Give a listen

<a href="http://carbonironrecords.bandcamp.com/album/c-fe-menagerie-vol-1">deciBel--Subsistent by C/Fe Records</a>

Sunday, April 10, 2011

MusiM has released a soundtrack for the short film The Beginning for $1: http://ping.fm/2WmMF

Monday, July 12, 2010

The Still Lifes videos

The Still Lifes have remixed their video for the Future in Question to better reflect the spirit of the song. They are also pre-releasing a song from the forthcoming album. Age of Static is a fan favorite which they perform at virtually every show. They finally feel comfortable releasing a recorded version of it, and the video is probably the best of their four music videos. You can see both at our YouTube channel.

http://ping.fm/ZnXzt

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Band Updates 7/3/2010


MusiM has been asked to compose the soundtrack for an unofficial mod of DragonAge: Origins. John is almost as serious about gaming as he is about his music. There is no doubt this soundtrack will be quite dynamic.
The Still Lifes have almost completed their compilation of previous works. They will actually be giving away the songs. The release will coincide with their short stint in New Zealand in two weeks. The proper album, Aiglatson, should be out soon featuring all new songs and a much more engaging sound.
deciBel is opening for VNV Nation next month.
AllThisIsMeaningless is still busy mixing and picking up fans all over the world with their single Gate 36. Request it on your local or internet radio station.
Also, we are very happy to be releasing the first album from Dromedary Sunset which is tentatively titled The History of the Universe. These guys are perfectionists. They can be real pains to work with when you are running their record label and trying to release their music for them and their benefit. However, when they say a song of theirs is finished, rest assured, it will be one of the most subtly enjoyable and intriguing soundscapes you have ever heard. Seriously, I told them I liked one of their songs once. Their comment was, no not yet. The still needed to find the right tone for one of the parts, but once they found it, I was shocked by how much more complete the song sounded afterwards.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Reality and other Simulacra

First, I have some sad news. Not only did Asimov's Robot series get introduced to movie goers in a questionable way, but now his Foundation series is getting muddled up: http://ping.fm/Ew6Ie

Mark Wilson reports that Roland Emmerich is directing the movie. He directed Independence Day and Stargate. So, he has directed sci-fi movies before which had merit. However, Foundation is sf of the highest caliber, and Emmerich work--The Day After Tomorrow and 2012--has just gone down hill in terms of intelligence. He may be able to grasp the epic nature of the story, but will he ever be able to convey the higher minded elements? Just to add insult to injury, the screenplay is being handled by Robert Rodat who wrote the Patriot. Now, the complete disrespect The Patriot gave to the Swamp Fox and the other historical figures alluded to or featured in the movie is probably due primarily to the movie's director. Rodat may actually treat this story with some dignity in light of some of his previous work like Saving Private Ryan. While the movie is like to be a pathetic spectacle which mocks Asimov more than it pays him tribute, I'll try to stand with Wilson and hope that the two can some how manage to combine an action packed blockbuster movie with a heady art film filled with the symbolism the book contains.

In better news, Josh Wimmer at io9 graces his audience with a thought provoking review of Philip K. Dick's Man in the High Castle: http://ping.fm/xrB9t Wimmer is able to point to Dick as the sf author who best connected with the American culture of his time, but along the way poses some very fun questions. You may also notice a link to your right for a review of A Canticle for Liebowitz. It's also an interesting review.

In fact, Wimmer's review of PKD reminded me of Brad Feld's post a day before titled, Are We Already Working For The Computers?,
http://ping.fm/qy61I Feld's post is worth reading without preview. I could ruin your perception of it. Suffice it to say that he poses questions of reality which are also very fun to discuss philosophically.

Anyway, that was a fraction of my online reading which I found interesting this week. In actual C/Fe news, The Still Lifes are not only preparing to release remastered versions of some of their older work, they are also working on some music videos for each of their three songs on C/Fe Menagerie Vol. 1. Stay tuned to see when they are released.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Music Future?

The La Times published a funny article on January 31, http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-afternoons31-2010jan31,0,6652730,full.story It's about the music industry these days in LA. I say it is funny because the bands are in the same position now that they have been for the past several years, yet the article does not show this fact. The article suggests this is a recent trend. Perhaps it is because some bands are only just now feeling the effects of the music industry's poor decisions--focusing the whole industry on one style of music, punishing their fans for sampling songs, allowing Apple to seize control of their market, etc.

A few years ago, The Still Lifes introduced me to Dennis Draeger. He was just starting his masters degree in Futures Studies at the time. Since he was an avid music fan and a budding futurist, I asked him to write some reports for me about the future of the music industry. He immediately said he didn't think there was a foreseeable future for a commercially viable market with our taste in music without some massive amounts of capital, but he would do some research and see what he could dig up for me. When I asked him to explain massive amounts of capital, I was surprised we had a similar definition: tens of millions of dollars. I may be a successful businessman in my own right, but I'm not Donald Trump much less Jack Welch or Warren Buffet who don't need a TV show and a bad wig to stay in the public interest. My best work is getting small businesses to become medium businesses. That's what companies hire me to do. So, when I decided to dump some small capital into a personal interest, electronic music, I was hoping to bring some music nerd interest to some newer electronic groups which used acoustic instruments to create works of art. I never expected any of the eventual bands to go mainstream. Dennis' initial thoughts though were worrisome since they suggested that medium level independent labels may be a thing of the past.

Dennis actually wrote some very inspiring and insightful reports on the music industry. And many of the things he mentioned are mentioned in this LA Times article: the death of the album, bands being lost in the ocean of hopefuls trying to get sold on the internet or iTunes, the focus of record labels to make money off band tours, and a need to focus on selling music for soundtracks to TV and movies. Dennis even brought up an idea of selling the bands through designer T-shirts. Dennis said most of the things he put in his reports had been brought out years before he wrote them in 2007. In fact, he found a blog from 1999 that postulated many of the things mentioned in the LA Times article. Yet three years after he informed me of all this, here we are in the same situation according to this article.

Laughing at this may be a dark form of humor, but I have to laugh to keep from weeping. I especially have to laugh considering the continuing trend these days toward boring, rehashed mainstream pop which dates its lineage back to Spice Girls, New Kids on the Block, Menudo, ABBA, The Archies, Nancy Sinatra, Fabian, Pat Boone, and earlier. There's nothing wrong with any of these people, but watching the Grammy's these days is like watching reruns of Leave it to Beaver with a little more sexual innuendo--just enough to keep interests of teenage boys.

What happened to thinking about music as an art form? What happened to expecting musicians to push the envelope. The only envelope Kanye West, Taylor Swift, and Lady Gaga are pushing is 15% of their paycheck to their image manager. Swift, the pretty little princess of white trash pubescent noise, was at least voted on by a demographic of couch potatoes trying to sing along. Kanye, to his defense, has brought Santogold (Santigold) to a little more prominence than she would have if left to her own devices. Lady Gaga is at least...well are there any positives to her? She's keeping vaudeville alive? No, I don't think she is trying to be funny. If her image consultant is trying to be funny, I don't think Lady Gaga is in on the joke.

The hope of C/Fe Records is to be a haven to artists searching for ways to appeal to the public while creating music that reflects its time as much as it is experimental. We want to also provide a place for music aficionados to experience new sounds and new concepts of where music can take us. Let's get beyond the old cliché of what a band was, and focus on what a band and record label can and even should be.

C/Fe has a lot of plans. Some of our strategies may fail, but many of them will succeed. I hope you enjoy the ride.

Listen to the sounds of the singularity,

Jakub Novotny

Monday, February 1, 2010

The LA Time published a funny article on the 31, http://ping.fm/oBve9

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

C/Fe Records MusiMenagerie Vol. 1 – Dirt Hero #10


This is a hard song to write about.  This is primarily because its literally a good 6 years old now.  I wrote this song during the summer before I became very sick.  Things were very dramatic for me back then and little events seemed like the end of the world.  I wouldn’t be surprised to find out I was certifiably crazy during that summer.
Dirt Hero #10 was one of the first songs I wrote that I was proud of after Sub Ojec.  Oddly enough the song has never really found a home on an album or anywhere else which is why I’m so happy to see it have a home on the C/Fe compliation.
Some of my songs start out as a name or a riff.  Dirt Hero #10 started out as a file named dn10 and a beat.  Actually quite a few beats.  See I had probably four or five songs that were under 3 minutes long that I didn’t like but I liked the beats to.  And at the time I was coming off a benge of being into tech step drum ‘n’ bass artists such as Cause 4 Concern and Bad Company (aka EIB), so I was really wanting to do some industrial drum ‘n’ bass.  The Gridlock side project Dryft also very much had some inspiration in this.   And thus came the creation of the opening beat which I beat mixed with itself.  The song really wrote itself after that and I did the EQ work.
The name changed a few times.  Part of me almost wishes I had changed the name to dna#10 but Dirt Hero #10 has actual meaning.  The idea behind the name is Dirt Hero brings to mind the Anti-Hero.  The Anti-Hero has surged in popularity over the decades to the extent that story telling has become a bit predictable.  And real life imitating art produces a lot of people who want to be seen as dark and animalistic and unpredictable thus emulating their favored Anti-Hero.  But in all the fake ones there has to be a real one, one who isn’t devoted to image but is thrown into those extrordinary circumstances to change their persona and life.  So the title makes the reference to the tenth one who might be the real deal.
I also want to share the first time I knew that other people would enjoy the song as much as I have.  My best friend at the time and I were driving out of town while I was sick to visit a couple of our ex’s oddly enough.  I didn’t realize how sick the medication I had that afternoon would make me that evening.  I was in the process of involuntarily passing out when I pulled out a mix CD I had done with the track on it and put it in the player.  I apologized to my friend and told him that I wanted to listen to this track I wrote.  Evidently this apology came out as something like “Hm frmmm ugmm emmm negmmm fargle.”  See a few minutes later he was telling me how badass it was and asking me what band it was taking the shot in the dark guess of Converter.  Although I was out of it, his reaction was definitely sincere and to this day the best compliment I have received on the song.
Anyway there you have it, my synopsis and thoughts on Dirt Hero #10.  I’m actually a little sad this will be the last of these posts but everything has to end.