sexta-feira, 29 de junho de 2007

Artist Of The Month > TIGERSKIN



TIGERSKIN is the alter ego of german producer Alex Kruger aka DUB TAYLOR. Releases on labels such as Forcetracks, Morris Audio under his diversemonikers together with 12 years of rocking under his belt have made him one of the respected producers in the global electronic music circuit.
His uncountable exceptional live performances are legendary to manypeople...

Born and bred in Berlin, Alex has been carefully developing his smooth and groovy house signature that is deeper and refreshing than the Ocean at the Marian Depth since he was a teenager. Solidly entrenched in Berlins house underground scene and boasting a growing global following, he plays an important role in shaping and producing numerous of tracks and releasing for labels like forcetracks, strictly rhythm, raum...musik and RESOPAL. Alex's motivation behind the live p.a. or in the studio has been to always add a new wrinkle to dance music's vibrant fabric.

www.realgrooves.com

Underground Radio Party #001


Frequência: 96.2 MHz
Banda: FM
Emissão On-Line: mms://stream.radio.com.pt/ROLI-ENC-146
Site: http://www.radioregionalcentro.com/

quarta-feira, 27 de junho de 2007

Super Pop @ Look Club


SUPER POP
LOOK CLUB
Viana do Castelo
Sábado 7 de Julho


thinkfreak
(live act)
sonic culture | mis records
myspace.com/djthinkfreak


vivax
(dj set)
underground sound society | musica divina
myspace.com/supervivax


guerriero
(dj set)
musica divina
myspace.com/ilguerriero

sexta-feira, 22 de junho de 2007

GO! BOTS & VIVAX

Artes Electrónicas
Foyer da Casa das Artes
Arcos de Valdevez

23 de Junho 23:59h

GO! BOTS & VIVAX

Vivax + Shock + Hellder + Amaral (VJ)

quarta-feira, 20 de junho de 2007

S. João Alternativo


S. João Alternativo
dia 23 de Junho 2007
espaço alternativo pt - braga


quarta-feira, 13 de junho de 2007

Gemini Birthday Party

segunda-feira, 11 de junho de 2007

Underground Kollektiv Upcoming Gigs

> Vivax

Upcoming Shows

Jun 15 2007
Plagia + Vivax + Lukkas + Methyl @ CensuraPrévia - Braga

Jun 16 2007
Vivax + DJ.Yolk + DJ byAccident + Absolut @ Patelas - Coimbra

Jun 23 2007 11:00P
Go!Bots plus Vivax @ Casa das Artes - Arcos de Valdevez (00h)
Vivax @ S. João Alternativo Espaço PT - Braga (04h)

Jun 30 2007
Vivax invites: Voodoo + KingFu @ Nasoni - Viana do Castelo


> Yolk


Upcoming Shows

Jun 15 2007
28bar (all night set) aveiro

Jun 16 2007
Vivax + DJ.Yolk + DJ byAccident + Absolut @ Patelas - Coimbra

Jun 23 2007
28bar w/ turntable crew (andré cipriano + al karper) aveiro

Jun 29 2007
28bar (all night set) aveiro

Jun 30 2007
28bar w/ b:kas (www.lowlevelcrooks.com) aveiro


> Javier Rodriguez


Upcoming Shows

May 9
I Aniversário Artes Jah Nasce @ Escola Sec. José Falcão - Coimbra

May 14
Soul Sessions @ Artes Jah Nasce - Coimbra


> DJ by Accident


Upcoming Shows

Jun 16 2007
Vivax + DJ.Yolk + DJ byAccident + Absolut @ Patelas - Coimbra


from minimal... to hardcore


plagia
[max.ernst | glanzbil]

vivax
[underground sound society | musica divina]

lukkas
[f.r.e.i.m.a]

15 de junho 23:59h @ censura prévia - braga

quarta-feira, 6 de junho de 2007

Join the Kult


(((musicadivina)))

apresenta

Join the Kult

Sábado 9 de Junho

Café Teatro (Teatro Sá de Miranda)
Viana do Castelo

DubKult
(GB - Live Act)

Living Rec | Traum Schallplatten | raum…musik
[www.myspace.com/dubkult]

Vivax
(PT - DJ Set)

underground.sound.society | age&see | musicadivina
[www.myspace.com/supervivax]

Guerriero
[ www.myspace.com/ilguerriero]

Check Your Pulse
[ www.myspace.com/checkyourpulsept]

A V/ presença é imprescindível !!
A não perder…


I Aniversário do "Artes Jah Nasce"



O projecto Artes Jah Nasce, sedeado em Coimbra, vai comemorar em grande um ano de luta e resistência contra a babilónia e para isso organiza nos dias 8, 9 e 10 de Junho um mini-festival Reggae com a presença de grandes bandas nacionais! São 3 dias de música, cultura, gastronomia e muito mais!

O 1º dia será mais dedicado a música africana, com o grupo do Edy e amigos.
O 2º dia, sábado conta com a presença dos "pais do reggae nacional" os Kussondulola, seguidos pelos Terrakota. A festa prolonga-se com Bob Figurante, Sista Pat e Selekta D.
No 3º e último dia é a vez dos Sativa do Porto subirem ao palco, logo seguidos pelos One Love Family. A fechar o festival estarão Selecta Masko, Sista Kato e Selekta D. Também D.O.M e Javier Rodriguez ajudam à festa.

Durante o dia haverá muita animação por todo o recinto, com barraquinhas variadas de artesanatos, comidas, half pipe de skate, capoeira, djembées, teatro, cinema e muito mais.
O preço do bilhete é de 15 "heróis" para os 3 dias e 10 "heróis" para 1 dia.
O local deste evento será a "mítica" escola secundária José Falcão.



LINE-UP BANDAS DE GARAGEM
(SÁBADO 8 DE JUNHO)
14h - Preachy Boys
15h - Resposta Simples
16h - Ex Lovers Sex
17h - Nightmare Eleven
18h - Blind Alley Dogs
19h - Hanging By Name

segunda-feira, 4 de junho de 2007

Revolution, flashmobs, and brain chips. A grim vision of the future



[informACÇÃO]








Information chips implanted in the brain. Electromagnetic pulse weapons. The middle classes becoming revolutionary, taking on the role of Marx's proletariat. The population of countries in the Middle East increasing by 132%, while Europe's drops as fertility falls. "Flashmobs" - groups rapidly mobilised by criminal gangs or terrorists groups.

This is the world in 30 years' time envisaged by a Ministry of Defence team responsible for painting a picture of the "future strategic context" likely to face Britain's armed forces. It includes an "analysis of the key risks and shocks". Rear Admiral Chris Parry, head of the MoD's Development, Concepts & Doctrine Centre which drew up the report, describes the assessments as "probability-based, rather than predictive".

The 90-page report comments on widely discussed issues such as the growing economic importance of India and China, the militarisation of space, and even what it calls "declining news quality" with the rise of "internet-enabled, citizen-journalists" and pressure to release stories "at the expense of facts". It includes other, some frightening, some reassuring, potential developments that are not so often discussed.

Read the complete article on Guardian Unlimited

A Deluge of Parades

[informACÇÃO]




Promoters, DJs, and dancers alike prepare for some much needed cabaret lawlessness.

New Yorkers, used to being told they can't dance where they want to, will soon find themselves able to cavort a bit more freely. Alas, no, the cabaret law hasn't been repealed—incredibly, dancing is still illegal without a license. But at 1 p.m. on May 19, the city's first-ever Dance Parade will take over Broadway at 32nd Street and wind its way down to Washington Square Park. With more than 6,000 dancers signed up and top DJs such as Kool Herc, Danny Tenaglia, and John "Jellybean" Benitez participating, this hopefully annual event may soon rival Berlin's infamous Love Parade.

Greg Miller, the president of Dance Parade Inc., says this parade will differ from Berlin's in one key sense: It won't be centered around dance music, instead emphasizing dance as an art form, with representatives from Dance Manhattan, Sandra Cameron Dance Center, Djoniba Dance Center, Soho Dance, and Stepping Out Studios all participating. And they'll flip the concept of the city's cabaret-law enforcers on its head, hiring their own "dance police," who will issue citations (actually discount coupons to clubs and dance schools) to passersby for not dancing.

So far, Miller's got 20 floats signed up and 41 styles of dance represented, from ballet to breakdancing. "We are honoring these forms of dance that were birthed in New York City, such as the Lindy Hop, vogueing, and even salsa," says Miller, who was once a part of the activist group Metropolis in Motion, which is dedicated to eradicating the cabaret law. For him, the parade's point is twofold: to educate people about the cabaret law and the history of dance.

Meanwhile, the case brought by Paul Chevigny and Norman Siegel against the city, which claims that the cabaret law is unconstitutional and infringes on freedom of speech, is in appeals—the most recent ruling by the State Supreme Court Appellate Division upheld the previous ruling that dancing is not a protected, constitutional form of expression. Tell that to the members of Swing 46, a swing-dancing club that was shut down for one year and received a $10,000 fine for illegal dancing. In fact, tell that to all New Yorkers, who now have only 148 licensed spaces to dance—down from 276 five years ago. In Manhattan, the number stands at a lowly 69 licensed venues, an appallingly low number for a city of our size and stature, a city that has banners all over town proclaiming it the nightlife capital of the world.

Dancing may still be a crime in most venues, but that's not stopping the unstoppable Larry Tee from hosting a dance festival in some of the few available licensed clubs. Dubbed the Dance Music Invasion, the event finds Tee joining forces with Kevin Graves and former Ultra liaison Lainie Copicotto to create a five-day festival to be held October 3 through 7. Tee, ever the salesman, is pitching the festival as the "Winter Music Conference meets Coachella; New York needs to get its act together and be the center of music, instead of letting Miami run off with it in some version of a drunken orgy of schmoozing," he says. New York, he notes, has lost its grip on dance music, but the festivals in other cities—like Miami's WMC and the Billboard Dance Music Summit, now held in Las Vegas—leave much to be desired.

Tee might be overselling, but he knows of what he speaks. The man behind the Electroclash Music Festival—and later, the Outsider Music Festival—has no fear. After running up a $40,000 debt to fund the electroclash festivals, he learned that persistence and well-placed hype pays off. Thanks to buzz from those events, his Berliniamsburg night took off soon thereafter and helped pay off his debt.

While Tee is reluctant to name names until the ink dries, he wants to showcase Top 20 and underground DJs alike at clubs around the city, with a wish list that includes venues as varied as Pacha, Studio B, Hiro Ballroom, and Cielo. He's envisioning bills that cross genres and subcultures, pairing mainstream house DJs like Erick Morillo with techno underdogs like Bookashade. "We're approaching all the clubs," he says. "If it's gonna be for everyone, it's going to have to be for everyone. We're mixing up highbrow and lowbrow."

He's also talking about launching a blog, dancemusicinvasion.com, to coincide with the festival—one that will combine all aspects of nightlife under one roof. Ideally, you can read about Lindsay Lohan's comings and goings, track club openings and closings, and check out the top singles of the week, all in one place. "A lot of dance-music websites are way too serious," says Tee, who describes the site as Perez Hilton meets Rhythmism meets Last Night's Party.

Coincidentally, the same week Tee's Dance Music Invasion kicks off, there's another big bash planned. This one's called NY Dance Party. Scheduled for October 6, it'll be headed up by two of dance music's legends—Cerrone and Nile Rodgers —as a means of celebrating 30 years of dance music. The event's website, nydanceparty.net, purports that NY Dance Party will feature the "largest dance floor ever created in New York" at the Trump Wollman Rink in Central Park. The event will double as a fundraiser for various AIDS organizations, including the Elton John AIDS Foundation, Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, Lifebeat, and the We Are Family Foundation.

One more piece of dance news: Blackkat's annual MayDay! event, usually held at Tompkins Square Park, was denied permits this year; as the Blackkat mailing list explained, "The Parks Department makes a habit out of approving the permits for Mayday a few days before the event," though the forms are usually filed in January to give the bureaucrats plenty of time. Undaunted, the politically charged music and party promoters regrouped at Union Square Sunday, where Collin Strange, Atomic Babies, Sacha (of Flavorpill fame), and Jason Blackkat himself played. Thursday at 7 p.m., they're meeting up with Metropolis in Motion at Kabin, 92 Second Avenue, to hear from those who've been affected by the cabaret law. Meanwhile, we hear City Councilman Alan Gerson's office is drafting a proposal that would render the law moot for venues with a capacity of fewer than 200 people, but would bring stricter enforcement of noise, which would include using a device that physically limits the volume levels on a club's sound equipment.

All this pro-dance music and anti-cabaret law activity leads me to believe Larry Tee when he says, "Dance music finally has an opportunity. It's kind of hot. I sense something is changing here."

flylife@villagevoice.com

Citado de The Village Voice