ANDRY & 5IVE

·

We welcome you to the new year as we bring in 2K18 with Andry Adolphe and 5ive.  Andry co-runs conceptual street wear label, PHINGERIN, with Koba and Zoomie and also collects mixes from friends. 5ive is known for his contributions in art and left field electronic and dance music, as half of COS/MES with Flatic.

Using field recordings from both day to day life and traveling on tours, and weaving in select tracks of the moment, we proudly present "One day by 5ive, Andry (Ear Diary), a peek into the lives of two friends sharing their daily rituals and the sounds that encapsulate their living experience. 

CST: Where are you from and where do you live now?

A: From Nagoya, live in Tokyo

5: From Tokushima, live in Tokyo

CST: What's your sign?

A: Pisces

5: Capricorn

CST: What's your favorite record shop?

A: Pigeon records

5: Diskunion, Lighthouse Records, Technique

CST: What is your morning ritual?

A:  Sleep till late and rush to work

5:  Coffee, cigarette, bath

CST: What is your dream lineup for a party and what would you name this party?

A: “Don’t sweat the revival” would be the party name but can’t decide with the guest … !

5: “Music Box Japan Tour” 

CST: What parties/underground spaces did you go to when you first started partying?

A: Club Mago, a long runned party in Nagoya & AUDI., by Sonic Weapon, Kool Kat and Jaguar P

5: Mixcrooffice (Office/Club space located in Shibuya, Tokyo. Later, they relocated and became Dommune. )

CST: What was the first record you ever bought?

A:  I think… Lee Perry “Return of the super ape” which I bought at Banana records, Nagoya.

5:  Brooklyn Slumlordz Presents Crooklyn Clan "Funky Relaxation"

CST: Where was the first party you ever went to?

A:  Capricorn, a party run by a local cosmic legend DJ Kaneda, who also owned a record store called “White House".

5:  Bop Gun which was organized around ’93 in my hometown club, Gumbo by longtime friend 40.

CST: Is there a concept or theme for this mix and if so, can you tell us about it a little bit more about it?

A&5:

This was a sound collage-ish mix/audio diary drone which was inspired by a regular day. It starts out walking to the car, getting in, driving, listening to the radio, getting sleepy, arriving, walking around the town, going to a record shop, watching the news, going to a party, etc.

This mix plays between being very literally and abstract. The part we enjoyed most was mixing tracks we have in hand to the music inside the field recordings, enjoying the overlaps of sneaking in-and-out of the scenery. 

unnamed.jpg

 

CHRISTIAN LINDEMANN

The fifth installment of our mix series brings in Christian Lindemann from Chemnitz, Germany.

Founder / Co-founder of the projects Geister and Kommune Wild, Christian's collection spans from ambient, cosmic, house, techno, wave, stoner, kraut-rock and the synthy sounds from the 80s.  A compilation of Christian's favorite records from this past year, we bring the house down with our last mix for 2017, losing ourselves for a moment as we revel in this beautiful and dark odyssey of shadows swaying through layers of smoke. 

·

CST: where are you from and where do you live now?

CL: I’m was born in Zwickau.

Now I'm living in Chemnitz. Two Cities in Germany/Saxony.

CST: introvert or extrovert?

CL: Introvert

CST: whats your sign?

CL: mmh...difficult question

CST: what is your favorite record shop?

CL: Hardwax, hhv.dedeejay.de, discogs

CST: What is your morning ritual?

CL: Taking a Shower, tea and an unhealthy snack

CST: what is your dream lineup for a party and what would you name this party?

CL: I can’t say it at the moment, there are to many good djs and live acts.

CST: What parties/underground spaces did you go to when you first started partying?

CL: Achtermai, Distillery, BPM Club

CST: what was the first record you ever bought?

CL: Members Of Mayday – We are Different (1994)

CST: where was the first party you ever went to?

CL: I can’t remember

CST: what are you reading right now?

CL: American Psycho from Brad Easto Ellis (because I love the movie, I saw it around 100x :D)

CST: what are your other interests besides djing?

CL: Music, Movies, Traveling and Sightseeing

CST: biggest vice?

CL: Where shall I start? ;)

CST: happiest moment?

CL: the moments with my family and friends

CST: favorite part of the day?

CL: morning

CST: do you collect anything else aside from records?

CL: Movies

CST: where is your favorite place to dance?

CL: I don’t have a favourite place.

Screen Shot 2017-12-14 at 9.28.39 PM.png

NIKLAS

·

"In 6th grade I was given the chance to select cassettes for my schoolmates during a daytime dance. For 25+ years since then; top 40 and classic pop at the ice rink for free skate, bedroom mixtape trip-hop & indie blends for my high school crush, house music at dawn on a wintry morning in a clandestine warehouse, throwback 80s club mixes for my best friends at a house party, disco edits in a rock club for rad kids in Philadelphia, rhythm-heavy jams for Mission bar hipsters, sci-fi synths in a superclub for the tech elite, and a mix of all of these seemingly disparate sounds for 100 episodes of a live internet radio broadcast have been among my happiest and most memorable experiences. 

I’m influenced by my dad’s collection of Merseybeat and Motown records. As a child of the 80s, Prince and the Revolution, Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, Run DMC & Aerosmith, and Hall & Oates all continued this mix of rock and soul. An introduction to “DiY” through punk rock and post-punk at a young age led to my time as a vocalist and bassist in two bands. My hometown’s proximity to Chicago and the pounding beat of House and Industrial music led to an infatuation with giant speaker stacks in clubs and raves until today.

The dance floor is a sacred space. My main goal as a DJ is to elevate that space without interruption for as long as I’m able. As a dancer I’m aware that sometimes breaks are welcome and needed. Clearing a floor is an opportunity to fill it again, and I get greater satisfaction from building up an empty floor than taking over a full room."

For the fourth installment in the CST mix/feature series, Vinyl Dreams resident Niklas brings us to a galactic realm beginning with a guided meditation then weaving in and out of dark extraterrestrial landscapes with uplifting bursts of soulful reverie. Let us welcome the Fall with Niklas' stellar September mix. 

CST: Where are you from and where do you live now?

N: I live in San Francisco, CA. I grew up in the suburbs of Milwaukee, WI. A Rust Belt burg with a fantastic DiY subculture, weird music, and a direct interstate pipelines to/from collegiate enclave Madison and broad-shouldered Chicago which became capitals on my musical map.

CST: Introvert or extrovert?

N: Both. I love parties and dancing but am often restless or uncomfortable in crowds.  DJing gives me an opportunity to participate in a really special way.
CST: What's your favorite record shop?

N: Vinyl Dreams in San Francisco. I’m lucky to have been invited to play a regular slot on Thursdays which streams live and then archived via YouTube.

CST: What is your morning ritual?

N: When I can remember to, opening my eyes and saying “thank you” before I do anything else. Then a rush to get to work at the last minute, followed by coffee, and more coffee.

CST: Happiest moment?

N: Being tapped to open for Nicky Siano in SF on his birthday. To this day it doesn’t seem like it actually happened. I’m forever humbled by the experience and if I never play out again, at least I did that.

CST: What's the first record you ever bought?

N: There was a period of time where I might have been embarrassed to admit this, but the first 12” dance record I ever bought was a slightly warped but playable copy of Sasha’s “Arkham Asylum/Ohmna” on Deconstruction. Each side a 13+ minute progressive trance opus that truly seems like it would have been made longer if not for the time limitations of the vinyl single. I used to turn off the lights, burn a candle, and start mix sessions at home with Arkham Asylum because it starts from near silence, and the kick drum doesn’t first appear for nearly 4 minutes. In a way tracks like this have always held a place for me and I try to make a point of never starting a DJ mix with drums.

Unfortunately this record didn’t make the cut when I moved my collection to California, though I’ve since made space on my hard drive for the digital file.   

CST: Where was the first party you ever went to?

N: My hometown: Drop Bass New Years Eve 96/97 “Music, Two Turntables, and a Lot of Bass”, which gives me the right to brag that I got to hear Larry Heard play the sunrise of my first party. My friend and I showed up super early to meet some girls we liked who were photographing the event, and the first DJ (who I wish I could find the identity of) opened his set with “Pulse State” by Future Sound Of London, which was an eye-opener for me. Before this moment all of the music I was hearing on mixtapes was alien, unobtainable. Here was a local DJ starting his set with something I was intimately familiar with. The curtain was lifted!
 

CST: Favorite part of the day?


N: Lately it’s been the time I spend walking my significant other and our dog either to or from our neighborhood MUNI stop. They’re the best, and I’m so grateful to be able to enjoy this simple thing. There was a time not too long ago where I don’t think I was in any position to appreciate things like this.

CST: Where is your favorite place to dance?

N: As a young man, I loved to be on a stage or riser, even on a speaker stack. I still do from time to time. I’m a bit of a speaker freaker and love that feeling in front of the bass bins when the air pressure is vibrating right through my body.

CST: Is there a concept or theme for this mix and if so, can you tell us about it a little bit more about it?

N: For a long time I’ve strayed from this approach to mixing and these particular subgenres of dance music, which I have always loved, collected, and played at home. These floating, ethereal, moody, synthy strains of techno and house music. It is really nice to dive back in, and included in this mix are a few all-time favorites that have been in my collection for nearly 20 years but have never made it onto a recording of mine. I hope you enjoy the ride as much as I enjoyed creating it.

Screen Shot 2018-01-06 at 9.58.48 PM.png

JAY GOITIA

·

Excited for this month as our second guest dj (and long time friend) comes from Brooklyn, NY by way of the quiet East Bay salt flats. J_G also known as Jay Goitia is a producer making up one half of the Ambient / Kraut group Goitia Deitz, among many other sonic projects. For this month, we have a beautiful textural set mixing obscure geothermal ethno ambient tracks taking us into some mystical hazy jungle.

CST: Where are you from and where do you live now?

JG: From the East Bay, CA. Currently living/working in Brooklyn NYC.

CST: Introvert or extrovert?

JG: Intro for the most part.

CST: Whats your sign?

JG: Leo ♌

CST: What's your favorite record shop?

JG:

IRL: diskunion

URL: om-ondas.com and discogs for the digital digging

CST: What is your morning ritual?

JG: My cat usually wakes me up really early to feed them lol.. then I check water levels of aquariums, water the plants, and hit the shower. Depending on the day, I might throw on a record to soundtrack this. On Sundays i take my time to cook something nice and definitely throw on some vibey morning tunes.

CST: What parties/underground spaces did you go to when you first started partying?

JG: Eklektic in SF. This one stands out as the most memorable and influential party for me. It was a weekly drum n bass party in the bay circa late 90s early 00s. I went pretty much every week and the vibe was unreal, never disappointed!

CST: What's the first record you ever bought?

JG: Super Duck Breaks

CST: What are your other interests besides djing?

JG: Aquascaping, obsolete technology + physical media, drawing, mahjong, old school JDM/bosozoku culture

CST: Do you collect anything else aside from records?

JG: Yup! just a few things i collect as well - CRT’s, arcade PCB’s, films that died on VHS/Laserdisc, cheap synths, anime cels..

CST: Is there a concept or theme for this mix and if so, can you tell us about it a little bit more about it?

JG: To be honest, I started out just playing some records that I was feeling at the moment, but as the mix went on - a theme started to become apparent that tied everything together. "Low Latitude" refers to areas near the equator, and the track selections seem to reflect this zone with a humid, ethno-ambient vibe.. at least for the most part

MATT BROWNELL

·

Born and raised in the North East and recently transplanted to Los Angeles, Matt Brownell is also a visual artist, other projects include a recent collaboration entitled BODYWORKBODYWORK. Matt has been spinning disco, house and balearic for the last 20 years throughout underground Philly and NY roofs, his set reflects the sonic journeys he has traveled with a slow build up of worldly obscure ambient and balearic selections teleporting us to a tropical psychedelic underground hut party.

CST: Where are you from and where do you live now?

MB: Born-Philadelphia, PA, live-Los Angeles, CA

CST: Introvert or extrovert?

MB: Shy extrovert

CST: What's your sign?

MB: Aries

CST: What's your favorite record shop?

MB:

1) The Thing (brooklyn) for used-maybe this is a case of rose-colored glasses, but i still loved digging there even if i walked away with nothing

2) Pacific Beach Vinyl (san diego/pbvinyl.com) for new-probably the best selection of new dance/whatever music available stateside, and with top-notch customer service to boot. Can't recommend them enough!

CST: What is your morning ritual?

MB: On a work day, snooze until about 10 minutes before leaving time, throw on clothes, brush teeth, try not to forget anything. On an off day, wake up early, make coffee, and get to work in the studio!

CST: What is your dream lineup for a party and what would you name this party?

MB: A house party doing ones with all my buds, it would be called "Friendzone".

CST: What parties/underground spaces did you go to when you first started partying?

MB: "Alive" thrown by Columns Of Knowledge at the Hartford Civic Center, "Muni Cafe" in Hartford, "Asylum" in Springfield Ma, "Local 13" parties in Philadelphia, "Platinum" at Fluid in Philadelphia.

CST: What's the first record you ever bought?

MB: I bought lots of hardcore and punk records as a teen, but i'd be hard pressed to remember the first. I can say, though, the first house record i bought was Armand Van Helden "Flowerz"

CST: Where was the first party you ever went to?

MB: An all dnb party, at a venue i went to more than once and cannot recall the name, in Connecticut, summer '99

CST: What are you reading right now?

MB: "Quicksilver" by Neal Stephenson

CST: What are your other interests besides djing?

MB: Trying really hard to focus on music composition, making lots of art in various forms, going to the mall.

CST: Biggest vice?

MB: Bad food

CST: Happiest moment?

MB: When I met my #1

CST: Favorite part of the day?

MB: Early morning

CST: Do you collect anything else aside from records?

MB: Books and art

CST: Where is your favorite place to dance?

MB: Cedar room (Bushwick, NY) RIP, Joy (Bushwick, NY)

CST: Is there a concept or theme for this mix and if so, can you tell us about it a little bit more about it?

MB: I really tried to always have the aesthetic of CST in mind while picking out records and putting this mix together. it's meant to be my interpretation of the CST ethos

Screen Shot 2017-08-10 at 5.48.31 PM.png