Friday, October 9, 2009

This is what the world is for, making electricity

It wasn't too long ago that people from Manhattan began transforming abandoned industrial buildings into studios and venues in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Just as the Williamsburg Bridge spawned a migration from the lower east Manhattan slums back in early 1900s, the lower rents and abundance of space left by the deserted industrial factories provided sound artists and musicians with allure and somewhat of a blank slate to create new possibilities of space and time.
Today, the Williamsburg scene is thriving and has become know for its worldbeat. I assume this has happened because the music is impossible to classify in terms of genre. Regardless of what the music is or is not, it is achieving something that most have not seen since the early days of rap. It is not meant for anyone. It is done to preserve the essence of music. The melodies, tones, notes, etc. that the musicians construct urge us to think in hopes that we can alter our realities for the better.

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