martes, 28 de agosto de 2018

Telephone Exchange

Learning from the machines.

welcome once again to this, your space to discover new music and experiences, a few days we had the pleasure to interview our friend Cesar Saldivar from Telephone Exchange and he told us about his up-coming album, a new release coming in October and a few details about the recording process, the project itself, El Cochinero (his home recording studio) and his own persona. 

1.- You have kept us posted about your new project lately (something we thank by the way) So, what could you tell us about Telephone Exchange, what is it? What does it involves? And How it started?
Telephone Exchange begun as a side project, I still had a band and just had left Aguascalientes looking for a job (and I found a job… and heaven knows I’m miserable now…). I went to London, where all the computational design happens (that’s what I do for a living). One day I was walking somewhere in Seven Sisters and found an old building which was called “Telephone Exchange”. I came up with the idea of making a personal music project where I could convey the feeling, and all the experiences I went through at different places where I had been to; just like the old telephone exchanges, where operators connected cables in a patch bay to communicate different places and people. I had some recording gear in my flat over there and started working on ideas (some of them are part of my new album). I didn’t get a job in London; I was in the middle of the whole Brexit thing, and getting a visa was really tough by then; but I got a nice job offer in Mexico City, so I came back. Just after a few months, this “modern life” reality hit me up, so, Telephone Exchange transformed into that, a project where I could explore the daily intricacies of modern life. This project had a rough start. I didn’t have a place where to set up the whole recording studio I had back home, it just went one year that way. But it was not that bad at all, since throughout all that time I basically wrote the whole album and did some pre – production. Eventually I got a bigger flat, and finally brought almost the whole studio. It took me one year to record the album (just six tacks lol!), but I think it was alright, this allowed me to analyze a little bit better the concept I was working on. Working at an office became some sort of field trip in order to understand better the object and subject of study.



2.- As off we heard your brand new single this year, Machine Learning, What do you feel about it as a single? What’s behind those eleven minutes of music? And what were you doing during the time you compose it?
I really like it, it’s one of my favourite songs of the album for many reasons. It’s the last track of Maschinelles Lernen. This track is basically the conclusion or “epitaph” of the whole album (Yes, it is a conceptual album, sort of). The track pretends to be sung by a machine (you can tell by the processed vocal track). This artifact acquires machine learning skills, and is eventually able to discern between performing a determinate task simply by request, and thinking and meditating about the purpose of it all; this thinking is sort of transposed into the workforce components of modern life. The album tries to “humanise” the general aspects of a machine, and makes us reflect about the ethical and ontological aspects of simply performing a task by request.

What was I doing? My roommate was having a cocktail party and I wasn’t invited haha, but I had had a really bad day, and was pissed off about all I was asked to do, and was thinking as above.

3.- One of the first statements you told to us was that you will release your debut album very soon (not so soon) Machinelles Lernen, what are the elements and aspects you can tell us about in this recording? How did the Lo-Fi sound match with your ideas?
The whole album was recorded on a 4 track cassette recorder. there was so much fun, since I had to do a lot of bouncing (record 3 tracks, and pass them to an empty track, so I have 3 more available tracks). Part of the lo – fi sound is due to that. Also to the fact that I was kind of looking for a Velvet Uderground’s White Light/White Heat sound; so I recorded the whole thing at hi – gain levels. On tape this sounds really good, recording on tape is very different than in a digital fashion, since first, I think you get a more realistic sound, more organic and dynamic; and second, you don’t have too many options in means of editing. This forces you to become a better performer, and I think this is the real basis of making a good record, rather than relying on expensive microphones, outboard gear or studio tricks such as compression (didn’t use much compression during the tracking by the way). Classic records from the 50’s and 60’s were made using less gear than any average musician has in its home studio or home.

4.- How exciting was to track it with an analogue format and how was the recording process?
It was great, since I was putting in practice what I just had been studying for a while. It was exciting to pay attention to details, to nuances, to slight mistakes. I really enjoyed recording it in analogue format, also, because it was the first time I do this, and by my own, engineered by myself.
The recording sessions were basically Saturdays and mostly Sundays. I brought some drinks into the studio, and just recorded until I had ear fatigue (or got really drunk) and thought that I just shit that session. The next morning I would listen to what I recorded and then it was a few days of analysing the tracks and finally I just left it like that since it sounded good. Ear fatigue was a common problem in this recording process, but I guess it was due that I was so excited on recording, and also, because I wanted to finish the whole album and listen to it from start to beginning.




5.- You decided to track every instrument for this record, how difficult was it for you with these modern life schedules, how is you writing process in general? And how do you feel knowing that you recorded this by yourself?
It depends. The drums were recorded in a rush and under tight times. I was in a one week holiday back home, and recorded the drums there (in Aguascalientes). It was just one week to do all the drums perfectly, and then bring back the tapes to Mexico City. Besides that, the whole process was soft. The modern day schedules yeah, were hard to handle eventually (I work from 10 to 9!), but I managed to keep up the whole thing. My writing process depends, it’s very variable. Sometimes I grab the bass guitar and come up with a nice riff, then before bed, I think on a way of structuring it. Sometimes I get a really nice chord progression and even the structure on guitar. Even sometimes, there’s no music at all, just a technical concept in my head on how to perform a song based on simple rules. About recording it myself, it is really pleasant. I had done this before in an album I released on 2011 which is called Gusman (http://gusman.bandcamp.com), but this time, I hadn’t anyone else helping me in the studio with engineering stuff, or microphone placing, or moving the cables, or playing a certain track. I know in a recording process, it is best to record the whole band live, but in this case, I think the process I used gave the album a certain character, very intimate.

6.- where did you take the inspiration for this project and what is the music that influenced you at the moment of conceiving this material?
Everyday experiences, but transposed into a more “philosophical” focus, if we can call it that way. Also I had been reading some papers and books on the politics of parametricism, a little bit on neo-liberalism and social systems theory, and I think the lyrics got heavily influenced in that as well.

7.- About your previous projects, what kind of struggles and difficulties did you have to place them on people’s radar? How can you describe the musical scene in your natal state of Aguascalientes? And how did you survive throughout the years with your experience?
I think the only way is to make things happen, not to wait for them. That’s what I learnt when playing with Bleak Boys. I really struggled with that band, because of that, and because of the band-mates haha, but well, that’s a different story.
Aguascalientes has some interesting bands, I think the musical scene tends to vary a lot. You can find guys doing grunge / shoegaze, and people doing reggae and funk. But simultaneously, gigs get all mixed eventually! I don’t know if this is a good or bad thing, but bands, and good bands, yes there are a few. I find very exciting hanging out in town centre on a weekend. You get to go to a few gigs, end up pissed at an after party; it is all very innocent really.
It’s been a rough process, the one of growing up and keeping up with music. Many friends who were very talented musicians got lost in other projects, such as family, kids, work, or even having bands and playing the same stuff as they did 10 years ago. I am not saying this is a bad thing, we are all free to choose what to do with our lives. It’s just a matter of choices and willpower, and having ambition and clear goals.

8.- Previously known as NoLab, you are re-opening your own label, now under the name of El Cochinero. Will you be working on new projects and releasing your music via this label? How is it to start a personal label? Did the name was on your mind long before or does it hit you like a truck in the heat of the moment?
No!Lab was not a label really, it was a project studio I set up for the recording of Gusman, but eventually, bands came in and asked me to record them, so I set it up eventually. El Cochinero is a twofold project: El Cochinero Recording which is currently a recording facility exclusively for overdubs and mixing (I can’t do drums here, my neighbours will kill me!); and El Cochinero Records, which is actually a very very young “record label” project. I am currently trying to release and manage my music myself, and El Cochinero Records is a way of doing this. Eventually, I want to properly set up a very small record label, where I can help independent artists to release their music digitally and even in vinyl format as well, but I don’t have a concise plan for this now, I am just releasing my music via this platform, and I think it is important to set a precedent for these plans. The name was given by my mum, she says my place is a real mess (un cochinero, a place where pigs live), so the name stuck.



9.- Which will be your next release and  what are your words for people out there? The people who supported you from the beginning and the new listeners?
I will release a new single in October, there’s no official date yet, due to the next news: Maschinelles Lernen will be released in vinyl in the US via Ongakubaka Records! Their release times may be different to ours, especially due to the vinyl pressing times, so, this might vary. They will make 150 copies for a beginning and we’ll see how it goes over there, this is really exciting for me. Also I am trying now to set up a band to play the album live, and maybe do a few shows here in Mexico City, and the country; and why not, eventually a few gigs in the States, we’ll see. I would really like to thank everyone out there who has been supporting my music throughout my career, but mainly for this project; friends, family, supporters all around. I would like to thank as well to all the people who is no longer around… (dead and not dead). Very special thanks to my girlfriend, who has been crucial in the whole recording process of this album; very special thanks to my parents for all their help, support and trust. And also, very special thanks to yourself, Petit Mexicain! It’s always great to be here!

Maschinelles Lernen will be available in the next months following the release of Telephone Exchange's next single, we thank so much to Cesar Saldivar for this interview and hope this project start to fulfil its purpose. 






lunes, 27 de agosto de 2018

A Trip To Tlaxcala 

Food, architecture and a great breakfast. 

Hallo, my beloved friends, today i have a very special post for you and it's because a few days we've been invited to travel to an iconic place of Mexico, the city and surrounding laces of Tlaxcala, but we did it to eat one of the finest treasures of the country, the chiles en nogada and we found a place where breakfast has another meaning. 

Our first stop was in Tlaxcala's downtown were we decided to have breakfast, we walked just two blocks from the parking lot and we found a place called Casa Uno Uno, we got in and the inside was amazing, a place with rock, wood, rustic decoration and the most fine furniture. While reading the menu we decided to take the breakfast number 1, it included juice, mixed fruit with yogurt on top, a cup of tea, coffee or atole, this atole was champurrado a chocolate/corn brew and also its variant without choco but blue corn and as strong meal chilaqules with chicken and enchiladas. 



Casa Uno Uno is located in Av. Juarez number 11 near the main square, is not also a place to eat breakfast, but also where traditional food can be found or just a few drinks with your mates, the place is quiet and comfortable and also the food will worth the way from city to Tlaxcala, it offers season food and sweet bread from french tradition (cuz sweet bread is a french tradition in mexico).  
 in this place breakfast has a different meaning, you can see it in the pictures below. 

red chilaquiles

green sauce chilaquiles

The champurrado

After this feast and lovely ambient we decided to visit the convent, which is in the top of a hill a few steps from the Xicohtencatl square, this square is also the place were merchandise can be bought, many kind of merchandise since typical clothes to hand crafts and also regional fruit or bread. Is also the home of Xicohtencatl, the lord from Tlaxcala in a sculpture.  

Xicohtencatl square

the lord itself
Also, it's a plce where restaurants are gathered to offer vast and wide food and drinks selections, one of the most popular drink, the pulque in its different "cured" versions. 

One of this breweries offering pulque


So up on the hill you will find more interesting merchandise sold by the town's people and also hand crafted, but one of the best things from this hill is the view, the convent and its gate, a colonial architecture can be seen here and around town, the top of the convent is form a Mos-Arabian style, very popular among Spanish colonies. 

The gate


The chapel form the convent 
From this point the Arena can be seen. 


But the main character here is the convent. 

The convent


And after visiting this convent, a religious building still, we hit the road to Apizaco to eat a well-known delicacy of the season, the popular chiles en nogada and to explain what is a chile en nogada let me tell you that: is the most popular way to celebrate mexico's gastronomy in just one meal. 

Chile en nogada at its finest


First of all you have an iconic element, the pepper, known as chile, big sized pepper, stuffed with a sweet ground meat stew called picadillo, the nogada is a or kind of sauce made out of castillan nuts and cream, it has to be sweet to contrast the not so spicy flavour of the chile, but we need to add colour, the pomegranate is the right fruit to give the meal some color, even so you are recreating the Mexican flag with this. As final trick people often add some parsley. 

We ate two versions of this chile, one deep fried on egg and the other in its natural state. 

Deep fried in egg
Among the differences both versions are tasty and it pleases the most demanding clients, but we were invited as friends and that's what it takes, a good, fresh and tasty meal to gather people around tables, not only in restaurants, also at home. 

I hope you had enjoyed this as much as me, maybe we need a wider explanation, but that will be later. so, i say goodbye by no and i remind you, to always keep your eyes peeled cuz you can find something interesting around town or wherever you are. 
  
And of course i remind you Je suis Le Mexicain, Au Revoir. 



sábado, 25 de agosto de 2018

Marauder


Walk in on your own feet says... Interpol

And finally after months waiting for this, it arrived, the new Interpol album is here and sounds as incredible as they told us it would be. 

4 years after their last album called El Pintor, Interpol arrives as a Marauder in the dark with a new record. As a fan i have to admit i was very pleased by its sound, not only by the fact they decided to keep on going without Carlos D, but also because Interpol had a huge impact in my life, playlist and many other stuff. 

In July, my friends from Bring My Noise invited me to attend a press conference where INTERPOL gave us some details from this album. And it was quietly unexpected that a band with such international success decided to create a big event in a city like mine, Mexico City. 




But let's focus on the record by now. 

What we listen is a new mix of sound with the classic Interpol style, they seem to be more obscure but also more comfortable with each other, like a pack of wolves who know each other for a long time, they have no fear to attack. 

Lyrically their songs have made them grow up as a band, we can listen to new subjects involved, Paul Banks seems to have his mind clear, which is a good thing cuz' most of the albums show a very unquiet behaviour, he told us in the press conference that he prefers to write in the beach cuz' that's a safe place for him and it really seems like. 

The peace transmitted in Marauder is also the calm behind a storm, because the instruments are explosive in tracks like The Rover (their first single), this aggressiveness hit you like a truck and then a wide calm like the sound of sea contrast. 



In resume, Marauder is an album to keep listening, Interpol can keep writing music just as a three piece band, they don't need more, like Nirvana, they can keep touring and we will never get tired of them. 

We feel very proud to have them in our country the times they want, they also called Mexico their second home... so. 

we give this album a 9/10 score and we share to you the album via spotify below.

Be sure to share it with friends who also like the band and if they do not know it yet, share it too. Also check out the video for their single The Rover, filmed entirely in Mexico City. 



jueves, 16 de agosto de 2018

La Casa de las Flores


Frivolity and tastelessness of a soap-opera drama. 

Yes my friends, a Mexican is going to talk about an "original" Mexican production by Netflix and i have a lot to talk about it, mostly bad points. 

Beginning to air this month, La Casa de las Flores is divided in different episodes which every single one of them has the name of a flower, representing a situation. But... what's wrong with this "TV series", first, is not a TV series, is a telenovela or soap-opera drama trying to imitate the classic format of the Mexican dramas where a suicide complicates the frivolous live of an upper class family. 





The ups and downs on the production are noticeable when characters star to play their role... i have never seen such fake acting, even the voice of Cecilia Suarez' caharacter is so annoying (but we got an explanation about it... simply i don't care, it's unnecessary) that paused, slow way to speak and pronounce Spanish...  please... stop it. 

The fact to Aislinn Derbez see in this Netflix series is nothing but promotion to her career, which is basically sucking his father's blood. 

Characters are so vague on their roles and the "fun" parts are forced and simple. Photography is full of colour and over saturated.

The portray of  Mexican society is completely wrong in some cases due to the fact of pride, frivolity, excessive brazenness and prepotency... but well maybe is right on that side of upper Mexican society.    

Nevertheless there are subjects and themes inside the plot with different look, the fact of placing these subjects such as homosexuality (diversity is important). This is the kind of things other studios and companies should start to talk about, give their place to diversity and people. The situation could be anywhere and to anybody. well done there.

Besides i'm talking pure trash about this series mom says: "We should support these productions, give it a change, cuz' this way studios promote investments for the Mexican TV and cinema industry" 

But let's be honest, who the hell would support a series with an old-cranky actress (Veronica Castro) and a senseless plot? 

A Mexican talks about a Mexican production... but that does not means i have to talk nice about it, it was good when Netflix produced Club de Cuervos, everything was just fine, if the studio could have done more series like that it would have been pretty good, but no, they took a basic, tasteless concept and over tropical.lized  the view of our society. 

Sincerely i ask, no, i beg pardon from all of you when you see these words, i'm not the typical Mexican who enjoys novelas or... bad TV shows, but believe me this series is such stupid, like what they did with Luis Miguel, who the hell produces a series about a decadent and irrelevant "artist"? There's no difference between the garbage we catch from regular TV and this production.

...Watch it under your own risk. and sorry about my words, sometimes we need to be strong with these matters and talk with the truth. 


miércoles, 15 de agosto de 2018

Telephone Exchange

The New Alternative and The Machine. 

Hello again my friends, i haven't been able to post lately but now i will get more in touch with you. Today i want to show some music by a friend of my, Cesar Saldivar. he's been up in the underground music scene of Mexico in the last decade, being part of bands like The Surfucks, Bleak Boys and now his new project where he goes solo and fully charged as Telephone Exchange.

Is weird to explain the way i met Cesar, almost 10 years ago, to be precise it was 8 years ago, via Facebook, i saw a band called Surfucks and immediately got hooked by their sound, then he became friends and started chatting about music, travels and so. Cesar is from the state and city of Aguascalientes, a desert like place in the middle of Mexico, 2010 he joined Surfucks for a short period of time before they split and then got back together in 2014, in 2015 he formed Bleak Boys and they split in early 2016 and at some point almost disappeared in 2017.



2018 has been a busy year for Cesar who's been working and living in Mexico City for a long time and writing music for himself, recording all of the material at his home studio. He tracked all instruments and voices on the album, which is called as Maschinelles Lernen. 



He likes to mix psychedelic and Post Rock sounds to create calmed atmospheres, the sound of his music could be related to shoegaze or Lo-Fi. 



He's up-coming album is still waiting but we had the chance to listen the first single, Machine Learning, and it's quietly amazing with some influences of Krautrock, taking abstract sounds and deep voices to make it sound mysterious, we could say it's the new alternative music made for those sunny summer days or rainy cold days at home. We hope to listen to his up-coming album real soon and to have the pleasure to interview him about all the details and facts to know about it. 



As plus data, the whole album was recorded in an analog studio. Lately Cesar Saldivar is launching his own Label as El Cochinero. 

Don't be late and listen the track Machine Learning by Telephone Exchange. 
   
I leave here also his facebook pagefor you to check it out and start following this music genius. 

 https://www.facebook.com/pg/telephoneexchangemusic/about/?ref=page_internal