Horse Lords – Bandwidth http://bandwidth.wamu.org WAMU 88.5's New Music Site Tue, 02 Oct 2018 15:23:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.2 Exploring ‘The Great Outdoors,’ Andrew Bernstein’s Audio Vortex http://bandwidth.wamu.org/exploring-the-great-outdoors-andrew-bernsteins-audio-vortex/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/exploring-the-great-outdoors-andrew-bernsteins-audio-vortex/#respond Mon, 28 Mar 2016 16:13:23 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=62787 Intense and disorienting, Andrew Bernstein’s The Great Outdoors feels like a vortex tunnel — except you can’t walk into it. To get inside, you click on a link.

The new work from Bernstein, who plays saxophone in the adventurous Baltimore quartet Horse Lords, attempts to redefine how digital real estate is used. But exploring it may mean subjecting yourself to an uncomfortable experience.

Visit Bernstein’s website for The Great Outdoors, and you’re introduced to four sets of mind-numbing video and audio. The sound portion combines sax squawks and piano notes with helicopter drones, and they’re paired with repetitive animations that are the visual equivalent of locked grooves.

If it seems like intellectual porn, that’s because it kind of is. Bernstein says The Great Outdoors is essentially the final project for his MFA at Goucher College.

“[I was] pushing myself technically and artistically to try to figure out what an album could be in the Internet age,” Bernstein says.

The composition seems like something you’d encounter in a modern art museum, but Bernstein wants to bring unconventional art to an accessible platform, making the Internet a type of everyman’s gallery. But the work is immersive and beyond the audience’s control. In The Great Outdoors’ web space, there is no play, pause or fast forward.

Bernstein says he wants his work to challenge people to see and hear things in new ways, “or pay attention to their own vision and hearing in a new dimension.” He thinks the Internet medium can help achieve that.

Andrew Bernstein of Horse Lords

Andrew Bernstein

“I’ve thought a lot about what a website is, and what websites try to do — be useful or get you to buy something,” he says. “[I] wanted to make something that … sort of didn’t have a purpose. A website that created a space that was just meant to be experienced, and not necessarily meant to do anything.”

Bernstein credits modern saxophonists and early drone music for influencing The Great Outdoors, along with Object Oriented Ontology, a domain of metaphysics that seeks to understand existence beyond a human lens. (According to scholar and game designer Ian Bogost, OOO contends that “nothing has special status” and “everything exists equally.” Bernstein says he’s still trying to wrap his head around the concept.)

However complex the theory behind it, though, The Great Outdoors synthesizes a common pre-Internet experience: It’s like staring at television static, waiting for something to emerge from the fuzz — because every now and then, something does.

Andrew Bernstein’s The Great Outdoors is out now on Ehse Records and its video accompaniment is viewable on the project’s website.

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A Bunch Of Baltimore Bands Covered Sisqó’s ‘Thong Song’ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/a-bunch-of-baltimore-bands-covered-sisqos-thong-song/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/a-bunch-of-baltimore-bands-covered-sisqos-thong-song/#respond Tue, 16 Jun 2015 17:39:40 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=53460 The 15th anniversary of Sisqó’s monster single “Thong Song” could have wafted past like the scent of coconut body oil on a summer breeze. But Baltimore public radio station WTMD couldn’t let that happen.

To commemorate the Baltimore native’s hit — which dropped on New Year’s Eve of 1999, but topped the charts the following summer — WTMD commissioned “Thong Song” covers from seven Baltimore artists. Horse Lords, TT the Artist, Wing Dam, Thee Lexington Arrows, Soft Pink Truth, Microkingdom and The Manly Deeds all turned in versions that range from wacked out to cranked up. Not all preserved the song’s most infamous lyric, “Dumps like a truck, truck, truck.”

On WTMD.org, writer Sam Sessa also has a story about the origins of “Thong Song,” well worth reading.

Listen to these ridiculous covers below:

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Photos: Baltimore Gets Weird At Fields Festival http://bandwidth.wamu.org/photos-baltimore-gets-weird-at-fields-festival/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/photos-baltimore-gets-weird-at-fields-festival/#respond Mon, 25 Aug 2014 18:08:02 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=38380 Promoted as a camping, music and arts event, Fields Festival took over a campsite in Maryland last weekend and brought hundreds of Baltimore musicians, ex-art students, costume aficionados and performers to the site in Darlington over three days. Some of the ambitious fest’s bigger attractions included Dan Deacon, Jenn Wasner’s Flock of Dimes and Matmos—but most of the artists booked to perform dwell happily in the margins of Baltimore’s arts community.

Photographer Valerie Paulsgrove attended Fields Festival and captured these moments from the colorful and occasionally rain-soaked weekend.

Abdu Ali at Fields Festival

Abdu Ali

Abdu Ali at Fields Festival

Abdu Ali

Zomes at Fields Festival

Zomes

soundNest installation at Fields Festival

soundNest installation

Pool stage at Fields Festival

The pool stage

Nautical Almanac at Fields Festival

Nautical Almanac

Nate Young AtFields Festival

Nate Young

Matmos at Fields Festival

Matmos

Lexie Mountain Boys at Fields Festival

Lexie Mountain Boys at Fields Festival

Lexie Mountain Boys at Fields Festival

Lexie Mountain Boys

Crowd at Lexie Mountain Boys at Fields Festival

The crowd watching Lexie Mountain Boys

Leprechaun Catering at Fields Festival

Leprechaun Catering

Inflatable Ball art at Fields Festival

Inflatable ball art

Horse Lords at Fields Festival

Horse Lords

Free Sherbet At FieldsFestival

Dave Adams’ performance “Free Sherbert”

Flock of Dimes at Fields Festival

Flock of Dimes

Flock of Dimes at Fields Festival

The crowd watching Flock of Dimes

Fields Festival

A conversation between partially clothed attendees

Fields Festival

The idyllic setting

Dan Deacon at Fields Festival

Dan Deacon at Fields Festival

Dan Deacon

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