PORTALS Traveling Showcase - Los Angeles, CA

To the west coast we go for the next PORTALS Traveling Showcase. The outdoor party featuring 10 PORTALS adored artists will go down on Saturday June 2nd in a courtyard in the epicenter of Hollywood.
With a debut live set from Mister Lies, a TV Girl performance just after the release of their full-length record, Slow Magic‘s first ever LA gig, and performances by 7 others who have made So Cal music noteworthy, the day in California sun isn’t to be missed. In true LA fashion, there will be a taco cookout, liquid comfort, and a showering of PORTALS merch and giveaways. We’ve shown you why we love Denver, Austin, and Orlando, but now it’s time we show you why we love LA. And to share with you the artists of the festivities, our June monthly mixture will feature fresh sounds from a number of the artists performing.
Come make PORTALS LA your own.
PORTALS LA :: June 2nd 2012 :: 2-10 PM :: Space 15 Twenty, 1520 N. Cahuenga Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90028
⇒ Venture over to portalsmusic.com and look for the ads to buy your tickets.⇐
⇒ RSVP HERE ⇐
Have a question about the show? Email us at tickets@portalsmusic.com
In The Sun: TV Girl, Dreams, Mister Lies, Slow Magic, Honeydrip, StaG, Caves & Eliot, MirrorLady, Different Sleep, and Tuesday Glass.
(Source: prtls)
Welcome PORTALS expansion to Tumblr, where we’ll be sharing fresh sounds and visuals for your tumblr-devouring.
Generation y Not
Below is the very first post I did for the newly launched DIT blog collective PORTALS that I’ll be contributing to :::
Punk bands like The Sex Pistols, The Ramones, Television, The Clash, The Buzzcocks, and heaps more pursued the conviction that “if nothing gets challenged, nothing gets changed”. Punk culture of the 80’s was the teenager opposed to the bourgeois - it was the outcasts and the isolated, the vicious and frustrated, the protective of their youth. Each youth generation opposes mediocrity; mediocrity is the explicit opposite of adolescent sentiments. While teenagers, like myself, are experiencing the affliction of discovering their identities, the pressures of conformity, and the trouble of expectations, a society of mediocrity feels fictitious. If the youth of the 80’s popularized the opposition to the bourgeois, I wonder what the youth of the present is repelling.
Youth will always be defiant of the adulthood they are expected to enter; but there’s a hugely significant difference in the vocalization of that defiance today. The distinction is the identical vocal opportunity of the present. If I’m 16 and my blog has the same readership contingency as anyone’s, then what implication does that have on the 16-year-old musician? The most prevalent bearing of that opportunity is in resources. The 16-year-old musician has the equivalent music production opportunities as his seniors on a fundamental level. This makes debatably the most colossal impact on the beat scene. An immense amount of what’s blogged about on sites akin to PORTALS is sample-based, and in synchronicity with that, teenagers make an apparent portion of the music blogged about. In my mind, that doesn’t seem aberrant in the least bit. To me, it feels conspicuous – but only because I was born into the generation of the accessible.
The idea of youth having the same volume of expression as adults is hastily becoming less and less an exception to the norm. Less and less are we identified as young and held within the connotation that we’re the atypical of the teens. Industries fetishizing youth and using age as a marketing tool is becoming less rampant in the music world – and more so in the blogging community where artists are discovered in the open playing field of the Internet. And so if the voice of youth is becoming more and more received, I wonder if the youth of today is repelling mediocrity or if we’re becoming that commonality. This idea of becoming what you’re contrary to is something that bands like Nirvana spoke of. Kurt Cobain said that the mass recognition Nirvana received in the consumerist world was unequivocally what they contested. I wouldn’t say though that the prospect of adolescents and adults being comparable in the music world is carried with such a negative connotation. I’d say that it’s an inevitable fate.
Because of the technology operated sphere my generation was carried into, it would be unfeasible for youth today not to have the inclination to share themselves on the internet. If young artists were not blogged about, it would be obvious that those who steer the music community were deliberately disregarding a group that compensates for a vast portion of music. I think that the larger music sites are just now beginning to honestly ratify young artists. While smaller sites tend to cover younger artists more frequently, likely because they’re less steered by those of the industry. The influx of youth involved in music is immense, and no longer solely as the consumer, but furthermore as the creator. The question now is what qualifies the legitimacy of music? My response would be that nothing qualifies validity; the validity in music is as unrestricted as its distributor, the Internet.
Below are 3 tracks by 3 artists who have been born into a generation parented by the internet:
Honeydrip - “I Know” (click the link to listen)
Caves - “1993” (click the link to listen)
XXYYXX - “Never Leave” (click the link to listen)
Welcome to PORTALS.
Introducing PORTALS
PORTALS is the convergence of 16 music blogs that stem from various locales globally, and diverse surroundings sonically. We take part in the Do-It-Together movement that has surfaced in the ethos of music today. Together we will be in a constant stream of discovering, enriched by each of our distinct musical appetites and further developed by those who discover with us. We ask you to join us in our collective objective to pursue the DIY psyche with an all inclusive and synergic way of thinking as we together explore the art/music/media that will make imprint to last, and will ultimately shape our times.








