forest, but there are already four other DJ
Forests and one of them is pretty established
and lives in Hawaii. So I decided
to go with Forest Green, and sometimes I
like it and sometimes I think it sounds
pretty dorky, and sometimes people ask
me if my parents were hippies ... but it's
too late now (laughs).
Go-Go:Everyone gets sick of their DJ
name once in a while.
Forest:Yeah...
Go-Go:What was your worst gig ever
and why?
Forest:Oh man, I get to rant! (laughs)
There were two. One never even happened:
I got flown to Toronto with a few
other DJs from the west coast, and they
ended up having to close the upstairs.
They decided, rather than have the headliner
that they had flown all the way
out from San Francisco to Toronto
play, they would have their
local DJs play. They paid us, and then shortly after
we asked them if they could at least take us
back to the hotel room, if were not
even going to get to play. That was
really weird. I wouldn't do that if I
had talent from anywhere else. And the other bad
experience was a party I was supposed to play in
Calgary. I didn't have a permit and I got kicked out of Canada. I'm
still kicked out of Canada until August 26.
But I learned my lesson, don't go out of the country
without a work permit. With records, anyway.
Go-Go:I have heard a lot worse stories,
that's for sure.
Forest:Oh yeah, I have heard of people
booking a girl DJ and assuming that
booking a girl means more than just a gig.
"I booked you, I'm paying you, doesn't
that mean I get benefits?" No, not really.
Go-Go:I know this sounds cliché, but
how do you feel that being a female DJ
has helped or hurt your career?
Forest:Oh, it's just been so horrible, and
I'm so oppressed. No, no, I guess it's an
issue and then it's not. In a lot of ways I
guess it helps because there aren't as many
female DJs as there are male DJs and
therefore you're like, Oh, it's a girl. Wow,
exciting ... it's almost like a marketability
on that because you are a female and there
aren't as many, that you get maybe more
opportunities than you would as a male
DJ. But at the same time there are some
downsides to that, too; not so much in San
Francisco because it's so liberal there. It
seems normal, there's some girls playing,
there's some guys playing. But when you
go out of state you realize it's more rare.
Like, I played in El Paso three weeks ago,
and from what I understand there's not a
single female DJ there, not one. That was
what the promoter said; they could be
wrong. There could be girls there playing and they don't
even know it.
Go-Go:What else do you do besides DJ?
Forest:Video art, although I don't have
my own studio currently because all the
gear is expensive. I write music. I studied
opera for a long time, I don't really sing
now, currently. I might try singing again,
but I can't decide how I feel about that.
It's kind of like a closed chapter in my
life. I would like to teach at some point
when I can't travel anymore, when I get
tired and older and just can't do it any more.
I'd like to teach some kind of weird
techno culture classes at some crazy college
somewhere where you can get all
freaky and talk about the real deal and
don't have to cover it over. I would actually like to do
more video art stuff, I just need to have more time.
--Erin Marsh
ORANGE
PEEL
Have you ever had deja vu? Whether you actually
remember the birth and eventual retirement of disco, or even
its subsequent nostalgic retro rebirth doesn't really matter.
What matters is that 611 Records' Carl Michaels will be dropping
his unique brand of Philly disco dub house on the unsuspecting eardrums of mesogroovic candy
noodles in honor of the Gemini Party on June 7 at Tracks 2000.
Residences At Space, the 2-4 Club, Silk City Lounge, and Smile Thursdays at Club Shampoo have kept
Michaels at the top of his game for nearly eight years and running. According to his bio, he does have undies
(in case you were wondering) but whether he will be sporting them for this particular engagement is yet to be
seen. Vodka shots at the Foxhole could definitely tip the scales in favor of freeballing.
If you do find yourself experiencing an uncontrollable urge to shake your groove thang on Thursday night, please
arrive prepared with a well-done tuna fillet cooked by DNB Mogul Andy Sine (Michael's favorite food) and try to
avoid smashing Carl in the cranium with a beer bottle for not being hip hop ya don't stop.
Tracks 2000 is located at 2975 Fox Street in Denver. For more information on Carl Michaels or 611 Records, you
can visit him in cyberspace at www.611records.com
Congratulations to the winners of the Colorado Electronic Music Awards for 2000:Tracks 2000 (best club),
Together Productions (best promoter), Ty Tek (favorite local; best techno), Jon Bishop (favorite natl/ intl),
Thursdays at Tracks (best club night), Fun Factory (best party), Vitamin D (best producer), Nutmeg (best
house), Shahzad (best trance), X-static (best breakbeat), Fury (best jungle), Ivy (best hip hop/ trip
hop), Evenflo (best female), Garth Geisler (best retro), Dino (best MC), Brandon Kent (best up
and coming), and Twist & Shout (best record store).
For more information on the Colorado Electronic Music Association (CEMA), you
can visit it in cyberspace at
www.coloradodancemusic.com or give its info
line a buzz at 303-778-1612.
--orange peel moses
CD Review
MERE:THE STANDING
THAT WAS
Now that music from the '80s has
become the newest answer to Denver's
radio marketing strategy, the trepidation I feel about listening to a
bunch of neo-U2/Depeche Mode/The
Cure knockoffs makes me want to dive
under the covers and wait for grunge to
be cool again. When a friend handed me
the latest CD from local band Mere, I figured
I'd throw it in the bin with Carolyn's
Mother and call it a day.
The Standing That Was definitely has an
'80s sensibility to it ... sensitive yet powerful
lead vocals, catchy riffs, lots of
emotion and yearning, steady foot-tapping
tunes, songs titled "Sweetest Kiss"
and "Heaven and Earth," and so on. Track
six, "She Comes Down," is a dead-ringer
for Bono & Co.
Thankfully, sweet Jesus, there is more. In
all fairness, modeling U2 isn't such a bad
idea, especially with the latest Grammy
and all. But, Mere retooled its sound
since the last record, A Mere Nine Songs,
and include more variety from acoustic
guitars, keyboards, and vocal harmonies.
With an edginess reminiscent of older
Radiohead and mid-decade INXS,
Standing remains interesting and gets
better with each listen. The whole record
has good songs and solid songwriting.
Lead singer Cory Tenbrink can really
sing, and his voice works in that sort of
soft-and-mellow-then-belt-it-out way.
Mere has made a record that could break
it into a larger, but extremely competitive
national market. As musicians, the five
members are young, attractive, educated
guys who earn new fans' respect at each
live show. Recent successes include a CD
release party at the Soiled Dove, gigs at
Josephina's, performance at CHUN
People's Fair, and a Fiddler's Green performance
as openers for The Black
Crowes/ Oasis show in May.
A few tracks of note include "Close Your
Eyes," probably the most radio-ready of
the batch, although "Paper Wings" has a
wonderfully gentle sadness to it that
attracts a few hits of the repeat button.
"The Silence That Says So Much" has an
Oasis vibe for sure, and "Stay Awake" is
one of those weird gems-- every record
must have at least one. With The Standing
That Was, Mere gives us a surprisingly
satisfying look into where the band is
today, and illustrates how even in mainstream
pop music, there is room for creativity.
A
--Judy B.
CD Review
RUBY:SHORT-STAFFED
AT THE GENE POOL
Remember Ruby? Her 1997 Salt Peter was
an eye-opener of female technica, featuring dingy
synths and a voice as dark and sticky as a movie theatre
floor. It's been four years since she
launched her alternative offensive to the
bubble-goth of Garbage; many feared she
would not return at all.
She is back, jettisoning Sony for Thirsty
Ear, a boutique label out of New York,
and going several steps beyond Salt Peter
with a jazzier sonic landscape and a
sharper ear for the hook. The first song on
Short-Staffed, "Beefheart," is hauntingly
familiar ground for Ruby fans, feeling as
grungy and buzzed as ever, but the rest of
the album lightens exponentially. Though
she never quite hits the sugar level of
Bjork, Ruby's keyboards flitter in upper
registers, and she throws in "bop bop"
background vocals to somehow cross the
wide chasm between her own gothic
sound and the incessant chorus of a Go-Go's
song. It's a cool bridge, and gives
her songs the repeat play impetus Salt
Peter lacked.
The most dynamic change on Short-Staffed
is the use of jazz riffs and brass
instruments, especially strong on such
almost-cheerful tracks as "Lamplight"
and "Fly." The lyrics haven't left the
realm of artistic metaphors, which is just
fine with me. Phrases like "skinny hide"
and "choicely scented fingers" somehow
evoke a sensual fetish for the ugly ... one
verse of "Cargo" deals with old blind
men, and the way she sings it, she just
might bite the necks of those old men and
shiver with orgasm.
If you're new to Ruby and you need an
actual song to explain all the mumbo
jumbo above, find a record store that
allows you to listen before buying, and
check out "Grace," as typical a new Ruby
song as the album offers. Short-Staffed is a
rarity:an album with enough pop to make
good party background music, but enough
lyrical interest to hold the lonely listener.
I'm already looking forward to 2005. A
--Chris J. Magyar
Order "Short Staffed at the Gene Pool"
|