The Incredible Blog

  • russell comes to portland, after party is witnessed

    6/4/06

    Anjali and I just got back from Russell Peters at the Crystal Ballroom. Apparently 436 tickets were sold at $35. Seems like a good take to me but Seattle did 1900 and tickets were $50. Russell demands big checks and the promoter lost a lot of money. Portland is a cheap town and I am amazed that that many people paid $35 to see a comic with nothing available commercially. I think the turnout shows the power of youtube where most people I imagine are introduced to his work. The bulk of the tickets were sold in the last 4 days which just shows how slow to move most Portland audiences are. When we were in negotiations with the promoter to do the after party he alleged that they worked with their own DJs. Well, actually they dug around Portland for a straight-ahead hip hop DJ. Maybe they usually do work with their own DJs and the slow ticket sales and a frustrated search for a free venue resulted in them digging in Portland for a DJ at the last minute. Russell “hates” Indian music (which probably goes some way towards explaining why we didn’t get the gig) and it was “Gold Digger” and “In Da Club” right out of the gate. The DJ (Def Touch?) was allegedly late because of being stuck in traffic behind the Starlight parade.

    There was nothing but a Hip-hop/R&B mixtape playing when we entered Lola’s Room below the Crystal Ballroom. I was somewhat expecting to see a room full of hundreds dancing to live DJs. There were probably more people still up on the top floor in the ballroom trying to get drinks from the upstairs bar. The one attached to Lola’s Room required five dollars to get access. It was a very quiet, light crowd of people waiting (in the hopes to see Russell? Or have a party?). This after party venue was only decided on at the last minute because so few advanced tickets for Russell had sold and every other venue in town supposedly wanted money to host the event. So no one in town other than the attendees of the comedy show upstairs even had any idea that this party was happening. Everyone was mostly sitting down, Indian boys in circles around white tablecloths with drinks in front of them. The carrot constantly hung out by the emcee was that “if everyone packed the dance floor” Russell Peters (allegedly a “great DJ”) would actually play some tunes. Well, he had no records so he could play Def Touch’s mainstream hiphop singles, I guess. Def Touch was even playing CENSORED versions of the songs which always baffle me. I will only play a censored version when it is an absolute necessity because no other version of the song is available.
    I was told that five different people including Russell were going to be DJing but I find that hard to believe since no equipment was set up until Def Touch arrived late. There was an hour of backing tape with people sitting around waiting. And there are five DJs waiting to play? Really? The sound was good but as soon as I saw the DJ setting up turntables so close to the bouncing floor I knew there was going to be skipping since I have had trouble playing records at any Lola’s gig without being set up on the permanent fixture attached to the back wall. Sure enough things were skipping and because of the sound effects in all the censored portions of the lyrics I couldn’t tell what was a skip and what was a deleted cuss word. The sound was good and loud with a lot of bass other than that. The mainstream songs certainly sounded as good as I’ve ever heard them but hardly provided enough interest to keep us from leaving such a relatively quiet and uninteresting scene early. The promoter was cool enough to get us in for free (Thanks!) and as we left we heard that the bar was shutting down at midnight because of how few people were buying drinks. As we were rounding the stairs heading out we heard the emcee making noise about how Russell was going to be coming to the stage but knowing what was likely in the record bins I couldn’t “rustle” up much interest. Pizza Oasis came through like a champ for a midnight run. Good overrunning pizzas. Apizza Scholls is damn good but sometimes an overflowing pizza just hits the spot.

    IK

    PS The comics were all better than average. I like Daniel Nainan but his act was exactly the same as the one available on youtube. He stood at the base of the stairs and said “Hi” to everyone and handed out business cards which he announced from the stage were “free” even if you didn’t buy his DVDs. Yoshi was a raunchier comic which the crowd didn’t warm to as much. His accent (which Russell Peters made a great deal of fun of) becoming nigh- unintelligible when he started riffing very fast which he was quite apt to do. Russell spent a lot of time pausing and passing time between bits and it still came to only an hour not including the “Somebody” routine done as an encore. The encore got far more cheers than laughs suggesting how familiar it was to the people in attendance. Russell did do some playing with the crowd, a lot of time with an older Indian uncle and a group of “Arabs.” He expertly dispatched hecklers from all positions in the long room including the balcony and the back bar. He used a lot of his repetoire of accents in sketches that were slightly different to avoid being youtube repeats. My favorite bit was about his desire to see good Indian pornos created and how he imagined the soundtrack being tabla beats played on a woman’s ass and a guy’s penis being played like a tumbi. Russell providing expert vocal imitations of these instruments in his very humorous porn enactments. There were some interesting perspectives throughout and while I appreciate some of Russell’s approach I still wish he was more politically progressive and engaged than he comes off in his routines. He did make some very interesting comments about “white people” (specifically the white people of North America) and our position relative to all the other world’s peoples (in the form of North American immigrants). His flipped perspective on white guilt was quite thought-provoking and insightful.

  • Reggaeton hitting its stride

    So lately I’ve been feeling new Reggaeton as much as anything. First hearing it from a rooftop in Antigua, Guatemala in early ’99 I was immediately drawn to a new sound I didn’t have a name for belonging to a scene of which I was totally unaware. I think the first song I really latched on to sampled an old Bob Marley riff (De La Soul sampled the same riff for “Keepin’ the Faith”) which was tuggingly familiar. I ended up buying cassettes both legally and on the streets of Panajachel that had titles with “Regue” in them. Not that I knew what I was getting. In baby Spanish I was asking for youth music that was the most “intenso.” I had no way of listening to them during my sojourn but after checking them out back in Portland I ended up bringing some along to a career-defining May Day gig that Spring at the Borthwick manor. I would cart around a tape deck to house party gigs at the time in order to take advantage of street tapes filled with new Reggaeton and Merengue-House songs of which I hadn’t yet found more legitimate copies.

    A trip to New York City in 2002 convinced me that Reggaeton was the biggest sound on the streets of El Barrio when people weren’t taking the mellow road with sappy Bachata. From first hearing Bhangra I knew it was going to break into the American mainstream but I don’t remember having any such thoughts about Reggaeton; I just knew that it slayed at parties. In fact I DJed a house party many years ago on Haight St. where I was about to take over the decks and decided to spring a new sound on people. As I was about to put on my first song someone came up and asked me to play some Hip-hop. I told them sure and thought “I hope they like Latin Hip-hop.” Well as I drop the first Reggaeton track the man come back to me saying “I’m from P.R. My whole crew is from P.R. This is our music. This is our roots.” They begin to go crazy and jump up and down on the dancefloor. Well, I have to assure anyone who doesn’t live in Portland that this is an unbelievably rare and unusual scene for Portland. Portland is not only most definitely not NYC, it is the whitest city of its size in America, and the Spanish-speakers here are for the vast majority, not from Puerto Rico. For years I would go to Latin stores in the Portland metro area and find nary a hint of Reggaeton. Reggaeton has since become a pan-Latin smash, the most popular urban genre in Spanish, and has achieved a great deal of mainstream exposure and sales. There was a period of time last summer when it felt like 1 out of 5 songs on 95.5 was a Reggaeton cut.

    As much as I have stuff dating back to the early days of Reggaeton it is the latest releases that have me the most excited. I’ve had such a vast collection since the first time I went crazy at a Spanish Harlem shop that sometimes it has felt like more a chore to slog through all my Reggaeton discs than a joy. Well, ever since Mas Flow 2 things have been entirely different. That was the most significant time that I discovered a Reggaeton disc filled with hot tracks and not just 1 or 2. Lately Hector El Bambino, Tito El Bambino, Wisin y Yandel, Zion y Lennox, Ivy Queen, anything by Luny Tunes, and in it’s un-remixed form, Daddy Yankee’s “Rompe” have all been sounding to my ears like a consolidation of stylistc features and a spear-charge forward into the next phase for Reggaeton. Don Omar has his first album of new material in quite a while. I have yet to pick it up but I am curious in what directions he will be pushing Reggaeton, as I am about Tego Calderon whenever he gets around to releasing a new album.

    IK

  • technical mishaps happen to the best of us

    6/3/06

    Anjali and I played at XV on Thursday. Another gig dedicated to Indian sounds (on a weeknight!) that actually brought out a group of dancers until 2am. May we all sing the praises of friends of friends and text messages. Thank you, Alyssa. I actually played more of a bhangra/hip-hop sample set than I feel like I’ve played in years. I even forgot one of my Skillz secret weapons until the next day. For my first set I played what I thought was one of my best of efforts at a totally grooving 60’s and 70’s Bollywood breaks set. The whole time I was into it and feeling really good about the tracks I was dropping. I couldn’t hear the sound from the room because I was behind a monitor aimed at my face from a few feet away. About 45 minutes into my set my friends Connie and JC come up and tell me it doesn’t sound too good in the room. After some trouble shooting it appears that the only sound-transmitting devices that are on in the room are my monitor and the subwoofer. The main speakers hadn’t even been turned on yet. Because all I could hear was the monitor and I hadn’t left the DJ booth once I had no idea.

    Now, at this point in the night most people were in the other room with the bar and they had their own system in there so things sounded fine. The few people who had been in the DJ room apparently didn’t notice anything the matter. It is just somewhat defeating to realize that the whole time I was feeling so into the songs I was playing they were being compromised to such a great extent in a way I wasn’t aware of at the time.

    IK

  • indo-canadian comic comes to Portland

    6/3/06
    Anjali and I are seeing Russell Peters tonight at the Crystal Ballroom. Yay, a Saturday night without a gig! Revel in these rare occurences. It might not have been that way. We had been hearing about Russell Peters for some time but only started checking him out online in the last couple months (Thank you, Racecar!). The day after we had watched a bunch of his clips on youtube we got a call from the production company putting on the Portland show about forming a “promotional alliance” for handling the after party. Well, we explained to them that we promote events because we are DJs and we promote the events we DJ. They were looking to put “Anjali and the Kid” on all their advertising as sponsors. We explained that we would only be interested in promoting an event at which we were performing. What would be the point of putting our names on flyers for a show we weren’t playing? Well, it turns out that the production company has their own DJs that work their events so that put a quick end to any proposed “promotional alliance.” Since no details have been released about the after party I’ll be curious to see what has been arranged. Russell’s tickets were steep as shit so he better earn his fucking money. I’m also curious to see the opening comics since from what I’ve seen on youtube it seems that he performs with some pretty sharp comics.

  • a free weekend?

    5/20/06

    Yes, a weekend without a DJ gig. The first in months. Of course we find ourselves at a club and hanging out with friends and listening to music all night anyway. And, yeah, guess what, I’m tired. Wasted tired. We saw DJ Vadim and One Self last night (Yarah Bravo and Blu Rum 13 are the MC’s). We got there very late (after 12:30am) and according to Jacob at the door that is when everyone started to arrive. We only caught the last couple songs of their set (and a seemingly spontaneous set of encore songs). Didn’t see DJ Vadim DJing beforehand or our friends DJ Blackmarks and Alter Echo. One Self had the whole club grooving from people at the bar swaying along to almost everyone else fixated on the stage and moving arms according to instructions. Yarah Bravo is the type of super-cute, infectiously energetic female performer that gets everyone focused on her and crushed out, bobbing along. According to our friends Nick and Sung they were much better right before we got there and then some of the newer stuff we ended up catching was apparently not as worked out. There was some really bad singing but they had spirit, pep and energy and the crowd was eating out of their hands. I wish I had caught more to get more of an impression. The bass was tremendously loud and chest-compressing which was awesome and I wish it sounded more like that at our nights at Holocene. Apparently Blackmarks was having some fun before we got there maximizing the bass and causing the windows to rattle. Shame we missed it.

    IK

    PS I keep trying to write a proper in-depth update and keep being foiled by lack of time. Don’t worry, I’m thinking about all of y’all.

  • tired again with little energy to write too much

    5/16/06

    Suprise, suprise, tired again. So tired that I am soon to bed despite it being before midnight. Yes, occasionally it does happen. Just got back from seeing “To Catch A Thief” with Anjali. Cary Grant (or Archibald Leach if you prefer) will always be an all-time classic. They don’t write dialogue like that any more.

    So, not only do I have no time or energy to write any more about the last several shows but yet another one occurred last week, Atlas. Despite there not being as many people as there have been lately (blame it on the gorgeous, long, summer-like day) it was still a great party with a lot of energy and a lot of dancing. I had a wall of people dancing on the speakers in front of me throughout an entire set. I felt much better about my around-the-world-in-an-hour set than I have at several recent events. I’ve been feeling down about my performances in general lately, and Atlas definitely gave me a boost.

    5/17/06

    I was so tired I went to bed without even attempting to finish my thoughts. Let me tell you working days and nights makes one a tired fellow. I promise I’ll sit down soon and blast you with something long and worthwhile. Thanks for checking in.

    IK

  • Tired, but I can’t leave you without an update can I?

    5/10/06

    I’m tired. What else is new? Stayed up very late last night listening to old school Reggaeton and rereading Grant Morrison’s New X-Men line. Yes, it’s the only X-Men I’ve read since the early 80’s because its GRANT MORRISON! Grant, Grant, Grant. You’re the shit.

    But how are the gigs, you say? Well, since I last posted we played the first night of our new First Thursday gig at XV, saw Panjabi legend Gurdas Maan in Salem (at the gorgeous Elsinore Theater), and DJed off an on from 6pm until 2am at the PICA 11th Birthday Party. Honestly, I’m too tired and rushed to really get into it right now, but when I see how many of you are checking here everyday I like to at least drop a note.

    I’m looking forward to Atlas this Saturday and hoping to drop some new (or new old) stuff for y’all. We’ve also confirmed the line up for Anjali’s Birthday on June 15th. State of Bengal and the Sub Swara DJs from NYC. Do not miss this one. I’ll hopefully write soon to fill you in on more of the latest details.

    IK

    PS What do you think the chances are that Grant’s run on New X-Men will ever be rereleased with more consistent art and less fill-in issues? I think it would be the first time in history such a move has ever happened. I’d be curious to see it.

  • ringing ears, gig behind me

    4/30/06 4:20am

    Tired. Ringing ears. Another Andaz is past. Very different night. Anjali and I always say that. It always feels like a largely new crowd. Lots of people wandering around confused not sure what to make of any of it. Where was my filmi crowd? Or did they just want different songs? We certainly had a large if not the largest gathering of Panjabis this night. Its good to have excitable crowd members but treading lightly is always a better idea than trying to dictate to the DJ. Some people get very enthusiastic and aggressive with their requests. Don’t get in the DJ’s face and don’t piss the DJ off. Of course the people who need to hear this aren’t the ones reading this.

    So many crowds to balance. The Panjabi crowd. The filmi lovers. And in the middle the goras who generally don’t appreciate filmi cheez and don’t necessarily appreciate the slower Bhangra numbers that are often most coveted by the Panjabis. How many people recognize that in order not to lose any given faction the DJ has to try to balance all of them. Then there are people who are making requests that aren’t even for Indian music such as American Hip-hop and reggaeton. I love hip-hop and reggaeton dearly, but the majority of the crowd at Andaz (whether white or brown) comes so focused on Indian music that Hip-hop gets met with blank stares and still feet. So much Panjabi and filmi music is so clearly influenced by or directly derivative of American Hip-hop that it is ridiculous to play the imitations (whether pale or inspired) without featuring some of the genuine article. Easier said than done at Andaz. Regretfully the most succesful numbers would probably be the most predictable and overplayed. My one Hip-hop request all night was E-4o “Tell Me When To Go.” I appreciate that E-40 and the Bay are getting some much deserved national attention but that song has yet to make me want to jump up and dance. Maybe it’s just a case of 95.5 oversaturation.

    Thank you to everyone who came out. I feel like I had a hard time hitting a homerun tonight. Maybe I had too much of my own agenda without doing a good enough job of determining what the crowd really wanted to hear. I certainly have my own perverse filmi interests and steppy Bhangra fusion favorites that few others (if any) appreciate to the extent that I do. Balance, balance, balance. Too bad dancefloor factions are often intolerant of anything other than the sound (if not the very specific songs) that they want to hear. Boys (and boys at heart) like boy songs, girls (and girls at heart) like girl songs. And some guys are smart enough to tolerate girl songs because they like watching or dancing with girls who like to dance to girl songs. Off balance. Out of gear. Sore throat and signing off.

    IK

    PS Thank you to Deai for the visuals and Shira!!! for coming through as always and making sure the sound was dialed in just right. Thank you!!

  • A little more of an update

    4/18/06

    It’s late. I’m tired. I should be sleeping. Listening to a fabulous old vinyl compilation of even older Tito Puente hits. I love the dearly departed, Tito very much. I only discovered him towards the very end of his career but fortunately I was able to see him perform several times in his last years. Such an amazing composer, arranger and performer. The changes in his songs are simply spellbinding. This is one of many records and CDs I picked up on our SF adventure. I hadn’t been in most of a decade and I can’t say things really seemed any different to me. We had a few beautifully sunny days and some crappy, crappy days that made Portland seem tolerable by comparison. The night before we left we had our Atlas show at Holocene. Since we were getting on the plane for SF right after the gig I was simultaneously having to pack for Atlas, pack for the SF gig, and pack for the trip. I have trouble with just one packing experience, much less three overlapping. The Atlas gig went great. Huge crowd, one of our biggest in a while, which is saying something because all our gigs have been great lately.

    We slept all day after arriving in SF. Our friend and Bhangra instructor extraordinaire, Joti Singh, took great care of us and made our gig such a success. We went to a mutual friend’s wedding and then had to jet straight to the gig. A reggae band had also been scheduled for an early show and they were still playing when we arrived. At first there were only a few people there to see them but by the end of their set the room was full. They seemed miffed at having to leave the stage but their final song was met with faint clapping and that heartened me to realize that the room was actually full of people that were there to see us. We were lucky to have many friends there. The band took a long time to move their gear and since they were set up on the dance floor it set things back a bit. Joti eventually gave a spirited lesson and quickly it was dancin’ time. We had a good time and already have several interested parties trying to bring us back to SF so hopefully that will happen before too long.

    We saw Cheb I Sabbah at Underground SF. He is no longer DJing at his long-time haunt, Nicky’s. His set was almost entirely Bhangra which is quite a difference from when we first saw him several years ago. He was kind enough to give Anjali a pre-release of a new remix album of his which is coming out. In the five years Anjali and I have been DJing Bhangra we’ve seen its profile change quite a bit as it becomes more and more standard as a part of any international DJ’s set list. Even some DJs who years ago claimed they “couldn’t stand” Bhangra. (Not a reference to Cheb I Sabbah.)

    Alright, I need to be sleeping. As good as the Tito Puente record is I’ll call it a night. Here’s to you Tito (and Santos too!) wherever you are.

    IK

  • retraction or what

    4/18/06

    So, I love talking smack. Mad smack. However, I hate to impugn anyone who doesn’t deserve it. Mr. David Starfire wrote me back in reference to the soundman at the City Repair benefit. He had this to say:

    Yea well he didn’t have much to work with and someone told him he needed only stack a side.

    So, maybe the low, low sound had nothing to do with the soundman. Maybe his hands were tied. Maybe it was all out of his control. All I know is that it was far too quiet for any kind of serious dance action. Ah well.

    IK