Wednesday, December 17, 2008

JACKFROST Art Show information!

by Mikey Velazquez, HAWT Los Angeles



Check out the pics we have up from last year's JACKFROST Toy Drive and Winter Wonderland! They're in an album on our myspace page!

www. myspace. com/thehawtmusic

And of course, the countdown grows nearer to our 3rd Annual this Saturday night, rain or shine or SNOW!

JACKFROST Art Show and Artist information:




KISKA 242:

Hailing from San Diego, she will be doing live art during the show, as well as displaying some pieces.
Live Art was an integral part of our 1st JF, and we're adding to the artistic experience once again so keep an eye out for her work during the show!

LILIA, GINGER, & TATIANA:

These 3 ladies will be displaying their works, a series of current and past installments that will give you an idea of their styles, versatility, and creative passions.


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AND OF COURSE, remember to arrive early as possible to enjoy the ART SHOW and get acquainted with the Winter Wonderland!

PLEASE DO bring an unwrapped toy for the TOY DRIVE, this is the main reason we're doing this event, so please do bring one for a local kid from NEW HORIZON'S FAMILY CENTER.


www. newhorizonsfamilycenter. org

Thursday, December 11, 2008

JACKFROST Info & New HAWTCAST: Justin Long @ Jackfrost Part 2

Some like it FROSTY! =)

*********************************************************

JACK IS BACK!

SATURDAY DECEMBER 20th in Los Angeles....

We transport you to another magical night in a Winter Wonderland, filled with beautiful art, music, friends and smiling faces. Please feel free to pass this along to those who might appreciate such a special event, one we only do once every December.


Our primary objective of the night is to raise more toys than we did the previous two years, which we will donate to the NEW HORIZONS FAMLY CENTER, a non-profit organization that gives these toys to Los Angeles families who are less fortunate and can really use a smile on their face in this season of giving.


www. newhorizonsfamilycenter. org

If you would like to get involved in this year's TOY DRIVE, please inquire within.
It doesn't take much at all, and will only help us raise more toys for these kids =)

email for more info: mikey@hawtmusic.com





Below is a sneak peek of what's to come, with a video taken of last year's JACKFROST, featuring Justin Long performing his magic....








You can also go to our HAWTCAST to listen to Justin and Mes' mixes from the previous JACKFROST Winter Wonderlands!

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Wednesday, December 10, 2008

HAWT Abroad w/ DJ Mes Part 1

HAWT abroad Part. 1 with DJ Mes

by DJ Mes, HAWT San Francisco

Traveling is one of my favorite things to do, especially as a DJ. It’s a such great feeling to travel to a distant or unknown land to meet new people, rock a crowd and soak up unique cultures. I feel truly blessed to be able to see the world while doing what I love to do.

On this tour I’ve gone to some new countries and parties as well as some of my old favorites.

My tour kicked off in Glasgow, Scotland, which is one of my favorite cities in the world. If you have never been let me just tell you that The Scot’s are some of the nicest people you will ever meet! They are so kind, very hospitable and really know how to show guests a good time. I played a party called ‘Fiasco’ for the first time but I felt right at home. Fiasco is definitely a top party and one of the best underground nights in Glasgow. The vibe was thick, party was rammed and everyone was well up for it! The show went off without a hitch and then we all carried on to an after party where it got a little messy [no pun intended] but that’s just par for the course when you go out for a proper house night here. All in all, it was a great way to kick things off. A shout out to Ed and Frazier for putting on such a bang on night and Shouts out to Chris Harris, Dom Martin, Craig Hamilton, Ch3fDa3P4rty and all of the other good folks I met.

Check out some videos and pictures from the night below and stay tuned for next weeks blog complete with front line reports France and Ireland.


DJ Mes Live @ Fiasco 21.11.08


http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=VYo9_7d6Le0


http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=eGMzPkP-fB0


http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=Bhs5lL-qOIw&feature=related

Monday, December 8, 2008

3rd Annual JACKFROST Toy Drive!


PLEASE REPOST if you like it FROSTY! =)

*********************************************************

JACK IS BACK!

SATURDAY DECEMBER 20th in Los Angeles....

We transport you to another magical night in a Winter Wonderland, filled with beautiful art, music, friends and smiling faces. Please feel free to pass this along to those who might appreciate such a special event, one we only do once every December.


Our primary objective of the night is to raise more toys than we did the previous two years, which we will donate to the NEW HORIZONS FAMLY CENTER, a non-profit organization that gives these toys to Los Angeles families who are less fortunate and can really use a smile on their face in this season of giving.


www. newhorizonsfamilycenter. org

If you would like to get involved in this year's TOY DRIVE, please inquire within.
It doesn't take much at all, and will only help us raise more toys for these kids =)

email for more info: mikey@hawtmusic.com





Below is a sneak peek of what's to come, with a video taken of last year's JACKFROST, featuring Justin Long performing his magic....








You can also go to our HAWTCAST to listen to Justin and Mes' mixes from the previous JACKFROST Winter Wonderlands!

..





......


Monday, December 1, 2008

The VINYL Frontier

Eddie Barajas, HAWT Music, Los Angeles




I came across this article some time ago, and I'm not sure where I found this article, but I hope you enjoy reading it :)



You hear music in a club or a bar. You start to nod your head to the beat; or you get up and dance; or maybe you chat up a stranger or you walk out of the venue. Regardless of your decision, do you think about the means by which this music is invading your head space? Probably not. But some folks do care?very much. Because to some, their livelihoods?and honor?depend on it.

For DJs, the matter of format is as crucial as instruments are for surgeons. Arguments rage online and in clubland about the pros and cons of various formats and gear: vinyl, Serato, CDs, MP3s, .wav/.aiff/FLAC files, iPods, etc. These debates crackle with the same irreconcilable fury as those dedicated to evolution vs. creationism, celluloid vs. digital video and the Beatles vs. the Stones.

Recent years have seen DJs increasingly deploying digital formats, with laptops and Serato interfaces becoming as common a sight as record bags among selectors. Every time you go to a club now, you can hear the paradigm incrementally shifting more to 0s and 1s and away from the analog medium?vinyl?with which deejaying has flourished for several decades. Serato Scratch LIVE (the consensus-preferred software program that incorporates platters and turntables hooked up to a laptop) is lauded as the logical transition product for vinyl DJs to switch to digital; its BPM readouts, ability to hold several thousand tracks and effortless navigation have made it wildly popular.

Is this cause for celebration, or weeping and gnashing of Ortofon cartridges? We decided to pick the brains of Orange County?s DJs and discover how they feel about this revolution.

First revelation: DJs who use vinyl exude much more passion?and verbosity?for their weapon of choice than do Serato/digital aficionados. In fact, many of the latter whom I contacted for this story didn?t even respond. That indifference speaks volumes.

Second revelation:Most vinyl champions resemble fire-and-brimstone fundamentalists, and many have sentimental attachments to wax that supersede its utility. Per the latter sentiment, Steve Fisch (DJ aDJective, who spins at Kitsch and Memphis Santora) gets all metaphorical about gatefold covers of cherished LPs, particularly Pink Floyd?s Dark Side of the Moon.

?The brilliant Hipgnosis cover for that best encapsulates the essence of vinyl: That prism is a needle, and that rainbow isn?t only the light hitting the spinning black disc; it?s also the concepts and sounds that flow out of the groove.?

Of the 10,000 records Fisch owns, he typically brings eight crates? worth to his gigs?as well as his laptop. ?iTunes is now an integral part of my spinning, and once you?ve let the digital interface in, there?s no looking back. The qualifier for this is that I?m the kind of DJ who places an emphasis on [song selection] and not so much on scratching a break or matching a beat; thus, programs like Serato have no appeal to me. Furthermore, though in the ?phones I can detect how analog sounds crisper and more warmly blended than digital, through the PA systems of the bars and events where I deejay, it?s very hard to discriminate the difference when there?s a crowd roaring.

?Vinyl will be around as long as the petroleum from which it?s made remains available,? Fisch continues, ?because in the hands of a grandmaster, turntables are an instrument, and they?ll no more disappear than flutes or grand pianos will, now that those sounds can be easily simulated on a synthesizer.?

Sean Harris (DJ TSC1 of the Definitely Maybe/Souled Out nights at Memphis Costa Mesa) represents the hardcore ?analog brigade. He laments the instant-gratification mentality among digital-?oriented DJs. By not digging for vinyl, Harris asserts, these DJs not only miss some great obscure tracks, but they also bypass important information contained in liner notes, knowledge that can?t be gleaned from most downloading sites. And besides, he states, digital data present ?a catastrophic loss in sound quality. Analog is still far superior to digital.?

That?s a common sentiment among DJs, and Seattle-area audio-software designer Brian Willoughby confirms it. ?MP3 is about the worst quality digital has to offer,? he says. ?MP3 does not represent the full capabilities of digital, especially if you are listening in something like Serato. By the time you hear something, the digital sound has been mangled by the MP3 coding and then pitch-shifted by Serato. There is a ton of distortion in that process. Useful distortion, in that it gets you a fast download of music and allows you to beat match, but there is a tradeoff. You have to pay attention to your signal chain because Serato and [similar program] Ableton alter the quality of the sound when they alter the pitch or tempo of a track.?

Dan Sena (Busywork mogul, regular at Proof Bar?s Mute) is one of the few people queried who uses both Serato and vinyl. ?[A]s technology progresses, the medium follows along with it,? he says. ?I?ve noticed some DJs moving to Ableton and other computer programs that do not require vinyl manipulation. I guess it?s cool, but it certainly takes the human touch out of it. The only risk you run is your computer crashing. Serato, as a visceral deejay program, got it right. [It preserves] the art of turntablism, which is what I?m most interested in. I don?t really think the waning importance of vinyl has anything to do with DJs, but with consumers and, of course, that damned technology.?

Jose Ramirez (a.k.a. DJ Legit, who spins at Mute at Proof Bar and White Collar at Memphis Costa Mesa) makes the strongest case for Serato. ?For club DJs like myself, Serato gives us many more options and advantages over vinyl. Serato allows us to keep up with the latest music selections and remixes without the hassle of trying to find them on vinyl. Most important, we do not have to carry around heavy crates of vinyl, and our music selection is endless compared to that of a vinyl DJ, who can only bring as many records as he is willing to haul in the trunk of his car. Serato is definitely the better choice for club DJs: less to haul, more to spin. And there is always the option of bringing a few of your favorite records to throw in the mix.?

Scotty Coats (mainstay at Avalon Bar?s Double Fisted) couldn?t disagree more. He views most Serato jocks as non-dues-paying lazy-asses?and criminals, to boot. ?I have nothing against any of the software programs, except that I feel it takes away from the foundation that deejaying was built on. It?s one thing if you were a DJ, did your homework, and then switched over to Serato or Final Scratch because you don?t want to lose or scratch any of your records that you spent your entire life looking for, as opposed to the kid who just picked up Serato and is playing all the clubs because he has the latest fashion and steals music from the latest blogs and doesn?t really give a shit about the history of the culture.?

Coats cites this heinous example of that type of DJ: ?A dude gave me his mixtape, and I listened to it and asked him, ?What was track 3?? His answer was, ?I don?t know; it was a .wav file.? A real person made that .wav file and you don?t even care enough to find out who it was?!?

Coats also castigates DJs who ?play MP3s that they either steal or trade with friends. I work really hard on capturing frequencies in my recordings, and I?d be pissed if someone squashed it into an MP3 to play it out without taking the time to buy the record and have it heard the way it was meant to be heard. It?s about the music and respecting the artist who made it.?

Coats? Double Fisted partner, Chip Bernal (DJ Poppa), also flies analog airlines at all times. ?Digging for rare dance and disco cuts is still half the fun and what sets you apart from other DJs who play in your same genre. All these new-jacks who say they?re DJs and just started last week/month/year can have thousands of MP3s on their laptops of all the latest shit. That?s too easy. My 13-year-old daughter can do that from her bedroom tonight and probably mix just as good as half of them by tomorrow,? Bernal says. ?But then again, I?m old-school.?

Chris Alfaro (DJ Urthworm/Free the Robots) mostly uses vinyl, but he acknowledges that Serato can enhance his deejay sets by allowing him to ?perform new mix techniques, and it makes it possible to play my own new tracks and re-edits without having to press LPs all the time.?

Vinyl enthusiast Andrew Meza (BTS Radio) admits he?d use Serato?if he could afford it. ?People still weren?t using Gutenberg?s printing press as soon as homeboy added a steam engine to it,? he explains. ?That shit printed out, like, 80,000 more pages in a minute than Gutenberg?s original device could print in 10 years.? It?s not a precise analogy, but point taken: This story?s not written on a manual typewriter.

DJ Cocoe (Abstract Workshop) reiterates a common refrain among DJs. ?Nothing sounds better than a record in a club. It?s a warm, home-like feeling.? In DJ circles, to claim otherwise is akin to believing the Earth is flat.

Bep (Training Bra) concurs, hailing vinyl?s ?sensual feel and purity of sound? and cringing at ?software that automatically beat matches for you.?

Many young DJs love the convenience of Serato, but Matt Papp (DJ Shh) bucks the tide of his peers and spins vinyl. ?Serato is on a trend now,? he says, ?and people jump into it because you don?t have to have a record collection to start deejaying.?

Ron D Core (owner of Fountain Valley?s Dr. Freeclouds Records and a popular DJ) proclaims from his shop?s MySpace page, ?Laptop deejaying is killing music.? Freeclouds has lasted 13 years mainly by catering to hardcore vinyl DJs and electronic-music collectors. He sums up the audiophile perspective of the argument: ?Vinyl is more expensive. But I would much rather own a Mercedes than a Yugo. I see the laptop DJ as purchasing Yugo-quality music.?

Just as there?s more than one way to skin a cat, there?s more than one way for a DJ to wow a crowd. They?ve never had more options with which to practice their craft, but not all media are created equal, if you believe these opinionated sound connoisseurs. Digital is on the rise, but analog purists will not fade away without getting their wax in. One thing isn?t debatable: You can?t download good taste.

Post Thanksgiving Thoughts

Hey everyone,

I hope you and yours all had a fantastic holiday weekend and that you got your Turkey fix!

Today is December 1st! Can you believe that? Holiday Season is in full swing, and the year is almost wrapping up! It's an exciting time for all of us, and for me personally, I love this time of year.

Besides the obvious reasons, being spending time with family and friends, eating good home cooking, etc, I love this time of year for other reasons.

1). New Year Ahead

For some reason, once December hits I start to plan out the next year, also looking back at the year that has passed, the good, the bad and the ugly, too. There's something so exciting about a new year to come, a fresh start, a new lease on life. We live in a wonderful world where no matter what you have done in the past, you can always reinvent yourself at anytime. You can begin a new career path, change your daily habits, start new ones. If you're down, you have a new year to get off on the right foot. For the most part, it all comes down to you, what you want, what you don't want, and what you want to accomplish.

2). Jackfrost

Jackfrost is a special event we do every December in which we celebrate the holidays in the name of giving back to our community. We transport you to a winter wonderland, a night of friends, music and art, something we look forward to every year. So, there is alot of work involved and it is a small price to pay for presenting such a special event. We hope that you and yours might share the magic with us again this December 20th. For more info check out our websites:

www.hawtmusic.com
www.myspace.com/thehawtmusic

3). Our Country, Our World

This particular December marks a far more exciting time than ever in the world. Sure, the economy is bad, we got wars we're in, and then some, but I for one am looking forward to the year, and many more ahead. Change is good, and it is coming. The most beautiful part about it is that it transcends any political party, any nation, etc., it is about shaping our future, and that truly does begin within ourselves. I am excited to start fresh in 2009, and I hope you feel the same way.

4). Get In Shape

I dunno why we tend to wait until January 1st to start eating better and getting exercise. I do it every year myself, but this year I'm getting a head start. Today I began a new program to shed extra pounds and eat better. I figure it is worth a shot, because I'll have a month's jump start on any other year to kickstart 2009 the right way =)