Oct 16 2009

Edgar Winter’s Frankenstein

Category: Label Blogadmin @ 2:19 pm

When you ask me for the one song or album that most influenced me and my music, I still keep coming back to Edgar Winter’s “Frankenstein”.

Besides the fact that this song was absolutely revolutionary way back in the early 70s to combine funk, rock and electronic music, that song still represents very much the kind of music I am making today.

Edgar Winter took his Moog synthesizer and made it sing, wail and dance at a time where nobody even understood how to use the thing for anything but to ‘make noises’. I can’t really claim to be the first to combine soul and funk with electronics (as in today’s house music), Edgar Winter was the one who did it and that song rocks to this day.

People have been asking me about musical influences all the time and I am never quite able to get an answer while other musicians wish to sound just like U2 or sing just like Luther Vandross. My influences come from all over but I can truly say, “Edgar Winter’s Frankenstein got the ball rolling for me..”

If you don’t know the song, check it out on iTunes or at your favorite internet music site. It still rocks!

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Oct 03 2009

A Visit to the Temple of Boom – Alan Steward in Concert

Category: Label Blogadmin @ 12:12 pm

The room is pitch black. Only a eerie red glow cuts through the fog that covers the stage. You can make out several banners with Oriental symbols in the background, the kind you see in Kung Fu movies. An orchestral soundtrack starts playing through the speakers. Am I in the wrong place? Is this the Prague Symphony? From backstage, a bright halogen flashlight cuts through the red fog. Here’s Alan Steward, in his typical Indiana Jones adventurer outfit, entering the stage with the bright halogen flash light scanning the stage. He is pointing his flash light into the crowd, scanning the audience while the smoke thickens and the colored glow itensifies.

Suddenly, a booming 808 drum beat cuts through the orchestral soundtrack. Yes, I am in the right place and the “King of Chill” has just entered the “Temple of Boom”. Alan grabs a guitar and sits down centerstage. Not an ordinary guitar mind you, this one you can see through. He starts playing an acoustic solo that reverberates sweetly throughout the room while the sub bass continues to boom in sync with the ever swelling sounds of the orchestra. We are in for a good chill this evening.

Well, not really. As soon as the first song finishes, an ultra deep synth bassline is taking over paired with a pounding drum beat. A sweet female voice chants in Hindi over the arpeggiating synth lines and pounding rhythms of “Global Warning”.

In the middle of all this multi cultural audio mayhem is Alan, pumping out guitar leads that would make Jimi Hendrix blush. This musical magician has taken command of the stage, effortlessly controlling the multiple keyboards, vocoders and drum pads. The high tech light show is in perfect sync with the music, switching from multi colored washes bathing the stage in a colored glow to strobes and lasers that move to the beat of the music. Alan’s live repertoire includes a mix of songs from all of his four albums, from “The Groove Enigma” to the unreleased drum and bass tune “Swing of the Pendulum” from his upcoming “Temple of Boom” album. Calling his show “high energy” may be an understatement. Alan combines rock, electronica and world music into a tight coherent musical mixture that is almost impossible to describe.

With every song, Alan seems to be raising the energy level just a little and by the end of the show, the audience is rocking. It’s the return of the rock star. Alan is playing his daft punk inspired rock anthem, “Underdog”. The audience is singing along while Alan grabs his guitar and leaps to the front of the stage to play the final lead. “We are all just Underdogs. we are all just Underdogs” The vocoders are fading…….. The King has left the building!

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Sep 12 2009

A Return to Music – At the Swing of the Pendulum

Category: Label Blogadmin @ 1:53 pm

If you were wondering about the meaning of my latest song “Swing of the Pendulum” and if it had anything to do with the group Pendulum, here’s my official explanation:

If you would ask me what the music of Alan Steward is all about, the answer would be: “It’s about a return to music”. I feel this change is in the air right now. People want more than just blips and beeps, more than just ‘turntabelism’. Deep inside every person there’s an appreciation for rhythm and melody. That’s been like that for thousands of years.

I can’t believe that concertgoers will continue to be satisfied by watching a bunch of “DJs” who’s act consists of nothing more than sticking their right hand in the air every 45 seconds. Can that really be called a “live concert”?

The success of the UK/Australian Drum and Bass group Pendulum is a perfect example of this trend. Here is a group that actually plays Drum and Bass music and not just spins CDs. Pendulum has been consistently on the top of the electronic music charts. Another example is the Prodigy. No longer just two DJs spinning discs, the Prodigy live show features vocalists, guitar players and more. It’s a return to music and it’s a good thing, believe me.

Personally, I always seem to be a little ahead of the trends with my music, using breakbeats before that word even existed and using loops and samples before anybody even heard of Fruityloops and Acid. But this time, I don’t mind being a groundbreaker and pioneer. I see new fans enjoying my music every day. People from Uruguay and Poland, from Japan and France are forwarding my songs to their friends. The change is in the air.

At the swing of the Pendulum . . . your fortunes will turn.

Have a listen: http://www.reverbnation.com/tunepak/1806839

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Aug 26 2009

Psychedelic it is!

Category: Label Blog, New Musicadmin @ 4:37 pm

I’ve been having a problem with those hundreds of electronic music genres and categories. There are at least half a dozen with the word “step” in it, two step, dub step, tek step, double step, side step, half step . . .  and so on. So when picking a ‘genre’ on MySpace I always have a hard time figuring that one out. Does my music fit nicely within one genre? Probably not. So, while checking those genres I came across one that I really like: Psychedelic.

It brings back memories of Pink Floyd, Funkadelic and experimental music that sold millions because the record execs were still saying ‘hey, that’s something new, let’s try it’. It brings back memories of the times when musicians made music, not so called DJs who can’t play a note. 

So, Psychedelic it is. I am sticking with that. Forget Trance, Psy Trance and Hard Trance. Forget House, Deep House, Progressive House and so on. The King of Chill is choosing Psychedelic and he’s sticking with it.

Come out to one of  my shows and check out something I call . . music.

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Aug 25 2009

Song of the Day – Swing of the Pendulum

Category: Label Blogadmin @ 2:24 pm

What happens when Global Chill collides head-on with Drum and Bass? Check out this new song and find out for yourself:
Swing of the Pendulum – Drum & Bass with an ethnic twist: http://www.reverbnation.com/tunepak/1759159

You can even download this song for free by visiting the Alan Steward web site at www.alansteward.com/fanclub.html and signing up for our fan club. We have fresh new free downloads all the time for our fans plus contests, giveaways, free concert tickets and more.

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Aug 01 2009

An Interview with the Groove Enigma

Category: Label Blogadmin @ 2:15 pm

Music Journalist Ray White sits down with electronica artist and record producer Alan Steward for an in-depth interview. Alan talks to Ray about his music, his views on the music industry and what it means being a Global Citizen.

_________________________________

R.W.: You seem to be somewhat of an Enimga and very little is known about where you really come from. You call yourself a Global Citizen and your residence is listed as the US on one web site, the Caribbean somewhere else and other sources mention that you are European. So, where exactly are you from?

Alan Steward: Well, I can tell you that I don’t mind a little bit of mystery surrounding me at all.  After all, my first album had the title “the groove enigma”. One of the things that is happening with the internet I guess is that just about anything about an artist can be found somewhere on the net these days. Where you went to school, what hardware store you worked at during your summer vacation. There are no more secrets. Somebody out there will report what Britney Spears had for lunch today, and I personally don’t really need to know that. I think that kind of exposure just takes a lot of the glamour and mystery that was once associated with an actor, musician or singer away and it’s really a shame that it has come to the point where we feel we need to know where your favourite star went shopping this morning.

As it comes to me, yes, I am a Global citizen. I was born into an international family, part Russian and part American and yes, I did grow up in the Netherlands. In the 1980s, I moved to the Caribbean and I spent a good amount of time in the Bahamas and later in Trinidad, where I now own a recording studio. The US will always be my official headquarters though, that’s where my record label offices are located. However, the reality is that I am always ‘on the road’

I do like the term of a Global Citizen because music is very much a global thing these days. In today’s world, somebody can be a star in Japan without ever having set foot in Japan. This whole thing about showing your birth certificate at every occasion, needing a different set of paperwork for everything you do in every single country is to me total nonsense. Forget about borders, we don’t need them.

The Groove Enigma speaks out

The Groove Enigma speaks out

R.W.: You have worked with a good amount of famous artists as a producer. So, why did you yourself never signed with a major label?

Alan Steward: The major labels these days are taking less chances than ever before. They sign what they consider a safe bet, the non threatening rock band with the boy next door looks or the good looking dance act with the 3 chord song and mindless lyrics. And the endless amount of guys with the initials DJ in front of their name making sound-alike music that can be a hit on the dance floor for the next two weeks. You could make the most incredible music but if you don’t fit the majors profile of what they think they can sell, they won’t sign you.

Besides that, there’s the financial dark side of signing with a major. When you sign with such a label, you may not really be set for life at all. On the contrary, your chances that you end up broke are actually quite large. Yes, the labels have the deep pockets to promote you and your music properly but their deep pockets are really your deep pockets and you have to pay most of that promo money back from record sales. Look at the highly successful rap trio TLC. They ended up bankrupt. Even Michael Jackson ended up forced to attempt another moonwalk at age 50 just to satisfy the debtors.

No, thank you. I am quite happy with my own small label and the money I am making from record sales all over the world, from Japan to Germany, from the UK to the US.

I don’t mind working with another small label, signing compilation deals or even signing a distribution deal with a major label but selling your soul outright to a label, no thanks. Just ask Prince about that one…

R.W.: When I listen to your albums, I hear Hindi and Arabic vocals but you are not Arabic or Indian? What made you decide to incorporate those elements into your music?

Alan Steward: (laughs) You are right. I am 100% NOT Indian or Arabic. White boy all the way. But I am a Global citizen and I don’t think you have to be from a certain region of the world to make a certain kind of music.

I admit that I am outright fascinated by the phrasing and delivery of Eastern vocalists. It’s just so different and something that we just can’t duplicate.

To me it’s a little like when I heard Jimi Hendrix play guitar for the first time. To hear an instrument used like you never heard it used before. And the human voice is an instrument. I love those exotic voicings and I realize that my listeners love it too. There was one song with a Hindi vocal on the “Pop Icon” album, that was “Global Warning”. “Licensed to Chill” has six songs with Eastern vocals. You don’t have to understand a word of Hindi or be from India to get into that sound and to feel the magic.

I got turned on to those exotic voicings quite a while back by a fellow musician and producer from the UK called Bally Sagoo. I met him at MIDEM, and he gave me a copy of his album and it simply blew me away. The mix of different styles from rap to dub and electronica mixed with ethnic voices. I was immediately into that.

That was also the same time when I moved my recording studio to Trinidad in the Caribbean. In Trinidad, the population is so mixed up with all the religions and races, you’ll hear Bollywood music from one person’s radio and Beenie Man or Kanye West from the next. That mix is in the air everywhere in Trinidad and living there helped me shape my sound into what it is now.

We get a lot of Indian music videos on TV in Trinidad and I think that Bollywood is very much going in the right direction. The new crop of Indian music videos is great. Well produced, high energy, very easily digested even by Western tastes, no more hokey dance steps and over the top costumes, just a lot of fusion of all kinds of different styles very well and skillfully mixed together. Rap, Rock, Techno, mixed in with the exotic aspect of Asian music. I would not be surprised if the ‘next big thing’ in music may not come from the US or UK this time around but from Bollywood or maybe another Eastern country. The success of “Slumdog Millionaire” and the subsequent #1 song by the Pussycat Dolls and A.R. Rahman point to that already.

R.W.: Do you fell that you are mainly a “studio musician” like Micheal Cretu of Enigma or do you like playing live?

Alan Steward: You may think that I like hiding away in the studio creating my music but the truth is, I love being on stage and being able to do something that totally blows people away.

I was hooked on being on stage since age 13. I played in front of over 25,000 people and I don’t even know what stage fright is.

This is actually another thing that bothers me about today’s music scene. Where are the stage acts that really blow you away these days? Every band I hear at the major festivals is at best mediocre.

When you see Alan Steward on stage, I want you to be blown away. I think one of the major difference with me compared to the hundreds of electronic acts out there is that I am a musician. You’ll see me on stage jamming out a solo on my guitar instead of watching a DJ spinning discs for an hour and waving his hands in the air every once in while. How interesting is that really to watch? I want people to get chills when they’re in the audience or I’m not doing my job. I want them to see and hear something on stage that they’ll be talking about for weeks to come. If it isn’t that good, I may as well stay home. Yes, I love playing live, I love being on stage and you’ll get to see at lot of that happening real soon. My first target is Europe because Europe has always been the place for new music to emerge.

R.W.: You’ve been quoted as saying that there aren’t any rock stars anymore. What do you mean by that?

Alan Steward: Years back you could see Pink Floyd on stage and the lighting and stage design alone would make your jaw drop open, or you could see a group like the Tubes bring an entire theatre production to the stage complete with a dozen costume changes, motorcycles on stage, exploding TVs, dancing Robots and then some. Bruce Springsteen or George Clinton could hit a stage and keep you spellbound for five hours.

Now you see a bunch of guys on headlining major festivals that look and dress like the guy who bags your groceries or pumps your gas. Tell me honestly, who did you see on stage somewhere this year that totally blew your mind? No, there aren’t any rock stars anymore.

R.W.: One final question. What can we expect from Alan Steward in the near future? What are you working on?

Alan Steward: My main focus right now is on my live performances. I’m stepping away from being the “Enigma” and I’ll be right in your face from now on with a live show that will leave you breathless. You may consider my music chillout but if it hits you with 40,000 watts of sound and lights, the thing takes on quite a different dimension.

Wherever I am able to, I will bring my group, the Underdog Corporation with me on stage. The Underdog Corporation is a varied group of vocalists, dancers and performers from all corners of the world. We will show the world where the future of music is heading, trust me.

Also, I hope to have a new album out in 2010, entitled “Black Magic” that will be the ultimate step in the direction I feel my music is heading and should be heading. I don’t think anybody will call it chillout anymore because it will be a lot ‘heavier’ than “Licensed to Chill”. However, what the new album will have still have plenty of is that ‘magic’, that spiritual feel, that global spirit, that mystery, but with a whole new attitude.

People who come to see my live show in the coming months will get a preview of taste of that hew attitude in a song called “Swing of the Pendulum.” The song is also available as a free download for all my fans at www.alansteward.com

I’m coming out in full force with a tour through the UK and the rest of Europe at the end of this year and the plan is to bring a new attitude and musical flavour to the music scene. Shake things up a little, well, a lot.

R.W.: Thank you for taking time out to talk to me today. Do you have any final words for our readers?

Alan Steward: I would love to thank everybody who bought my music over the past two years. It is totally mindblowing that without any major promotion and without much airplay, so many people have found my music somehow and found it worthwhile adding to their collection. It tells me that I am doing something right. I hope that I get to meet some of you in person during my concerts and I’ll always be grateful.

(c)2009 Ray White – You can reprint this article on your web site, blog or magazine provided that proper credit is given to the author.

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Jul 15 2009

Croozin for Cool Music in Belgium

Category: Label Blogadmin @ 11:14 am

If you are into smooth, grooving music and you live in Belgium, we got some good news for you. Our friends at crooze.fm now have two new frequencies where you can tune in and listen to smooth jazz and other cool, groovy music.

CROOZE.fm is now also available on fm in Brussels (106.5MHz) and Ghent (106.4MHz). In Antwerp, the frequency is still 104.2 on the fm dial and of course, there’s the crooze.fm webstream that lets you tune in to their programming wherever you are in the world.

Crooze.fm is very open to new music and you just get more musical variety than many other stations that just play the usual major label hits. They’ve been playing Alan Steward’s songs like “Sax on the Beach” and “King of the Chill” for quite a while now, so you know what kind of music you’re in for when tuning in to crooze.fm

Yes, Belgium just got a whole lot cooler thanks to Crooze.fm.

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Jul 10 2009

No, I am not anti social!

Category: Label Blogadmin @ 11:56 pm

Some people may have interpreted the last episode of the “where have the rock stars gone” blog as me being against using MySpace and other Social Networking sites to promote your music. Not at all. All these sites have their use and if used wisely and correctly (as my friend Hitz pointed out), they can do wonders for you. What I was commenting on was the idea that social networking somehow means “free advertising” or “Spam all you like” and that kind of behaviour does turn people off.

To prove just how social I am, I completely re-done my MySpace page with a cool video box with all of my music videos plus a ‘free download’ button. You can see the new page here: www.myspace.com/slimchancerecords

And I didn’t stop there. You can now find my music, videos, gig listings and much more on Reverbnation at www.reverbnation.com/alansteward. They have some very useful widgets to (hopefully wisely and correctly) promote yourself. I posted one of the coolest of these widgets right here:



Alan%20StewardQuantcast

How about that for a lot of info in one small space? And besides that, you can have your fans post this baby on their sites, blogs etc. See, I’m not that anti-social after all.

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Jul 06 2009

Rockstar Part 3 – Social Networking for Musicians

Category: Label Blogadmin @ 10:59 pm

This is my third and last installment of the “Rock Star” blog, dealing with the state of the music industry today.

Social Networking (Facebook, MySpace, Bebo, Twitter, etc.) has generally been hailed as the new way to promote music, especially for indie musicians so I decided to put this to the test. What can MySpace really do for you?

The first thing you see on all of these sites are those annoying posts “Check out my Music”. Very often, they are coupled with giant size poster graphics and many artists feel that they just need to rack up 100,000 friends as quickly as possible and then fire up these “Check me Out” messages.

In my opinion, that’s the wrong way to use social networking. I followed a few smaller artists on last.fm that posted that kind of “Check me out…” messages and from their stats I could quickly gather that hardly anybody “checked them out”. Their listener numbers really didn’t increase at all, even after posting messages all over the place.

To me, MySpace and similar sites are for real networking, building one on one relationships with managers, DJs, other musicians that you may end up touring with together or collaborating on a song with. That does work.

Here is a prime example of such a successful hook up on My Space. A rapper from the UK, Phonetix and his produceer, Hitz connected via MySpace with a Rock Band from Canada, Glam Daddy. They exchanged audio and video recordings and created a “long distance” music video that has been extremely well received on YouTube, MySpace and many other places. You can see the result of that collaboration for yourself at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJGMtzCj3F8

This video is a prime example on how to use Social Networking the right way. So, everybody, stop the annoying check me out messages, pasting entire YouTube clips into somebody’s comment box and whatever else you can do to annoy people. On the other hand, do use the net to inform people that are already your fans or friends, they actually want to hear from you.

While on the subject of MySpace, another thing that musician’s don’t seem to realize is the fact that if you put half a dozen YouTube videos and some MP3s into your MySpace jukebox, they all will want to auto start and play at the same time. What a mess that makes and I’ve seen this over and over on MySpace pages. Put up one video and if you have many, put up links and a thumbnail to the other videos so visitors to your page don’t get bombarded with videos that you can’t easily stop. And of course there are some of us who don’t have very fast internet connection and then, a busy MySpace page becomes totally unmanageble.

So, yes, Social Networking is a good thing, it has created some unique opportunities for artists but we have to realize its limits and use it right. Put your music up, let people hear and see what you are all about but don’t overload people with information, bite size bits are best. That’s why Twitter seems to work well for people with their 140 character limit and no music, no videos, no pictures.

In closing, one thing we have to talk about is the ‘take over’ of the social networking sites by the major labels. A few months back, I got a MySpace friend invitation from, I think it was Ashanti. I said, “cool, Ashanti wants to be my friend”. When I clicked through the link, there was nothing there about her being my friend, I just become her friend. A major label ploy to gather 10,000 users to send Spam to. Sort of like George Carlin’s definition of “68″: It’s like 69 but you do me and I owe you. Needless to say, I didn’t let Ashanti (or was it Universal?) “do me”. So, we have to deal with the fact that the majors have a firm foothold on MySpace and everywhere else because (if they don’t own the site already) they can bribe a site with “exclusive video” and other goodies to get top billing. When it the last time you saw the video of a indie artist on the MySpace front page?

So, as I suggested before, Indies have to band together and become a “major label” themselves and start negotiating deals for “exclusive videos” on the networking sites. Unfortunately, as soon as an indie artist racks up some major sales, the labels will sign him within the week and he is no longer an “indie force” to be reckoned with. Two examples of that are Drake and Never Shout Never. Both artists racked up major sales on iTunes and both were signed within one week.

Yes, everybody is just waiting to be signed. But whether they actually end up with lots of money in the pocket after the major label expenses are paid back, that’s a whole different story. (you didn’t know? you pay for everything, all the bling bling, promos, expensive parties… etc.) I guess that’s a topic for Rockstar Part 4.

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Jul 05 2009

Slim Chance rocks YouTube

Category: Label Blog, Music Videos, New Musicadmin @ 7:04 pm

If you haven’t checked out the music video for Alan Steward’s song “Underdog” yet, stop on by on YouTube and have a look and a listen. We re-designed the Slim Chance Recordings YouTube Channel with a bold look and some flashy color choices.
You can find our YouTube Channel at www.youtube.com/user/slimchancerecords

We still have a downloadable version for your computer or phone:
Download Hi Res Version – 33 meg Zip File

Stay tuned for two new music videos coming this summer. The video for “Buddha Bar Fly” and a music video for “Sax on the Beach”. Make sure to follow our RSS Feed and sign up for our VIP list to get all the latest news first.

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