Kevy Baby
05-04-2006, 09:58 PM
Has anybody ever heard of him?
I saw a blurb about him in today's LA Times (http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-wk-bands4may04,1,7444802.story?ctrack=1&cset=true):
The album's title harks back to L.A.'s rave scene of the '90s, when parties seemed unending "and there was something apocalyptic about it," says Daedelus, who was born Alfred Weisberg-Roberts and has changed his name to Alfred Darlington. But the music remains characteristically sample-heavy, while achieving the swoon of an artist influenced by "all those great film composers who made their best records when they went to Rio."
"I'm from the pretty electronic side of electronic music," says Daedelus, who in solo shows plays a sequencing contraption called a Monome (mono-mee). "To be honest, this is me trying to represent dance music from my perspective, though it can still sound techno-y and still have things that go bump in the night."
Also found this about him online (http://www.plugresearch.com/daedelus.htm):
One of LA's most daring new artists wears a buzzing halo. This young musical romantic weaves together a true "love-sound" that falls between honeyed melody and avant-electronics. Daedelus chops and splices disparate acoustic sources into incredible works of staggering resonance. His production style is very unique; it has a precise impact that will make you wonder if you’re dreaming or dancing.
Caught between myth and reality, past and future, Daedelus produces sonic mazes from a studio deep within Santa Monica, California. Crafting waxen wings from his background in live instruments, a young Daedelus began noodling bass clarinet notes, and soon graduated into the covenant of double-bass. After an ill-fated affair pondering classical and jazz, rave paved the way, and a burgeoning record collection fueled Daedelus’ artistic creativity, preparing the path to his first full length release, Invention. Inspired by 30’s, 40’s and 70’s grooves, and defying genres such as downtempo and hip-hop, Daedelus gradually begins to venture into the L.A. afterdark.
Something about the descriptions REALLY captures my attention. I gotta look into this guy.
I saw a blurb about him in today's LA Times (http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-wk-bands4may04,1,7444802.story?ctrack=1&cset=true):
The album's title harks back to L.A.'s rave scene of the '90s, when parties seemed unending "and there was something apocalyptic about it," says Daedelus, who was born Alfred Weisberg-Roberts and has changed his name to Alfred Darlington. But the music remains characteristically sample-heavy, while achieving the swoon of an artist influenced by "all those great film composers who made their best records when they went to Rio."
"I'm from the pretty electronic side of electronic music," says Daedelus, who in solo shows plays a sequencing contraption called a Monome (mono-mee). "To be honest, this is me trying to represent dance music from my perspective, though it can still sound techno-y and still have things that go bump in the night."
Also found this about him online (http://www.plugresearch.com/daedelus.htm):
One of LA's most daring new artists wears a buzzing halo. This young musical romantic weaves together a true "love-sound" that falls between honeyed melody and avant-electronics. Daedelus chops and splices disparate acoustic sources into incredible works of staggering resonance. His production style is very unique; it has a precise impact that will make you wonder if you’re dreaming or dancing.
Caught between myth and reality, past and future, Daedelus produces sonic mazes from a studio deep within Santa Monica, California. Crafting waxen wings from his background in live instruments, a young Daedelus began noodling bass clarinet notes, and soon graduated into the covenant of double-bass. After an ill-fated affair pondering classical and jazz, rave paved the way, and a burgeoning record collection fueled Daedelus’ artistic creativity, preparing the path to his first full length release, Invention. Inspired by 30’s, 40’s and 70’s grooves, and defying genres such as downtempo and hip-hop, Daedelus gradually begins to venture into the L.A. afterdark.
Something about the descriptions REALLY captures my attention. I gotta look into this guy.