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Color me impressed. This is just an amazing undertaking. They are doing a new film of the musical Les Miserables (based on the book by Victor Hugo-you should read it). Instead of recording a soundtrack and then lip syncing on location they are singing live as they film. Just wow. I can’t wait to see this.

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This week we are joined by Eddie Regan. He has created a rich and dangerous, yet beautiful world as Effword. I was lucky enough to see Eddie perform with Taint Misbehavin (I hope to have an interview with them in the future). This guy as a lot of energy and it is intense. Some artists talk about being forced to create and Eddie/Effword is one of those artists. Let’s jump into the bizarre, magical, and often unsettling world of Effword.


Give me a little background on yourself. How did you get into music and video production and what projects do you have going right now?

ER: I was born on October 28th, 1983 – three days before Halloween, something I’ve always been influenced by. Growing up I was obsessed with music, horror films, and ghost stories.

During college I studied classical music and also got heavy into electronic music such as Kraftwerk and Walter Carlos. I finished school in 2006, did some traveling and continued to perform as a theater musician. In 2008 I decided to become an electronic solo artist after listening to the album ‘Silent Shout’ by The Knife.

Tell me more about Effword. How did that start and what is your goal with it?

ER: I named myself Effword after a nickname a college friend had given me. The costumes and makeup I wear as Effword add more to the show and the creative process. A lot of my favorite artists perform in makeup, masks, or fucked-up costumes. I’ve always appreciated musical performances that were more than just a band in their everyday clothes playing their songs.

Currently, I have almost enough music video content to release an audiovisual album. Like my live performance, I think it’s very powerful to have a video element for the whole entire thing, start to finish. So, my plan has been to release the album only on DVD and VHS formats.

Another short-term goal is to produce and direct my first short horror film, under my everyday name. The script is almost done, then I’ll move on to casting and coming up with the money… planning to shoot it in springtime!

How do the concepts come about? What is your writing/creative process?

ER: Some ideas just unfold naturally for me, like a dream does when sleeping – it just happens. I also find a lot of energy/motivation from getting inspired by the work of other artists; musicians, filmmakers, and visual artists.

For both writing music and creating film, I usually start out with something very simple – and more ideas come around in the process.

When my friends and I made the most recent music video for an Effword song ‘Zenith Magic’ – the process was a blast. The concept was based around a guy who takes a walk in the graveyard and follows a ghost who leads him to a briefcase which contains his funeral clothes. He puts them on and begins dancing on the ground which will soon become his cold grave. Once we had the idea for that, all kinds of crazy shit started happening! We incorporated little kids, a voodoo doll, a dead mouse, a girl playing Ouija board, a book called ‘Diseases of the Horse’, and a creepy talking genie toy named ‘Zultan’. We filmed almost the entire thing on Super 8 mm in one day, and everyone was really happy with how it turned out. It looks vintage and grainy… the colors turned out very rich.

Why did you choose to synthesize the vocals?

ER: I had been listening to lots of music with vocoder when I started doing that. Once I discovered I could sing polyphonically with a monster voice… I was hooked.

What do you want people to take away from Effword?

ER: More than anything, I want people to be inspired by my work. I want them to feel like they are on a journey, in a trance, when they watch my videos. I want my art to be an escape from reality, and I want people to explore their dark side with me. And for everyone to smash the shit out of their flat screens and get a tube TV.

Are you playing a character when you do Effword or is it just another part of Eddie Regan?

ER: I’ve always thought of Effword as a subconscious entity who wants me to do absolutely nothing but create. He doesn’t give a fuck about a single aspect of my personal life, he doesn’t want me to have one. Sounds crazy, but it’s true!

What has been the overall reaction to Effword?

ER: It’s usually been positive! Especially since I started performing live to my music videos on a projection screen, people really respond to that. Not everyone knows what there getting into when they walk into a show… it’s awesome having the visuals, I’m never going back. People who would normally be out of the room to smoke a fag every three minutes get glued to the screen! I’ve been very lucky to find venues that suit my style as well. The Lovecraft Bar has always been my favorite venue to play, and I’m looking forward to my first show at The Jack London, also the perfect kind of joint for me. At the end of September I’ll go to Astoria to play at The Voodoo Room. It’s decorated with New Orleans Voodoo posters, devils, and other varieties of wierd cool shit! They have a giant Ouija board as one of their seating tables.

The videos all seem to be taking place in the same world. What can you tell me about that world?

ER: I like to explore the gates that lie between the individual’s dream world, the reality-world that we all live in together, and the unknown. I like the experience of exploring those worlds to be timeless. The video for ‘Rotto Cuppo’ was my first expression of that journey. ‘Warm Like Summer’ and ‘Zenith Magic’, while different in many ways, share a similar vibe.

What are you plans for the future with Effword?

ER: On the shorter term, I’ll be playing that show at The Jack London Bar on September 1st, also at the Voodoo Room on September 29th. Probably an October show somewhere back here in Portland. This fall I will shoot a music video soon for my newest song, ‘Murder’. Once I get that done, I should be ready to launch that DVD as a music video album.

As far as longer term goes, concerning Effword – I will probably continue to do more of the same, bring the act to new places, expand my audience. I really want to be an independent film maker, especially in the horror genre. Some people say everything that can be done with horror has been done already. I don’t agree nor do I really give a shit even if it’s true. I’ve always been a Halloween baby and a lifelong fan of horror films… so I want to live and work and play in that world. I want to create a horror sanctuary for both grown-ups and children.

I think a lot of horror filmmakers nowadays try to go for shock value, to push the boundaries further than ever, I would never discourage them! As much as I like that stuff, and I want to do it, I’m more interested in the feel we get from horror, in the world we can create with it. It really is a fantastic and warm place!

If you could be a squash, what kind of squash would it be and why? 

ER: A pumpkin of course!  Since they get faces carved into them they are by far the most expressive squash 😉


Big thanks to Eddie for his time and sharing. You can see more of his videos at Effword on Youtube

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I have added a link to the right. Japan Cinema has great reviews of Asian influenced movies. The current review is for the movie Chocolate. Music related? I’m sure there’s a soundtrack…Besides it’s ok to have a broad area of interests.

Anyway, check it out: http://japancinema.net/2009/04/24/chocolate-review/

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This looks so good. And unlike It Might Get Loud it will actually play here in Portland.

Throw Down Your Heart follows American banjo virtuoso Béla Fleck on his journey to Africa to explore the little known African roots of the banjo and record an album. Béla’s boundary-breaking musical adventure takes him to Uganda, Tanzania, The Gambia, and Mali, and provides a glimpse of the beauty and complexity of Africa. Using his banjo, Béla transcends barriers of language and culture, finding common ground and forging connections with musicians from very different backgrounds.

The movie was made by Sascha Paladino, Béla Fleck’s half-brother, and is the second the two have made together, the first being the documentary short Obstinato: Making Music for Two. A CD is already available under the title Throw Down Your Heart, Tales from the Acoustic Planet, Vol. 3: Africa Sessions.
Limited screenings start in New York today, April 24th. We in Portland must wait until July 17th.

July 17-23, 2009

Hollywood Theatre

Portland, OR

http://www.hollywoodtheatre.org/

List of screenings: http://argotpictures.com/throw-down-your-heart.html

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This is pretty exciting: It Might Get Loud

Who hasn’t wanted to be a rock star, join a band or play electric guitar? Music resonates, moves and inspires us. Strummed through the fingers of The Edge, Jimmy Page and Jack White, somehow it does more. Such is the premise of It Might Get Loud, a new documentary conceived by producer Thomas Tull.

It Might Get Loud isn’t like any other rock’n roll documentary. Filmed through the eyes of three virtuosos from three different generations, audiences get up close and personal, discovering how a furniture upholsterer from Detroit, a studio musician and painter from London and a seventeen–year–old Dublin schoolboy, each used the electric guitar to develop their unique sound and rise to the pantheon of superstar. Rare discussions are provoked as we travel with Jimmy Page, The Edge and Jack White to influential locations of their pasts. Born from the experience is intimate access to the creative genesis of each legend, such as Link Wray’s “Rumble’s” searing impression upon Jimmy Page, who surprises audiences with an impromptu air guitar performance. But that’s only the beginning.

It opens in NY and LA Aug 21st and then other theaters after that. If it makes it to Portland I am definitely going to see this in the theater.

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DIY before it was cool. U.K. Subs: Punk Can Take It was directed by Julien Temple who you may know better as the director of The Great Rock And Roll Swindle (Sex Pistols, y’all). Resting on the pastiche of World War II films Temple shows the disillusionment and anger that fueled the punk movement in England. This film is messy and vile and not well done. Exactly as it should be. There’s not really a whole lot going on here, but that’s OK. Punk Can Take It is a wonderful little snapshot of a time when punk was no longer in its infancy and you get to see the U.K. Subs live. By 1979 the second wave of punk had already been around for two years, Sid Vicious was dead, Hardcore, Oi! and New Wave were under way. Check out U.K. Subs: Punk Can Take It. Have some laughs, get inspired, learn a little history (or remember it if you were there). At the very least it’s only 18 minutes 59 seconds out of your day.

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Why 7? Because this is filler. Plus, haven’t lists rounded to the nearest 5 or 10 been overdone? In the meantime, if you want a top 10 list, post a comment with 3 more movies to round this list out and you will get my eternal gratitude and a cookie!

Dig!

Wonderful movie about the mutual admiration of The Dandy Warhols and The Brian Jonestown Massacre and how it all goes wrong, for one band. Best line in a movie EVER, “You fucking broke my sitar, mother fucker!”

The Flaming Lips: Fearless Freaks

Made me really appreciate what they’e about by learning more about their process. It’s all about the process.

Metallica: Some Kind Of Monster

Band loses bass player, band finds bass player, band loses bass player, band loses singer, singer comes back, band finds bass player, and Bob Rock is adorable. I should know. I watch this movie 40 times a year.

Les Paul: Chasing Sound

Just amazing. See why every recording artist, regardless of genre, owes this man just about everything.

Shut Up & Sing

Or Why Country Music Fans Hate America No Matter How Patriotic They Sound. In all seriousness this is a must see. The Dixie Chicks kick ass.

History of Rock ‘N’ Roll

Want to learn how every major genre of rock music started and be entertained? No? Oh. Well watch this anyway.

LoudQUIETloud: A Film About The Pixies

Find out that indie cred doesn’t make you cool in real life. Oh, and Frank Black’s man boobs!

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