The Creators Project ~ Richie Hawtin x Anish Kapoor

What happens when you combine the open space of a colossal atrium, a renowned sculptor with an electronic music pioneer? A monumental artistic experience, through shape, space and integration of music. This edition of the Creators Project, includes British sculptor, Anish Kapoor and M-nus producer, Richie Hawtin.

“My ambition,” said Kapoor in the press release, “is to create a space within a space that responds to the height and luminosity of the Nave at the Grand Palais. Visitors will be invited to walk inside the work, to immerse themselves in color, and it will, I hope, be a contemplative and poetic experience.”

Each year, Monumenta invites an internationally renowned artist to conceive of a site-specific installation for the great nave of the Grand Palais in Paris. The vast atrium space, which encompasses some 13,500 square meters, has been tackled previously by some of today’s preeminent contemporary artists, including Anselm Kiefer, Richard Serra and Christian Boltanski.

Richie Hawtin @ Mezzanine, San Francisco – July 1, 2011

richie_hawtin_san_francisco_july2011_visao media

(Encore break before his last track. Video by Visao Media)
Three years since his last SF performance. Richie Hawtin (M-nus) performed a great night of tech house in San Francisco. Fans enjoyed a 2-hour relentless set from the tech don himself. Kontrol SF’s Nikola Baytala played a great opening set (playing vinyl/CDs with a cast on). Thanks Blasthaus.

David Terranova Spotlight ~ Rebel Rave Director ~ Pt.1 (of 2)

david terranova - visao media - rebel rave

David Terranova: the Director
Flash Developer/Video/Music Producer/Designer
Age? 27
Born: Rome, then moved to London. I’m half Italian, half English. I spent part of my childhood moving between London and a rustic old village outside Rome, then at 16 I moved to the UK permanently.
Current City: I’ve been in New York for 6 months now, London has definitely been the most influential city on me. Since moving to NY I’m feeling really fresh and positive vibes everywhere, so I know my move will be an important chapter for me.

How did your opportunity with the Rebel Rave video series come about? Matthew Dear’s Black City? Richie Hawtin’s M-nus Embed video?
DT: An important chapter in my life was when I discovered the party scene in East London at the rather late age of 23. I became ingrained in the local parties, taking pictures with my little snap camera (flickr?) and making flash flyers and posters for friends’ nights like “Trailer Trash”. I got a text message from Hannah Holland one day, while I was freelancing in an agency building an awful kids’ website for Disney. She was a DJ from that scene and asked me if I was interested in speaking to Damian Lazarus, he was looking for someone to make some videos. Within a couple of weeks I was sitting in his kitchen drinking a cup of tea and stroking his cat, completely star struck, talking about this series he wanted to make to promote his label(Crosstown Rebels). Neither of us had a clear idea of what we wanted, he just wanted me to film the parties and make cool videos. So as a trial he sent me off on New Year’s Eve to film three different parties. My cameraman brother quickly showed me how to use his Sony Z1 and my best friend, Robbie came along as my assistant. Damian loved the video, but it was just a leap in the dark for me.

Each episode you can see that I learned something new: the first one was just a basic edit to music, the second I tried to record some sit-down “interviews”, the third was a big mess because Watergate in Berlin didn’t let me use my top-light, the fourth I played a bit more with graphics, the fifth I used a presenter for the first time, etc, etc. And you can see the editing and style also has changed a lot, so it’s just been a vehicle for me to figure out how to do things. The last episode, featuring the RR U.S. Tour, was mostly focused on making everything feel like a dream/nightmare, which is something I’m getting fond of. The Richie Hawtin video is a bit like that too.

The people at Fabric really liked the series and they put me through to Matthew Dear when he was looking for someone to make a promo video about his Audion world tour, filmed at his upcoming night at Fabric. I had met Matthew on a couple of occasions before at Crosstown-related events, so felt honored to finally be actually working with him. That was almost 2 years ago now, so when I moved to NY last January I sent him a quick email showing some of my latest work. He particularly liked the Afterlife video(http://vimeo.com/8153533) made with my friend James Mountford, so he put me in touch with Will Calcutt to work together on the material for Black City… Six months later and I’m in an office with Will filming my eyeball for the promo video!

I remember not really knowing who Richie Hawtin was 4 or 5 years ago. I recognized the name, but knew nothing about his history nor heard him play. So, I went to this festival in London where friends were saying “Wow, Richie Hawtin and Ali Demirel”, because Ali’s name was also on the flyer. I was like “who’s Ali Demirel?” and they said “he does the visuals or something”. Turns out I was blown away by what was being displayed on this giant LED screen. There were these minimal geometrical images moving slowly all over the place and that was the beginning of a new chapter for me. This was a moment that shifted things around in my head. A couple of months later we went to the Contakt show in London, and that’s when I felt like my eyes had just been opened up for the first time. I remember going back home that morning with my best friend, we were in the shop looking for some breakfast and all we could see were these perfect and beautiful shapes everywhere, we actually stopped to look at the bottles that were neatly standing on the floor, admiring their colorful caps and how they were all chained together in an invisible grid. The next day I decided to recreate one of the visual structures that had been shown at the event, the one you always see in the Contakt videos with the grid of dots moving around, I called it Minus Grid (http://www.davidterranova.com/minus-grid).

A few months later I get a message from Ali Demirel, who I knew all about by this time: his history and work with Burak Arikan. So you can imagine the excitement when I get an email from him. A few times he tried to get me to do some work for them, including the first installment of the M-nus Embed series, but I could never take anything on because of my own schedule with other projects. So finally, I think after two years after we first spoke, we managed to get me working on the third installment of the Embed series, following Richie around on a 3 day tour across Europe, which included flying in a private jet. It was a really big ordeal for me as a lot of things went wrong (including a lost camera charger halfway through the trip!!) and everything became a terrible nightmare that I couldn’t believe was happening, which meant I had to work 3 times harder during post production to save the project. You can read more detail on my blog: those three days were in a way some of the worst in my life, but at the same time I was on a constant high spending time with Richie and Ali, people who I’d admired so much.

david_terranova_visao_media_m-nus

2010 Rebel Rave Tour(Crosstown Rebels) You’re the director for the video series; which shows did you happen to attend? Most memorable experiences? Fav. artist from series? Who was shooting all the video?
DT: I filmed everything actually. I don’t know how the series is perceived, but it’s actually a one-man-band. The skinny guy with the big camera poking around the DJs, that’s me… My favorite artist from the series has to be Mr. Seth Troxler. You just stick a cute girl next to him and camera in his face and he’ll just go on for hours. From the episode in Paris there’s so much footage I couldn’t use, really hilarious material, maybe one day I’ll post it up unedited. I would put Damian Lazarus up there in the top; after all he’s the real man behind it all.

Memorable experiences, on a personal level, has to be the Wolf+Lamb episode because everything about the trip was magical: meeting Zev and Gadi, going to the Marcy Hotel, the unparalleled 24 hour party, meeting my girlfriend. It became a huge chapter in my life, that episode is the only reason why I’m now living here in New York, a couple of blocks away from the Marcy.

Another experience has to be the time I was at the Droog party on the roof-top of the Standard Hotel in Downtown LA: Damian had just started playing and the sun had gone down and all the surrounding skyscrapers were lit up. Unforgettable moments and a really colossal setting for a party! Oh no wait, actually probably the best one was walking around with Seth in Paris, looking for one of these guys on the street who is trying to sell you a haircut deal. We found one and followed this dodgy guy for about 15 minutes down these back alleys until we got to this amazing Caribbean hair salon where a bunch of 3 year-old kids gathered around us in awe (camera kit, Anna the presenter and Seth, this superstar-looking-guy with a funky tache). One of the kids burst into tears when we had to leave as he didn’t want to let go of the microphone we had mistakenly let him hold. In the end Seth was pretty pissed off that they brutalized his tache, right before his gig at the Batofar for Freak n Chic. That was very memorable.


The Rebel Rave series is a quirky music-based video series with party cuts and special guests. What’s your approach presenting the series?

DT: My approach at first was actually non-existent, it’s all been experimenting with whatever knowledge I had at the time. Well actually, the only thing I’d say is constant with my videos is that I spend a lot of time on the music. Before editing, I find the right music. I mix it all in Ableton, exporting single mixed tracks for Final Cut. It’s a fiddly process because I then edit the video to this track, and if at a certain point the track breaks down, that means I have to also break down the visuals, which involves going back and forth between the video edit, finding timecodes, going to Ableton and cutting or looping sections, or putting effects on top at the right point in time, and then going back to Final Cut to see if it fits. So as the video edit builds, I’m gradually extending the audio edit.

RR series: Biggest mishap?
DT: On my first trial during the NYE episode, two of the tapes were all scrambled, no playback! I generally have bad luck when I least need it (wait till you hear the Minus Embed story in a few days!), so I was in utter despair and just assumed that it was the end of my short-lived relationship with Damian and the Rebels. My brothers helped me figure out what was going on with the tapes; we called all sorts of technicians. In the end I found that if you scrubbed the tape at half the speed, it played fine without any scrambling. So, I re-recorded the two tapes by scrubbing them at half the speed onto new tapes, and then recaptured the new ones and sped them up by 200%. Big mess! Again, please don’t tell damian.

Rebel Rave Series: How are the music selections for the videos decided?

DT: Most of the time Damian sends me the label’s latest releases, which in some cases don’t work too well for video as they can be too bassy and minimal without many variations in frequency (although over the past year this has been changing). If there’s a track that has a lot of high-frequency effects going on, then it’s perfect to edit to, otherwise there’s nothing for me to hook onto.

Sometimes, I hear the track playing in the original footage and I ask Damian if he has the original (sometimes another DJ is playing it in the footage). For example in the last episode there was some shots of Damian in Mexico playing Robert James’ “Sleep Moods”. I didn’t know it at the time, so I exported a clip and sent it to him, after which he sent the original back. In the final edit you can hear the original audio (together with crowd and ambience sounds) which then mixes in with the original track, which I’ve pitched up/down to match the BPM that Damian was playing at. It’s a great way for me to get some good music. Just don’t tell Damian. Ha! Other times I pick stuff from my own library. Whatever you hear that isn’t released on Crosstown Rebels is my own selection. I ask him if he’s ok with it, if he’s ok with the artist or with the label, and most times he is.

What next in the Rebel Rave Series?
DT: We were trying to do the next one at Burning Man, but left it too late to organize and it looks like it’s not happening. It’s Damian’s and Jamie’s first time there, so it would have been really cool to do one at BM. Actually there’s a really big and exciting project for Rebel Rave coming up in the next 1 or 2 years(yeah, it’s that big). But I can’t say anything about this yet – sorry!.

Plastikman(Richie Hawtin) x Derivative ~ Visuals Contest


PART 3

Plastikman(Richie Hawtin) & Derivative[Visual Thinking] has teamed up to open a visuals contest to designers/animators for an upcoming live performance. TouchDesigner, is the technology that drives the visual element. Watch these videos for more info. We’ll check back in later, once we have done a full examination of this contest. Click here for all the details.

Plastikman – Spastik
[audio:http://www.visaomedia.com/audio/Plastikman_Spastik_visao.mp3]

DUBFIRE (Deep Dish/Sci+Tec) ~ Vessel, SF 11.02.10

Dubfire - deep dish - sci+tec - vessel, sf, - visao
Deep Blue presents Dubfire at Vessel, SF, Thursday, February 11, 2010
Line-up: Dubfire, Shoddy Lyn, Gordon Waze

Awesome Mix: Richie Hawtin & Dubfire – Magda & Loco Dice @ Essential Mix – Exit Festival (18.07.2009)
[audio:http://www.visaomedia.com/audio/Richie Hawtin & Dubfire – Magda & Locodice @ Essential Mix – BBC1 (18.07.2009).mp3]

)DancetrippinTV Interview ~ Will Johnston (The Party’s At Your House

Slam & Mauro Picotto

With all the new media popping up, we would like to recognize the original king of dance club media, DanceTrippn TV. Our good friend and owner, Will Johnston has been running this operation for nearly 10 years now. Their site has some of the best recorded sets from Ibiza’s Privilege, Amnesia, Bora Bora and many more. Their site has interviews, a new blog, youtube channel and you can also get their channel on your TV, the party(really) is at your house. Enjoy these featured videos and interview with DanceTrippn TV.

Richie Hawtin

VM: Can you tell us about how DanceTrippin started?
WJ: I used to go out all the time, and would always be up really late, sleepless afterwards…missing the music and party and wanting it to just continue forever, mind racing with crazy ideas. This one kept coming back to me over and over again, and eventually I thought “Lets try it”.


VM: Where are you from and how did you come to Ibiza?

WJ: I grew up near Washington D.C. and went to school in Miami, before starting my travels around Europe and getting (mostly) stuck in Amsterdam, which used to have an amazing club scene. I had heard of Ibiza from a friend in Miami (back then almost nobody knew of it back in the states) and it all sounded like some kind of fairy tale… like a mecca for party people. I had to go check it out.

VM: DTv has awesome videos, whats the approach(philosophy) for creating quality visual/audio entertainment?
WJ: Its really great to hear when people appreciate and understand what we’re doing. To be honest it took a long time to really start to get that reaction on a broader scale. For years, most people in the dance music industry were pretty dismissive of what we were doing. Now, I think people (and the industry) are really starting to get it.

Anyways, to answer your question, whatever we make has to be totally legitimate content that true music die hards would appreciate, but also enjoyable for the casual viewers who just like the music and vibe of the party. Our focus is really about the music, vibe of the parties, and performance of the artists… not talking heads or presenters trying to come up with something interesting to say.

VM: What has been the biggest obstacles?

WJ: Lack of a business model!, but times have changed, the market has really developed, and I think things are going to get a lot easier and more enjoyable quite soon.

VM: Crazy Ibiza story?
WJ: Yeah I know, it’s a typical cop out, but its not really repeatable here.

VM: Advice for all the new dance media sites popping up?
WJ: IF I could go back 9 years ago, and see the state of myself (and DanceTrippin) 5 years into the future (so 4 years ago) i would be scared shitless to go down that route again. Its been a difficult trip, so I guess my advice is don’t start your own media business unless you really enjoy it, and can deal with the very good chance that you wont succeed. Aside from that, PERSEVERENCE is really important, Its very unlikely to be easy. and maybe most importantly, make sure your product is very good, and unique. finally i would say, if you really enjoy the dance music scene, you’re probably better off experiencing it as a clubber.

VM: What’s you next step for DanceTrippnTV?
WJ: Well, in terms of the content, we’re just going to keep doing what we do, but bring a lot more of it. Look out for DanceTrippin on cable and satellite. I think it wont be too much longer.

VM: What’s Ibiza like these days?

WJ: To be honest, somewhat less exciting than it was 10 years ago, but more exciting than almost anywhere else on earth if you are a real electronic dance music lover. Unfortunately, the powers that be are doing their best job to suck the life out of the place, but thats pretty much the same story everywhere isn’t it? I say, enjoy it while you still can… and if we’re lucky that will be quite some time to come.

VM: Recording live sets with video, must have its hurdles. Some DJs may not want to be recorded, how do you approach or decide who’s or where’s the next episode on DanceTrippin TV?
WJ: We speak directly to the artist or management. A lot of them don’t like this in general, but we’ve been doing it awhile and people know our reputation and this makes it easier nowadays. We wont use it if the artist isn’t happy with it.

Up next is Laidback Luke!

Will Johnston