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Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

"Symbiosis" by Molly Alexander

July 22, 2019

I created a series showcasing mankind’s evolutionary relationship with nature and the role technology has played in both corrupting and enhancing it.


A once symbiotic relationship between man and nature has transformed into a parasitic relationship fueled by our consumerist wants.


The pieces splice natural imagery, with mankind and it's creations, forging a future landscape based on our present habits.


What if we continue to live this way?


How will our habits shape what remains beyond our existance?


Images were collected from the NYPL Picture collage.
Collages created both by hand and digitally.

Follow Molly on Instagram to see more of her work.

Ryan Galvez

July 20, 2019

I’m a 19 year old photographer from Los Angeles, California. I’ve been practicing photography for around two years and it has become something that has incorporated itself into my daily life. When I was 16, I started playing in punk bands around the Los Angeles area and started getting into the big alternative scene in LA. Skating, music, surfing, and street culture are all concepts that I try to document and capture in my photography.

The first photo is called “California Bros,” shot on medium format film. It’s inspired by my two best friends who love to surf.

My next shot is called “Skating in the Dark,” shot on 35mm film. This shot was taken as a candid of my friend hanging out one night listening to music and skating.

The main goal of my work is to document people’s passion through simple film/digital photography with minimal edits.

Follow Ryan on Instagram to see more of his work.

"bombay beach" by Emma Sophia Valles

July 14, 2019

I went out to the desert with a few of my friends a few days before Coachella and we took advantage of the time we had there and made it a bit of a creative trip - this is the outcome of it.


Follow Emma on Instagram to see more of her work.

"Side Effects May Include" by Claire Donohue

July 13, 2019

! My name is Claire Donohue (she/her) and I'm a Northern California based filmmaker, visual artist, and student. With this short film piece, "Side Effects May Include," I wanted to highlight and intertwine a number of voices sharing intimate experiences with side effects of hormonal birth control. The six minute piece is shot on super 8 film and manually manipulated (with paint, etching, and bleach). It aims to spark a larger conversation about what I think is a generally overlooked part of our reproductive rights / general healthcare system. When I began talking about the project a few months ago I was overwhelmed with the number of immediate responses I got from my community - I hope to continue growing the library of voices and eventually expand the project into a larger archive or website.

 

Follow Claire on Instagram and check out her website and Vimeo to see more of her work.

An interview with California Alt-Grunge Band Dem Bones (questions and visuals by Molly Alexander)

July 9, 2019

I spoke with Gavin Valladares, the drummer of Dem Bones, about the group’s creative influences, redefining their band identity and curating a one of a kind concert experience.


MOLLY ALEXANDER: You mentioned that 3 of the 4 members of Dem Bones used to be in the band Running On Empty. How has this previous experience influenced your current sound and values?

GAVIN: Our previous experience influenced our new sound and values because we love energy. Our energy is infectious and translates through our crowds at shows. We enjoy playing more upbeat type songs, and there's a few songs that we very quickly learned will always be a great song to cover such as “Bulls On Parade.”

Your music is reminiscent of both 90s grunge and early punk. Who are your biggest musical influences and what inspires your band outside of the music world?

Biggest Influences: Rage Against the Machine, Soundgarden, RHCP, Smashing Pumpkins, and Foo Fighters. 
Our influences outside of the music world tend to be artists. For Gavin, he loves artists like Basquiat and Chihuly. 

Live performances are a big part of your band identity. What is your favorite song to perform and what is something you'd like your fans to take away from your shows?

Our favorite song to perform might have to be “Bulls On Parade” and we want all fans to take away a sense of family and a fun night every time they come to a show. 

(photos from @cristinacasa)
How has your view of music and performance presence shifted since your first concert?

After our first concerts, we were all suddenly aware that there was so much more than just recording and releasing a song. For some bands, the live element is the most important part.

Any crazy performance stories?

At our last show, we had a huge showing specifically for our set and were playing under a little terrace. I'm not sure what song it happened during but a huge mosh pit erupted and there were other people hanging from the terrace while we played. That was crazy. 

What makes up a typical songwriting session? What comes first, the lyrics or the core instrumentals?

Usually one of us will develop a song on our own and bring it to practice, then each person adds their little nuances and the song slowly but surely takes shape.

Lyrically, what themes and thoughts are you typically drawn to?

Lyrically, we like to examine the thoughts inside of all minds and why people think certain things. Other than that, we write about past or current personal experiences. 

Online music streaming sites are highly saturated with an abundance of musicians trying to make their break. How have you distinguished you band apart from other DIY Alt grunge groups?
 We have a passion and energy that combines itself with all of our friends coming to shows to create an awesome environment. Our shows have a super friendly environment where everyone is friends until they're in the pit.

What do u see for the future of DIY music? How can bands thrive in an increasingly produced industry?

DIY bands have to stick together and support one another. That's why we make it such a specific part of our goal to build a community around music. A community is the band, the fans, and anyone who wants to be involved in one big music family. 

What's next for Dem Bones? Any upcoming shows or music fans can look out for?

We are playing a big art collective/swap meet type event on July 12 and playing a festival on July 19. We are looking to release a single soon and then a full length album!

Follow @dembonesband to stay up to date with future shows and song releases.

"Dermot Kennedy: An Introduction" by Blanca Reyes

July 7, 2019

Dermot Kennedy is a up-and-coming singer/songwriter from Ireland who is already making his name known in the music scene with his distinct voice and his lyrics that could pass as something you would read in a poetry book.

When you listen to his music, you’ll be able to hear his favorite genres and his influences take part in his art. Dermot has said that he never intentionally tries to sound like anyone but rather the mix of his influences just come naturally in everything he does: songwriting, vocals and production. You’ll hear his love for hip-hop in his production and lyrical structure, his love for Bon Iver in his songwriting and instrumentals and his love for David Gray in his vocals.

Dermot Kennedy is an expert songwriter. The way he creates a story that you can so easily visualize in your mind, a picture so clear that you feel like you’re actually experiencing it in real life, makes me speechless. I wish I could explain how beautiful his music is as well and eloquently as he writes his own songs but I am truly stumped here. Dermot is special - his songwriting and that powerhouse of a voice along with his perfect mix of genres brings something refreshing to the music industry.

It’s also refreshing to see a man who is so comfortable writing poetic, vulnerable and passionate lyrics in a society where men are typically scared or are not used to being so open with their emotions. And whether or not he intentionally means for that to be an anti-toxic masculinity message, he’s still setting his footprint in that movement along with other up-and-coming artists Sam Fender and Matt Maltese. His lyrics are what he’s starting to become known for (along with that voice of his) and one of the things I love about his songwriting and his intentions is that fact that there are no mean lyrics. I know it sounds silly but in a world where breakup songs can be pretty harsh ("I Don’t Fuck With You" by Big Sean, anyone? Still a tune though), Dermot’s breakup songs make me want to fall in love. He can be talking about how someone ripped his heart in two but the way he phrases it makes it sound almost heavenly. Here are some of my favorite lyrics of his:

  • “When she kissed me, I felt a new freedom or something.” - "Moments Passed"
  • “What’s important is this evening I will not forget. Purple, blue, orange, red - these colors of feeling. Give me love, I’ll put my heart in it.” - "An Evening I Will Not Forget"
  • “Deep into the night, eyes closing, heart swollen with my loving for you.” - "A Closeness"
  • “I wanna know who you are, I want your heart to beat for me” / “Remember the lake in the moonlight? Remember you shivered and shone? I’ll never forget what you looked like on that night” - "Power Over Me"
  • “But she’s bringing the moon and stars to me. Damn permanent reverie” / “We were open and vulnerable, it was wonderful” - "For Island Fires and Family"

The fact that someone can love a person so much that they write songs about that person with lyrics as beautiful as Dermot’s is the purest form of art there is. It will bring you tears of joy, sadness and pure peace.

Dermot’s debut album (yes, debut!), Without Fear, is releasing on September 27th. Until then, get your tissues and ice cream ready and listen to everything he has released on any streaming service. Also, don’t miss out on future tour dates. Trust me, you’ll want to see him live.

Follow Blanca on Instagram and Twitter to see more of her work.

Lala Lala @ Big Bar Room by Tricia Stansberry

July 6, 2019

I saw Lala Lala for the first time in winter of 2017 when they opened for Cherry Glazerr. I had never heard of them before, had never listened to any of their music. Regardless, their music blew me away, and I was in love as soon as I heard them perform a cover of together PANGEA’s “Night of the Living Dummy.” Lillie West’s soft voice and emotional lyrics instantly drew me in and I went home that night and started to listen to Sleepyhead.

Lala Lala’s second album The Lamb came out in 2018 and was praised upon its release for the intimacy of West’s lyrics, as well as the musicianship put forth by the band. Personally, The Lamb was one of my favorite albums of last year, and it became the soundtrack to my winter.

I was excited to be able to see Lala Lala again earlier in June, as they made a stop at Big Room Bar in Columbus. A small, intimate venue with lovely lights and ambience, Big Room Bar proved to be a great venue for Lala Lala to perform their succinct yet comprehensive set. Playing most of the songs off The Lamb, including stand outs “I Get Cut” and “Water Over Sex,” I was blown away by Lille’s stage presence and the way she brings in the audience with the emotional aspect of her lyrics. Ending the evening with a stand out performance of “Destroyer,” Lala Lala definitely put on a set that I will not soon forget. Lillie joked at the beginning of the night that if they hadn’t had a successful set at Big Room Bar that they’d never return to Columbus again. Fortunately, I don’t think that will be of concern. Lala Lala’s set at Big Room Bar was one of the best shows I’ve been to this year, and I am excited to see the future of this band.


Follow Tricia on Instagram to see more of her work.

"Espero que me veas en tus sueƱos" by Natalie Tapia Carranza

June 29, 2019

Doing this series was very fun and exciting! I really love and appreciate how my friends trust me when I tell them to do certain poses and all my different ideas. This was something I recently worked on and I’m really proud of how they turned out.

Model: Chantrea Robinson


Follow Natalie on Instagram to see more of her work.

"Bleach" Video Premiere (+ Tour Announcement!) from The Aquadolls

June 28, 2019

If you’re in desperate need of some new bangers, look no further. Comprised of lead singer Melissa, Jackie on the drums, Kate on guitar, and Keilah on keyboard and bass, The Aquadolls are a California-based, self-proclaimed psychedelic surf-punk girl band whose music is fitting for every occasion. Right now, they’re releasing their new music video for the song "Bleach," which can guarantee some headbanging and even a guest appearance by Coldhart!

"Bleach" is completely propelled by angst. It’s the ninth track on their 2018 album The Dream and the Deception and Melissa describes it as “the turning point in the album where it shifts into the deception segment, where love is lost and the first reaction to this loss is anger. This song represents the pains of heartbreak, when all you wanna do is hurt back the person who hurt you worse.” You can feel this intensely through the steady but forceful drum beats and the unequivocally raw vocals. Not to mention the fun, vengeful lyrics. Melissa continues by saying “The chain in the music video, also pictured on the album cover, represents how I was bound by someone holding my true self back, and now that I am free from them, take the chains and tangle them up in the mess they started, forcing them to suffer a little bit of the pain I felt. Now while I would not recommend anyone chain their ex’s to a chair and pour bleach on them, this is a dramatization of a dream I once had on getting my revenge. Once again, do not try this at home!!! Only in your head. Maybe.”

As for the experience behind making the video, it sounds like a truly amazing time. Jackie said she loved sitting as their fans skated around the band in Little Tokyo. I was ecstatic to hear that during The Aquadolls’ live soundchecks, Jackie likes to yell her favourite line from "Bleach": “with a blow torch instead!” into the microphone repeatedly. Kate enjoyed holding some pretty symbolic candles during the shoot - they drip red, as though bleeding, “representing the bloody mess a heartbreak can leave you in” she says. Keilah was admittedly freezing in her crop top, but served some serious looks throughout. This was a monumental experience for the band as this was the first music video they all shot together.

But wait! There’s more! The band will be embarking on their Cali Aquababe tour, playing Warped Tour at Mountain View, as well as headlining in Sacramento, Fresno, and their first show in Bakersfield. Those of you fortunate enough to live in the area, go go go! They’ll be playing some classics, songs from their latest album, a new song or two, and a couple covers.

Jul 18 - Temblor - Bakersfield, CA
Jul 20 - Vans Warped Tour - Mountain View, CA
Jul 21 - Goldfield Trading Post - Sacramento, CA
Jul 22 - Strummer's - Fresno, CA
Jul 28 - Belly Up Tavern - Solanda Beach, CA (21+)

Tickets just went on sale yesterday morning at the-aquadolls.com/tour!

Words by Saffron Maeve + Visuals by Molly Alexander


We are thrilled and honored to be able to share with you a brand new music video for the Aquadolls' track "Bleach," shot + edited by dashymedia. Watch the video below and then keep scrolling to read an exclusive interview with The Aquadolls by Molly Alexander!



DISSOLVING FILM: Who or What inspired the visuals in your latest music video for "Bleach"? (any films, artists, things outside the music world, etc.)

JACKIE PROCTOR (Drums): I feel like it’s inspired by fucked up boys taking advantage of relationships and girls being like hell no bye bitch!

MELISSA BROOKS (Vocals and guitar): I was really inspired by red and black for this song and feel those colors represent the bloody nightmare heartbreak can be. As far as visual inspiration goes, I really love the scene in Texas Chainsaw Massacre where the main girl Sally is tied to a chair and how every one was taunting her, and I wanted to reverse the roles and situation in the video. Instead of chainsaws, pour bleach on your ex??? Also, I would never condone anyone to do such a thing, but this was definitely inspired by horror movies and how bad I wanted to get even with people of my past relationships.

What is your favorite song to perform and what would you like fans to take away from your shows?

KATE ROSE (Guitar): My favorite song to play is “Runaway” because it totally opens up the pit. It’s super punk rock and changes the mood from our other love songs. I hope our fans take away that
1. Girls can do anything
2. Our show is a safe space for everyone
3. We love you!!

JACKIE: My favorite song to perform live is “sick sad motherfuck” because it’s fast aggressive and gets out my emotions without me ever having to say them in words.

KEILAH NINA (Keyboard and Bass): I would say my favorite song to play live would be “Runaway”! It’s one of the first songs I got to learn on bass other than “Wander.” I really really love how it sounds all together and how the bass really made the song sound super full! It’s a real crowd pleaser and gets people head banging. I also really like playing the new song live! We don’t really have a name for it yet and haven’t played it at too many shows BUT it’s so so fun and raw. I’m so certain it’s going to turn into a crowd pleaser once we record, release, and start playing it live more!! <3

MELISSA: I love playing “Runaway (The Jam)” live! I love when the bass and guitars harmonize in the second breakdown, and then I get to put my guitar down and get everyone to clap and party with us!! It always gets the pit going. I also love singing “communicationissexy/idkhow2communicate” with the band because everyone sings together and Jackie made up some lines in between lyrics that aren’t on the recording. It’s fun to jam new ideas and try things differently live!! We also make the chorus heavier on “communication” and it’s always so surreal to see people singing along with us in the audience! The OG songs always get down live as well, like “Wander” and “Our Love Will Always Remain.” We’re going to throw in some older songs on this tour too, so I’m super excited to see how show goers react! Never be afraid to be a bad bitch and be unapologetically YOU. Much love and can’t wait to see you on tour!!

Interview by Molly Alexander

"magic in a human world" by Elsa Burgos

June 23, 2019


1- When I see you up close 
I feel a lightheartedness 
My heart softens
as if i’m holding something so fragile 
but that gives me so much strength,
 so much light 
as if you are the universe’s way of showing me how much I can give
How much magic is reachable
 in a human world
 how love can save us from it all 
when I hold you in my arms I wish my hands could keep you always safe 
when I kiss you slowly and your lips tremble that’s my favorite
Peace is you
Peace is me and you
I kiss an angel how lucky am i? 


2- Love will make us
Is not something you take
Is something that arrives
When it wants and it leaves when it wants
It makes us
It changes us
Shapes us
And i love you with such a violent light.


Follow Elsa on Instagram to see more of her work.

"Tangerine" by Oralia Cantu

June 22, 2019

My name is Oralia Cantu, I’m 19 years old and I’m a local artist from Houston.

The name of this piece is Tangerine and it is about letting go of the ghosts from your past and trying to maintain your own identity in a chaotic world. For my pieces, I like to use mixed mediums in order to create a style that reflects a bit of pop art and surrealism in order to blur that line of the perception of reality.


Follow Oralia on Instagram to see more of her work.

"Happy Birthday Melodrama! or on Growing Up Alongside Lorde’s Music" by Valentin Espey-Davis

June 16, 2019

In 2013, songwriter Ella Yelich-O’Connor released Pure Heroine under the name Lorde. I was 11 years old and the summer prior I had lost my home to financial ruin I could not yet fully understand. I moved in with my grandmother, where my new room claimed a cold tile flooring that always seemed at odds with the dusty, clotted, and warm air. It was incredibly still, and entirely silent.

Eventually autumn spilled into the Missourian streets and yet my room remained sunken with heavy summer melancholy. I pleaded to music to drive out my seemingly incurable fatigue; Pure Heroine answered. Lorde’s voice poured into empty space and moved me to revel in the hush, in the coolness at my feet as I moved wildly to the clean, sharp, magnetic pulses of the music. Within days I was conversing with melodies in the beginnings of an intimate dialogue between artist and listener.

Pure Heroine was unique because it spoke my reflection to me, empowering the image of my mundane existence. My skin was not perfect, but “in craters like the moon.” I wore clothes I lied about being thrifted, and sang along to the assurance that “we’ll never be royals.” Ridden with insomnia following another lonely day at a new school I internalized the cries of "Ribs," “we’re reeling through the midnight streets/and I’ve never felt more alone.” The promises, prayers, and passionate declarations of Lorde’s debut album allowed myself to feel the weight of a maturity that most adults tried to deny me.

Nearly four years later and June 16, 2017, Lorde released her sophomore album Melodrama, coincidentally coinciding with the precipice of my sophomore year. Again I found myself unconsciously internalizing the words that I listened to as if they were meditations. Sophomore year was the happiest of my life, the sunniest, a glimpse into joy I had not known since the deep, consuming battle with depression that had taken middle school away from me.

It was also manic, fevered, and carelessly young. The roar and crescendo that haunted the parties of Melodrama seeped into my own life. Lorde sings in "Green Light," “I whisper things the city sings them back to you.” I did not know this line was a guarantee and as the year unfurled I discovered myself tuning in to a collective murmur. I stood through car sunroofs and heard the cyclical story of loving, losing, dying, and evolving become louder and more melodious. I looked at my friends and knew that we were fireflies in glass jars: alight and fiery, flickering, dull, then dead. Pure Heroine taught me how to make a home, Melodrama taught me how to burn with it.

In an interview with Time Magazine, Lorde remarked that this album was “about pain, but it’s more so about joy—the process of discovering joy and reclaiming joy. Like crying and dancing in equal parts.” In accidentally mirroring the narrative arc of Melodrama, I reclaimed joy preemptively from thieves many did not know lingered on the horizon of the year. I found out second semester I would be moving again, this time across the country to New Jersey. For a while I told no one. It was time to burn with celebration, not anxiety. I laid in streets and gave stars new names with friends and we lauded rebirth. Hair dye stained my cuticles and my first contacts watered my eyes. I ignored endings and settled in beginnings, Melodrama playing the entire time.

Light bounced on the water of my apartment complex’s pool as I took pictures of my friends while it rained, "Supercut" and "Homemade Dynamite" joining the party from a phone speaker. Theo Wenner’s photographs of Lorde were tucked hurriedly in a backpack as we chased the imagery memorialized in album art during the summer storm. We snuck out to watch sunrises from tennis courts and picked flowers at midnight. I loved, I kissed, I wrote and laughed and sang (poorly,) I took out of focus pictures. In my sophomore year I found intimacy and secret keeping and recklessness that mirrored the fervent quality of Lorde’s sophomore album - and a year later, June 16, 2018, I finally moved again. I reacquainted myself with the quiet. I found cool pavement and my muscles remembered dancing. I was 11 years old; there were no strobe lights, no drinks, no lovers, just a world alone. The forceful distance that had been forged between myself and the experiences that had so consumed me was biting. It was burning and strong, but real and sincere.

Lorde once said of her ballad "Liability," “I feel like if I’d had that song when I was 15, maybe it would have been kind to me.” Kind is a strange word to describe the sting of remembrance, but it is an accurate one. To encapsulate loss was to acknowledge the love that was had.

Lorde’s albums are so sacred to their listeners because of their cathartic sincerity. Pure Heroine was a loving chronicle of suburban youth from the honest voice of a 16 year old. Melodrama was similarly vulnerable because of the self awareness that accompanied its party spirit, an awareness too absent in the modern pop genre. Yes, I could be high to the contents of Melodrama but I could lay in the oft forgotten lows with it too.

"Hard Feelings/Loveless" and I unpacked New Jersey together. The screams of "Supercut" and I laid awake on an air mattress replaying visions of elation. "Liability," "Writer in the Dark," and "Sober II (Melodrama)" helped me shift through residual tensions and trauma that remained permanently unresolved. From the memories of years prior and the above tracklist I built a blueprint of a lost home and began again.

Another year later and I’m closing out my last week of Junior year in New Jersey, fully settled in. As the anniversary of both my move and the Melodrama release approach I want to wish Lorde’s sophomore album a happy 2nd birthday. Thank you for growing up with me.

Follow Valentin on Instagram to see more of their work.

"fly me in a rocket past the sun" by A.R. Clark

June 15, 2019

My name is A.R. Clark, and I am a photographer based out of Bangor, Maine. I mostly shoot fine art and portrait photography. I am obsessive with telling stories through photos and matching glamour with the melancholy of the complicated relationships we all have with each other.

These pieces were shot on Kodak Gold 200 on an Olympus point and shoot. The series is called "fly me in a rocket past the sun." It stemmed from the idea that if you were an alien, then at least there would be a home planet to escape to.


Follow A.R. on Instagram and check out their website to see more of their work.