Wednesday, September 23, 2009
DANCE DANCE DANCE!
New mix! Live off of two turntables.
http://sharebee.com/00ef7e1a
Dance Dance Dance
Live Mix
Tracks
1. Toy Selectah - Brklyn Raverton Break
2. Busta Rhymes - Don't Touch Me (U-Tern remix)
3. Santigold - Shove It (Grandtheft remix)
4. Lykke Li - Dance Dance Dance (Grandtheft remix)
5. SI2 - Way in My Brain
6. Miike Snow - Animal (Fake Blood remix)
7. Emynd - Kissed Me Theme
8. DJ Tameil - Bump Like This
9. Kazey & Bulldog - For the Real Gs (French Fries remix)
10. Sidney Sampson - Riverside (Dstar remix)
11. Pitbull - Go Girl (Risk One remix)
12. Rye Rye feat. MIA - Bang (Nancy remix)
13. The Kinks - You Really Got Me (Morsy remix)
14. Dire Straits - Money for Nothing (Top Billin remix)
15. The Rapture - OOTRAOTT (Mike B edit)
16. Kings of Leon -- Sex on Fire (Richard Sharkey & Peter Sar remix)
17. Radiohead - Everything in its Right Place (Discotech remix)
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
i Infection
9:24 a.m.
There is a summer sale happening at Crate and Barrel today. Limited availability. Selected items only. While supplies last.
I know this because for the past hour I have been sitting in a dusty green folding chair on a downtown sidewalk outside of the popular furniture store, staring in at its colorfully striped loveseats and floral-printed pillows. I will be here for the next nine hours.
It is June 29th and, for those few that do not make a habit of tracking significant consumer product launches, today the Apple Corporation releases its much-hyped iPhone – a technological marvel that, beyond the guarantee of intense happiness, promises to revolutionize the way we communicate. And those that know me at all know that revolutionary telephone devices are my passion.
Joining me on this gray morning are eighty to ninety eager consumers layered in various coats and sweatshirts and seated along the fringes of the sidewalk on the pavement or in folding chairs. Some have been camping here since the previous evening, fearful that a night's rest in their own beds would prevent them from achieving possession of the most advanced cellular phone ever created. We range in age from acned teenagers to an elderly Asian couple who will spend today seated on boxes as a favor to their son in Hong Kong, whose quality of life would be in grave peril were his generous parents not to spend a full day waiting to buy him a new phone.
But despite the disparity in age and cultural background, there is a sense of unity amongst those camped out here on the concrete. For while yesterday we may have been bartenders or IT managers or college students enjoying our summer break, today we are line-sitters. And we take our jobs very seriously.
12:00 p.m.
Six hours before the phone will be released for sale, our number stands at around one hundred and fifty and we span the length of two city blocks. Membership in the line ranges from the organized idlers of iWait.org to individual technophiles to entrepreneurs such as myself that are acting as paid surrogate consumers. The boy ahead of me in line is earning $15 an hour so that his mother may have an iPhone by night's end. He has spent most of the morning lying on his back unconscious, aware that this is one profession where the ability to sleep on the job is a saleable skill.
Our line has become an outdoor lounge of sorts, substituting plush leather seating for beach chairs, canvas matting and the occasional tent. Our members occupy themselves with books, Mp3 players and cell phones, which in only hours will be deemed pathetic and hastily exchanged for the object of our collective affection. My battered LG, for example, with its primitive wireless technology, its glaring absence of a touch-screen interface and its striking inability to indicate my location on Google Earth, is losing favor by the minute. It doesn't understand me like the iPhone will. It doesn't understand that my needs include access to exotic pornography at any given moment, or the ability to view the scientific consequence of mixing Mentos and Diet Coke when the need arises (and it does more often than you might think). iPhone knows that when I'm reading The New York Times on my cell phone, sometimes I want to read it vertically and sometimes horizontally. This ability I have long considered to be a universal human right and it is appalling that it is only now being widely recognized as such.
1:37 p.m.
The line has become a spectacle – a temporary attraction for tourists and department store shoppers that have ventured downtown. On approach to our line, the typical passer-by will first cast a confused squint at the linear mass that borders the street. This look will then change into astonishment as they realize the cause for the congregation and then finally, a bemused smirk emerges on their face at the collective absurdity of what they are witnessing. It warms their heart to know that people will devote their time to something that they consider trivial. Some never make it past the first stage of confusion, however. Others are simply disgusted. They don't understand. When I am using iPhone to record a high resolution video of my kitten playfully attacking an army of Lord of the Rings figurines, then who will feel absurd? Not me.
News of our brethren at other Apple stores periodically filters through the line. There is the courageous trio of young men who have braved the tough mall parking lots of Walnut Creek for the past 72 hours, their conviction never wavering despite the temperate climate and occasional wayward shopping cart. There is the Masonic coordination of iWait.org, its patient fingers spreading their docile grip across America's shopping centers. And then there is Greg Packer, the Michael Jordan of line-sitting, a man whose commitment to maintaining preeminence in our field has compelled him to begin the line at the 5th Ave. New York Apple store five days before iPhone's scheduled release. They are visionaries like Greg Packer that inspire the nation's best and brightest to invent flimsy excuses for missing work and then, spend days sitting idly on city streets awaiting the rare opportunity to purchase a new product several days before others can. Kudos Greg.
3:14 p.m.
The wait here has been pleasant for the most part. The temperature is nice, the company friendly and there is no shortage of attractive women to gawk at. A few entertainers have made their way down to the corner, apparently aware that here they have a truly captive audience. There is a sketch comedy group who laughs their way through a sloppy presentation and then offers to continue "entertaining" later that evening at a paid performance. I feel that I have already paid enough with my attention, and perhaps am actually owed a refund. The next act is a middle-aged clown woman, whose favorite trick seems to be lazily staring off into space. She mopes about for a few minutes until spotting a childish victim upon whom she unleashes the full force of her showmanship. The child, now apparently suffering from epilepsy, retreats in horror and quivers behind the protective legs of her parent.
There are other attempts at engaging our tentative spirit – an Asian boy shouting cheers into a megaphone, a flamboyant pair of cosmetic salesmen offering various pastel colored lotions and treatments – but these are unnecessary trivialities. We are focused. Not until we are caressing our newly purchased iPhones with trembling fingers and pressing them to our now tear-streaked cheeks will we be able to enjoy ourselves. It shan't be long now.
5:00 p.m.
Five o'clock. We have an hour until the store is scheduled to open. Beer and wine are being discretely passed around in some sections of the line. The afternoon sun hangs directly overhead, burning my neck and sending the elder line-sitters for shade. The line is now three hundred strong and members of the press scramble to document the occasion; but the novelty of being novel has worn thin. We want our phones.
5:54 p.m.
I am overwhelmed with a mixture of giddiness and anxiety. The line has collapsed to one half of its previous size as all chairs and coolers and other line-sitting accessories have been packed up or hastily abandoned to furniture scavengers and trash men. Across the street from the Apple Store, a sizeable crowd has gathered to watch and take pictures with their antiquated cell phones. The store has yet to open but already eager and confused phone enthusiasts are attempting to push their way in. The police have arrived and inserted themselves into the turbulent soup of photographers, tourists and Apple employees that crowd the entrance to the store. As the line moves, confrontations abound between line-sitters and our natural enemies, line-cutters. Despite our attempts to police the line, it has fattened significantly in the past ten minutes.
At six o'clock, we are greeted by the entire staff of the Apple Store, who parade around the block attempting to build excitement through childish screams, clapping and spontaneous cheering. If only they realized that using their power as Apple employees to actually sell me an iPhone is what would get me most excited.
Finally, the doors are opened to a passionate cheer and the line begins to steadily move. Those in the back of the line stand on their toes anxiously searching for confirmation that the sale has begun. Conversation is now limited to:
"Has anyone come out with a phone?"
"Have you seen anyone holding an Apple bag or anything?"
"Do you think there will be any left when we get up there?"
"Hey! Did that dude just cut in line?!?"
As I approach the front of the line, I am reminded of Vietnam War footage in which soldiers are hurriedly waved onto departing helicopters as an enemy closes in. The crowd here is thick and we in line are protected only by the outstretched arms of frail Apple Store employees and one pathetic stanchion that serves more of a symbolic than practical purpose.
At last I arrive in front of the line and am quickly waved and pushed in through the open doors of the pristine white Apple Store. Inside the store is nearly as chaotic as the scene outside. It resembles a crowded Indian bazaar, with some employees waving iPhone accessories at those waiting in line while others are pulling customers out of line to make purchases on their handheld virtual kiosks. Still others merely stand around smiling and clapping. An indistinguishable anthem blares from the store's sound system.
At some point, a young woman wearing a black Apple T-shirt tugs at my elbow and invites me to duck under the stanchion and go off with her. I agree and after leading me to a safe corner, she asks me what I would like. Stricken with some form of performance anxiety, I fumble with my words for a moment but then loudly blurt out, "Two eight gigs!" She nods with understanding, takes my credit card and promptly disappears and then immediately reappears holding two small black boxes, which she places in my trembling hands.
The boxes pulsate with heat and I suddenly feel like I possess the strength of ten men. I can also read people's thoughts. Not surprisingly, at this point everyone's thoughts are in some way related to their desire for an iPhone. My credit card is returned and I stuff the iPhones deep into my shoulder bag with a sense of fear. I then push my way toward the light at the entrance to the store as if navigating through an overpopulated birth canal. For some reason, I catch myself sucking my thumb. As I reach the crowd outside, an Apple employee shoots a solemn congratulation at me from my right side and then, after an intense battle for escape, I am in the street, alone with iPhone.
Fighting a nagging compulsion to leverage my purchase for some form of celebrity status, I instead walk back to Crate and Barrel, where I have planned a rendezvous with the woman who will deliver my iPhones to their new parents. I hesitate for a moment at the door, debating whether I shouldn't just elope with iPhone to a faraway land where the reception is strong and the wireless free. But then she appears, hands outstretched and wearing a cold look of formality. "This is the best thing for everyone," she says quietly. "You made a promise."
I hand over the boxes and my knees grow weak as she says goodbye and walks away. I feel as if I were a man whose love has just left on a plane without hearing all of the deeply held feelings that he had meant to tell her. The elaborate fantasies that had been building in my head throughout my hours in line have been heartlessly extinguished. My evening is colored with regret and as I walk to the subway, I feel a vibration in my jacket pocket and my eyes are flooded with tears.
Thursday, July 19, 2007
Swing Set
Sooo... I played a gig at a swingers club this past Saturday and it was a fairly interesting albeit unpleasant experience. I was turned onto the gig by an ad on Craigslist and, while the guy that booked me did not let me know what kind of party it was, I looked up the domain (twist-sf.com) in his e-mail address and from that was able to gain some idea of what I was getting into. Here's the story, if you're interested:
The venue was entered through an inconspicuous doorway in North Beach, down the block from The Hustler Club and across the street from The Hungry Eye, another strip club. I arrived 15 minutes early and was greeted by a thin man of about thirty, who, through a thick Russian accent, introduced himself as Ivan. The first room that I entered resembled the darkened lobby of an apartment building, with a stairway leading up to the right and another short stair leading down ahead of me. I was led down these stairs to a small room where a makeshift bar was set up on a folding table, behind which sat an attractive woman in her thirties who was playing bartendress for the night. She was also Russian and said that her name was Irina. Down another short set of stairs was a large room, dimly lit and featuring various ambient decorations - a laser light, ceiling drapes and a projector displaying the animated silhouette of a nude woman dancing against one wall. This was the room in which I was to play.
The DJ equipment was old and featured a technology (perhaps imported from Russia) that I had never encountered before. I am a vinyl DJ but the only equipment available here was a dual-CD player and an antique mixer. During a phone call earlier in the week, Ivan had asked me to bring "radio hits" and so I had burned a number of CDs featuring the hot club tracks of the day. Later on, I would realize that I should've clarified with him exactly which radio station he was speaking of when he made this request, as it would become clear that there was definite miscommunication.
After I was done setting up, an attractive older woman who introduced herself as Lana invited me for a tour of the top floor and I eagerly accepted. At the top of the stairs was another large room, with low ceilings and bathed in dim, red light. Following a circular path, we walked through a series of beds of various shapes and sizes, each separated from the next by translucent veils hung from the ceiling. At the far end of the room lay an enormous, round bed covered in pillows. This furnished island was not enclosed by veils as the others were, suggesting that this must be the orgy's main stage. At the other end, there was a large shower with a removable head and no door -- clearly installed as much for recreation as sanitation. As I toured around the room, doing my best to picture what it must look like at the party's height, Lana explained to me in a somewhat apologetic tone who they invited to their parties and what the purpose of the parties was, as well as telling me that during the week the venue was used to make designer clothing (your typical seamstress by-day, orgy hostess by-night immigrant story).
After the tour, I returned to my station as DJ and, by that time, a few guests had arrived. The rules of the party stated that guests must attend with a partner; there were no singles allowed. As I began playing some mellow hip-hop and lounge music, couple after couple trickled into the room. They were generally well-dressed white men and women in their late twenties to mid-forties, with a few older gentlemen also in the mix -- the Viagra in their systems causing more than their confidence to swell.
It was apparent early in the evening that the music that I had brought with me was not going to be well received by this older crowd. The hip-hop club bangers that I had in my small CD pouch elicited little more than stares and annoyed whispers from the guests that were now filling the seats that lined the room's walls. Occasionally, a courageous young woman would rise from her chair and attempt to inspire the crowd to dance but, upon realizing the futility of her attempts, she would quickly return to her seat and continue staring. It became clear to me that here, more than anywhere else that I had played, the crowd was dependent upon me to inspire a sexual mood. If the women couldn't dance, then they couldn't entice men to approach them and without this approach, their admirable dreams of having sexual experiences with strangers in public might remain unfulfilled.
At some point, a fourth Russian entered the room and after quickly shaking my hand, explained in broken English that he was the owner of this building and that this was his party. Sensing the discomfort of his patrons, he forcefully volunteered some programming suggestions, shouting in a thick accent, "More fast! More loud!" And while I found this advice helpful, I was still unsure as to how to deal with my dearth of "fast" and "loud" selections as clearly I had not thought to bring them. Apparently sensing this, he pushed his way behind the DJ equipment and pulled out a book of CDs from beneath the mixer. He handed the book to me saying, "Here! Play this!"
Eager to halt the oppressive staring that was generally focused on the DJ booth and my failing attempts to rock the party, I loaded one of The Russian's CDs and scanned through the tracks: Britney Spears, INXS, Pussycat Dolls, Clay Aiken, Fergie, etc. After swallowing my artistic pride, I transitioned into Beyonce's "Naughty Girl" and, like magic, the floor began to fill. I followed this with Nelly Furtado's "Promiscuous Girl" and then The Pussycat Dolls' "Don't Cha" and by now the chairs were empty and the dancefloor full. It was at this point that I committed to getting as drunk as I could. After filling up on Franzia, I continued the pop hit parade until I was interrupted by Ivan who shouted to me from the stairs that there was too much bass. Bass was pronounced like the fish and, while I thought I had caught a bit of a smell coming from the upstairs, I squinted my eyes at him not knowing exactly how I was supposed to correct that problem. He repeated the word "Bass! Bass!" and finally I realized what he was trying to say, replying, "Oh bass. Yeah, I'll turn that down."
Later on as I played a Jay-Z track, the elder Russian -- whose shirt was now unbuttoned -- approached the DJ booth and stated, "Some people have asked for some hip hop? Do you have hip hop?" He said this with an accentuated pause between the words hip and hop, asking as if he had never heard of the genre and wasn't entirely sure that whoever had made this request wasn't just speaking some nonsense. I shouted over Jay-Z's voice that I thought I probably had some hip-hop and that I would play it next. He seemed satisfied and returned to the dancefloor to be assisted with the removal of the remainder of his clothing.
The Russian's semi-nudity signaled a trend that was spreading across the floor as, emboldened by alcohol and cheesy pop music, the party-goers had begun to undress and aggressively grind on one another, however gracefully their aging bodies allowed them to. Breasts were made bare and eager hands searched their partners'
private parts as I tried to keep my eyes focused on the mixer and my CDs, aware that killing the floor at this point might inspire a sex-crazed riot. I couldn't help but look up from time to time, though, and I had to laugh aloud at what I saw. In one corner of the dancefloor a squat man of about 45, who could've been mistaken for George Costanza, was dancing with a large black woman who stood over him by a good six inches. As they swayed back and forth to the music, George had his hands placed on her breasts, moving them slightly as if tuning a radio. She seemed mildly turned on by this and smiled stupidly at him. Similar partnerships were found about the room, with attractive women putting their sexiest moves on display as interested men danced awkwardly near them.
Around midnight, pairs began filtering out of the room, hand in hand, and disappeared upstairs. I found that I could accelerate this process by making sloppy transitions and playing offensive music, and this was easy for me to do as I was now very drunk. By about 12:30, the room was entirely empty except for a couple that was attempting to slow-dance to the Ying Yang Twins track that I was playing.
I decided that I was allowed a break at this point and so I went to refill my wine glass and use the bathroom. As I passed by the stairway leading to the top floor on my way, I heard a din of ecstatic shouts and moans and a sarcastic smirk appeared on my now-reddened face. I looked up the stairway but could see nothing and so, Ireturned to the dancefloor where I began to play Radiohead and DJ Shadow and whatever I felt like listening to for the remainder of the night. A few females reemerged in the room and -- either exhausted from their experience or disturbed by what they had seen upstairs -- sat quietly against the wall.
A little before 2 the room began to refill, although the energy level
was noticeably lower. Ivan then came in with my payment for the night and granted me permission to leave. However, now enjoying myself because I was drunk and playing music that I liked, I stayed around for a bit and then put on a house CD as a joke and walked out into the streets of North Beach.
DJ Bio
Once upon a time, not long ago...
The story of White Mike is a long and mildly interesting one. No stranger to the entertainment industry, Mike earned his reputation as a performer at a very young age. As a dogged competitor on the youth beauty pageant circuit, by the age of 11, White Mike had already been named to Pretty Boy Magazine's "Hot 8 under 8," crowned Little Lord Fancypants at the 1989 Shokegan County Fair and won a role in an afterschool special in which he played a pre-pubescent boy coming to terms with his father's homosexuality. Following this, the pressures of show business proved a destructive force in young White Mike's life, if only briefly, and he entered what could accurately be labeled a "fat phase" At this point, he was relegated to status as the poster boy for a public health campaign to promote awareness of the dangers of childhood obesity (commonly known as the "Fat Chance Campaign").
Always a rabid fan of music and public appreciation, Mike bought two turntables and a mixer during his sophomore year in college and began spreading his love for a vast range of music (from German Microhouse to German Hardhouse) to unsuspecting party-goers at his school's events. Then performing under the moniker Anglo Jackson, Mike's parties became legendary for their ability to bring together diverse groups of young people (typically Germans) to dance to his celebrated sets. The "Nighty Nights," as his weekly parties were called, often featured the spectacle of exotic animals and burning objects (sometimes in combination). During his senior year at Neumont University (Get Your Degree in One Year! Visit www.neumont.edu), Mike was voted into the position of Minister of Culture and, during his one-year reign, primarily devoted his budget to the purchase of exotic animals and burning objects.
After graduating with honors, White Mike moved to Tangiers to "find himself." This was accomplished by growing a beard, holing up in a hotel for 2 years and regularly testing his body's tolerance for toxicity. Mike passed the test and also took up writing. His hobby became a passion and he produced powerful pieces that chronicled his double-life of junky by day and DJ/junky by night. Writing under the pseudonym Mike Honcho, White Mike published several critically acclaimed novels including Rocky Zero: Bounty Hunter and Nice Girls Don't Explode. A egregious misreading of his contract left Mike pennyless despite the success of his work and he gave up writing, swearing never to pick up a pen again.
After this experience, White Mike returned to his life's calling: DJing. For the past year, White Mike has been working to establish himself on the San Francisco club scene and is quickly emerging as a rising star. Mike was recently the feature DJ at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall during their Gerald Ford Remembrance ceremony, which many attendees considered a legendary booty bass/electrohouse set. White Mike can be seen at events and clubs around the City, including his residency at SF's 817 Oak.
(to listen to sample mixes, please visit White Mike's homepage at www.whitemikesf.com and click on "Downloads")
Baby Needed
Needed: Baby to Borrow or Rent for Stern Grove Festival this Sunday 7/22
I am looking for a baby, aged 18 mos. to 4 years to accompany my friends and I to this weekend's Stern Grove concert. We have attended the festival these past two weekends and felt a growing sense of emptiness as we watched glowing adults fondle and play with their excited children while we were left fondling ourselves and our drunken companions. It seems a necessity for us, if we are to continue enjoying ourselves for the remaining Sundays this summer, that we inject some sort of dramatic catalyst into our routine concert-going activities and a baby seems the best form of injection.
If you are a parent of an eligible child or a baby with an extraordinary sense of independence, take the time to consider my proposition:
-- I am willing to pay a reasonable hourly rate, or at least put down a deposit of equal value to the child received.
-- I can also promise that we will all be very nice and well-mannered with the baby. I feel confident in this promise as part of our weekly tradition is to "drop" certain substances that ensure loving and "deep" human interaction. The baby will receive complimentary back massages and repeated affirmation that it is amazing and loved. (Parents with poor genes needn't worry as we can guarantee that we will tell your baby that it is amazing and loved even if it isn't).
-- Also, any revenues garnered through sale or use of the baby will make their way back to the baby's proper owners minus an agreeable commission.
Now, before you start dialing my number, please note that we have specifications for the baby desired that are non-negotiable:
1) No white babies. I am white and it is important that the baby be distinguishable as one that is under my care but not the product of my seed (i.e. not my responsibility in the long-term). While I may use your baby to attract the attention of young females in the area, it is important that they recognize that while I am a sensitive guy that loves cute things like babies, our potential relationship will not be saddled with the obligations that a needy young child requires.
2) Also, while Korean and Iraqi/Irani babies may be fun and fashionable in 2006, I regret that we cannot accept their application as we do not wish to put forth the energy to protect them from other more Aryan or jingoistic babies in the park. If the baby can demonstrate a significant talent for self-defense, then we may reconsider.
3) Your baby must be cute! I cannot stress this enough. If the sight of your baby does not compel women to smile, wave or feel anxious about their own unfulfilled desire to have a baby, then we do not want it. I'm sure your baby is good for something, but not our purposes. Stay home and teach it to be funny or interested in science, perhaps.
4) The baby must have a vocabulary of 10-100 words. No more, no less. It is important that the baby acknowledge simple childish things that we may feel compelled to say to it but is not one of those babies that always wants to know things or has an awareness of how to properly communicate to us that it is uncomfortable or bored. We would rather operate on convenient assumption.
5) The baby must be open to wearing costumes of our choosing and potentially making several costume changes throughout the day. Every member of my party has their own cute little fantasies about what our baby should wear and it is only fair to allow each a moment or two to enjoy the fulfillment of their vision. The baby should do its best to act as if it loves being dressed up as Darth Vader or a panda bear or whatever it is we decide is most appropriate. Any complaints or "crying" should be reserved for the debriefing with the parents, at the end of the day.
Those qualified shouldn't hesitate to give me a call. I'm certain that this will be a rewarding experience for all of those involved. If I receive your offer, please be prepared to provide me with photos of the baby and relevant demographic information. I look forward to doing business with you!
Thanks,
Mike
253-376-1498