Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Black Marble - Weight Against the Door EP

 If you haven't heard of New York City's Black Marble yet, give them a listen below. Their track "Pretender" is a real standout from their Weight Against the Door EP, which will be available on 12" vinyl February 14. You can already purchased a digital copy at iTunes.

"Pretender" shows a remarkably adept new waver synth style, with a driving beat and bass riff that is all function with no frills. If the track is showing off its in just how direct and focused it is, where nothing is extraneous and everything is substantial. The accompanying track, "On My Head", shows much of the same focus, while not quite matching the intensity of "Pretender". But a solid track all the same, with a lighter, more optimistic charm that explores slightly different territory, but keeps all the technical skill and restraint. This is a band worth paying attention to.


It would also be shallow of me to not thank Jessy for putting me onto these guys. Thanks again, Jessy.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Antelope Island

Antelope Island, UT. On flickr.
My first visit to Antelope Island was a very nice experience. As was shooting this roll of Walgreens 400 speed. Something about these cheap rolls of film that I just really like. I took about a dozen shots with my D40 and didn't like any of them (except maybe one). I suspect the digital pictures could have turned out better if I'd exerted a more disciplined rigor toward shooting with a D40. But no matter how much effort I'd put into those digital shots, they still wouldn't look like this.

Monday, January 16, 2012

All That Could Have Been


A recurring pattern: I load the film, and fry the first image. Keeps me humble. Or something. A reminder that the whole process is rather delicate and it doesn't take much for your world to vanish. Still, from the look of that water, I'll bet this would have been the best oceanscape on the roll.

Waiting for the Man

Outside the Fourth District Juvenile Court, Orem

Self-Conscious Waterfall

Also found at LDS Earth Stewardship
I took this picture at BYU's south campus stream and trail, a landscaping/restoration project completed in April 2011. It was apparently quite a project, and thus somewhat amusingly became an Event.

I admit, it looks nice. But there's something rather (to use my brother's description) self-conscious about this project. My picture doesn't show the stream, or the trail, but shows one of five waterfalls along the stream and trail. It also shows how badly BYU's landscaping team wants to create a natural scene. But by wanting a natural look that also imbues each waterfall with "its own personality" (Bruce Maw, BYU Campus Landscape Architect) they have constructed a natural look that is so calculated as to become unnatural. It's basically an outdoor set piece, where nature is a prop used primarily for our personal pleasure, rather than an autonomous group of systems that each have their own patterns of behavior.

I appreciate having a place for students to "get away from it all" and enjoy some nature - I want that, too. It's important to have gardens and responsibly integrate nature into the urban space. But I get uncomfortable when part of the motivation seems to be to construct a superficial image of beauty and prosperity that values nature solely for what it can do for us, something to be tamed and controlled. BYU sits at the foot of the Rocky Mountains, where trails aplenty take you out of the city and human-constructed natural landscapes into much more vibrant, rejuvenating and adventurous territory. I worry that creating such docile and predictable spaces hinders us from taking nature on its own terms, where it is not simply a submissive prop. We think we know how best to handle the environment, which is hardly true considering the strain Utah Valley, and BYU, put on our desert environment.

The south campus stream and trail is a nice gesture, but it's incomplete. For my part, the south campus stream and trail still lacks a genuine personality, and instead displays a self-conscious and somewhat superficial personality I too often find at the university.

Turn on the Bright Lights


Sunday, January 15, 2012

Pretentious


I don't typically do self-portraits for rather apparent reasons. But I had a roll to finish and my creativity was exhausted.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

"Was ist die Befindlichkeit des Landes?"

Potsdamer Platz, Berlin; summer 2008
One of those lucky moments. This picture still just charms me and it's probably my favorite picture from Berlin. I don't think we have to be city people to be fascinated by the city and urbanity. Berlin is without a doubt my favorite big city and I'm hoping for the chance to go back.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Find Your Note


My N65 is pulling the film through weirdly, resulting in some lines on my negatives, which often doesn't enhance the image in any way. Therefore, the N65 is taking a leave of absence while I consider my options. With Allen's Camera already willing to muck up my scans by not cleaning their scanner properly (they tell me it's really hard to keep it clean, which I don't doubt; but they're supposed to be pros, so I have no sympathy for their hardships), the lines are one challenge too many.

Still, despite the lines and dust, I thought this one turned out alright.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Two from Tennyson

On flickr

On flickr
It takes me a while to get to some things. These two pictures are personal favorites of mine, yet I had done nothing with them until now. Maybe I wanted them to myself for a while. But after two and a half years I think it's time to let them out.

Though I bet you can find them in here somewhere.

Nothing but You and Me

On flickr

Monday, January 2, 2012

Summer Ultramax



I didn't take a picture for four months. When I came back to it in mid-December and finished my roll, I found these. It feels like so long ago, but it was only August.

Kodak Ultramax film delivers.

Happy New Year

From First Beach, La Push, WA