spring break breakthrough
Transcription
spring break breakthrough
VO L . I | NO . 1 | FA LL 2012 FEEL IT. FOLLOW IT. FINDING HER VOICE MAGGIE PAKUTKA 13 SPRING BREAK B R E A K T H R O U G H THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: MANAGING EDITOR: SOCIAL MEDIA EDITOR: FEATURES EDITOR: NEWS EDITOR: REVIEWS EDITOR: PHOTO COORDINATOR: SENIOR WRITERS: VIDEOGRAPHER: REPORTERS: PRODUCTION EDITOR: COPY EDITOR: CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: COMMUNITY OUTREACH: PUBLISHER/FACULTY ADVISOR: CREATIVE DIRECTOR/FACULTY ADVISOR: Briana Rodriguez Scott Duwe Catherine Castro Christie Rotondo Rebecca Strassberg Andrew Marinaccio Meredith Jones Rebecca Kaplan Kevin Redding features UPFRONT FOUNDED 2011 ART DIRECTION & DESIGN: PHOTOGRAPHERS: Michelle Huey Roman Dean Kellyann Petry LETTER FROM THE PUBLISHER LOGO DESIGN: COVER PHOTO: Alyssa Evans Kellyann Petry Conversations with Purchase’s nationally-ranked beatboxer, Spencer Polanco, and music professor, Dr. Joe Ferry. A welcome from publisher Andrew Salomon... 4 UPFRONT WITH... By Aurora Fowlkes & Meredith Jones ... 5, 6 Occupy Wall Street wanted to wrest power from the 1 percent, and to redefine power itself. On the cusp of its first anniversary, how much juice does OWS still have, at Purchase and around the world? By Rebecca Kaplan ... 12 SUNRISE ON SUNSET BOULEVARD COVERING THE AGES The Cover Show, with live tributes to 1990s bands, is a new fave. David Grimaldi Aurora Fowlkes Ashley Helms Michael Kerwin Lisa Eadicicco Daniel Nation Michael Andronico Anthony Aquilino Scott Interrante 12 16 20 23 25 FROM MIKE CHECK TO REALITY CHECK By Jillian Lucas ... 7 CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Scot Moriarty, Purchase’s producer of choice. By Kevin Redding ... 8 Sean McVerry had a dream-like spring break, working and partying in the Hollywood Hills with J. Cole. Now that it’s fall, all the senior comp major has to do is prove it wasn’t a one-shot deal. By Rebecca Strassberg ... 16 GAME CHANGERS SHOCK & LAWN Ecstasy, agony, splendor in the grass: a Culture Shock pictorial. Photographs by Roman Dean ... 9 Ole Skaar One of hip-hop’s last taboos—being an openly gay artist—is slowly yielding to people like Purchase alum Andy Smart and underground movements like sissy bounce. By Christie Rotondo ... 20 FINDING HER VOICE Andrew Salomon, Assistant Professor of Journalism Robin Lynch, Associate Professor of Art+Design Maggie Pakutka, of Maggie and the Hat fame, is a woman trying to make it in the man’s world of music engineering. The Beat Q&A. By Ashley Helms ... 23 ALL FUNK’D UP Mokaad is blending hip-hop with old-school funk, and turning heads while dropping the beat By Kevin Redding ... 25 FOUNDING CONTRIBUTORS The staff thanks all who generously give to make The Beat possible, including: We apologize if you contributed to The Beat and we forgot to include your name. Please notify the editors at [email protected] In the subject line put “ FORGOTTEN CONTRIBUTOR” We will include your name in our next issue. 2 Robin Lynch Frank & Rebekah Ahrens Michael Long Diane O’Brien Sheryl Huggins Salomon Eric Kaplan Richard Alfredo Anonymous Ross Daly Larry Elkin Meri Beth Jones Janet Kelsey Nancy Kaplan Suzanne Kessler Madeline & Gerald Marinaccio Michael & JoAnn Marinaccio Theresa & Jim McElwaine Tony Reid George D. Reilly Marisol Rodriguez Charles Salomon Robert Cook & Kealy Salomon In Memory Of Marylee R. Salomon Samantha Strassberg Kenneth Tabachnick Louise Yelin Philip Kaplan Gloria Castro Dave Catuogno Laurie Engemann Tara George Noel Holston & Marty Winkler Patricia R. Klausner Kristin & James Luebbert Nathan Lunstrum Jeffrey & Peyton Marcus Sheyla Navarro Gail & Richie Porter Dianne Rotondo Julie & Anthony Rotondo Tina Marie Rotondo Maria Somma StamptheBand.com Stacey Strassberg Rebecca Strassberg Matt Semel Tad Welch Mary Alice Williams Anonymous Donald Beard Virginia & Tom Breen Donna Cornachio Alexa Dillenbeck Vinny Duwe Mara Goldman Paul Griffin Bella Feldman Charlie Fonville Johnette Howard Cheryl Kushner Guara Narayan Melissa Ortiz Judy Hoffstein & Joel Patenaude Ronni Reich Patrick P. Salomon Laurence Sheinman Stéphane Verlé-Smith Kathleen Tolan Tina Carletto Andrew Marinaccio Julian Rubinstein Andrew Scott Halley Bondy Kathryn Churchill Laura Chmielewski Luke Crowe Scott Duwe William Franke Leslie & Tony Goldsmith Harper Habbersett Anna Helhoski Scott Interrante Harriet & Phil Janovy Genetta M. Adams Zack Berliner James Bartha Kyle Carrier Sarah D’Andrea Jordan Griffith Steven J. Hamrick, Esq. Daniel Holloway Scott Interrante Bill Junor Ted Kaplan Shomar L. William A. Loeb Jillian Lucas Tiffany Lumsden Christine Perner Alexandra Pusateri Gene Seymour Lily Thrall Chrissy Vitolo Mark Waldron the pulse of purchase QUARTERNOTES ... 27 Michelle Charles: Misogynistic rap video turned on its head Kelly Izzo: Alice out of Wonderland Ariel Loh: Tonight, they are “The Young” REVIEWS ... 28 Hannibal King: “The High Times of Don Chiesel,” reviewed by Andrew Marinaccio Bryant Dope: “Queens Kids,” reviewed by Scott Interrante Stone Cold Fox: “The Young,” reviewed by Michael Andronico Wess Meets West: “Chevaliers,” reviewed by Anthony Aquilino Mitski: “Lush,” reviewed by Anthony Aquilino YEAR IN REVIEW ... 30 A look back at the 2011-2012 school year Fall Fest 2011 PHOTO BY KELLYANN PETRY By Lisa Eadiccico 3 It’s common for professors to smile wryly when students have ventured into the world, discovered that what we’ve taught them is true, and return to relay their wonderment. “My editor hates quote ledes just as much as you do.” “The producer scolded a staffer for coming to work in jeans.” “The guy who always shows up late always turns in the worst copy.” At least we know they were listening. Between The Beat’s notional and physical lives was its virtual one, and credit goes to Catherine Castro, who set up our Facebook page and Twitter feed, which generated buzz and demand and helped fuel our fundraising drive. Unfortunately, she screwed up in reverse, and is now responsible for developing our website, the main project for this year. Sorry, Catherine. Truth is, the wonderment cuts both ways. We’re often amazed when students show us how well they’ve listened in the work they do. Last year I was editing a stack of profiles for my course The Beat of Music Journalism. I was continually buffeted by compelling tales of people yearning for unique and universal things, overcoming obstacles, battling the odds. Suddenly, I wasn’t grading a stack of papers anymore. I was reading the rough draft of the first issue of a magazine. Meredith Jones had the unenviable task of coordinating our photo shoots, which means trying to align the schedules of college students. I would liken it to herding cats, if only college students possessed the consistent pliability and sense of cooperation that one gets from cats. Meredith also came through to do our Q&A with Dr. Joe Ferry. A few weeks later, a student came to see me about her senior project. When she finished I said, “I would like to start a print magazine at Purchase that’s devoted to music and long-form journalism, and I’m looking for an editor-in-chief.” “I’ll do it,” she said. As editor-in-chief, Briana Rodriguez wasn’t what I hoped. She was better. As an editor, she spotted holes, pressed for rewrites, doled out praise. She drove through rush-hour traffic each Tuesday night for meetings, wherein she would provide graceful ballast to my hyperkinetic, Tourettsean mien. What you’re holding in your hands wouldn’t be there unless her professionalism and strength had matched her enthusiasm. The Beat needed more than Briana, and we got it. Scott Duwe is a managing editor of unflinching honesty and unceasing drive. If Briana is our heart, Scott’s our spine. Christie Rotondo and Becca Strassberg will either be great reporters or great editors—my mind changes every day. Their editing and leadership, as well as their stories on gay hip hop artists and Sean McVerry, respectively, have helped to establish our standard going forward. So, too, has the work of Andrew Marinaccio, who is an uncommon choice for reviews editor, because he’d rather his work prompt new questions than stand as the final word. Would that all critics and their editors were thus. Rebecca Kaplan (Occupy Wall Street) and Kevin Redding (Studio A, Mokaad) are as talented as they are unflappable, taking every assignment thrown their way and delivering more than asked. LETTER FROM THE PUBLISHER UPFRONT WITH Spencer Polanco THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 The Beat is first and foremost a print publication, and we couldn’t exist in physical form without a pack of students from Prof. Robin Lynch’s Community Design class, led by Michelle Huey. Her and her classmates’ artistry and patience have made the magazine what it was intended to be—something you can hold as well as read. In media, what we’ve gained in immediacy we’ve lost in intimacy, and to have news that matters you need both. Not both in the same outlet, but definitely both in the same informational ecosystem. We’re losing our diversity of form, and form matters. If you don’t believe me, look at what was done to transportation in postwar America— the wholesale gutting of railroads has left us too dependent on the automotive industry. Who knows—if we had more trains, we’d have more time on our way to work to sit and think, or to read. I’ve seen the numbers on print magazines and young people. It ain’t pretty. Pew tells us the average age of print magazine readers is 44, and that number is going up. I don’t care. I have two-dozen people all under the age of 25 who have devoted time and energy they can’t spare to make a magazine, a print magazine. They aren’t representative of their generation, but they are the best of it, so why not follow their example? Isn’t that what we’re always told, to follow the best? So don’t just read and marvel at the work here. Listen to it. You’ll be amazed by what you hear. PUBLISHER BY AURORA FOWLKES PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN Beat by beat, a 20-year-old bio-med major at Purchase is making a name for himself— and helping America to reclaim an art it invented. HOW DID IT FEEL TO BE RANKED THE SEVENTEENTH GREATEST BEATBOXER IN AMERICA? I felt really proud to be ranked 17th in the nation, but the feeling of pride goes beyond a number. I was just happy to be part of the leading movement of vocal percussion in America. At first I was startled when I received the ranking of 17th, because I came so close to the finals (Top 16). I couldn’t believe I was the cut off. But this just inspired me to practice my craft. HOW DID ALL OF THIS START? Two summers ago...I made a video for an audition to do an event in Austria. It went viral on YouTube, and since then many people have been contacting me to book performances, and to collaborate with them. I’m on someone’s mix tape, I’m gonna be recording with many people at Purchase, and I have a lot of projects I want to set up for beatboxing. IS THERE A CERTAIN NUMBER OF SOUNDS YOU CAN MAKE? What’s interesting about beatboxing is that you can make just about any sound you can think of. If you break down words, they’re just different letters combined. If you break down beatboxing, it’s just different noises combined. It’s like talking, almost, but with sounds instead of words. [Spencer demonstrates: drinking water, bird calls, zipper sounds, and helicopter sounds, as well.] There are a lot of different things you can do, and that’s what I really like about beatboxing and stage performances. I can make the crowd visualize whatever I want. WHAT INSPIRES YOUR ART? I think the community of music here at Purchase is really inspiring. If it wasn’t for the hip-hop club, I wouldn’t have performed here. WHY DO YOU CONTINUE TO BEAT BOX? I didn’t realize this before, but beatboxing is kind of like an underground collective; America is kind of late with the wave of beatboxing. Although we founded the art, we kind of died out. Now, it’s coming back up and I hope to be one of the people in this movement that really does something. I feel like it’s an unrepresented art. It’s the most manmade, organic instrument that someone can have, and if someone wants to express their artistic ability through it, I feel that’s fantastic. I still have a long way to go from where I see myself being in beatboxing. But I have dreams and I know how to get there. And until I reach that goal, I’ll just do what I do best, and beatbox my heart out. Of the 2012 American Beatbox Championships which took place in August, Polanco said, “This year, I’m ready. The competition is going to be a lot harder as the beatboxing community has grown more in the U.S., but I am confident and plan on being on top of my game.” Aurora Fowlkes is a staff reporter for The Beat. ANDREW SALOMON 4 5 Dr. Joe Ferry BY MEREDITH JONES PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN “There are a million hats you wear as a record producer,” says Dr. Ferry, and the same can be said for his work at Purchase. Since 1976 the Grammy-nominated producer has worked with major artists like David Bowie, Barbra Streisand, Mel Tormé, and Rhonda Vincent; he’s been playing bass even longer. Recently, Ferry spent a year and a half touring with alter-ego artist Uzimon, who combines comedy and roots-rock-dancehall reggae with stellar performance integrity. He just wrote a book called Connected: Mob Stories From My Past, and teaches studio production at Purchase. WHAT KIND OF MUSICAL EXPERIENCE IS YOUR IDEAL? If Michael Jackson were alive today and asked me to play in his band and all I needed to do was stand there and play, that would be it. I’m a performer – I’m a shoegazer, I don’t move when I play bass, I pretty much just stand there, watch my shoelaces, and try to get a fat groove goin’. It’s not that I’m afraid, I can’t. I can only play bass. I can’t even walk and play bass. WHAT ABOUT UZIMON’S PERSONA AND MUSICIANSHIP APPEALS TO YOU? Daniel Frith could walk into the room and you wouldn’t know that’s Uzimon. It’s all makeup; the beard is fake. When he becomes Uzimon he puts on the Jamaican patois and you’d never guess that. He’s a perfectionist and wants every show to be different, but when you’re on the road that’s really hard to do. The idea is to hit a groove–you do the same show, same moves every night. That’s what makes the band tight. He doesn’t want that, which meant rehearsal every single day. That was why I ultimately had to leave the group. I can’t be here teaching, doing all my other bass and production work and working with Uzi seven days a week. But we’re still great friends. Uzimon enabled me to confront a lot of my fears. I became a real reggae bad boy. He forced me to do things I wouldn’t normally do, like get tattoos, play in huge reggae clubs– places I would frankly be afraid to go by myself. I’m making a record called The Dub Album that’s going to be a compilation of different artists. He’ll have two or three tracks. WHAT IS YOUR MISSION WHEN YOU RECORD A GROUP? The first thing is that the artist needs to be comfortable. I work now only with artists that I can connect with cerebrally. I’m an old-school producer, so I don’t do any engineering; I bring in terrific engineers like Peter Denenberg and Phil Moffa. I think about, Is the band gelling? Is the artist happy? Is the song coming together? Literally, Is the temperature of the room okay? There are a million hats that you wear as a record producer. HOW DID YOU GET INTO PRODUCING? In 1976 I recorded in RCA Studios and it was gigantic, like a football field. It had baffling that lowered and raised from the ceiling so you could actually change the contours of the room. The floor was gorgeous oak. Then we started doing the tracks and I heard them coming out of these 600-watt Big Reds, there was this 24-track Neve console, and I was like, “I love this! This is where records come from?” Finally the engineer Joaquin Lopes said to me, “You know, you’d make a good record producer.” And I said, “What does a record producer do?” He said, “What you’re doing! You’re guiding the session–don’t you realize you’re telling the guitar player he’s out of tune, saying, ‘Let’s do this take over again,’ you wrote the saxophone parts, you wrote the charts up, you’re leading the band.” That’s what I always do–I just thought I was being pushy. And he said, “No, you’re producing this record!” WHAT ELSE HAVE YOU BEEN WORKING ON? I produced a live EP for this singer named Joey Ray and we’re going to make a full-blown album together. The other thing I’m really excited about is my book. It’s about my life with my father. He’s sick now – he has Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, so he’s only a shell of his former self; but he was a tough guy in his day, and I’m used to that guy. BY JILLIAN LUCAS PHOTOS BY KELLYANN PETRY THE COVER WHAT GENRES ARE YOUR FAVORITES? I love Reggae, Ska, R&B. I’m not really into singer-songwriter stuff; stories of lost love, I’m not interested in that. I just like a big beat. HOW HAVE STUDENTS OR MUSIC AT PURCHASE CHANGED SINCE YOU STARTED WORKING ON CAMPUS? They’re coming into our program almost engineers already; some of them come in with credentials. I find that an 18-year-old guy thinks he’s God’s gift to the world. But they mature over the four years; I see people going from clueless little brats to mature adults that I’m really proud of. In that sense I find that nothing has changed. HOW DO ALL OF THE HATS THAT YOU WEAR RELATE TO ONE ANOTHER? Everything in life informs everything else in life. I teach my students what I love, but I think the main thing that I embed in my teaching is how to live and be happy. I have students who have been consulting me for 20 years. That comes from, hopefully, teaching them not only the mechanics of what they’re studying, but the fact that we’re here to be loved, to spread love, and to be happy, and that’s where it’s at. Meredith Jones is a senior writer and photo consultant for The Beat. SHOW The Cover Show, with live tributes to 1990s bands, is a new fave at The Stood. The siren song of memories gone by is hard to ignore as a college student. Reminiscing about the past, especially when you reach the age that is truly the blending of child and adult, is almost a rite of passage. Some colleges take this into consideration and attempt to rid their budding co-eds of their desires to relive their golden days, but others, like Purchase, manifest these desires into something great. With that manifestation, comes the semiannual Cover Show at The Stood. Elise Granata, the 20-year-old arts management major and former General Program Coordinator, is one of the numerous students that helped set up the last Cover Show. “The Cover Show is an opportunity for greater access. It’s an opportunity for people to play in bands who may not have bands, and for people to come out to shows who don’t normally,” she said. While Zombie Prom and Purchase’s two major “festivals,” Fall Fest and Culture Shock, are usually the main attractions when the school year begins, the Cover Show has developed something of a cult following. There is one each semester, with this semester’s scheduled for sometime in November. Students that participate start preparing months in advance, practicing and choosing the right band to cover, along with song choices, and even costumes. Even attendees plan out their night to catch the band they really want to see. “I think that there’s more support and excitement for the Cover Show,” Granata said. “People come out to it that don’t come out to any other event; people who may not be interested in the type of music we bring in otherwise, or the level of music.” The Cover Show combines reliving nostalgic musical acts and the illusion of seeing those big name bands, into one event more easily accessible to Purchase students. “It’s always really validating to be able to sing along to bands in a smaller setting that you never dreamed you’d see in any setting,” Granata said. With the chance to play music that brought back memories of growing up, and the ability to dance to your favorite song, students jumped at the opportunity. Patrick Linehan, the drummer for the Green Day cover band this past spring said, “I’m most excited about it because of the bands. It’s the music I kind of grew up with and I’m excited to play.” The Green Day cover band, which went on third to last this past event, was one of the highlights of many of the students’ nights, with popular songs from arguably the band’s most popular album, “Dookie.” “This was spur of the moment,” Patrick Hyland, the bassist said. “We wanted to do it, and wanted to do a band that lots of people would like.” While the hype this past show was on Green Day and Blink-182, other bands like the Pixies garnered dance parties and mosh pits as well. Bands from previous shows who covered Weezer and Brand New, and a band that played a melody of 1990s covers, were among the bands that brought the biggest buzz. “Kids were coming up to the bands after the show,” studio production major Brendan Williams said. “They thanked them for playing, like, ‘You just played my middle school years.’” With the list of acts expanding every semester and the turn out and response growing, the Cover Show is ever-evolving. More and more students are becoming attached to the music they grew up with as the years spent as a kid seem farther and father away. Jillian Lucas is a staff reporter for The Beat and a Purchase alumna, Class of 2012. COVERING THE AGES THE COVER SHOW 6 7 THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 Ecstasy, agony, splendor in the grass: some highlights from Culture Shock 2012 Waiting in the lounge, bands and artists watch as Scot Moriarty, 25-year-old studio engineer at Purchase, tweaks their songs to perfection. He’s just finished a session with Max Hendrickson, a studio composition major, and is listening back to his guitar track with concentrated ears. Moriarty’s been here for only three semesters but he’s already recorded, mixed and engineered albums, EPs, recitals and ensemble pieces. He is the go-to guy if you want to get your music sounding tight, finessed and big for listeners. Always a lover of music, he grew up focused in on specific records and recordings of his favorite bands, where there was a certain distinct sound. “Whether it be the bass tone, or the drum sound, or the doubled vocals and reverb,” said Moriarty, “I realized all these years of going to shows locally and being friends with bands, I started to get curious, and asked myself ‘how the fuck do they do that?’” He stands tall behind the computer screens filled with audio and wave files, and a desk with a huge 16 channel API board laid on it, which is used for mixing and getting the right amount of bass and volume for each instrument recorded. He is concentrated, but not confused. Though intimidating to those outside the program, Moriarty is fluent in the functions of this equipment. BY KEVIN REDDING PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN There’s an open guitar case, a stack of amps, and a mish-mash of cable wires decorating the red-carpeted floor in Studio A. The studio is broken down into two sections: the lounge-like control room with couches, a giant HD-TV hovering over all, and the main mixing equipment conveyed on two computer screens. Standing in this room, you can look right through the glass and see the recording room, aligned with acoustic walls and ceilings, an old Rhodes organ, a grand piano, a drum set and a few guitars, all mike’d and hooked up for recording. CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD SCOTT MORIARTY 8 “For my first session here at Purchase, I was recording a jazz group, and I ran into problems,” he said. “I couldn’t get signal for things. I didn’t know how to put a click on. I didn’t know how to give someone more volume in their headphones. Any studio that I go into, I have to do a bunch of sessions to know my way around. But it’s important to figure these things out on your own. That’s what I did; you get better and you learn.” It didn’t take him too long to find his groove in the studio, adjusting very quickly to the hectic schedule and pressures of engineering. Last semester while recording studio composition major Mitski Miyawaki’s album, the two worked for about a month and a half to get things just right in the studio. “I’d stress out about little things,” he said, regarding mixing a project like that; spending hours late at night in the studio. He’s also had to juggle recording projects required of his major, recordings done as a favor to musicians, and recordings done for himself, like when he’s in the studio with his band, Levels. “Sometimes you feel more passionate about certain things you’re recording and working on than something else,” he says. “I’d much rather record with my band because I love that music and I have an idea for it, but I try my best to keep a positive outlook on whatever I’m working on. It’s best to make sure the client is happy and it’s always a learning experience no matter what.” A transfer from County College of Morris in New Jersey, Moriarty has a lot on his plate and intends to keep busy. Hendrickson is happy with the guitar track. Moriarty plays him a Levels song. Heavily distorted guitars and loud, crashing drums blast through the speakers of Studio A, and Moriarty strikes a smile. much anticipated Friday night hit, Tycho PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN 10 SHOCK+LAWN CULTURE SHOCK CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: EMA; Tycho; Felice Brothers; Big Freedia; Islands; students dancing at the main stage; EMA PHOTOS BY KELLYANN PETRY ALL OTHER PHOTOS BY ROMAN DEAN CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Coyote Campus; Idle Warships; Cloud Nothings; the crowd at Idle Warships; 2012 MEC Alicia Santiago; Big Freedia’s dancer; Nina Sky PHOTOS BY ROMAN DEAN SHOCK+LAWN CULTURE SHOCK 11 On the cusp of its anniversary, how much power does OWS have? BY REBECCA KAPLAN PHOTOS BY JESSICA LEHRMAN In the fall of 2011, a group of protesters pitched a tent outside, forgoing the warmth and safety of the indoors to make a political statement, to open a dialogue. They did so to the general confusion of those around them and managed to spark an overwhelming anger in others. They each had varied reasons for their actions and no specific plans beyond a desire to raise awareness. They had no unifying cause other than a general angst—the financial climate in the first quarter of the 21st century was bad and somebody should do something to fix it. They were a group of young adults with a message to send, but no idea how to do it. That may sound like a critique of Occupy Wall Street (OWS), but these protesters were a mere microcosm of OWS—the haphazard, catch-all movement which sprung up in the summer of 2011 and has lurked in our minds and in our parks ever since. These protesters were part of Occupy Purchase, an activist circle that spawned out of the Wall Street movement, but quickly fizzled. A year later, the Purchase movement is now defunct, along with the original and now mostly silent Occupy Wall Street. So what, for both OWS and Occupy Purchase, went wrong? Communication, for one thing. Occupy Purchase started out with a simple goal: to provide a place for open dialogue, according to Purchase alumnus Zach Brady. “We took that space in the Mall, and for a week… or maybe four days, in reality,” he added, seemingly chagrined, “we turned it into a meeting space. We turned it into a space where people could come up and say, ‘Why are you doing this?’ And we would talk to them.” The group of about 10 to 14 students camped in the space between the library and Student Services with a tent and a few sleeping bags from Sunday night on Nov. 13, 2011, to Thursday afternoon on Nov. 17, 2011. About two days into the occupation of the mall, junior Ava Monske distributed a flyer titled “DON’T FALL IN LOVE WITH THE REVOLUTION,” a piece of paper stapled to all bulletin boards throughout campus offering a blistering critique of Occupy Purchase. “The physical occupation of the mall by the Occupy Purchase ‘movement’ is, at best, a waste of time and energy which could be put to better use,” she wrote. “At worst, it blatantly undermines the original Occupy movement, and the ideologies associated with it, by (unintentionally) existing as a caricature of all the negative stereotypes.” The culture of Occupy Purchase was part of what bothered Monske. She said that on the first night they slept outside, “a cop had come by and told them they weren’t allowed to be there, and they were like, ‘Well we’re gonna be here anyway!’ The cop just sort of walked away and didn’t pursue it at that point. They were all like, ‘Yeah!! We won a victory!’ “That was kind of galling, knowing how dire the situation was at Occupy Wall Street, with the cops,” she said. “UPD isn’t going to do anything to harm students who are just sleeping outside. To be honest, it almost seemed like some of [the students] were doing it because it was a trendy thing to do.” However, alumna Melanie Mac Caskie, an organizer of Occupy Purchase, disagreed, saying the occupation, however brief, was meaningful. “[Monske is] assuming that because not a lot of people saw us that it didn’t mean anything. No, it meant something,” she said. “I teach small children in the museum for a living, and if I get one child to remember a vocabulary word, I’ve done my job. I know that that occupation did something because it did something for me.” OCCUPY WALL STREET 13 THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 Do I think the goals, this broad list of goals, will succeed or the idea that social justice, economic justice will prevail? In my mind, it better. – ZACH BRADY Despite the informed dialogue, Levy, who did informational work for OWS, said he had a hard time accepting the balance between work and partying: “The culture of [the occupations] are really lively and can be really lovely and invigorating and I think that’s great for people and that’s wonderful, and I don’t want to sacrifice that in any sense, but I do think it’s really helpful to try to focus on change rather than just trying to maintain occupations.” He added that while occupations may be inefficient, it’s better than doing nothing. “If 80 percent of that energy is wasted, and 20 percent of it is channeled into something that they believe in, that’s not really a terrible thing considering that a lot of us were doing nothing with our anxiety. It’s better than punching the pillow.” Alumna Brittany Bollenbach, who participated in the OWS movement, said she too thought local occupation groups were useful. “I think it makes it more accessible to the people who, for various reasons... can’t get to the city. It brings a sense of community and togetherness wherever. It creates a stand.” Despite its good intentions, Brady felt the local occupation of Purchase, like its parent, fell victim to lack of communication. “We had occupied in solidarity with college campuses across the nation,” said Brady. “We never made that explicitly clear, and that was an issue. A lot of people thought we were doing an aggressive act against the school, which at that point we had not considered aggressive.” The conflicting voices around Occupy Purchase mirror the larger movement it stems from. Almost a year after OWS, depending on whom you ask, the movement still hasn’t gone very far beyond talk and many feel it’s not a bad thing. “The reality is, expressing our voice is the best thing we can do right now,” said 26-year-old OWS protester Aaron Waters. Jesse Cooper Levy, a Purchase alumnus, said he felt personally responsible for how difficult it has been for people to plug into the voice of the OWS movement. He had volunteered to work as a greeter in Zuccotti Park but pulled out in November when the park was raided. The raid made camping at Zucotti impossible OCCUPY WALL STREET 14 and transportation to the location unfeasibly expensive. On top of that, he says it was “butt cold.” Outside of obstacles like communication issues and police raids, weather became a heavy factor that worked against the movement. Brady agreed, saying, “It’s hard to get people out there when it’s cold. It’s a lot easier when you can get out there with shorts and a T-shirt,” when explaining the lull in OWS action over the winter. But just because OWS is taking baby steps rather than moving in leaps and jumps doesn’t mean it hasn’t been successful. Connie Lobur, a political science professor at Purchase said, “I don’t think there has to be one big event that makes something worth it or not. The student movement and civil rights movements were things that lasted decades. These were not things that happened in one confined period of time [or with] reactions to just one thing.” Indeed, Mac Caskie said that one thing that drew her to the movement was its ability to empower people to express issues that historically haven’t been brought to light. She highlighted “problems like unemployment and student loans, lack of health insurance, health insurance that doesn’t cover cancer—like, what the fuck?” “People are saying political change is the only kind of change, but I think social change is much more important at this present moment,” she added. “The law will follow, but if we change the culture first, it won’t be as important to have a law to force the culture to change.” Bollenbach said that she was sick of hearing so much criticism from the media against Occupy Wall Street. “It did take a lot of criticism for not having a focus, like ‘Oh, they’re just a bunch of hippies with a lot of demands.’ No, that’s actually not it. Why don’t you go down there and find out what they’re talking about? They’re really intelligent people down there talking about interesting systemic changes and options, and working toward that. What are you doing? You’re sipping on a Mochachino thing at Starbucks and checking your Facebook.” As Occupy Wall Street moves forward, things may need to change. “Some of its uniqueness, though in the end some of its problem, might be its being leaderless in the conventional sense,” said Professor Lobur. “I think in the end for movements to grow, there needs to be sort of a centripetal force to that, for people to know who to look at, and toward.” And to some, the Occupy movement is stronger without goals. “It doesn’t need focus,” said Bollenbach. “And I think that’s its strength, because there is no obvious thing we can point to, like Obama, or capitalism. It’s a whole bunch of different things in the whole entire world that’s connected.” Levy agreed, saying that in the future “I believe there should be hierarchy circles to make up for the fact that the need for hierarchy has arisen in OWS.” Brady estimated that it would take about 15 years to see some kind of change come out of Occupy Wall Street. He said, “Do I think the goals, this broad list of goals, will succeed or the idea that social justice, economic justice will prevail? In my mind, it better.” Mac Caskie said it would take a while to “convince [Americans] that socialism isn’t a dirty word, to convince people that capitalism is a dirty word. To convince people that the American dream as we’ve painted it for the past 200 years does not exist.” She was hopeful, however, that things would improve with the 2012 election and “Obama’s second term.” (Optimistically, she did not even consider the chance that a Republican candidate would win, “just because I’m scared that if they did win, there would be mass riots, because people would be that angry.”) Another thing that may change is the physical occupation of land as a means to an end. “We risk being self-obsessed, being interested in preserving the occupation rather than actually being interested in direct actions and moving toward goals that we care about,” said Levy. Photographer Jessica Lehrman with a protester in NYC But even if they continue to garrison our parks, how much longer will they occupy our minds? “The problem is, whenever you’re not being reported on, especially given how focused our culture is on visual imaging and all the rest, things that are going on are treated as though they’ve disappeared,” said Lobur. “But that doesn’t mean it’s all gone.” No, it’s not gone, not yet. And as long as they’re still active, the Wall Street fat cats should do their best to take notice. “Occupy Wall Street is a warning,” said Brady. “The first thing you do when you’re angry is you complain about what’s making you angry. And that’s the stage we’re still at.” Rebecca Kaplan is a senior writer for The Beat. OCCUPY WALL STREET 15 HE SAT TRANQUIL ON THE BACK PORCH OF A HOUSE in Hollywood Hills. Although it was later in the afternoon, and presumably many of the city residents had already begun their days, Sean McVerry had just woken up. From the far distance, he could see the entire Los Angeles skyline, and it was the first time he had ever seen it. When he wasn’t making music in the studio, he liked to spend his time out here, listening to music, reading J.D. Salinger, and writing down ideas. Though he had left the clear, unseasonably warm weather in New York, the air in L.A. carried more than warmth. This trip wasn’t quite a vacation for McVerry, a senior studio composition major, but rather the opportunity of a lifetime: he was flown out by the record label, Roc Nation, at the suggestion of rapper J.Cole, and friend, Anthony Parrino. When Los Angeles was proposed, McVerry was in disbelief. “I wanted to keep it to myself. Off the bat I was more nervous than I was excited,” he said. “Then when the anxiety finally went away I just remember thinking, ‘Wow, this is really happening, and I’ve got to take advantage of it.’ ” Parrino, a Purchase alumnus who studied studio production, met McVerry in a master class set up by Prof. Jim McElwaine, and said he was blown away by what he heard. “I set up a class for my very best students and best alumni,” said McElwaine. “As soon as Sean started playing, Anthony turned to me and said, ‘I got to have him.’” “Everyone was playing songs from their iPods, and Sean just sat down at the piano, played live, and was better than everyone else,” Parrino said. “I knew immediately that I wanted to work with him.” On the plane ride over, McVerry felt especially nervous. “Once I sat down in my seat I thought, ‘Well, this is it. It’s really happening,’” he said. “It felt like a dream.” He flew Virgin American Airlines, which he described as “this swanky fucking plane, with purple lights down the aisles, and cool cartoons illustrating the safety precautions.” SUNRISE ON SUNSET BOULEVARD SEAN MCVERRY 16 BY REBECCA STRASSBERG PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 When they landed in California, McVerry, Parrino, and a few others drove from Englewood to Hollywood. Driving down Sunset Boulevard, McVerry recalled passing legendary venues like The Roxy, and Whiskey A Go Go. The house was up in the mountains, overlooking the Los Angeles skyline. With a pool in the center of the living room, McVerry said, “It was a stereotypical L.A. house; just walking in there was a trip.” The house had three bedrooms, but accommodated fourteen guys during this particular week. On the ride there, Parrino told McVerry they would be roughing it a little bit. “I told him that I didn’t care; that I’d sleep in the bathtub. He told me to be careful what I wished for,” McVerry said. “It was just a bunch of guys sleeping in a living room filled with air mattresses,” he said. “I slept on a mattress that deflated the first night.” McVerry said he was so exhausted by the time they went to sleep, that it didn’t matter. The exhaustion came from the 15-hour-day spent making music in the studio. Most of the week was spent at Record One, a one-floor studio on Ventura Boulevard, fully equipped with an outside barbecue pit and ping-pong table, an indoor lounge, television, and Xbox 360. There were beats pumping out of every room at any given moment, McVerry said. “In Studio A, the guys would press this button that would set off a disco ball, a laser light show, and a black light,” he added. “It was like, okay, let’s see how this beat would sound in a club.” Next door was the studio where McVerry and Parrino spent most of their time; a room furnished with a brown Steinway baby grand piano and speakers. It was the nicest thing he had ever played, but every time anyone came in the room they were astonished that McVerry got stuck playing “that old piece of shit.” From 5 p.m. until sunrise the next morning, the two worked without pause. McVerry would play something on piano, whether it be a scrapped idea he once had for his band, “Coyote Campus”, or just a hook he had stuck in his head. THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 “I’d treat whatever he played like a sample, and throw a beat behind it, and we’d just go from there,” said Parrino. “Guys would ask how old he was and whenever someone would say ’21,’ no one could believe it,” Parrino said. “It was a funny situation, to be thrown into a hip hop lifestyle, and to sleep on the floor in a huge place with guys he didn’t know, but he showed his ability to take any situation and just run with it. Everyone was really impressed with how he handled himself.” Parrino said working with McVerry was special in that it was two genres coming together. “I’m more hip-hop influenced, and he’s more rock and pop. Every time we made something, it was like nothing either of us had ever done before, and some stuff got big responses.” When his week in L.A. was done, McVerry came home dignified. “People seemed genuinely upset to see me go,” he said. “One thing that stuck out to me was that people were saying ‘See you soon’ and ‘See you in New York.’ It wasn’t goodbye forever, and I kind of realized that it was just the beginning.” One of the songs that got a big response from the group in the studio, came at an unexpected time. After the only night of partying, several guys made their way over to the studio. McVerry remembered a slow start, and remembered feeling like he couldn’t write a single thing that day. The studio was quiet, and guys were laying down, taking naps. McVerry’s track woke them up. “I just couldn’t think of anything, so I played this little hook on the piano, and all of a sudden Anthony was like, ‘Whoa, that’s amazing. Let’s go,’” McVerry said. “It ended up being the best thing we wrote over there. Everyone was so dead and then all of a sudden engineers and musicians were just popping in wanting to know what it was.” Though there’s nothing definite planned for the tracks they made, Parrino said there are a lot of possibilities. “Cole’s interested in a few of them, but you really never know. The thing about this industry is that nothing’s definite until the moment it’s done.” This was a defining moment of the trip for McVerry, along with talking to record producer and vice president of Def Jam Records, No I.D., and just hanging out with “an incredibly talented group of “I was out in California for two months,” Parrino said. “The week Sean was there was my favorite time.” Back in New York, McVerry returned to Purchase, and his band “Coyote Campus” gathered in his music room with some of the band’s songs written on staff paper, tacked up on the red walls. There were shards of broken drumsticks scattered on the floor, and a single lamp, to set a mood that the harsh overhead light couldn’t. Though still on a high from the trip that he just returned from, and optimistic toward his future projects, McVerry’s mind is focused on his band. “Sean has spent his time at Purchase learning to write larger, and expand his ideas,” said McElwaine. “I think we’re really seeing a career take off, and the kicker will be to check back and see what he’s doing in two or three years.” Coyote Campus, Battle of the Bands winner, performing at Culture Shock PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN engineers, producers, and musicians,” including, of course, J. Cole. Though he was exhausted, McVerry was determined to make the most of his trip. Jogging down the palm tree-lined Sunset Boulevard in the heat of Los Angeles in March, he collected his thoughts. “Running past all those venues and realizing where I was, I just felt incredibly blessed and incredibly lucky. In that moment I couldn’t help but think about how crazy it was that I was there.” Parrino didn’t share the shock and disbelief that McVerry did. “Flying him out to L.A. was an idea me and Cole had talked about for a while. Cole knew I was looking to work more with Sean, and he was really interested in his music. We just wanted to get his foot in the door, and now hopefully get him a deal at some point,” he said. McVerry’s level of maturity, both in his music and his attitude, was something that shocked the group out in Los Angeles. McVerry noted that this opportunity was not just about him. He feels “Coyote Campus” has started some great chemistry and really found its sound. “Everything I do is for the band. I never want it to be ‘The Sean Show.’” “We’re working on his music, and his music with Coyote Campus,” Parrino said. “We’re working on a huge variety of songs so we can shop him around and hopefully get him a deal.” “I try and make sure he understands his value. Someone who’s talented holds the power. People might come at you with what they try and convince you is the opportunity of a lifetime, and the only one you’ll ever get,” he added. “I want to show Sean that he has the power to create his destiny, to show him that he’s young in the industry, but he’s talented, and he, as the artist, is the commodity. If he’s patient, he’ll get the deal he really deserves.” Parrino is planning to start up a company called Lead Through Music, for which he was hoping to have McVerry as his first artist on the label. McVerry confessed to thinking the week in L.A. would be filled with chaos, that the studio would be a wreck, and that he wouldn’t be able to think of anything good, but “it just felt natural,” he said. “It felt like it was the right place, that it was the right place for me, and that it was really only the beginning.” Rebecca Strassberg is the News Editor of The Beat. “I had this idea that these guys knew how young I was and were just going to think I was some little punk,” McVerry said. This was not the case. SUNRISE ON SUNSET BOULEVARD McVerry’s band Coyote Campus; FROM LEFT: Andrew Cowie, Jonathan Sacca, Dean Torrey, Sean McVerry, Brendon Caroselli, Andrew Russell PHOTO BY KELLYANN PETRY SEAN MCVERRY 19 BY CHRISTIE ROTONDO PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN ANDY SMART DOES NOT LOOK LIKE THE STEREOTYPE OF A HIP HOP ARTIST. WHEN HE TAKES THE STAGE TO PERFORM HIS DEBUT ALBUM, “HELLO, MY NAME IS ANDY,” HE ROCKS FLAMING RED HAIR WITH HORN-RIMMED GLASSES, LONG BEADED NECKLACES, AND A BASEBALL CAP. “When people come see my shows, it takes them like ten minutes to be like, ‘Oh, he can rap well for a white guy,’” Smart said. “And then 20 minutes into it, somebody would be like, ‘Oh my god, home dude’s gay.’ By that point, you look to your right or left and no one gives a fuck because my music just stands for itself.” Smart, 24, is a Purchase College graduate with a BFA in dance who now lives in Rotterdam, the second largest city in the Netherlands. Originally, he traveled there to find more opportunities to dance experimentally; instead, he released “Hello, My Name Is Andy,” late last year. The album sports pink cover art with a space vibe. He’s been working as a “freelancing gypsy rapper” ever since. Openly gay hip-hop artists like Purchase alum Andy Smart and Big Freedia are dismantling the genre’s last taboo. “I think why I decided to rap is that I always found that hip-hop is a medium for the underestimated or the underappreciated,” he said. Smart is just one of a handful of artists who are tackling one of mainstream hip-hop’s last taboos: being an openly gay artist. When straight rapper Lil’ B announced at Coachella in April of 2011 that he would title an upcoming album “I’m Gay” as a gesture to encourage his fans to be more accepting of those who are gay, the artist received death threats on Twitter. “A lot of them are on Twitter, saying that they’re going to kill me for being gay, and they’re going to kill me for being homosexual even though I’m not homosexual. I don’t like men,” he told CNN in May 2011. “They’re saying they’re going to bash my head in. They’re calling me faggot. That’s all right, because I did this with the pure intention in my heart to help people, and I didn’t do this for promotional reasons. I did it because there needs to be someone brave enough to do it, brave enough to speak up and have the right reasonings of doing it.” Shaka McGlotten, a media, society, and the arts professor at Purchase, who focuses on queer media convergence, said that one social force pushing reactions like this to openly gay artists is hyper-masculinity. 20 THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 “In a culture that has denied black men their masculinity, a form of hyper-masculinity has arisen in response,” he said. “The question here really has to do with how the culture at large defines masculinity—as hard and impenetrable. Some black male rappers exaggerate these qualities.” Outside the mainstream, though, McGlotten said, are artists that are breaking down this stereotype. “I think hip-hop is way more diverse and idiosyncratic than an attention to the mainstream affords,” he said. “There are local sub-genres that form and proliferate and influence hip-hop but operate outside the dominant flows of economic and cultural capital.” With a response as fierce and hate-fueled as Lil B’ received, it is almost no surprise that there are few openly gay artists in mainstream hip-hop. However, small underground movements are taking place at clubs like New York City’s Ghe20 Goth1k, as well as within a rising genre of queer hip-hop, “sissy bounce,” that recently exploded in New Orleans. These movements are pushing the envelope and developing their own flavor within hip-hop. In Rolling Stone’s Nov. 10 issue, a 100-word bit titled “Hot Rap Scene: NYC’s Gay MCs” claimed that hip-hop’s last taboo is crumbling at Ghe20 Goth1k, a club that featured cross-dressing rapper Mykki Blanco, as well as other openly gay artists like Leif and House of Ladosha. The club is a dance scene where feather headbands and spandex are the uniform of choice. So where does sissy bounce fit into mainstream hip-hop? If you ask Chapman, it doesn’t. “I don’t know if it fits into hip-hop today or not, or if it has to or wants to,” he said. “I think that it has the potential to transgress and complicate the way black masculinity is seen in hip-hop.” While some sissy bounce artists have performed alongside rappers like Snoop Dogg, Chapman said, these performers are normally found on line-ups with indie and alternative-rock groups. The best example of this is Purchase’s own Culture Shock, which features bounce artist queen Big Freedia for the after party in the Stood. i’m a lot of things, i’m androgynous, i’m a man, but i’m a little bit of a lady too, because that’s the way my momma raised me – ANDY SMART Overall, however, Chapman said genres like sissy bounce are making the mainstream audience rethink how they view hip-hop. “It’s got to make people question: ‘Is the shit that we’ve been doing just getting a little bit old and cliché?’ Because I think there are a lot of the same representations of masculinity in hip-hop,” he said. Carlos Martinez, president of the Purchase Hip-hop Club, agrees. “Gay people show up,” Leif told Rolling Stone in regards to the Ghe20 Goth1k parties, “But I’m conscious about making my music accessible: It’s for anyone who is liberal in 2011.” About 1,300 miles away from New York City, “sissy bounce,” the loved and hated moniker for a queer subgenre of bounce music, has become an intrinsic part of the black community in New Orleans. Alix Chapman, a graduate student from the University of Texas at Austin who has studied queer performance, focused his dissertation on the phenomenon. According to Chapman, “sissy bounce” is like other bounce music. It features the same style of dancing, accompanied by sexualized lyrics and, quite literally, a beat you can bounce to. However, its performers are particularly gay men or transgendered men. He said that this genre has become so tied to the New Orleans’ black community that he first heard it at a community block party–where families and senior citizens gathered with the queer community to enjoy the party. “I honestly feel like homophobic lyrics are a thing of the past,” Martinez said. “Although, the reason why some artists still use them is because they still want to adhere to the image of a heterosexual, masculine male gangsta that rap used to be about in the late 1990s, early 2000s.” Martinez said with the variety of diverse artists currently leading the hip-hop chartslike Lil Wayne, Nicki Minaj, and Kanye West, the image of the hyper-masculine is no longer appealing to hip-hop’s audience. “The negativity in hip-hop is so outdated, seeing that there’s not as much as there used to be in the market,” Martinez said. “Even now you can see the foundation being laid down for the future of rap.” Perhaps Smart is the beginning of the “future of rap.” His style pays tribute to 1990s hip-hop, with a mix of influences like Nicki Minaj and Biggie Smalls. While he is proud of his sexuality, he said his goal is more to fill a spectrum with his music that his audience can relate to, whether they are gay, straight, male, or female. “I’m gay. Clearly. But if you take a second to listen to the lyrics, yeah, I’m queer but it’s not the focus,” he said. “I’m a lot of things, I’m androgynous, I’m a man, but I’m a little bit of a lady too, because that’s the way my momma raised me.” GAME CHANGERS ANDY SMART 21 THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 One track on the EP, “Ray Ray” exposes Smart’s sexuality explicitly. It is a love song, about a real person whose intellect inspired Smart, he said, but the character of Ray Ray is imagined. The lyrics are: “The kind of man that’s blessed by African priests/The kind of man that makes me proud to hear him spitting these beats…My heart be racing to the sound of your voice/ And life has got me sweating all these difficult choices/ And maybe if you quit calling me baby/ I could run away because these feelings are crazy.” BY ASHLEY HELMS PHOTOS BY KELLYANN PETRY The song, while about a gay love affair, reaches even his straight fans, Smart said. Sitting in a room with Maggie Pakutka might feel somewhat tense. She speaks slowly and quietly, taking long pauses to think carefully about her answers, her back straight against the white wall of her apartment bedroom. Her hands play nervously with a purple guitar pick, flipping it over end to end. “It was romantic, and enough to reach everybody,” he said. “If you’re really listening, all of a sudden, nobody hears the ‘he’ or ‘she.’ It’s the content that sort of stands for itself.” While his sexuality wasn’t the focus of his EP, Smart said it’s still an intrinsic part of his style, and he may receive some sort of backlash for it in the future. “Mainstream hip-hop is a little bit more vulgar, it’s very hyper-masculine, there’s an archetype definitely to follow to be successful,” he said, admitting that being a gay hip-hop artist might damper his success. “People are very homophobic. People are very scared. But it’s not just in the industry, it’s worldwide,” he said. Evan Davis, a junior at Purchase and fan of Smart’s, is working on a documentary about openly gay artists. He said he wanted to show the gay community that being queer and a hip-hop fan can be harmonious. “This part of hip-hop is unknown for a lot of people, and I want to showcase that,” Davis said, “My being gay and love for hip-hop don’t really coincide with each other, so I wanted to create something that said I’m gay, this is hip-hop. There are people out there.” Big Freedia PHOTOS BY KELLYANN PETRY Davis said he essentially grew up on hip-hop, and its homophobic lyrics made being a fan difficult. By spotlighting gay artists, he said he has found a voice for himself and people like him. Sometimes she will pull away from the wall, sitting at the edge of her bed when she feels more passionate about a certain topic, like DIY recording and taking a strong stance in what can be described as the “man’s world” of music engineering. Although she writes and performs her own music, she doesn’t want to be known as another “singer/ songwriter girl who writes about their feelings.” Andy Smart IMAGE BY LUIS ALONSO RIOS ZERTUCHE With her acoustic guitar in hand, Pakutka’s music might be described as a catchy tangling of indie, pop, and rock. She plays under the name Maggie and the Hat and is also a member of a newer, more electric band, Tiger Death. “We don’t have a voice, for people who love hip-hop and love hip-hop culture and homosexual culture. I want something that can voice both of those together, but is still genuine,” he said. She has recorded homemade CDs and made her own website, drawing from her skills as a new media major at Purchase. She also had an internship at a large record company in New York City, but according to Pakutka, she faced a road block that kept her almost entirely out of the studio: her gender. McGlotten felt the subculture of queer hip-hop would most definitely influence the mainstream over the next decade, and that this will make it more accessible to the queer community. Drawing from this experience, Pakutka has made a zine dedicated to helping women produce, write, and record their own music, DIY style. The guide–available on her website maggieandthehat.com–she hopes, will help other women in her position push back against the boundaries in the music business. “My sense is that as the culture at large embraces its queer communities, you’ll see this reflected in all kinds of public cultures, including hip-hop,” he said. Smart hoped because his music represents a spectrum of his different beliefs and ideologies about being gay, that it might influence those who would have avoided listening to an openly gay artist before. “Maybe if people listen close enough, it might change the way they think,” he said. “Or maybe not, maybe they’re just fucking drunk at a party and want to vibe out.” Christie Rotondo is Features Editor of The Beat. HOW DID YOU START PLAYING? HOW DO YOU WANT TO DO THAT? When I was little, I think I was 7 or so, my parents asked me if I wanted guitar I’m not sure yet; using more electric though. And playing with lessons. I started taking them and then I got more into music and I wanted to the band has helped me experiment with other styles. start writing my own stuff, so I took a couple of singing lessons where I got myself coordinated with playing guitar and singing at the same time, which is really hard ARE THERE ANY FEMALE MUSICIANS THAT YOU LOOK UP TO? especially when you’re young and just starting both. In early elementary school I Yes, Jenny Owen Young. I found her music at a really important time in my life, started writing my first crap songs, and then I got more okay and I started finding around age 15 or so, right when I just started to write my own songs and make more friends who were into playing music. Then I just started getting shows, and my own music. She’s a singer/songwriter, but she’s also a total badass, and her it just happened. lyrics and delivery were really inspiring to me at the time. She’s also kind of local so I got to go see her every month. TELL ME MORE ABOUT YOUR MUSIC, AND THE NEW BAND YOU’RE IN. My music is the Maggie and the Hat thing. Historically, acoustic, solo acoustic DO YOU PLAN ON RECORDING SOON? singer/songwriter stuff, but I’m trying to break away from that now. I don’t want I don’t have any super official records of any of my songs. I’m working on that. I to become just another one of those acoustic singer/songwriter girls. So, I’m have ones that I’ve done and I like a lot, and they sound pretty good, but they’re going electric and experimenting and I also have a new band, Tiger Death. not awesome quality. WHY DON’T YOU WANT TO BE ONE OF THOSE SINGER/SONGWRITER GIRLS? DO YOU HAVE ANY PERSPECTIVES ON HOW YOU’RE GOING TO MAKE MORE GAME CHANGERS I think the industry is oversaturated right now, and I don’t really associate OFFICIAL RECORDINGS? DO YOU KNOW ANYONE? ANDY SMART myself with a lot of those people. I get lumped in with them anyway, girls Yeah, I had an internship in a recording studio last year. This semester I’m singing about their feelings. I want to make something different that people taking a studio production class and I’m also becoming friends with more studio look at differently. production majors, so I want to do some stuff here while I still can for free. 22 THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 DID YOU GET THAT INTERNSHIP SO YOU COULD DO THIS RECORDING? WAS YOUR INTERNSHIP YOUR FIRST EXPERIENCE WITH No, that wasn’t the only reason. I totally wanted to learn more about the music industry and how THIS? it is right now. And also I just wanted an internship in general and I figured doing anything for a It was definitely the most profound. I’ve been playing music for record label/recording studio would be really cool. a while with guys and they’re usually always more into taking the reins in a band and having all this cool equipment and WHAT WAS IT LIKE WORKING THERE? DID YOU LIKE IT? knowing how to make a certain sound. The girls I’ve played I liked it, but I wasn’t doing what I wanted to. The recording industry is really gendered. I with before are way more lyrically and musically driven. applied to this place to work in the recording studio, but when I got there they told me I would be working with the record label part of it. I didn’t even like the musicians that they had on the label. HAVE YOU EXPERIENCED THIS IN TIGER DEATH? No, not quite. Esteban and Jon are really chill guys, and ANY SPECIFIC STORIES? everyone is pretty equal. For a “Riot Grrls” class that I’m taking, When I was first interviewed, the guy interviewing me who would be my boss was really as a final project I’m making a zine that’s a DIY for girls who impressed with my résumé and knew that I was into learning how to record, but he also knew I are looking to make their own music, produce it, distribute it, was a new media major and liked arts management. A lot of girls who applied there just ended and market themselves so they don’t have to deal with all the up working in the label department instead of audio engineering. Then one day a couple months bullshit in the industry. down the road, it really hit me. I was sitting in this one room with all girls on laptops, doing separate things, not directly music related. Marketing things like scheduling meetings and WHAT EXACTLY IS THE BULLSHIT IN THE INDUSTRY? making Excel spreadsheets. I was staying kind of late that night for some reason and so I hung There was a time–or a few times–at my internship where out with the guys that were in and out of the studios. I was talking to one and I asked him what my bosses would ask me to do something, and it would be the deal was, if there were ever any girl recording engineers here. He kind of laughed. He knew to design something for an artist; their album or website or what I was talking about. He was like, “We had one once.” something. I would do it, but I would feel really weird about it THERE WERE NOT MEN ON THE LABEL SIDE? music and I had no interest in listening to it. How impersonal it No, except for the bosses. Everyone who was in charge of scheduling meetings and taking care is, and how much control it takes away from the artist. because I didn’t know anything about this artist or about their of secretarial work were all women. My last few nights interning there I just hung out with the recording studio guys and made friends with them and helped them break stuff down. That was HOW WILL YOUR ZINE GIVE LESS POWER TO THIS SEXIST what I wanted to do the whole time. SYSTEM YOU TALK ABOUT? Letting people, mostly girls, know that in order to get your music out there and project your image, you don’t need to pay anyone to do that especially today with the Internet. All when you do everything yourself people notice that and take it more seriously – MAGGIE PAKUTKA you really need is access to a computer with the Internet, determination, and some like-minded friends. I just feel like when you do everything yourself rather than rely on faceless companies, your work is way more personal and people are going to notice that and take it more seriously. DO YOU THINK YOU’LL HAVE AN IMPACT ON OTHER WOMEN BY KEVIN REDDING PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN IN YOUR POSITION? Purchase’s main stage at The Stood is Yeah, I’m probably going to make more than one edition of the crowded with people, caught in a blend zine because I can’t fit everything into this one, but I’m going to WERE YOU NOT ALLOWED TO? give overviews on how to make a website, how to raise money of soul singing, hard-hitting drums, and It’s not that I wasn’t allowed to. I didn’t think I was supposed to. I thought it was a totally online, how to put together a CD, and how to book shows. Just different thing. I was also kind of intimidated because I had never been in that professional of a like a page or two or three on each thing just to give people a rhythmic guitar licks, with a shirtless recording situation. I don’t think they purposely intimidated me—I think they just didn’t expect taste and let them know they can totally do it. They just have to lead singer, Gabriel Garzón-Montano, at me to step up and do recording studio stuff, so in turn made me not want to do it, except toward sit down and work. the forefront who seems possessed by the end. I was like, “Fuck it, I’m going to do what I want to do.” DID ANYTHING IN YOUR UPBRINGING INFLUENCE THIS the surrounding sounds. Through the HAVE THESE EXPERIENCES INFLUENCED YOUR MUSIC AT ALL? FEMINIST DIY STANCE YOU HAVE? Not yet, but soon. I haven’t recorded much really since my internship, but I plan on recording Not having a lot of money. I was never poor, but I always darkness of the crowd, a huge wave of soon. I want to be totally involved in the entire process and not go into a studio and pay someone wanted to get my music out there and play shows, and I’d have hands raised high in the air can be seen, else to do all of the work. I learned that I can totally do it. I just need to put in the work and not to get all my shows by myself and I would make all my CDs at be afraid. with piles of people gazing at the band home and give them to friends and whoever was at shows. I while swaying their hips to the contagious think it just grew out of necessity. HOW ARE YOU GOING TO DO THAT? I have a lot of friends who are really into recording. Friends here, friends from home, and friends HOW ARE YOU GOING TO COMBAT THESE SEXIST IDEAS IN from that internship, so I’m going to get all my stuff together and see if they can work with me THE FUTURE IF YOU DO END UP RECORDING IN ANY SORT OF for a while. I’ll also look into buying some of my own equipment for doing things on my own. ENVIRONMENT LIKE YOUR INTERNSHIP? singers, the lead singer and the guitarist’s bright guitar. Garzón-Montano lets out think I have to do. I’m not going to not do something I want to I don’t have experience at other labels. Girls are understood typically to not know a lot about do just because somebody doesn’t offer it to me. working for weren’t mean; I liked them as people, it’s just the way everything seems to subconsciously happen. 24 strikes down on two of the three back up I would do exactly what I think I should be doing and what I DO YOU COME UP AGAINST SEXISM IN THE MUSIC INDUSTRY IN OTHER PLACES? equipment and the technical side of things and they’re kept out a lot. The guys who I was rhythm. The lighting above the stage a Sly Stone scream and disappears into the background of musicians on the stage, with the guitarist taking his place with a slow-paced guitar solo. Purchase’s own Mokaad is blending hip-hop with old school funk, and turning heads while dropping the beat. This is Mokaad. “The whole band is centered around a live show,” says Garzón-Montano, 23. “It always has been. We made a record out of that.” “We definitely try to make it a live show,” says guitarist and co-founder Davy Levitan. “Give it an art, give the audience a real show. With the strength of the music, we’re right where we should be. Everybody’s on the same page. Everybody’s there and ready to play. We know we’re going to bring it. We’re doing it the right way. We’re putting the work in. If nothing ever happens, at least we made it this far.” “We get way better and understand what it is to put together a band like this,” says Garzón-Montano. “That’s all we’ve ever wanted to do.” On the brink of releasing their debut EP, Booty, Purchase’s 11-member funk band Mokaad has set out to prove that they can bring back the sound of old records like James Brown and Sly and the Family Stone, while adding a fresh hip-hop touch, to ensure that funk music is still alive and that people still want to hear it. The band has garnered a reputation on the Purchase campus and New York City venues as a live show band, first and foremost. With trumpet and sax players on the right, back up singers on the left, drummer in the back, guitarist at the forefront and Garzón-Montano center stage either behind a keyboard or with a guitar ALL FUNK’D UP MOKAAD 25 strapped on, the sound on the stage is electrifying, like a celebration of music every single gig. Having played at Culture Shock in 2010, as well as various venues in Brooklyn and Manhattan, including Brooklyn Bowl and Crash Mansion, Mokaad has drawn huge crowds of people to their shows, giving them covers of old songs verbatim to the original records, never glossing over details or missing a beat, as well as their original tunes. The first taste of Mokaad’s EP, the band’s six-track step into the recording studio, is a vibrant, bubbling and contagiously energetic sound. The first sample of the EP, “The Stomp,” has been released on the band’s websites and YouTube page. Even though it’s only a 36-second teaser, the band is able to show off their ferocious approach to recording and precision in that amount of time: The horn section is sharp as a knife, the drums and bass are locked in with each other, with the bass trailing off only to leave behind groovy and tasteful riffs in the backdrop, and the light guitar blends in with the rest to make a fully pure sound, making it reminiscent of Prince’s funky “Musicology” and Galactic’s “From the Corner to the Block.” But the sound and the feel of the recording is fully credited to the band’s primary songwriter/lead singer and one of its founding members, Gabriel GarzónMontano, who worked tirelessly to make it sound as funky as it does. “It’s tight as balls,” says Garzón-Montano. “We recorded it to a click. It was made in anguish. I was really stiff during the recording and I was concerned, because we wanted to make a record and call it funky and if it’s not funky, that’s the worst shit ever. There would be nothing more shameful than to contribute something half-assed. It took a year of delays and procrastination, but we got it right.” Inside Garzón-Montano and Levitan’s apartment on campus, a huge surround system on high volume blasts hip-hop, while pictures of Jimi Hendrix, Bob Marley, Biggie Smalls and The Beatles cover the walls, as well as banners from Mokaad’s gigs. The bass of the speakers fills the room, making it no question that the beat and rhythm in a song is the most important piece of the puzzle for Mokaad. For “Booty,” the band was meticulous in the studio, making sure every single instrument was laid down perfectly, spending up to twelve hours a day recording until everything sounded just right. “We record the rhythm track first and foremost,” says Garzón-Montano. “Bass, drums, guitars. When I’m writing songs for the band, I always start with the beat. The lyrics are a total afterthought. It’s important to get the drums and bass really tight and everything else comes after that. Then you find cool things to say, a positive philosophy with a sort of swagger to it, an arrogance.” “We didn’t fake it,” says Levitan. “The rhythm section had the time to devote to it. Everything we did on the record was done live, in studio.” Garzón-Montano, whose mother was a singer and multi-instrumentalist who played in churches and was featured with Philip Glass on recordings, grew up with music all around him. There was always singing and piano playing in the house, so, it became natural to him to pick up on a variety of instruments. “I would always imitate her and sing and play the piano,” he says. “She took me to music school and I chose the violin because I thought it looked so badass. I was like, five. Then she let it be, and I started doing the rock and roll thing and then that was all me. Violin at six, drums and guitar at 12 and a little bit of piano, which got more intense later on and then singing forever. But at 15, I started getting serious about singing and specifically, singing for people.” 13 Mokaad & The Flex Points at Gramercy Theater PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN To be the leader of a band like Mokaad, with its wide range of instruments and musicians, intricately written charts, and execution of the songs with little to no changes between the recorded track and the live performance, it’s important to have an understanding of a lot of different styles of music and instruments. “In order to really control the outcome,” he says, “you have to put on a lot of different hats.” “I started playing guitar when I was thirteen,” says Levitan. “It really changed everything because I developed a love affair with the instrument. The way it felt, the way it sounded, what I could do with it, that’s what I’ve been doing since then. I didn’t do it for anybody, or anything. I’d just come home from school everyday and play and then when I got to college, I realized I wanted to be a musician but I had very little experience with a lot of essential things so one thing led to another, I took time off from school to get into a program somewhere and ended up coming here.” Through mutual friends, the two ended up meeting and playing together, both with the same mindset of the kind of music they wanted to play. “When I came here,” says Levitan, “I was looking to play something funky so once I found out somebody else was down, and who was a singer, I was on board.” Music has come a long way since the glory days of funk and R & B in the sixties, where a band is picked up by a label and shipped off on a worldwide tour. Now, with a majority of famous musicians being heard from the Internet, it’s up to the artists to get their names out there and to tour themselves. Essentially, getting your name out there is the most important part. And that’s exactly what Mokaad intends to do with this record, pushing it to see where it takes them. PHOTO BY MICHAEL LAMBERT PHOTO BY ROMAN DEAN MICHELLE CHARLES ARIEL LOH MAJOR New Media MAJOR Studio Composition MAJOR Studio Composition Major HOMETOWN Queens, NY HOMETOWN Chicago, IL HOMETOWN Brockport, NY FAVORITE CAMPUS VENUE The Stood FAVORITE CAMPUS VENUE Loh prefers to go offcampus to the Music Hall of Williamsburg FAVORITE CAMPUS VENUE The Dance Theatre Lab BIGGEST POST-GRAD CHALLENGE Where to go with her studies and artwork. BIGGEST POST-GRAD CHALLENGE “The resources to make art.” Kevin Redding is a senior writer for The Beat. MAGGIE PAKUTKA Quarter Notes “We tried to make a record that sounds like it’s supposed to be sitting in this contemporary environment.” “Hopefully with our fans’ help, our promotion, and the record itself, we’ll have lots of opportunities,” says Levitan. “But at the end of the day, we know our music is good, so nobody gives a shit, we’re still gonna be happy no matter what.” FINDING HER VOICE the pulse of purchase KELLY IZZO BIGGEST POST-GRAD CHALLENGE His band, Stone Cold Fox. FAVORITE SONG “Right now, embarrassingly enough … ‘Love Shack’ [by The B-52’s]. How could you not be awake when ‘Love Shack’ is on?” BIGGEST INFLUENCE Video Artist Lauren Kelley. “I hadn’t been familiar with other black female video artists at all. I just didn’t think that existed. It was nice to see that I could put some of myself into video art and have it be accepted and considered art.” THE STATE OF THE ART (MUSIC TODAY) “It’s great if you can make pop that’s meaningful, because then it will reach wider audiences and then you have a real chance of changing culture. But if you’re going to make pop music that’s really catchy—that cool earworm—you’re also going to fool people into thinking that maybe you are supposed to be some kind of revolutionary character. You’re going to cause a lot of confusion and you might end up polluting culture, too.” SENIOR PROJECT Song and video, “I Love My Boo” (part of her thesis, “Representations of Black Women in the Media”). FAVORITE ALBUM Strange Mercy, by Saint Vincent. “A lot of times when I listen to music, it’s almost about the production and how it works with the songwriting. I think that album really hits. It’s so unique, fresh, and the composition and arrangements that go with the songwriting are just absolutely incredible, totally different, but at the same time work so well.” BIGGEST INFLUENCE Torches, by Foster the People. “Before I started listening to the Saint Vincent stuff, the Foster the People album was on my rotation. It was so fresh, and super poppy and catchy, but had a lot of intricacy with the programming, and little nuances—really cool attention to detail.” THE STATE OF THE ART “I think it’s pretty good, actually. People are always saying there’s no money to be made in music anymore, this and that, everything’s free... but I don’t know. It almost makes the playing field more difficult than it was in the past, if that’s possible. And I think that really drives people, motivates people, and really brings the best of the best out.” SENIOR PROJECT The Young, by Stone Cold Fox. WHAT IT IS A hip-hop track lampooning the misogynistic tropes of the modern rap game. Inspired by what Charles calls Nelly’s “multimillion dollar wankfest” of a music video, “Tip Drill,” “I Love My Boo” reverses roles by having women fully garbed in macho thuggery while men act as scantily-clad human gyrators. WHAT IT’S ABOUT “If you’re going to spit back things pop culture is selling you, do something really funny with it, do something crazy with it, and think. Don’t just consume it.” Andrew Marinaccio is Reviews Editor of The Beat. WHAT IT IS An EP that expands upon band mate Kevin Olken’s acoustic song sketches. Recorded on campus and at Manhattan studio, Stratosphere Sound. WHAT IT’S ABOUT “The comfort of knowing that everything is good will slowly go away. It’s about departure. But the thing is, with the record we didn’t want to make it a sad and gloomy album, but rather we wanted to make it a little more upbeat and have a lighter spin on it. Because it’s not really a sad thing, necessarily. I’m actually really excited to leave, graduate and everything, so I think it’s something to be celebrated.” FAVORITE SONG “When I’m Gone” by Phil Ochs. “The melody’s kind of normal, but the words…It’s about how when you die you can’t do anything, so when you’re here you should make the best of what you do, or do all the things you want to do and you think are all right to do.” BIGGEST INFLUENCE Joni Mitchell; Paul Simon. “I really like their lyrical style. They kind of take the poetry and sculpt around it with the melody. I like the way that they’re free … to go where the lyrics go.” THE STATE OF THE ART “It’s weird because the stuff that’s on the radio I don’t think is really a good sampling of what people actually listen to. There’s all these kind of semi-big bands on the Internet, and playing around locally. I don’t know how good that is for making any money, but it’s interesting to see what people listen to in different demographics. I don’t know how I feel about it yet, but it’s interesting.” SENIOR PROJECT “Alice Unraveled,” a musical inspired by Izzo’s past and Lewis Carroll’s “Wonderland” series. WHAT IT IS Originating from the titular song she wrote after the sexual assault of a close friend of hers, “Alice Unraveled” follows a girl emotionally paralyzed after the traumatic events of a local party, attempting to balance the reality of her condition with the impeding doubts of her unchained imagination. WHAT IT’S ABOUT “How everybody struggles, and overcoming. You have to find yourself, be satisfied with yourself, and be confident enough to just keep going, even when things push you down.” 27 the pulse of purchase HANNIBAL KING THE HIGH TIMES OF DON CHIESEL (MIXTAPE) S OR’ T I ED ICK P DOING IT AGAIN FOR THE FIRST TIME BY ANDREW MARINACCIO Hip-hop DJs and producers have established sampling as high art and one of the genre’s greatest virtues. They confirm for us, through a digitized blend of dissected jazz records, fringe electronics and good old-fashioned noise, that the spirits summoned by Coltrane, Davis, and countless lost legends can find new life in the postmodern online realm. In many cases, these DJs and producers act as the historians of their eras, combing the Internet’s bottomless cultural compendium for old instrumental relics to repurpose within their music. More so than ever, the modern beatsmith makes his influences literally present in every note, bass kick, or organ chord reverently purloined from past inspirations. Purchase alumnus Hannibal Jones, adopting surname King for his musical endeavors, contributes to that curatorial spirit on the latest addition to his mixtape series “Villians Gone Bad,” The High Times of Don Chiesel, by setting his own distinct interests within the throwback reconstructions of today’s hip-hop. Digging into a sunny flow of Motown verve, High Times opens with an appropriately sampled Cheech & Chong skit, set to lax key noodling and vinyl fuzz before snapping into place with the track “Mellow,” whose title sets the eased mood of the mixtape. Even as it fluidly segues into the blossoming horns and cascading guitar of “Organic,” then the diced soul wails and tense string samples in “Do It Again,” King keeps a steady, dignified pace and refrains from cluttering the choice loops of his songs. King’s marriage of technique and taste render beats that evoke the urbanity of Madlib in his dreamily looping Motown selections, hemmed in by cool, leveled high hats and backbeats. On “Places” he channels the late jazz amalgamator Nujabes with propulsive drum work and airy sax cycles. He shows his production savvy of knowing where the oddest detail can lift a song, positing a left-field trill between “Sour’s” nostalgic big band horns to drive it forward. Turning those unexpected fragments into underpinning hooks defines King’s mincing of soul not as a reductive slaughter, but a meticulous-yet-breezy ode to comfort music. High Times richly retells a genre’s story with all the familiar bits but, even more important, with relatively new wrinkles that storytellers and listeners alike may have forgotten. With The High Times of Don Chiesel being so lithe, infectious, and deftly informed by an artisan’s ear, it’s no wonder that King has been a rising producer sought after by his MC peers. He’s a win for young rappers looking for more distinction than just sanitized electro beats, which often seem to be the best that this day and age can muster. Andrew Marinaccio is Reviews Editor of The Beat. 28 THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 WESS MEETS WEST – CHEVALIERS BY ANTHONY AQUILINO To the post-rock savvy ear, Wess Meets West’s gently plucked, slowly echoing guitars at the start of their latest LP, Chevaliers, sounds more than just a bit like a certain Austin guitar quartet. That band may or may not have soundtracked a certain teenage melodrama that may or may not have opened up the long-existing post-rock genre to millions of uninitiated ears in the early 2000s. And this may or may not cause some listeners to take an early pass on Chevaliers under the assumption that it’s but another Stetson in the well-hatted ring of records made by mostly nonvocal, semi-ambient, primarily guitar-driven bands—many of whom borrow quite heavily from Explosions in the Sky. This is something of a shame. Though the White Plainsbased Wess Meets West openly tears a page from Explosions’ better-loved efforts in Chevaliers, WMW allow these borrowed elements to explode in ways their Texan progenitors generally don’t, can’t, or won’t. Call it a regional influence. Wess Meets West’s particular position in New York state puts them well within reach of two of the nation’s more active post-hardcore scenes: Long Island and Poughkeepsie. On tracks like album-opener “The Mountains Are Shaking at Their Roots,” they pair ambient noodling with searing, metal-edged guitar licks and forward-thrusting drumming that nod to post-hardcore acts like Refused, Thursday and Saosin. Still, Chevaliers makes good on its post-rock promise, punching out crisp crescendos and high-squealing, cathartic peaks underpinned and punctuated by patches of lilting guitar echoes, twinkling electric piano, and slithering ambient noise. And though Explosions in the Sky are an easy first association, WMW’s deeper knowledge of post-rock history seeps through on “Leaving Behind a Whaling Economy” and the album-closer, “The Wars of Men.” Both play with the twinkling electro-experimentation of genre-bending pioneers Tortoise, while “Deadlock Arms” finds WMW exploring the sort of crunchy, propulsive riffing that made Chicago instru-metal outfit Pelican’s City of Echoes so refreshing and engaging. One might argue that the overt genre-reference that kicks off Chevaliers is attention-suicide. But as digital media continues to drive listener habits to track-picking over whole-album listening, the long-player format is in constant need of hearty advocates. Post-rock’s requisite patience makes it a perfect idiom for such advocacy, and Wess Meets West seem well aware of this: Chevaliers is undoubtedly intended to be consumed as an album. Accordingly, an overt statement of purpose seems almost necessary, especially against the backdrop of Wess Meets West’s electronics-heavy, occasionally danceable back-catalogue. Chevaliers isn’t without its faults, many of which can be levied against the genre as a whole. While its peaks-and-valleys— loud-quiet dynamics—are often satisfying, most of the record is spent rising or releasing, sometimes predictably so. Of course, both Explosions in the Sky and Godspeed You! Black Emperor have been guilty of similar crimes, but on parts of “Deadlock Arms,” you can almost count on first listen the number of beats left before riff changes, the mid-song lull, and the late-song climax. Most listener impressions of structural predictability, though, are likely to fall along pro- or anti-post-rock party lines, and WMW bring enough originality and transcending influence into Chevaliers’ seven hulking tracks to implore forgiveness from skeptics. While Chevaliers bears some resemblance to Wess Meets West’s earlier work in its embrace of electronic percussion and ambient noise, and nods to less-cosmopolitan rock idioms like emo, screamo, and hardcore, the band’s back-catalogue is historically fidgety, and we may well see them reemerge on the next go-round as something entirely different. For now, though, we’re left with a solid and unique take on a still-evolving genre. MITSKI – LUSH BY ANTHONY AQUILINO “I’m at my highest peak/ I’m ripe, about to fall/Capture me,” singer-songwriter Mitski coos over crawling cabaret piano and a quietly clanking boiler-room beat on the chorus of “Liquid Smooth,” the opening track to her debut album, Lush. It’s an apt beginning to a record that spends much of its nine tracks contemplating the artist’s own emerging womanhood––and in parallel, her emerging maturity as an artist. Much of Lush plays like a test course for Mitski’s snaking soprano to ramble and meander about while she refines the details of her artist-character-narrator persona. When it works, this looseness in both melody and lyrical content lets Lush’s finer tracks seethe with danger and desperation. “Eric” tells of nervous intimacy in snaking, tremulant lines laid over quivering electric piano, brooding vaudeville strings, and prickling synths that chirp and skitter like a failing heart monitor––all recorded with a perfect surgical starkness that emphasizes her conflicting swagger and anxiety, evoking loose seams ready to burst. While Mitski’s swagger and her melodic restlessness both stand behind Lush’s finer moments they sometimes render songs either too postured or too nebulous to be memorable. Her sole attempt at a rocker, “Brand New City,” plods along, recalling some of the more regrettable millennial radio rock, while “Real Men” aches for a real chorus, and spends most of its under three-minute run grasping for a melody worth repeating. Paired with a weakly realized lyrical concept that compares the actions of “men” and “little boys,” the song feels too stilted to pronounce any genuine assertion of confidence. Such posturing, though, can often mask a certain vulnerability, and Lush’s high points come when Mitski acknowledges this in both lyrical content and melodic delivery. “Liquid Smooth” deftly realizes both the power and instability of young adulthood through the lens of blossoming femininity. The almost entirely a capella “Abbey” explores a youthful, misdirected spiritual turbulence in a near-hymnal of gorgeously layered harmonies. Its content is vague on paper––“I am hungry/I was born hungry,” she intones in the opening verse––but in context, it begs the listener to give pause to its platitudes. Mitski is perhaps at her best when she allows herself to be someone else. “Wife” plays with that time-and-place trick Fleet Foxes do so well, using an archaic accent and subtly dated language to lend an ancient urgency to timeless conflicts of love, fidelity, and fertility. And on the album-closer “Pearl Diver,” she projects her own well-tread restlessness onto characters driven to seek treasure despite obvious peril. While Mitski occasionally falls prey to the peril of her own ambition, her hunger and willingness to explore, experiment, and refine lets Lush sparkle most of the time, and hints at an artist-in-flux rapidly growing into her own talents. Anthony Aquilino is a contributing writer for The Beat and a Purchase alumnus, Class of 2011. STONE COLD FOX – THE YOUNG (EP) BY MICHAEL ANDRONICO Every so often, a budding young band comes along that sounds so refined, it’s familiar. You’ve never heard Stone Cold Fox on the radio, in a Starbucks, or at Coachella, but their breezy brand of smart indie-pop could easily find its way to those places in the future. Composed of Purchase studio composition majors Kevin Olken and Ariel Loh, there’s something strikingly professional about this group of guys who haven’t entirely finished college yet. The band’s EP, The Young, kicks off with the relaxed guitars of “Pictures,” a track that stays calm until a sudden explosion of “ahhs” that become hard not to sing along to. The delayed guitars and galloping drums of “American” follow suit, as the smooth drawl of frontman Kevin Olken is simultaneously effortless and tellingly emotional. The layered harmonies of the chorus of “Give Up the Kids” make for one of the EP’s most memorable moments, as you’ll likely be tapping your toes while admiring the subtle catchiness behind the track. “Father Spirit” ups the energy a bit, with a jumpy guitar solo from Olken in the bridge. The Young closes out with the acoustic “Wildcats,” a barebones track that lets Olken’s voice have the spotlight. He’s not entirely alone, as subtle percussion and trumpet help drive his words even further into your ears. Producer/keyboardist Loh did an excellent job behind the boards, making all five tracks sound radio-ready without being drowned in fancy effects. Catchy, familiar, yet refreshingly unique, Stone Cold Fox has delivered an accessible debut that hints at tons of potential. This is the sound of real people making real music, and it’s well worth your ears’ time. Michael Andronico is a contributing writer for The Beat and a Purchase alumnus, Class of 2011. BRYANT DOPE – QUEENS KIDS BY SCOTT INTERRANTE Bryant Jacques is a sophomore arts management major at Purchase College, but he is much better known as Bryant Dope, an up-and-coming MC from Queens. He’s been making a name for himself on the East Coast and hip-hop blog circuit with his latest mixtape Queens Kids and his 2010 tape The Chronicles of Dope. The self-proclaimed “New Voice of Queens Hip-Hop,” this rapper is doing a good job at proving he has the ability to live up to a name like “Dope,” focusing on keeping the tradition of East Coast and Queens hip-hop alive while moving it forward by integrating new styles and original flow. He makes Queens the focus of most of Queens Kids, and speaks directly about living up to its rich hip-hop history. Like the title song, produced by fellow Queens kid Hannibal King (Mac Miller, Children of the Night, Sene), Bryant proudly proclaims, “My religion is A Tribe Called Quest.” This influence comes through over the course of the mixtape both in the fantastically produced beats and Dope’s carefully calculated flow. Even though there are six different producers that contribute tracks to the mixtape, there’s a shared sensibility throughout that echoes the jazz-heavy sampling of Q-tip’s early A Tribe Called Quest productions as well as J-Dilla’s smooth and intricate beatmaking. Bryant Dope’s rapping follows his borough’s lineage with a focus on where he stresses his rhyming and extends his phrases over bar lines. Where he deviates, however, is what brings an asymmetrical element to his music. Most classic Tribe verses utilize consistent rhyme patterns with rare irregularities throughout a verse. This kind of restraint gives their rhymes maturity and class. But 20 years later, hip-hop has moved away from that style. Dope makes a game out of his asymmetrical phrases and uses their varying pulses to propel the verse forward. His avoidance of regularity doesn’t come across as a lack of restraint or maturity, but rather it is used effectively enough to show that his work is that of a true craftsman. Dope’s fascinating rhythms and productions, however, don’t apply to every track on this tape. There are a few songs, particularly “Young People’s Anthem,” produced by Long Island beat-maker Courtney Hall, which fall more into a club-hit style and lose a lot of the rhythmic and musical diversity found on the rest of the album. This mixtape may not be enough to solidify this 19-year-old rapper as “The New Voice of Queens Hip-Hop,” but it absolutely puts him on the right track. Scott Interrante is a contributing writer for The Beat. 29 THE BEAT | Vol. I | No. 1 | Fall 2012 MOVE OVER LARPERS, NEW NERD CLUB TAKES OVER PHOTO jessica lerhman Each academic school year at Purchase marks a new chapter for its ever-changing student body. The 2011-2012 academic period is no different, from Purchase making its presence at one of the most prominent American economic rallies of our generation, to the dissolution of a landmark campus service that has been around since the school’s inception. We’ve survived a hurricane, been arrested for what we believe in and struggled with being stranded in White Plains for an entire semester. Here’s a glimpse at some moments students will remember when reflecting on this year. MORE STUDENTS HOUSED IN WHITE PLAINS THAN EVER BEFORE ALTERNATIVE CLINIC CLOSES AFTER OVER 30 YEARS OF SERVICE This year 102 students were housed in the AKA Hotel in downtown White Plains, occupying six floors of the luxurious extended-stay suites. Compared to previous years when the number of students housed in White Plains was 64, according to Residence Life, almost twice as many students could say they were AKA Hotel residents. Due to the large amount of students living there, hotel management also implemented new policies. Students were required to sign an addendum prohibiting alcohol, even for those over the age of 21. The paperwork also restricted students from smoking on the premises. This is the fourth year Purchase has housed students off-campus, but the presence of hotel-dwellers was more prominent this semester than ever. Overhearing students’ gripes and complaints about the Purchase Loop schedule and scurrying out of evening classes to catch the last shuttle bus was commonplace. At the end of February the school announced that the Alternative Clinic, a service provided by students and for students on campus, was shut down because of legal liabilities. The service began in 1979 and provided a nurse practitioner offering women’s health services. The Alternative Clinic had been a safe place for female students to seek medical help. Six student interns and a faculty advisor also aided in running the clinic, which provided services such as free pregnancy tests, STD testing, and pelvic exams. The SUNY Counsel, the lawyer for New York State, made the decision to “disband” the clinic, according to Health Services. The service does not have medical malpractice insurance for students, leaving it open to legal risk if anything were to go wrong. The “Save the Alternative Clinic” petition started on campus currently has 537 signatures. PHOTOS posterize; scottchan C’MON, IRENE. REALLY? As Purchase students began to pack their bags in anticipation of move-in day, Hurricane Irene swept across the Northeast, pushing back some students’ return. Residence Life student workers and various others opted to move in before the storm, which seemed relatively subdued initially. However, on August 28th students in Alumni Village began to feel Irene’s wrath, with numerous trees downed around the apartment complex. Those living in apartments one through six were forced to evacuate until the trees were removed. But for one group of female students living in the Olde, the inconvenience persisted long after the storm was gone. In apartment J5-2, the hurricane tore through the duplex’s ceiling, leaving a giant gap above the common room. Facilities didn’t fix the ceiling until November. With Live Action Role Players taking over the Humanities Building by night, Purchase has become renowned for its nerd culture. In 2009 former student Ben Bookbinder, known for spearheading the LARPing community, was arrested for committing campus arson-related crimes on three separate occasions. Now it seems the role-playing society has diminished with its figurehead, making room for a new iconic geek union. Last year the Nerd Guild was officially named a campus club, and in the fall 2011 semester the new organization began to rise in popularity. The club has launched campus-wide ongoing games, such as “Humans vs. Zombies,” in which Undead- infected players marked with red bandanas scour the school searching for other participants to zombify. The objective is to “stay alive” for the game’s week-long duration. Each Wednesday evening, at least 30 students show up to the Humanities building to engage in Nerd combat. The club has 100 members on Facebook and counting. ILLUSTRATION michelle huey BY LISA EADICCICO PTV RE-CHANNELED TO NORTH FALL FEST WHITEOUT In September, protesters in New York City started the movement known as “Occupy Wall Street,” originating in the heart of the financial district near the iconic charging bull. The movement intended to incite a cry for help, urging for a change in the economic climate of the nation. Purchase students were quick to make their presence known with students meeting regularly in Campus Center South to plan and organize trips to Wall Street. On October 1, senior Zack Brady was arrested for marching across the Brooklyn Bridge alongside 700 other protesters. He was released from jail the following day. “It was amazing,” wrote Brady in his account of the movement. “We had taken the bridge, one of the biggest actions in New York State in a very long time. We marched, danced, and cheered almost halfway across the bridge.” YEAR IN REVIEW 30 PHOTO kellyann petry STUDENTS TAKE A STAND DURING OCCUPY WALL STREET Enduring snowstorms during the school year is familiar to Purchase students. Anyone remember the blizzard in 2010 that transformed the campus into a snowball-flinging battlefield? However, the flurries don’t usually fall until the second half of the school year’s wintery months. October’s unprecedented snowstorm shocked students when the wacky weather swept through this year’s Fall Fest event. Norwegian metal act Kvelertak arrived at the festival two hours late, and the chilly conditions resulted in a bleak student turnout during the day. Purchase Television, an integral part of student life on campus, was forced to halt its broadcast of Purchase-run shows when the television network switched locations. The station was disconnected from the end of the fall semester through March, and is now situated in Campus Center North. The studio had found its home in Campus Center South for the past four years and those who have grown well-acquainted with the television station’s location were forced to adjust to the new spot. Campus construction in the Humanities building was the deciding factor behind moving the PTV location. The class of 2012 may be gone, but for those feeling nostalgic, the upcoming year is sure to bring more student budget cut protests on the academic mall, disruptive construction that has made the campus an ever-changing maze, and the usual Culture Shock complaints. But underneath all the jokes and student gripes, Purchase has a defining element that separates even the most cynical of students from other collegiates (even if they won’t admit it): we are a community of artists, leaders and innovators, and the Purchase community is sure to continue to uphold its eccentric yet admirable reputation. Lisa Eadiccico is Production Editor of The Beat and a Purchase alumna, class of ’12 31 WORKING FOR THE BEAT ________________________________________ ADVERTISING _____________________________________________________________ The Beat is looking for reporters, critics, editors, photographers, page designers, and ad sales staff. Contact editors at TheBeatatPC@ gmail.com and type “Working for The Beat” in the subject line. Include your name and number. The Beat is accepting ads of various sizes for Issue #2. For rates and other information, please contact Andrew Salomon, publisher and faculty advisor, at [email protected], or call 914.251.6598. Include your name and number. SENIOR PROJECTS ________________________________ The Beat seeks seniors in the Music Conservatory who are interested in having their projects profiled for Quarter Notes. Please contact editors at [email protected] and type “Senior Project: Quarter Notes” in the subject line. Include your name and number. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR _____________________________________________________________ The editors welcome reader comments about our inaugural issue and/or anything that is remotely relevant to our work. Please send your letters to [email protected]. Please include your first and last names and a phone number. You can also comment on Facebook (/TheBeatatPC) and Twitter (@thebeatatPC), and we’ll run selections in Issue #2, set for Spring 2013. Letters and comments may be edited to fit The Beat standards and practices. Please limit your letters to 250 words or less. SUBMITTING WORK FOR REVIEW STATE OF THE ART _____________________________________________________________ ________________________________________ Have a LP, EP, mixtape or concert coming up that you would like reviewed? Please contact editors at [email protected] and type “Submitting Work for Review” in the subject line. Include your name and number. The editors welcome brief essays (500 words or less) from the Purchase College community on issues related to the world of music, on campus or off. Contact editors at TheBeatatPC@gmail. com and type “State of the Art” in the subject line. You do not have to submit a completed piece; a brief description of your topic will suffice. Also: please include your name and number. DONATIONS _____________________________________________________________ The Beat is an independent magazine printed twice a year. If you’d like to contribute, please contact Andrew Salomon, publisher and faculty advisor, at [email protected] or call 914.251.6598. Include your name and number. GRAPHIC DESIGN • PHOTOGRAPHY WWW.MICHELLEHUEY.COM