Wave of Mutilation? Tour of Aggregation?

Posted in Uncategorized on March 6th, 2008 and tagged , , , ,

My RSS Feeds:

To anyone who may be reading this page: check out my PageFlakes:

On the site you’ll find a great collection of music, fashion, gossip and scene blogs all rolled into one little page. I guarantee that you’ll be thankful the next time your at work and only have one page you need to close and hide from your boss.

L.A. Record

Check out this site to find info on upcoming events in Los Angeles. The events are typically limited to concerts and festivals, however the site also features reviews, previews, interviews and features. From the site:

The L.A. RECORD is an independent weekly publication for the Los Angeles music scene that looks like a poster but reads like a newspaper–a descendent of LA tabloids like Slash and Confidential.

Downside of the site is that it tends to cover the rock scene a lot more heavily than the electro/house scene.

When You Awake:

This great little blog was started by a friend of mine and covers musical events and album releases. It features album reviews and mixtapes from prominent bands. The site kinda has a country twang to it in that Silverlake kind of way. Me likey. From the site:

We may live in the city but we sure do miss the country! When You Awake is our ode to country life as well as a chronicle of the current indie country/folk/rock and roll/roots scenes in LA, New York, and any place where people listen to songs that tell stories. We’re looking to bring you the best in revival goodness: Music, Style, Events, Recipes, whatever strikes our fancy…keep checking back as we update daily!

Stereogum

This awesome blog has a few great recurring features, such as “Quit Your Day Job”, which explores the day jobs of a different indie musician each week and “Video Hangover of the Week” , a feature which resurfaces an awesomely bad video from the past. This comes on top of the regular reviews and band features.

The Cool Hunter

This great little site can provide hours of eye candy. The blog features exactly what the name implies: cool stuff. From cars, to architecture, fashion to food, this blogger has passion for anything cutting edge.

The Face Hunter

An off shoot of the Cool Hunter, this is a great site to hit up for pics of fashion forward young folk in case you need a jolt of inspiration. What’s great about this site is that it gives you a pretty international sampling of what people are wearing on the world’s streets. From the site:

A man out and about in London and beyond: eye candy for the style hungry.

Defamer

This site is best suited for those of us that like gossip/entertainment news, but like to consider ourselves to be part of alternative culture. The blog includes posts on television and movie news. Guilty pleasure.

The Scenestar

Check out this site for news about L.A. music events (concerts, etc). The site also features some great interviews and tons of awesome photos. I question the taste level a little when it comes to some of the bands that are covered and I can’t say I really get the point of concert reviews, but the interviews make up for these minor problems.

Valerie

Je t’aime Valerie. This blog has so much to offer, I can’t praise it enough. With all the attention that bands like Justice and Daft Punk get, people tend to forget about anything not associated with Ed Banger. I love the french house scene and the tracks that come through here are awesome. Plus, the blog even has it’s own theme song. Check this out to stay on the up with some hot Electro.

Hustler of Culture

I use this site all the time to keep updated on what’s happening in the art world. This site features updates on events happening in the art scene in L.A. It definitely is youth oriented and tends to have a focus on contemporary art. I have found out about some amazing exhibitions from this blog.

The Hype Machine

Most people know about this site already. It’s a music blog aggregator, you can search for and artist and the site’s engine will skim a large number of blogs looking for any mp3 files that have been posted of that artist’s music. It’s a handy tool.

Perez Hilton

Needs no introduction. Vh-1 has given him a regular TV spot, he’s been given a record label. The whole world is reading it, you should too.

Last, but not least, you can use the Universal Blog Search tool on my page flake to search through blogs and find any kind of specific information you may be craving that isn’t already featured by one of the blogs I’ve highlighted. I decided to go with the Universal Blog Search rather than the Universal News Search because it seems like blogs tend to cover more obscure artists.

Moving on.

You should check out my Diigo bookmarks:

So far they include Valerie, Face Hunter and the Cool Hunter, which I’ve covered above. I’ve also bookmarked Fluo Kids, a nifty little site that comes by way of France. Each post features a hot photo and and even hotter mp3. The site also features an international list of cool parties. Check it out.

Also, Check out my post on my social bookmarking soulmate. It’s full of hidden cries from my failing love life. It also explains some of the pageflakes thatI got from my soulmate.

I want to take some time to talk about Zotero. This nifty little tool allows you to categorize and annotate articles and books that you’ve found online. After going to the Zotero homepage and installing the tool, it appears at the bottom, left hand corner of your browser. You use the tool by going to a page online where an article lives and then adding the page to Zotero, from there you edit the information in the categories that pop up in the bottom left hand corner. After you’re done with this you can click on the article in your Zotero browser and create a bibliography. I have found that this tool is a great way to skip the stress of trying to remember how to format a bibliography. I love it. Here are some sources I have found:

Grody, Steve. Graffiti L.A.: Street Styles and Art. New York: Abrams, 2006. 10 Mar 2008

Graffiti is one of the most most rich traditions that contemporary Los Angeles has to offer the art world. Since graffiti is now a global phenomenon, it’s important to be aware of it’s history. Now that hip-hop has co-opted graffiti as both a style and form of expression, it can get easy to forget that this particular art form had to have been developed by real people in recent decades. It’s amazing to think back to the 1980s and to the people who unwittingly where creating a form of art that reach a global celebrity that they never would. This book explores the history of graffiti, and details how Cholo scripts became the first letter forms to appear in graffiti. These were the seeds that acted as a catalysts for artists of all different backgrounds to begin using their own unique culture as a means for developing for own brand of graffiti. This book provides a visual history of graffiti in LA. It takes the phenomena all the way back to the 1930s and explores its cultural significance not only to the art world, but the the regional culture from where it came. It also explores the types of graffiti that are in use today. The book also includes interviews with important figures in the colorful world of graffiti.

Graffiti is important to make note of because in a lot of ways it captures an essence of Los Angeles that exists in much of it’s art. It’s this sense of the urban, of a melting pot and an reshaping of traditional cultures into something new and exciting. The kind of hardened, gangster feel that is associated with it, combined with the colorful, expressive reality of the work is also a good metaphor of the Los Angeles in general.

Trilling, Daniel. “New world order.” New Statesman 136.4859 (2007): 36.

Frankel, Dextra. Multiple Vantage Points: Southern California Women Artists 1980-2006. Los Angeles, CA: Southern California Women’s Caucus for Art: Southern California Council of the National Museum for Women in the Arts, 2007.

You can find a post featuring another Zotero source here. 

End epic post. Peace Out.