air, new york, 
            	  city, japan, pop, culture, zine, blog, weblog, web, log, journal, ivan, corsa

air, new york, 
            	  city, japan, pop, culture, zine, blog, weblog, web, log, journal, ivan, corsa, ken taniguchi, reiko oishi
AIR MASSIVE
GLOBAL POP CULTURE MEDIA WEBLOG

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ON MOVIES, MUSIC,
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ON OUR STEREO Air Massive

The Top Ten discs that get us through the night...

1. Playgroup - "DJ Kicks" (!K7)
2. Lost in Translation - "Music from the Motion Picture Soundtrack" (Emperor Norton)
3. The Flaming Lips - "Ego Tripping at the Gates of Hell" (Warner Bros.)
4. DJ Olive - "Bodega" (The Agriculture)
5. Dizzee Rascal - "Boy in Da Corner" (Matador Records)
6. Antonio Pinto & Ed Cortez / Various Artists - "City of God: Music from the Miramax Motion Picture" (Milan)
7. Erykah Badu - "World Wide Underground" (Motown Records)
8. The Neptunes - "The Neptunes present... Clones" (Arista)
9. The Streets - "Original Pirate Material" (Vice / Atlantic)
10. Erase Errata - "At Crystal Palace" (Troubleman Unlimited)


Top 3 Hip Hop Artist Names...

1. Chingy - Cuz it's right thurrr!
2. Dirt McGirt - Better than being called Sh_t McGit
3. Jadakiss - Alterna-name of opening scene on future "Passion of Christ" DVD


Kickin' It Ol' Skool...

1. Beastie Boys- "Paul's Boutique" (Capitol)


Overheard...

At Grand St. & Norfolk St.: "Marvin, pick me up at Wal-Mart!"


Top Video Game for ADD Moments...

1. Grand Theft Auto III: Vice City (Rockstar Games)

AND YA' DON'T STOP

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  • Mar. 03, 2004 - New York City | + HOME

    GRAPHICA

    Street Art: Hip Hop Walks This Way on the L.E.S.

    Graphics, street art, street, art, new York City, Lower East Side, Rivington, historic, district, photography, photographer, 
Typhoon, Ivan Corsa, Ken Taniguchi, Air Massive, Ken Taniguchi, Typhoon, ivan corsa, Kid from Kyoto

    So we were running some errands and walking over to Orchard 88, our usual morning java joint on New York's Lower East Side, when we were approaching the corner of Rivington and Allen streets and something caught our eye: the crossing signal was red AND green. The red hand was lit up telling us, "Don't Walk." But the green-walking-man-figure was lit up, too, saying "Walk." Which was was it?

    Then we realized, "Hey that green is a little too green--where are those lightning-white L.E.D. lights we've become accustomed to... huh? HUH?"

    On closer inspection, the reason for the initial confusion became clear. An anonymous artist had pasted up a new green-walking-man on the signal plate, covering the original L.E.D. version. The artist's version was of a tracksuit-and-backwards-Kangol-hat-wearing hip hop dude carrying an old skool boombox. (Click here to see close-up of detail of above image.)

    Clever... No, wait... VERY clever!

    What's more, the artist had cut out holes in his paper substitute so that the "Walk" L.E.D. lights underneath could shine through. Genius!

    One of the great things about Lower Manhattan, especially around the Lower East Side, Nolita, SoHo, the East Village and Chinatown, is that there's so much cool street art on the walls and pavement that the urban landscape is a virtual museum in and of itself.

    Okay, for the record, by "street art" here we don't mean graffiti ( though some of it is art and there are plenty of graffiti tags and throw-ups in Downtown New York ), but non-commercial posters, stencils, attached objet d'art , board-graphics, stickers and murals.

    We'd love to know who the artist behind what we're calling "Hip Hop Walk Man" is. We think it could be the New York street artist Swoon, but while similar in cheekiness the style and medium here are of a slightly different flavor than his usual works, so we're not sure. If anyone knows, drop us a line at the Massive.

    It would be cool if green walkman stays up up for a while, but given the safety risks due to the sign's potential to confuse pedestrians, the authorities will probably have to remove Hip Hop Walk Man. Sniff sniff.
    --Typhoon + Ivan Corsa / Photo: Typhoon

    |

    RELATED LINKS

    + Wooster Collective Street Art Project -- Interview [Session.edu]
    + Swoon bio -- Jen Bekman Gallery


    Feb. 25, 2004 - New York City | + HOME

    Movie Review

    Japanese Video Night Part II: "Branded to Kill"

    "Branded to Kill" is a stylish, inventive and thoroughly modern piece of '60s Japanese noir, at turns sexy and psychologicaly creepy. It's also one of the most influential Japanese films ever made.

    Released in 1967 and directed by Seijun Suzuki, "Branded to Kill" ("Koroshi no Rakuin" in Japanese) is the story of a yakuza hitman and his battle to stay alive after he botches a job and finds himself in the cross hairs of another hitman's rifle.

    Jo Shishido stars as "No. 3 Killer." After he misses hitting his assigned target (a butterfly lands on his rifle, blocking his telescope), the mysterious and higher-ranking "No. 1 Killer" is sent to rub him out... [MORE]

    + HOME





    ARCHIVE

    Selected articles, interviews, reviews and more from the Air Magazine NYC-Japan Web Project 1998-2002.


    CONTACT

    Submissions, info tips and feedback welcomed via email. Contact the Massive here.


    MASSIVE

    Lost in Translation:
    Ken Taniguchi
    Ape Shall Never Kill Ape:
    Ivan Corsa
    Style Guru:
    Reiko Oishi
    Remote Control Unit:
    Typhoon
    Sources Direct:
    Jay Han
    The Kid From Kyoto
    Rob Samra
    Shibuya Kid
    Da Smitho
    Adrian Tharani
    Gravy to Potatoes,
    Luke to Darth Vader:

    Lao Tzu




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