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The Last Exclusive Field Report Mix From Dublab: Frosty’s Vibrant Vietnam Mix

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Download: Final Field Report: Vietnam
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Vietnam glows in my earliest memories.  I grew up with a Vietnamese stepmother from the age of three so my summer vacations were spent chomping fresh spring rolls, dipping green papaya in tangy fish sauce and plucking fiery Vietnamese red peppers from the garden.  My stepmother TiTi would take my brother and I to the Vietnamese market every weekend and proudly introduce us as her sons.  We were showered with smiles and curious eyes as we sipped mysterious concoctions of soda, nuts and seaweed.  We also got an overdose of karaoke style ballads seeping with sweaty sap and synthesizer strings.  My brother and I especially tripped out over the singer Tuan Anh.  My Stepmom’s car was filled with cassettes of this airbrushed love child of Little Richard and Prince dramatically crooning his heart out.  While my Vietnamese culinary world was wide my vision of the country’s music was pure cheese ball.  I knew there was much more to explore and hoped to someday hear Vietnamese music magic.

My first footsteps in Saigon felt so right.  It was a city singing with energy and I was ready to explore.  The first barrier to be broken was the traffic.  Mopeds snaked through the streets like they were weaving a city-wide asphalt basket.  The traffic stream was solid as cycles flowed to fill every crack.  To cross, I needed to step into the chaos and trust the handlebar skills of those zipping by.  After some deep breaths, one steady step after another brought me to the other side.  My knuckles were white and my nerves rattled but I had faced down the infamous traffic and Saigon’s gems were mine to find.

The food called first.  My taste buds sought to soak up the source of every street corner scent.  Saigon is filled with endless sidewalk delicacies.  Every stall is immaculately clean and filled with fresh, delicious treats.  Even when you choose to remain static the food will inevitably roll your way on a wagon, bicycle or basket.  Every moment in Saigon can be filled with flavor if one’s mouth allows.  When seeking transcendent sidewalk dining the key is to find the locals.  My modus operandi was to scan for crowds of enthusiastically slurpers squatting on plastic preschool size stools.  It is in these places that dream dishes live: steamy bowls of 75-cent, spicy Pho with sprigs of fresh mint tingling every taste bud, bánh mì sandwiches stuffed to the max with complex textures and tastes and deeply rich coffee coupled with sweet, creamy milk and ice.  Saigon’s soul shines through its food but my next mission was to find the songs they sing when their souls shine loud.

Before visiting Vietnam my mind swam with images of go-go dancers shaking to the shimmy of fuzz guitars and bubbling drum beats.  While these scenes existed in the Saigon of the late 60’s and early 70’s they are ghostly dreams now.  The recorded remnants of these moments were mostly destroyed once the Viet Cong swept into Saigon in 1975.  Many pop records were discarded by their owners out of fear they would be associated with the West.  This makes record digging in Vietnam a true challenge.  Luckily I had a great guide in the form of Jase Nguyen who led me to a small stretch of antique shops close to Saigon’s main market.  In the junkiest of them all, amongst the clutter and scattered nic-nacs of every sort, there were ramshackle stacks of vinyl 45’s.  In retrospect my greatest asset would have been a respirator and rubber gloves.  Disturbing the sleeping piles kicked up ancient clouds of soot that coated by nostrils and caked my lips.  I could feel gristle on my tongue as I flipped through 45’s so dusty it was hard to see the grooves.  Upon wiping away the grime I found beautifully colored vinyl: yellow, red and marbled mixtures.  The secrets they held were pure mystery to me.  I had no turntable to preview the records, the tattered covers didn’t match their paired discs and my only written clues were the words “rock,” “hully gully,” “twist,” etc.  Nevertheless I left with a bag of 45’s and ears wide open.

On first needle drop back home I was blasted with the noise of static, pops and scratches.  Even after a deep cleaning it was hard to hear some of the songs under all the surface noise but thanks to a little modern technology and EQ adjustment I was able to salvage some sound waves.  Unfortunately, many of the tunes turned out to be ballads that are easy on the ears but lack stimulation.  These songs are hugely popular in Vietnam and can be traced to the chansons of the French who colonized the country.  The crusty bread of bánh mì sandwiches are a much tastier remnant of the Franco influence.  A few of the other records turned out to be Cải lương opera records.  These songs would often feature amazing pop introductions that after a minute would give way to traditional vọng cổ music.  While the Vietnamese speaker might dig the drama and poignancy of these songs they can prove a little straining to foreign ears.  After sifting through the sounds my Vietnamese record search yielded some true gems but to assemble a full mix I needed more.

I continued my Vietnamese music expedition from home.  Luckily just a skip south from my hood in Los Angeles is the Vietnamese enclave of Little Saigon in Orange County.  It is here that the largest expatriate community has blossomed in the decades following the Fall of Saigon.  The streets are lined with Vietnamese grocers, cafes and music shops.  I paid a visit hoping to find some jewels.  I knew I was unlikely to come across a cobwebbed corner stacked with vinyl or reel to reel tapes filled with forgotten Pre-War sounds but I at least hoped to find some cassettes, an “oldies” CD collection or a film with a heavy rock soundtrack.  Sadly there was no sign of any exceptional sound sources.  I only got puzzled stares and proud claims, “We have new music.”  It makes perfect sense that these Vietnamese expats would keep their eyes steadfast on the future after such a turbulent, recent past.  With the proper aid and a few thousand prayers this mission might have proved more successful.  It would have been nice to have my stepmom at my side to translate in my search for sound treasures.

After a fruitless local hunt I decided to engage in some modern ethnomusicology.  An early Google quest led me to the new collection Saigon Rock & Soul: Vietnamese Classic Tracks 1968-1974.  It was serendipitous that the amazing, exploratory music minds at Sublime Frequencies released this stellar compilation just as I was assembling my Vibrant Vietnam “Field Report.”  The heavy rock and funk gems they excavated fulfilled an essential angle I desired to highlight in this mix.  These tunes also set my imaginative mind at ease.  I didn’t see any go-go dancers while in Saigon but if I close my eyes while hearing these jams I can almost see them twisting their bikini-clad waists.  After this lucky score I scoured the web for more righteous Vietnamese tunes.  After plenty of dead end clicks I honed in on a sizable offering of vintage Vietnamese audio online.  One of the greatest revelations was the Asian New Wave scene.  In the early 1980’s it seems the youth of Little Saigon fell in love with Italo Disco and New Wave and started making their own Vietnamese language versions that sound like Freestyle remixes of the Xanadu soundtrack.  This vibe was outside my original vision for this “Field Report” but I couldn’t resist including these unique songs.  I also dove into some more modern fusion from the talented young French-Vietnamese producer Onra who created Chinoiseries a full album of hip hop beats sampling Vietnamese 45’s he found in the very same antique shop I hit in Saigon.

After intense searches I found songs that have truly enlightened my vision of Vietnamese music.  I hope you enjoy listening to my Vibrant Vietnam mix.  I was thrilled to connect some personal dots through this journey halfway around the world and even more excited to share my musical discoveries with you.  My mind is fulfilled having finally heard Vietnamese music that matches the soulful spirit I love in the food and people of this beautiful country.

- frosty

FROSTY’S VIBRANT VIETNAM MIX

Phuong Quang – Tàu Qua Sằn Ga (As the Train Goes Past the Station)

Băng Châu & Hợp Ca – Ông Trang 1973

Lê Thương – Thằng Cuội

Thanh_Tuyển – Tôi Gập Em

Thàn Tuong – Phuong Tâm

Phoung Tam – Dem Huyen Dieu

Thanh Lan, Thanh Mai – bup be khong tinh yeu 75

Hung Cuong & Mai Le Huyen – Thien Duyen Tien Dihn

Hung Cuong & Mai Le Huyen – Unknown

* Thanh Lan – Hoài Thu (Autumn Memory)

* Bich Loan and CBC Band – Con Tim Và Nước Mắt (Heart And Tears)

* Thai Thanh – Bừng Sáng (Dawn)

* Carol Kim – Cái Trâm Em Cài (Your Hair Clip)

** Thai Thao – Oh Qué Calor (Vietnamese Version)

** Angela Lee – Why Can’t We Live (Vietnamese Version)

** Kashmir – I Want To Be (Vietnamese Version)

Onra – Phuoc Dat (Interlude)

Onra – Relax In Mui Ne

Tinh Yeu Thuy Thu – Hong Phuc

Thanh Vu, Hong Phuc & Phoung Bang – Tinh Yeu Tren Dai Duong

* Giao Linh – Chuyện Tình Sao Ly (A Love Story From Sau Ri)

Bich Loan and CBC Band – A Band on the Run (acoustic jam in new delhi 1975)

Bahnar gong ensemble – Concert of Gongs of Bahnar tribe

Thanh Kim Hue – Tieng Chay Tren Soc Bom Bo

THANKS TO THESE FOLKS FOR THE TUNES!

* Saigon Rock & Soul: Vietnamese Classic Tracks 1968-1974 (Sublime Frequencies)

** youtube.com/user/NightSociety

Fukakai: A Special Bonus Japan Field Report Mix by Hashim B.

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Download: Hashim B: Fu-Ka-Kai Mix Vol. 1
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Hashim B. – Japanese “Field Report” : Fu-Ka-Kai Mix Vol. 1/ ハシムB 「フ・カ・カイ」Mix Vol. 1

The translation for “fukakai” is incomprehensible..

It might be hard to understand why Fuzz, Funk, Folk, New Wave, No Wave, Techno-Pop, Disco, and Anime Songs from Japan between the 1960’s and 2010 could work on one mix, but it reflects the disparate and sometimes colliding cultures of music that have always existed there.

1. Takehisa Kosugi / Mano Dharma ‘74 / Catch Wave

小杉武久 / Mano Dharma ‘74 / Catch Wave

2. Kefia P Feat. Hatsune Miku / intro ~memories~ / Hatsune Miku Best ‘07-’09 MEMORIES

ケフィアP Feat. 初音ミク / intro ~memories~ / 初音ミク ベスト ‘07-’09 MEMORIES

3. Speed, Glue & Shinki / Red Doll / Speed, Glue & Shinki

4. Sachiko Kanenobu / Aoi Sakana / Misora

金延幸子 / 青い魚 / み空

5. Speed, Glue & Shinki / Don’t Say No / Speed, Glue & Shinki

6. The Helpful Soul / Aldin’s Theme / A Thousand & One Nights OST (45)

ザ・ヘルプフル・ソウル / アルディンのテーマ/ 千夜一夜物語

7. Excerpt from “Funeral Parade of Roses” (film)

「薔薇の葬列」

8. Les Rallizes Dénudés / Kioku Wa Tooi / Le 12 Mars 1977 à Tachikawa

裸のラリーズ / 記憶は遠い / Le 12 Mars 1977 à Tachikawa

9. Haruomi Hosono / Funiculi Funicura / Philharmony

細野晴臣 / フニクリ、フニクラ / フィルハーモニー

10. Flower Travellin’ Band / Hiroshima / Make Up

フラワー・トラヴェリン・バンド / 広島 / メイク・アップ

11. Kenjiro Hirose / Onna Bancho Taiman Shoubu M-5 / Sugimoto Miki vs Ike Reiko Onna Bancho Nagaremono Futengurashi

広瀬健次郎 / 女番長 タイマン勝負 M-5 / 杉本美樹 Vs 池玲子 女番長流れ者/ふうてんぐらし

12. Excerpt from “Shinjuku Mad” (film)

「新宿マッド」

13. Food Brain / M-8 / Shinjuku Mad OST

フード・ブレイン / M-8 / 新宿マッド

14. J.A. Caesar / Haha Koishiya Sangosho / Kokkyo Junreika

J.A. シーザー / 母恋しやサンゴ礁 / 国境巡礼歌

15. Phew / Signal / Phew

16. Audio Sports / Voo Voo / Era of Glittering Gas

17. Akira Ishikawa & His Count Buffalos / Heated Point / Get Up!

石川晶とカウント・バッファローズ / Heated Point / Get Up!

18. Hiromi Iwasaki / Good Night / Fantasy

岩崎宏美 / グッド・ナイト / ファンタジー

19. Yumi Arai / Anata Dake No Mono / Misslim

荒井由美 / あなただけのもの / Misslim

20. Taeko Onuki / Kusuri Wo Takusan / Sunshower

大貫妙子 / くすりをたくさん / Sunshower

21. S.L.A.C.K. / I’m Home / WHALABOUT

22. Ichiro Araki / Onna Bancho Kankain Dassou  M-7 / Hotwax Trax 04 Teppoudama No Bigaku: Nakajima Sadao No Sekai

荒木一郎 / 「女番長 感化院脱走」: M-7 / Hotwax Trax 04 鉄砲玉の美学: 中島貞夫の世界

23. Buddha Brand / Ningen Hatsudensho (Classic Mix) / Yameru Mugen No Insto No Sekai

ブッダ・ブランド / 人間発電所 (Classic Mix) / 病める無限のインストの世界

24. Haruomi Hosono / CHATTANOOGA CHOO CHOO / TROPICAL DANDY

細野晴臣 / CHATTANOOGA CHOO CHOO / TROPICAL DANDY

25. Yellow Magic Orchestra / Seoul Music / Technodelic

26. riow arai+anna yamada / Ie / R+NAAAA

riow arai+anna yamada / 家 / R+NAAAA

27. Excerpt from “Tenshi No Koukotsu(Ecstasy Of Angels)” (film)

「天使の恍惚」

28. Yasuo Higuchi / Photograph / Hotwax Trax Maruhi Shikijyo Mesu Shijyo – Nikkatsu Roman Porno No Sekai

樋口康雄 / Photograph(秘 色情めす市場) / Hotwax Trax 秘 色情めす市場~日活ロマン・ポルノの世界

29. Akira Ishikawa & His Count Buffalos / Pigmy / Uganda

石川晶&カウント・バッファロー / ピグミー / ウガンダ

30. P-MODEL / KAMEARI POP / IN A MODEL ROOM

31. Haruomi Hosono / Platonic / Philharmony

細野晴臣 / プラトニック / フィルハーモニー

32. Yellow Magic Orchestra / Neue Tanz / Technodelic

33. Zuno Keisatsu / Hyena / Kamengeki No Hero Wo Kokuso Shiro

頭脳警察 / ハイエナ / 仮面劇のヒーローを告訴しろ

34. Audio Sports / Eat & Buy & Eat / Era of Glittering Gas

35. Ryuichi Sakamoto / E-3A / B-2 Unit

坂本龍一 / E-3A / B-2 Unit

36. OOIOO / HONKI PONKI / ARMONICO HEWA

37. Senba Kiyohiko To Haniwa All Stars / Cha Nomi Tomodachi Suresure / Haniwa

仙波清彦とはにわオールスターズ / ちゃーのみ友達スレスレ / はにわ

38. Excerpt from “Tetsuo” (film)

「鉄男」

39. Ishiwatari Junji & Sunahara Yoshinori + Yakushimaru Etsuko / Kamisama No Iu Tori  (Version Z80) / Kamisama No Iu Tori

いしわたり淳治 & 砂原良徳 + やくしまるえつこ / 神様のいうとおり (Version Z80) / 神様のいうとおり

40. Yellow Magic Orchestra / Computer Games/ Yellow Magic Orchestra

41. Doseijin Mikael (≒ARM) / Mika No Kuni No Genso Wakusei – Dot No Kanata E / Toho Tsuki Tourou Safe!

土星人ミカエル(≒ARM) / 御伽の国の幻想惑星~ドットの彼方へ / 東方月燈籠セーフ!

42. Haruki Matsuo / Ivy(Last Mix)-08 / Haruki Matsuo_12″

43. Nihon Henshu Ongaku Kyokai / Tonkaka Nadeko / Dame Mikusu

日本編集音楽協会 / トンカカ☆なでこ / だめみくす [16]+[22]

44. Junko Yagami / Imagination / Communication

八神純子 / イマジネーション / コミュニケーション

45. Haruomi Hosono / Body Snatchers / S-F-X

細野晴臣 / ボディー・スナッチャーズ / S-F-X

46. imoutoid / PART3 / ADEPRESSIVE CANNOT GOTO THE CEREMONY

47. miko / Kanbu De Tomatte Sugu Tokeru – Kyoki No Udongein / Toho Tsuki Tourou Safe!

miko / 患部で止まってすぐ溶ける~狂気の優曇華院 / 東方月燈籠セーフ!

48. Hiromi Iwasaki / Papillon / Fantasy

岩崎宏美 / パピヨン / ファンタジー

49. Hatsumi Shibata / Singer Lady / My Luxury Night

しばたはつみ / シンガー・レディ / マイ・ラグジュアリー・ナイト

50. Spectrum / First Wave / Spectrum

51. Yuming / Youkoso Kagayaku Jikan E / Pearl Pierce

松任谷由実 / ようこそ輝く時間へ / パール・ピアス

52. Excerpt from “Downtown 81″ (film)

「Downtown 81」

53. Plastics / Delicious/ Welcome Back Plastics

プラスチックス / デリシャス / ウェルカム・バック・プラスチックス

54. Totsuzen Danball / Sentaku To Hairetsu / Can I?

突然段ボール / 選択と配列 / 成り立つかな?

55. Phew / Closed / Phew

56. Excerpt From “Face Of Another”

「他人の顔」引用

57. Maher Shalal Hash Baz / Remember My Labour Of Love / Blues du Jour

58. Rie Yokohama / Umitsubame / Tenshi No Koukotsu OST

横山リエ / ウミツバメ / 天使の恍惚

Thanks to: Masa at Disques Corde, Azzurro, Uemtasu at Headz, and all the artists on this mix!

Experience Teebs’ “Personal Winter,” A Special Japan Field Report Download

Monday, August 16th, 2010

Download: Teebs: Personal Winter
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Through this special Japan Field Report remix, Teebs shares with us his time in Japan. Drawing us in, making the music, the memories, almost our own.

“Being in Japan was such an adventure. I spent a month there in November 2009 and the whole time I was bouncing around with different groups of friends and musicians. It was beautiful. The weather was just starting to get cold out there, but the sun was still out every morning around 8am. My host went to work pretty early so every few days after he had left I would take time to walk the streets of his area. I had never eaten so well or felt so at peace with a place before. When I came home I made ‘Personal Winter’ and instantly got sucked back into those early mornings…really missing the hell out of that place…” -Teebs

Download and enjoy.

A New Field Report Download for the Weekend: Golden Hits Brings You, Remember Temple Amputee

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Download: Golden Hits: Remember Temple Amputees
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This weekend, sit back and enjoy the sunshine while listening to a new download from Golden Hits as part of the Exclusive Field Reports only on VTech…

Cambodia is filled with millions of unexploded land mines.  They scatter rice paddies and hills, waiting motionless for one wrong step.  These artifacts of anger have claimed the limbs of too many Cambodians.  Some of these victims have found a musical aid for recovery.  They form bands to perform traditional Khmer classical music for tourists visiting the temples of Angkor.  Their songs will never repair their scars but they put food in their mouths, dignity in their hearts and beauty to the ears of passerby.  As I walked under a jungle canopy headed to explore an ancient temple I stopped to record the performance of one such band.  Once home I played back snippets of this field recording in a live improv sound session with my family of fellow dublab drone dreamers, Golden Hits.

New Field Report Download From Dntel: Guardian Remix, Only on VTech

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Download: Dntel: Guardian (Cambodian Field Report Remix)
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Angkor Wat is Cambodia’s greatest glory.  It is the apex of the classical Khmer age.  The temple shines in symmetry and grandeur under the wide Cambodian sky.  A broad moat has helped keep its expansive sprawl safe for over eight centuries but this physical barrier is not its sole key to strength.  When Suryavarman II constructed Angkor Wat he did so with faith infused in every inch.  Into the walls, pillars and gates his craftspeople carved deities to protect against demons and invaders.  These spirits of stone were mystic guardians.  There are powerful spells still today and one such charm is before you now.  Dntel has created a new talisman to keep towers from tumbling.  This song reflects from the walls of Angkor Wat and casts a spell that will keep its majesty intact for the far future.

A VTech Field Report Exclusive, Cambodia Remix From Daedelus: Broken Radio Bliss

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Download: Broken Radio Bliss Remix: Daedelus
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Daedelus embraced the crackle and fuzz of Cambodian 1960’s rock & pop cassettes to create this buoyant remix.  In this exclusive download to The Sounds of VTech listen to his slithering synth waves saunter on and hear the scattered magnetic fragments floating from every corner of your headphones.  This rhythmic pattern is one of multiple flashes through time.  Daedelus ping-pongs between the past when these Cambodian jams ruled the nation, and the present, where the original songs are golden ghosts, audible only to those lucky enough for an encounter.  His “broken radio bliss” remix is full of serious wow and flutter.

The ideal way to listen to this cut-up would be with a pair of headphones attached to a knock-off Sony Walkman with its sticker peeling away from the heat of the sun. But for those who don’t have one handy, we’re pretty confident that any way you play it, this remix won’t disappoint. So close your eyes and cruise the busy Cambodian streets with the radio turned up and Daedelus as your guide.