
Posts Tagged ‘california’
you’re a jerk (en espanol)
Thanks to the Soundway’s Panama! comps we know about how much amazing music has come out of this tiny (but geographically fascinating) country. Chief Boima (SF heads can catch him spin, among other places, at Little Baobab) has posted an amazing remix of You’re A Jerk. There’s also a Nigerian remix, but I have to agree with Boima on this one, the Panama version kills it.
Also, of somewhat related interest, although I have a basic familiarity with Jerkin’ and the culture that it entails for over a year now thanks to the internet, it was only this month that I actually personally witnessed a black teenager in skinny jeans. I sometimes like to think about how science fiction was once the stuff people would write about concerning the future, but these days science fiction mostly consists of stuff going on in the present, but perhaps we will soon be entering a phase where science fiction is the stuff that we are writing about from the past that we are only now fully aware of.
somewhere
Lets start in the middle.
Last night I was at an excellent show at Mighty that started out with some fresh cumbia jams from the always excellent Bersa Disco, and then The Very Best – a collaboration between Radioclit & Esau Mwamwaya. One thing worth pointing out was the video projector at the space was projecting images of safari animals.
(Man, that clip has such a corny Paul Simon vibe)
The juxtaposition of this signifier of Africa with their forward-thinking, very contemporary music makes an obvious enough statement, and you can understand an artist wanting to make this point in the U.S. where the idea of Africa is still very obscure to our minds.
All of which is to say it is great meeting different kinds of people. Allow me to introduce myself by way of sharing music:
As the title suggests, this song was inspired by California’s stunning coastal highway route. It really is as beautiful as everyone says it is. I remember California being described as a collision/amalgamation of islands, and that is why the landscape here is diverse and ecstatic. I think that is a very beautiful metaphor for something, but for what I cannot yet say exactly.
