Another Year In The Books

7.1.16 – Hello, today marks another year loggedĀ on the planet. I am now officially in my late 30’s and I’m cool with that! The past year was a wild journeyĀ of creation and much needed reorganization. Sometimes ya gotta neaten up the shelves before you splash more paint…

I’ve have some great New England gigs coming up this summer. They’re on the calendar and if you’re in the area, please come and rock out! I promise the music willĀ pump and I will be auditioning some new tracksĀ I’ve been working on as well.

In other news, I’m setting up shop in LA this summer! Ā SuperĀ excited to see more of my friends out there and fully explore the area. Whether it’s music or media, there are so many opportunities to collaborate in LA. I’m thinkingĀ it should be great.

In regards to Western Mass, this is where I was born and raisedĀ and that’s why I came back here 8 years ago from NYC. It was a bold move to leave New York City which has everything a DJ / Producer could ever need, but ultimately I wantedĀ to be closer to my Mom and friends. There wasn’tĀ necessarily a great plan laid out beyond building some music studios in Holyoke but after a couple viral videos we soon began to define our purpose in the area. The Wedge will remain the main headquarters for PorterHouse Media and some of our newer business ventures (www.beatdwellers.com).Ā I’m very proud of what’s been accomplished in Holyoke and happy we can continue to see this city revitalize, and grow.

Much love,

Sporter

 

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The Path To Completion – Music vs. Media

When I first started producingĀ video mashups back in 2007/8 I treated the creative process much like I did with my music, when it was done, it was done! Very seldom would I invite others into the creative process outside of a few close personal friends who already knew what my dirty laundry smelled like. I had the confidence to take a small concept and build it to a creative finality, and subsequently live with the consequences whether it became a hit, or a dud. This was a process that worked pretty well for me but I was introduced to a whole new way of working after releasing “Press Hop” in the spring of ’09.

I got a call from Goodby Silverstein & Partners (The NBA’s primary creative agency at the time) requesting to see some demo’s of what I could do with the NBA’s content. I was blown away to have such an opportunity within just 2 months of releasing “Press Hop”. I had a chance to potentially produce commercials for the NBA (I had always loved their commercials as a kid) and expand uponĀ an emerging art form that I had been tinkering with. I quickly jumped on it and produced 4 demos based off the themes the agency provided me. I was soon on my way to San Francisco to work with an incredible creative team at Goodby Silverstein as my 4 demos had been approved to become the first 4 broadcast commercials for the NBA’sĀ 2010 “Where Amazing Happens” campaign.

Coming from a guy who wishes he collaborated a little bit more with his underground dance music comrades, it was awesome visiting a full fledged creative agency for the first time. Collaboration is the name of the game at these agencies, there may be 2 or 3 art directors and/or creative directors on one campaign, all with the same goal of producing the best advertising possible. You have to be ultra-amenable in this environment and willing to divorce yourself from ideas that you truly feel are your best. It’s not always a perfect process as there are many cooks in the kitchen, but it really does strengthen one’sĀ ability to rapidly move onto the next best idea without remaining stuck trying to wrestle something just-decent into something amazing.

Working with a creative agency can spoil you in that you be come accustomedĀ to a deeply collaborative process, one of which timely first drafts, no matter how rough, are appreciated because just about everybody is working against a deadline. It’s also pretty awesome to be able to submit initial ideas for review and have several project milestones along the way before you consider something final. This saves a lot of anguish in the case that you labor over something intensely all for it to be shot down in the nicest way possible. One of my first tasks when I got to Goodby in SF was to produce a new demo called “Clutch”. I remember distinctly the amount of courage it took to produce the rough-cut in a couple of hours, and subsequently have five of their top creative’s give me in-person group feedback on the cut. It is scary to let people into your creative process so quickly, but it really was an element I grew to enjoy.

It was indeed these spoils of working for major agencies and the mainstream media that provided me the biggest lesson I’ve learned since deciding to produce original music again. The creative process does not always work the other way around. Typically you do not invite 10 cooks into the kitchen when you’re working on original music. Organic music is something best baked from start to finish. I had to learn this the hard way as I assumed I could start auditioning my music demos around and invite everybody for a round of feedback. Generally people in the music world aren’t comfortable with this, there are very few people outside of the aforementioned “dirty laundry friends” that are comfortable commenting on how you bake your bread. They know better, they know the music has to come 100% from you.

Realizing the differences between finishing a mainstream media project and finishing an original piece of music has been a valuable lesson, if not an embarrassing one. The differences are quite stark especially considering people in general are not always comfortable delivering feedback no matter what industry they are in. Sending people your half-finished music feels a bit like sending unsolicited and unflattering nude photos. The irony here is, it’s those early nude pics that are exactly what a creative agency wants to see.

At least from a personal level, it’s nice to reach the conclusion that not all creative processes are interchangeable. I really do love both the collaborative draft process as much as I do creating organic music. If anything, all this hasĀ driven home what my friends and I have been preaching for years when it comes to music making… Just Finish It.

Live From SF 2/26/16

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Had an awesome timeĀ DJing with my Agent 001 partner-in-crime Eli Wilkie and the Players crew in San Francisco. It’s been a few years since I last playedĀ Ruby Skye and SF has always been one of my favorite towns to DJ in. Sharing my set from Romper Room below, as well as my 2004 Love Parade set from 1015 Folsom. You can download directly at my portfolio as well –

 

Revolt Festival

Super excited to be playing the Revolt Festival this summer. So many great DJ’s and rave legends on the lineup. Anytime I’m on a bill with Charles Feelgood I’m humbled and reminded of the 90’s mixtapes that influenced me to create and spin music myself. Regarding Revolt Festival, thinking of getting an RV for this one, it’s up in Carthage, Maine and maybe this is a good warm up to a Burning Man-esque experience (of which I’ve yet to attend). Check out the flyer for Revolt Festival and map to Carthage below. Look forward to seeing you guys there.

Facebook event –Ā HERE

Revolt Flyer

Reunion With Music (Q&A)

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What made you want to come back into doing music again?

Producing music has been my passion since I began arranging beats in 1996 but when I started PorterHouse Media music itself became more of a component than the main focal point.  After a couple hundred mashups I started to feel like I was neglecting the core creative process that meant everything to me.  Making tracks again is purely a therapeutic thing for me at the moment but after a long time away it’s exciting to feel inspired again.

What have you missed most about not making music?

I missed the infinite creative chain reaction I get from building a track from scratch.  It’s that uninterrupted flow and natural high of creating music that I love the most.

Why did you stop producing music in the first place?  Was it a gradual chain of events or like a specific moment of clarity you had?

There were a combination of things that led to my fallout with djing and producing.  I actually started to lose my energy for production as my touring DJ career entered a non-stop phase around 2005.  International touring exhausted me so much that I’d have no desire to make tracks when I got home.  It was scary not to have that desire.  I was more or less relegated to making bootlegs on planes and my original production really suffered during this time.  In 2009 I was burning the candle at both ends, I was making a big push to renew my dj production career while also assisting the construction buildout of new music studios in Holyoke.  I released the ā€˜Slap Chop Rap’ video and things were really going well, I had just been voted #2 in the America’s Best DJ poll, and DJ Mag notified me that I had made the top 100 again (back when the poll meant a bit more than it does now).  Two days before the top 100 reveal DJ Mag notified me that I had been removed from the list due to a ā€œhigh number of unconfirmed votesā€ (whatever this means) and it was at this point when something in my brain just snapped.  It was the closest thing to a nervous breakdown I’ve had and it was nobody’s fault but mine.  Just purely an accumulation of unrelenting work and travel for years on end.   I took an immediate about-face and subsequently put all my energy towards video mashups.  I think ā€˜devine intervention’ is the only way I can explain it as within a month of my meltdown I was producing TV commercials for the NBA.  All in all, it’s incredibly ironic how many positives can come from a total burnout.

Are you going to get back into the Club life? DJing at clubs/events?

Definitely looking to start playing out more often but it’ll take time.  I’m more or less starting over but I’m looking forward to whatever organic growth occurs.

Do you think it is going to be hard for you to work on producing music and producing music mashups?

I’ve had to exercise some next-level balancing to create equal time for music & mashups. It’s been extremely challenging and humbling, but I’m determined to to honor the past with the future.  (just no more burnouts!)

What should people expect to hear from you? How will it differ from past DJSP music?  Will your new tracks be a continuation of your older sound or are you going to go in another direction?

I think I’m just picking up where I left off.  A little of this and a little of that.  I’m gonna stick to what’s natural to me and just try to make tracks that move.  I’ve dabbled privately with EDM vibes but it’s just not me.

How do you get inspired to make new music? 

Inspiration comes from anywhere really.  Ideas can come from listening to random radio in the car, or dissecting production techniques that you’d like to elaborate on.  My ideas always come from a place of wanting to create something that hasn’t quite been made before.

Thoughts for any collabs?

I’d love to reunite back in the studio first with some of the peeps I made tracks with in the past.  I think that’s a great place to start.

What are your thoughts on the current DJ’s out right now? Any favorites?  What modern day producers or styles excite you?

Techno and house seem to be on the forefront again, but not sure they ever left either.  Those genres are like pizza and will never go out of style.  I’ve been listening to a lot of http://boilerroom.tv sets and really digging some of the hybrid live/dj sets on there.  Not sure there’s one producer that I’m drawn to but it’s exciting to see that ā€˜groove’ is back in style.

How do you plan to stand out? 

I have no idea beyond just being true to myself.  I think it’s the only way.