As a teenager I would watch Matt Pinfield on MTV’s ‘120 Minutes’ every week as he introduced me to new rock, metal and alternative bands. It was one of the highlights of the week and opened me up to so much of the music I listen to today! Now, fast forward to today and Matt shares a studio with me at Westwood One, where I record Geekscape every week! Now Matt and I share the studio at the SAME TIME as we talk rock history, rock’s influence on comic books (and vice versa), Matt’s amazing career in music and the music you should be listening to right now. Beyond have an encyclopedic knowledge of music, Matt is also one of the nicest people I’ve ever had on the show with some amazing stories to boot! Enjoy!

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I grew up watching Eric Walker whenever ABC would re-air ‘The Ewok Adventure’ and ‘Battle For Endor’ every Christmas on TV! And now he’s my guest on Geekscape! Eric and I talk all about filming the TV movies, where they fit in Star Wars canon, his friendship with Warwick Davis, his lifelong battle with his weight, his faith, his new career as a musician and a lot more. This is a really solid episode, whether or not you’re a Star Wars fan… because the George Lucas stories are pretty good either way. Enjoy!

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Jeff Grace returns victoriously to Geekscape with his film ‘Folk Hero and Funny Guy’, a movie he started crowdfunding with us! The movie, starring Alex Karpovsky and Wyatt Russell, is available now on iTunes and VOD and I can’t recommend it enough. We talk about writing the film, nailing the sincerity of it, the dangers of being third wheeled and friend zoned and comparisons to Kevin Smith’s ‘Chasing Amy’! We also talk about working with Michael Ian Black and I take you through my first trip to the Ren Faire! If you’re a filmmaker, you won’t want to miss this episode!

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Today I sat at work listening to a 90’s Pandora station when I heard the song Time Ago by Black Lab. There’s a chance you’ve never heard this song. When I saw the band name, however, I practically channeled Old Ben Kenobi as I thought, “Black Lab… now that’s a name I haven’t heard in a long time”.

People sometimes wonder why I love the 90’s so much. The answer is obviously nostalgia but it goes deeper than that. Nostalgia is definitely fun. It’s fun to reflect back on the past; but there’s a deeper level of nostalgia that I believe genuinely makes time travel possible… for just a millisecond.

Have you ever had that Time Travel moment? When you hear a song, smell a smell or have a thought and for a very brief second you are living in your memory. You can vividly see and feel it and just as quickly you’re back. Music always has the power for me.

As I sat at my desk with this obscure 90’s song playing through my headphones I was suddenly 12 in a bathing suit standing by my cousin’s pool ready to jump in. The song was playing on the stereo behind me and then as quickly as it happened I was back at my desk at work.

It’s what makes me love music so much. To paraphrase Empire Records, music is the glue to this world. Is there anything that holds a time-stamp in our minds better than a song at a crucial moment? Songs can be forever associated with a break-up, a death, a new relationship, a friendship or a road.

When I was in college I had a MP3 player that had very little space on it. I believe I could only fit an hour of music on it. I would listen to it driving to class and home. For whatever reason no matter what this song Les Wirth by the band TwoThirtyEight would come on just as I turned onto some back roads home. I’d go down a hill, over train tracks and then immediately needed to cut right for a sharp turn.

Almost a decade later, when I hear this song, I still can vividly remember that road, that hill, those train tracks and the sharp turn. That shouldn’t be too shocking though, I remember music queues in movies better than movie quotes sometimes.

I didn’t have a lot of friends growing up. I had an even harder time maintaining long lasting relationships with the friends I did have back then. While some kids would hang out with friends after school, I’d be watching movies or listening to music in my basement.

There was a time when I would listen to the Wedding Singer every day. I love that soundtrack still to this day. I didn’t have any specific crush at the time, but ever the hopeless romantic I would listen to songs like Every Little Thing She Does is Magic (the Police), Love My Way (Psychedelic Furs) or Hold Me Now (Thompson Twins) and fantasize about feeling that way towards someone.

In college I was in love with my friend Stacie. It was my freshmen year and the summer prior I had seen Garden State and like most 18 years olds in 2004 it had changed my life. I excitedly pre-ordered the DVD at Suncoast which arrived the day before winter break.

I had plans to hang out with Stacie during that first winter break. I was going to finally tell her how I felt about her. That’s when I found out she had a new boyfriend. I was crushed. I put Garden State into the DVD player and for two weeks it never left the player. It would just loop over and over and over. When I hear those songs (specifically Colin Hay’s I Just Don’t Think I’ll Ever Get Over You) I think of her and that terrible winter.

It’s not all bad memories though. There is still one song that can transport me back to a beautiful and peaceful memory as a child. Like most of the songs I mention here, it’s a bit obscure.

In 1986 The Care Bears II: The Next Generation was released. When it first aired on TV my aunt taped it for me and over the years it was one of my favorite VHS tapes. I recall many sleepovers at my Grandmother’s house watching that and Mary Martin’s Peter Pan. There was a bunny rabbit sleeping bag that I would bury myself in on the couch and watch those tapes.

Care Bears II ends with a song called Forever Young which is probably cheesy by literally every standard, but the song still has an effect on me. I was flying home after an unsuccessful stint living in L.A. with my iPod on shuffle. I was trapped in Chicago at the time due to snow-storms delaying my flights and it was looking like there was a chance I would miss Christmas with my family.

I sat on the floor, completely alone and scared. Forever Young came on and I felt warm suddenly. I felt myself wrapped in that bunny rabbit sleeping bag. I felt like everything would be okay. I closed my eyes and felt that warmth take over my body. The song ended. I opened my eyes. They were letting us board the plane. Everything was going to be okay.

That’s the magic of music. Beyond being a time-stamp for period in your life, it has the power to make you feel comfort when you feel your most alone. You may not ever be able to relive moments, but musics ability to unlock those memories is pretty damn close.

This week on Monday Music we’ve got the first single from the 12th studio album from the legendary 311. Check out the video for Too Much To Think below!

This is all really surprising to me.

Personally, I’ve relegated 311 to a “dead band”. A punchline to a joke about milquetoast music. Never really exploring the band’s content, I almost dismissed the press release all together; I was just going to write up the new Weeknd music video instead. I stopped and thought “ehhh, lets just give it a chance”.

I was blown away. What the hell happened to 311?! This wasn’t what I remembered them as. I even went back and listened to some of their older work.

Too Much To Think is a tremendous single. It has a very “modern” feel: The production is tight, the lyrics feel like they could come from any Top 40 tropical house track, the instrumentals are vibrant and relaxing. I am getting this nostalgic feeling for a band that holds no nostalgia for me.

The band’s newest album, MOSAIC, is out this summer. I will definitely be getting my hands on it.

You can also check out their Summer 2017 North American tour info on their official website. They’re hitting up a lot of cities and festivals!

There is a huge bump on the back of my neck. I’m not sure if it’s a pimple, or a cyst, or maybe a spider bite… I keep squeezing it and an opaque, semi-tan liquid is coming out, along with some blood, and it doesn’t seem to be getting smaller. Actually, when I was applying what felt like super-human pressure to it last night, it divided itself into three smaller bumps. The same happened tonight, and so I dunked a cotton swab in rubbing alcohol in hopes it would dry up, but I think it’s just going to come back and annoy me again tomorrow, possibly shinier, with more prominence, and I’ll just walk around looking like the beginning of a YouTube video your unemployed friend shares on social media where they assume you can’t make it through the viewing of various dermatology procedures where membranous sacs are drained. Maybe I should have worn latex gloves…

Anyway, this is what I think about when I think about explaining the music of ABBA.

While no inflamed spots of skin on my epidermis have ever won the Eurovision song contest, or been requested to play at a wedding, the analogy seems fitting.

I just spent an hour and forty minutes in my car listening to various ABBA songs, and while that might not seem extravagant, you should know that I had nowhere specific to be. As of this writing, it is 2 AM on a Thursday morning and there was literally no reason for me to be galavanting around, crossing state lines, except for the fact that in my twisted logic, it makes sense to drive forty minutes one way, cross a cantilever bridge, and pay a five dollar port authority toll, all to save about twenty cents per gallon on gasoline.

It makes about as much sense as a thirty-four year old male spending an entire week listening to ABBA to write this piece.

ABBA broke up after abandoning a half-finished album the year I was born (1982), so I can’t say listening to them makes me feel nostalgic. I also do not listen to ABBA ironically. In fact, nothing I do is, in the hipster/millennial vein of being “ironic” (and those are quotations for emphasis, not irony, both usages I despise, but ironically, I used simply to include this scathing parenthetical on misuse of quotation marks).

I find appreciation of popular culture for ironic purposes quite a bore, in all honesty. To shit all over something a vast majority of people enjoy simply to point and giggle with your closest companions to achieve an acute, holier-than-thou self-value boost is sadder than the mainstream mediocrity you claim to be better than. So hopefully you will find anything I write about or amateurishly appreciate or scathingly criticize void of those comparisons.

Speaking of comparisons, a number of which come to mind when I reminisce on my almost two hour experience with the Swedish stock exchange’s former hot commodity, ABBA. Almost every song reminded me of something else, be it another song or an entire genre, but the vast majority of those similarities were post-dated from the ABBA release, which leads me to believe (and, again, I am not being nostalgic), that ABBA was, and still is, one of the most influential pop groups of the twentieth century.

There were songs that sounded like the precursor to the ‘80s power ballad. There were synths that could have easily fit on an industrial Nine Inch Nails EP. Some songs were so theatrical, I could envision a story playing out just beyond the darkened trees that lined the road my car’s tires were hugging. There were even songs to which I found myself head-banging (“Mamma Mia” if you must know… “Just (bang) one (bang) look (bang) and I can hear a bell ring…”). The point I’m trying to make is that through the darkness of the night, there was something borderline creepy at times (the final song on my aimless journey that rattled my ossicles being “The Day Before You Came,” where I found myself generally concerned that the singer, Agnetha Fältskog had suffered some sort of brain injury since she could not iterate definitively whether or not she had participated in seemingly mundane tasks, and then I began spiraling into thoughts of whether that concern was genuine, since I had just spent an hour and thirty five minutes with this quartet of Swedes, or if my own paranoia had captured my thought patterns as I had now been awake almost twenty hours and was about seven large coffees and a Rockstar Fruit Punch into caffeinated delirium.)

I think a deer ran into the back of my car during “Super Trouper.” I didn’t stop to check on my vehicle or the possibly made up hoofed beast which either misjudged its road-crossing timing or simply did not like me for personal reasons it failed to properly relay. So I continued on, just as ABBA had done after band members Agnetha and Björn Ulvaeus divorced in 1979 and other members Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad also split later in 1981 after a nine year engagement and two year marriage. I knew I had a good thing going with this trip and the pop-power of the tunes kept me rolling on. (“‘Does Your Mother Know’ would not be out of place on a Cheap Trick album”, I thought to myself, apropos of a dyslexic reading of the words power pop.)

That’s what’s so striking about ABBA.

Most of my life, I wrote off this group as “those girls that sing ‘Dancing Queen,’” which, if that is what you’ve done, I hope I am encouraging you to not, but it wasn’t until I read Chuck Klosterman’s essay ABBA 1, World 0 in his collection “Eating the Dinosaur” in which he compared ABBA to AC/DC, that it clicked. I loved AC/DC for the exact reason he compares them to ABBA (and I apologize for summarizing or stealing any of his material subconsciously). AC/DC is not just a band, they are a brand and a genre in-and-of themselves. The case is made, in said essay, that ABBA are of the same ilk, albeit in a more pop-sensible fashion. Although, upon further listening, I would be confidant in both agreeing whole-heartedly with that sentiment, and also completely refuting it simultaneously.

ABBA not only has more range than AC/DC, but was also more influential on popular music, as a whole. There were songs I heard which completely borrowed from the past (i.e. mimic of genres from before the song’s release, such as “I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do,” which it seems completely ludicrous that this song has not beed used in a film’s pre-credit sequence which freeze-frames on all the main characters and describes what they went on to accomplish in life post-narrative, a-la-“American Graffiti” or the “Hot for Teacher” video), but there were songs which also seemed like pre-cursors to so many styles and songs that would come after (in fact, there was one song that I swore was the spirit animal parent of Pat Benatar’s “We Belong” and cannot now, for the life of me, remember which one).

This was just day one of my weeklong relationship with ABBA, and what’s promising to me about this self-assigned journey, is that even after digesting those 25 songs, I still want to watch the Community episode “Epidemiology,” in which, along with being a brilliant George Takei-narrated zombie-spoof, is also driven by various selections from the discography of this award-winning four-piece of Scandinavians about which you are reading.

Which reminds me, I should probably clarify my opening analogy.

The reason ABBA is like a skin lesion, or at least the reason that makes sense to me, is that, personally, I enjoy popping pimples. It’s not for everyone. But even when people were burning disco records and shitting all over ABBA in their heyday, they came back with better music, much of which was ahead of its time, they made music videos before many other acts, and they knew how to write a perfect goddamn pop song. They made perfect sense in their time. But, at least in today’s society, ABBA doesn’t make sense anymore. Some people, no matter how much you poke and prod and push, just will not get into pop music. They feel it’s beneath them. Had you told me, a decade or more ago, that I would purposely put myself in a car and drive around listening to ABBA for a week (let alone even the length of the ‘90s revival collection ABBA Gold, I would have thought you an idiot. But here we are…)

Here is the playlist from my first day. It was more than enjoyable, and quite frankly, I look forward to seeing what tomorrow will bring.

Thank you for the music, Agnetha, Björn, Benny, and Anni-Frid

(A.B.B.A… get it?)

This week on Monday Music we’re bringing you a delicious future house remix of that crazy popular hip-hop song Broccoli. Check out the Party Pupils Remix below.

If you’ve been living under a rock lately, let me bring you up to speed. Broccoli debuted early last year from hiphop artists D.R.A.M. and Lil Yachty. It’s very much in the same boat (HAH!) as Lil Yachty’s Minnesota. In this up-and-coming sub-genre upbeat and lively, lullaby-esque melodies combine with hard hitting trap style sub-bass to bring a surprisingly cohesive song that kicks.  The lyrics that accompany the tune are just as fun and upbeat. Broccoli has hit double platinum since it’s release in April 2016.

That brings us to the track you’ve just listened to. The Party Pupils Remix takes the extremely recognizable lyrics from the original and adds a toe-tapping sidechained beat. This is how to remix a song; music producers take note.

Be sure to check out more of Party Pupils on their Facebook.

So ‘scapists, what do you think? A faithful remix of the original or utter trash? Let us know below!

We’re back! That’s right faithful Geekscapists, we are back with another episode of Monday Music. I sincerely apologize for the lack of postings, as your resident “Resident Advisor” here I feel like I’ve failed you. I’ve not brought the beautiful creation that is music to your eyes and ears. Well, that’s about to change.

I was just shown this dark and spooky EP from the “Detroit Sludge” grandfather himself, Marshall Applewhite. Check out Under A Pale Moon below.

Under A Pale Moon is the latest from Late Night Munchies, the Alaska born/Seattle based record label helmed by House producer Tony H. This EP gave me chills.

A very recent sub-genre to the techno family, Detroit Sludge was co-created by Marshall himself. Featuring slower tempos, dark sub-bass frequencies, and oscillating mids, Sludge gives off an uneasy feeling to listeners. Deem’d the “anti-drug” of EDM, this genre is not for the faint of heart.

The titular track really evokes the feeling of dark, desolate space. The album art and the tune are PERFECT for each other. My personal favorite, Lice, feels different than most of what the genre has to offer. It’s very bubbly, and compliments the overall vibe of Under A Pale Moon. One of my criteria for a strong, long lasting song is its ability to be remixed and still retain the essence of the original piece. Sham is a song that should be remixed, it’s probably the best track on the EP.

You can listen to Under A Pale Moon right now on the Late Night Munchies SoundCloud, and pick up the EP yourself on December 19th.

Be sure to follow both Late Night Munchies and Marshall Applewhite on social!

Facebook.com/latenightmunchiesmusic
Twitter.com/lnmmusic
Instagram.com/latenightmunchiesmusic

Facebook.com/marshallapplewhitedetroit
Twitter.com/marshallawhite

 

You probably didn’t expect to see Rick Astley on Geekscape, at least in a non “Rickroll” capacity that is. Well the internet meme legend has just released his newest single from his upcoming album 50. Check out Keep Singing below.

50 marks the singers first album in over 10 years, and Keep Singing is his first single in over five years. The album’s title represents Rick’s 50th birthday, as the singer is turning…well 50!

I’ve always liked Rick Astley, even before his Rickrolling rise to fame. When his last single, Lights Out, hit I was extremely impressed that he still has the chops he did all those years ago.

Keep Singing has soul, volume and bounce. It DESPERATELY needs a dance remix. Do yourself a favor and play the youtube video at 1.5X speed. You won’t regret it.

Rick Astley’s 50 hits store shelves June 17th! You can get your hands on the digital preorder’s right now!

This is it! Geekscape Episode 400! Nine years in the making! Broadcast Live from TheStream.tv, this episode is packed with surprise guests, drop ins from the Geekscape crew, shout outs to favorite moments from throughout Geekscape history and live musical performances by The Suburban Legends! PLUS! I get visited by myself… from The Future!

This episode is also available in FULL VIDEO at bit.ly/Geekscape400th! Enjoy!

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Brad Breeck is a musician and composer with some of our favorite TV credits, including Disney shows ‘Gravity Falls’, ‘Star vs The Forces of Evil’, Nickelodeon’s ‘Fanboy and Chumchum’ and MTV’s ‘Awkward’! He drops by to talk about how he got his start in TV composing and where he gets his inspiration… and maybe why it’s not always a plus to be first in school! I also profess my love for MTV’s ‘The Shannara Chronicles’ and we try and give Brad the perfect nickname! Enjoy!

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This week on Monday Music we have a nice treat for all the geeks out there. Disney has teamed up with record producer Rick Rubin to create a Star Wars inspired compilation album, and what we have seen so far is outstanding.

Head Space features a trove of well known electronic music producers. Most of you will recognize artists like Flying Lotus and Röyksopp right off the bat, but I can tell you that the entire group of people involved are some of the best. Head Space get’s inspiration and elements from all of the Star Wars films. C-3PO’s Plights features samples of the droid lamenting existence, as well as blaster shots from the movies. Baauer’s Cantina Boys gets really dirty with some classic samples you will immediately recognize.

What is very interesting to note is the Rick Rubin/A-Trak Re-Work of the song Jabba Flow from The Force Awakens. The original artist, Shag Kava, is actually J.J. Abrams and Lin-Manuel Miranda!

You will not be disappointed with this release. Check out the track list below.

1. C-3P0’s Plight – Kaskade

2. Help Me! – GTA

3. Force – TroyBoi

4. Cantina Boys – Baauer

5. Jabba Flow: Rick Rubin Re-Work (feat. A-Trak) – Shag Kava

6. R2 Knows (feat. Barry Drift) – Claude VonStroke

7. NR-G7 –  Rick Rubin

8. Ghomrassen – Bonobo

9. Bounty Hunters – Röyksopp

10. Sunset Over Manaan – ATTLAS

11. R2 Where R U? – Flying Lotus

12. Druid Caravan of Smoke – Shlohmo

13. EWOK PUMPP – Rustie

14. Scruffy-Looking Nerfherder – Galantis

15. Star Tripper – Breakbot

The album hits iTunes February 19th, and hits store shelves March 18th. Check out some of the songs below, an interview with Flying Lotus from Zane Lowe’s Beats 1 show, and a video of Röyksopp performing Bounty Hunters at their show in Oslo last December!

 

This week on Monday Music we get down low with Valentino Khan.

Granted, this song came out in March of last year but today we are gifted with this incredibly strange music video. I could NOT feature it this week.

Valentino Khan has been producing music since he was 16, but didn’t really appear on my radar until 2014 when he was signed to Skrillex’s record label, OWSLA. His electrohouse singles, and trap remixes always bring an incredible vibe.

The Deep Down Low music video is directed by Ian Pons Jewell, who is responsible for A LOT of EDM music videos. All of which have a very unique vibe.

Enough rambling, check out Deep Down Low’s music video below! Click through to the video for a chance to snag a free VIP version of the track!

If you find yourself up here with me in Alaska, then you can catch Valentino Khan LIVE at the Deep Down Low event during Spring Break!

After a 4 month hiatus Saint Mort Show has returned in a new once a month format.

This month Matt sits down with Sean Esl (aka Bossbattle) as he talks about his time traveling in Indonesia and becoming part of the noise community. He also explains the concept of Noise-Bombing to Matt and shares an instrument he built.

If you’re curious where I’ve been I’ve been working on my new podcast Horror Movie Club. Check us out on Facebook, Twitter, Soundcloud, Reddit and Geekscape.net!

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This week on Monday Music we’re showing off the highly anticipated team up of two of EDM’s rising stars. Jauz and Marshmellow joined forces to give a funky jersey trap sounding twerk style remix of Duke Dumont’s Need U 100%. Take a listen below!

Both Jauz and Marshmellow have blown up recently making crazy unique new sounds, and getting a lot of attention for their remixes of popular songs. Jauz’s remix of Tip Toe Wing In My Jawwdinz and Marshmellow’s remix of Where Are U Now are two of my favorite tunes to play out when DJing.

I feel ultimately that this collaboration was hyped way to much. Both artists, as well as some of the bigger names likes Skrillex, really talked this track up a lot. It’s GOOD, but it’s not the amazing, world ending banger fans were expecting. Still though, it’s free so give it a download. You can be sure I will be playing it out this weekend at the bar.

We’re getting a little bit weirder this week, and leaving the hood behind. This week we’re going to explore the odd genre called Vaporwave

You’ve probably have heard that one trippy song by Macintosh Plus. A pitch shifted, multi sampled, remixed version of Diana Ross’s Your Move. It has been blowing up recently, and has kind of become a “meme” in the YouTube Haiku community. But you may be asking yourself, “What the hell is Vaporwave?”.

When I first discovered Vaporwave, I was skeptical. It’s a genre, that I thought initially, was a parody genre. People ironically throwing in Japanese characters into their song titles, and the constant talk of “AESTHETIC”. But the more and more I explored the genre, and it’s countless subgenres, I began to fall in love with it.

The vibe, or A E S T H E T I C, the genre is trying to exude is an interesting one. A lot of the sounds you will hear are very pitch shifted down, and will be kind of droning. You will immediately get a kind of, nostalgic feeling, which is what a lot of the songs are trying for. The artists are trying to teleport you to a retro future, where the pinks and teals of the late 80’s and early 90’s are the only colors you will see as your walk an abandoned mall. There is a huge cross over with the trend of using outdated technology, as VHS and cassette tapes are the norm. Labels like Dream Catalogue have gone one step further, and instead of releasing albums on Vinyl have gone for the magnetic glory of cassette tapes. Granted it’s an inherently BAD medium for sound, as the frequencies on it favor the high side. Getting the latest vaporwave release on a little cassette just drive home the whole retro future vibe.

This week’s Monday Music focuses on t e l e p a t h’s newest release. Him/her/they are one of the juggernauts in the Vaporwave community, and have released some of the quintessential songs that define the genre.  This latest release is nothing new, but really shows you what you can expect from this quirky genre. Take a listen below to the full album, and be sure to check out t e l e p a t h on Band Camp.

This week on Monday Music, we’re going to the dirty south with Lil Wayne’s newest mixtape!

No Ceilings 2 came out a few weeks ago on Thanksgiving, but that was before I started writing these posts, SO HERE IT IS NOW!

Lil Wayne has really outdone himself this time around. No Ceilings 2, released on his own Young Money Entertainment, is a great progression from his previous release of No Ceilings. This time there were no track leaks, and when it hit on Datpiff it was met with positive reviews.

Wayne brings his own unique style to existing instrumentals. His version of Hotline Bling turns the Drake tune into a jailhouse love ballad.

The whole record has an extreme amount of sub bass, and each song really kicks you in the chest. My only complaint with the album is that sometimes, Wayne’s signature auto-tune vocals sound disjointed and overdone.

You can snag the entire No Ceilings 2 mixtape for free on Datpiff.

We’d love to hear your thoughts on this Mixtape, what do you think of Lil Wayne’s covers?

https://youtu.be/L12FwJ2Peek

The Korean pop sensation, PSY has just released promotional videos for two singles off his upcoming album PSY 7th Album. The one that got my attention is the video for the single Daddy. Check it out below.

Released just a few hours ago, the video has already hit almost half a million views. The song is very reminiscent of Gangnam Style, with a nice catchy repeating line in English. This is definitely the track that is going to get the most attention off this record.

The song features CL from the K-pop band 2NE1. I’m not a particularly HUGE fan of 2NE1, but they are probably the group most Westerners are familiar with. EDM fans will recognize CL from the collab she did with G-Dragon and Skrillex, Dirty Vibe.

The other PV that PSY released today is for the dual titled song, Bell-Bottoms (Napal Baji). This song is ostensibly “better” in my opinion, but it’s obvious that Daddy will be the juggernaut this time around. We probably won’t see another Macarena killer like we had with Gangnam Style, but this single comes pretty close.

PSY – 7th Album can be picked up on iTunes right now, and officially launches worldwide December 1st.

Guitar Hero is back, baby.

Honestly, I left the Guitar Hero brand years ago. After spending far, far too many hours than what would be considered ‘healthy’ on Guitar Hero and Guitar Hero 2 (not to mention garnering far, far too many blisters over that period of time), Activision’s Guitar Hero 3 left me disappointed in its song selection and new mechanics, and in that, my attention shifted to Harmonix’ own Rock Band series.

At that time, all that I was interested in was playing songs with my friends (and staying far away from the microphone due to embarassment), and of course, at that time, Rock Band provided a far better group experience.

Obviously, both Guitar Hero and Rock Band disappeared for years after the all-too similar Rock Band 3 and Guitar Hero: World Tour, yearly updates, and an astronomical amount of expensive plastic controllers led to the entire rhythm genre all but disappearing entirely.

Now it’s late 2015, and both Activision and Harmonix have bet that we’re all ready to pick up our (new) plastic instruments and rock out once again, and boy were they right.

Guitar Hero Live and Rock Band 4 both launched within a few short weeks of each other, and thankfully this time around, both titles are completely different… Well, aside from the fact that you’re still playing plastic instruments.

This time, Rock Band 4 feels incredibly similar to 2010’s Rock Band 3 (but better looking, of course), and is banking on the idea that you loved Rock Band, want a similar experience, and also want access to the myriads of DLC that you likely purchased way back in the day. It’s a great idea, and the transferring of DLC alone is likely to ensure a lot of purchases from gamers who played the last game in the series, but again, things are pretty same-y with this iteration.

Guitar Hero Live? Well, it’s almost unrecognizable from any other game in the series, and it banks on an idea that I haven’t seen ever in the genre, and rarely anywhere else (well, since the 90’s, anyways): full motion video.

https://youtu.be/6SnIZgESm4c

And it’s absolutely incredible. It’s impressive to the point that during the game’s tutorial I began laughing wildly at just how impressive everything looked.

See, Guitar Hero Live removes the silly, cartoon caricatures, animated crowds, and insanely busy HUD of previous iterations, and replaces them with a simple interface and beautiful footage of real performers on real stages, performing to real crowds.

Again, it’s insane. The game is played from a first person perspective; you are the guitar player, and the HUD consists of only the fret board, the notes, and your current note streak. Gone is the gauge that tells you just how well (or poorly) you’re doing, and there’s no score onscreen either. So how do you know how you’re doing? The crowd (and your bandmates), obviously.

Play well, and your bandmates will look at you with sheer excitement as you put on the best performance of your lives. Play well, and the crowd will jump, cheer, sing along, and generally freak out. And then there’s the opposite. If you stink, your bandmates will look at you with sheer confusion, the crowd will go silent, and you’ll genuinely feel bad for what you’re doing. If you’re doing really poorly, your band will look completely pissed, and the crowd will actually begin to throw things at you.

Remember that this is Guitar Hero Live, so rather than flipping through a menu to select your music after playing just one song at a time, you’ll actually be playing setlists and different venues during two fictional festivals, SoundDial in the UK, and Rock the Block in the US. Instead of one track at a time, you’ll generally be playing three or four before returning to a menu. This is great because it keeps you in the action for far longer than in past games, and once you’re into the 2spooky4me harder modes in the game, it intensifies the challenge as your fingers are bound to get exhausted.

Speaking of fingers getting exhausted, this new controller was hard to get used to. This isn’t a fault of the controller at all, but it’s so different that it definitely impeded my playing for some time. See, instead of having five buttons across the neck of the guitar (one each for five ‘frets’), the new guitar has two sets of three buttons, one on top of the other. This means that the game should be more approachable for beginners, as they actually have to move less, but also far more challenging for expert players, as technically there’s an extra button along with the addition of chords. For me, it was kind of like trying to learn a bicycle that pedals completely differently from the kind that you already know how to ride. For instance, seeing a note coming at you on the left of the fretboard, and then on the right of the fretboard and now technically just two buttons apart, but being used to the older controllers, I’d instead reach across the neck for buttons that no longer exist.

https://youtu.be/bolwf2q9Vb8

Once I put in some substantial time with the controller, however, things were great, and I actually felt the new axe to be more comfortable than any I’d used in the past. Go figure.

There’s a myriad of tracks available in Guitar Hero Live, and I’m not sure if I’m just getting old, or if I just don’t listen to any current popular music, but I certainly recognized far fewer songs that I would have in earlier games in the series. Don’t get me wrong, they’re definitely not bad, but I did’t have the ‘oh, I already love all of these songs’ feeling that I did with earlier titles. Tracks range from classics like Warrant’s ‘Cherry Pie’, The Who’s ‘Won’t Get Fooled Again’, The Rolling Stones ‘Paint It Black’ and more, and there are also tracks that I never thought I’d see in a Guitar Hero game (and that I don’t even really know) like Eminem’s ‘Berzek’, Skrillex’ ‘Bangarang’ and many more. In any case, the game’s current setlist is right here.

So that’s Guitar Hero Live. You’ll note that I didn’t mention anything about actually playing with friends, racking up crazy scores, or anything like that.

Well, Guitar Hero Live is actually only half of the game.

Actually, the first thing that you’re presented with each time you boot up Guitar Hero Live is which mode you’d like to play, Live, or TV.

GHTV actually feels far closer to the mechanics of Guitar Hero games of generations passed; multipliers, hero powers, and customization all make a triumphant return, but again, instead of cheesy characters and a one-song-at-a-time philosophy, GHTV becomes the ultimate party game by having you simply play over top of music videos. It’s freaking brilliant.

As of now, you have two different live channels to choose from, the aptly named GH1 and GH2. Each has different programming on at different times, so if you’re not feeling the indie tracks on GH1 at the moment, you’ll find something else entirely running on GH2. I should probably give you an ample warning about GHTV, however: it is unbelievably, undeniably addicting. Numerous times, I picked up the guitar and expected to play through a few videos before moving on with my day, and those good intentions turned into me pulling the Netflix classic ‘just one more’ for what felt like several hours. Another addictive element is the completion aspect of GHTV. Because it’s always online, you’ll see how you’re performing in your current song compared to 9 other players that are at your skill-level. This led to me swearing at my TV far, far too often as I messed up a note streak, and also had me giddy with excitement as I made some unexpected comebacks.

A great progression system certainly keeps you coming back for more, as you can unlock alternate fretboards, new hero powers, player cards, as well as in-game currency that lets you play songs on demand.

https://youtu.be/4fQccRAO40U

Here’s where Guitar Hero Live’s GHTV mode has been receiving some controversy that I really don’t understand. Gone are the old days of spending cash on DLC that you’ll either play all the time, or just a handful. Sure, this old model ensured that you could have instant access to tracks that you loved whenever you wanted to play them, but it did absolutely nothing for another very important aspect of these games: music discovery. You downloaded everything you knew and loved off of the store, and ignored everything else, because you weren’t willing to spend a few dollars on something that you weren’t already familiar with. This is totally natural, and it totally makes sense, but how much great content did you miss out on because the old games simply had no real discovery system?

GHTV is amazing because it’s almost all discovery. You play through hundreds, and hundreds, of music videos, many they’ll have never seen or heard before, and you’ll absolutely fall in love with many of them. I know that I now have plenty of bands, songs, and albums on my phone that I would have never even heard without the help of GHTV.

So the controversy comes from the fact that you never really buy anything. Every song that you play earns you in-game currency, which you can use to play any song in the game’s expansive library, on-demand. There’s no way to simply say ‘Hey, I really love Boston’s ‘ More Than A Feeling’, and pay an actual amount of money to have it in your library, forever. You access the track with the in-game currency that you’ve already earned, or you can pay some real money for a buttload of said currency.

The big thing to note here, is that in the many, many hours that I’ve played the game, I’ve never actually felt like I actually had to spend money. The game rewards you with currency at a very steady rate (after every single song you play, in fact), and it’s not tough whatsoever to buy a pack of ‘Play Tokens’ that allow you play through whatever the heck you want.

https://youtu.be/Pk69OcbOJDQ

I may be in the minority, but I actually feel like this model is incredible. Instead of spending actual, real money to download a song that I may or may not play a handful of times, I just have to play the addictive as hell GHTV channels, which I’d be doing anyways to earn the ability to play whatever I want. I actually find that I generally gravitate towards GH1 or GH2, and only actually jump into an on-demand track when I feel like I need a break, or I’ve just found a song that I’d like to play again. As of this writing I have nearly 50 Play Tokens available to me (and enough currency to buy more), and I haven’t spent a single dime. So yes, while these are technically micro-transactions, they’re definitely micro-transactions that are far, far different from a game that you’ve downloaded for free on your smart phone.

GHTV also offers very intriguing ‘Premium’ content, which you can access, again, with real money, or by completing in-game challenges. Premium content includes anything anything from new music videos in GHTV to live concert footage that you can play along to. It seems pretty neat, and if I was going to spend real money on the game, I’d rather have it be to play along to a live performance of one of my favourite bands, rather than to simply download one of their songs.

GHTV also, of course, supports multiplayer. Grab another guitar controller, and you can compete with your local friends, and you can also hook up a microphone in order to let someone perform vocals. It’s just as much fun as you’d expected to be, and it’s just as much fun as you remember from previous games. It may even be a little bit cooler, as the fact that you’re simply playing over-top of music videos is really, really slick.

I am absolutely in love with this game. After a much needed, years-long break, Guitar Hero is back, and it’s better than ever. There’s really nothing not to love about Guitar Hero Live, from its incredible full motion video-based Live mode, to the insanely addictive nature of GHTV, and at this point in 2015, it’s probably the most fun I’ve had with any video game this year. Really, I can’t wait to jump back into it, and I can’t wait to see how the game and how GHTV’s already impressive offerings evolve as time goes on.

Guitar Hero Live scores an encore-worthy 5/5.

https://youtu.be/123m8R16p04

Briefly: All this has happened before, and all of it will happen again.

Yes, the plastic instrument war begins anew this month, with the launch of Rock Band 4 today and Guitar Hero Live on October 20th.

Rock Band 4 may have Guitar Hero Live beat when it comes to release date, but none of the ads I’ve seen for Rock Band 4 have had as much influence on me as this Guitar Hero Live video does.

See, Rock Band 4 looks largely similar to the games that preceded it (though with a much, much larger library this time around), while Guitar Hero Live looks to be doing something completely different, focusing on an actual concert experience with real crowds and real reactions (as well as the social GHTV, which sounds interesting as hell).

In any case, today’s video shows James Franco and Lenny Kravitz duking it out in the game’s ‘Win the Crowd’ mode, which looks like so much fun. Take a look.

https://youtu.be/ev66m8Obosw

So, are you looking forward to the resurgence of these instrument-powered titles? Or is this a niche that would wish would stay dead?

My absolute favorite thing about Mr. Robot, the new USA series about a vigilante computer hacker on a journey to take down the biggest corporation in the world, is the music.

Reminiscent of The Social Network crossed with a dystopian/horror movie, the unnerving soundtrack is an huge highlight for the series. The series’ composer, Mac Quayle, is a rising star in the soundtrack world. Having worked in collaboration in movies like Drive, Contagion, and Spring Breakers before going solo on American Horror Story: Freak Show and now Mr. Robot, Quayle’s distinct style often evokes the darker nature of music with high-tech, synth-heavy sounds.

A few weeks ago I had a chance to speak to Mac Quayle, recently nominated for a primetime Emmy, about his career, from his beginning all the way to American Horror Story and Mr. Robot.

Whether or not you win your Emmy, what was your first reaction to getting that announcement?

Mac: I was really excited. Really excited. Kind of beyond my wildest dreams to be included with such great composers.

What was your inspiration into getting into music? What did you listen to that made you go, “You know what? I can do this.”

Mac: Well, it started with my parents putting me in the church choir when I was six. And it wasn’t really my choice. They just put me in the choir. And that was my introduction to learning music. And I’ve just sort of been on that path ever since.

Was there anything that you listened to later in life that just kept that momentum going?

Mac: I don’t know about one particular piece of music. I’ve certainly listened to a lot, been inspired by a lot of different people along the way. There’s so many, from different phases of life. But some early influences, I’m going to say Devo, Ultravox, New Order, Peter Gabriel…

Really, Peter Gabriel?

Mac: Yeah.

I don’t know why that surprises me. I think that’s kind of cool.

Mac: Yeah, I was a huge fan of his years ago.

What led you into doing soundtracks and movie scoring? I’m not well versed in music, but I know enough enough that it’s a different path than, say, performing like Peter Gabriel. What led you to do movie scoring and TV scoring?

Mac: In a way, it’s like a second career for me. My earlier career in New York was working more in the music business, as a musician, producer, dance remixer, and I did that for a number of years, until the early 2000s [when] the music industry started to find itself in decline and a lot of the work I was doing was drying up. So I decided it was time to move to Los Angeles, and I had a vague idea of getting into scoring, but I wasn’t totally clear. I moved out here in 2004, and I met some people, and I ended up getting my first job working on a TV show called Cold Case, as an additional composer.

I remember that show.

Mac: It was a great opportunity and I learned a lot, and I found that… It seemed like a good fit for me. That was the new direction that my career was taking and I followed it.

Speaking very broadly, soundtrack scoring is more often than not kind of categorized in two different ways. There’s the character theme, and then there’s a piece for a particular scene or moment. Do you personally have a preference for writing one kind of piece over the other?

Mac: Not really. I’m more about whatever works. For me to do a theme for a character, then that’s great, and if it’s more just about a particular scene or a particular feeling, then I’m all for that as well. And sometimes I’ll write a theme for a character and it ends up getting used for that character and other characters. And it works. And so I’m like, “Okay! It works.” That’s all good. I’m basically about whatever works.

What piece of composition do you think has worked the best, the one that just came together almost flawlessly?

Mac: Well, there’s been many, but recently the first piece of music that I wrote for American Horror Story last year, which was actually what got me the job. That piece of music, something about it, it came together not effortlessly, but it wasn’t that difficult to write and it just really seemed to fit the scene. They loved it. They hired me, and then variations of that piece got used so much throughout the entire season, it became a very useful piece of music and components.

This was last season, right?

Mac: Yes. Freakshow.

Your work is noticeably what I’d call kind of like a techno-thriller. You did the soundtrack to ContagionDrive, I can imagine a hacker out of a William Gibson novel. Even when you use traditional, non-electronic music, they’re very intense and heavy pieces.

Mac: Yeah, I definitely gravitate towards that. On those films you mentioned, I worked with Cliff Martinez, and that’s certainly a bit of his sound and so it was kind of [us] both gravitate towards that.

Is there any reason why you gravitate towards the sound? Or do you just find it works for the material you’re composing for?

Mac: It does tend to work for the projects that I’m working on and that’s part of the reason that they asked me to do it, because they know that’s something that I do. And I also, I’ve just always loved synthesizers. I got exposed to my first synthesizer when I was maybe fifteen. And it just kind of blew my mind. And then I’ve just ever since been obsessed with the synthesizer. I love playing with them, I love how they sound. Now, what you can do with computer technology and all the virtual synth… It’s just an unlimited palette of electronic sounds at your fingertips.

I think one of your most stunning pieces, in my opinion, is your most subdued. It’s in Contagion, when we find out that the strain originated from the bat and the pig. That specifically, do you remember that one, if you remember anything about that … What went into the making of that piece? Because that, to me, … That was just awesome.

Mac: Thank you. And I do have to clarify, that is Cliff Martinez’s score, and I did work on that piece but it’s a collaboration with Cliff. I can’t take credit for it. That piece, I remember it, it was a very strange piece, pulsing, electronic pulsings…

It’s subdued. It’s a reveal. It’s like, “This is what happened.” It’s so stunning.

Mac: Here’s some of the mechanics. This is how film scoring works, sometimes. We had written a piece that was similar to that for another scene in the film. And when we got to the bat and pig scene, we took that piece that we’d written for the other scene, and we put it up against the picture, and it seemed to be a good direction. And so I modified the piece of music to fit the bat and pig scene. So it was not so much like this grand design of, “Oh, what’s the best thing for bat and pig? Let’s write this piece of music.” It was, “Here’s a piece we’d written for another scene. It seems to almost work for bat and pig. I’ll modify it so that it does work.” That’s how that … It’s a little more boring than, “Oh I decided that this pig sound would be really good if I had an electronic pulse.” But that’s just the truth. That’s really how it came up.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1Ji3Lw_WGw

What is the most vivid memory you have attached to anything you’ve written? What can you listen to, and remember something that’s totally not related to the movie or TV show?

Mac: When I listen to Drive, that I also collaborated on with Cliff. When we finished that film, we were mixing it at his studio for maybe ten days straight. And during that time he had just bought this espresso machine, and we were… the mixes were basically fueled by this espresso machine. And it began this sort of obsession that I’ve had ever since, with espresso. [laughs] And so that soundtrack is always tied to my love of espresso now.

That’s actually really funny to me. The Drive soundtrack is haunting and so many other words, but to you, you just think “Oh, lots of coffee.” That’s hysterical.

Mac: Maybe not so much during the writing of it. It was the mixing, when the espresso [kept] us going for those long days.

What can you tell me about your time on American Horror Story? I know a lot of fans of that show. What was that experience like?

Mac: It was really a dream come true. And it was a dream that I didn’t even know I had. I had not watched the show before I was hired. It was on my list. I had heard great things about it but I had not seen it. And if you had asked me, “What show do you think will be a great show for you to work on?” That would not have been on the list.

It would seem out of your style, out of your general forte, at first glance.

Mac: But when I found myself working on it, I was about a month in, and all of a sudden it felt like my whole life had been leading up to that point. I was just using all these different skills, and musical styles, and all these things that I had never really been able to come together on a project before. It was great. I was kind of amazed. It caught me by surprise.

The season finale to Mr. Robot airs on USA Network on September 2 at 10pm ET.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ug4fRXGyIak

Hi, my name is Scott and I’m a recovering metalhead.

This is where you all say “Hi Scott!”

I spent close to a decade playing in metal bands, but my earliest experiences with the genre were thanks to 80s horror movies. It was a golden age for both heavy metal and over-the-top horror cheese; I credit much of my personal growth to those countless nights watching people with questionable morals bleed out as some Aquanetted guy in pleather pants screeched on about how rock and roll will never die. If you’re like me, horror and heavy metal are two sides of the same coin, so before you scream “Satanic Panic,”  let’s burn through a definitive list of the very best heavy metal songs to slay to.

12) Shadow – New Years Evil theme (New Years Evil)

“Call me Eeeeevil!”
New Years Evil is a double-header of ridiculous premise and execution, so it makes sense that a room full of punkers would circlepit into the new year with a hair metal band as a masked killer knocks people off at midnight in each time zone.

11) Thor – We Live to Rock (Rock ‘n’ Roll Nightmare)

Rock ‘n’ Roll Nightmare is a cinematic abomination, but this song kind of rips, so let’s call it even. Plot breakdown: bodybuilder-cum-metalhead fronts a band and fights the Devil, with a serious nod to Krull. Interested? Of course you are.

10) Solid Gold – Blood Tracks (Blood Tracks)

https://youtu.be/Hy4BoSzOzGY

The band Solid Gold (played by an actual band called Easy Action) is shooting a music video in an abandoned warehouse in the mountains. The whole crew gets snowed in and hacked up in clever ways; there’s bonus heavy metal interspersed between the gore. Two of the Easy Action guys quit to join Europe, so I guess they traded up?

9) White Sister – April (You’re No Fool) (Killer Party)

https://youtu.be/frPvDXgZGOU

Killer Party gets the award for most false starts ever, and peaks with this musical number in the first 10 minutes. White Sister does their best Y&T impression (who themselves got popular for doing their best Journey impression) in a diner while undead teenagers dance-fight the survivor girl. If you’ve got 10 minutes, watch the beginning of Killer Party. If you’ve got an hour… just watch the first 10 minutes.

8) Sorcery – I’m Back (Rocktober Blood)

Rocktober Blood had one of those VHS covers I couldn’t look away from as a kid. The demon mask and ladybutt must have created some sort of short-circuit in my brain. Drug use, human sacrifice and onstage murder are the orders of the day, though I was severely disappointed that the mask wasn’t the killer’s real face. But who needs demonic possession when metal is enough reason to kill?

7) Spastic Colon – Virgin Girl (Shock Em Dead)

When else but the late 80s could a virtuoso guitarist play the multi-neck-guitar-soloing body double for a nerd who sells his soul to become a rock star? Michael Angelo Batio (of Nitro fame) cashed in all of his chips as the possessed version of a geek-turned-rock-god who forfeits his soul to play high school auditoriums. How pissed would you be if grunge usurped hair metal a couple years after making that kind of deal?

6) Pretty Maids – Night Danger (Demons)

https://youtu.be/60oXp3GDNLA

Not quite as memorable as Accept’s “Fast as a Shark,” due to no one tearing up a movie theater on a motorcycle while this one plays, but arguably a more entertaining song in general. Dario Argento may have never written a coherent plot, but at least he padded his movies with loads of metal songs.

5) King Kobra – Paradise/Rock Invasion (Black Roses)

Another possession-metal flick, featuring a demonic hair metal band that enjoys playing small Midwestern towns. Between this and Shock Em Dead, I’m left wondering why, if you’re imbued with the powers of Satan, would you waste your fame on high school auditoriums. There’s also a confusingly erotic scene later on with a demon-headed topless girl, if you’re into that sort of thing.

4) Fastway – Trick or Treat (Trick Or Treat)

https://youtu.be/fDLlf-WUwW4

If the fear of the Devil’s music was too subtle for you in Rock ‘n’ Roll Nightmare, then Fastway’s title track from 1986’s Trick Or Treat may be more your speed with lyrics like this:
“Rock and roll, rockin’ on a midnight, steal your soul”
Visionary poetry that is sure to reverberate through the centuries. Inscribe it on my tombstone, please.

3) Norden Light – No Escape (Opera)

As mentioned previously, Dario Argento had a serious chub for heavy metal. This track is by far my favorite from any of his films, and it totally rips. Arguably the thrashiest song on this list, though I’m sure my metal preferences are pretty evident by now – too bad that there is no escape!

2) 45 Grave – Partytime (Return of the Living Dead)

The greatest zombie movie ever made (fight me) has one of the best obscure heavy metal tracks playing as the dead rise from their graves. There’s not much to say about Return of the Living Dead or Partytime that hasn’t been said a million times, so I’ll leave it at, “You think this is a fuckin’ costume? This is a way of life!”

1) Dokken – Dream Warriors (Nightmare on Elm Street 3)

Would you expect any other song in the #1 slot? Of course not, since nothing compares to the glory that is Dream Warriors. This is easily the best song to come out of the franchise – sorry Nightmare on My Street.

Bang your head (not too hard, it’s too early for that), crack a beer (or diet soda, gotta watch those calories), and mosh your cubicle (maybe just tap your foot a little). Rock and roll may steal your soul, but sometimes it saves you from burn victim pedo-ghosts.

\m/

Honorable mention:
The metal song that instigates all of the terribleness in The Gate
Laaz Rockit – Leatherface (TCM3)
Iron Maiden – Flash of the Blade (Phenomenon)
Lizzy Borden – Me Against the World (Black Roses)
Alice Cooper – Teenage Frankenstein (not He’s Back, that song is terrible) (Jason Lives: Friday the 13th pt VI)
The Truth – Hidden (The Hidden)
Fair Game – Blind Faith (Bad Channels)
W.A.S.P. – Scream Until You Like It (Ghoulies 2)

Scott is a musician and founder of the 8-Bit Metal project Console Crash as well as the horror inspired 50’s rock band Survivor Girl. He’s also the co-host of the upcoming podcast Horror Movie Night which debuts July 6th on Geekscape.net

James Horner has tragically passed away. He was 61.

Reported on Monday by his assistant Sylvia Patrycja on Facebook, the Oscar-winning film composer was piloting a plane 60 miles north of Santa Barbara. The plane was reported down by police, but it was unknown what happened to its pilot until now. (Source.)

Not much is known beyond that, including what happened during his flight, but I personally think that stuff is irrelevant right now. We’ll know that when we’re told, let’s not speculate. We lost a great artist, and that’s what’s important.

To say James Horner had a stellar career is an understatement. In his short 61 years on Earth, Horner earned himself immortality by leaving his mark in the world of cinema. He scored countless of iconic movies we’ll remember until our civilization is dust.

You can scroll through the long list yourself, but some key works you’ll probably be most interested in include Star Trek II: The Wrath of KhanAliens, A Beautiful MindAn American Tail (which he earned an Oscar nom for), Field of Dreams (another Oscar nomination), Apollo 13 (yet another Oscar nom), and Titanic (an Oscar WIN). His career certainly doesn’t end there, not when there are more Oscars to get nominated for, but to list them all would be a chore. The upcoming Southpaw will be his latest work.

James Horner was just one of the best. There is comparison, but that’s not the time or place for that now.

There’s one work in particular of his I’d like to highlight: Casper.

Let’s be clear: Casper is kind of a shitty movie. It’s sweet but tonally confusing, with numbingly slow pacing and flawed direction. But if there’s one saving grace, it’s James Horner’s score. Fusing together an ethereal, angelic mystique over a sleepy northeastern harbor town resulted in a beautiful, utterly haunting score that deserves both adjectives. Puns be damned. Most of the soundtrack takes on a whimsical flair — with some tweaking it could score a romantic comedy set in Manhattan — but Horner hits his stride on the Casper soundtrack with “Casper’s Lullaby.” I guarantee that if you play this song to anyone who had any kind of memory with Casper, this is the one that will trigger every sensation and memory.

I thought I’d share this one with you today. It may be tasteless, given that it’s a movie about ghosts and it plays at every scene that tugs so hard on your heartstrings it feels disingenuous, but I really think it’s one of Horner’s best and most under appreciated compositions. Whatever memories you attach to this or to any of Horner’s other work, I hope they are pleasant enough to make you smile when the day is difficult. And not to drag in the ugly outside world right now, but for many of us the very recent times have been testing our patience and tolerance. We still don’t know how to live with each other peacefully, but if art makes life worth living then I hope there’s some art in Horner’s work that inspires you to keep on going. This one is mine.

Veronica Batter was my old art-school teacher. After she was forced into resigning due to a disease which made her unable to work. Instead of giving up she started her own art center which opens this Thursday. 

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Once again Matt joins some of the people behind TanoshiiCon to discuss what excitement is ahead of us this year at the con. We also get into our geek history, our geek knowledge and think back to how awesome local music used to be. Make sure to check out TanoshiiCon on April 25th

Pick up your copy of the Carrie Double Feature from Scream Factory.

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Briefly: Remember those recent rumours that Rock Band was set to make a come back? Well, turns out they were true, and it’s not even very far away.

Yep. Rock Band 4 has officially been announced for Xbox One and PS4, and it’s coming THIS year, and Harmonix says that it will support ALL of the Rock Band DLC that you’ve already bought. That’s pretty freaking cool.

A new Rock Band, of course, means some new hardware, and Mad Catz has revealed “a Rock Band 4 Band In A Box™ bundle, which includes a copy of the game, a new Wireless Fender™ Stratocaster™ Guitar Controller, a new Wireless Drum Kit and a Microphone!” There’ll also be a “Guitar Controller Bundle which includes a copy of the game and a Wireless Fender Stratocaster Guitar Controller.”

Harmonix Chief Executive Officer Steve Janiak says that “With Rock Band 4, we’re doubling down on the energy and excitement of playing music live with your friends. Focusing on the core experience that our fans have told us they love allows us to evolve established gameplay in meaningful ways that we can’t wait to share with everyone later this year.”

Harmonix notes that “Hundreds of tracks will be available at launch, with more back catalog music – and new tracks – to be added regularly after launch.”

Between this and Amplitude, could the once-venerable rhythm genre be making a comeback? Hopefully the over-saturation that lead to the genre’s demise just a few years back can be avoided this time.

Will you be picking up Rock Band 4 when it announces later this year? Sound out below!

The intersection between hip-hop and geek culture might be bigger than we previously thought. One of my fraternity brothers who raps on Soundcloud is one of the biggest gamers and anime fans I know (Cheap plug: Listen to him here.) Beyond MC Frontalot and Community fans who chill to Childish Gambino, there is a generation of new artists like XV who rap about growing up on Dragonball Z and Final Fantasy.

Nevertheless, I think everybody needs to see this (NSFW) trailer for the upcoming Straight Outta Compton.

Let’s talk about one thing before anything else: the filmmaking. From the introduction with Dr. Dre and Ice Cube revisiting old stomping grounds to the actual film itself, it’s supremely well-made and has all the makings of a culturally relevant piece of pop. I’m just so in love with how it looks. The director of the film is F. Gary Gray, whose previous works include FridayThe Negotiator, and The Italian Job.

Straight Outta Compton looks to be The Social Network for ’90s gangsta rap, about the formation of the infamous N.W.A. (Yes, there were rags-to-riches biopics before The Social Network, but allow me my shorthand.) You have your humble beginnings, doubts from loved ones, all the way to success with scantily-clad women at your side and lawyers throwing legal jargon to scare you. Seriously, you could see mirrors between this and that still-amazing Social Network trailer.

But while Straight Outta Compton has the makings of a strong yet typical biopic, if you know anything about recent American history might know what could set it apart. The racial tensions in the aftermath of Rodney King was a few years after the N.W.A.’s rise to fame, but judging from the trailer they seem to be compressing that time period. Even so, the N.W.A.’s, radical, in-your-face anthem “Fuck tha Police” and other lyrics that left little to the imagination spoke to people, and brought to the world’s attention the divides between communities and their law enforcement. That’s something we are all too familiar with today, twenty years later. The N.W.A. had a titanic presence in everything concerning that national discussion, when they became more than just hip-hop but a voice. Whether their voices helped or hurt matters, that is up to you.

In any case, the movie might be more than an average biopic and could be an extremely topical work upon release, and Geekscape adores the cinema. There are other movies coming out this year, not just Avengers: Age of Ultron and Star Wars.

Will you be seeing Straight Outta Compton? Let us know, homie.

With Christmas Day upon us tomorrow, thus ends the season of earworms ad nauseum. Whether it’s the painfully monotonous beat of Paul McCartney or Bruce Springsteen practically dying live on stage, Christmas songs are either loathed or tolerated merely because it’s just that time of year. That weirdo you know who legitimately loves Christmas songs? Probably a serial killer.

But if you can’t wait one more day to kill the monotony, here is a selection of phenomenal alternatives or mainstream hits that do not nearly get the airplay they deserve because, for some reason, people really love hearing Bruce Springsteen struggle to breathe for five minutes.

“I Want An Alien For Christmas” by I Fight Dragons (Cover of Fountains of Wayne)

Fountains of Wayne made a modern classic with “I Want An Alien For Christmas,” with their signature pop alt-punk and cutesy humor everyone remembers from their biggest hit, “Stacy’s Mom.” But the 8-bit alt rock reimagining from THE GREATEST BAND OF ALL TIME, I Fight Dragons, kicks the song ten notches up. The wonderfully nostalgic exchange between Linus and Charlie from the iconic Christmas special at the beginning masked with SNES beeps is just the pre-game to the absolute party that is the main song. I love you, I Fight Dragons. Never stop making music.

“Chiron Beta Prime” by Jonathan Coulton

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0wjoNmaJEQ

You can always count on Jonathan Coulton to provide something quirky and off the beaten path, so it’s not hard to see why he is so beloved by the dwellers of geek culture. “Chrion Beta Prime” is a hilariously dark but optimistic track perfect to throw in a holiday playlist and catch unsuspecting listeners off-guard.

“God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen/We Three Kings” by Barenaked Ladies and Sarah McLachlan

I told you I would be including mainstream hits that don’t get the airplay they probably deserve. And yet, I’m thankful they don’t; if they did they wouldn’t have that edge the other holiday staples don’t. Their rarity is what makes them special. When you do hear them in that grocery store line or airport, it’s a welcome relief from the tired old shit like Bruce Springsteen dying.

Furthermore, this song in particular remains phenomenal. The Barenaked Ladies’s entire holiday album is a treat, and you should expect nothing less from the greatest Canadian alt-rock band of the late ’90s*, but their duet with Sarah McLachlan on “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” is a twilight journey through a sub-zero winter. No pun intended, it’s just plain cool.

*Thank you, Britta. For once, you didn’t Britta something.

“A New York Christmas” by Rob Thomas

I apologize if my elitist NY/NJ dick is showing, but if you know what Christmas is like in the greatest city in the world you would be in love with this song too. I can’t tell you if it’s my nostalgia from spending the holidays with my family in Manhattan or the post-9/11 pride that this song was written in light of, but something about this song just gets the season in that beautiful city right. You’d be surprised to learn that it’s also barely played on the radio. The only thing that separates residents around my area from the subject is a 50-minute train ride, so what gives?

“All I Want For Christmas is You” by Michael Bublé (Cover of Mariah Carey)

Confession: No matter how ubiquitous it is, Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas is You” is a masterpiece. I fully admit that and I don’t care how much cred I lose with that statement. With that in mind, holy shit guys, you need to listen to Michael Bublé’s cover. I get that The Bubble Man is a polarizing figure in music, but if you don’t melt at the first few notes of his Mariah Carey cover, you aren’t human. How on Earth did he figure out how to turn the ultimate upbeat holiday pop song into a slow ballad? He’s magic, you guys.

“Just Another Christmas Song” by Stephen Colbert

Speaking of magic, if you weren’t tuned into the final episode of The Colbert Report, shame on you. Without hyperbole, this song is just god damn perfect. “Make it the heart of my retirement plannin’.” It’s comedy gold and we are a better generation for having had him apart of us.

“Noel” by Animaniacs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rO_S3ZayDNY

We were blessed to have Stephen Colbert in our lives, but we are lesser for having lost the Animaniacs. The show is nearly twenty years old but the comedy hasn’t dulled, and you can spend a whole afternoon still busting your gut at the legitimate genius this show oozed. I believe the best cartoons are the ones that are aimed at kids but treat them neither as children or adults, but as people. Animaniacs did that in spades.

There was a whole holiday special that was released on home video that my sister and I grew up watching, but “Noel” was strangely not included — and it’s probably the best they ever did.

“Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays” by ‘N Sync

Shut up. SHUT UP. Okay. Look. Somewhere in my spirit, I am not a 22-year-old Asian man but a 15-year-old teenaged girl forever stuck in 1999. While I remain a die-hard Backstreet Boy and loathe ‘N Sync like a member of the Horde would loathe an Alliance scum, I willfully admit ‘N Sync made one hell of a holiday album. The whole CD is pretty damn good, and — remember, this is a big theme of this list — rarely played on the airwaves. This goofy video (with Gary Coleman?!) doesn’t do the song justice, it’s fun holiday pop tune that is as cheerful as “All I Want For Christmas is You” but far less earworm-y.

For the Horde. For the BACKSTREET!

“All I Want is You (This Christmas)” by ‘N Sync

IT’S A GREAT ALBUM, OKAY? What sells it for me? That god damn saxophone and fake elevator jazz aesthetic. I’m thankful this song isn’t played ad nauseum, or anything by ‘N Sync, really. One of the biggest-selling pop groups of the late ’90s, and their entire holiday catalog is left largely unforgotten. That’s okay though, because there’s more for us who know about it.

After joining and becoming a part of the Geekscape team this past Summer, I’ve had a wonderful year getting on my soapbox writing whatever I damn well pleased. It’s been a hell of a ride and I can’t wait to see what 2015 brings. Merry Christmas and happy holidays, Geekscape! From my family to yours.

Ashen Phoenix is back! This time with model Hollyhocks! Holly is a charming and eccentric model/cosplayer who opens up about her favorite characters to cosplay as, her life as a single mom and her love of 90’s everything. Also before the interview check out my brief interview with Kevin Hock the writer of Fantasy Killer an amazing new horror/comedy comic book.

The song during the intro is #nudesforsatan by Ichabod Crane.

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We love Video Games Live. In fact, we were just talking about the VGL and its incredible co-creator Tommy Tallarico on the latest episode of Geekscape Games!

I was lucky enough to experience a Video Games Live performance back in April of 2011, and since then I’ve been eagerly awaiting for VGL to return  somewhere near me, as it to this day remains one of the most mind-blowing musical experiences that I’ve ever been a part of, and I would really, really, really love to experience it again (and I missed it at SDCC… bah).

My iTunes library is filled with frequently-on-repeat Video Games Live content, and as such I’m beyond excited for the currently-in-crowdfunding Level 4 album to finally be released.

The Kickstarter is already over its funding goal with just three days left to contribute, but Tommy and co. have set up some stretch goals to bring us even more content, and if it can get enough funds, another full length concert video (who wouldn’t want that?). Video Games Live: Level 4 is set to be a studio recorded album, and being able to relive another concert would just be icing on the cake. Check out the Kickstarter video for the campaign below, and keep reading to learn how you could win an AMAZING VGL price pack.

So, you want to hear about what you could win, huh? Well, one lucky reader is set to win a HUGE digital Video Games Live prize pack. Here’s what it includes:

VIDEO GAMES LIVE: BONUS ROUND

(digital album)

NOT SOLD IN STORES OR ONLINE! ONLY AVAILABLE EXCLUSIVELY FOR A LIMITED TIME THROUGH THIS PROJECT!
This 25 song Special Edition Collectors album was created for the Kickstarter campaign as a bonus gift for anyone who pledged $5 or more. It includes music from VGL creator and game composer Tommy Tallarico, VGL conductor (and Grammy Award winner) Christopher Tin (Civilization IV), VGL guest conductor (and Grammy nominated) Austin Wintory (Journey), VGL guest conductor Eimear Noone, Balder’s Gate II composer Craig Garfinkle, VGL performer Frank Klepacki (Command & Conquer), VGL vocalist Jillian Aversa (Halo, God of War), Andrew “zircon” Aversa (Soul Calibur V, Street Fighter II HD), YouTube vocal sensation Peter Hollens, VGL performer and internet sensation Viking Jesus, a special OCRemix FF VI “Terra’s Theme” from Zelda Symphony Music Director Chad Seiter AND MORE!

 

VIDEO GAMES LIVE: LEVEL 3
(digital album)
This is the reason we started the Kickstarter campaign in the first place! Video Games Live: Level 3 is the 3rd album of symphonic & rock video game music from the award winning 10 year+ world touring Video Games Live concert series. The album was recorded with a 72+ piece orchestra, 80+ person choir and full rock band consisting of world famous game composers from around the world. Each music segment in Video Games Live is personally arranged and orchestrated by the original composers and also uses input from the actual game designers & producers and game developers & publishers.

The album track list consist of NEVER BEFORE RELEASED Video Games Live music arrangements from game franchises including Shadow of the Colossus, Skyrim, Journey, Zelda, Pokemon, Monkey Island, Final Fantasy, Chrono Cross, Dota 2, Silent Hill, World of Warcraft, Beyond Good & Evil, Street Fighter II, Portal, Tetris AND MORE! (final setlist to be contingent on game publisher approval).

 

Earthworm Jim Original Artwork
(digital)
This is a digital copy of original artwork of Earthworm Jim playing a guitar created exclusively for Tommy Tallarico (composer of Earthworm Jim) from Earthworm Jim creator Doug TenNaple.

 

VIDEO GAMES LIVE: VOLUME ONE
(Special Extended Collectors Edition – digital album)
This was a studio recorded album but the Special Extended Collectors Edition includes studio & live performances never before released including Castlevania, Halo, Mass Effect, Myst III, Earthworm Jim, Advent Rising AND MORE!

 

VIDEO GAMES LIVE: LEVEL 2
(Special Extended Collectors Edition – digital album)
This was our live album that went along with our PBS Special and DVD/Blu-Ray. The Special Extended Collectors Edition includes additional live performances never before released including Kingdom Hearts, Warcraft, Tron AND MORE!

 

JOURNEY PIANO ARRANGEMENT ALBUM
(digital album)
This album produced by Journey composer Austin Wintory is being made specifically for this project based on the Grammy nominated Journey soundtrack

 

TRON LIGHT CYCLE BLUEPRINT
(digital)
This is a digital copy of the Video Games Live Tron Light Cycle blueprint used to make the life-sized Tron Light Cycle that appears in the show.

 

VIDEO GAMES LIVE: LEVEL 2 CONCERT VIDEO

(digital copy)

This is a digital copy of our award-winning DVD/Blu-Ray filmed as part of our PBS Special.

 

EARTHWORM JIM ANTHOLOGY
(digital album)
Includes 28 digitally recorded and re-mastered songs with live instruments and uniquely arranged remixes.
NOT SOLD IN STORES! ONLY AVAILABLE HERE THROUGH THIS OFFER!

 

TOMMY TALLARICO: GREATEST HITS VOLUME II
(digital album)
Contains 29 digitally recorded songs from 12 games including Earthworm Jim 1 & 2, Treasures of the Deep, Spot Goes to Hollywood, Madden Football, Skeleton Warriors AND MORE! NOT SOLD IN STORES OR ONLINE! ONLY AVAILABLE THROUGH THIS OFFER!

 

CLASSIC ARCADE MEDLEY CONDUCTORS SCORE
(digital – .pdf format)
A digital copy of the conductors score used for the Video Games Live Classic Arcade Medley segment containing over 25 Classic Arcade Games in chronological order.

 

BIOSHOCK PIANO SHEET MUSIC
(digital – .pdf format)
This is a digital copy of the piano sheet music used in Video Games Live from the fan favorite mega-hit “Cohen’s Masterpiece” by Garry Schyman, also known as “Scherzo No. 7 – Andante con Fuoco” from the game BioShock.

 

VIDEO GAMES LIVE BLIZZARD CHINA POSTER
(digital)
A beautiful hi-res digital poster from our 2013 Blizzard shows in China.

 

VIDEO GAMES LIVE 2008 TAIWAN POSTER
(digital)
A beautiful hand drawn digital art poster from our 2008 tour in Taiwan.

 

MDK SOUNDTRACK

(digital album)
An exclusive and rare, out-of-print digital download of the MDK Soundtrack album
NEVER BEFORE RELEASED IN DIGITAL FORM! NOT SOLD IN STORES! ONLY AVAILABLE HERE THROUGH THIS OFFER!

 

TOMMY TALLARICO: VIRGIN GAMES GREATEST HITS VOLUME ONE
(digital album)
Released in 1994, this was the very first video game album to ever be released worldwide and on a major record label (Capitol Records). Contains digitally recorded music from The Terminator – Sega CD, Global Gladiators, Cool Spot, RoboCop vs. The Terminator AND MORE! OUT OF PRINT! NOT SOLD IN STORES OR ONLINE! ONLY AVAILABLE THROUGH THIS OFFER!

 

CHRONO TRIGGER & CHRONO CROSS CONDUCTORS SCORE
(digital – .pdf format)
A digital copy of the conductors score used for the Video Games Live Chrono Trigger/Chrono Cross medley.

 

FRANK KLEPACKI – CONQUERING 20 YEARS
(digital album)
Featuring 15 brand new tracks composed in the varied styles of Frank’s past game soundtracks. While Frank has largely been synonymous with his “Rocktronic” style since composing the themes of the popular Command & Conquer series, This 7th solo offering contains quite a bit more variety, featuring the styles of 8-bit, 16-bit, ragtime, classical, electronica, metal, and symphonic rock just to name a few.

 

VIDEO GAMES LIVE WORLD TOUR POSTER
(digital)
A beautiful hi-res digital poster from our 2012/2013 WORLD TOUR.

 

7 VIDEO GAMES LIVE CONDUCTORS SCORES
(digital – .pdf format)
Digital conductors scores from the following Video Games Live segments: Kingdom Hearts, Earthworm Jim, Advent Rising, Halo Trilogy, World of Warcraft (Montage), Command & Conquer (Hell’s March) & End of Nations.

Pretty amazing, huh? It’s actually valued at over $1500!

Since this giveaway is digital, it doesn’t matter what country you’re in! All that you need to do is share this post on your Facebook / Twitter profile, and email a screengrab of your share to contests@geekscape.net (this will also get us your email address for delivery)!

So, get sharing, and please, please consider backing Video Games Live: Level 4. I want to see that concert!

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