Girl
Talk
Feed
The Animals (Illegal Art)
Pittsburgh artist Gregg Gillis (aka Girl Talk)
has scrupulously created music from samples for over eight
years. His fourth album, Feed the Animals, continues his sonic
evolution towards his party-infested live show. While his
first album, Secret Diary (2002), was full of purposeful glitches
and noise, his subsequent albums, Unstoppable (2004) and the
groundbreaking Night Ripper (2006), moved closer and closer
towards dance-able mixes of varying genres, often including
dozens of audio sources in a stream of juxtaposed hooks. With
the fourth Girl Talk album on the Illegal Art label, Gillis
steps even closer towards a creation that is centered on pop
musicality rather than attention-deficit sample splicing.
Girl Talk has been known to underground audiences for several
years, but it wasn't until 2006 that Gillis crossed over and
caught the attention of a larger audience. With Rolling Stone,
SPIN, Blender, Pitchfork, and even Beck including Night Ripper
in their _best albums of 2006_ lists, Girl Talk has gone on
to be booked by major festivals (Coachella, Lollapalooza,
Bonnaroo, Virgin, All Points West, Pitchfork, DEMF, etc.),
and solicited for remixes (Beck, Thrill Jockey, Tokyo Police
Club, Grizzly Bear, Simian Mobile Disco, Peter Bjorn &
John, TeddyBears, and Of Montreal). And with roughly 200 live
shows over the last couple of years, Gillis has consistently
played larger venues to capacity crowds (every date on his
2007 North American tour with Dan Deacon sold out).
A year after the critically acclaimed Night Ripper release,
Gillis quit his job as a biomedical engineer and now focuses
on music full time. With his newly acquired lifestyle he can
now work on music during the week and fly out to play shows
on the weekend. With only a laptop in hand, the Girl Talk
live show is more portable than a traditional band and has
afforded Gillis the opportunity to travel the world with minimal
overhead. A visceral culture of audience involvement has also
become key to the live Girl Talk experience. Performances
oftentimes feature the stage being mobbed with a sweaty mass
of dancers who surround Gillis as he triggers samples and
create mixes, new and old, out of loops from his hard drive.
Such performances have quickly become one of the most entertaining
and exhilarating live shows many have experienced as Girl
Talk has the extraordinary ability to get the crowd ecstatic
and keep the thrill going for the entire concert.
The new album, Feed the Animals, collects the material that
was developed over the last two years as part of Gillis' ever-changing
live show. With hours of material in hand, it still took months
to meticulously edit together the seamless album that combines
300+ samples in 50 minutes. Such fastidious care is what separates
Girl Talk from the dime-a-dozen remixes that are posted to
the Internet daily. In comparison to the previous release,
Gillis has described this new album as expanded, with a larger
range of tempos and samples. Yet, at the same time the focus
has shifted from technical prowess to the flow and balance
of each segment in an effort to successful translate the over-the-top
party feel of the Girl Talk live show into album form.
Before Girl Talk suddenly reached critical acclaim, a typical
show would attract 15-30 people. During those initial years
it was an extreme oddity for someone to show up with a laptop
and play elaborately constructed mixes of pop samples. In
the last couple of years, though, not only have Gillis' live
shows exploded, but he is also being recognized for his innovations.
From Wayne Coyne of The Flaming Lips nominating him for the
Shortlist Music Prize to Representative Mike Doyle speaking
about him to Congress (in relation to copyright laws), Gillis
has quickly become a public figure. Emerging from his underground
Pittsburgh roots, he is now being lauded as the future of
electronic music by techno pioneer Richie Hawtin, while celebrities
such as Paris Hilton are vying to dance onstage during a Girl
Talk show. Gillis modestly takes it all in stride and has
stated in interviews that he will eventually go back to a
normal job, all the while reveling in the party while it lasts.
While Girl Talk's music is often categorized alongside mashups,
or DJ mixes, it is critical to note how distinct his assemblages
are from the conventional mixing of two simultaneous tracks.
Gillis' roots lie more in the rich history of sample-based
compostion as demonstrated by artists such as Dickie Goodman,
Negativland, John Oswald, Steinski, Public Enemy (The Bomb
Squad era), and countless others. Rather than taking mashups
to an extreme, Girl Talk is more focused on the art of the
sampling and developing new tracks that have their own character,
and surpass the original elements. Such transformative work
is what helps qualify his output as being protected by the
_fair use_ principle of U.S. Copyright Law.
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