View Full Version : Ken Ishii makes his return to New York Presidents Day weekend!
Matterform1
Feb 5th, 2004, 08:33 PM
Tiger Beer & GBH Present:
Ken Ishii
At Spirit
Sunday Feb 15
Presidents’ Day Weekend
Main Room (Body):
Ken Ishii
Kazu (Vinyl Market)
Hiro (Con-Fu-Sion)
Mind and Soul Rooms
Special guest DJs playing hip-hop and classics
Doors Open: 10pm
Admission: $15 ‘til midnight / $20 til 1am on guestlist
General admission is $25
For guest list call: 212 807-6795 or email gbhny@aol.com with your name and the number of guests you are bringing.
Spirit: 530 W 27th St between Tenth and Eleventh Aves
Subway: C, E to 23rd Street
MAP
http://newyork.citysearch.com/map?mode=geo&id=39400409&map_lat=407505&map_lon=-740033&fid=5&cslink=profile_map_noncust
http://www.matter-form.com/spirit_back.jpg
LavenderMenace
Feb 5th, 2004, 10:25 PM
:D :sip: :evil:
detroittechno
Feb 6th, 2004, 11:51 AM
FINALLY! a nite worthy of checking out Spirit . . .
i have had qualms about it thou still.
will not seem rite not being at Twilo . . .
i kinda want to keep my memories intact of it as it was.
anyone with me?
KingInk
Feb 6th, 2004, 04:02 PM
time to check out Spirit :nice: :evil:
Nurse GLOW
Feb 6th, 2004, 10:59 PM
Nice!!!!
matterform
Feb 11th, 2004, 07:50 PM
Weekend's almost here... :evil:
amy
Feb 11th, 2004, 08:39 PM
:D :D :D
matterform
Feb 12th, 2004, 11:41 AM
Purdy old article I done dug up.
Ken Ishii
Flatspin
(Sony Japan)
US release date: 2001
by Shan Fowler
PopMatters Music Critic
e-mail this article
There are at least two ways to look at Flatspin, the latest release from Japanese DJ and composer Ken Ishii: as a collection of minimal techno tracks destined for dancefloor greatness, or as a collection of songs that might not fit on any dancefloor mix, but fit nicely anywhere else. It's been that way for a while with Ishii. Like Moby, he expands the boundaries of what can be considered dance music. Unlike Moby, he sticks to what he knows best.
What Ishii knows best is techno. The focus is on BPMs, bleeps and buzzes. He can stick to a driving yet understated groove that easily puts him on par with any of the Detroit masters such as Derrick May and Kevin Saunderson -- DJs whose missions are an uninterrupted sonic journey that plays out like a jet flying low in complete darkness. And yet Ishii's just as prone to shed some light on the flight, adding burst and loopy rhythms that shine through the beats like sunshine through clouds.
Ishii wastes no time letting the sun shine through, as it does on the instant classic "Iceblink", which starts with a junkyard clang and crescendos with a haunting synthesis of Japanese-tinged synthetic strings. Another mix of the same track replaces the steely undertones with a lilting vocal that could melt the iciest techno mix.
Yet "Iceblink" is the most accessible track on the album, and it's easy to see why DJs outside of Japan have had a tough time incorporating Ishii's soundscapes into their own mixes. The beats rarely drop out entirely -- though "Grab It Attack It" is too boingy for its own good -- but the way he builds the beats would make it tough to match with other tracks in a standard Detroit or German mix. "Infrangible" is founded in a massive power-down/power-up juxtaposition that'll make you want to dance even when you're sitting at your computer. "Drums in Friction", has an equally massive tribal thump-and-hum. But most DJs would probably have to build an entire mix around either of these songs just to fit them in. Ishii's nonconformity is too much work for most DJs.
As its own CD, however, Flatspin makes for great listening. "Mirage" is a dubbed out drifter that comes perfectly in the middle of the CD. "Moonquake" is a jolty spacewalk with a classic techno vibe. And "Sneaking Shadows" (an Asian bonus track), with its suave organ and chirpy flute loop, sounds like official driving music for international spies everywhere.
Full-length, non-mix albums aren't the best medium for many dance DJs. Some can't fill an entire album with tracks worth hearing. For others, full-lengths can prove that they should stick to mixing and leave the composing to those who are best at it. Ken Ishii can live in both worlds. He's at the forefront of internationally known DJs and he's an experimental composer who doesn't limit his musical pedigree to tracks that would fit in other DJs' mixes, let alone his own.
matterform
Feb 12th, 2004, 02:36 PM
back up there...
Matterform1
Feb 14th, 2004, 06:18 PM
Techno in the air... :D
ckord
Feb 14th, 2004, 06:55 PM
I'll most likely be there. :sip:
Matterform1
Feb 15th, 2004, 08:14 PM
Tonight's the night... :D
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