14 August 2011

Field Day

If you’re a regular reader of this blog, you probably know that we are no fans of the type of festival that requires one to bring their own roof to sleep under at night. Not to mention the sleeping bag, air mattress and pump – though I can safely say, following a rather disastrous encounter at a recent Lowlands festival, that our hate versus pumps is wholly reciprocated. Luckily, there is another type of festival in existence that doesn’t require one to queue to shower (and if your no avid reader of this blog, you might be able to take a wild guess at which we prefer at this point).

More after the jump.

2 August 2011

Best of 2011 so far

As per usual, we of IKRS have been busying ourselves with coming up with what we think are the best tracks of 2011 so far. We might be a bit late this year with our half year lists, but hey, apparently we finally all got lives to attend to as well. My contribution can be found below the bump, that of the others is available via IKRS, and, if you're into that sort of thing, Spotify

15 June 2011

I'm in the Guardian!

With text this time! (next time with name!)

If anything, this shows I spend too much time on Twitter. Whole story here.

5 June 2011

Primavera 2011 - long post, sorry, Sunday evening word vomit

The prologue
Every decent festival has a prologue: at Lowlands you can spend a whole extra day sleeping on a half-inflated air mattress whilst fighting boredom by inventing stupid games that don’t really work but hey, you’ve got entertain yourself some way, at Pinkpop you spend that extra time queuing in varies places to get your wristband and secure that one place that isn’t at the bottom of a hill for when the inevitable rain will fall, and at Glastonbury you get drunk. At Primavera you spend it watching a couple of bands in a fake ancient looking square just around the corner from where the ’92 Olympics were held. And no, Las Robertas and Comet Gain might not be the most entertaining bands, but when you know Echo & the Bunnymen and Caribou are also on the bill it is certainly worth that cheap metro ticket and the 30 second wait to get your wristband. Yes, the food and drinks might be slightly overpriced, and the queue for the toilets is a tad bit intimidating, but other than that even Dutch and English audience combined can find very little to nag about.

Girl Talk
Chapter 1: Of Montreal, Suicide & Girl Talk
Imagine: a festival terrain right next to the beach and a shopping mall with wonderful clean toilets and metro and tram stations right in front of it. Sounds rather perfect, doesn’t it? It gets even better when you realise that there are actual seats at some of the stages, though this also means a lot of stairs. And I really mean a lot of stairs. But hey, as long as you can also use them to sit comfortably whilst enjoying a bit of Glenn Branca I’m not one to complain.
The day starts of with thirst. Yes, thirst (and no not for knowledge, were not from Greece). There’s around 40.000 people roaming the festival, but there’s only bar that’s actually open leading to queues that only move when people give up on getting a drink there and make their way to the mall. The reason for this a new way of paying for your drinks with a futuristic plastic card linked to an account you have to set up on the festival’s website, a system that requires a working computer system and wi-fi connection and which fails miserably on the first day.
After missing the whole of Of Montreal by waiting to get a bottle of water (it looked great on screen though, but no new tracks), it’s on to P.I.L. who are playing the Llevant stage, which is condemned to solitary confinement in the outer corner of the festival. Surprisingly though, the stage is about twice as big as the main stage and hordes of Johnny Rotten fans have made it there. After having seen a rather miserable reincarnation of the Sex Pistols a couple of years ago, P.I.L. seems to suit Johnny Rotten a whole lot better: he can actually sing. Glenn Branca and his ensemble are the next surprise and probably an act that wouldn’t fit on any other festival (well, Northsea Jazz probably, but Oneohtrix Point Never and Salem wouldn’t be listed on the same stage). 
From one old man to an even older one: it’s Suicide. And at the age of 72, Alan Vega is showing that somewhere between 62 (Glen Branca’s age) and his age is the right time to quit music altogether. The horrifying scream in ‘Frankie Teardrop’ is reduced to a feeble ‘Oh no!’ which is enough to convince us to go back to the present day with a bit of Ty Segall. The band from California feel right at home in the warmth of the Spanish night and manage to get the whole crowd on their feet and dancing (except for me as I seem to have finally reached that age where I really need to sit down every now and then because my back is killing me – in my defence, it was around 2am at this time and I had been up on my feet since 7am the day before and am generally a whiny person).
After a sneak peek at Salem (avoid at all cost) it’s on to a bit of the Flaming Lips spectacular. It’s predictable, but it’s fun. At 5am in the morning it’s finally time for the best act of the day: Girl Talk. The guy is a bloody genius. Nothing’s more fun than a whole crowd of pretentious hipsters singing along to Bon Jovi and Kelly Clarkson like their life depended on it.


Srsly, if I need to caption this you're reading the wrong blog
Chapter 2: PULP!!!!
It is finally there: the day most of the people present at Primavera have been waiting half a lifetime (or at least half a year) for: Pulp. After scaring away most of the other hostel guests by doing an overenthusiastic Pulp-karaoke on the ‘house and R&B’-evening on our first night there, we know we are prepared. As we made it back pretty late on the first day (“we saw the sun rise” wouldn’t do justice to the time we finally made it back), the day starts of pretty comfortably in the auditorium of the museum of natural sciences which, for this festival, houses DM Stith and Sufjan Stevens. DM Stith is amazing, and it’s a shame he’s only allowed four songs. Sufjan’s performance is perhaps even better than the one a week earlier at the Royal Festival Hall in London. It’s crazy, absolutely ridiculous, genius and just plain indescribable. There are angel wings, various alien costumes, the whole of Age of Adz, talk of star people and Royal Robertson (the artist who inspired the album) and a half our finale consisting of one song only. And of course there is an encore with ‘Chicago’, which is still one of the best songs ever written. And this only the opener to the real headliner of the day!
                  As for the rest of the day: Male Bonding were okay, as were M. Ward, Pere Ubu and the vegan cakes (vegan cakes! At a festival! If anything indicates the quality and variety of food availability at a festival, it's the presence of vegan cakes!). Belle & Sebastian were in a league of their own, that is, if they weren’t playing at the same festival as Pulp and I wasn’t just standing at the front during their performance to get an even better spot during the next gig. After an endless period of waiting during which someone has discovered you can display silly messages on the screen behind the stage using Pulp’s laser show, the 4 letters that were already faintly visible light up (just after someone had the clarity of mind by texting their position as ‘near to the ‘P’’) and the festival explodes. It takes ‘Do you remember the first time’ to get the most annoying people out of the way, but the rest of the set is pure bliss, being surrounded by hundreds of people who can sing along to every single line of every song (a feat which does unfortunately drain out Jarvis himself at times). But Jarvis – and the person in charge of the sound – soon recover and the rest of the set is just perfect. There’s a marriage proposal at the end of ‘I spy’ – which causes an emotional overload for a lot of people – and a lot of grinning at the loud shouting of inappropriate lyrics in unison or marvel at Jarvis's manual to sex during 'This is hardcore' (which is a lot more informative with the visual representation). Jarvis is still in top form moves across the stages in ways the twentysomething hipsters on the Pitchfork stage can’t even contrive. It all culminates in ‘Common People’ which Jarvis dedicates to the Spanish Revolution - or #spanishrevolution, a lot of whose demonstrators are present at the festival. After admitting he’s only a foreigner and doesn’t know much about what’s going on, he claims it can’t be right if police beat over a hundred protesters into the hospital. His words are greeted more enthusiastically then Barca’s Champion League win will be greeted the next day and a glorious mess ensues (and what else would you expect with 45% of the ‘common people’ being unemployed). The rest of the night sees people spontaneously bursting out in reiterations of ‘Common People’ in line for food or the toilets. It was awesome.
Oh, and Battles played later. The drunk people dancing to their music was more entertaining than the band. But had seen Pulp at this time and were busy remembering the first time.


Tune-Yards
Chapter 3: the afterbirth
So 2 days have gone by and the real headliner of the festival has already played – what’s left? Although the last day of the festival has a pretty decent line-up, it still feels a bit like an afterbirth (© Ilse van de Spoel). But showing up does pay of: in the line for John Cale (which is in the auditorium again) we get treated to the sight of Jarvis himself who gets priority treatment whilst entering the building. Just that makes it worth it – that and the seats that are perfect for sleeping (I can vouch for that).
Tune-Yards (imagine wonky spelling) is pretty amazing as well, as are Einstürzende Neubauten, Gang Gang Dancegarbage bag boy apparently is part of the band – and Swans. Matthew Dear is were things get a bit more interesting: you might have already read about his charismatic stage presence earlier on this blog but I can now reveal where he gets it from. For he is Freddy Ruppert’s (of Former Ghosts) long lost twin brother. Damn, I even had to check whether any of their live dates had clashed to be certain they weren’t the same exact person. Both have the same looks, the same charm, same manner of moving around on stage and both make dark electronic music that I really like.
                  Matthew Dear finishes just in time for me to catch the best bit of PJ Harvey’s show, which is very long but very good. And her white outfit makes it easy to spot her even if you’re sitting on a staircase at the other end of the field where she is performing because your feet are finally starting to really give out. To end the night in style, we catch three bands that are playing at the same time. We start of with Odd Future who jump into the audience feet-first. Nice one guys. Then it’s on to Animal Collective who are incomprehensible as usual (they mainly play as yet unreleased tracks) and finally Pissed Jeans who sound like being born and vomiting at the same time (again © Ilse van de Spoel). Holy Ghost! loses out to the prospect of a nice warm shower and a comfortable bed.


Epilogue
The festival finishes as it started: with just a couple of bands in a square. We prefer a day at the beach and some tapas over Mercury Rev at this time though.

I’ll be back next year.

Bands I would have liked to see but missed (but don't really care about as I've seen so much else): Caribou, Interpol (I know, but I’ve never seen them), Islet, Glasser, Baths, The National (they played on the same day as Sufjan Stevens and Pulp, had I gone to see them as well it would have the most perfect festival day ever rendering all other attempts to entertain myself with live music futile), Deerhunter, Julian Lynch, Twin Shadow, Jamie XX, Lindstrom, Warpaint, Perfume Genius

1 June 2011

31 May 2011

Welcome to my little blog, where I'm trying to keep you guys up to date with my London life (with the emphasis on trying as don't think I've written anything substantial in months - except for reviews of course). Oh, and if you want to read everything in Dutch, than this is an option.


        London                                                                          Music 





Funzies                                            Sports

14 May 2011

A week in pictures

Spot the fox on the station
Entry to QI granted
QI Christmas episode (yes they record this in May)
For those of you who are interested: the guest on the show were Sean Lock, Ross Noble and Brian Blessed
There was a surprising amount of talk about bestiality which will probably not make the final cut
Stephen Fry's hands outside the ITV studios
Have I Got News for You set 
I sat all the way on the right in this picture and could only see Ian Hislop and Paul Merton's receding hairline
And lastly Sufjan Stevens at Royal Festival Hall
Above picture is what I was expecting from this folk singer (he has been likened to Bob Dylan for those of you who don't know him)
It got a bit crazier during Chicago with a monkey for a hat
However, Sufjan only sported the 'plain' monkey hat look during the encore
The rest of the show featured costumes such as these full size angel wings...
(but banjo - thus still folk)
...the more plain fluorescent tape costume...
...a diamond alien costume with disco ball...
 (and lots of talk of star people)
...and an adapted version of his eagle wings for the 25 minute 'Impossible Soul' finale
(that link isn't the entire track - surprisingly it's to big for the internet)
 Also, there was confetti
And balloons
(and hip hop dancing, but that's a bit hard to photograph)

Overall, it was on of the best gigs I've ever seen and the sheer the diversity, chaos and multitude of things happening on stage have made it absolutely impossible to review. Hence, pictures. 
More pictures (and in better resolution) on Flicker (1) and (2)

Also, a video of Vesuvius (from a gig last year - so the show elements present yesterday are mostly missing) which was by far the best song in the set - apart from Chicago of course



And while I'm at it, a video of Chicago



If you would happen to think he's a bit weird: his parents thought they were star people (aliens basically), he plays 51 different instruments, likes to knit, makes all the costumes himself, once planned to write an album for each state in America (he managed Michigan and Illinois), is responsible for the only double EP in history, releases a Christmas album each year and has brother (Marzuki) who is really good marathon runner. Now you have reason to think of him as 'weird'. But in a wonderful way.

3 May 2011

Finally...

Despite all the bank holidays lately messing publication schedules up, my paper has finally made it to the internet. It's available here, though I'm not sure whether it has open access - but you will at the very least be able to read the abstract (again). If you want to read the whole thing, you can try the 'Download PDF' application in the upper right corner. If you're denied access but keen to read the paper (one can never know), I can send you the PDF myself - it's only 8 pages of scientific gobbledegook.

16 April 2011

#twitterjoketrial

This:

Lead to this:


(As seen at the #twitterjoketrial gig, which functioned as a fundraiser for an idiot who joked on Twitter that he was going to blow up an airport but got taken too seriously and has now evolved into a cause Stephen Fry would go to jail for)

15 April 2011

My First Paper©

The full thing will be online next Tuesday for everyone to enjoy (I'll link it up then), but for now, you can enjoy the abstract and be baffled by the number of initials in my name.

7 April 2011

Goals

I've got a list of things that would be very nice if I would achieve them at some point but wouldn't mind very much if I didn't. One could call them 'goals' - which I have done in the title of this post in the sake of brevity - but I'm not getting all worked up about them. I would view my life as complete though if I were to make (one of) them reality.
The list comprises:
  • Publishing in the BMJ (I like their font)
  • Publishing in the Guardian (I like their font and their interview style)
  • Owning a dishwasher
I would be especially pleased to achieve the latter, though I now seem to have a shot at achieving the second one in a 'future science writers prize' organised by the Wellcome Trust, the Guardian and the Observer, which are three of my favourite entities in this world. The prize includes publication in the Guardian and £1000 which ought to be enough for a dishwasher. I think I'm entering.

6 April 2011

Cold Cave @ The Lexington 5 April 2011

Even Charlie Brooker on a bad-hair day wouldn't be able to muster the amount of vitriol needed to review opening act Drum Cunt (...), so we'll just leave you with a warning.

Cold Cave seem to expand further everything time I see them: this time there's five of them. Or rather, four of 'them' and Wesley Eisold who has decided to become David Bowie. Last time he seemed to not even notice there were any people in the same room, and now he seems to be on the way to become an extravagant frontman - he's got the flashy rings and goth shirt to show it. The photographers apparently were in the know about this change in appearence as they gathered en masse in front of the stage in an attempt to blind the entire audience with an abundance of bright flashes not seen since the last supernova (which is not an awful lot better than the deafening effect that usually ensues after seeing Cold Cave).
Once control over some of the senses is regained, confusion reigns. Is this camp band really the same Cold Cave as before, though with added guitar player? Is Wesley Eisold really making all those Brett Anderson-like poses on stage? Okay, he is supposed to be a poet, so he's allowed to be weird, but this seems like 180 degree turn in the opposite direction. Hell! One song even sounds like a 'Love is a Battlefield' cover (if it was: kudos to you, Sir, my ears weren't cooperating enough to actually make the words out)!
Eisold still can't really sing, but we've got whole hordes of tv shows just to tell us that it isn't about the singing, but the songwriting, so yeah, that's okay. Or is it? On the first album, the songs were loud enough to hide the fact that most of the lyrics were just shouted into the mic, now that he seems to be flirting with disco, his lack in holding a tune kinda shows. 'The Great Pan is Dead' is still a loud enough song to make for it, but other than it Cold Cave seem to be this year's Foals, which is sad as I really enjoyed their first album (and might have already ordered the new one on a whim - any takers?)

25 March 2011

Watson

I finally got a new computer at work (only took 6 months) and as a true geek, I've decided to name it Watson. Partly, because research is a bit like detective work (and with the computer as my sturdy assistant, that makes me Sherlock), and partly after Dr James D. Watson who won a Nobel Prize for co-discovering the structure of DNA. The reason for the latter is because the man is a total jerk which I can use as justification when I shout abuse at the thing when it inevitably will refuse to do what I want it to do.

Also, I have discovered that Bikini Kill is the perfect music for a Friday afternoon.

13 March 2011

We Love Cox



(please don't cut incriminating soundbites out of this stream...)

11 March 2011

I can do science me

"I am very pleased to inform you that your above mentioned manuscript has now been accepted for publication in the International Journal of Obesity."

Yay! The article I wrote as a part of my Masters has finally been accepted, meaning that I am now officially a scientist.

Also, I have found out that I am just 6 years older than the computer I'm using to write this on.

9 March 2011

We're on a roll people!


Ikrs 2nd March by Ikrs on Mixcloud

And we've also got a Facebook page, if you're into that kind of stuff (please be our friend)

12 February 2011

Officially a massive nerd now

I kind of scribbled some words down for the blog of the Royal Statistical Society. Mainly because I've been getting a bit fed up with the Daily Mail's interpretation of science, but mostly because last week the Guardian joined in. My blind anger has led to this piece (which has actually been read by at least one person judging by the comment) and me now having an actual editor who has already made me commit to writing something similar every three weeks. You can read the rest of it here.

Also, this week my existence has been confirmed inside of the department I've been working in since October last year: I am apparently a studentship with half a telephone number (does this mean I can't say I'm not made of money anymore?).