Everything I Need

September 8, 2010 9:14 pm  /  Bikes, New York, Twin Cities

Sometimes I imagine myself standing on the very cusp of the amazing-rest-of-my-life just waiting to unfold.  And I’ve got everything I need.

I live in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, New York, and my rent is reasonable. I live in a comfortable apartment, with the biggest bedroom of any place I’ve ever lived, in a neighborhood I love.  My landlord is friendly and responsive to my concerns. I can see the Empire State Building from my roof. I am friends with my roommates, and we avoid cable bills by watching TV on the computer.  I am friends with my neighbors, who offer me cold drinks and jerk chicken hot off the grill on weekends. 

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Last Night

September 5, 2010 8:49 pm  /  New York

“Excuse me, officer, but can you tell us what the problem is?”

“This in an UNauthorized party.  I’m only going to tell you to leave one more time.”

“I understand, but I was just wondering if there was a particular problem or offense? Maybe they could turn the music down a bit?”

“I’m just following my orders. What, are you…some kind of reporter?”

“No, I’m just a guy who lives in the neighborhood and was enjoying the party.”

“Because you’re asking questions like a reporter.”

“We going home,” my neighbor said, defeated. “Home, sweet Home.”

Caribbean Day Eve Eve

September 4, 2010 8:37 pm  /  New York

It’s Labor Day weekend, and if you live in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, it means a weekend of celebratory preparation for the West Indian Carnival or “Caribbean Day Parade” on Monday.  (If you live anywhere in the NYC area GET DOWN HERE on Labor Day for the show.) In other words, this is a weekend full of jerk chicken, oxtail, sequined dancers, reggae, dancehall, and (for some reason) Guinness. (According to my neighbors, stouts are the brew of choice. I have yet to see anyone drink a single Red Stripe in my 3.5 years here.) My sister, Lauren, is also in town and I need to take her to the various festivities. Our neighbor already offered us goat soup this afternoon. We just ran into him again on our way home and he made me promise to meet him at a party down the block in a few minutes. So apologies for this short blog note, but I’ll make up for it with some Caribbean Day documentation in a later post.

Alright!

A perfect set-up

April 30, 2010 11:38 pm  /  New York

Tonight my housemates and I broke out the mini charcoal grill and went up on to the roof to make some burgers.  Sean had a recipe for “Hawaiian” hamburgers: ground beef marinated with soy sauce topped off with a slice of pineapple. We used those sliced rings of pineapple from a can, but also had the standard lettuce, tomato, onion slices, and condiments.  I was on burger-flipping duty, so naturally I served myself last.  As I was deciding how to garnish my own burger, I asked my housemates how they were enjoying theirs.

“Do you like it?” I asked, hesitating over the slice of pineapple.

They did.

“Well, if you like it then I’d better put a ring on it.”

Silence.

Listening vs conversation

April 18, 2010 8:53 pm  /  Music, New York

What a serendipitous weekend. Since Thursday I’ve seen three very different but equally inspiring concerts (1, 2, 3) at some of New York’s best stages.  I’ve met some equally interesting and inspiring people. One of whom–an accomplished composer–asked me if I had been writing any music of own. In a kind of self-deprecating half-truth, I told him, no, I hadn’t. “But how can you NOT write?” he asked, visibly concerned.

To say I’ve been having a “musical crisis” would be melodramatic; in truth I’ve continued to write little modular riffs, progressions, beats, loops, all sorts of disconnected scraps. But then I try to stitch them together into something larger (by myself, in a vacuum on the computer) and am often disappointed with the results. It doesn’t feel like “writing music” anymore at least.

Listening to the aforementioned composer talk about his own (unlikely?) journey as a musician made me think of something one of my composition professors once told me, that great composers need to inhabit two contradictory personas: the analytical self-critic and the egomaniac. According to him, you need to be able to deeply examine and reflect on your work, but also need to be able to turn that critical voice off completely from time to time. In a Jekyll and Hyde transformation, you must become unabashedly self confident and have glimpses of what my professor called “momentary infallibility.” You are the artist, you have the vision, and you can do no wrong. To hell with the critics.

These past months I’ve been thinking a lot about music, about writing, and about thinking about writing and music far more than I’ve actually been writing or writing music. Generally speaking, I’ve spent the past few years out here in New York in “listening” mode…or at least listening far more than I have been speaking. Indeed, much of my work as a recordist requires that I be a “fly on the wall,” capturing other people’s thoughts but never dialoging with them. And in terms of my own music and writing, I thought I should absorb as much of the world around me as possible in order to make an informed, articulate statement of my own.

But this “listening in preparation for an intelligent response” approach (or whatever I’m going to call it) is like snail mail. More to the point, it’s nothing like having a real conversation. We communicate not despite of but through our interruptions, digressions, and (very often) instincts based on fragments of information. In order to sustain a conversation, we often speak regardless of whether or not our response is completely measured, accurate, or even articulate. Conversation is improvisational, forcing us to keep stringing along new ideas, to examine for brief moments, and to answer. Maybe this is alternating between self-critic and egomaniac at a faster or pace, but perhaps it’s just acting like a whole, balanced person.

As a producer, I’ve become pretty good at shaping and augmenting other people’s ideas, being critic or maniacal advocate on behalf of someone else’s material. So it would seem I should be capable of giving my own ideas the same treatment, right? Should I start having more conversations with myself? It seems I’m arriving at some of the same conclusions as in the past: I should probably keep a journal (offline, for myself), and I should start making a point of going out on a limb and sharing some of my ideas (musical and otherwise) with others.

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Here’s a recent podcast I recorded and edited for the Met:

Artist Pablo Bronstein and curator Gary Tinterow discuss Bronstein’s new drawings and etchings that suggest mythical histories and hypothetical futures of the Metropolitan Museum.

link