Categories
Music

Album of the Year: Civilian By Frank Tovey

2019 has been all so overwhelming, hasn’t it? Being trapped in this infinity loop of crisis and pundits, all at our fingertips? We mindlessly scroll through the drone of Facebook, greedily lapping up salacious headlines and fretting over our future. Is anything changing for the better? Has the ennui always existed? Humanity loves believing in a simpler past. The deluge of programming and movies rebooting old material and old scripts is played out so heavily now one wonders if innovation is allowed anymore, or if we’re just going to keep pacifying ourselves with cozy familiarity. The 1980s seem as much of a utopia now as the 1960s did when The Wonder Years premiered in 1988.

Frank Tovey saw right through the excess, saccharine and glamour of the Reagan/Thatcher era, and, much like the soothsayer of Julius Caesar, went ignored by the masses. There was no room for nostalgia here.

Fad Gadget, photo by Florence Doorgeest

Frank Tovey’s proto-industrial band Fad Gadget, the first signed to Mute Records, boldly steered electronic music into the realm of industrial sound. Eschewing the stationary, robotic playing of his early synthwave contemporaries, Tovey shocked audiences with intense art performances: ripping out body hair, crowd surfing, being tarred and feathered, climbing rafters with a microphone stuffed in his mouth, often seriously harming himself with head gashes, black eyes and snapped tendons.

Fad Gadget albums were an eclectic mix of electric drills, drumming, Orff-inspired vocal arrangements, musique concrete, and shrieks. Tovey’s message and notorious reputation clearly threatened the suits; his lyric material found more sympathetic bedfellows with The Pogues, the Kinks, and Billy Bragg, by way of Einstürzende Neubauten and Iggy Pop. Tovey’s message was highly confrontational, bitterly anti-commercial, and deeply vulnerable. As most pop stars crooned about romantic love spats, Tovey operated on a different plane: warning humanity of the dangers of late capitalism.

Photo by Anton Corbijn

Despite never making Top of the Pops, Frank Tovey still wielded tremendous influence in the UK and West Germany. A fledgling Depeche Mode were entranced by his early performances, and signed to Mute soon after. The entire industrial genre owes him a tip of the hat, with artists like Skinny Puppy, NIN, and Marilyn Manson snatching the relay baton.

By the late 80s, however, Tovey pulled an about-face with his sound. He tucked the chaotic Fad Gadget in bed for a long nap, picked up an acoustic guitar, and penned brand new protest folk as Frank Tovey. After 1986’s Snakes and Ladders, which retained many sonic elements of Fad Gadget, and a side project called MKultra, he released the extraordinary Civilian in 1988.

The sonic switch confused his fans, the press and even his own label, but his fundamental message remained. The irony was, Tovey had always been a folk musician, albeit one with a synthesizer. His lyrics delved into humanity, the human experience, and the Everyman existing in a technologically-fueled fascism. Much like Bowie, Tovey found inspiration from various collaborators.

“It was never about transitioning from electro to folk with Frank,” says John Cutliffe of The Pyros, with whom Tovey would collaborate on his final albums. “It was about songs and sound and the musicians he surrounded himself with. His influences had always been eclectic, and his love of manipulating sounds electronically inspired so many, but that is also what we were doing with the more traditional folk and rock instruments. We would push the limits of what they could do and play…Frank didn’t care if it was a banjo or a synth. The song mattered, and the layers of sound we could use to draw out the emotion of the song was the only thing that was relevant.”

Over thirty years later, Civilian remains as prescient as ever as it slips into 42-minute slow motion tumble of Western civilization’s house of cards. This was not a world Tovey wanted for his beloved children.

Civilian is a hypnotic channeling of rage at corporate greed and corruption. The album opens with New Jerusalem, a screeching cacophony of crowd chants and a droning, nightmarish recounting of a fascist police state and street violence. It is a bleak, paranoid scene of innocents falling victim to the militaristic whims of “big enterprise.”

Ultramarine bitterly attacks the Hollywood glorification of the American military complex:

Liberation comes

In jeans and Coca-Cola

Liberty this bullet’s

Got your name on it

You make the films

And you’re making history

Napalm burger bars

Popcorn victory

Tovey darkly closes Ultramarine with his own Wonder Years-style monologue, recounting a childhood memory of watching a Buddhist monk die by self-immolation on live television. So much for the veil of nostalgia.

From The City To The Isle of Dogs examines the gentrification of London neighborhoods already present by 1988, the continuing erasure of local culture, and the demise of the middle class. The jaunty banjo number Bridge Street Shuffle wryly predicts the horrific spectacle of human suffering via reality television.

I’ve got two tickets, front row seats
For the riverside
We can take a picnic
And watch the suicides

The Brotherhood lambasts the corrupt patriarchal power of fraternal societies. Diana echoes the wrenching pleas of infidelity forgiveness. Unknown Civilian explores the post-war home front, and the silent suffering of shell-shocked veterans.

Civilian as a whole is a horrifying, clairvoyant glimpse at Western society on the precipice of complete breakdown.

In 2002, Frank Tovey’s earnest heart suddenly gave out, and he shuffled off this mortal coil. By then, however, he had already tilled the parched earth for the greedy saplings of a post-9/11 dystopia. Too bad no one heeded his warnings when Civilian was first released, but it deserves a fresh listen. You won’t find a more perfect soundtrack to close out these chaotic 2010s.

Mute Records would be wise to re-release this treasure. It’s time. Fad loves you.

Bridge Street Shuffle:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jRD6ba1JPZo

Ultramarine:

See More

Clan of Xymox Materializes At Le Poisson Rouge

Blake Charleton Keeps It Fresh

Virginia Marcs Goes “Wild” In Stunning New Video

Christine Smith Waits On The Far Side Of A Star

Adrian Sexton Draws The Death Card

Categories
Culture Entertainment Music

Panorama introduces The Point to its Jul. 28-30 festival

Continuing its mission of bringing together music, immersive art and innovative technology to New York’s creative community, critically-acclaimed Panorama Music Festival is introducing The Point this summer at New York City’s Randall’s Island Park. An introduction to The Point experience and its lineup can be viewed here.

Inspired by the overwhelming love and excitement generated by Despacio at Panorama’s debut, The Point will be a non-stop dance party embedded in the heart of the festival, an open-air club with a shaded, misted dance floor and continuous DJ sets all day and all night. With a lineup featuring hometown favorites alongside legends and leading DJs of the global underground, The Point celebrates New York City’s key place in the ongoing evolution of DJ culture and electronic music. The Point will feature a mesmerizing LED light show experience throughout a multi-level dance area.

The full lineup of The Point for the weekend is:

Friday, Jul. 28
Theo Parrish • Omar-S • Marcellus Pittman • Jane Fitz • Jay Daniel

Saturday, Jul. 29
Motor City Drum Ensemble • Anthony Naples b2b Huerco S. • Mister Saturday Night • Jayda G • Powder

Sunday, Jul. 30
Derrick Carter • Honey Dijon • DJ Heather • Tim Sweeney • Miles Maeda

Working Women, a Brooklyn-based DJ collective whose members host shows on The Lot Radio, will warm-up each afternoon.

The Point will utilize a state-of-the-art Funktion-One sound system. Funktion-One has become synonymous with impeccable dance floor audio, in use at Hï (formerly Space Ibiza), Berghain (Berlin), Output (New York), and École Privée (Montreal), some of the most renowned clubs worldwide.

Aside from The Point, Panorama will feature performances from Nine Inch Nails, Frank Ocean, Tame Impala, A Tribe Called Quest, alt-J, Solange, Justice, Nick Murphy, MGMT and more.

3-day and single GA and VIP passes to the festival are on-sale now at www.Panorama.NYC.

Categories
Business Featured Technology

Mixer founders Anis Bennaceur, Cody Simons & Alex Carapetis on their popular app & more

The founders of Mixer
The founders of Mixer

Simply put, Mixer is a global private network for individuals working in art, fashion, film, music and other creative industries. Members must be invited to join the app-based social network, and in turn, they are able to showcase past and current projects while making one-to-one connections. Some of its current members include Rose McGowan, André Saraiva, Adrian Grenier, Lindsay Lohan, Cédric Hervet, Luke Pritchard, Adam Green, Zafar Rushdie and musicians from Major Lazor, St. Lucia, and Leon Bridges’ band.

The founders of Mixer come from very different backgrounds. Cody Simons graduated from Harvard with a degree in Statistics. Anis Bennaceur earned a Masters in Business from ESCP Europe, having worked in marketing at Tinder in France. Alex Carapetis is a drummer for both Wolfmother and Julian Casablancas + The Voidz; he has also toured with the likes of Ke$ha, Nine Inch Nails and Phoenix. Downtown had the pleasure of catching up with Cody, Anis and Alex for some Q&A about Mixer’s past, present and future.

More on Mixer can be found at www.joinmixer.com, while Mixer can also be followed via Instagram and Facebook.

Andrew in action at a live Mixer event
Alex in action at a live Mixer event

How did you three first meet?

Alex Carapetis: Anis and I met two years ago over a pre-show steak frites lunch while I was on tour in France with Julian Casablancas + The Voidz. Anis booked me for an after show DJ gig at Le Baron in Paris. He told me about how him and his business partner Cody Simons were at the beginnings of creating a platform / app. They expressed interest in bringing me in as the chief creative. It was actually quite a serendipitous moment as the three of us were all looking to create an app for creatives kind of like LinkedIn meets Soho HouseOver those next few months we integrated our visions and began to shape the scope of Mixer.

Did any of you work together on a project prior to launching the app?

Anis Bennaceur: No. Although, Alex DJed at a party I threw in Paris. Does that count?

Sure. How did the decision come to make your social network app-based rather than a website?

Cody Simons: Since we were focused on artists connecting with other artists, we wanted something that would be quick and easy to connect rather than something heavy-handed. We are also working on a website.

Cody Simons
Cody Simons

What is it that you look for in new members? Is there criteria for someone to get an invite?

AB: I’m looking for interesting art, alternative music from whatever you can listen to on the radios these days. Mostly, I think, before approving someone on the network, “How would this person be a good addition to all this userbase that we already have?”

CS: We are generally looking for people who have devoted their career to their trade — not hobbyists.

AC: Creatives — people in fashion, film, music, art, influencers, movers and shakers

Are there any projects that have come about as a result of your app that you are especially proud of?

AB: We are seeing extensive daily use and interaction on Mixer. All internal collaborations and projects are generally confidential unless they’re announced on other social media.

Is there a region where most of your users are? Or are they truly all over the place?

CS: Right now, Mixer’s membership is mostly concentrated in Los Angeles, New York, and Paris. We are working on growing our membership in London, Berlin, and some of the other creative markets in the U.S. — Nashville, Austin, Atlanta, Seattle, etc.

Anis Bennaceur
Anis Bennaceur

What’s coming up for Mixer in the near-future?

AC: We’ve just introduced our jobs section, which is growing daily and features some brilliant workplace opportunities for creatives. A beautifully-practical way to post jobs and look for paying jobs in the creative and arts industry.

CS: We are focused on growing the membership and getting more jobs on the platform. We have some major updates we’ve been working on coming out in the next month — stay tuned.

When not busy with Mixer, how do you like to spend your free time?

AB: Reading, I’m a bookworm, and I love biographies. I’m currently reading Claude Grudet’s. It’s fascinating.

AC: Music + Travel + Love.

Do you have a favorite restaurant in New York?

AB: Epistrophy in Nolita, I always go for the hanger steak. And Blue Ribbon Sushi on Sullivan [Street], I go there every week — their popcorn shrimp tempura is a killer.

CS: We work in Nolita so we often go to Lovely Day and Tartinery for lunch

AC: La Esquina, Pepe Rosso, Vanessa’s [Dumplings], Sushi Seki.

Alex Carapetis
Alex Carapetis

Any upcoming concerts or events you have tickets to?

AC: I play drums with Wolfmother and I’m currently in Australia opening up for Guns N’ Roses. Pretty sweet tickets.

AB: I just go to smaller and more intimate concerts. I missed Splashh’s concert last week because of the snowstorm. So I’ll definitely see them at the Mercury Lounge at the end of next month

CS: Lemon Twigs Feb. 21 at Bowery Ballroom — they’ve got a cool sound.

Finally, any last words for the kids?

AB: Don’t ever, ever, ever worry about what other people think of you.

AC: Have fun, stay safe, live with love, put time into following your ultimate desires daily. Follow your dreams. Be good to your mother.

Categories
Culture Entertainment Events Music

Panorama returning to New York from Jul. 28 through Jul. 30, headliners announced

Panorama 2017

Music festival Panorama returns to New York City’s Randall’s Island Park for its second installment this summer. As announced earlier this, some of the top-tier talent performing will be Nine Inch Nails, Frank Ocean, Tame Impala, A Tribe Called Quest, alt-J, Solange, Justice, Nick Murphy, and MGMT. The critically-acclaimed festival sits at the intersection of New York’s unique creative community, bringing together music, immersive art and innovative technology as never before.

3-day, single-day General Admission and VIP passes go on-sale Friday, Jan. 13 at 10:00 AM EST on Panorama.NYC, where the festival’s full lineup can also be viewed.

American Express card members can purchase passes before the general public beginning Thursday, Jan. 12 at 10:00 AM EST through Friday, January 13 at 9:00 AM EST.