Комментарии •

  • @finkployd6110
    @finkployd6110 2 года назад +19

    I'm amazed that multiple different artists developed turntablism independently of each other. This guy was figuring it out all on his own while the hip-hop pioneers were doing the same thing in the Bronx, that's just mad synchronicity.

    • @vitorrua
      @vitorrua 8 месяцев назад

      "the same thing"???... I am sorry but its not "the same thing"!!!... they do scratch but not tape in the records and not using the turntables as an instrument like Marclay!

    • @finkployd6110
      @finkployd6110 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@vitorrua Hip-hop DJs were putting tape on records and manipulating them in ways similar to this. The DMC World Championships showcased some of it. Also there are artists like Kid Koala who utilise the turntables as an instrument. It's not just scratching.

    • @vitorrua
      @vitorrua 8 месяцев назад

      can you put a link to see them doing that* I am curious to see the similarities... I never saw nobody else doing things like this! One thing is to do scratch another is to do this in many turntables... first of all they use generally only two turntables... and with a mixer in the middle... this is a thing completely different... but show me an example please...@@finkployd6110

    • @finkployd6110
      @finkployd6110 6 месяцев назад

      ​​​@@vitorruaSorry for the late reply. I've had time to mull this over and I get where you're coming from. I wouldn't say this is completely different, it's certainly different in the ways you described but there were things I saw that reminded me of what some DJs did especially around the later vinyl era in the battle scene (after DVS came along, DJs stopped using real records and hence a lot of the weirder techniques died down). Obviously one major difference is there being no crossfader to act as a killswitch, but there are DJs who can scratch completely without the fader, look up "faderless scratching", it's uncommon but it's been done. Multiple turntables are often used in DJ "bands" like the Invisibl Skratch Piklz, solo DJs not so often but it's happened. There were other experimental techniques I saw here that have been used by scratch DJs, such as drilling a spindle hole off-center to make the record flutter (DJ Qbert did that in his 1991 DMC set), scraping the record with the needle (Qbert also did that in his 1991 DMC set), tape on records to make rhythmic noise (DJ Kentaro at the 2001 DMC World Championships).
      One thing I realised is that the only examples I myself can think of are from after this performance. It wouldn't shock me at all if it turns out some DJs, especially the Bay Area DJs, saw Christian Marclay on TV and repurposed some of these techniques for their own sets, especially DJ Qbert's 1991 DMC performance.
      I understand what you mean by this being different, it was an oversimplification of me to call it the "same thing", really what I meant was that it's a cool synchronicity - while Grandmaster Flash and Grandwizzard Theodore were turning the turntables+mixer into a sampling instrument, another young man elsewhere in America was also experimenting with using the turntables as an instrument, and they both did it by "ruining" records in the traditional sense. From what I understand, earlier avant-garde composers who experimented with turntables didn't think of manually moving records, marking them with tape, touching the grooves with their hands. Grandmaster Flash said he got a lot of flak for touching the grooves and marking them with crayon, and Marclay had a similar out of the box thinking approach in that he also didn't care about treating his records delicately.
      Here's DJ Qbert's 1991 DMC set, this version he messed up a fair bit but you can see what he's doing: ruclips.net/video/8wITk8-7oNU/видео.htmlfeature=shared
      Here's a better executed performance of the same set but the video quality is shite, it's harder to see what he's doing: ruclips.net/video/saWnli51Ix8/видео.htmlfeature=shared

  • @Rascaduanok
    @Rascaduanok 7 лет назад +33

    I love the way he carelessly discards the records when he's done with them!

    • @fleurpvnk108
      @fleurpvnk108 6 лет назад +4

      Kodanshi Helcarver Does this look like a person who cares about the condition of his records? Just look at 3:47 -4:00

    • @gusmozart
      @gusmozart 4 года назад +2

      You guys don't get it at all. Look at how carefully he sliced up records and put them back together. That's not a characteristic of a careless person.

  • @jonathanhowells4923
    @jonathanhowells4923 Год назад +3

    I saw this broadcast live when I was in High School and it blew me away!! I think it shifted my mind in terms of art, music, breaking the rules and inventing new ones.

  • @FranklyNorman
    @FranklyNorman 3 года назад +19

    So interesting to watch this in 2021. Ableton Live looping, Autotune, click tracks, sampling, beat mapping, quantizing...this guy is essentially using all of these devices before they even had names

  • @stoopsburger
    @stoopsburger 11 лет назад +12

    Truly ingenious dude. Saw one of his original record cut-up creations on display at MOMA and it was absolutely beautiful. Just wish I could've had a chance to give it a spin. He's like the Jimi Hendrix of the turntables and a DEFINITE innovator.

  • @NachtSchreck13
    @NachtSchreck13 4 года назад +4

    I think you have to be able to experience ASMR to understand this kind of performance. Very trance-inducing. Love those turntables! They obviously color the sound of the records greatly with the built in amps and EQ, old transistors, etc

  • @vaspers
    @vaspers 14 лет назад +4

    Total genius. Never boring or trite. Does so much that's even interesting visually. Love this brilliant pioneer. This video was selected for my New Musiology vlog.

  • @thapoint09
    @thapoint09 10 лет назад +29

    John Cage meets Invisibl Skratch Piklz.

    • @freal
      @freal 10 лет назад +5

      Never has there been a better way to describe this.

  • @AMOKIAN
    @AMOKIAN 4 года назад +4

    I saw this when it aired. So awesome!!!

  • @bochi_inst
    @bochi_inst Год назад +2

    本当に素晴らしい!

  • @dkeifjdmeldksksmdf8571
    @dkeifjdmeldksksmdf8571 6 лет назад +3

    Got to see him in a garage on Mott St. in the the mid 80's. Been hooked since.

    • @lxxwj
      @lxxwj 3 года назад

      that is fucking awesome tbh

  • @meepage332
    @meepage332 16 лет назад +4

    This is amazing! Talent where others may not see it.

  • @cheggerz666
    @cheggerz666 14 лет назад +2

    This is actually beautiful!
    Kinda sounds a lil like R2D2 having some hand to droid time at the start!
    EPIC!
    THANKYOU!

  • @MattAHTatTat
    @MattAHTatTat 15 лет назад +4

    Reminds me of something Negativland would put out...although done entirely with vinyl...awesome video!

  • @porchestra
    @porchestra 16 лет назад +3

    This is mind blowing stuff!

  • @mlzellers
    @mlzellers 14 лет назад +3

    best music show ever....

    • @DelEngen
      @DelEngen Месяц назад

      Groundbreaking. Too good for TV which is why it didn't last. Loved watching Conway Twitty perform with The Residents.

  • @humanewman
    @humanewman 15 лет назад +1

    Brilliant. Thanks for posting.

  • @vonbontee
    @vonbontee 13 лет назад +3

    Magnificent racket! Love 3:27 when the drum solo kicks in.

  • @gaffle-411
    @gaffle-411 6 лет назад +3

    Now we see where DJ Qbert got some of his inspiration from!

  • @pbksound
    @pbksound 15 лет назад +1

    fantastic= total influence on my own work

  • @rastabus
    @rastabus 15 лет назад +1

    this music is excellent

  • @turntable700
    @turntable700 15 лет назад +2

    Wow what a legend ...way before Grandmaster Flash , Theodore and Kool Herc ...true skills !!

    • @wewuzwolves4428
      @wewuzwolves4428 3 года назад +2

      Not quite "way before". It was a case of parallel events (something that happens quite a bit in music and other artforms). GMF and the others you mentioned had been doing their thing since the early 70s (Kool Herc was doing his thing in '73). Christian Marclay (as far as I know -- he may have been dabbling w/ the idea much earlier) didn't really start doing his thing until the late 70s. Both are innovators because both came to the idea of "turntable as an instrument" independently but from different angles. I like Christian's approach better because it's more like Punk Rock (in spirit as far as telling the "rules of music" to get lost) and I'm biased toward that style of music.

    • @wewuzwolves4428
      @wewuzwolves4428 3 года назад

      BTW, dope channel. Subbed.

  • @anaelhonings8683
    @anaelhonings8683 11 месяцев назад

    My hero!

  • @zoranaleksov5854
    @zoranaleksov5854 8 лет назад +1

    amazing

  • @ENOKESO7
    @ENOKESO7 13 лет назад +1

    これは素晴らしい演奏です!

  • @MainDuiker
    @MainDuiker 12 лет назад +2

    @romeosdistress Oh yes, you're right! I just saw this mix hit the top 10 !

  • @miltonparker
    @miltonparker 15 лет назад +1

    Night Music DVD set
    please

  • @seanfollett5942
    @seanfollett5942 10 лет назад +3

    He's got four turntables, cant hold a microphone.
    Where its at.

  • @pmd44
    @pmd44 13 лет назад +1

    @Kaischoosi I'm sure he used a record where he made his own off-center hole.

  • @aseta
    @aseta 12 лет назад +1

    like music to my ears!

  • @gehtnixan3756
    @gehtnixan3756 12 лет назад +2

    Sick!

  • @SensoryOssuary
    @SensoryOssuary 15 лет назад +1

    this made my cat go crazy. great music!

  • @obadiahwashington7060
    @obadiahwashington7060 2 года назад +1

    Does anyone know what key or BPM he's playing in... :)

  • @_u_t_o_n_
    @_u_t_o_n_ 9 лет назад

    amazing!

  • @knsgakhr
    @knsgakhr 10 лет назад

    Excellent!

  • @influenciaautonoma2055
    @influenciaautonoma2055 2 года назад

    salve!!!!

  • @FrenchKettleStation
    @FrenchKettleStation 12 лет назад +2

    Take that DJ Shadow!

  • @totosu
    @totosu 14 лет назад

    cooooool!

  • @kidhouse23
    @kidhouse23 14 лет назад

    blimey!!

  • @coire_
    @coire_ 4 года назад +1

    banger

  • @MrJay21121990
    @MrJay21121990 11 лет назад

    Good for you.

  • @Bananananamann
    @Bananananamann 14 лет назад +2

    Whats that strange turning record he puts on on 2:28 ?

  • @dandylionphotography
    @dandylionphotography 12 лет назад +1

    AMAZING
    sounds very reminiscent of Oval

  • @kamichamamink
    @kamichamamink 12 лет назад

    This is what the future sounds like...

  • @sonofabeach71
    @sonofabeach71 3 года назад +3

    I wonder if he ever saved up enough money for a mixer..

    • @rednoise0
      @rednoise0 3 года назад +2

      Aw, where's the fun in that?? ;^)

  • @waterywaffles
    @waterywaffles 4 года назад +1

    Does anyone have any idea what kind of turntables he’s using? I’ve seen a lot of artists use them but I can’t find them anywhere online

    • @rednoise0
      @rednoise0 4 года назад +4

      They look like the portable record players that were used by my grade and high school AV departments. Looking around the 'Net, I think Marclay has 3 Califone 1450A and another model, probably also a Califone. These would all be from the '60s and '70s.

  • @Bananananamann
    @Bananananamann 14 лет назад

    @MrMeddled
    Cool thank ya, so this has some particular effect on the sample ?

  • @counivers
    @counivers 5 месяцев назад

    Track ID?!

  • @FunkigaMoses
    @FunkigaMoses 11 лет назад

    Agree!

  • @briancrainakacain9780
    @briancrainakacain9780 9 лет назад

    good stuff

  • @romeosdistress
    @romeosdistress 12 лет назад +1

    @WhiteAfrican78 Haha. The mark of a true artist. Hitting the top 10. Right there with Beyoncé, Justin Bieber, Susan Boyle and all those other geniuses...

  • @Bananananamann
    @Bananananamann 14 лет назад

    @MrMeddled
    Oh i can hear it now ... coz of the longer resp. shorter distance the sample is faster resp. slower than normal ... cool effect...
    great musician anyway, he has a really abstract and destructive style... destructive in the sense of a wild animal that wants to destroy every border in what we call music...

  • @DIRTBA7
    @DIRTBA7 2 года назад

    undeniably one of the first "turntableists" in my semblance of an "opinion" or "perspective"...basically no marclay...no tableism!... ans a contributor to the "noise" or "experimental noise" movement...or at least one of the contributors..Turntable "compositions".. not just "routines"...

  • @jn8845
    @jn8845 8 лет назад +1

    Does anybody know what turntables he's using?

    • @rednoise0
      @rednoise0 8 лет назад +10

      +Jesse Noily - He's using Califone record players. They were heavy-duty-grade machines mostly used in school classrooms and industrial applications... I remember them from my childhood I'm sure they would ruin any of our nice LPs in a second... not that that would be a problem for Mr. Marclay!

    • @grassulo
      @grassulo 7 лет назад

      I have a bunch of them and audiotronics ones and their fine also have a technics sl1200 and sl 1430 califone won't hurt your records and their solid, with a real astatic power point cartridge it will not hurt records for real those school record player manufacturers knew exactly what they were doing these don't mess up records if you take good care of them.

  • @Thrash0Jazz0Assassin
    @Thrash0Jazz0Assassin 13 лет назад

    @Sololeiperme "Da sempre abbiamo avuto una educazione di tipo letterario per cui, la gente, anche quella colta, di fronte a un quadro astratto (supponiamo) cerca di capirne «il significato», il «cosa vuol dire», vuole il racconto, cerca ancora la letteratura nella pittura. E così cerca la letteratura nel cinema, nella scultura, in ogni tipo di arte visiva. Se l'arte visiva mostra solo se stessa (come fa certa musica) la gente non capisce, perché non ci trova niente da leggere" -Bruno Munari

  • @LfunkeyA
    @LfunkeyA 14 лет назад

    epic

  • @Dillinify
    @Dillinify 11 лет назад

    genius

  • @TheArtChannel1
    @TheArtChannel1 9 лет назад

    For The Art Channel review of the Christian Marclay at White Cube see ruclips.net/video/bSGsiJiXulk/видео.html

  • @rednoise0
    @rednoise0 12 лет назад +1

    Well, it definitely pushes against the boundary of what is and isn't music and art, and it won't appeal to everybody. At least you're open-minded enough to listen.

  • @ecmhands
    @ecmhands 13 лет назад

    космос

  • @LfunkeyA
    @LfunkeyA 12 лет назад

    the future was back then

  • @wavelengthrecords-1
    @wavelengthrecords-1 6 лет назад +1

    David Sanborn at the beginning. Fun story: he came on hard to a girl friend of mine at a hotel shopping area in Oklahoma City in 1987. Literally asked her to come up to his room and hang out with him for a while. It was the day of his concert there and I had asked her to go to the show with me cause I was sick in love with her and had free tickets. She still went but clearly hated it and told me why after we left. Did I mention we were seniors in high school? What a creep.

    • @lxxwj
      @lxxwj 3 года назад

      yo what the fuck thats awful

  • @deadleaves9587
    @deadleaves9587 8 лет назад +1

    Are the sounds on each record produced by him? or are they collected from different artists?

    • @Stellbellz
      @Stellbellz 8 лет назад +1

      They are old records from thrift shops, so not his

  • @snapman801
    @snapman801 12 лет назад

    mind fucked dig it

  • @iamchosen1
    @iamchosen1 14 лет назад +1

    this is really weird, but in a good way.

  • @jvemPiRe14
    @jvemPiRe14 11 лет назад +1

    1:48

  • @Knifeworld
    @Knifeworld 12 лет назад

    Birdy Nam Nam. LOL

  • @akihirokanasugi
    @akihirokanasugi 10 лет назад

    Play that broken music !
    ruclips.net/p/PLH93iInXKrCBJu4ovY6wp8CaJxWmMRHdm

  • @penguinworm
    @penguinworm 15 лет назад +1

    3:11 sounds like a sad robot.

  • @toadstool1313
    @toadstool1313 12 лет назад

    no, this is what the past sounds like.

  • @arkadymarto9440
    @arkadymarto9440 6 месяцев назад

    Extraterrestrial!cool!

  • @jsol420
    @jsol420 12 лет назад

    Don't hate. It wasn't that bad.

  • @AKut1710
    @AKut1710 13 лет назад

    this guy needs to chek out the DMC'S. haha

  • @mikeg9192
    @mikeg9192 10 лет назад +4

    Somewhere in time and space, the never ending frequencies of Christian Marclay's night music got sucked into a black hole, caused a super nova and gave birth to the Glitch Mob.

  • @GelenosOak
    @GelenosOak 11 лет назад

    3.08 bwad

  • @stevearle
    @stevearle 8 лет назад +1

    "All this needs is some bad example nursery rhymes over top and we could really get the kids on the hook."

  • @brazfrei
    @brazfrei 12 лет назад

    Desenvolveu o Scratching com nada haver ao hip hop

  • @cullyvan
    @cullyvan 12 лет назад

    He invented scratching.

  • @jordankell1881
    @jordankell1881 11 лет назад

    Shit i could do this lol

  • @edgar15346
    @edgar15346 12 лет назад +1

    me dolio la cabesa con escuchar esta mamada de sonido yo toco mejor es enserio

  • @elevenart
    @elevenart 15 лет назад

    worse than that murderous moment in Psycho

  • @vaspers
    @vaspers 8 лет назад

    I'd rather watch musician playing synthesizers, samplers, and drum machines.

  • @sucklingfatty
    @sucklingfatty 13 лет назад

    brilliant