Darby Strong

Playing point. Delivering the rock.

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Dream Job

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I have been making a bunch of mixed cd’s lately, which reminds me how much I love the process of mixing songs and being a DJ. As a natural (over) analyzer, I put a ton of thought into my mixes. Too, overthinking is destructive, because the audience must feel the mix, above all else. Finding the balance between the two, a dance where both intellect and emotion lead at different points, is key. Just as John Cusack’s character in High Fidelity (a great soundtrack, BTW), ruminates on the art of the mix, I see myself with my good friends, passionately debating the ingredients of an outstanding compilation.

Personally, I think it is fairly simple:

  • Start off strong, literally. Almost always, the first track should be upbeat (in tempo) and incredibly strong in its demand of the listeners attention.
  • Tell a story. Picking a theme helps stay true to the plot. (Note: Genre and mood can equal theme).
  • Ensure cohesive mood changes and song order. The order of the songs seems to be almost as important as the songs themselves.
  • Finish emotionally. This leaves the listener wanting more.

Back in the day, I used to make a mixed tape for a specific person, and would never give that same mix to a different person. Now, I have been using themes, rather than making a mix for a specific person, breaking my own rules of yesteryear of never duplicating a mix. New times require new rules.

The hours it took, though, in making a mixed tape, remember? To cue up the chosen song (rewind, stop, fast forward, stop, fast forward more, stop, rewind, almost there…), see if it flowed well into the next, repeat the process until the exact song was found for the exact slot, and on and on, was painstakingly laborious. It was all we knew, though, and making a mixed tape was an act of love. And getting one…well, that created a special bond. It allowed us to speak through music without passing a note in study hall. Now, someone makes a mixed CD and it’s a nice gesture, but doesn’t seem to hold the same weight as the mixed tape. Ahhh, the good ole days.

Which brings me to the point of this thought process; How cool would it be to get paid to make mixes? People do, ya know. This is now officially my dream job. I daydream of working with directors like Sophia Coppola and Wes Anderson in the pursuit of the stellar soundtrack. I always like to shoot for the top, ya know?

Allelujah, Praise the Stone

I have definitely morphed from an almost fully wild single creature to a tame and domisticated partner. This is evidenced most obviously by the sheer joy coursing through my veins right now due, soley, to the completion of our kitchen with the installation of our stone countertops. Make that – near completion. We still need a couple of finishing touches, like a cooktop hood, glass-tiled backsplash, pendant lights, and a cabinet finish or two, but you get the idea.

To aid you in your visual quest, I give you the before and after’s. The pic’s are presented from left to right; the one on the left, the before, and the one on the right, the after, from the same vantage points. Can you believe the difference? How SWEET is the after?

This post is getting awfully spiritual, what with the allelujah’s, possessed spirits, and the sweetness of the here-after. Plus, all the working to become complete, ever knowing that it will never be complete. Hmmmm. Maybe new kitchens are representative of Buddha. All the peace and serenity and calm and enlightenment and stuff…

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Shredded Trees

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The landscape architects and environmental planners at ah’bé in Culver City, CA, are creating trees out of shredded paper. The firm has taken six weeks of their paper waste and sculpted it into giant paper trees.

The term “sustainability” has entered the mainstream with such force that it teeters on the verge of becoming meaningless. This second installation in a 3-part series seeks to challenge the viewer’s understanding of these materials as “consumptive” or “wasteful”, and asks them to consider a more significant and vital meaning and intent of this term.

Although so many things about it scream high art, it seems a lot like Cali’s answer to modern Folk Art to me. The installation opened Tuesday and runs through May 18th at the MODAA gallery in Culver City.

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