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Jeff Soto |
Cultural Stimuli in NYC Issue 298: unexpected flavor
As the city's unstable weather continues to disorient us in our day-to-day, cultural offerings follow suit with a wonky diversity that keeps us on our toes. This week, local cinemas whisk us to Israel and Japan via film series, and the stage proffers up a freaky folktale/existentialist drama in The Snow Hen. On the music front, Man Man rock eccentrically, hip-hop legends Afrika Bambaataa and DJ Premier drop mad boom-bappery, Lionel Loueke channels jazzy African sunshine, and Brooklyn's Bloody Panda revel in dark metal. Meanwhile, the talk is blowin' blustery, as Galapagos gets "gayronic," an art panel debates the pros and cons of kitsch, emerging funnyman Aziz Ansari steps up on the indie comedy tip, and Portland, Oregon's Clear Cut Press delivers its writers straight-up. Choose your own adventure, and spread it...
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flavorpill NYC is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.

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Spotlight
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Art Digressions
New-media art darling Tony Oursler opens two new exhibitions of sensory-inundating works this week — one concerning elemental themes, and one with music as muse.
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| MULTIMEDIA |
A Gayronic Art Jam feat. Mike Albo
| when: |
Tue 2.21 (8pm) |
| where: |
Galapagos Art Space (70 N 6th St, Wburg, 718.782.5188) map |
| price: |
Pay what you can |
| links: |
Event Info | Mike Albo |
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The biggest perk to being Family is the Wilde-given right to do exactly as you choose and chalk it up to being a 'mo. For this month's Art Jam, Galapagos opens its bosom to the Community to celebrate that particular post-camp wit, gayrony. Mike Albo, performer and author of The Underminer, headlines this feel-good party also featuring Julie Klausner and Sue Gallaway in their '70s-style educational musical Free to be Friends. The Lesbian Overtones a cappellicize lez classics and go head-to-head with People Lution's all-gay choir. To fulfill the requisite panty quota, the Varsity Interpretive Dance Squad perform synchronized dance moves. (JG)
Note: On Thur 2.23, Mike Albo presents The Underminer: The Best Friend Who Casually Destroys Your Life at Joe's Pub.
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| ALSO ON TUE |
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FILM: Double Feature
The Palm Beach Story (1942) and You Can't Take It With You (1938) Tue 2.21 (6pm) Symphony Space (2537 Broadway, 212.864.1414) map $10
Event Info |
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Preston Sturges' Palm Beach Story takes the traditional happy ending as its jumping-off point, and unfurls in a zany, romcom-trope-baiting whirlwind as Joel McCrea and Claudette Colbert turn in a perfectly screwed comedic duet. Stay for Capra's classic, starring ye olde eccentric family. (JKG)
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MUSIC: Lit Pop
Edith Frost w/ the Zincs Tue 2.21 (9:30pm) Joe's Pub (425 Lafayette St, 212.539.8778) map $15 / $12 advance
Event Info |
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Edith Frost's defiantly private music goes public tonight in support of
It's A Game, her stripped-down fourth record of literate pop
country. The elegant indie folk of the Zincs starts things off. (TB)
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| MUSIC: Doomy Baby |
Bloody Panda w/ Floriculture
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Brooklyn-based doom quintet Bloody Panda are a strange animal. A
hybrid of experimental atmospherics and cold, evil metal, they're equally at
home opening for Soilent Green and playing with local avant-folk
acts. These sinister pallbearers traverse vast, black landscapes, their slow
procession ballasted by Blake McDowell's mournful keyboards and the complex
rhythms of newly recruited drummer Dan Weiss. However, the nucleus of this
dirge is vocalist Yoshiko Ohara, whose deep and sorrowful chants —
occasionally augmented by monstrous howls from the band — belie her
diminutive stature. Floriculture, Weiss' jazz ensemble with Fantômas and Mr. Bungle bassist Trevor Dunn, open. (GM)
Which 1970s band is considered to be the primary founder of
doom metal? The third correct response wins a pair of tickets to
this show.
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| THEATRE |
The Snow Hen
| when: |
Now through Sat 2.25 (Wed-Sat: 8pm) |
| where: |
Charlie Pineapple Theater (248 N 8th St, Wburg, 718.907.0577) map |
| price: |
$15 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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In the post-apocalyptic world of The Snow Hen, a girl, alone at the seaside,
spends her days fishing for remnants of our world. Her excruciatingly
routine life is interrupted by a giant wanderer who catapults into her home. It seems that with the stranger's new company things will be better, until he unmasks a dark secret that is anything but routine. Hannah Bos and Paul Thureen of the Debate Society wrote and star in this haunting, melancholy, and oddly hilarious adaptation of the 14th-century Norwegian folktale. Their masterful communication is almost wordless. (NR)
Survival necessities aside, what five things would you choose to have in a post-apocalyptic world? Our four favorite lists each win a pair of tickets to a Snow Hen performance.
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| ALSO ON WED |
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DJ
Afrika Bambaataa w/ Bobbito Garcia Wed 2.22 (10pm) Canal Room (285 W Broadway, 212.941.8100) map $10
Event Info |
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Godfather of Hip-Hop and electro-funk innovator Afrika Bambaataa spins at
this benefit for Friends of Island Academy, a youth recidivism prevention
program. Slinging eclectic beats alongside Bam is the ever-on-the-go
Bobbito. (CEH)
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| ART: Opening |
MetLife
| when: |
Thur 2.23 (6-8pm) |
| where: |
Morgan Lehman Gallery (317 10th Ave, 212.268.6699) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Using the loose theme of studio culture, MetLife brings together
12 diverse metropolitan artists working in the media of painting and
drawing. Formalism is the principle aesthetic at play in this exhibition,
and, as such, it is a showcase for virtuoso talent. Among the works displayed
are the unusual and dynamic architectural forms depicted in Satoru Eguchi's Two Red
Daisies and Cotter Luppi's The Last Flash Crystic
Melodies, a beautiful and obsessively detailed drawing of patterned
lines, colors, and shapes. Perhaps the most compelling of these works is
Oona Ratcliffe's Stab It Heart, which, through its use of deftly
applied washes, demonstrates that light and surface alone provide sensuous
aesthetic pleasure. (PJ)
Note: This exhibit runs through Sat 3.25 (Tue-Sat: 11am-6pm).
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| DISCUSSION |
On Kitsch
| when: |
Thur 2.23 (7pm) |
| where: |
School of Visual Arts Amphitheater (209 E 23rd St, 212.592.2532) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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At SVA, a diverse cross section of the art world convenes for a panel discussion on the
artistic merits and pitfalls of kitsch — the catchall term for things
combining mass-market appeal with tawdry production. As the original
pejorative meaning of the term gives way to an embraceable vehicle for
populist nostalgia, artists and critics are scrambling to decode its new
undertones. This evening features Henry Darger-devotee Amy Wilson,
saccharine landscape painter Melissa Brown, and Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt,
whose sculptures of crafty materials with Liberace flair are harbingers of
good bad taste. Art in America critic Brian Boucher and Dahesh Museum
curator Lisa Small round out the group to debate the current place of
cultural standards in an anything-goes society. (CEK)
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| FILM |
Israel Film Festival
| when: |
Thur 2.23 - Thur 3.9 |
| where: |
Clearview Cinema: 62nd & Broadway (1871 Broadway, 877.966.5566) map |
| price: |
$7-10 / $40 festival pass |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Generally speaking, Israeli cinema gets a lot less play in the States than European and Asian cinema — a shame, because it's as varied,
provocative, and fierce as Israel itself. The films in this festival prove
no exception. From the opening feature, Out of Sight, about a blind
PhD student investigating the death of her best friend, to Wasserman, the
Rain Man, in which an aging farmer struggles to forgive his children for
embracing religion against his wishes, and from Kibbutz, a documentary
examining the evolution of kibbutzim, to a series of student shorts, most of the
festival's entries would otherwise never achieve any US exposure, let
alone distribution. (LR)
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| ALSO ON THUR |
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PERFORMANCE: Art
The Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black Thur 2.23 & Fri 2.24 (9pm) Deitch Projects — Wooster (18 Wooster St, 212.343.7300) map 
Event Info |
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New York vaudevillian punk-rock phenomenon the Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black return to perform their new theatrical spectacular, The Sound of
Magic. (MB)
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| MUSIC: Hip-Hop |
Papoose w/ DJ Premier, Sadat X, and DJ Eclipse
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Papoose ruled NYC hip-hop radio for a minute back in '04 with his white-label track "Alphabetical Slaughter," which ripped alliterative fury from A to Z and back again, owning the theme that was once Gift of Gab's backpacker gem. With his lyrical strength and hungry flow, the Brooklyn MC was tapped to head up the Streetsweepers — the crew founded by mixtape-murdering, beef-broadcasting DJ Kay Slay. While Pap's been on the cusp too long now, he's still running the underground, and couldn't have better company for this coming-out party with two Golden Era legends: super-producer DJ Premier and Sadat X, whose recent Experience & Education proved that the former Brand Nubian's mic still sounds nice. (JL)
DJ Eclipse is a member of which two other groups? The first correct response wins a pair of tickets to this show.
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| MUSIC: Post-Waitsian |
Man Man w/ Vaz and Blood Feathers
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The Philly-as-sixth-borough proposition is an interesting one. Sure, eager
kids getting priced out of Williamsburg may be seduced to take a spot in a
warehouse space and pay rent in cash at unusual meeting places each month,
but that's youth, isn't it? A brochure for potential residents: Man Man's
neo-junkyard wildman aesthetic, all Captain Beefheart bang without the
machismo; Vaz's twitchy art-punk; and Blood Feathers' earnest, downright
rootsy indie rock that takes the Most Misleading Name category. Philly's not
a runty Crabapple to our Red Delicious; it's a freakin' mango — and an
enticing, reasonably priced one at that. (MP)
Ignoring the realities of actual geography, which town or city do you consider sixth-borough-worthy, and why? Our two favorite suggestions of 50 words or less each win a pair of tickets to this show.
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| FILM |
Man in the Dunes: Discovering Hiroshi Teshigahara
| when: |
Fri 2.24 - Sun 3.19 |
| where: |
BAM's Rose Cinema (30 Lafayette Ave, Bklyn, 718.636.4100) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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BAMcinématek kicks off its three-week exploration of Japanese
avant-garde filmmaker Hiroshi Teshigahara's work with a gorgeous new print of Antonio Gaudí (1984), his cinematic ode to the Catalan architect. A rare opportunity to see a
master's camera lick the sensuous curves of the Sagrada Familia, this brick
flick is an ambitious draftsman's wet dream. Also included in the lineup
are Woman in the Dunes (1964), a hypnotizing retelling of Kobo Abe's
existential novel about an entomologist trapped in a sand pit
with a lusty woman, and The Face of Another (1966), a surreal
examination of identity that pre-dates Nick Cage's face transplant by 30
years. (KI)
Hiroshi Teshigahara's father was a famous grandmaster of what unique Japanese art form? The first through sixth correct answers each win a pair of tickets to a screening in this series.
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| ALSO ON FRI |
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DANCE
Trajal Harrell and Karen Bernard Fri 2.24 & Sat 2.25 (8pm) The Kitchen (512 W 19th St, 212.255.5793) map $10
Event Info |
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Fashion Week withdrawal can be cured with Trajal Harrell's Before
Intermission, a collection of vignettes inspired by voguing and the
runway. V-Day withdrawal, meanwhile, is treated with Karen Bernard's Totally in
Love, a dance piece that unfolds like a series of journal entries. (SP)
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MUSIC: Nu-Jazz
Lionel Loueke's Gilfema Fri 2.24 (9:30pm) Joe's Pub (425 Lafayette St, 212.539.8778) map $15
Event Info |
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Multinational trio Gilfema, led by West African guitarist/vocalist Lionel Loueke, merges jazz with a confluence of pan-African virtuosity, harmonic ingenuity, and joyous, primal rhythms. (JM)
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DJ
Brett Johnson Fri 2.24 (10pm-5:30am) Sullivan Room (218 Sullivan St, 212.252.2151) map $15 / $10 with RSVP (after 11pm) / $5 before 11pm
Event Info |
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Texas-bred DJ/producer Brett Johnson delivers an always-satisfying selection
of underground acid and tech-house, and, to assure full dance-floor
debauchery, DJ Hal returns from the UK with his own special blend of
psychedelic house. (CEH)
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DJ
Sweat NYC feat. Catchdubs Fri 2.24 (10pm) The Delancey (168 Delancey St, 212.254.9920) map 
Event Info |
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Multitasking mixmaster and blogger extraordinaire Nick Catchdubs joins Erik
the Red and DJ Moe Choi to funk up the main floor of monthly dance party
Sweat NYC with a healthy dose of '80s-spiked electro, dancehall, and Bmore
club beats. (IB)
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| READING |
Fine Print: Clear Cut Press
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It may not have superhero emporiums like McSweeney's, or punk-rock
affiliations like Soft Skull, but Clear Cut Press is nonetheless a force to
be reckoned with in the indie-publishing world. Based in Portland, Oregon,
the Clear Cutters operate a subscription press that showcases some of the
most innovative new writers around. This event features readings by Matt
Briggs, author of The Remains of River Names, and Stacey Levine, who
wrote My Horse and Other Stories, as well as live music by YACHT, a
one-man act who recently blew the doors off Monkey Town at the Laptops vs
Craptops battle. (CLH)
What is the oldest existing printed book? The fifth correct response wins a pair of tickets to this reading.
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| MULTIMEDIA |
Tony Oursler: Sound Digressions in Seven Colors
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An instrumental voice in the new-media field since the mid-'70s, Tony
Oursler has never stopped exhibiting a hyperactive attraction to the
pubescent fascinations of TV, gross-outs, and Kim Gordon. He presents a solo show at NYEHAUS in affiliation with a concurrent show at Metro Pictures, turning NYEHAUS's project space into a surround-sound nightmare. Twelve sculptures of musicians, each embedded with a video projector, engulf gallery visitors in audio-visual chaos, which simultaneously recalls the intensive pressure of adulthood and the overstimulation in everyday media exposure. At Metro Pictures, new multimedia works made using 3D computer animation take inspiration from water, mercury, and smoke. (JG)
Note: The Oursler exhibition at Metro Pictures had an opening reception from 5-7pm, preceding the NYEHAUS opening.
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| MUSIC: Prog Garage |
Roxy Pain w/ the Vibration
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A sonic collision between Hawkwind and that scruffy local garage band you loved in high school, Roxy Pain make you hurt so good with their entertaining, manic live shows that max out at 20 minutes. While they probably won't shoot lasers out of their eyeballs as some band members like to claim, they just might dress up in matching outfits, and will certainly churn out some spastic noise. Also on the bill are the Vibration, a furious female foursome who channel the Slits and are celebrating the release of their new record, Amarilla. (CLH)
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| MULTIMEDIA: Opening |
Torbjørn Rødland: 132 BPM
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The iPod generation is accustomed to living life with a soundtrack, and in
this video work, Norwegian photographer Torbjørn Rødland
exaggerates that modus operandi with a metronome-calibrated beat, backing a
series of nature shots. During his one-month field study in the wilds of
western Croatia, Rødland took tranquil images of trees, waterfalls,
and ocean waves. For the accompanying manic beat the artist teamed up with
Berlin-based electronica band Sex in Dallas to sublimely mix tunes from an iPod playlist with nature sounds. Watching inside P.S.1's intimate vault
space, you may find yourself bouncing along at 132 beats-per-minute. (JK)
Note: A Wolfgang Tillmans exhibition and The Thirteen: Chinese Video Now are other notable exhibitions opening today at P.S.1.
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| ALSO ON SUN |
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COMEDY
Highlights from The Richard Pryor Show feat. Paul Mooney Sun 2.26 (6:30pm) Museum of the Moving Image (35th Ave at 36th St, Astoria, 718.784.0077) map $12
Event Info |
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Fed up with "white-bread comedy," Richard Pryor made a stand-up career — and a
short-lived variety show, screened tonight — out of pushing the
envelope and playing every race card he was dealt. Pryor's colleague and
fellow comedian Paul Mooney hosts. (LT)
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| COMEDY |
Here's the Thing feat. Aziz Ansari
| when: |
Mon 2.27 (10pm) |
| where: |
Mo Pitkin's (34 Ave A, 212.777.5660) map |
| price: |
$7 / $5 advance |
| links: |
Event Info | Aziz Ansari |
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If this wacky winter weather has stripped you of your sense of humor, we suggest rejuvenating your grin this evening at Mo Pitkin's. Hosted by Sean O'Connor, Nick Maritato, and Andrew Wright, Here's the Thing thaws out today's rising stand-up and sketch comedians. Tonight's lineup includes SNL Weekend Update writer and UCB regular Ari Voukydis, Alex Blagg of Blagg Blog, and the estrogen-fueled sketch duo of Walker and Cantrell. Fresh from the frontlines of the burgeoning downtown indie-comedy scene is recent Rolling Stone hot lister and ever-hopeful M.I.A. devotee, headliner Aziz Ansari. (MB)
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| ART |
Huma Bhabha
| when: |
Now through Sat 3.18 (Tue-Sat: 11am-6pm) |
| where: |
ATM Gallery (511 W 20th St, 212.375.0349) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Featuring a minimal installation of three mixed-media sculptures and two
photographic c-prints, this exhibition of recent work from Pakistan-born
artist Huma Bhabha investigates themes of materiality, decay, and
regeneration through Art Brut aesthetics. In the front gallery, two works
radically refigure the human form through clay, chicken wire, Styrofoam
bricks, and metal piping. In the back gallery, a statuesque figure with
classical undertones stands inserted into a hollow cube, its yellow-painted
feet hidden from view. Each sculpture mediates a tenuous balance between
grotesque self-destruction and playful elemental combinations. They are
complimented by the haunting photographs, which depict fragmentary staged
visions, created from materials on site in places like Karachi and
Guadalajara. (AM)
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DRUG OF CHOICE: OpiumMagazine.com |
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The creators of OpiumMagazine.com realize our literary pursuits are in direct competition with video games, MP3 players, and an ever-expanding number of blogs for our time, and rather than shaming us for our errant ways, they aim to entertain. Opium offers clever, low-pressure essays, stories, comics, and interviews, all conveniently labeled with an estimated reading time for those daunted by the prospect of endlessly scrolling through text. Staff- and author-read podcasts can be downloaded in its .live section for your daily commute, and traditional readers can pick up a copy of their bi-annual magazine, .print. For those in search of something more interactive, Chinatown's Happy Ending hosts the 11th installment of Opium's monthly reading series on February 23rd. (IB)
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CD REVIEW: Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti, House Arrest |
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Paw Tracks
Released February 2006
$13.99 (Insound)
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It's easy to see how Ariel Pink's playful pastiche has rubbed some listeners
the wrong way since day one, but the mirage cast by his latest album should
change all that. Actually recorded years ago, House Arrest is
one of many home-recordings Pink has been steadily eking out. As the title suggests, it has the sound of a wide-eyed, shut-in kid falling head over
heels for pop — and deciding to be his own AM radio. While these
reconstituted nuggets are mulched from countless eras and genres, the active
ingredient is breezy, fuzzy psych-pop. Flicking from goofy balladry and
Stones-style dirges to Isley Brothers keyboards in mere minutes, Pink
assembles a haunting, heart-melting world that's at once borrowed and all
his own. (TW)
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STREAMS: Beats in Space |
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Despite extensive touring, both in support of the Juan Maclean and on several solo DJ jaunts abroad, Flavorpill favorite Tim Sweeney has still been able to man the WNYU studio and lay down some mixes on Beats in Space. This week, check out a smattering of new tracks, including a DFA take on Tiga and an out-of-this-world Carl Craig remix of Delia Gonzalez & Gavin Russom. Speaking of which, check Craig dropping Human League dubs amid new cuts on his own in-studio mix, assembled in support of his recent Fabric release. Finally, even though we're into 2006, be sure to tune into Sweeney's Best of 2005 show, recapping the year's notable electronic releases — there's bound to be something you missed and absolutely must hear. (CJN)
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Tim Sweeney: In-studio Mix (Electro/disco)
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Carl Craig: In-studio Mix (Techno)
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Tim Sweeney: Best of 2005 (House/disco)
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| Christopher Walken | Jeff Soto |
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| Editors: |
| Chairface | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Alf | Jake Lancaster | | Hawkman | Doug Levy | | Ford Prefect | Sascha Lewis | | Marvin | Andrew Maerkle | | Xenu | Mark Mangan | | Endomorph | Kristin Miller | | Orson | Colin J. Nagy | | Howard the Duck | Stephan Paschalides | | Khan | Joshua Stein | | David Johansen | Leah Taylor |
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| ABOUT US |
| flavorpill NYC is a free weekly email magazine covering music, arts, and cultural events in New York City. All listings are pure editorial, never paid advertisements — no money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us, and spread it... |
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To let us know about an upcoming event that you think belongs here, please email us at events at least two weeks prior to the date.
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| Contributors: |
| Paris Hilton | Mindy Bond | | Republicans | Irene Bradish | | K-PAX | Todd Burns | | Julian | Jules Gaffney | | Alan Mendelsohn | Todd Goldstein | | Monolith | Carl E. Hagen | | Chewbacca | Cortney L. Harding | | Kim Basinger | Kiwa Iyobe | | Jadzia Dax | Paddy Johnson | | Q | Jessica Kraft | | Cardassians | Catherine E. Krudy | | My parents | Gerry Mak | | Vulcan | John McCormick | | Arnold Schwarzenegger | Mike Powell | | Romulan | Naz Riahi | | Worf | Lisa Rosman | | Gerry | Toby Warner |
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Production: |
| Mork | Casey Acierno | | The Grand Negus | Anjuli Ayer | | Amanda Lepore | Chelsea Bauch | | Kelly Clarkson | Jessica Bauer-Greene | | Ebe #1 | Morgan Croney | | Trumpy | Kate Estwing | | The Giant | Sander-Martijn Milks | | The Midget | David Morrow | | Ewoks | Judah Wiedre |
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