Stephen Mejias
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Stephen Mejias
Stephen Mejias Sep 23, 2005 0 comments
We’ve reached the end of the week.
Stephen Mejias
Stephen Mejias Sep 22, 2005 9 comments
I was 22 years old, and had no idea that high-end audio existed. No idea at all.
Stephen Mejias
Stephen Mejias Sep 21, 2005 9 comments
I was 22 years old, and had just made it back to New Jersey from a four-month trip traveling around the States aboard Amtrak trains.
Stephen Mejias
Stephen Mejias Sep 20, 2005 6 comments
On this occasion, however, John had not come over to tell me to run. Rather, he had come to tell me where to go: “Good work, but I think you’ll have to steer more towards audio,” he suggested.
Stephen Mejias
Stephen Mejias Sep 19, 2005 1 comments
Seriously: Will you show me around?
Stephen Mejias
Stephen Mejias Sep 19, 2005 1 comments
The AZ9345 is on right now. And it sounds pretty damn good to me. I’m listening to Smog’s latest album, A River Ain’t Too Much to Love, and god, I love it. I love it. I don’t even know exactly what it is. I keep wondering, “What is it? What’s so great about this album?”
Stephen Mejias
Stephen Mejias Sep 19, 2005 10 comments
Not how. I mean to say: I should tell you something about the circumstances surrounding my personal act of listening.
Stephen Mejias
Stephen Mejias Sep 19, 2005 2 comments
The music we made in Genie Boom was not unlike the music made by the pumps and steam lines and reactors of Firmenich. Michelle drummed on garbage cans, a red school bell, a gas tank, whatever banged. Todd pressed buttons on his Casio synthesizer and Roland drum machine. I plugged five cheap guitars—old Silvertones and Kays, before they became popular—into whatever amps I could find, turned the knobs on my effects pedals all the way up, and screamed the lines from my poems into the guitars’ pick-ups.
Stephen Mejias
Stephen Mejias Sep 18, 2005 2 comments
Throughout college, Michelle and I—along with our very good friend, Todd—played in a performance art/noise rock band called Genie Boom. We took the name from the sky-blue steel beast that you sometimes see at construction sites, or on highways, or—here in New York City—even on Madison Avenue; the same sky-blue steel beast that I once used to propel myself a hundred feet into the air to install all sorts of I-don’t-know-what along the tanks and pumps and whatever else that make up Firmenich, the chemical plant where I worked at the time. They make flavors and fragrances; much of what you taste and smell everyday comes from Firmenich. I spent four summers there, painting curbs and railings “emergency yellow,” watching flaming bits of iron fall from the welders’ gloved hands, finding beauty in how smooth a beveled pipe could be.
Stephen Mejias
Stephen Mejias Sep 17, 2005 1 comments
“Dated” is a bad word. I’ve never understood what it means to “date.” Does it have something to do with the passing of time?
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