.: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

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  • j_love01
    Addiction started
    • Jun 2006
    • 465

    .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

    Sounds Like & Proton present...

    The Other People with Kate Simko

    Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

    Kate Simko - Ghostly, Spectral Sound, Traum (Chicago, IL)
    Kate Simko
    Ghostly
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    Propulsive, groovy and hypnotic, Kate Simko's music occupies a space between house and techno with an international voice that sets it apart. Artistically, Simko’s background helped shape her sound into a well-rounded package: she began as a classically trained pianist who found herself at house and techno’s doorstep during the Midwest rave’s heyday in the mid 90’s. As part of her degree in music, Simko ventured to Santiago, Chile in 2001. There, her successful project with Andres Bucci, Detalles, marked her entrance into the emerging South American minimal scene.

    With two Detalles albums and several years under her belt, Simko began producing solo releases that speak for themselves. Her standout live sets at festivals and clubs around the globe have steadily built her reputation while her DJ skills earned her a spot in “Chicago’s Top 10 DJ’s” in XLR8R magazine.

    Recent sets include Fabric in London, the Detroit Electronic Music Festival, and a live PA at Berghain in Berlin. Simko’s new release "Take You There" (Spectral Sound) is being played by the likes of Laurent Garnier, Shonky, Tiefschwartz, Sebo K, Dyed Soundorom, Seth Troxler, and more. Kate Simko is a music lifer, committed to the craft and impressing the more savvy critics one record at a time.

    Planet Doobias - Proton Limited (Dallas, TX)
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    DragonLazer - Sounds Like, Harmonious Discord (Dallas, TX)
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    Zubar
    2012 Greenville Ave
    Dallas, TX 75206
    www.thezubar.com

    10PM - 2AM
    21 and Up with Valid ID
    $10 @ Door; Please arrive early to ensure entry.

    Expect extra sound, deco, surprises...and of course we'll be bringing the crazy heads!



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  • j_love01
    Addiction started
    • Jun 2006
    • 465

    #2
    Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

    [YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QLjyCXS5zmA[/YOUTUBE]

    Ghostly takes an in-depth look at Spectral Sound's first lady of techno, Kate Simko. In this artist profile, Kate lets you in on her beginnings as a musician, her family and friends and her musical hopes for the future.


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    • j_love01
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      • Jun 2006
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      #3
      Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

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      • j_love01
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        • Jun 2006
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        #4
        Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

        Here's another interview w/ Kate. She talks about some of her favorite clubs to play in around the world.

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        • j_love01
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          • Jun 2006
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          #5
          Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

          Facebook Event
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          • j_love01
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            • Jun 2006
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            #6
            Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

            We'll be bringing in the Yorkville LS720Ps & NX750Ps. Close to 3000 Watts of auditory pleasure...feel the BASS!
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            • j_love01
              Addiction started
              • Jun 2006
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              #7
              Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

              Kate's December 2009 Chart

              tINi - Thats Right (Desolat)
              Kate Simko - Lost In Time dop Remix (Eklo)
              Tevo Howard - Move (Rush Hour Recordings)
              Lee Jones - Closed Circus (Cityfox)
              Agaric - Nobody Home (We Are)
              Losoul - Time Passes feat. Fadila Dyed Soundroom Code Quantum Remix (Freak n' Chic)
              Marco Carola - Turn Around (M-nus)
              Detroit Grand Pubahs - Dr. Bootygrabber Samuel L Session Remix (Detelefunk)
              Geddes - Rom (murmur)
              Butane - Little Helper 1-1 (Little Helpers)
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              • floridaorange
                I'm merely a humble butler
                • Dec 2005
                • 29116

                #8
                Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

                i'll def look into this based on all your effort

                thanks!

                It was fun while it lasted...

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                • j_love01
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                  • Jun 2006
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                  #9
                  Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

                  We are in the home stretch...this Saturday! Crazy heads, crazy music, and fantastic times!
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                  • Steve Graham
                    DJ Jelly
                    • Jun 2004
                    • 12887

                    #10
                    Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

                    i must say nice job on promoting this, very informative and not over the top... just wish i were close enough to be able to attend.. hope its a great night!

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                    • j_love01
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                      • Jun 2006
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                      #11
                      Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

                      Thanks guys!
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                      • j_love01
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                        • Jun 2006
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                        #12
                        Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

                        What do you get when you mix cold Detroit techno with warm Chicago house and filter it through a lifetime of classical instruction? RA's Christopher Thomarios talks to Kate Simko to find out.

                        Don't be fooled by Kate Simko's slight frame and easy going demeanor. She may be soft-spoken, but her live performances and current production work suggest a severe departure from her upbringing. Growing up in a musical family, Simko spent much of her youth in Chicago practicing the likes of Chopin and Brahms on the piano for three to four hours a day. However, in high school Simko ventured out to parties and got her first taste of the Midwest rave scene and when she went to study at the University of Miami she got turned onto the sounds on Warp, Skam and Mouse on Mars, which served as a conduit from the 16th century influences to the burgeoning dance culture in South Florida. As Kate tells it, "I had an epiphany that I didn't want to spend my life playing classical music; instead, I wanted to figure out how to make my own electronic music."

                        Simko eventually transferred to the Northwestern University and refocused her love of music on 0s and 1s. Upon arriving at the school, she soon found herself spending hours at the vintage studio housed within the Music Technology program, and after discovering an original Moog and Arp 2600, her new path was secured. After getting her portfolio together, Simko was accepted into the prestigious Music School where she wound up studying production techniques and sound synthesis. Despite the dry coursework, though, her music is anything but: Her composition style could be described as a bridge connecting the cold and desolate sounds of minimal techno with the warm-soulful essence of her hometown of Chicago.

                        That music saw an uptick in profile earlier this year when Simko joined Spectral Sound and released her She Said EP and was asked by the imprint to become its Death Is Nothing To Fear resident throughout the year. Her touring schedule is also picking up with her first European tour this fall which include dates at Weekend and Fabric. RA caught up with Simko at the tail end of her dates on the tour in New York City to see why she stepped away from the Steinway and stepped to the 808.

                        You grew up in a musically-oriented family. Can you tell me a bit about it?

                        My dad's side of the family has a number of pianists, so it was pretty much required that my brother and I start studying piano at a young age. My grandmother still plays piano and organ at the age of 87, her sister teaches piano, a cousin is a professional jazz pianist in New York, among others. Learning to play and read music came naturally to me, so I stuck with it.

                        Is your classical training something you've tried to unlearn or something you utilize to your advantage?

                        Well, both. I had to unlearn my classical training when I began improvising and playing jazz piano. I took private jazz piano lessons on top of the classical training and other coursework during college. I'd spend three or four hours a day practicing classical piano and one to two hours learning to improvise and play jazz. I didn't sleep much. In the end, jazz piano taught me the most interesting modes and scales and gave me a framework to start composing my own songs. Now I take what I've learned from both classical and jazz and bring it into that Chicago house/Detroit techno realm that got me into dance music.

                        As a classically trained pianist, do you mostly work from analog gear or all digital?

                        Mostly digital. Everything I create starts with me playing on a keyboard besides drum sequencing. I had an MPC-2000 in the past and currently have a Machine Drum. I've had a couple synths over the years (currently I am borrowing a Prophet-600 from a friend), otherwise I use software synths, like virtual Moogs, Native Instruments stuff. I use Logic Audio to record the different parts in my songs, sometimes as audio tracks [from analog gear], sometimes as "audio instrument" tracks [virtual].

                        "Over-the-top vocal house still has a special place in my heart."

                        You spent a considerable amount of time in Chile in the past few years. Why Chile?

                        I first went to Chile on a study abroad program during my fifth year of college, in 2001. I was looking for a Spanish-speaking country with a good level of technology, and a good music program at the University. Chile ended up being a perfect blend of these things. Also, I knew of Atom Heart's music and had the early Ric y Martin records on Perlon, so it was comforting to know there might be some electronic music stuff going on down there. Since then I've been back to Chile and Argentina a few times. I don't do well in Chicago winters, so I've chased the summer down when possible.

                        You and Andres Bucci formed Detalles during your first stint in South America. How did that union come to be?

                        I met Pier Bucci, Andres' brother, who suggested that I meet Andres and maybe work on music with him. I gave Pier a CD of me playing classical piano to pass on to Andres. Not too long after that Andres and I met and he offered me the chance to work out of his studio together. I had been working on only headphones for months, so it was great. We recorded our first Detalles record, Shapes of Summer, in about six weeks. It's an honest, calming record, I'm glad we pushed to do it.

                        I returned to Chile for a couple months in early 2004 and we recorded our second record together as Detalles, which ended up coming out on Kupei Musika last year. And last fall we reunited to play at Mutek in Montreal and the Worldtronics festival in Berlin. Besides that, though, we're letting Detalles sit until we have the chance to work together in person.

                        How do you bridge the gap between to often-times perceived "coldness" of techno and the "soulful" warmth of Chicago house?

                        Well, the first techno I was into was Detroit techno. When I went to raves in the Midwest in the mid '90s, the techno I heard from Derrick May, Claude Young and Jeff Mills wasn't cold—it was raw! My favorite DJ's back then played acid house and records that straddled the line between techno and house. It was inherently gritty and soulful, so I just try to maintain that feel while bringing in the polished new sounds of minimal techno.

                        Do you think that being from Chicago, and listening to the likes of Derrick Carter, influenced the way you produce—perhaps even subconsciously?

                        Absolutely. Those countless teenage memories of dancing to diva house until dawn in Chicago just don't go away. Although I'm not the biggest fan of over-the-top vocal house, it still has a special place in my heart. I'm from here and I grew up on that stuff. I understand why some purist Chicago heads can't get down to newer house and techno. It seems sterile to them because they listen to music in a different way. It's all about soul in Chicago.

                        What's going down in Chicago these days?

                        House is still where it's at in Chicago. You can hear Derrick Carter, Diz and all the old school Chicago guys throw down on a regular basis. I did a monthly minimal techno and house residency here called "Wake Up!" for three years that ended in April. Sassmouth (who recently moved to London) and I had many great guests come through. It just reached a point where we both wanted to prioritize making music and DJing more than promoting the night. It seems like almost all of the artists touring the States play in Chicago, so we have an opportunity to hear a lot of great music here.

                        Do the techno flocks try to stay together? For instance, do you try and organize events with the Siteholder crew in Chicago?

                        Techno crews in Chicago respect each other, but don't seem to work together that much. I'm not sure why that is.

                        Do you think all Midwesterners stay together?

                        [laughs] I guess so!

                        How is it being a woman in male-dominated industry?

                        Oh, "that question"! Well, it's just like you'd think… you're outnumbered ten to one by men, so you have to learn to hang with the guys. I've been told I'm like one of the guys, so it's not a big deal to me. Sometimes I feel like I need to prove myself that much more because I'm a woman, but maybe it's in my head. I never sit around comparing myself to other women. Everyone is on their own path.

                        Although gender isn't an issue for me, there are little things that become concerns, such as where you're staying and what you're doing during gigs. Most performers have the stamina to hit the ground running when they arrive, but I would prefer to chill, regroup a bit, eat a nice meal, then head to the club rested. There was this one time recently in Toronto where the promoter treated me to a gift basket full of fresh fruit, energy drinks, water, chocolate and toiletries when I arrived. They knew how to treat a woman.

                        I hear that you were a tough girl/rabble-rouser in high school. Has growing up on the tough streets of Chi-town ever give you the gumption to punch a dodgy promoter in the nuts?

                        I've never thrown a punch in my life, but there's probably some dodgy promoter out there who could provoke it. I did get punched recently while breaking up a fight in the women's bathroom though. It was one of my last residency nights at Sonotheque. I didn't want any drama so I jumped in the middle of the fight and caught a girl's punch. Both of the ladies were both pretty shocked.

                        What's right with techno?

                        It's right that the genre is continually evolving and embracing change.

                        What's wrong with techno?

                        It's wrong when people say a live PA is not live if you're using a computer. It's possible to program out full sequences on synths or drum machines that just playback. How is that more live than cutting things up into small pieces and rearranging them on the fly with a computer? This is electronic music and both machines and laptops are electronics. Of course it's not live to playback your tracks or "DJ" your own tracks one after the other. Playing each drum sound, bass, synth, texture, etc. on multiple channels to create a live sound collage is definitely a live electronic music PA.

                        What frustrates you most about dance music?

                        It frustrates me that the worst dance music is the most popular and known. I guess that's how it is with all music—the underground stuff is the best, the worst stuff sells the most...

                        What do you enjoy the most?

                        I enjoy traveling to new places to share music I love and create. Life is good!

                        Source: http://www.residentadvisor.net
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                        • j_love01
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                          #13
                          Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

                          Discover Everything Ghostly

                          A streaming radio station and mood-based music discovery tool, Ghostly Discovery is a free app for the iPhone and iPod Touch that lets you listen to the Ghostly International and Spectral Sound catalogs (full songs, nothing less) and share your favorites with friends.



                          Ghostly is a record label and art company that aims to provide work of high quality, integrity and individuality.
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                          • j_love01
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                            #14
                            Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

                            Happy New Year!! See you tomorrow night!
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                            • j_love01
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                              #15
                              Re: .: The Other People with Kate Simko (Ghostly, Spectral Sound) - 1/2/10 :.

                              Get there early to receive a free Sounds Like shirt.
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