Showing posts with label blogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogs. Show all posts

Monday, January 11, 2010

pHinnWeb.tumblr.com

All updates will now take place at:

http://phinnweb.tumblr.com


See you there.


(I may revive phinnweb.blogspot.com in the future, but for the time being that's not in sight -- therefore the blog you're reading now will remain as archive only.)


Searching for news and info on a particular artist, record label or genre? Some tags linking directly to the new pHinnWeb blog:

Finnish artists:

  • Dinosauruxia
  • Jori Hulkkonen
  • Huoratron
  • Imatran Voima
  • Jimi Tenor
  • Kemialliset Ystävät
  • Mesak
  • Mono Junk
  • Mr Velcro Fastener
  • New York City Survivors
  • Pan sonic
  • Randy Barracuda
  • Mika Vainio
  • Villa Nah

    Finnish record labels:

  • Dum Records
  • Fonal Records
  • Rikos Records
  • Sähkö Recordings

    Genres:

  • electro
  • funk
  • house music
  • skweee
  • synthpop
  • techno

    Others:

  • cinema
  • books
  • comics
  • graphic design
  • music videos
  • psychedelia
  • retro-futurism
  • science fiction

    More to come...
  • Thursday, January 03, 2008

    pHinnWeb "The Best Culture Blog of 2007"




    The internet on mobiili blog on Internet mobile services has chosen pHinnWeb's blog as the "Best Culture Blog of 2007", telling that "One could subscribe pHinnWeb's newsfeed to one's e-mail already 12 years ago, and even though the technology has changed along the years, its content has remained in the underground of the Net" [this clumsy translation from Finnish my own]. Thanks & cheers, mates!

    Sunday, September 23, 2007

    Wednesday, August 08, 2007

    Tididii Tididii Tididiididii @ Mutant Sounds




    Mutant Sounds now mentions and offers downloads of Tididii Tididii Tididiididii (LTJ-05/06), a 2003 release on Hannu Haahti's CD-R label 267 Lattajjjaa. With 160 minutes of music from psychedelic folk to improvisation to electronic noodlings, this compilation was like a Who's Who of Finnish underground music scene of the time, with some international guest stars included too.

    And oh, yours truly and his mighty(?) Yamaha Portasound can be heard there also, as part of No Scene (Disc 2, track 25: '230801'): the track is an electronic-ish improvisation jam taped at No Scene club in August 2001 at Tampere's Telakka.

    No Scene was another sadly short-lived electronic music club, run by American ex-pat and electronic musician Nathan Siter who lives here in Tampere (check his 12" on German label Zhark). I recall the people playing on the track were at least Nathan, Joonas of Toiminto, Perttu Piirto of Ever Had (another criminally underrated Tampere electronic musician!) also playing Syd Barrett-like electric guitar there, pHinn and some other people (including a female vocalist) whose names elude me now. This ensemble consisted of different artists and DJs playing at the club, who gathered together at the end of the night to do this jam session, on a "free-for-all" basis. Because I remember the pained expressions on some punters' faces who had to listen to our extended improvisation... To save your own nerves, the track is edited for the compilation.

    Tuesday, June 26, 2007

    Plat Ypus @ Mutant Sounds




    I wrote here some time ago about the art of Ilkka Vekka, also a member of the interesting exp/electronic-tinged rock group Plat Ypus. Now Mutant Sounds, one of the most fascinating music blogs around (dedicated to some extremely rare and obscure exp/electronic/psychedelic/punk/Krautrock/etc. record releases from 1960s onwards, also featuring downloads of these records), has featured there an entry of Lörsson/Plat Ypus 3" split CDR (a limited edition of 30!) released in 2003 on Helsinki's 267 Lattajjaa label (a brainchild of one dedicated fringe music fanatic called Hannu Haahti -- we were featured with Kompleksi on the label's Sigue Sigue Sputnik tribute compilation last year). This is what Mutant Sounds writes about Plat Ypus: "Vascilllating between rhythm box-driven vignettes of ass-backward mulched electronica, mid-period Boredoms spasming art splatter and post-rock repetition". Too bad Plat Ypus seems to gone on hiatus these days (even though one member of the band, Perttu Makkonen, just sent me an interesting CDR of his latest project, about which more here).

    Thursday, March 29, 2007

    Kid Shirt On Kompleksi's Video



    Kid Shirt, a UK music blog for all things underground, which did an interesting review of Kompleksi's 7", now namechecks our video at http://kidshirt.blogspot.com/2007/03/kompleksi-sara-pain.html:

    "... check out their strangely melancholic travelogue-themed vid for 'Sara Pain'"

    [...]

    "The footage and edits remind me of the sort of homemade promos that Cabaret Voltaire used to put out on Doublevision many moons back. Trust me, the track's a real grower."


    Original Kompleksi photo by Tina Ulevik; image manipulation by pHinn.

    And more Kompleksi-related stuff found from the Net:

    Electronic music producer Scary of Malmö, Sweden comments Kompleksi on his blog.

    http://scarypages.blogspot.com/2007/02/kompleksi-finsk-underhllande.html: "... De har hållit på sedan 2002 och gör en nästan organisk elektronika. Jag gillar deras lätt skeva och svårplacerade stil mycket och hoppas verkligen att de kan få släppa det album som de gjort men inte fått ge ut än. [...] Min favorit just nu är Kompleksi vs Citizen Omega-låten 'Ghost at Noon'; het som en utbränd lägenhet."

    *****

    Webzine Noise.fi has recently featured some Kompleksi tracks on their Net radio shows.

    Musaiikki, 31 January 2007:

    Kompleksi (with Polytron) - 'Moscow 1980'

    Demolition Derby, 5 March 2007:

    Kompleksi - 'SWT NG FCK THNG'

    Värinää, 14 March 2007:

    Kompleksi - 'Gothic Robots'

    Musaiikki, 28 March 2007:

    Kompleksi - 'Love Missile F1-11'

    *****

    Musasalama show on Radio Helsinki has had Kompleksi even before on its playlists:

    Musasalama 14 December 2006:

    KOMPLEKSI WITH SONIC TEMPLE ASSASSINS - 'Slick Little Girl'

    Musasalama 10 January 2007:

    KOMPLEKSI VS. POLYTRON - 'Moscow 1980' (Javelin Remix)

    *****

    John Cavanagh of Glasgow, Scotland is a musician-radio show DJ-writer (among all, an author of a book on the early days of Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd and their debut Piper at the Gates of Dawn; also pHinn's personal all-time favourite album).

    John Cavanagh's Soundwave @ Radio Six International

    Soundwave number 107 - 28th-29th January 2007:

    Kompleksi - 'Love Missile F1-11'

    Soundwave number 113 - 11th - 12th March 2007:

    Kompleksi remix of 'Kirkko Rakkaani' by M.A. Numminen & DJ Sane

    Related:
  • Official Phosphene Homepage
  • Phosphene Soundwave @ MySpace

    *****

    But what is this (and the same in Japanese)...?
  • Monday, November 20, 2006

    Saturday, February 11, 2006

    Parnasso and Blooks

    The latest issue of Finnish literature magazine Parnasso has on its cover a photograph of the late Arto Salminen, with an obituary/feature story by Harri Haanpää, so I had to buy the mag for my archives. Haanpää's story was quite interesting and would shed some light to Salminen's correspondence with his literary editor and how his books were born. I'm sure we'll see more texts and studies on Salminen's work in the future, and I for one hope to do my best to keep this writer's name alive and in good memory.

    It's funny because I've never considered myself as one fitting to the reader profile of a "high-brow" magazine like Parnasso, but to my surprise I found it interesting read from cover to cover. Now of course, in Finland Parnasso has the status of an established cultural institution, which means it is easy to put the magazine down in certain circles, but since I'm an outsider to literature circles myself (I used to study Comparative Literature at Tampere University, but because I liked books too much, I thought it was better to drop out, before the murky and dust-covered world of academia would make me hate and loathe them...), I can stay away from these little cultural wars, their backstabbing, etc., and judge it all with my little innocent (tee hee) eyes.

    There was also Karri Kokko's story on poetry blogs (which you can read in Finnish here), and it's great talented writers will increasingly present their output on this electronic medium too. "Blooks" (blogs serialising books) are now on everyone's lips, and even people like The Who's (one of my all-time favourite bands) Pete Townshend (known as one of the most verbal and outspoken commentators working in the area of popular music) publish their own fictional texts on those. Perhaps "blook" is a good point of reference for my own dilettantish efforts here too...

    Monday, February 21, 2005

    Hello To All You Who Came Here Through Pinseri

    I just added this blog to Pinseri, the list of Finnish blogs. Hello to all of you who came here through that.

    Basically, this blog is an extension of pHinnWeb and its mailing list; dedicated to Finnish (but also international) electronic, experimental and avantgarde music, underground culture and some other interests of mine concerning pop culture in general, cinema, literature, visual arts in general, esoteric arts, and so on and so on. As you see, I'm interested in all things between heaven and earth (and below).

    Here you can also read about some things that would be too off-topic and personal for the site and mailing list mentioned above. One part of this blog is my personal net diary, where I tell about my every-day life in my hometown Tampere, my dealings with underground music culture and other related things, and also a bit of personal, existential (though hopefully not too exhibitionist) soul searching... my world is not always nice and cute but not totally dark, bleak and hopeless, either. Anyway, proceed only at your own responsibility... [a biiiiig grin of a smiley here]

    Thursday, August 26, 2004

    On Anger And Being Pressure-Cooked

    I've earlier expressed here how much I'm into Birdy's net diary/blog. Here are some excerpts of Birdy's recent net column on anger, freely translated from Finnish. I think she hits the nail on the head here, on the feelings of anger and how society sees it better to suppress them the best it can. There's a lot of latent violence in this society; a lot of people who live from day to day like being constantly pressure-cooked. Showing one's anger or aggression is not encouraged in most social situations, which is all good to maintain society's day-to-day consistence, but those feelings considered negative seem to be only swept away under the carpet, making the occasional outbursts of violence even worse. The ancient Greek used to hold as their maxim "Know thyself"; and one's dark side is also something we have to deal with, perhaps even more often than we realise. A lot of anger is childish, of course; undergoings of the feelings of hurt egos, but there is also anger that is justified: in the face of unfair social situations and one's being subjected power games; in the face of oppression and unequality.

    "Being angry does not make anyone a Satanic hound of darkness or a destructive psychopath. Instead, the people who deny their own feelings of anger make me scared. When that soup keeps brewing and growing inside a high pressure kettle, one becomes a walking time bomb."

    "An angry person is angry. The one who denies one's anger can't accept the feelings of anger in him/herself, not to talk about the other person's anger: an angry person is to an anger-denier a mad and destructive being. Being angry is demonised. An angry person is seen nearly as a monster, whereas one's own angry behaviour is seen as something of a Mother Theresa or a Dalai Lama. Ms. Jekyll feels like she's encountering Ms. Hyde."

    "How can a child learn to handle the feelings of anger and express those in a correct way, if s/he doesn't have any healthy example to follow? How is the well-being of a person in a society, where any anger should be suppressed and kept under wraps?"

    "Being angry is energetic and normal, and how to control it is an important skill. Being angry protects and destroys, depending exactly on how well one can handle it. Denying it won't improve one's skills to handle it. The passive aggression is the worst bane of human relationships: brooding, keeping silent, stealthy retort, 'forgetting', and other funny ways to vent out that hatred that can't be expressed openly. Passive aggression is also one's rising above, from which position one can handle one's angry neighbour like a little kid who has pooped on the floor -- at same time reinforcing one's own 'goodness', which is in reality merely arrogance."

    "For many people conflict or being angry is like a plague, best avoided. Either sacrifing oneself with ongoing concessions (which causes the martyr syndrome and bitterness) or rising above, in other words avoiding." One should "understand that the opposite of love is not being angry but being indifferent".

    Wednesday, May 19, 2004

    Birdy and Post-Politics

    I have to admit I'm an addict for Birdy's Storybook (sorry, Finnish only). It's weird, since many times her furious
    feminist manic street preacher antics just irritate me, but I still find a lot of it making sense, with a lot of thought-out opinions and comments, expressed in an honest,
    straightforward way. Mostly Birdy's texts concern relationships between males and females and issues of equality; and even though, as said, I often find myself disagreeing about
    certain aspects there (for example, I hate her concept of "ATM", Alemman Tason Mies, or
    "The Lower Level Man"), I still have found myself being enlightened and mentally refreshed by her texts.

    Lately, Birdy has been written
    about the Rosa Meriläinen incident too (it seems to be the hottest topic at the moment also among the people I know myself); pointing out how the members of her Green Party have now unfairly turned their backs on her, at the time when she would need most support from her own people, and the obvious opportunism detected there. I don't have anything
    to add there, but then, I'm not generally the biggest advocate of the traditional party politics system, which I find in the end to be merely a playground for self-serving opportunists, ambitious egocentric wannabes with narcissistic tendencies and greedy power-hungry bloodsuckers. Am I cynical here? You bet I am; but trying to be a bit more constructive here, I think the time has come for the kind of era of "post-politics", with all power centers located purely to the grassroots level ("power to the people", eh?) instead of the current elitist system of politicians and economists and their vested interests and the military-industrial-entertainment complex ruling over it all... I admit my thinking is still quite naïve and vague, but basically I'm not a theorist, only a pragmatist wishing to be just something like "an educated layman". I'm trying to get something more out of it in the future... If you're not laughing your heads off by now, just stay tuned.