Tagged with tulsa

Easter Island 2012

Twyler will be showing art at Easter Island Festival this weekend (April 13 and 14)! That should be reason enough to go, but the festival also features an incredible, diverse lineup of local and regional acts. It’s put together and hosted by Twyler favorite the Moai Broadcast, who will play a headlining slot on Saturday night. I mean, seriously, look at that lineup. If you know local music at all you’ll know that this is a who’s who of awesome local flavor.

It’s a great way to support local music and kick off the festival season. Also, camping! And Twyler! Come out because this is going to be something special. Check out @Twyler for updates throughout the weekend. Come kick it with us!

And here’s one of the new paintings!

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Dubstep = disco and other year-end music musings

I’d love to do another ‘best-of’ post for this year’s music, but I’ve been slacking slightly in keeping up with new releases, so I thought I’d just ramble a bit on a few trends and bands I have been keeping up with.

Dubstep is this generation’s disco

This genre has become pretty mainstream among young people, though it’s been around for a while and has been big in Europe (which obviously is cooler than the American version). I’m actually a fan of some artists and certain styles that could be lumped into the genre (and, ok, some mainstream stuff) but I think it’s pretty clear that the dubstep craze will fizzle and become the disco of the 2010s. Once these kids (you know who you are) graduate from college or get real jobs and a few years pass, we will all sit back and laugh. ‘Dubstep is dead’ shirts will be mass-produced along with hilarious pictures and videos of people making stupid faces and doing the dubstep dance. (This is already happening.)

Again, I’m not knocking the genre as a whole — some artists aren’t simply button-pushers who jumped on the trend, and actually do it in a creative and amazing way — but check back in 4, 5, 10 years and tell me I wasn’t right.

I’m a little lost

I’ve always had a wide pallet when it comes to music, and this year has been no different. I do find myself, however, sort of lost when it comes to new music that I actually like and want to listen to. Maybe I need to dig a little deeper, but I’ve been listening to a lot of the same bands I did last year. Not a bad thing, but hopefully 2012 will offer more of a diverse group of must-hear new acts.

Standout artists of 2011

  • Little Dragon. I fell in love with this Swedish electro-rock band this year, along with many other critics and music fans. Their ‘Ritual Union’ record is filled with catchy hooks, poppy electronics and lead singer Yukimi Nagano’s delicate melodies. I’ve always loved the Swedish.
  • Ryan Adams. His ‘Ashes and Fire’ album was a simple, sweet return to his trademark acoustic, country-tinged sound, and it was refreshing to see him get back to making music like this. His voice is perfect for this type of music, and though I would have liked a little more rock mixed in with the lovey-dovey, I can’t complain.
  • Chromeo rocking Cain's Ballroom in Tulsa. By Twyler

    Chromeo. I’ve been getting down to this band long before this year, but jumped at the chance when they came through Tulsa in October. I was giddy before, during, and after the show and it was clearly the highlight of my 2011 concert experiences. Super-funky, good-time grooves that also prove Palestinian/Jewish relations can do wonderful things.

  • Manchester Orchestra. I basically got into this band after seeing their tear-jerking and beautifully shot video for ‘Simple Math’ off their album of the same name. While that song is definitely the highlight, the rest of the album has its moments for sure, notably ‘Deer’ and ‘Leave it alone.’ Really wish I could have seen them play in Stillwater this year.
  • The Joy Formidable. One of my most-played bands this year. They’re aggressive and heavy but in a layered, melodic way — and the vocals of Ritzy Bryan (awesome English name) give their sound that female punch I love so much, similar to the Sounds but less poppy.

I promise to blog more next year

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Backwoods Bash

I had an amazing time this Memorial Day Weekend at Backwoods Bash on Keystone Lake. I took some art to show off, took the little one for a bit, got my fish on (got one really nice catfish), took part in a late-night djembe jam, listened to some amazing regional bands and even got to take the stage myself with the Move Trio. Lots of wonderful people, beautiful lake weather and inspiring, diverse music. Also, I’m a VIP (in every regard).

I thought I would post a little something since I gave out a few cards. So, if you somehow made it to this site because you were at Backwoods Bash go ahead and comment or shoot me an email (tylizzle@gmail.com). I know I get some decent traffic on here, but it’s always cool to see how people find the site. Also, a few people were asking about artwork and how they can get in touch with me, so if you saw something that you liked (or even if you weren’t there) I’ll give you the Memorial Day deal of $50 for any of the paintings I took out. It’s a steal, really. Literally. Well, almost literally. Nobody uses that word right so I don’t feel remotely bad about that phrase. Almost literally.

Email me (tylizzle@gmail.com) if you want some Tulsa-made art/t-shirts or if you just went to the Bash and wanted to toss around crazy stories and fuzzy memories. I have boatloads. I’ll also be putting up pictures of my art and doing a site redesign, so watch out for that.

Dirtfoot at BWB 2011. Absolutely epic band.

A music post is coming shortly, so stay tuned. I’ll have to include some bands I saw this weekend, because there was some serious star power out there. Goodnight!

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Street Cred Tulsa and some art

Tonight from 5-9 p.m. and tomorrow from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. I’ll be showing some art at the Eclipse in Tulsa. It’s part of the Street Cred Tulsa event put on by the Tulsa Young Professionals. There are going to be a ton of vendors and small businesses who will be showing off the coolest that Tulsa has to offer. Be there!

I’ve also been putting a few pictures of my art on a Tumblr I started. I’m still undecided about the whole Tumblr thing. It’s an easy way to blog or put up pictures and I love the search/tag and community aspects, but it seems like a breeding ground for copyright and attribution issues… or, just like the rest of the Internet. I’ll stick it with it for a while although I should really just build my own site to show off my artwork.

Here are a couple pictures to pique your interest. Or not, depending on your cool factor.

"the Nixons"

Street Cred: Polishing the Pearl District

Tumblr: www.theTwyler.tumblr.com

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I feel like a new man

Today marks the second day of sunshine and no snow or ice accumulation. After almost an entire week of being stuck inside by blizzards and snow drifts, I was very much convinced of the perils of the so-called ‘cabin fever’. I nearly lost my mind.

Yesterday I was able to work again, and it felt wonderful. I feel like a new man today, like a real person again. I also got to sleep in which helped a great deal, and today I’m tackling all kinds of things on my to-do lists.

It makes one really think about what’s important. It was nice to have time off to play with the little one, play in the snow and put off paying bills, but after a while your mind starts to wonder what exactly the hell you’re doing. You’ve been in this same house, doing the same thing for what? Three, four days straight? That’s not entirely abnormal for some people, but the simple fact is that with the street conditions and below 0 temperatures you are STUCK. You can’t go anywhere, and this can be a really depressing thought.

I don’t want to speak too soon, as we’re setting up for another round of intense snow and panic, but today was the first time in a long time that I’ve felt this fresh, this alive, this ready to tackle the world like Brian Urlacher on speed. Music is more intense, colors are brighter and the melting snow has never looked prettier. I hate to admit that something as silly as the weather can affect my mood this much, but after the snowpocalypse I think we can all agree that the sun is a good, good friend right now.

Bring on summer, music festivals, 105-degree sunburns, road trips and the like. I’m over you, snow.

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Get happy this weekend in Tulsa

There is so much going on in downtown Tulsa this weekend that all this crappy weather probably won’t even matter. It could rain or just stay gloomy and humid, but people will still flock downtown for art, music, food and people-watching. The two most obvious things going on this weekend (you’ll run into them if you’re driving anywhere downtown) are Mayfest and the Blue Dome Arts Festival.

Mayfest – May 13-16 (Thurs-Sun)

Mayfest is Tulsa’s sign that summer is actually approaching and it’s time to walk around downtown eating, drinking and looking at art. The festival is a family-oriented celebration of springtime (how great is May in Oklahoma?) and all things artistic and musical.

Blue Dome Arts Festival – May 14-16 (Fri-Sun)

The Blue Dome Arts Festival is almost like the hippy cousin of Mayfest, and this year the two are happening the same weekend. “This year, we are working with Mayfest to draw more people to the beautiful streets of Downtown Tulsa,” said Michael Sager, Founder of the festival. Perfect. Just take a little walk through downtown and you can experience an eclectic variety of art, crafts and music that Tulsa has to offer.

Stephen Egerton

Personally, my highlight of the weekend is on Saturday at the Crystal Pistol. Stephen Egerton, local music producer and member of some legendary bands (Descendants, All, 40 Engine), is hosting his CD release party for his new album “the Seven Degrees of Stephen Egerton”. Stephen is somewhat of a legend in the punk scene and he produced an album for a band I was in called Megatron, so I am very excited about seeing him play in Tulsa, especially in an  intimate and hip place like the Pistol. He has a character named after him in the movie “SLC Punk” (Stevo), he made a brief appearance in the movie “the Philadelphia Experiment”, and he’s performed and collaborated with some seriously big names, plus he’s just an awesome guy to hang out and talk with. This show is kind of a big deal, and one can expect special guests who contributed to the album to come out and support him (pop/punk icons Tim McIlrath (Rise Against), Chris DeMakes (Less Than Jake), Mike Herrera (MxPx) just to name a few).

Tickets are $10 at the door, and the show starts at 8PM. There will be a few opening sets, including some fairly popular names like Drag the River and the John Moreland Band, so this is an event you just can’t miss. Tulsa has only recently begun to get back some of its punk attitude with bands like Bearhug and First Lady Assassins, but this is an event that should bring out everyone who is even remotely in ‘the scene’.

Get out this weekend and have some fun in downtown T-town. Don’t let a silly little thing like rain or a tornado or ‘extremely severe weather’ get in your way of celebrating this wonderful creative energy that is vibing through Tulsa. Did I mention pop/punk icons and semi-famous musicians coming to Tulsa to rock out all night?

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OKC Thunder, meet Jerome Jordan

I was the Sports Editor at the TU paper (the Collegian) when TU picked up Jerome Jordan, the lanky seven-foot center from Kingston, Jamaica. Although he was really raw his freshman year, I knew he was going to be a huge asset for that team. I wrote about it and I was right. He finished with the Conference USA career blocks record, threw down countless jams and is now considered a late first round to second round pick in the 2010 NBA draft.

I love the guy. He’s super nice, he’s got a great touch when he gets in the post, he’s fast, he can dunk (like a 7-footer should) and he just has an overall cool factor that you can only get when you come from Jamaica. You can argue all day about his stats, production, potential in the kill-or-be-killed NBA, but the OKC Thunder desperately need a center, and this guy is an almost-hometown kid with serious potential. Add him in with Durant and Westbrook and you could have a seriously formidable young, fast, soft-spoken playoff-killing team. These guys wouldn’t talk trash, but they could trash talkers (see 2010 first round vs. L.A. and imagine they have a decent baller in the paint). Somebody needs to shut those Hollywood punks up, right?

Jordan still has a way to go if he wants to start in the NBA – he has to get bigger physically, get some fire and toughness, get more aggressive on the defensive end, etc. – but he’s seven feet tall with a huge wing span and with the right coaches he can do some serious damage in the big leagues. He’s not the bruiser/basher type that the Thunder need right now, but he definitely has the potential to at least hold his own while he beefs up and works on his skills.

Maybe I’m biased (I’m definitely biased!), but OKC is a young team that is on its way to being a really formidable force. If they add some Oklahoma talent like Jordan, along with some other key players, they may just have enough of a supporting cast to launch Durant (who finished 2nd in MVP voting) into superstardom. He’s obviously on his way and Jordan does need some work, but I’ll continue to rep for this guy because I know he has potential and he’s a great guy. OKC, are you listening?

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Epic Battle of Musical Creativity

On October 4, 2009, two of Tulsa’s most promising indie bands performed in an epic battle of creativity and musical innovation. “The Panda Resistance vs. Ptiaradactyl” showcased two of Oklahoma’s most innovative and talented bands in a musical event enhanced by costumes, lights, signs, comedy and a slide projector. This audio-visual experience at one of Tulsa’s hippest bars, the Soundpony, seemed to mark a growing trend within the local music scene where bands are pushing each other to new levels of creativity by being innovative and creating a sense of community, even if bands within this community are engaged in musical and creative warfare.
These two bands are quite different in their sound, style and performance, though both have an indie, artsy feel and both perform with some type of costume – the Panda Resistance wore their trademark panda hats and members of Ptiaradactyl wore lighted headpieces and are known to wear other outlandish getups. The Panda Resistance has an atmospheric, upbeat indie rock feel, with impeccable musicianship and symphonic layering of sound effects and bright melodies. Clay Welch on guitar, Bo Halford on bass and Andrew Bones on drums and percussion are an instrumental trio who sound like a trip-hop group inspired by exotic melodies. With the tightest rhythm section in Tulsa, the group can truly hold down some amazing grooves, and with Welch’s ear for tasty reverb-dripping melodies they can also buildup to incredibly powerful moments through atmospheric layering of sound.
Ptiaradactyl, on the other hand, is much more avante-garde, leaning more towards a punk/electronic sound that is raw and energetic. The band has played at Tulsa’s Dfest music festival, toured fairly extensively and has even garnered some national attention. The group plays mostly instrumental rock-inspired jams that are slightly dark with an obvious punk and indie influence. The songs often change tempo and feel multiple times within a song, creating a sense of orchestrated but raw and energetic musical expression.

This is the type of event that helps a city’s music scene expand and evolve. The epic battle-like feel, the lights and props, the costumes and comedic banter all added to this experience that was unlike any other concert I’ve seen in Tulsa. The broad-ranging musical styles and impressive audio/visual performance was amazing and somewhat unexpected, but Tulsa could use more of these types of events. The very fact that this was promoted and hyped up as something more than a concert with two different bands helped this night stand out for many people, and the actual show did not disappoint one bit.
“You know Pterodactyls lived during the Cretaceous period right?” Hallford asked the crowd during a song break. “You know what they didn’t have during the Cretaceous period? Music lessons! …Or showers!”
Hallford and the Panda Resistance really got into the battling mindset during the show, projecting slides on a wall at the side of the stage while they played with drawings of a Panda beating, threatening and degrading a Pterodactyl, followed by cheeky comments, jokes and digs at the other band between songs. It was all in good fun, though, and the whole aura of a musical battle seemed to make both bands play better and allow the crowd to become more of a participant in this crazy, over-the-top musical experience. There was an even a point towards the end of the night when a huge Chinese-dragon-like Pterodactyl was paraded in front of the crowd with the help of about a dozen people. This concert was more like musical theater than just two bands playing music… the visuals, costumes, crowd interaction, the undercurrent of two great bands locked into musical and creative warfare all added to this imaginary mystique that made me feel like I was witnessing something special. I still feel that way, and Tulsa should have more bands doing things like this.
There should be more Flaming Lips style enthusiasm in the local scene where the circus atmosphere and incredible visual experience forces everyone in the crowd and in the band to have a good time. These aspects may seem like gimmicks to some people, but this is the type of event that can truly excite people and get them involved in the increasingly creative Tulsa music scene. A Flaming Lips show wouldn’t be the same without the mass amount of confetti, the blinding lights, the props and the hamster-ball contraption that Wayne Coyne always opens the show with by walking out on top of the crowd. These things create an experience that makes the music that much more powerful and emotional, and bands that can pull this off are always on people’s list of must-see concerts. The whole point of going to a concert is for an experience, and when all these aspects are combined in a creative way, fans can have an almost spiritual sensation that makes music unique and powerful like nothing else. This epic battle was on a smaller scale than a Lips show or a festival-type show, but these two Tulsa bands really know how to create an amazing event rooted in fresh, original music and artistic expression.

 

**Thanks to Brian Horton for the videos**

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Cars are powerful and full of power.

I’ve been thinking a lot about the inherent nature of cars… how powerful they are, and how it’s weird that we take this for granted. Also, some lady recently t-boned my car by running a red light. So naturally I’ve been having weird flashbacks and driving really slowly…

… (this isn’t what happened, just a little narrative) …
I’m driving down the highway at around 69 miles per hour. The car is running on cruise control, allowing me to control the car solely by moving the steering wheel. I can feel the power of the car run through my fingers as the engine automatically accelerates to meet the speed I set it to. I begin to wonder what would happen if I dozed off (or randomly jumped out of the car)… the speedy, powerful little sedan would simply continue to barrel down the road at a high rate of speed, not caring that its controller has become incapacitated or unaware of the machine’s momentum. Or what if the cruise control went haywire and simply refused to let up, thinking it was simply doing its job by continuing at this high rate of speed? The human inside (me) would be powerless against this brutal electronically-controlled mass of steel and potential carnage.

These are strange questions to ask (I suppose) and strange feelings to have, but am I wrong? My car has at one point stalled slightly when I tried to disable the cruise control, giving me a gut-wrenching feeling of helplessness, although I only had to hit the brakes a couple times to get it working again.

I just feel like we drive to work everyday (some people commute for hours!), cutting people off and screaming at other people through closed windows, not even thinking about how powerful and potentially dangerous this is – of course until you get in a brutal wreck. I’m a great driver, and it’s really not that difficult, but some people REALLY need to learn how to drive. People of Tulsa, please, please learn how to drive correctly. Not only because I just got my car totaled… I see people everyday who simply refuse to use their blinker or are just idiots when it comes to really simple things.

Don’t talk on your cellphone or text, and if you do, just don’t drive like you’re not even watching. And don’t drink and drive. Thanks.

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the MOVE and Stone Trio

move2

Come see me play… it will be fun. We’re playing with the lovely Stone Trio. Seriously, it will be fun!

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