Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Crafting Memories - Final Fantasy and the Mountain Goats



Music is about memories. It's about the Summer night in Chicago I spent sneaking my brother backstage at the Pitchfork Music Festival. We drank a bucketful of Chicago's finest Goose Island Pale Ale and made friends with John Darinelle and Peter Hughes, otherwise known as The Mountain Goats. It's about my girlfriend Cara. Her cell phone's ringtone is a Final Fantasy tune, the first I'd ever heard. I remember so many mundane workday drives because of the music on the stereo. I can’t listen to some albums without thinking of ex-girlfriends or college or (even worse) ex-girlfriends from college. It might seem like I graduated from Duh University when I say this, but these memories bring us closer to the artists, their songs suddenly—irrevocably—private and personal and ultimately special in a way that they couldn't possibly anticipate.


This can make live shows traumatic. It's one thing to have an illusory personal connection with the music coming out of our speakers. It's quite another to see your favorite band cheating on you with hundreds of others in a single room, as I did on November 15th at the Music Box at the Henry Fonda Theatre, where fans crowded the main floor to see Final Fantasy and The Mountain Goats. Both bands craft emotionally honest music: Final Fantasy does it with violin melodies built track-by-track; The Mountain Goats do it with lyrics intricate and heartfelt enough for fans to break out the liner notes. And, both bands are experts at coloring the past, sharing memories. It’s enough to buy their records. But why see them live? Why compete with all the other fans standing shoulder-to-shoulder trying to make a connection? To create new memories, of course. A Toronto native, Pallett generously complimented Los Angeles and our public transit system. “Do you even realize what you have?" he asked. We did. Accompanied only by a drummer who lacked a full drum kit, he then beautifully conducted an orchestra of two. Later, Darinelle delivered his lyrics with the same enthusiasm he must have had when he wrote them years ago.

Final Fantasy didn't play Cara's ringtone. And I didn't get to slip into drunkenness with The Mountain Goats again. I'm sure the people in the crowd have memories the bands didn't re-enact in concert, either. They did the next best thing.

Originally in Los Angeles Magazine at: http://www.lamag.com/do/blog_post.aspx?id=22207&blogid=1592&blogid=1592

Part-Time Paparazzi



"This is not about art. Listen, we do this every night."

The photographer—good enough to land a spot in the front row, right next to the red carpet for the 30th anniversary of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles—was explaining. So I didn't doubt him. He probably did spend every single night outside of movie premieres and black-tie galas, snapping celebrities.

But the man at my right seemed not to care. He was older, a photographer as well, clad in a faded gray photo vest. The two of us were exiled to the back row of the step-and-repeat, but he brought his own stepladder to get a clear shot of the carpet. His gray stubble jutted out in defiance. He was ready to argue.

"That was Francesco Vezzoli. His art is why we're here tonight." The old man stood his ground.

The response from the front row: "Exactly. He's an artist. We take pictures of people and we want to sell these pictures. Artists don't sell."

Defeated, the old photographer began to fold his stepstool and pack up his camera in silence. But the veteran paparazzi in the front row wasn’t finished twisting the knife. "This has nothing to do with art."

I stood on the back riser, holding my camera close and waited for the next celebrity to walk by. I am a part-time paparazzi. The veteran was right—this job has nothing to do with art.

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I've photographed Gwen Stefani and Sylvester Stallone, Will Ferrell and Pharrell Williams, Kate Beckinsdale and Kate Bosworth. I've photographed Paris Hilton. Who hasn't?

When I tell people this, they picture me in charge of a huge set with expensive lights and assistants toting make-up kits. "No," I say, breaking my own myth, "it's much more like red carpet," a brief pause, then, "more like paparazzi."

Now, don't get me wrong. I don't hide in garbage cans or break traffic laws hoping to get "the shot." Most of the photographers I work alongside hate this image of the celebrity chaser as much as I do. They've even created a
euphemism to separate themselves from the riffraff: We are not paparazzi, we are red carpet photographers. We shoot arrivals. I fear this is delusional.

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About a year and a half ago, I started working for a print magazine based in Los Angeles. I reviewed and photographed concerts—basically a dream job without any pay. But I didn't mind. Going to see live music every night and writing about it didn't seem like real work. Six months later, my opinions changing with my sinking finances, I took the only paid opening at the mag. The society page was spending too much on photos from their wire services (Getty, Reuters, etc.) so they decided to move the operation in-house. I became the lone beneficiary of the economic downturn. I was their cost-saving initiative. I felt like the luckiest guy in Hollywood.

My first assignment was to cover Paris Hilton's chartered jet ride from a hangar outside of LAX to Utah for the Sundance Film Festival. In honor of the festival's winter weather, the PR company paid to have two tons of fake snow dumped outside the airplane hangar. It was September.

Paris arrived with two giant St. Bernard dogs in tow. There was a hill for sledding. Some of the minor celebrities casually tossed snowballs at one another. The whole event was preposterous in such a lighthearted way it disappointed me when I saw its ugly side: the photographers.

They were standing in the fake snow, clawing at one another for a prime spot. All photographers worry about being in the best spot. For celebrity photographers, the best spot gives them front-row eye contact with the celeb without having to see the sponsor's branded backdrop. They squeezed together; their jobs depended on it.

A red rope separated the photographers from the celebrities and, for once, it seemed appropriate. Uncaged barbarism let from the pack of photogs as Paris Hilton walked the carpet. Each one louder than the next, they shouted directions at the blonde socialite.

"Over heeeeere," a pudgy photog intoned. A photo without eye contact is next to worthless, so every working photographer battled for Hilton's attention. Paris tried her best to stare down the barrel of each lens in the row. I could see why some celebs have taken to wearing impenetrable sunglasses; with no direct eye contact, there's no reason to fight for attention. And they would fight and catcall without shame. When she passed them by, the photogs would singsong, "Oh-ver the shoul-der," again and again until she obliged them and looked back.

I spent that first assignment shooting the photographers more than the small group of B-list celebs. On the working side of the velvet rope, every photog seemed miserable, angry that they were too old or too fat or too ugly to be walking the red carpet themselves. They seemed to despise their competitive co-workers even more than the celebrities. The whole enterprise reminded me more of the Wild West than glamorous Hollywood. They were a line of prospectors looking to strike it rich.

Deciding to become a real paparazzi, the kind who stakes out houses and speed after celebs is a bit like panning for gold. It can pay just as much—those exclusive pics of Britney Spears shaving her head sold for $500,000. For a business, start-up costs are small: a digital SLR camera, a star map and a willingness to bend traffic laws. Don't worry about picking up a sense of human decency or respect. Those aren't really necessary. I got a chance to witness the real paparazzi in action on a rare night off. They made the vultures that crowd the red carpet look like parakeets.

Megastar Ryan Gosling was DJing an after party at the Bob Baker Marionette Theatre in downtown L.A. I was there for the free booze. Gosling isn't much of a DJ, but I found him to be overwhelmingly kind. After the free vodka dried up and the music died down, Gosling, in a white shirt and black dress pants, started cleaning up. He emptied the trash. He vacuumed the floor. If it was a hollow stab at being thought of as "normal," it worked. I was happy that, for once, I didn't have a camera to spoil the moment.

Most of the women in the crowd were there for the quietly cleaning movie star. They played with thoughts of stardom and romance in a spotless mansion. They wouldn't even have to hire a maid.

Outside, the paparazzi gathered. It was approaching one a.m. when I saw them. I was tired and ready to go home. The clan of photographers was waiting next to the parking lot, careful to stay on the public sidewalk. As I approached them I saw them notice my own white shirt and black pants. They started to raise their cameras, but dropped them again when they realized I wasn't their target. After that, they seemed to ignore me, talking loudly as I sat waiting in the car.

"When he comes out, we'll get him."

"Yeah, that fucker. Making us wait like this."

"What if he's already gone? The show has been over for hours now."

"He's not gone. That's his Prius."

"Somebody park behind him—block him in!"

"That fucker. Kept us out here. I'll get a tire iron and take out his tires. We'll get him."

I wondered what they would say if they saw Gosling picking up trash inside the theatre. I wondered how close I was to joining them, hoping to provoke young starlets, praying for an explosion, a lawsuit, a crotch shot. Hoping to find some gold in my pan.

One month later, I was working the carpet with a Getty photographer who used to be one of them. Frazer was proudly British. He was a trained photojournalist, working the slog of a daily paper for years before a shattering divorce pushed him towards the States. His emotions were drained from photographing disasters, car wrecks and murders, as well as the regular stuff like local politicians and council meetings. He was tired of news. So he became paparazzi.

"Calista Flockhart, we used to chase her around. We made her life hell."

We were photographing a DVD release party for the television dramaBrothers & Sisters, and Flockhart was in attendance. "I wonder if she recognizes me," Frazer said.

After years of chasing Flockhart and other celebrities, Frazer grew tired of this, too. He retired to a job photographing arrivals. It was easy, a technical exercise. Once he figured out his lighting setup, he could turn his brain off. The subjects came to him. All he had to do was press a button on a box. Far from news, removed from art, he seemed happy.

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I stopped the old man as he was stepping off the platform, stepladder under his arm. "Do you know if Jeff Koons has walked by?" The contemporary sculptor, with his giant, metallic balloon animals, was a favorite of mine.

Still upset, he turned to me and said, "I wouldn't even know what he looks like. He's an artist. Nobody photographs artists." He carefully stepped over the cords that powered the giant lights above the carpet, past all of the clicking photographers. We had to be ready—the next celebrity was coming.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Le Letdown - Le Loup






I've been thinking about Radiohead a lot lately. Despite its standout single, "Creep", their first album, Pablo Honey, was mostly forgettable. They’ve grown into such giants of rock that it would be a shame if you caught them on their first world tour, if your only experience was with the younger, less-polished band. Only a gambler would have seen the muck of that first record and predicted gold.

It was with a roll of the die that I predicted great things for indie experimentalists Le Loup. Their debut album, with its impossible-to-repeat title The Throne of the Third Haven of the Nations' Millennium General Assembly, was widely regarded as a mess, but I found the banjo plucking, the Biblical lyrics, and the blipping electronics promising. The band threw so many ideas into the mixing boards that at least one of them had to hit. I thought they were channeling Radiohead, and went all in. On October 28, The Echo hosted the band's second stop in Los Angeles, giving me a chance to see if I had called it right or wrong.

In short: I called it wrong. I was expecting Revelation. I was expecting Thom Yorke. They produced Sam Simkoff.

Simkoff, Le Loup's newly-bearded lead singer and banjo/ keyboard player, flailed on stage clad in tie-dye and a trucker's hat. He ducked low, surveying the jamming of his bandmates with a flamboyance that must have grown annoying to them mere days into the tour. Simkoff was so dedicated to his dancing, in fact, that he sampled his banjo line on the song "Le Loup (Fear Not)" in order to free his hands for greater movement.

An odd air hung over the show. Somebody threw up next to the bar. A man started doing pushups near the back. And a woman in her mid-30s brought her scooter inside (okay, so she was wearing a cast) and rode around through the crowd. Worse of all was the material the band performed from their new album, Family. The excessive chanting and droning baselines might mean that Simkoff and Le Loup have, to steal a phrase, tuned in and dropped out. I stopped defending the band's shortcomings, folded my cards, and gave up. At least until the band's next album comes out. You never know.


Originally in Los Angeles Magazine

The Longest Winter - The Decemberists


I’ll be honest: I’ve never liked the Decemberists. I have respect for their artistic sense and the thought that they must put into their branding. As for their music, I’d rather listen to the vocal stylings of William Shatner. Or Leonard Nimoy, for that matter.

But when a friend who’s a Decemberists fan told me to lighten up, I decided to try and experience their Oct 19th concert at UCLA’s Royce Hall as any concertgoer would. In line with the band's rugged traditionalism, I even walked the 7.2 miles from Hollywood to Westwood, listening to a podcast of "This American Life" along the way.

I arrived in Westwood just in time to see an eager audience file into Royce Hall, the band they discovered on NPR's "All Songs Considered" or by reading "alternative media" (sometimes even online!) about to appear onstage. Looking around I saw men in dry-clean-only button-downs turn to their girlfriends with "Honey-isn't-this-great" expressions. There were younger men, too (some probably study the historical incidents that appear across The Decemberists lyrics at UCLA), making the same face.

To their credit, this was no ordinary Decemberists concert. The band known for placing such emphasis on their public image had teamed with Flux, the group of collectors known best for their taste in film. Animations by four filmmakers commissioned by Flux of the band’s latest album, The Hazards of Love, screened throughout the performance. The result was unspeakably lovely: there were patchwork starscapes with constellations given life by Guilherme Marcondes and grey scale wave swells pummeling pastel pirate ships created by Julia Pott.



Decemberists lead singer Colin Meloy hummed, the crowd swooned, and—you have to believe me—I tried to enjoy it. But The Decemberists are as uncomfortable to watch as a high school band at the year-end talent show. Every member showboated across the stage, assumed a power stance and headbanged. There were raw guitar chords that seemed to be stolen from Eddie Money and soft vocal cooing lifted from Arcade Fire. It screamed of phony posturing, the bits of "authentic" guitar distortion no more meaningful than the musical interludes during "All Things Considered."

What I found most regrettable was the pairing of such beautiful filmmaking with such a boring band. The talent of these four artists should land them a gig with a more dynamic group, like Broken Social Scene. That’s what I turned on as I left Royce Hall for the two-hour walk home, happy to clear my mind.

Originally in Los Angeles Magazine

Fan Appreciation Night - The Flaming Lips



The Flaming Lips have dedicated the past decade to crafting an uncompromising live performance—something their loyal fans adore—and now recent reviews complain their on-stage eye candy is growing sour with age. The band, critics say, need to spend less time on theatrical gimmicks.

As if in response to these barbs, The Flaming Lips chose the Nike Montalban Theatre, a venue much too tiny for their typical stage show, and proceeded to rock an overflow crowd with pure vitality and talent last Thursday night. I can't imagine a less shocking outcome; dog bites man.

Of course The Flaming Lips don't need hugecrowd-surfing balloons to be a captivating live band. They don't need laser pointers, dancing Santas, UFO light shows, smoke machines, or slutty aliens, either, though these have all made appearances at their concerts. During the first part of last Thursday's set, the Lips proved that all they need is a microphone.

And a Twitter account. Yep, the first segment of the evening was reserved for questions from the audience, sent as Tweets, to the band. At the front of the stage, The Lips' consummate frontman Wayne Coyne made some surprising revelations. First, that the band has recorded a track-for-track cover of Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon and plan to release it in the coming months. And second (and even more interesting to me), that the long-rumored stage adaptation of their classic album Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots won’t be moving to Broadway anytime soon. According to Coyne, it would take the Lips two years of work to do the stage show properly, and the band is unwilling to spend that much time apart from fans.

In his answers, Coyne made it clear that his band’s only goal is to please its fans. From the extravagant live shows to the double- (and quad-) studio albums, The Flaming Lips have always been fan-centric. Embryonic, their latest album, seems designed to please th whole lot of them, from the old faithful still clamoring to hear something like "Everything's Explodin'" to the children who have grown up singing "Do You Realize" and "The Yeah Song."

The Lips demonstrated this diversity when they picked up their instruments for a short live set. Their new material included late night TV stalwart "Convinced of the Hex" and the ridiculous and fun "I Can Be A Frog" (which had the Montalban audience, some of them dressed in full costume, pretending to be frogs, wolves helicopters…). The set lacked the bombastic special effects of the routine shows, but their fans more than made up for it. The crowd, with their colorful questions and questionable costumes, proved as engaging and entertaining as we all know the band can be. And the music was great.

It's unlikely we'll ever see the Flaming Lips truly "unplugged," but after Thursday’s performance, I think it wouldn't be such a bad idea, if only for the fans.

Originally in Los Angeles Magazine at: http://www.lamag.com/do/blog_post.aspx?id=21577&blogid=1592

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Badge Engineering



This was when I knew I had to de-badge my 1997 BMW Z3: Driving down the 880 outside of San Francisco, a man in a Ford Windstar minivan waved frantically at me to lower my side window. He pointed first to my car's tail, then to its hood, and finally to its driver, waving his finger, scolding me.

For the four months I'd owned the BMW, since I found it for around $5000 on Craigslist, I'd been driving around a lie. It could have been the slick stereo dealer who sold me the car, or one of the three probable liars who owned it before him-somebody saw fit to affix a fake "M" badge to the very non-"M" 4-cylinder Z3. And now that it was my Z3, the fakery was mine, too.

The differences between my humble Craigslist roadster and that tuned, sculpted beast that rightly wears the "M" badge don't just lie in the engine bay, nor in the brakes or the suspension, in the extra-wide rear tires or the four exhausts. The proud red-blue-purple colors of the real badge had faded, a sign that all was not right with my car. But the easiest way to spot a true "M" roadster is to look for the beautiful, chromed vent running on either side of the hood, a work of engineering art that my car, of course, didn't have.

As I uselessly walked circles around my car on the pull-off lane of the 880, I felt certain it was this vent that the minivan man was pointing towards. My forgery turned a sane driver into the captain of a righteous missile, built to eradicate the unworthy.

And it wasn't as if I didn't deserve it—I felt justifiably eradicated every time a real M3 would spot my fake badge, pull around to check the side flank, and then disappear in a huff of very real four-barrel exhaust. If only they could see me in my entry-level cockpit, self-flagellating. "It wasn't me," I would say as the purest of the BMW breed sped away, "it was the last guy." Worse were the actual M Roadsters, which would pass slowly enough for the M owners inside to sneer.

The previous owner, the counterfeiter, must have gotten the same treatment. He was a strange sort the more I thought about him. The fake badge seemed to target the rare person who knew enough about cars to appreciate and respect an "M," but not enough to actually tell the difference upon seeing a forgery. The badge couldn't impress the opposite sex; there are few pick-up lines more destined to fail than those constructed around what type of BMW you drive ("No, I do drive a BMW, it's better than the others because it has this special badge..."). Why would anyone want to invite that kind of guilt and rejection?

Now, don't get me wrong—I have limitless respect for the German scientists who put together the M Division. Many of them have worked their entire lives for such an honor, to make the "Ultimate Driving Machine" somehow even more ultimate. I would love to own any car in the M series someday. Preferably a real one.

My badge-modifying predecessor must have felt the same way. Kidding aside, I can't say I really resent the guy. Every one of us wants to find that great deal, the buy-one-get-one-free nacho and margarita combo, the M Roadster for the price of a Z3. Most of us can silence our consciences long enough to wear a fake wristwatch out to the neighborhood bar. Over the past few years, Hyundai have calculated their styling to be more than just reminiscent of fancier cars with more respectable badges. Apparently, it's not just civilians who want to appear sophisticated; it's corporations as well.

I too wanted to seem sophisticated. I was tired of all of the wary glances from other drivers, tired of wondering if they knew or cared about my fake badge. So I decided to take it off, with a couple of feet worth of dental floss and some rubbing compound. I wrapped the floss around my fingers and started slowly sawing away at the "M." It left behind some stubborn black foam after it fell off, but soon enough the rubbing compound took that off as well, leaving my car the way it was found, and leaving its driver legitimate, finally.

Originally in SpliceToday at: http://www.splicetoday.com/consume/badge-engineering