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HÄANA – FMP 001

April 1, 2018 By Michael Leave a Comment

The Freio Music Podcast

Episode 01 - HÄANA

  • Overview

  • Description

  • Links

Overview

This episode's featured artist is HÄANA. She shares some amazing stories about her life's journey and her travels throughout the world. HÄANA is a classically trained violinist who utilizes electronic (digital) and organic (analog) elements to blend her creations into delicate works of art. HÄANA will take you on her journey from playing on the streets of Europe to playing festivals and shows around the world!

Description

This episode's featured artist is HÄANA. She shares many entertaining stories including one about nearly drowning in water during the creation of her music video. She also shares a pivotal moment when she found herself penniless on the streets of Europe with only her violin to earn a living. HÄANA is a classically trained violinist who utilizes electronic and organic elements to blend her creations into delicate works of art. This episode is on the longer side but will keep your ears gripped to the speakers as she reveals details about her life and career that have never been shared on record. She discusses collaborations with some of the top artists in the electronic field as well as the process she uses to finalize her creations. Haana Thiem is a violinist, producer, and creator / founder of two record labels Paper Gold Records and Deep Sonos. Stay tuned!

Links

HÄANA's Links:

 

ThisIsHÄANA.com

Deep Sonos

Listen to HÄANA on SoundCloud

Listen to HÄANA on iTunes

Watch Teardrop Music Video

Listen

Full Transcription & Show Notes

HÄANA Podcast Transcription

Start out by introducing yourself

My name is Haana Thiem, I go by HÄANA on stage.  I am very particular about my brand because it is recognizable, and what people read, see and hear.  I live in L.A. now.  I used to live in New York and the east coast for about 10 years, before New York was Boston.  I am kind of a nomadic individual.  I love the question “where have you been?” rather than “where do you live?” or “where were you born?”  because that doesn’t say a lot about a person, I think.  

In that light then, where are some of the highlights of where you have been?

(HÄANA Laughter)

Well some of the most special places, I lived in Germany for a year.  I lived in Spain for almost a year.  I lived in Granada .  I lived on an island in the Mediterranean called Formentera, which is just south of Ibiza.  Then I traveled through Greece.  I was studying Greek and I was going to move to Crete, but instead I moved to Boston somehow. They are kinda parallel, kinda not.  I studied German, studied Spanish.   I have had opportunities  to play in a whole bunch of different places but, for a moment I realized that, all the traveling was kind of confusing me.  But what I wanted to do instead, was hone my art, and my craft, and my offering and then travel.  Which is how it has turned out.  

Great, so where were you honing your craft?  Was it in the Mediterranean?  

It kinda started there.  The really interesting turn of events.  Should we get into it?  

Sure.  Ya, lets get into it.  That’s why we are here.  

Well, lately i have been posting old photos of me from when I was 21 living in Formentera and living in Spain.  It is a really Inspiring story.  I think it is important to share the back story.  I feel like people want to know about that.  I tend to shroud myself in a bit of mystery.  I want to let more people in, so thank you for the opportunity.  I was living in Granada, Spain and at that point I wasn’t performing on violin that much.  I started playing Violin when I was three but I was studying languages in college.  So, I bought a violin while in Spain and started playing casually on the street.  It wasn’t until, this was the turning point of my whole career,  somebody stole my wallet.  I had no money.   So, I decided that I would go put on a costume with a beautiful shirt and shall or something. I don’t know, It wasn’t really a costume, but something to make me feel different and embolden me.  Then I went to this restaurant, near where I lived in the old Arab district, and performed outside for all the people dining.  Then I went around and asked for a tip.  People gave me, at that point it was the one and two Euro coins, so you could make a decent amount.  It wasn’t really the money but the validation that people really enjoyed it. So was making up beautiful songs and performing very firey, and they loved it. So I was like wow, I can do this.  So I would start to make my rounds in the evenings and would make about 80 Euros in about 15 minutes.  Then my new debit card finally came so I could have access to my money but I had started a whole new career path.  

Wow that is amazing.  A lot of people would be very upset and let the it ruin their day or week for vacation or moment but you were able to seize opportunity in the difficulty.  Now tell me about that costume, I am just interested.  You said “embolden you”, was it like armor against negative thoughts, or a hater out there would ‘boo’ at the first show?

Kinda of.  Hahah.  Well, just to give you a little more backstory, I started classically.  Sometimes it is really hard to get out of that classical mode and to make up your own music. To improvise. To be free.  To not read music off of a sheet.  At that point, I was really feeling not very inspired by playing dead people’s music.  You know? And how to put the emotion into it?  When i started to improvise, I was sort of tapping into this feeling. I am naturally an introvert.  A lot of people don’t know that about me either because I am up on these big stages all the time.  I have diagnosed myself recently as being an extroverted-introvert.  

Ok?  If you don’t mind, go on about that (being an extroverted-introvert) how does that happen?  

Ok, but I would like to explain one more piece to the Spain story.  The costume itself helped pull me out of my shell.  Helped me feel like a different person.  Like oh, if this fails or doesn’t work out, than nobody knew it was me.  So, I was a different person.

Did it help break you free of the classical mindset, being dressed up in a costume?

Ya, I ended up meeting a dancer from Barcelona, her name was Sophia. She would do this flamingo-mime ballet movements. My music would inspire her movements and the reverse.  We ended up traveling to Barcelona.  She lived on an  organic compound just outside of Barcelona.  So we ended up traveling to Formentera and living on an island in the mediterranean and performing every day.  It was amazing.  To this day, I still perform with dancers, especially with ballerinas.  You never know where life will take you.  

Thats awesome.  If you could go back to the ‘Extroverted Introvert’. What does that mean to you?

So I used to be extremely shy.  To the point of not really even knowing how to talk to people.  Not that extreme but as a kid I was a thinker.  I loved to read and hang out by myself. I was always an artist drawing and photographing.  My dad gave me a camera when I was four or five, which its also my parallel career as a photographer.   My older sister was always very extroverted.  I feel that in birth order the kids want to be different than their siblings.  I was more the quiet thinker.  The pensive one.  Then what actually happened is that I started working in a restaurant. When you have a role, there are things you need to say to have people order food.  I would just make jokes.  I started my standup comedian career at that moment.  To get people to laugh to interact to get to meet them.  You don’t have to go very deep.  You just have conversations.  Through that i learned how to be a bit more extroverted.  To this day when I meet people, I really try to get to the root of who they are.  Rather than “how are you?” “where are you from?” “what do you do?”.  Those questions are so boring.  Ask interesting questions.  Sometimes making a silly joke or asking something interesting, where it feels natural but getting to the heart of the person.  That’s how i like to interact with people.  I still remain a very one-on-one person.  I don’t really like big groups.  But there is something about being on a stage where I just embody this energy.  Where I am pulling everyone into my world.  Kind of captivating.  I am definitely an extrovert but in an introverted role.  But I don’t know, I’m sure there are other people like me out there. [laughter / chuckles]  

I’m sure there are.  When you are on stage does it feel like the crowd is giving you energy?

Yes

It does.  So you kinda take in that group collective energy. That is great.  Well now that you have made it difficult for me to ask good questions because you have ruled out all the shitty questions.

Haha.  No you can ask me those boring questions. I don’t care.

I have one that is super general and kind of a curveball but I am curious where everyone takes it.  What is music to you?

Music is a universal language.  You can talk to everyone about it.  Even people who are deaf.  They can still feel vibrations.

I have seen at some shows there is a deaf area where there are balloons for people to hold and feel the vibrations.  

Or I think the sub-pack as well.  My friend David Starfire and Zach are working with Sub-Pack and I am pretty sure they do these workshops with Deaf children and everyone wears this sub-pack that you can feel the vibrations, especially the bass frequencies.

I couldn’t agree more that it [Music] is a universal language.  Being yourself, well traveled, how do you associate the different cultures that you have been with and how do they meld or culminate in your sound.

I have spent a good amount of time in Iceland.  That was such a beautiful and inspiring time there.  My solo-project started just after my first time in Iceland.  I didn’t realize…. now reflecting upon it I see the inspiration that that gave me and where I started to take the music.  Before that, I had a band called ‘Copal’ and I also had an electronic project called ‘Nixis’. Then I studied at ‘Dub Spot’ and got into my own music production. As in producing all of the music. Not just writing the melodies & harmonies and having other people to the other content, the rhythms and bass lines.  The very first song that I produced for my solo project, HÄANA, was called “Brym Al Mar” .  I have a music video for that out.  It was the biggest project manifestation of my artistic vision to that point.  So that in itself was incredible.  Brym, the word, means the salt spray hitting the rocks or surf. But surf sounds funny. Salt spray sounds more romantic.   Al Mar, is in Spanish, of the sea.  The melody itself was inspired by a Norwegian folk song.  The video goes into life and death and multiple iterations.  Also this folktale about the ‘Norns’.  In Nordic mythology these three sisters who weave the threads of past, present, and future.  So you will see this in the video. It is kind of abstract but I love things to be mysterious.  You will see the Norns weaving the threads of life and you will see me going through this iteration.  Being in a white dress on top of a cliff and then fall into the water and emerge as this badass with a mohawk wearing all black with a black hardanger fiddle by the fire. So it is incorporating a lot of the elements.  

There are a lot of people out there who don’t have a music video and who do have music.  In that light, did you dream up this vision of yourself in the music video?  How did it come to be?  Were you working with a producer?

Well, I met this dear friend, a very creative individual,  “Armin Matine” (sp?) in New York.  I knew that this song really needed a music video.  I knew that that’s what I wanted before I released it.  So I told him about my idea.  I am a photographer, I don’t think in moving pictures.  I think in fames, snapshots and composition.  I told him what my idea was.  Then he really dove deep into it.  He is this incredible creative individual.  He works on big commercial projects in New York but this he took on as a personal project.  So he did a lot of research.  He discovered the Norns.  I didn’t even know they existed.  He wove all these different story threads.  I was like wow, how are we ever going to be able to do this?  I don’t have that much money to pull this off.  

Ya, and the song is only so long.   

Ya.  He does CGI [computer generated images] and After-Affects.  

So you didn’t actually take a cliff dive?

Well I will get into that, if we want to.  Depends on how long you want to make this interview.  So then he presented it to Alice.  Alice Miller, who is an incredible cinematographer in New York. She apparently has been obsessed with the Norns since she was a little girl.  so she was like “yes! I want to do this”.  So she took it on as a personal project as well.  The three of us were very interested in creating a piece of art.  Sometimes when people really take on an idea and take ownership of it, a lot more beauty can come out of it.  Because it is not just the dollar sign.  It’s not the commercial product.  Its the art mission.  The passion.  So then everyone that we hired for the team…. You know, we had a budget.  Everyone wasn’t getting their commercial rate but everyone was pulling 200% of their energy.  We had this incredible assistant photographer and an incredible lighting designer.  Part of the shoot was done underwater.  We used the black-light cannons.  They basically spent the whole day setting up this part of the shoot, that you can see in the video, that is under water.  It was incredible.  The piece that they didn’t do.  They didn’t heat the pool, and it was May.  I was supposed to fall into the pool backwards from a diving board into the water.  I was like “ok, calm face.  Calm face.  It’s going to be great. It is going to be wonderful”.  But, you know there is fear involved.  Wearing this long dress.  We added more fabric to the dress because we went shopping for fabrics that would glow with the blacklight cannon.  I was envisioning how it would be in the water.  I bought a cheap throwaway violin on Ebay for like $30.  So the violin was going to go into the water.  I was envisioning me twirling in the water look in the water, playing violin in this whole romantic beautiful scene.  The reality is…. I fall into the water backwards.  I’m sure my face had some sort of grimace on it.  I fall in and then I am trying to swim up but my dress wrapped around my legs. I could not swim.  I couldn’t move.  So we have slow motion footage of the lighting designer diving in to rescue me and pull me to the surface.  All this water came out of my nose and ears. It was like I was waterboarded.  Oh, also I had this makeup artist Jess Toth (sp?), who did this waterproof makeup look on me.  My makeup did not budge one bit, thanks to her.  So she was like “you can’t do that again”. She was like “if you don’t feel good we can stop this right now”.  I was like “no, no we can do it”.  So we did that sequence a couple more times. One of the best shots we did was, I holding on to the edge of the pool because I didn’t want to fall in again. With my dress and with the violin in the water, waving it back and forth, creating this abstract texture, which you can see in the physical CD.  I did a beautiful print of that particular shot, inside [the CD].  That was a pretty incredible experience.  It was a three day shoot and the end result was something that looked like we spent twenty grand on it.  We just pulled our resources. It was just something that I was feeling so passionate about it and I just knew I needed to invest what ever I could in it.  I really truly believe that if you think big, and if you act big, than even if you are not quite there yet, you will get there.  Also thinking of it like a legacy.  This is a forever project.  So I didn’t want to put anything out there that wasn’t top top top quality. Top caliber. I also didn’t want to do a Kickstarter campaign for it because I would prefer that it was something that I am funding, I am not asking people for money.  I think that sometimes those things [Kickstarter Campaign] can be successful, but sometimes it is sort of a more begging thing.

It is kind of like losing control because you don’t have control over the budget and can’t plan accordingly.  

I think it is important to put out the best quality work you can, because it will be for forever.  Well, we don’t know really what the future holds but I’m thinking it will live for forever.  

Forever, as long as foreseeable.  Working with that production team but also musically… building your albums and recording it…  Collaborating with other musicians and sound engineers… How do you build and cultivate a team that helps you succeed?  Can you speak to the building of teams?

Sure.  Well, “Brym Al Mar” was the first song I did for my solo project, I actually went through a few iterations with a few different producers.  My friend Benny Cante (sp?) did some of the dubstep growls and textures.  Empsh Subatomic worked with me.  [He said] “before we actually mix this, I think we need to go into the sounds, themselves.  Let's get the best kick drum sound we can. Let's get the best textures.  Because if you have the best quality audio, than everything else will follow”.  He also had there idea to merge, you know when you are doing electronic music with violin and vocals.  Kinda merging those elements so that it is not this cold, stark electronic content.  When I went into the studio I recorded peppercorns rice shakers, these organic shaker textures and then also this Icelandic jaw harp I had.  Just in the act of having a few organic percussive elements helped fuze those two worlds together.  The digital and analogue.  From there I had it mixed by Ming, who is another producer in New York, who Empsh introduced me to.  It is kind of like you connect with one person and another person and another person.  But really I wanted to find the person who really fit, and really understood what I was doing and really got me.  Working with Ming, super fast and efficient.  There are some moments in the song where there are transitions, I didn’t really know how that would work.  But it [the song] still wasn’t there.  Even after all those people. Then I finally brought it to Dave Sharma. He mixed that whole EP that I released.  I basically sat with him for a bunch of the sessions. The processes with that is finding where the song wants to live, which is interesting.  Each song actually has a place where it wants to live.  I have approached a lot of my music as an artistic expression, that's really important.  I am not producing something that anyone else has any quality control over.  It's not a commercial label that has this specific thing that they want me to fit into.  Its my expression.  I am ultimately giving the “yes” or “no” to the final product.  I really felt that Dave got my vision.  [He] was pulling out elements of each song.  When we were working on [the song] ‘Phavet’, which is inspired by a Finnish a capella women’s chorus, as represented by violins.  I had a particular way that I thought the track should go, but he was like “no, let's try it this way”.  I was like "ok, well I’m open to it”.  I am very happy with that direction we took.  Then finding a mastering engineer, that's another critical piece.  I have been working with AudibleOddities. He [Shawn Hatfield] has worked with some of the top electronic artists like Amon Tobin.  I am an audiophile.  Finding people who really care about audio and sound quality.  The first track I sent him to master came back perfect.  No need to revise things.    

For this release that I did with Desert Dwellers they put Leya, I think I release it in 2015.  It was Laya and then four remixes by a few different artists; Haj I Ji, An-Ten-Nae, Kaminanda, and Twin Shape.  They used a different mastering engineer.  I think we went through four or five different revisions with that one.  

So it pays to get the right person.  

Again investing just a little more, because it is a legacy that will live forever.  

Thanks for sharing.  Tell me about Paper Gold Records.

Well... Paper Gold Records is actually my label.  At the moment I am the only artist on it, but my vision with it, which could tie into what you are doing, is to inspire young girls and women to pursue a career in music, and the whole world of electronic music.  There could be definitely be a lot more women that could take on that challenge.  So with Paper Gold, it is currently a vanity label but my vision is to take that to the next level and have it be a platform for other artists to release their music on.  

How do you make a record label?  Not all artists are willing to put in the work.  Tell me how that is for you and how you balance dealing with the record label and all of the political/ legal hoops that you need to jump through.

It is getting easier and easier to release your own music and to be an independent artist.  Sometimes it is good to have an additional avenue to release your music.  First of all, its quality control.  Also if I own all the pieces of my music, than getting it placed for television, for a commercial, for films… If I own of my publishing and all of my mastering… The down side to it though is that when you are part of a bigger label you are part of a bigger network.  If you want to do it on your own, you build your own team. Everyone starts somewhere.  Everyone starts small and grows.  If it is the right thing the path might be easy and if it is not the right thing, than the path might be a little more difficult.  It depends also on how much you really want it.  The important key element that I found was distribution. I work with Symphonic Distribution and they’re amazing.  That is how I get my music up on Spotify and iTunes.  Soundcloud is different but all the digital distribution happens through my distributor.  Ya, it’s not too difficult to start your own business in that way.  

Well, you have to be bold and take that first step.  

Yes. Ya, and come up with a good name.  Really the biggest thing was Paper Gold Label or Paper Gold Records.  Ah, they are so similar…

Was that a week, or a month or how long was that debate?

I don’t know, maybe a month or maybe two.  I have been spending a lot of… the beginning of this year and last year working on my new EP called Salt.  I actually played one of the songs last night at my show on the Green Tree Stage [at Arise Music Festival].  I invited up a guest guitarist for that.  Salt is the single I released in June.  Then I was touring the east and west coast with it.  The lyrics are in Icelandic.  I worked with my friend Outsa (sp?) in Reykjavik (Iceland) and she helped me with the diction.  I have been studying some icelandic and I am a linguist but I don’t speak Icelandic.  Part of my interest in working with different languages… I even have some songs in a made up language.  The thing about that is to pull people into your universe, it doesn’t really matter what the words mean.  But anyway the lyrics are basically “Tears of the ocean, salt of the sea.  Find yourself at the bottom of the sea, white doves over head and drift away”.  Then there is this badass Icelandic medal section that drops in.  The guy who plays on the track Stephen, in Austin… You know I never ever wanted electric guitar in any of my music but that just worked, really worked.  But back to your question earlier about collaborations…  I do write a lot for Cello.  My new EP will have a few different guitarists on it.  A string trio. I recorded a violist Nils Bultmann who works with Blue Tech.  Then Jill Berta (sp?) and Adam Maloof (sp?) they are cellists who live in New York. I have a lot of piano on there.  I play piano too.  You know collaborating with people in the sense that… If you are just one person you have just one expression.  But if you pull other people in   and their talents in… Wow, it’s so beautiful.  Tear drop, the cover I did of Massive Attack, I worked with a Cellist named Raymond who tours with Celine Dion or he did in the past. His expression on the Cello is just this gorgeous… like your heart just goes Oh… and melts.  You feel things.  I want people to feel things.  So that's what I keep in mind with every piece of music that I write.  

----------Part two-------

Tell me about your first performance and if you had any anxieties and how you overcame that.  

Wow, rolling back the time.  I started playing violin when I was three but then we took a bit of a  break with that.  I kept envisioning me in a pink dress in front of an orchestra soloing.  Then my very first recital for my Suzuki  concert, my mother and I sowed a pink dress.  I thought about that later and was like “wow, I really actually manifested that”.  Haha.  I was extremely nervous, I was so young.  For my class in school, when I was just learning, I would bring my violin and my Suzuki book to school and I would have them pick out a song and then play for them.  I was kind of bold then.  When I auditioned at New England conservatory for the master’s program in Boston.  That was a deathly horrifying nerve racking experience.  Somebody later told me about taking beta-blockers.  It was so bad. When you are so nervous that your hands are shaking.  Then my knee started to shake. So I did a graceful move to [try] to stop shaking.  Like my knee was about to fall of or something. haha.  I was like I hope they don’t see this.  So I got through that interview or that audition process.  At that moment I didn’t make it in, which was disappointing.  I feel like performing on stage is a very different thing than auditioning.  Auditioning is nerve racking

Well they are judges not fans.

Ya, they are all just sitting there staring at you. Its intimidating.  

How did you overcome your fear?  Did you get yourself into a mental mindset? Do you use meditation to clarify your vision before you step out and the curtains open? How do you get yourself ready mentally?

I do try to do that.  If at all possible I try to have the green room cleared right before my set.  Spend a few moments centering and grounding.  Two years ago I played Lighting in the Bottle at the Thunder stage, and I tried something new there.  I arrived in the evening.  My set was maybe two days later.  I arrived to the space and it was at night and everything’s closed.  I just did a visualization there.  I closed my eyes and envisioned the whole space filled with light and setting intention to really inspire people.  Envisioning the whole space, this enormous ball of energy.  That was really powerful.  Arriving to a space, setting an intention.  Really doing some visualizations. It doesn’t happen every time, especially at festivals.   Sometimes those change overs are so rapid and there are just a million things and chaos.  and the rain… why does it have to rain…. And there is also all that adrenaline.  So sometimes it is a little bit rushed.  And maybe not that grand.  You know it is not always the ____ Stage, and then Grand Reveal, and then I enter.  You kinda have to roll with whatever is given to you and make the most of it.  One important practice I do too… of course it is ideal if ever performance you have you have the best lighting, the best sound, the best ambiance, the best audience.  But if you don’t have all those elements you just ‘fake it’.  What I am saying by that is that let’s say I can’t hear myself very well on stage or if something shifted with the audio.  You roll with it. You don’t make a big deal about it.  Unless it is something that will really affect your performance.  The most important thing is that people… Their watching, they are listening, they are there for an experience, they showed up.  They want whatever it is you are going to give them.  To break the flow, I don’t like to do that.  I like to proceed.  If it is not ideal, its ok.  It’s improvising in the moment as well.   

Ya, I remember watching a set… it was actually here at Arise… it was Linx, is who it was.  Her computer restarted on her mid-song and she didn’t lose a beat. She was beatboxing over the track and then suddenly everything cut out, and she kept beatboxing without losing the rhythm. Then later on revealed “so I hope you liked that last one, that was just me beatboxing as my computer restarted but here we go”.  I didn’t even catch that there was a crisis on stage.  It was just serene, she just rolled with it.  

(Tangent):  I think that’s something very important and some younger musicians don’t do. I have taught Guitar and learned the Guitar myself.  And one thing that people do when you are just learning is you hit the wrong cord [or note] and then you stop. You freeze. You’re like oh, that was wrong.  And then go back to the beginning.  That was the wrong chord but the next chord should be right. So just keep going. Pretend like it [the error] didn’t happen. So I think keeping that flow is important.  

So getting into that mental mindset tell me about your meditation music.  

So I have this side project called ‘Deep Sonos’ and it is a full-spectrum sound meditation experience.  Part of that was I wanted a channel for this more meditative, pretty, contemplative music that I write. I actually did a workshop here on Saturday morning.  It was in the dome, the Sunrise Dome and it was basically 2/3rds full. So many people showed up at 9am for this experience.  It was basically this full spectrum sound experience, where all my textures, sounds, electronics,  bass frequencies, violin, and vocals are pulling people into this really deep effortless space for meditation. I actually have four episodes of these 10 minute meditations out that people can get online at: SoundCloud.com/deepsonos/

I have been doing a lot of those workshops around.  I really believe that music can create a very deep mental… ah… almost like a bed.   Like you can just fall into it.  Like you fall onto this feathered mattress and… there is a cushion… and you just melt.  No drugs involved. Haha.  So Deep Sonos started, I have a background with Yoga.  I have been touring with Wanderlust for about four years.  I did all of the U.S. and Canadian festivals.  I would take people on these hikes with just my violin in its case.  We would go to a beautiful vista.  I would sit everyone down and center and ground everyone in nature.  Its beautiful.  It's on a mountain somewhere.  There’s.. Oh, gorgeousness everywhere.  Everyone gets really comfortable. They are dropping in, they’re present.  They are in nature.  Then I start playing violin.  About 30-45 minutes I would improvise.  Emulating the sounds of the birds, the bugs, the textures, ancient melodies that are coming to me. I am kind of channeling music that comes to me, but I don’t normally say that. But then I also walk around.  So as people are in this meditative state, they are hearing now the violin is her… now it's there,  now it’s here.  It's like this out of body experience.  

Just imagine… your eyes are closed. you are in the grass. you are lying down. You hear this beautiful violin.  Its to the right of you now it’s left now it’s far away.  I’m not moving around that much but it’s this kinda tippy experience because when you are falling into this deep sedated state you are not totally aware of the specifics of what is happening but you are just kinda drifting off in this mellow space.  So, I love doing those hikes so much.  Some of them were at sunset or early morning. So I did a lot of music accompaniment for Yoga which is how I actually got into my solo electronic project because when people are doing Yoga they are not really paying attention to if you’re turning the right knob or if you played that melody correctly. it is just more about this immersive experience. What can happen with a yoga class [is that] as I am interpreting and feeling the environment, and the class [students], and the teacher, I am providing something for something that is being facilitated by someone else.  A couple of years ago I was in Portland for a Yoga event with this teacher Jill Knouse and we added on a meditation experience at this space, that was specifically dedicated to meditation call, Hush.  I had a full sound system, a full PA, because the bass frequencies are what are really important for this experience.  So I created a whole Deep Sonos sound meditation, an hour long. It was basically like having a pallet, a painters palette.  A little green, a little red, a little splash here.  I didn’t have anyone to tiptoe around. I was just intuiting, and feeling what these people who were meditating wanted.  I was creating this immersive experience for people to drop deep into meditation. That really resonated with me.  It really felt like something that I wanted to do more of and curate more.  So from there, I produced these ten-minute meditation sequences.  This was after a trip to Costa Rica and I recorded textures.  Like jungle textures.  Like sea pods, and crinkling up leaves, and rubbing two sticks together.  haha.  I recorded all these things with a Tascam Audio Recorder. Then wove those into this 10-min meditation track.  I produced it in Logic and wrote it all in Logic.

In Logic are you working with midi and digital instruments as well as these organic sounds that you are pulling from around the world?

Yes.  I use Native Instruments a lot.  I use Machine for a lot of my drum sounds.  I use a lot of different plugins. So I am doing a lot of studio recorded violin and vocals and sometimes guest cellists and guitarists.  Then I use a lot of Sine waves for base.  Sometimes I’ll layer that with...

Just straight clean sine-wave for bass?

I’ll synthesize sounds or do a little oscillation or wobble in there to give it a little texture.  The challenge for Deep Sonos to do these segments at 432 Hz.  I wanted to try it and see if that indeed felt more meditative.  They do say… 

Tell me about 432

There are lots of theories about… I am not an expert but from what I have gathered… 440 Hz is what most music is produced at.  The frequency… I don’t know if we should even get into this.  

Well if you don’t want to, we don’t have to.  

Well, I am not the most scientific about it.  440, 432… Apparently, Tibetan singing bowls, if you put a tuner to it, the frequency that it emits is 432, not 440.  440 is a bit of a contrived frequency.  

It’s Round

Well, there are theories about controlling people and I don’t know.  I don’t even want to get into that.  But, I wanted to try it because people do say that 432 is the sound of the universe, of nature, of the sphere and some people claim that it is more meditative.  It is challenging.

What about in your experience?

I honestly don’t feel a difference.  That’s my take on it.  But what’s interesting the challenge to produce at 432hz. My ear is so trained to play my violin at 440 that to down tune it just 8 herz. It’s like oh am I playing out of tune or is this not right? And then all of the plugins like Native Instruments, Konnect Medal (sp?),  and I love Alicia's Keys, it’s a plugin for Contact for piano. And a lot of these instruments you can change the tuning.  You can change it to 432 and some others you really have to dive in. It was a good challenge.  

Now these, ten minute… You called it a sequence of meditations… Are they meant to be listed to in order?

No.  They live on their own.  The first one called Vernal the next one is called Ephemére and then  Autumné and then Viintara.  They’re kinda seasonally based. But yea they are intended… Take ten.  In the morning. In the night.  You know when the song is up it has been ten minutes.  I live in L.A. I go to the Beach. I listen without any music just the sound of the waves. I put my timer on.  Inevitably at one moment, I will look.  “Oh, it must have been 10 minutes already.  Did I miss it? Oh, no there’s two minutes left”. I find that when I am meditating to one of those episodes, I really like Ephemére, I’ll actually drift off into this out of body experience and maybe I’ll be asleep for 30 minutes.  Then I wake up and like ‘wo, where did I go?” And I feel refreshed like I took a 5 hour nap but it was only 30 minutes.   And the fact that it can do that to me, and I created it, I mean… I channeled it, is pretty amazing.

Absolutely.

What Meditation does is gives your brain a chance to calm down. We have so much stimulus.  So many things going on.  So much distraction.  I think a lot of us feel like we are running around like a chicken, with our heads cut off.  Giving your brain and your body a moment to just calm down.  To center and ground and to focus.  Also to not have to worry about anything.  I have found that with music it allows you to be effortless with this space of just calming your mind.  So you are not worrying.  The brain likes to run around.  “Did I plan my dinner” or “my plans for the week”.  If you can just calm it all down.  So at one of my Deep Sonos workshops.  I do these one hour sound meditation workshops and this one guy said “wow, I was actually scared to come to this workshop.  How am I going to meditate for an hour?”  And he said [after] the first five minutes of music his mind was a complete blank slate.  It was completely blank.  He said “I have never ever experienced that” to just have a completely calm mind. I think he has a little A.D.D. I think it is super healthy.  You can read all the benefits of it Meditation.  I know for myself, when I have a regular practice of it [meditation] I can approach my day with a lot more clarity.  

My assumption is, that you want to share that clarity with your listeners and that is why you have created Deep Sonos.  

Yes.

Is Deep Sonos also intended to expand to other artists or is this a solo-project?

At the moment it is a solo-project but I do have bigger visions for it.  

Well we are going to have to stay tuned.

All of my music can be found here:  ThisIsHÄANA.com

What do you call the A with a double dot [Ä]?

Umlaut.  Yes it is German.

And where is the best place to listen to Deep Songs

SoundCloud.com/DeepSonos

Well thank you for taking the time to talk with us and I really appreciate all of the wisdom you have shared.  I wish you safe travels throughout the U.S. and to Australia and beyond.

Thank you so much.  

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Filed Under: Abstract, Acoustic, Ambient, Arise, Arise 2017, Asia, Digital Instruments, EARTH, Easy Listening, Electronic, English (US), Europe, FMP, Instrumentation, Interviews, Islands, Keyboard, Language, Laptop, Loop Pedal, Minimal, Musicians, New Music, North America, Podcasts, Violin, World Tagged With: 1, Artist, Artist Interview, Deep, Deep Sonos, episode, female, Fesh, freio, Freio Music, FreioMusic, FreioMusic Podcast, HAANA, interview, Meditation, Multi-Instrumentalist, Music, Music Podcast, one, Podcast, podcast episode one, Sonos, the Freio Music Podcast, Thiem, Transcribed, Transcription

Introduction Episode – Freio Music Podcast

April 1, 2018 By Michael Leave a Comment

The Freio Music Podcast

Episode 00 - Introduction

  • Overview

  • Description

  • Links

Overview

This episode is an overview about the Freio Music Podcast

Description

This short episode of the Freio Music Podcast provides you with an overview of the podcast itself. This episode lays out my hopes and dreams for the podcast. I discuss the layout and format of future episodes and reveal who has 'the cutest voice in the world'. If you want to hear artist interviews you can skip to the next episode as this episode only features me, the host of the podcast, aka Michael Morahan. Welcome to the Freio Music Podcast!

Links

The Freio Music Podcast Links:

 

About the Freio Music Podcast

FreioMusic.com/Podcast

SoundCloud

 

 

Listen

Full Transcription & Show Notes

Welcome to the Freio Music Podcast. I am your host Michael Morahan. This is episode number zero. THis episode is going to be about the podcast itself. So we are going to get super meta and talk about what we are going to talk about. So, who am I? I am a music student. A Musician. A music Lover. I go to different shows all over the place. I love, love music for sure. I also love to produce. What that [producing music] means to me is using the computer to harness bits and bytes and make some bad ass beats. Beyond that I also love sound engineering. The back end of how everything works. Thinking about the signal flow… Basically, what interests me is how I am reaching your ears right now. That is interesting. I would say that I am a mad-scientist and a musician at the same time. But beyond that the podcast is not about me. The podcast is about artists, other artists. I am going to be interviewing artists from around the world. I am not going to limit myself to genre. It’s going to be far and wide so I hope you enjoy. Hopefully you will find some new music that you have never heard of. Some new artists that you appreciate, that you have never heard of and maybe you will see some that you are familiar with. They are going to be sharing nuggets of wisdom. Young artists, listen up because these individuals and bands they know what they are doing. They have been through it so you can learn something from them. Let them help you along your way to becoming a musician because I know it is not an easy path. It is not; pick up the guitar, plug it into Garageband and you are going to have a new hit single. That is not going to work. You need some guidance.
But if you are not a musician, the podcast will hopefully still be interesting. It is not merely talking about types of instruments and cables and stuff like that. We are going to be talking about stories. How they got to be where the are. You are going to get a behind the scenes… like you are opening up the curtain and shedding some light on who these artists are. It is going to be an interesting podcast
Moving forward, this podcast is likely to evolve. And I want it to evolve because music changes. Life changes, everything on this earth changes. So if you think the podcast would be better with X or Y, I would love to hear it. That could be an artist [that you would like to be featured] or music news, or anything that I cannot even think of, that would be awesome. So please give your input and let me know what you would like to hear on the podcast moving forward. I will do my best to cater to it. Of course can't make a promise that I will incorporate everything that everyone wants, that seems unreasonable. But your input will be listened to and will likely have an impact on the podcast moving forward.
Feedback is very much appreciated. Leave your reviews on iTunes and comments on FreioMusic.com/Podcast. You can get all the episodes and show-notes there. Parents, forewarning, there might be some explicit content. It is unforeseen when it will come up. So just know that if it is something that is unacceptable, maybe this isn't the podcast for you. If you are open to it, we will see where it goes. Basically, I just don't want to filter these artists. I don't want to mute their worlds. Let them come out and say what they need to say and how they need to say it. So that is my stance on explicit content. Not every episode will have any swear words but just know my stance on it. So that is your warning.
In case you were wondering who that cute, partially coherent, voice was at the beginning of the podcast, that is my nephew Declan who is obviously one of a kind. And, in my opinion, has the cutest voice in the entire world. You have got to agree, he has the cutest voice in the world. And if you don’t, whatever. I think it is awesome. He went off script, delivering the priceless line “Pottycast”. Which, I could never have foreseen. He looked at me, out of the corner of his eye, started smiling even before he said the word because he knew what he was going to say. And he knew it was naughty but he delivered it excellently. So thank you Declan for being to voice of the podcast and being the intro. I couldn't have done it without you.
Moving forward, I hope you enjoy the podcast. And please share it with your friends, leave some comments, give some feedback and enjoy the next episode.

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Filed Under: English (US), FMP, Language, Marketing, Musicians, Podcasts, Uncategorized Tagged With: 00, About, episode, freio, FreioMusic, fresh, Introduction, Michael, Michael Morahan, Morahan, Music, Podcast, the Freio Music Podcast, Zero

TMRW.TDay ~ The Vibe

June 17, 2017 By Michael

Photo (above) by Corey Hamilton

Culture Festival in Jamaica | TMRW.TDAY | Beachside Music Venue (Photo Description: Stage facing towards the land and the photo is taken looking straight at the stage towards the ocean horizon | Seven Mile Beach | Photo Credit: Michael Morahan
TMRW.TDAY | Negril, Jamaica | Photo Credit: Michael Morahan

TMRW.TDAY is a unique gathering of mindful reggae lovers. The cultural fest has a touch of house, a toe-pinch of white sand beach, a mouthful of flavorful fruits, a breeze filled with tropic scents, and island lifestyle for the retreat of a lifetime, and plenty of reggae to sooth your soul.

As an American who had never been to Jamaica before, it took a few days to reset my urgent internal clock, from a rapid walk to a soulful stride, more closely matching the graceful rhythm of the waves.

With early morning 8am, (yes this was ‘crack of the dawn early’ or the coffee shop is still closed early), Meditation the day started with a gentle stretch of the body and mind.  The venue was a 5-minute walk from where I stayed, so just an easy stroll on the beach and I was on “festival grounds”.  The meditation on the beach was enhanced with some live instrumentation for stress elevation.

Irie Soul's Stacy leading a yoga/meditation class ~ Savasana ~ Photo by Corey Hamilton
Irie Soul’s Stacy leading a yoga/meditation class ~ Savasana ~ Photo by Corey Hamilton

The Irie Soul Beach Wellness Program has a plentiful schedule of meditation (starting at 8am) and various yoga classes throughout the day. Clear-minded people flow off the mat and into the mingling area. Friendships created from the chance occurrences at Chances on the Beach.

With fruit drinks, a full bar and some local food, everyone is well nourished and in a good mood.

The pace of ‘island time’ is a phenomenon not unique to Jamaica.

The tides map the hours of most businesses and the music fills the void.

The event schedules tended to begin at least 30 minutes late, which made it easy to be early.

The live headlining acts command control of the 11pm-2am time frame.

Fun Fact:

The newly enacted Jamaican law requires a permit to host events at night and promoters must obey the Noise Abatement Act. “… permission is given to have an event up to 12 midnight during the week and 2:00 a.m. on weekends…  These laws are to protect the patrons that are coming to your events. Organizers must take into consideration the safety and security of the patrons. We (JCF) want the patrons to be safe,” – Head of the JCF’s Corporate Communications Unit (CCU), Superintendent Stephanie Lindsay (Jamaican Government).

 

Naturally, music pushes the limits.

 

Photo Credit: Russell Ward
Main Stage TMRW.TDAY | Negril, Jamaica | Protoje | Photo Credit: Russell Ward

 

Tmrw.Tday is run on island time and is designed for relaxation. With built in “just chill mon” times from 9am-4pm followed by a drum circle session from 4pm-7pm, one is never rushed.  Plenty of time for livin, chillin, and being. A dive into the tropical jungle. A dip into the calm ocean.  A soak on the white-sand beach.

Photo of the sunset over the ocean with a small motor boat silhouetted in the foreground.
Photo by Michael Morahan

The pace of the island is ⅔’s time, a slow wandering stroll’s beat.

The energy of the island comes from the sun during the day and from the people at night.

Looking back on the festival…

Tmrw.Tday was simple yet diverse. Easy to navigate yet spread out.  The variety of venues and attendees made the whole thing a pleasant experience.  We are excited for what the future of this Culture Festival has in the works.  First-year festivals are by definition an experiment, a new test and there are many unknowns to be worked out along the way.  With the first year

Don’t worry, we covered the music from Tmrw.Tday as well!  Music from Jamaica and Tmrw.Tday Festival 

 

 

 


 

Impressions from the Jamaican Culture:

Photo of street market in Negril, Jamaica. Colorful bags and clothes hanging on walls.
Photo by Michael Morahan

[quote] A morning went a little something like this:

I stroll to the beachside restaurant.  Get out my pen, notebook, & order:

“A Jamrock omelet, coffee & water, please”

“Ya mon”

“Thank you”

The rain yields for the time being to a cloudy haze that blends the ocean’s horizon into the sky.

The temperature is ripe.

The humidity is lively.

The pulse of the island is coming into light.

From the crickets of the night to the dancing paintings and carvings on the wall, music runs through them all.

The soulful melodies spill forth, almost involuntarily, from the locals.

Is everyone a natural vocalist?

[/quote]

The small businesses thrive in Jamaica and the markets are vibrant with people and goods. One person employment can be seen from the seven-mile beach.

One beach hustler’s day

Mad Rebel Recording Studio with two musicians out front of the ocean-front recording studio| Negril, Jamaica | Photo Credit: Michael Morahan
Mad Rebel Recording Studio | Negril, Jamaica | Photo Credit: Michael Morahan

A man carries coconuts, straws, and a hatchet. “Coconuts…” he says, as he walks along the beach trying to make eye contact with any and all tourists. He takes 5-7 steps.  “Coconuts…”  he repeats, as he is now 1o-15 feet further down the beach. He knows the limitation of his voice’s range and he is competing, after all, with other people and the ocean.  Again 5-7 steps.  Finally, “Coconut Mon….” for the last 1/3 of his vocal cadence.  The three-part vocal loop seems to serve as advertising, a pace setter, a marching beat, and reassurance that he is actually getting somewhere on the 7-mile beach.  If you are sitting on the beach you will probably hear the loop twice as he passes. What is that rule 7 for advertising again?  Oh ya, that people buy after they hear about your product several times.  When business is good, a quick walk inland and a new harvest can be acquired. When the sun gets low the day is done.

Each step is one closer to a new sale.  “Co-conut”… “Coco-nut”… “Coconut Mon”…

“There are around 500 beach hustlers” – Paul (beach hustler)

There is an ever-changing flow of people, tourists, and travelers who soak up the island tropical sun.

Friendly entrepreneurs selling a story with their product or service. Friendly people so jolly that a word is worth it.

The smooth trotting pink-hatted horse riding salesman, slowly making his moves. Everyone is hustling their products and services

A Yoga class stretching on the beach. Photo by Corey Hamilton with a man in a pick hat leading a horse in the background by the edge of the ocean.
Yoga Stretch | Photo by Corey Hamilton 

Later that day, the pink-hatted beach horse salesman scored a lady tourist for the ride of a life. He washes the young rider with vocal melodies and song.  With gentle guidance and a quick step, the man leads the lady and horse along the water’s edge. (The legend himself can be seen in background of the picture – see left)  
Creativity in approach, service, products & storytelling is on full display. Rude guests foil high hopes.

Clearly, the Jamaican culture benefits from tourism, festivals, the cross-cultural exchange of ideas.  Jamaica continues to attract creative minded people to the lush jungles and white sand beaches, to enjoy a brief visit to paradise.


 

 


 

 

 

We covered the music from Tmrw.Tday as well! Read and take a listen here: Music from Jamaica and Tmrw.Tday Festival 

 

 

Filed Under: Caribbean, EARTH, English (US), Festival, Genre, Islands, Jamaica, Language, New Music, Reggae, Tmrw.Tday, Vocals Tagged With: #TmrwTday, 2017, 7 Mile Beach, be, Beach, Culture, Culture Fest, fest, Festival, Food, freio, fresh, gathering, happy, irie, jamaica, laugh, Meditation, Mile, Mindful, Music, Negril, Ocean, Paradise, Party, Peace, Reggae, sand, Scenic, Seven, smile, smiles, Soul, sun, sunny, tday, Tmrw, Tmrw.Tday, TMRWTDAY17, TmrwtTday, Tropic, TT17, warm, West Indies, Yoga

Epic Remix Contest ~ $16,000 of Tools and Skrilla for Winners

April 24, 2017 By Michael

Epic Remix Contest

 Song:  Flying

Prize:  All kinds of tools valued at $16,000

Calling all Aspiring Producers and Electronic Musicians

Love Making Remixes? If so, this is for you!

West Coast Bass Pioneers ill.Gates and Stephan Jacobs have teamed up to host an epic remix contest calling novice music producers to submit their spin on the duo’s massive track ‘Flying’.

“Amateur DJs and producers from all genres and styles are encouraged to flex their remix skills and submit their version of ‘Flying’ “

Do you know someone who could win this contest?  Share it | Crush it | Win it!

All of the details below….


ILL.GATES X STEPHAN JACOBS ANNOUNCE OPEN CALL FOR EPIC ‘FLYING’ REMIX CONTEST

April 17, 2017 – Following the widely-successful release of his full-length studio album Terminally iLL earlier this spring, San Francisco-based producer ill.Gates has partnered with fellow pioneer of the West Coast Bass Movement Stephan Jacobs, and production services website ProducerDJ to invite rising producers to enter the most epic contest of 2017 offering up more than $16,000 in prizes! From now until June 12, 2017, aspiring remix maestros from across the globe can submit their take on ill.Gates’ and Stephan Jacobs’ massive track ‘Flying’ featuring Jackie Rain with winners announced June 23.

Described as a beautifully contrasting dark yet uplifting tune, the original ‘Flying’ blends future bass and glitch hop into a catch, sub-flexing bass-heavy summer anthem offering up an intricate melody for ill.Gates Remix Contest participants to reimagine. Amateur DJs and producers from all genres and styles are encouraged to flex their remix skills and submit their version of ‘Flying’ to SKIO Music where the top three tracks will be selected by ill.Gates alongside special guest judges, and released via brand new label Producer DoJo. Additional prizes include professional audio plugins, hardware controllers, music production tools + courses, and exclusive opportunities to collaborate with ill.Gates and his vast network of musical geniuses, courtesy of sponsors ProducerDJ, Plugin Alliance, SUBPAC, Sesh, Sugar Bytes, Dave Smith Instruments, Ableton, KJ Sawka, Nunich, Mr.Bill, Warp Academy, Tom Cosm, Keith McMillen Instruments (KMI), Maschine Tutorials, iZotope, and LANDR. See grand prize details below!

Looking to learn from the best before entering the contest? DJs and producers of all skill levels can learn the iLL Methodology behind remixing from ill.Gates’ free video course available now via ProducerDJ. The course reveals five simple yet extraordinary ways to unblock your creativity and to help producers finish songs as quickly and effectively as possible. Deemed “life-changing” and “incredible” by users, iLL Methodology is an essential learning tool for mastering beats.

ill.Gates’ first, full-length studio album since 2011, Terminally iLL is part of a series of airport-themed albums by ill.Gates. Set to release later this summer, second in the series is album Departures, which will feature left field, experimental, and out of character tracks inspired by festivals like Shambhala and Burning Man. On the horizon for ill.Gates is a whirlwind year, with marquee performances scheduled at Bassnectar’s Atlantic City Event, California’s Lightning in a Bottle festival plus stops throughout many U.S. cities — check out his upcoming tour schedule below.

To enter the ill.Gates Remix Contest and to listen to the tracks submitted so far, go to the Skio Music website and be sure to follow the contest terms — Good luck!!!

 

Stay Connected: ill Gates
Website | Soundcloud | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube

 

Remix Contest – Grand Prize
Official Release on Terminally ill Remix Album (Producer DoJo) * Producer DJ – 1 YR Membership ($2,400) * Plugin Alliance 100% AAX DSP V1.5 Bundle ($8,663 MSRP) * Warp Academy’s Pro Producer Bundle ($999) * iZotope Neutron, Ozone 7, Iris 2 and Trash 2 Plugins ($746) * KMI K-Mix ($579) * Subpac M2 ($299) * LANDR – 1 YR Pro Account ($299) * MaschineTutorials.com – 1 YR Membership ($180) * MrBillsTunes.com – 1 YR Membership and T-Shirt ($140) * Producer Social – 1 YR Membership ($100) * Tom Cosm – 1 YR Membership ($99) * ill.Gates Merch Pack & 1 hr call * Call with SKIO Music A&R’s

Filed Under: EARTH, English (US), Language, Remix, Remix Contest Tagged With: Contest, freio, fresh, Gates, Grand, Ill, Ill Gates, Music, Prize, producer, Remix, Remix Contest, thousands, tools, Win

World’s Finest

March 1, 2017 By Michael

The Domino Room-February 17th, 2017


Last Friday at the Domino Room in downtown Bend, Oregon, we were able to catch Leftover Salmon’s opener, World’s Finest. Featuring an electric banjo, saxophone, and vintage guitar, they had a rustic and organic vibe. Blending elements of ska, bluegrass and reggae, they were able to touch on several familiar sounds while adding their own character and a bit of a twist.

Juggling genres and different styles, it was obvious the group drew inspiration from assorted backgrounds. There were many moments of feel-good-bluegrass easily associated with Portland and The Pacific Northwest. Both upbeat and rock influenced it reminded me of groups like Fruition. Other times they would tone things down and switch over to reggae and ska. Some highlights included “Rub-a-dub” reggae and well timed breakdowns to group acapellas. With flexible musicianship, they were able to showcase a few covers as well.  My favorite was their funky-bluegrass cover of “Pick Up the Pieces” by Average White Band.  The nostalgia of the song, accompanied with their provocative saxophone, was a great way to close out the set.

Full of fun energy and a feel good vibe, World’s Finest had very personable crowd interaction and seemed to thoroughly enjoy their time on the stage.

Check out the links below for music and more on the World’s Finest!

Website

Facebook

 

Filed Under: Banjo, Bluegrass, Concert Reports, Drums Set (acoustic), EARTH, English (US), Experimental, Folk, Funk, Guitar, Instrumental, Instrumentation, Jamgrass, Live Music, New Music, NewGrass, North America, Oregon, Portland, Reggae, Rock, Singer-Songwriter, USA, Vocals Tagged With: Artist, Band, banjo, bluegrass, drum, Featured, freio, fresh, Live, Music, North America, Oregon, Portland, Reggae, sax, saxophone, ska, USA, Vocals, World's Finest

Pigeons Playing Ping Pong

February 15, 2017 By Michael

The Volcanic Pub Theater-February 12th, 2017

Wildly entertaining, eccentric and funk-nasty. The words that come to mind after last nights show at The Volcanic Theater in Bend, Oregon. I knew to expect some funk with an East Coast jam band influence. What I didn’t expect was a roller coaster of spacey interludes, mambo break-beats, and jazz waltz noodling. And yes, of course there was always a sneaky funk breakdown to tie it all together. On point transitions and tight coordination amongst the group allowed for fresh switch ups and genre blending. It’s hard to explain exactly how I would classify their style, but just take my word for it, you don’t want to miss them live. Its beautiful, musical madness at its finest. With a packed house on a Sunday night, Pigeons Playing Ping Pong definitely have a following and were a perfect fit for the wacky Bend crowd, looking to get the most out of their Sunday night.

It’s rare that you come across such an animated front-man as lead singer and guitarist Greg Ormont. Sporting pajama pants and a frizzy Afro, I’m pretty sure he never blinked. His wide array of facial expressions were both engrossing and humorous. My initial hesitation slowly grew into captivation and it became hard to look away. Incredibly skilled guitarist Jeremy Schon really took it to the next level. It was clear that this type of seasoned musicianship demanded a bigger stage. With a calm, natural presence on stage, Ben Carrey laid down filthy, funk bass lines to back the group. Drummer, Alex Petropulos playfully transitioned between different tempos, genres and moods with ease. All together, this group was a tight knit team. Their raw and playful energy on stage really reflected their confidence to push their music to new boundaries.

This group is big news and word is spreading fast. They had so much support that they were able to fund their new studio album “Pizazz” through contributions from their followers. It should be releasing sometime this Fall. Also, make sure and check out their new live album “The Great Outdoors Jam” coming out February 17th!! For those of you out in Colorado, Pigeons Playing Ping Pong will be playing at Red Rocks, August 13th with Moe and Twiddle!

Written by Greg Powell

Photography by Molly Buckiewicz

Buy Domain Names

For more info on upcoming tour schedule, music and the band check out the links below!!

Music, buy album
Website
Tour

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Filed Under: Album, Break Beat, Concert Reports, Drums Set (acoustic), East Coast, English (US), Experimental, Funk, Guitar, Instrumental, Jamtronic, Jazz, Live Music, Musicians, New Music, North America, Oregon, Soul, USA Tagged With: Album, Bend, entertain, entertaining, freio, Music, Oregon, pigeon, pigeons playing ping pong, ping-pong, playing, Rising, Star

Sonic Bloom 2016

July 12, 2016 By FreioMusic

    Sonic Bloom 2016 has a stacked lineup producing incredible performances too numerous to describe here.  It is safe to say, “SonicBloom has become one of the best electronic music festivals in North America!”  It is worth noting the international talent attracted to the base of the Colorado Rockies to share their vision, talent and art.  To see the full lineup click here.  

     The mindfulness and vision to attract the top talent from across the globe, must be recognized and commended.  The three official stages vibrated with historic house music. This festival is the nexus of the Colorado electronic music scene.  The location is perched atop a beautiful space of land with the foothills of the Rockies to the west and windmill filled fields that go on to meet the eastern horizon.  The festival has succeeded at curating a fertile ground for the world-wide cutting edge of musical maneuvering. 

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      The sound systems are tuned to the valley and can bump through the entire festival grounds.  The security is appropriately staffed and energetically aligned.  The friendly faces can be found throughout the campgrounds, stages, in swinging hammocks, in high fiveing security guards, or the dancing chefs who happily serve nourishing food at reasonable prices.  The ice, in high demand in the hot sun is the only noticeably overpriced product at $1/lb.  The showers run at full capacity as people line up for their chance to clean off that layer of accumulated dust and dirt that is kicked up from all of the movement.  The sunny and beautiful weather also brings with it the dryness enabling the dirt to turn to dust.   The wind is welcome and the stream is an oasis for people looking to take a dip and cool off. 

Photo by M.Morahan © Freio Music 2016
Photo by M.Morahan © Freio Music 2016

     The unofficial or ‘renegade’ stages include tipis and camp sites stacked with speakers and subs.  The colorful crowd and the apex of art have arrived to create an immersive experience that people are willing to dedicate four days to.  Some of the crowd has traveled from across the continent to enjoy the this dreamed up reality. 

      This festival has become a small close nit group of people who are looking out for one another to form a utopic village for just under a week.  The production continues after the last set as everything needs to return to its original order; stages must come down, lasers, lights, projectors, sound & lighting boards, 1,000’s of yards of electric wiring, speakers, microphones, instruments, and framework to name a few.  The thankless work of setting up all of the stages and hauling in the gear was executed with time to spare and enough technology to entertain even the most avid of festival goers. 

      People in their ‘A-Game’ costumes come energetically into the festival entrance in groups.  Everyone has made 10+ new friends and friendly neighbors.   The exchange of ideas, paints, music and visual art permeate the mind of every attendee.  One cannot help but be inspired by something of unique beauty.   


Day in the Life; at Sonic Bloom:

Winds whip down the hills and across the plains. Dust moves in a hurried Eastwood direction. Every walk of electronic culture strolls through the grounds interacting with experiences, sonic vibrations and frequencies across the perceptible spectrum. Cars have been rolling in for over 12 hours at a steady pace filling up the campgrounds. The lucky and wise are nestled among the 6′ shrubbery whose neighbors are bushes and trees. My neighbors on the other hand-made the pilgrimage to SonicBloom from Louisiana. A tightly packed vehicle of four young energetic and enthusiastic beautiful artistic human beings.  As a group, it does not seem possible to gather so many like-minded humans in a place to enjoy and thrive in a collaborative environment.

Friendly staff greet the goers. The hippy chicks and the electric glowers.

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      From the lighting to the sound, from the stages to the camp ground, there are smiles to go around. With the hammocks from Yammocks, and the beats from the peeps the festi is full of fun-loving music geeks.

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      Three stages of stacked sets featuring some of the top electronic acts from around the world.  American electronic music lovers treat this event as an annual pilgrimage to discover and reunite with the music, people and source of creative energy that is the foundation of a festival.  Creativity flows from the ornately decorated stages and sublimely composed tracks that suddenly take hold of the listeners and create a simultaneous bodily expression of enjoyment including but not limited to twerking, spinning, jumping, dropping, exploding or floating.

         The breeze kicked up into a howl for Nightmares on Wax’s last song featuring one of the most recognizable guitar riffs around.  The high energy Bonobo set was filled with masterfully woven bass lines pulsing through the night.  The crowd can be heard cheering for miles. 

Photo by M.Morahan
Photo by M.Morahan

      The late night stages rage like there is no finality to human diurnality. The artists continue to stoke the flaming crowd into the next adventure and from one set to the next. The solitude of night embraced with the warmth of bass and faces.With the evolution of the performances, the pulse of the festival was amplified and magnified by the exemplified beat technique. The audible entertainment abruptly ended, with a slow retreating high pass filter that faded out for 15 min or more notifying the audience that the silent disco was starting. With headphones on, the party rolls on…

The nexus of Colorado electronic music counter-culture is here; at Sonic Bloom, on the beautiful property at Humming Bird Ranch.  

Filed Under: Break Beat, Colorado, Concert Reports, Deep House, Digital Instruments, Drum Pad, Drum-&-Bass, Drums Set (acoustic), Dubstep, EARTH, EDM, Electronic, Electronica, English (US), Festival, Genre, Horns, House, Hummingbird Ranch, Instrumental, Instrumentation, Jamtronic, Jamtronica, Keyboard, Language, Laptop, Live Music, Lo-Fi, Loop Pedal, Minimal, New Music, North America, Percussion, Sax, Sonic Bloom, Sonic Bloom 2016, Soul, Stand-Up-Bass, Techno, Trance, Trip Hop, Trumpet, Venues, Violin, Visualizer / Visual Artists, Vocals, World Tagged With: 2016, Bird, Bloom, Colorado, Featured, fest, Festival, freio, fresh, Humming, Music, Music Festival, Ranch, Rye, Sonic, Sonic Bloom Music Festival, sonicbloom, SonicBloom16

Sonic Bloom 2016 LineUp

May 9, 2016 By FreioMusic

Sonic Bloom Announces Headliners

 

Once again Sonic Bloom displays their taste for cutting edge producers and artistic performers by attracting some of the best talent.  Artists will travel from around the world to gather for a celebratory event known as Sonic Bloom.  This year, Sonic Bloom’s lineup includes local artists from here in Colorado, talent scattered across North America and will even feature select international acts including a gifted Kiwi headliner.

 

SonicBloom 2016 Music Lineup - FreioMusic
FreioMusic reveals Sonic Bloom’s 2016 Lineup: International Talent and Headliners that will Sufficiently Supply your Face with Bass

 

The 11th Annual SONIC BLOOM will once again be held during the Summer Solstice, the weekend of June 16-19, 2016, in Colorado (location TBA).

 

SONIC BLOOM has a reputation for and history of finding and helping bring to light some of the best and brightest stars.  Previously featured acts include The Glitch Mob, Beats Antique, Big Gigantic and Pretty Lights. 

 

4-Day General Passes include entry into the festival on Thursday, free on-site camping and free drinking water. VIP 4-Day Passes, parking passes, limited car camping passes and RV passes are also on sale.

SONIC BLOOM’S Network:

Website: SonicBloomFestival.com

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/sonicbloom

Twitter: http://twitter.com/sonic_bloom

YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/sonicbloomfestival

SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/sonicbloomfestival

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sonic_bloom_

 


Other Articles about SonicBloom on FreioMusic:

Sonic Bloom 2014 – Author: Hari

Sonic Bloom 2014  – Author:  Molly 

Sonic Bloom 2015 – Authors: Molly & Greg

 

 


 

 

Filed Under: ASL (American Sign Language), Colorado, EARTH, English (US), Festival, Language, Live Music, New Music, North America, Sonic Bloom, Sonic Bloom 2016, USA Tagged With: #BREAK SCIENCE, #EOTO, #QUIXOTIC, #TIPPER, 2016, and many others, Announce, BassPhysics, Bloom, Bonobo, buy tickets, Featured, Festival, freio, FreioMusic, fresh, Gipsy Moon, Govinda, Headliners, includes, Info, lineup, Music, Nightmares on Wax, opiuo, Reveal, Revealed, Sonic, Sonic Bloom Music lineup, sonicbloom, Vibesquad

Gem and Jam Festival 2016

February 24, 2016 By Julien Deroeux

Gem and Jam Festival 2016

Tucson celebrated their 10th anniversary of Gem & Jam Festival over the Valentine’s Day weekend with a star studded lineup accompanying a plethora of beautiful art, rocks, and performers. Every musical act performed flawlessly as if they each could have easily been the main act of the night. Nearly every show had performers across the three intricately designed stages whether they were flipping fire or moving to the groove. For the first time, Gem & Jam added onsite camping to allow attendees to make the venue their temporary home. Every single soul Freio Music met over the weekend was extremely kind and loving, making it easy to feel welcome outside of our home state.

 

Lyrics Born

 

The festival was held over the perfectly weathered weekend as it saw temperatures reaching to almost 90° during the day and dropping to cool summer-like desert nights just in time for the music. Entry into the venue and will call was seamless as there were never burdening lines despite attracting the largest amount of attendees in their history. The venue, located at “The Slaughterhouse,” was a perfect size, allowing minimal walking from one stage to the next. After the music was over for the night, Gem & Jam kept the music going almost until sunrise with three afterparties each night. Two were in downtown, and one inside the venue at the Onyx Stage.

 

GJderoeuxphoto-1

 

 

Stunning art was spread throughout the entire venue with a constant crowd watching their creation. Artists were constantly tending to their paintings and putting out some of the most spectacular pieces of art ever seen. There were artists beside each and every stage as well as their entire surroundings, providing their own show of creativity.

 

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It was overwhelming to see so many amazing musical acts under one bill. One could bounce from one stage to the next and see a nationally or internationally renowned act throughout the entire day! The Quartz Stage was beautifully hand decorated with laser cut wooden sculptures and plenty of artsy structures providing both shade and something to gaze at. Pretty Lights Music’s Michal Menert and Eliot Lipp each brought their own uplifting beats and Tycho’s downtempo set took over the main stage Friday night closing out with Minnesota’s heavy bangers. The Jade Stage housed Colorado’s very own Magic Beans who jammed heavily until the festival’s close.

 

Magic Beans

On Saturday, the great music started with Dirtwire’s “swamptronic” music and didn’t stop until Beats Antique and their extremely well choreographed performers who closed out the second night. The night also saw many headline-worthy acts like the always entertaining dance moves of Polish Ambassador, the pulsing beats of Desert Dwellers, and UK’s OTT who definitely got the most people dancing during the whole festival. Once Arizona locals, Brothers Gow are always a pleasure to see as their jammy takes on old songs as well as their own can really get the crowd involved with their awesomely funny dance moves.

 

 

On its final day, Gem & Jam certainly did not slow down in terms of musical acts as many quickly-rising electronic acts took over the Jade Stage while legendary DJ’s and numerous live acts shook the main stage. Mark Farina brought his smooth “mushroom jazz” that laid backbeat to some very chill hip hop like A Tribe Called Quest. Marvel Years performed before going back-to-back with Manic Focus who brought the electro-funk to Tucson. Lyrics Born was the biggest hip hop act and gained many new fans with their lively show. Closing out the night, Lettuce’s funk music brought Gem & Jam to a bittersweet end. But before Lettuce, was our favorite of the weekend, Break Science with the Shady Horns. The horn section from Lettuce collaborated with Adam Deitch and Borahm Lee and provided a wonderful addition to Break Science’s electronic sound. Manic Focus even joined the party to put on quite the fun show.

 

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Tucson, Arizona treated us well with open arms and Gem & Jam held a beautiful gathering of thousands of kind-hearted people. Everything from the extremely kind security (thank you), to the savory foods, to the great music provided us with an unforgettable Valentine’s Day weekend. The experience was top-notch and certainly stands out from the other festivals of this time and we are beyond excited to see what they have in store for us next year.

 

 

Filed Under: Arizona, Break Beat, Drum-&-Bass, Dubstep, EARTH, EDM, Electronic, Electronica, English (US), Festival, Gem and Jam Festival 2016, House, Jamtronic, Jamtronica, Language, Live Music, Minimal, New Music, North America, Trip Hop, USA, World Tagged With: Arizona, electronic, Festival, freio, fresh, gem, Gem and Jam Festival 2016, Jam, swamptronic

Countdown: 7 Days – Arise Music Festival 2015

July 31, 2015 By FreioMusic Leave a Comment

Its official, there are only 7 days left to buy your tickets to Arise Music Festival without missing a beat!  If you are like us, you are trying to squeeze in as much entertainment into your summer as your wallet can buy and your boss will allow, listen up.  Ticket prices increase August 1st, so act now and buy your tickets here.  To find out more info about who is playing, the daily schedule and driving directions: click here.  If you have already attended the festival in past years please leave your impressions of the festival below in the comments. A quick festival check list for you is below. Add any items we may have missed in the comments below.

When:

August 7-9th. (Early camping for 3day pass holders starts the 6th at 4pm.


What to bring:

Water bottle
Camping equipment: sleeping bag & tent (or a snuggly friend)
Artistic clothes, instruments, structures, face paint, and
Hat & sunscreen
Warm and cold clothes (day and night).
*If you plan for bad weather you will have a blast regardless what nature throws at you; so bring that rain coat!
Food, Money, and Snacks
Friends
A positive attitude, a large lasting smile and a camera for those special moments.

Arise Music Festival is truly one of a kind. In the state of Colorado, there has never been a comparable event. Arise will take place again at the extraordinarily beautiful and welcoming Sunrise Ranch, just outside of Loveland, Colorado.   The location is spectacular and the festival has improved every year since its inception.  With new amenities, artists, and attractions this year is poised to be the best Arise Festival yet.  Colorado’s flourishing artistic community will be present and your arrival will be icing on the cake. We hope to see you there!

For more information, keep on reading ~ . . .

The 2015 installment of theARISE Music Festival is set to kick off on August 7-9 at the scenic Sunrise Ranch in Loveland, CO.

The three-day camping event will feature headlining performances with Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, The Polish Ambassador, Emanicpator Ensemble, Joe Russo’s Almost Dead, Ozomatli, Trevor Hall, Rising Appalachia alongside over 100 live performances across 6 stages.

The ARISE Music Festival first came to life at the picturesque Sunrise Ranch just west of the town of Loveland, CO in the summer of 2013 — bringing forth a full-bodied, innovative festival experience with a tangible uplifting vibe.  While the two main stages and the electronic zone will always be the ARISE Festival’s primary attractions, the 3-day gathering is also filled with yoga classes, health-oriented workshops, celebrity and environmentally active presenters, along with a children’s village and parades each day.

Much more than just a concert experience, ARISE offers an array of interactivedaytime activities, camping opportunities and a vending village that showcases a bohemian-style specialty coffee shop with a full espresso bar, unique craft vendors, delicious organic and natural food vendors and trucks, and unique goods from around the world.

At every twist and turn, ARISE offers a visual feast for the eyes and an experience for the senses. As roving puppeteers, stilt walkers, large-scale art installations and live painters dot the valley, it is clear that the annual ARISE Festival devotes as much energy into showcasing varied art forms as it does it’s main attraction…live music. Arise Alive Studios

Taking a peek under the proverbial hood of the festival one might find that ARISE Festival’s mechanics are grounded in conscious environmental ethics. Located on an organic farm with over 100 acres of festival grounds, ARISE puts a considerable amount of effort into greening up the “leave no trace” event by implementing high standards of sustainability practices and environmental stewardship. Local event service provider ZERO HERO empowers attendees with the knowledge and systems needed to easily recycle and compost and divert waste. The event also prides itself in providing FREE drinking water to festival attendees, choosing not to allow the sale of water in plastic bottles, and encouraging festival-goers to bring their refillable water bottles. ARISE has also aligned with Fort Collins-based non-profit Trees Water & People to plant a tree for every ticket sold.

For music fans interested in sustainable gardening techniques, The Polish Ambassador will host a Permaculture Action Day at Sunrise Ranch on Thursday, August 6th. The Action Day includes earth-based, hands-on projects and educational techniques in the study of permaculture design. For those who want to dive deeper, The Polish Ambassador also be hosting an Intensive Permaculture Course in the 3 days leading up to the festival at Sunrise Ranch. The course is a comprehensive program that will take students through the permaculture design process; touching on soils, water, forest gardening, appropriate technology, and several other aspects of whole systems design. With a focus on catalyzing social transformation, intensive attendees will learn techniques for regenerating ecology, as well as explore community building through action-oriented organizing. The Intensive Permaculture Course will only be available to 30 preregistered guests and will be an additional cost for participants. (Details for the Action Day can be found here).

Perhaps one of things that makes ARISE stand out from most of the other festivals in Colorado’s vibrant music scene is a commitment to book distinct artists covering diverse musical genres that brings a richly well-rounded approach to live entertainment.  Day and night, festival goers can enjoy over 100 live bands at any of the six stages or just take in the pristine views from one of the onsite bars or beer gardens.

2015 highlights include daily playshop sessions with featured artists along with a rousing discussion on engagement in social issues with Alex Ebert (Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros) and Josh Fox (award winning writer/director of HBO’s Gasland documentary films).

The festival will run from August 7-9 at Sunrise Ranch in Loveland CO, just over an hour from Denver, 45 minutes from Boulder and less that 25 minutes from Fort Collins, in the Colorado Foothills. A full range of upgrade options including VIP passes, Early Camping, Car Camping and Day Passes are available on the event website.

It is also worth noting that ARISE Music Festival is a family friendly event, with free tickets for children 12 and under and half priced Youth Tickets for 13-17 year olds.For the full music line-up and schedule, and to purchase tickets check out www.AriseFestival.com.

Filed Under: Acoustic, AfroBeat, Alternative, Arise 2015, ASL (American Sign Language), Bluegrass, Break Beat, Colorado, Drum-&-Bass, Dub, EDM, Electronic, Electronica, English (US), Festival, Funk, Glitch-hop, Gypsy, Indie, Instrumental, Jamtronic, Language, Live Music, Loveland, North America, Reggae, Singer-Songwriter, Soul, Sunrise Ranch, Tribal, Trip Hop, USA, Venues, World Tagged With: 2015, Arise, Arise festival, Arise Music Festival, Colorado, countdown, Festival, freio, FreioMusic, fresh, Loveland, Music, Music Festival, SunRise Ranch

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