domingo, 30 de diciembre de 2007

No Slogan

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS United States hardcore

10 años de TROPIEZO - REPUESTO

NO SLOGAN - Santurce PR en los 10 años de Tropiezo

http://www.myspace.com/noslogan

No Slogan Bio

No Slogan began in late 2002 as a side project for members of Pretentious Assholes, I Attack and Los Jodidos. Amador, Benny, Chris and Danny wanted to start a band that played in a very Midwest early 80’s style. Although all of the members come from different backgrounds (grind/crust, metal, h.c., punk) we all had a love for early 80’s Midwest punk (Toxic Reasons, Zero Boys, Naked Raygun, Articles of Faith, The Effigies, etc.). Let’s face it No Slogan is a “wanna be” Bhopal Stiffs tribute band. However, we will never come close to being as good as them, but we try.

We don’t remember when our first show was and all of that other bullshit, all we know is that we have played w/ a bunch of good bands, and some really shitty ones as well (often times us being the shitty one!). The important thing is that we have met a ton of cool people within the diy scene during our time in this band, and that’s all that really matters.

Lyrically, our songs deal with/talk about circumstances that affect us (the band) day in, day out. Everything from gentrification in our neighborhoods, to our right to protest in the streets (even under the 2nd incarnation of the Daley Machine/Gestapo regime), how much we hate urban hipsters, the police state that inner city kids in Chicago live under, fashion punks who won’t be punks by the time they reach 21, upper middle class white boys from the suburbs who think it’s so cool and shocking to sport Swazi t-shirts, the exploitation of “illegal” workers in our communities and generally how much we hate right wing America amongst other things. No Slogan is a pro-Paiza (Mexican slang, look it up pendejo), kill whitey band (even the 1.5 Caucasians in the band hate whitey).

Collectively as a band we do consider ourselves a politically conscious band (not as politically active as we should be) and have no qualms about expressing our points of view on and off the microphone. We have no problem with punk as a primal scream, art expression or nihilism but when you start making comments or recordings bashing immigrants, women, minorities and gays then you are no longer apolitical or artistic. Such comments make you a dickhead and ARE political. Fuck trying to be like Sid Vicious, Stiv Bators was much cooler!

No Slogan will play just about anywhere (some people say we play out too much, fuck ‘em) providing the space/show is not booked by or with racist, homophobic, major label sponsorship bands or people. If you have a basement or any other dive please contact us!!! Currently the members in the band are:

Amamdor Castro Bass Benny Hernandez Screams Chris “Juan Jose” Cabay Guitar Joe Skeletor Drums

Danny Attack was our first drummer and started the band w/ us but left us in November of 2004 because his metal band Malas and his other band I Attack are much better than us, and his other band mates kept bitching about he was in too many bands. In all honesty Danny left on very good terms and will be sorely missed. Joe Skeletor is an old friend and has fit right in w/ the band, but he too is a band whore who plays in too many bands. Nonetheless, he has already written a shitload of new songs w/ us and loves Midwest punk as much as he loves grind core. Better yet he’s also a “southsider”!!!!! Well Amador is a Humboldt Park native (pre-gentrification you fucking hipsters) but he’s cool and a “Paiza” so he’s off the hook. You don’t have to be a “southsider” to be in the band but you do need ghetto credentials. We don’t know why the fuck you have read all of this, but if you have thanx!

“What we want is free!!”

www.southkorerecords.com

No Slogan Contact Info

Email: bennyjodido@yahoo.com

Mainling Address: No Slogan 2814 S. Spaulding Chicago, IL 60623




viernes, 28 de diciembre de 2007

Andres Calamaro


Parte de la critica de edición argentina de la revista Rolling Stone
para leerla completa http://www.rollingstonela.com/notaMostrar_cs.asp?nota_id=940522

La lengua popular, envuelto en un espléndido arte de Liniers, marca el retorno pleno del compositor, en un álbum que se ubica cómodamente al lado de Alta suciedad en su discografía. Estas canciones van a sonar en todos lados. En las radios de fórmula y los mp3, en las canchas y los boliches, en los taxis y colectivos, y sí, en nuestras casas. Si bien como él mismo lo dice, "parte de mí no cambió, y a la vez/ ya no soy el viejo Andrés, que no dormía jamás", el periplo lo ha dejado intacto, con inspiración a toda prueba y la artesanía del compositor fortalecida por la experiencia. Son doce canciones sin ningún relleno, todas buenas, todas distintas, ciento por ciento Calamaro, aunque el productor Cachorro López comparte la autoría de la parte musical de la mitad de las canciones. Como ya es característico, López garantiza un sonido impecable y una banda efectiva aunque algo impersonal; el toque de garra lo aporta la aparición de viejos amigos como Juanchi Baleirón como guitarrista) y Gringui Herrera.



http://www.calamaro.com

Nuevo disco de Calamaro y esta para pelos. Un disco digno de colección mucho mejor que El Palacio de las Flores de el calibre de Alta Suciedad. No sabemos cuando y por que Calamaro no aparece en la radio ni en los escenarios de Puerto Rico. Los dejo con Los Chicos primera canción de el disco.

jueves, 27 de diciembre de 2007

Hamburgesa de bacon

por que estamos en Navidad.
les regalamos unas de las mejores recetas en el mundo puesto que odiamos el pernil.


Comensales:
1 persona

Tiempo de preparacion:
10 minutos
Ingredientes

* 1 filete de hamburguesa de pollo o de ternera (al gusto)
* pan de hamburguesa
* 2 lonchas de bacon
* 1 loncha de queso
* lechuga, tomate y cebolla en rodajas
* ketchup y mostaza



Hamburguesa con queso y bacon, que le dá un sabor especial y mas ranchero.
Modo de preparacion:
Freímos la carne al punto, ponemos el pan un poco sobre la sarten a tostar.

Lavamos y troceamos la lechuga, el tomate en rodajas y la cebolla en rodajas también muy finas

En un plato colocamos los panes abiertos y vamos poniendo por capas nuestros ingredientes, el queso, la carne, las lonchas de bacon y la lechuga, el tomate y la cebolla.

Aderezamos con mostaza y ketchup (al gusto).

Podemos acompañar con unas crujientes patatas fritas.

publicado en : http://www.guisando.org

EL DIVO

"El Divo" jajajaja

Draco ufff en el Podcast de el tio chaco y Will Smith
http://eltiochaco.podbean.com/
http://www.willsmith.net/

viernes, 21 de diciembre de 2007

TROPIEZO


10 años de TROPIEZO
y ARTE basado en las
canciones
http://www.myspace.com/tropiezo
fotos por Ramon Miranda
en http://repuesto.wetpaint.com/page/10+a%C3%B1os+de+TROPIEZO
Tiburones Informaticos



lunes, 17 de diciembre de 2007

La Virgen del Pozo


Band Members
JUAN-guitarra para la virgen.
ISIDRA-bajo y vocales para la virgen.
RAMONITA-bateria para la virgen.

Record Label
Discos de Hoy
http://www.discosdehoy.com

http://www.myspace.com/lavirgendelpozo

martes, 11 de diciembre de 2007

POSERS AND ROCKERS

POSERS AND ROCKERS
Publicado en artnet
http://www.artnet.com/magazineus/reviews/velez/velez12-5-07.asp

by Pedro Velez

"Sympathy for the Devil: Art and Rock and Roll since 1967," Sept. 29, 2007-Jan. 6, 2008, at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, 220 East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Ill. 60611

In art it is important to remember that the most substantial, meaningful, honest, spiritual, cultural rituals, forms and esthetics come from the underground. In rock music the experience of aggressiveness and surprise, the hymns to the forbidden, the raw and vulgar pleasures of sex and drugs, and the frustration and fear of life are the kind of thing a museum can’t pretend to recreate.

So you know that Dominic Molon, the curator of "Sympathy for the Devil: Art and Rock and Roll since 1967," is in deep trouble when he claims that the show is "the most serious and comprehensive look at the intimate and inspired relationship between the visual arts and rock-and-roll culture to date." Now, here’s a question for the more than capable curator: How do you tame counterculture into the prepackaged pretext of High Art?

Before the show opened, Molon’s efforts already had detractors sufficient to rival the Spanish Inquisition. The reason is obvious -- we all know art exhibitions about rock music suck. Another big problem was that the MCA seems to have scorned one of the most influential and rich rock ‘n’ roll scenes in America by stressing that "the exhibition addresses the importance of specific cities such as London, New York, Los Angeles. . . ."

What about Chicago?

Chicago’s angry new-music mob reports no sightings of the curator at any of the dingy clubs where trends are hatched and passed along to the rest of the country. I can testify I never saw him at the Empty Bottle, The Metro, Fireside Bowl, Hyde Out or Double Door. Talking to the local podcast Bad at Sports, Molon had a good answer for the "poseur" accusation -- he doesn’t go to live shows because he can’t stand drunks. But even if Molon’s admiration for rock is limited to record covers, VH-1 and glossy magazines, he knows he needs the heritage of the city to legitimize his exhibition. Sadly, for "Sympathy," Chicago is a great opening act but not the main attraction.

Very weird, especially since in Chi-town musicians are treated like royalty for their contributions to culture and art at large. The Windy City was key in the development of Electric Blues, Jazz and Rock ‘n Roll, thanks in part to the legendary Chess Records (1950-1972), located at 2120 S. Michigan Avenue. The Rolling Stones even have a song titled 2120 South Michigan Avenue that is an homage to the legendary studios. Also from Chi are Howling Wolf, Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker. The town is the birthplace of House music, Dust Traxx Records, Industrial music, art-country rockers Wilco, record labels Drag City and Touch and Go, and one-time stadium fillers like the Smashing Pumpkins. It is home base for iconic figures like Steve Albini, founder of the punk band Big Black and producer of acts like Nirvana and High on Fire; the experimental musician Jim ‘O Rourke, who has scored films by Werner Herzog and worked with Sonic Youth; and Wicker Park’s staple schizophrenic poet, artist and musician, the late Wesley Willis. This is the city where hundreds of disco records where burned in the name of rock at a bonfire in Comiskey Park in ’79 -- a truly transcendent example of the perfect juxtaposition between social protest, art and sports. And the list, like the music, could go on and on.

I do believe that Dominic Molon had the best intentions and even a good vision, but the end result can be described as a white man’s suburban teen rock fantasy journey into nostalgia. Tourists may embrace the exhibition, but they won’t catch that close relationship of art and music that’s born from the underground, the outcasts and the sidelines. This is the kind of show where criticism is all about one question -- what about X?

There’s not much to think about in "Sympathy for the Devil." Starting from the hackneyed title, the show’s got no angst, no violence and no irony. Even interesting documents and fanzines are placed in vitrines that suck the life out of them, or hidden in the exhibition catalogue. Record covers are rendered as generic blow-ups and there’s way too much painting referencing photo documentation.

Installations take a big chunk of space, too, like Douglas Gordon’s Bootleg (Cramped), a video projection of grainy slow-motion close-ups of the bodies and facial expressions of the crowds and performers at live music shows. Cramped is a typically hermetic high-art view of musical delirium, and nothing new when compared to the campy documentation of the 1980s glam scene by photojournalist Neil Zlozower, or Penelope Spheeris’ multiple documentaries, The Decline of Western Civilization (1981) and The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years (1988), where fans, groupies and musicians are interviewed sarcastically in their natural habitats.

Suspicious in the mix are trendy art world tricksters like Assume Astro Vivid Focus, who is good and exotic but definitely can’t rock, and whose inclusion might be directed by market trends rather than any real interest. Nicely framed is Robert Longo, with his fashionable drawings of Republican yuppies from the 1980s, here reinterpreted as some kind of violent seizure to a rock soundtrack.

Also included are the now-overused Mike Kelley, Destroy All Monsters, Sonic Youth and Raymond Pettibon, some of whom looked much better at the Whitney Biennial. One of the biggest mistakes is the inclusion of Rirkrit Tiravanija’s Untitled 1996, a transparent and portable rehearsal studio-cum-cage that looks totally out of place, not to mention inessential, given today’s technology. How anti-rock would it be for a band to go to a museum to play on a piece of valuable art made by the favorite pet of curators around the globe?

Not all is problematic, however. My favorite piece in the show is Peter Saville’s sketches, notes and designs for New Order’s Power, Corruption and Lies record. My appreciation is based in nostalgia and process. I also enjoyed Jim Lambie’s homage to The Who. Titled Pinball Wizard, the humongous installation, specially commissioned for the show, features his habitual colorful stripes and swirls on the floor along with sticks covered with thin thread that revolve around a life-sized sculptural eagle.

A great surprise is to see works by the Chicago-based artist Pedro Bell, whose paintings illustrate the freaky, raw, sci-fi sexual imagery from Parliament Funkadelick. This reminded me of the absence in the show of things by African Americans and other "minorities," which would include the Black Punk era, Bad Brains and the art-packed magazine Rocktober. Not to mention ‘70s Latino psychedelic rock and the New Wave Argentinean scene from the late ‘80s, and the contemporary Mexican Puerto Rican Hardcore and Noise music that relies heavily on collaborations with visual artists. During the late ‘90s, 7/3 Split Gallery in Chicago would open its exhibition space to weekend shows organized by Traschcore kids, mostly from Mexican and Latino neighborhoods, demonstrating that the multicultural pot assembled for artistic collaborations easily extends beyond the established art centers.

Unsatisfied, I keep looking and thinking of the "what about" factor. What about Peter Hujar, Torbjørn Rodland, David Wojnarowicz, Punk Planet or H.R. Giger? And what about the Chicagoans? Hardcore Histories series at Mess Hall, Crosshair Printing, Screaming in Music projects organized by Marc Fischer, Academy Records, Wesley Kilmer, Terence Hannum, Chuck Jones, Artloinz, Siebren Veersteg, Matt Hanner, Rob ad Zena Zakowski, E.C. Brown, and Phillip Von Zweck.

And after a couple of fast rounds around the MCA’s tunnel vision, I felt sick, angry and ready to find a real club, a real show, and a real cold cheap beer. And finally, I left.


PEDRO VÉLEZ is an artist and writer living in Puerto Rico.

www.artnet.com