Brian’s Photoblog


Jupiter One
October 11, 2009, 1:10 am
Filed under: Uncategorized


Jupiter One, originally uploaded by Brian C. Reilly.

Had the opportunity to shoot Jupiter One when they came to Ramapo College of New Jersey to open a show for Regina Spektor. Going into this show, I had no clue who they were, however, I seem to have left the show as a fan.

http://www.jupiterone.com/home.html



Brooklyn Bridge
July 22, 2009, 11:11 pm
Filed under: Photos | Tags: , , , ,

Brooklyn Bridge, originally uploaded by Brian C. Reilly.

Went on Scott Kelby’s 2nd Annual Worldwide Photowalk last weekend and had an incredible time! Met a lot of very nice people and got to explore Lower Manhattan in all of it’s glory.

To read more about the photowalk, click here
http://worldwidephotowalk.com/

To check out my photos from the walk, click here!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/sleepwalkers_guide/



Meters Per Second
July 5, 2009, 9:57 am
Filed under: Photos | Tags: , , ,

Meters Per Second, originally uploaded by Brian C. Reilly.

Though this came out nicely. I like how 3-Dimensional this photo feels. I also really like the overwhelming red hue this picture gives off.



Best Concept Album

I have decided that I would like to put together a list of all of my favorite albums during the summer and figured I would start with “Best Concept Album”. The dictionary claims that “concept” helps to describe “an abstract idea or a general notion”. Out of all of the themed albums that I have heard, I decided on two albums and oddly enough, both albums are in the same musical vein. Personally, of the two bands described, I would have to say my favorite is the latter, however, both are absolutely incredible.

Hopesfall – The Satellite Years

Hopesfall-TheSatelliteYears2002

I have liked this album for about six years now, so I have a slight bias towards them in that sense. Regardless of bias and regardless of this band’s other material, this is one of the best concept albums I have ever heard. The musicianship really shines through on this album and all instruments and parts are literally, dead on. Everything from the intricate instrumentation, to the perfected use of the hard and soft contrast, to the raging vocals this album helps to create atmosphere. The key concept of this album is the re-creation of space – the term spacey, though superficial sounding, can be applied throughout, and even the feathery picking of guitar harmonies through many parts of the songs can be likened to the twinkling of a thousand stars. Incredibly epic story of space men leaving Earth and traveling through space, The Satellite Years takes breaks all boundaries regarding atmosphere and sound to create a recording that is spacey, literally.

Rosetta – The Galilean Satellites

Rosetta
The Galilean Satellites is in every sense a concept record (the album literature does not contain lyrics, only the cryptic line: “These songs are about a space man”) and sprawls grandly over two discs. The first disc is structurally a hardcore/metal album and the second disc is an outstanding ambient noise effort. Both discs are meant to be played simultaneously, which totally rocks. Imagine a collision between Explosions In The Sky and Coalesce, and you’ll understand just the framework. Honestly, this is one of the heaviest and most abrasives records I have heard to this day. Departe/Deneb and Europa/Capella are songs worth checking out on this album. Besides the fact that they may have ripped off certain themes from Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, “, the lyrics help to take the spacey theme of the music to a whole new level: “Across the forever night, take me to see her, the monolith, that knows the tales, dwelling inside man, telling of the names, dwelling inside me”



6/13, NYC – Comadre, Trainwreck, The Saddest Landscape

Comadre, originally uploaded by Brian C. Reilly.

I have never seen ABC No Rio this packed since the La Quiete and Phoenix Bodies show in the summer of 2006! At least 100 kids came out and packed the D.I.Y. punk space for Black Kites (New Brunswick Punk Rock), The Saddest Landscape (Incredibly emotional screamo and back from hiatus), Trainwreck (these dudes are from Germany and slayed the hardest) and Comadre (California “feel good” punk rock). Really awesome time and a few more pictures where this one came from!



WRPR Signs Formal Letter Opposing Record-Label Supported Legislation

WRPR has signed Colleges a letter that formally opposes federal legislation that would impose a fee on radio stations that play music, including on tuition and fee-supported, student operated, noncommercial radio! After much research into the consequences of such legislation in conjunction with a limited budget and limited resources, we have formally signed legislation that will hopefully allow all stations, like WRPR, to maintain stasis. If legislation is passed, many public stations will be required to log each and every song that is played every day for the entire year in conjunction with the “aggregate tuning hours”, or in much simpler terms, how many people listened to each song. This is not something that we will be able to do with limited resources and volunteer help and we will be forced to shut down our web stream in order to dodge impending fines; College radio is at a very pivotal point.

Colleges and high schools from across the country joined together to oppose federal legislation that would impose a fee on radio stations that play music, including on tuition and fee-supported, student operated, noncommercial radio. In a letter to members of Congress delivered earlier today under the banner of the Free Radio Alliance and the College Broadcasters Inc. (CBI), faculty, staff, and students from more than 80 stations including Duke University, Harvard University, the University of Wisconsin, SUNY-Brockport, Rice University and Virginia Tech argued that “other serious threats” would result from the passage of the performance fee.

The letter states, “One oft-cited straw man argument made by recording industry lobbyists is that…educational institutions would fall within a special accommodation. Though, in the context of record industry profits, company executives might believe their proposal to be reasonably low, in the real world those proposed fees represent large portions of annual budgets for student-operated radio stations.”

The letter continues, “Particularly in the present economic times as students, their families, and educational institutions face sharply increasing fiscal pressures, now is not the time to impose new fees on our small stations principally to benefit foreign-owned recording labels.  The record industry executives clearly do not understand student-operated radio, which is obvious in the proposed legislation.”

College Broadcasters Inc. President Warren Kozireski says that the performance tax legislation has hidden costs that would jeopardize many stations ability to continue to exist. “The record labels are completely out of touch as to how college radio stations operate. The extensive recordkeeping requirements that will be required by the Copyright Royalty Board alone will add hundreds, if not thousands of dollars to the true cost of a performance fee,” said Kozireski. “As families across the country continue to struggle to find ways to pay for school and as education budgets get tighter and tighter, the concept of a performance fee is outrageous – all to benefit foreign-owned record conglomerates at the expense of our students.”

A complete copy of the letter is available at here.



The Blackout Terror

I would like to preface this blog entry by saying that The Blackout Terror is one of my favorite bands of this particular genre. I found one of their 7″ records in a sale bin at a record shop in Philadelphia and bought it on a whim because it was only a few dollars. Since then I have purchased two other 7″s by the band, which includes a split 7″ with Majority Rule. I ended up creating the last.fm for this band based on content provided to me by the drummer via e-mail interaction. In an effort to keep this band afloat on the internet, I have created this blog entry and am simply “re-posting” the text from the last.fm and the pictures that went along with it!

The Blackout Terror was a hardcore band from Florida that was around in the early 2000’s. Their brutal style, short songs, powerful lyrics and a more ‘metal’ hardcore sound helped them grab hold in the scene at the time.

The Blackout Terror broke up because the members just wanted to do their own things. Tyler and Evan went on to form The Holy Mountain with Dan from Combat Wounded Veteran because it reflected more of the sound of what they were into at that time. The drummer, Greg, went on to form a band called Bleed Them Dry.

Blackout+Terror+blackout+02

Blackout+Terror+blackout+04



Rock ‘Em Sock ‘Em Robots
May 13, 2009, 11:15 pm
Filed under: Life, Photos | Tags: , , , , , , , ,

I love the idea of reviving older types of products. GI Joe’s made a comeback, older board games made a comeback and I am currently holding out for a Crossfire comeback! The sky is the limit with toy revivals.

Rock ‘Em Sock ‘Em Robots is a two-player game/toy designed by Marvin Glass and Associates and was released by Marx toys in 1946 .

Each player takes control of either the red robot (the “Red Rocker”) or the blue robot (the “Blue Bomber”), both of which are standing on a platform reminiscent of a boxing ring. By pushing buttons on a pair of joysticks at the base of the platform, players make their robot punch at their opponent’s robot. If a robot’s head gets hit with the sufficient force at a suitable angle, its head will pop up, signifying that the other player has won.

In 2000, a reissue of the classic version was developed by Mattel, at approximately half the size of the original model. In addition, an action figure line, a PlayStation game, electronic handhelds, a head-to-head plug and play and bobble head dolls have been recently introduced. The PlayStation game was Rock’em Sock’em Robots Arena, published by Mattel Interactive, and was developed by Paradox Development using their successful game engine from the Wu-Tang video game. The video game and action figure lines represented a newer, updated version of the robots, whereas the reissued game and licensed products all were based on the original Red Rocker and Blue Bomber characters.



Sherazada
April 26, 2009, 9:14 pm
Filed under: Music, Photos | Tags: , , ,

Sherazada, originally uploaded by Brian C. Reilly.

Took some shots of my friend’s band, Sherazada for the school newspaper! Check them out! Good stuff!

http://www.myspace.com/sherazada



Joshua Fit For Battle

Joshua Fit For Battle, originally uploaded by Brian C. Reilly.

Totally into this band. I think they also just re-created their old website, which is a great way to read up about this band!