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Out of my head and into my ears

I can’t complain about how I make my living: I write…and I write mostly about music. I go to shows for free, I hang out with musicians, and I get to listen to some of the most spectacular tunes being composed right now. It’s not all good—sometimes I’m overbooked to the point that going to one more show makes me want to run to my bed, sometimes the venue management and security are morons (no heat during a show in November? When it’s 20 degrees outside? Seriously?), and sometimes the album is a horrible ripoff imitation of music that came out 20 years ago and I want to bang my head on the table…but don’t because it’s not headbanger metal.

Either way, the last year heard the good, the bad, and the “why on earth did I voluntarily  put myself through that?”

The Good

Hands-down, these bands and musicians rocked my speakers and my ears.

  • Blue Sky Black Death: For fans of instrumental hip-hop, it doesn’t get much better than this. Again, this was a group that has continually colored my speakers the last couple of years.
  • Fotoshop: This was a serendipitous find during a night of blog-surfing—electronica that’s reminiscent of Brian Eno at certain points and then completely original at others.
  • Beirut: See this band in person. Their studio work, while a treat for the ears, cannot compare to experiencing them live. Yes, it is an experience and one unlike any other.
  • KMFDM: What better way to knock off a bucket list item than getting paid to photograph and review a band that you’ve wanted to see live for more than a decade?

By and far, however, the most spectacular band I’ve crossed paths with recently is Army of the Universe—an English-singing Italian industrial band whose debut album was produced by Chris Vrenna. There is something untouchable about this trio—the music alone is accessible in a way that most industrial music is not. There’s a strange nostalgia about the sound, but in no way is it dated.

The Bad

There’s been little music I’ve heard that has rendered itself a poor review. However, efforts from The Horrors, Ginuwine, and Off Color certainly made my ears bleed in a bad way and seeing Billy Corgan “cover” the Smashing Pumpkins live as “The Smashing Pumpkins” made my skin crawl. Maybe it’s time to retire the moniker since none of the other band members remain? 

Again, though, I can’t complain. 

    • #kmfdm
    • #army of the universe
    • #aou
    • #chris vrenna
    • #the smashing pumpkins
    • #the horrors
    • #billy corgan
    • #ginuwine
    • #beirut
    • #fotoshop
    • #blue sky black death
    • #bsbd
    • #music industry
    • #music journalism
    • #job
    • #work
    • #sal christ
    • #writing
  • 1 month ago
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  • 30 Plays
  • 252Gem Club
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kirklove:

252 by Gem Club

First song of 2012! I’ve been listening to this a lot the last few days. Here’s to hoping exfm gets a repeat one in 2012.

shared from exfm

This is a gorgeous track—what a beautiful way to open 2012.

Source: kirklove

    • #gem club
    • #252
    • #exfm
    • #kirklove
    • #new music
    • #mellow
    • #indie
  • 1 month ago > kirklove
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An Interview with Joanne Wilson

Earlier this month, I had the opportunity to pick Joanne Wilson’s brain about women in the tech industry and her advice for those of us that want to become more involved in entrepreneurial endeavors inside and outside of tech.

Wilson is also known as Gotham Gal and is an active investor in the startup world. 

Sal Christ: How and when did you get involved with tech and entrepreneurship?

Joanne Wilson: I’ve been involved with the tech industry since 1996, so it was the beginnings of the internet industry. I was involved in a startup at that time and I got out because the bubble burst and I had kids and I decided it was time to shift to another gear. Then I started blogging—figuring I have to keep connected somehow. I was starting to watch the beginnings of web 2.0 and I saw some business that were really interesting, businesses that I wanted to be a part of and so I started getting involved. A lot of women started contacting me—maybe because I write and what I write about—and I sort of ended up falling into it. It was something that I was really passionate about.

SC: What kind of advice would you give to people like myself? I mean, I’m in my late twenties and kind of just got into this over the last couple of years. 

JW: Well, I think one of the things that’s important is if you’re entrepreneurial and you have a great idea, go for it. Follow it, right? I think there’s all different ways you can work in the internet industry and I also think my best advice to anyone who’s young is follow your passion. You only go around once—you can never get that time back. Don’t do something you don’t like.

SC: Makes a lot of sense. In terms of school classes and anything that might make someone better at what they do in terms of entrepreneurship, what would you recommend?

JW: I think that the key to any great career in anything is learning a bunch of things. Going through a bunch of different paths because all of those will at one point connect together. I mean, I certainly took a lot of economics and marketing courses, but those were things I was passionate about, right? I think that if you find that the one thing that really rocks your boat is accounting, right, take a lot of accounting classes and then you’ll go into a startup understanding how that applies to certain situations.

SC: What would you recommend that women look for in mentors and finding mentors?

JW: I would say to you look up tech meet-ups. See who the startups are around the tech industry and start going to those events. You’ll actually start to figure out who the players are, who’s coming up with great things, what kinds of companies are out there. It’s a very embracive industry—people want to talk and connect about what they’re doing and how they think they’re going to affect the world. Before you know it, you’ll know what’s going on in the industry in your particular city.

SC: For you, since you’ve been involved in entrepreneurship and angel investing, what’s been the biggest take home for you? Or the biggest lesson you’ve learned over the last couple of years?

JW: When you have something in your gut and you know, stick with it. Sometimes I’ve done things and I’ve stopped myself, “You know, this is probably not a good idea,” and then I do it anyway and then I’m like, “I was right. I should’ve listened to myself.” But I think there’s something to be said for instinct. I also think the mistakes I’ve made, I’ve learned from because they’ve made me better at what I do.

SC: Yeah? Have there been any big mistakes that you’ve learned more from than others or has it just been along the way they all have balanced each other out?

JW: They all kind of balance each other out. I think I have a really good instinct about people and I think that’s the key to investing because you’re really investing in the person. You’re investing in the idea, too.

SC: Have you run into any struggles in terms of your gender or have you found that things have been a little bit more open?

JW: I haven’t, per se. Certainly I have over my career, but I kind of have that personality where I’ll plow right through it. I have met plenty of women that have been harassed or haven’t been taken seriously. A lot of the companies that women come up with that I have seen—it’s different by country because I find that many countries, Israel is a perfect example, women are building technology companies.

JW: Here, they’re using the internet as a platform. Many of those companies, perhaps, fill voids in their lives and many men, unfortunately, control—the reality is that they control the majority of the purse strings. I think they look at the business plans and say, “I don’t get it. How can I put money into something I couldn’t understand?” I think that’s where some of the issues come up. That’s why I’m thrilled to be able to invest in some of these women who—all of them, as far as I can see to date—have scaled their business and some are taking in secondary money, some of them are looking like they’re going to hit a huge run out of the ballpark, right? So, the next round will not be a big deal—they’ve already proved their model. I think because of the internet, because of handheld phones, because of the way the world is today gives us the ability to run your life in a virtual world that for women who are interested in having family and being part of the community and also working to expand their minds, there is the ability for everyone, in some respects, to be entrepreneurial.

JW: That is what is really changing the way we live and the tools have given us that ability. I think that we’re in this really interesting time, especially for women. It’s easier for women to be home, to raise their family, get in, get out at very different levels while still maintaining their independence and their identity and being able to continue to work. That’s very powerful.

    • #joanne wilson
    • #gothamgal
    • #Sal Christ
    • #tech
    • #women in tech
    • #entrepreneurship
    • #angel investing
    • #advice
    • #business
    • #women in business
    • #NYC
    • #Boulder
    • #entrepreneur quotes
  • 1 month ago
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I love the way music sews together moments of living—sometimes tying those memories to people, to sensation, or merely to the first auditory glance at an exciting fringe of notes. We oft turn to those songs in hopes of recreating that frame of our life over and over again—occasionally successfully, but too frequently just replaying a memory that is never quite as organic and lush as when it first occurred.  

    • #music
    • #memory
    • #time mapping
    • #sensation
    • #recreate
    • #notes
  • 2 months ago
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SoundCloud Gems: Tiny Little Houses

If your junior high crush had written cheery little romantic ditties, they would have sounded like Tiny Little Houses. Every song posted by this Australian lad is indie pop gold–from the sweet lyrics to the beautiful acoustic melodies. The content of the tracks tells the life cycle of a relationship–from crush stage longing to the jaded pain of a broken heart. While it’s hard to think the singer has experienced such a serious relationship, it helps to remember that love is at its most dramatic in its youth.

What’s most distinctive about Tiny Little Houses, however, is his voice, which is the lovechild of late singers Elliot Smith and Jeff Hanson.

    • #soundcloud
    • #new music
    • #303 magazine
    • #tiny little houses
    • #melbourne
    • #Sal Christ
    • #australia
    • #Elliott Smith
    • #jeff hanson
    • #indie pop
    • #acoustic
  • 2 months ago
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Day Creature: the French word for ‘writing.’

I'm a music journalist and freelance writer. Formerly the online section editor for the UCD Advocate in Denver, I currently write for Colorado Music Buzz, 303 Magazine, and other publications.

If you'd like to get in touch with me, I can be reached via email at salamander@salchrist.com.

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