Jim E-Stack for Interview Magazine Dot Com

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DISCOVERY: JIM E STACK

By ALEX CHAPMAN
Jim-E Stack is too talented to keep quiet about—the still-teenaged Southern producer’s buzz is building with every new track, each an amalgamation of syrupy hip-hop, tripped-up tribal rhythms, an R&B coo, and a bunch of surprises (we suggest his Chris Brown-sampling “Lemme” as a solid representation of the still-growing Stack catalogue). The young musician welcomes a broad spectrum of sounds with open arms, and has a natural ability to bend and break down obscure and familiar cuts into something altogether brand-new. It’s likely this exciting aptitude that’s caught the admiration of big-timers like Diplo (the two performed together at Diplo’s book release party), and A$AP Rocky, for whom Stack created a celebrated remix of hip-hop hit “Purple Swag.”Interview briefly spoke to the boy wonder about the birth of his career, his recording process, and what sounds he’s serving up in the near future.

AGE: 19

HOMETOWN: New Orleans, LA

STACK’S START: I started playing drums when I was 11 or 12 years old. I never took playing music that seriously until later on—I guess most 12-year-olds don’t, except for Kidz Bop singers. When I went to high school, I got pretty heavy into playing jazz and joined the school jazz band. Being around a bunch of music kids definitely drew me further into music—not just into jazz, but also some weirder hip-hop and noise rock, too. That was probably when I started taking music seriously as a calling and not just a hobby. Once I got introduced to rappers like The Pharcyde, Souls of Mischief, and RBL Posse, and producers like J-Swift and J Dilla, making hip-hop beats really started to appeal to me. I thought I could do more than only play drums, but I didn’t want to embarrass myself by trying to write songs and shit in front of other kids that were better at music than me. I started making beats and blends on my friend’s computer after school because he had Ableton. After a month or two of that, I pirated Ableton and Logic and all that and kept making bad hip-hop beats. When I was 16 or 17, I got into house music—Switch’s records especially—and my focus shifted to making dance tracks. I’ve been at it since.

INFLUENCES: I can’t really credit any specific artist, location, or period of my life as being my primary influence. I think pieces of my surroundings, what I’m listening to, and what I’m feeling, come together to influence my creativity. While I was living in San Francisco, the city and its culture didn’t really influence my sound, but the records I was listening to at the time did. Songs I discovered then, like “This Is Sick” by Solid Groove/Switch and “Archangel” by Burial, sparked my urge to make dance music early on. Living in New Orleans has definitely affected my sound, though. I’ve said that before moving there my tracks were just generically weird dance tracks, but always hearing bounce music in the club and on the radio made me more aware of hip-hop as being dance music, and as a result, I think more hip-hop elements have made their way into my sound. Hip-hop has such major presence in New Orleans—it’s hard not to be influenced by it. Everywhere else in the world, everyone is a DJ or plays acoustic guitar, but in New Orleans everyone is a rapper and has something to say, whether it’s Lil Boosie on a homicidal tip, or sissy bounce rappers talking about turning tricks for change at age 14.

PRODUCTION PROCESS: My laptop is where I make all my music. I have a workspace in my bedroom that’s just monitors and a MIDI keyboard. That’s where I write and finish all my tracks, for the most part. I start writing new ideas all over though, like in the kitchen at my mom’s house or in that somebody’s bed before she wakes up, or on a plane at dusk. That’s heavy. I don’t think I’ve made any track, start to finish, all in one place.

THE DIPLO CONNECTION: I’ve known some of the Mad Decent guys for a minute now. I forget how we first met, but they definitely showed me a lot of love early on, just on their blog and shit. Paul Devro got me a gig once way back in San Francisco. That was pretty cool of him. Shouts out to Michael Woodward, too—that’s my dude. I think “Lemme” made its way to Diplo either through Paul or Michael, or maybe through our manager, and he hit me up on Twitter over the summer. We linked up later in San Francisco a few times, as well as New Orleans, and got verbally abused by a transvestite one time. For real though, I’m really grateful to have Diplo as a co-sign. When I first started listening to dance music, his sounds stood out to me as different and weirder than what everyone else was doing, and that definitely inspired me to strive to do the same, and it still does.

THE MADNESS OF TOURING: I only started touring recently—maybe in April of last year or something. After I put out “Lemme” for free on the Internet in May or June, people started to book me around the US and Canada. It’s been a trip since then. I feel so lucky to be able to travel doing what I love, and to see new places along the way, as well as hang out with people who are as excited about music as I am. I had a good time out in Los Angeles a few months ago. I was playing at Drai’s at The W in Hollywood, and my best friend from New Orleans came out too. He and this porn star got into it in my room while I was DJ’ing in the club upstairs. After that and after I DJ’d, we took some Xanax, drank the minibar, ordered some $30 room-service hamburgers, and watched TV. I guess that’s not that crazy, though. It was just a dope sleepover.

UP NEXT: I just finished a single for Body High that will hopefully be out in mid-June, and I have a remix or two that should be surfacing in the next few weeks or months. I’m really stoked to be part of the whole Body High wave. They’ve been putting out some of the hottest club records since their first release back in October—get involved if you don’t know the label. Aside from all that, I’m really just grinding on my own sound and trying to develop it further. I don’t know if that will result in some more EPs and singles, or maybe a full-length. We’ll see.

FOR MORE ON JIM-E STACK, VISIT HISSOUNDCLOUD.

Marina and the diamonds for interview magazine dot com

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MARINA DIAMANDIS MINES THE FUTURE

By ALEX CHAPMAN

ABOVE: MARINA DIAMANDIS
Marina Diamandis (better known as Marina & The Diamonds) is far more than another emerging pop princess—but if you’re trying to figure her out, that’s probably the best place to start. She winks at the genre’s commercial techniques while embracing their utter absurdity: “Deception and perfection are wonderful traits,” or so the Wales native says in her new song “Homewrecker” (she means it).

A stunning 26-year-old who coos and belts, Marina has recently traded her brunette locks for platinum blonde, appropriately paired with glossier, dance-heavy production (songs like her single, the infectious and forthright “Primadonna,” are far cries from her indie-pop start), thanks to Dr. Luke, Liam Howe, and a few other big-time music makers who helped the songstress craft her highly anticipated second album, Electra Heart. Always one to take advantage of every medium, Diamandis’ video work is by no means lagging behind her ever-evolving musical style—searching Marina’s moniker in YouTube will result in a few spectacular short films from recent years past, as well as a tetralogy of brand-new clips that lean on the strategic singer’s beauty as much as they do the depth of the visual and strength of the audio.

Interview spoke to Marina while she was in New York about what’s changed since her debut disc, her gig opening for Coldplay, and the music we can hope to hear on her forthcoming release.

ALEX CHAPMAN: The last time I saw you was nearly two years ago. I’m not sure if you remember—we actually shared a cab.

MARINA DIAMANDIS: Yes, I remember! We were both scared we were going to crash.

CHAPMAN: I was a new New Yorker, and you aren’t a New Yorker at all, which I think gives us both with semi-valid excuses. Anyways, my point in bringing up that story is that so much has happened since then. What would you say has been the biggest change?

DIAMANDIS: Well I think the most obvious change is my image. I have blonde hair. I’m masquerading as an innocent pop star. As a person, I’ve calmed down a bit and have a different perspective on things now. On this album, I’ve really come into my own as an artist. I’m much more sure of my identity and understand it much better, and have accepted the fact that I like to jump around a lot in terms of who I am and what kind of music I create, and that it is okay—in fact, that is my main identity, the fact that I do that.

CHAPMAN: Your current image seems to be playing off the ideas you were interested in before—the Americanization of fame, etc. But now it seems to really be reaching a fuller form. You’re joking about being a huge pop star, but you also—

DIAMANDIS: I’m being genuine in saying that I want to be it.

CHAPMAN: Right.

DIAMANDIS: It is quite confusing. It’s really interesting to me, because some people who don’t know me will take it at face value, which I think, in a way, people should, but other people will read more into it, asking “Is she for real or is she masquerading as something?” To be quite honest, I think it’s a little bit of both. But people are complex, and I think it’s a huge element of what I do, because you have to balance out the fact that you talk about quite serious things with a sense of irony and tongue-in-cheek humor. That’s my personality as well.

CHAPMAN: Let’s talk about “Primadonna,” which seems to exemplify all that quite well.

DIAMANDIS: It’s funny because the idea for the song just came from the title, and for me, before I even wrote it, I just felt like it would be a really important song for me. Who knows what the outcome of all this will be, but I felt it would really change my career direction, and that the idea was something I could bottle and encapsulate everything I am. I love having a campy, theatrical quality to my music—I think I did have it on the first album, but I didn’t really know how to articulate it, and so I thought this song would be a good way to get that across. That’s kinda where the thoughts came from, and the fact that my ex-boyfriend used to call me a prima donna. I wrote the song with Dr. Luke, and it just fit together really perfectly. I think it’s one of the most important songs I’ve written in a long time, but that’s the beauty of pop—it’s much harder to write a simple song.

CHAPMAN: Absolutely. You’re putting a lot of extensive emotions and events into terms and turns of phrase that are purposely easy to swallow, but still carry the weight they did before. It’s really incredible when people do it right.

DIAMANDIS: Yeah, exactly, when it’s done properly. That’s why I love pop so, so much!

CHAPMAN: Me too. So being that the goal with this album was to attain that, who did you decide to work with on the production side?

DIAMANDIS: Nine songs off the album were made by two people—Rick Nowels did five and Greg Kurstin did four, and they were the main collaborators, which I’m really glad about actually, because I really wanted the whole thing to gel and feel like a body of work. So after that, I did two songs with Dr. Luke and two with Liam Howe.

CHAPMAN: One of the things I noticed from listening is that you really are fantastic at thinking up melodies. How does that process work?

DIAMANDIS: Well, all I can say is that the music I listen to is all very melodic. I think the Greek music that I listened to as a kid was based on melody—kind of quite dark, creepy melody. But people like Kate Bush, who’s a melody master, are inspiring looking back on it, because she doesn’t really have a system or structure. Everything is really off the cuff, and she doesn’t really try to reach the structure you see in a lot of pop songs. Daniel Johnston is actually really great with naïve, sweet, child-like melodies—more simple, but I love him a lot.

CHAPMAN: Do you ever feel like there’s a big difference between being home and being in the States? Are you even around long enough to notice a difference?

DIAMANDIS: Being here, I just feel a lot more creative and like I can be anything and that anything is possible, whereas in the UK—and maybe it’s because I live there—I feel a lot more limited and restricted. [Being in the States] is almost like being on a holiday. I always feel like I’ve decided already that I’m going to write my third album in New York. It’s kind of annoying because everyone’s like “Oh, you’re so obsessed with America,” but it’s not really that. I just really enjoy being here—I’m not the first British artist to make music here and be inspired by the country.

CHAPMAN: So you, Frank Ocean, and Rita Ora are going to be opening for Coldplay on tour. How’d that happen?

DIAMANDIS: I don’t know if it was Chris Martin who decided, but I’d heard that he liked my music about two years ago. Then an agent called and asked if I wanted to do a show in December, so I went and did it and I loved it, and their manager was there. Then they asked me if I wanted to do a whole stadium tour in Europe and the American leg as well, and obviously I jumped on it.

CHAPMAN: That literally sounds like the best thing ever.

DIAMANDIS: Yeah! And when I did play that show in December, I got such a good response from their audience, and so I actually think this is going to be a great pairing for me. They are such a great band as well, and have consistently good creative output.

CHAPMAN: Last time I saw you live, you were definitely working with some limited means, but it still felt like a full-scale production. You had props, costume changes, and all that jazz. Now that you’ll be doing way bigger venues for this tour, what can people expect from you?

DIAMANDIS: I am so excited! It’s gonna go into a completely different world. Physically, I think it’s going to be more like theater. The stage will be like a scene—I want a living room setting: a chaise lounge, a flickering, old, disgusting motel TV, a hat stand with various clothing I can switch into with each song. For me, it’s like about being able to be resourceful and adapt to each venue. If I’m in a 500-capacity or 5000, it’s going to be the same. But I like the idea of turning it into a play as opposed to a “music show”—it’s not like, jazz-hands theatricality. You become involved with the character.

MARINA AND THE DIAMONDS’ ELECTRA HEART IS OUT IN THE UK ON APRIL 30, AND IN THE UNITED STATES IN JULY. MARINA WILL BE ON TOUR THROUGHOUT THE SPRING AND SUMMER.

SIDIAN, ERSATZ & VANES For Interview Magazine Dot Com

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SIDIAN, ERSATZ & VANES ARE ANONYMOUS DEBONAIR
By ALEX CHAPMAN

PHOTO BY CG WATKINS

For those who appreciate the debonair ease of a dress shirt but seek to avoid its monotony, Sidian, Ersatz & Vanes are likely what you’re looking for—although that may have not been their aim at the start. “It certainly wasn’t the case that we were trying to fill a gap that was missing,” says the group, who keep their identities mum and correspond collectively via e-mail. “Dress shirts—or just shirts, as the English would say—made sense to us as a product that fit the aesthetic ideas we are concerned with, and we didn’t want to go through a process of reinvention from scratch.”

Working off a classic concept has likely helped the trio focus more on their ever-expanding palette of patterns and colors, a sort of signature that has gotten the attention of chic shops like Opening Ceremony, who sell their capably cut pieces in stores and online. “Of course it’s quite exciting to see the shirts in shops around the world and people wearing the pieces,” the trio says. “But it’s very fulfilling to see and handle a piece of clothing that started out as just an idea only a few months earlier.”

The aforementioned exercise is an important one, and it’s often a rift between the three creatives that determines what inventive and unsullied designs will appear on the traditional canvas with which they work. “It can often just be a matter of personal taste, which can sometimes be quite straightforward,” explains the troupe. “But at other times, that can cause tension between the three of us. However, when it’s the latter is when it’s likely to be an interesting design.”

Whatever the three mysterious shirt-makers are doing seems to be working—trendsetters like Frank Ocean and members of Arcade Fire have been spotted sporting the shirts as of late. “Even though our objective isn’t celebrity led, it’s quite a thrill nonetheless,” the brand admits.

Zebra Katz for Interview Magazine Dot Com

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ZEBRA KATZ IS BOOKING IT

By ALEX CHAPMAN

 

If you’ve spent much time lately in the music blogosphere, or happened to attend designer Rick Owens’ Fall/Winter show earlier this year, you’ve likely already heard or heard of Ojay Morgan, aka Zebra Katz—the rising star’s bass-heavy, ballroom community-inspired hit “Ima Read” was dubbed the song of Paris Fashion Week, and since then the 25-year-old has been on a fast rise to relevance, with a slew of South by Southwest gigs, a huge co-sign from indie star-makers Mad Decent, and an impending European tour. We spoke to the multimedia artist about his breakout hit’s long history and unexpected success, and how he plans to top it.

ALEX CHAPMAN: Have you always been working with music as a medium?

ZEBRA KATZ: I’d always been making music on the side, and Zebra Katz was a character that grew out of my solo performance piece, “Moor Contradictions.”

CHAPMAN: So how long has Zebra Katz officially been apart of your repertoire?

KATZ: I’ve been making music for the last seven years, but it really didn’t take off until the release of  “Ima Read” on Jeffree [an imprint of Mad Decent].  It’s always just been me making music for fun, as opposed to a professional career.  I was doing a lot of performance work before this, and I’ve also managed a catering company for the past three years.

CHAPMAN: Wow, I had no idea you were working as anything but a performer.

KATZ: I couldn’t really be a starving artist, so I had a full-time job as a staffing director. I never thought that people would listen to my music—I never thought it’d be as accessible as it is now. When I made most of the tracks, they weren’t meant for release.

CHAPMAN: You put some new music out recently—how new is all this material?

KATZ: I just released another EP called Winter Titty, and that’s the most up-to-date music I’ve released—”Ima Read” is five years old.

CHAPMAN: Oh my gosh! I had no idea it’d been around for that long.

KATZ:  I’m always like, “Yeah, it’s great, it’s been out forever!” But it took that little push from being on the label, and having Rick Owens hear it and play it.

CHAPMAN: Was it a phrase you’d use on a regular basis?

KATZ: The song has always been my self-mantra—it’s just something I would always say to myself as a joke, because I took this class called  “How To Read A Play,” and I couldn’t stand the teacher, so I was always like “Ima read that bitch.”  A few years later, after having that be my “thing,” I started messing around on Garageband, where most of my songs were recorded—in the confines of my bedroom.

CHAPMAN: Is that how you created all the production for the song? Tell me about that.

KATZ:  When I laid down the beat, I wanted it to be really minimal, and I’m not a trained producer, so I didn’t want to make an elaborate beat that was all tweaked out and not really my style. So I came up with a simple kick and started layering the song. I thought, “This is kinda like a lesson, so how can I break it up so it’s the song?” So I came up with the chorus, the intro and the hook in like 2005 or 2006, and then I met Njena Reddd Foxxx [who's featured on the song] about two years later, we became really good friends and I decided I wanted to go back and work on “Ima Read.”

CHAPMAN: How big of a part did she play? She’s pretty incredible.

KATZ: I had her add her verse, and then we did the back-and-forth—it gave the song more character and depth, and then there was a female and male voice on it, which made it more universal. I sent it out on MySpace—shout-out to MySpace—and I sent it to people, but it didn’t really go that far.

CHAPMAN: So what was it to you?

KATZ: It was just a song I listened to with my friends—it was our song, and that was okay. Then I got fed up with MySpace and joined Soundcloud, and a couple years later I had a collection of other songs on there with DJ Teenwolf, who introduced the track to Diplo and Mad Decent. So that was three years in the making.

CHAPMAN: That’s insane. Can you go into the context of the track?

KATZ: The song has a lot of influences in ball culture—if you’ve seen Paris Is Burning, there’s a section with Dorian Corey where she says “shade comes from reading, but reading came first.” Basically, “reading” is an elevated verbal insult—the fine art of insult. Being that “Ima Read” is the song it is, it is a boasting song with an attitude—that’s why I used the word “Bitch.” I tried to desensitize it, but also empower it, similar to what Missy Elliott did with “She’s a Bitch.”

CHAPMAN: That’s a great song.

KATZ: She killed that song and she really empowered the word “bitch,” and that was a part of her whole album—having ownership of that, which is why I felt it was so important to get a female voice on the track, which is why I featured Njena.

CHAPMAN: And the song can be taken literally too. The depth is sort of optional—it’s great to know where it came from, but you don’t need it.

KATZ: That really helped make it a song that you can pay reference to, even if you don’t know anything about ball culture—hopefully you went to school, then college, then at that point, hopefully you would write a dissertation so you can excuse your shit!

CHAPMAN: How deep does the literal vein of the song affect people?

KATZ: Schoolteachers love the song. I’m getting e-mails about how great the song is, and how important it is to talk about literacy in hip-hop. It does have a lot to do with that—look at our education system in America and what we’re going through. With that in mind I started the Ima Read Foundation through Room To Read, and it’s just a small campaign where we’re trying to get people to give back. I did that because of National Reading Day.

CHAPMAN: So it really is a song for everybody.

KATZ: That’s the great thing about the song—no matter where you’re coming from, anyone can relate. To some people it’s a comedy, to some people it’s serious, and I’m happy that I created a piece that opens up a dialogue.

CHAPMAN: I was surprised to realize that your press contact is actually you. Is that something that’s going on for a reason—you handling Zebra Katz yourself?

KATZ:  Self-managing the project wasn’t necessarily intentional, but it’s just the way it happened. As soon as the song hit the Rick Owens fashion show, it took a life of its own and started making a path. I am still working a full-time job, but as soon as I quit that job, I’ll have to commit myself fully to Zebra Katz, and hopefully I’m going to be making a living off this.

CHAPMAN: But right now you’re in the in-between, which is a weird place to be, I’m guessing.

KATZ:  It’s an interesting transition from making music as a hobby and a pastime to now making it as a creative outlet.

CHAPMAN: I’m just surprised you aren’t signed already. Are a lot of people courting you?

KATZ: I think people sense the buzz and energy, and I think everyone thinks that someone is else is trying to sign me. I’m not signed, but I’m meeting with a bunch of agents, which I think is the first step, and planning a European tour that will hopefully start next fall. For me, I’m gearing up for next Fashion Week, because I need another song on the runway!

CHAPMAN: And when will that next track be crafted?

KATZ: When I do have a little bit more time, I’m gonna go back in the studio and make music from a different place. It’s all extremely exciting, and I’m anxious to see what comes out of it all.

CHAPMAN: Well you’re super busy with all that—you recently went to South By Southwest, and got really great reviews.

KATZ:  It was my first time in Texas, first time going to SXSW. I went on Twitter and said, “Hey, we’re coming to Texas—anyone want us to jump on any shows?” Before we knew it, we were doing eight shows, and one big show with Mad Decent.

CHAPMAN: That’s a great reception.

KATZ: People—especially the kids—really reached out and tried to get us involved, and it was really great. Now we have that [experience], and a year ago I never even would’ve thought of going to Texas.

CHAPMAN: Any favorite showcases?

KATZ: The Mad Decent show was really fun, and we also did a sidewalk party during the day that was great. I would go back to Texas in a heartbeat. We got to meet a lot of people in the music industry—I met the whole Mad Decent team and had never met them before.  Making those connections is really important this early.

FOR MORE ON ZEBRA KATZ, VISIT OJAY MORGAN’SFACEBOOK.

Birdy for Interview Magazine Dot Com

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BIRDY, ASCENDANT

By ALEX CHAPMAN

Although it may seem near impossible given the pop genre’s longstanding fascination with extremely young musicians (Justin Bieber, Selena Gomez, etc.), British singer-songwriter Birdy’s age (15, to be specific) is almost entirely immaterial to her staggering success. The general glossing-over of the talent’s adolescence can likely be attributed to the fact that she’s too talented for it to matter—it was her incredible take on Bon Iver’s “Skinny Love” (a viral hit with over 19 million views), not necessarily her girlish good looks, that got her some well-deserved attention, which quickly spiraled into an array of international record deals and a debut album released late last year. And it’s that same aptitude that earned the classically trained pianist’s track “Just A Game” a spot on the Hunger Games soundtrack, a bill that throws Birdy in the ring with such colossal acts as Taylor Swift, Kid Cudi, and Maroon 5.

We spoke to the performer, born Jasmine van den Bogaerde, about her upbringing, creative process and local celebrity.

CHAPMAN: You’ve been doing music professionaly for quite some time—ever since 2008, when you won the Live & Unsigned competition in the UK. Does it feel like it’s been a long journey?

BIRDY: No, it still feels brand-new to me—it’s really exciting, and I’m still getting used to everything.

CHAPMAN: You play piano and sing. What’d you start doing first?

BIRDY: My mom’s a concert pianist, so she started teaching me when I was around seven. When I was eight, I started writing my own songs, and kinda started putting piano and singing together. But I’m trained classically, which is a big influence on me, I think.

CHAPMAN: How was having your mom as the person who taught you how to play?

BIRDY: It’s quite hard to have your mom as a teacher—it’s like, she’s not necessarily a “real teacher” for me. But she’d always teach me to really hear the music, and develop my ear, and to try and hear the harmonics of the piano. That was the main thing [that stuck with me].

CHAPMAN: Do you remember the first song you wrote?

BIRDY: Yeah. I’m not really sure I knew what the first song was about—it didn’t really make sense. I’m sure it was about love or something. I remember when I sang it, it felt right.

CHAPMAN: Your cover of Bon Iver’s “Skinny Love” was the first a lot of people saw of you. What made you decide to release it?

BIRDY: My aunt actually sent the song to me through a YouTube link, and I loved it. I tried my version with the piano and it just really worked, so we decided to do that and send it to BBC Radio 1, and it just got such an amazing reaction—the video got like, 17 million views on YouTube.

CHAPMAN: Did you expect that great of a response?

BIRDY: No, not at all. It was the first thing I’d ever really released! It was very exciting.

CHAPMAN: Your debut disc has a lot of covers on it. What’s the reason for that?

BIRDY: When we started doing the covers, it was a really new thing for me—I had never thought of doing covers before, but I think it came from “Skinny Love” doing so well. I have lots of songs of my own, but with me having school, I just wouldn’t have had enough time to do a full album.

CHAPMAN: Some of the covers are so original, I wasn’t even sure if they were a cover at all.

BIRDY: All the songs are really different from one another, but they are all kind of styles I love.  It was really fun for me to record them with the band.

CHAPMAN: Have any of the artists you covered given you feedback?

BIRDY: I’ve heard that Bon Iver liked my cover of “Skinny Love.” I haven’t heard from any of the others though.

CHAPMAN: What was the studio process like for the album? You worked with some amazing producers—folks who’ve produced people like Adele and The Arctic Monkeys.

BIRDY: We started in London. I was quite nervous at first, but everyone was so nice and asking me for my opinion, so I never felt too shy. Then we came to LA to record the rest of the album with the whole band, who are all so talented. It was quite different from London, and really relaxed and fun.

CHAPMAN: You recently wrote and recorded a song for the Hunger Games soundtrack called “Just A Game.” What inspired you to do that?

BIRDY: Well, I read all the books in like a week and I loved them. They’re so exciting, and it’s such a different story from anything I would usually read. The song’s about Katniss, and how she’s not sure whether or not she can trust Peeta.

CHAPMAN: When you write a song like that, what inspires you?

BIRDY: It never really used to be experience, but I think it’s starting to be more and more. I think it’s just from observing life, situations and relationships.

CHAPMAN: Do you think you’ll be implementing more personal stuff for the next record?

BIRDY: The next album is going to be all originals, so I’ll be doing a lot of experimenting. I’m not sure about who I’ll be working with. I loved working with all the people I did on this album, so hopefully I’ll get to work with all of them again.

CHAPMAN: With all this stuff going on, I’m sure you get recognized at home.

BIRDY: My town’s quite small and you kinda recognize everyone when you see them, so I definitely get funny looks from people.

BIRDY’S SELF-TITLED DEBUT ALBUM IS OUT NOW.

Rhye for Interview Magazine Dot Com

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DISCOVERY: RHYE

By ALEX CHAPMAN

Rhye’s rise to eminence has been an exciting, mystifying journey thus far. Those who already know the electronic duo are likely acquainted with their song “Open,” a tantalizing track that boasts perfectly prurient lyrics channeled through a soft spoken, Sade-esque coo, along with calm, cadenced production that may call to mind a more contented, funkified The xx. Beyond a subsequent,NSFW video that features an evolving stream of couples in bed with one another (à la Michael Jackson’s legendary “Black and White” clip) and a recently released EP featuring two more enticing cuts and their respective instrumentals, not much is known about one of 2012′s most exciting musical prospects. Interview spoke to one member of the band (which one remains unknown) in an effort to uncover its origins; the making of the song that put Rhye on the digital map; and what their next move may be.

THE BEGINNING: The two of us had been fond of each other’s work for some time, and one of us was working on a remix for the other. We had gotten to talking about the remix, which led us to the conclusion that maybe we should adapt it into a whole new song that we could do together. We had never met in person, so one of us gave the other a metro station to meet him at, one of us flew in, and we got straight to working on the track. We ended up coming up with three songs—three songs that are all on the full-length—and really enjoyed working together. We just clicked. Both of our styles of producing/writing completely compliment each other, and everything just flowed effortlessly. One of us moved to L.A., and the other just happened to be coming out to shoot a music video. We met up with Jamie and Nate from [record label] Innovative Leisure and showed them the songs, and they expressed interest in working on this as a full-length. It just felt right to work with them, as they are really great guys, and they really helped put this whole thing together and see it through.

THE SECRECY OF RHYE: Actually, the “mystery,” so to speak, is not the intention at all, to be honest. We have never really hid our identities; we just haven’t come out right and stated our names in press. The intention behind that is, however, rooted in the fact that we just want people to have their own experience with the music we have created, with no real preconceived notions. We have always thought that music should speak for itself—its success shouldn’t be the result of an attitude projected by the artist. As for liking the mystery, I am completely fine with how it’s all coming out. Actually, I kind of like it—it feels much more humble and true to the music we have created. I have never been into making music for the glory or fame, so this is perfectly fitting for us.

THE MAKING OF “OPEN”: All the songs we have created for this record come from very real and tangible experiences that I have had. “Open” is the result of a beautiful night with my now-wife. Actually, much of the record kinda follows that methodology: Having experiences in the evening, and then dedicating to the day in the studio, working off of that energy. The feelings and emotions really dictate where these songs ended up—we just let them unfold. In terms of deciding on it to be the lead single, it’s just simply that we had “Open,” “Hunger,” and “3 Days” finalized, where as we needed more time for the other songs on the record. “Open” just felt right to lead with—there wasn’t any overtly intellectual reason for putting that track forward. The video came about by looking at a bunch of treatments. Jennifer Nies’ treatment just really seemed to match what we were trying to encapsulate with the song, and we loved that it came from a feminine perspective and had a little attitude in it. It felt very sincere.

FIRST MUSICAL MEMORY: My first musical memory is definitely watching my dad play—he’s a violinist. Music has always been part of my life. I can’t remember a time in my life before music, to be honest. My parents put me into cello lessons when I was three years old. As for inspiration, I think I just wanted to be able to do what my father can do.

COLLABORATIVE PROCESS: We work on everything together—we don’t work on things separately. It just sits better, being there together, working through the recording process. We both play the instruments on the record, taking turns with different things, except for some featured players. The melodies just come naturally between the two of us, and the sound is essentially a hybrid between our two styles. I hear both of us in these tracks—it’s a very nice marriage.

WHAT’S NEXT: Well, I am guessing some more official videos from the EP, a bunch of virals of us playing with different musicians that we respect and admire, and then our full-length, which is just being mastered at the moment.

Mykki Blanco for Interview Magazine Dot Com

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THE MULTIPLICITIES OF MYKKI BLANCO

By ALEX CHAPMAN

Mykki Blanco is the all-encompassing metropolitanartiste—multi-faceted, multi-talented (poet, rapper, actor and author are just some of her varying vocations), and multi-gendered (Mykki is the womanly side of 24-year-oldMichael David Quattlebaum Jr.), the enthusiastic entertainer is armed with an aggressive and impressive flow, a sharp fashion sense, and a rare blend of confidence and humility.

The hard-working entertainer/beloved downtown dignitary has already grabbed the attention of many eyeballs and eardrums alike, thanks in large part to collaborations with photographer Terry Richardson (who chose the emerging artist to be a part of the campaign he shot for Happy Socks, along with model Ashley Smith and Harlem lyricist of the moment A$AP Rocky), a book of poetry (From The Silence Of Duchamp To The Noise Of Boys) sold at chic magnets Opening Ceremony and LA’s OHWOW Gallery, as well as opening slots alongside acts like Gang Gang Dance and ARABMUZIK. Mykki’s busy as ever, with two new albums and a one-woman show all set to debut this summer, a fact that should come as no surprise given the cute and candid performer’s track record thus far. Meeting up for a quick bite in NoHo,Interview spoke to the soon-to-be star about her foray into transgendered living, her journey to and through New York City, and her exciting new projects.

ALEX CHAPMAN: So I guess the first thing I’d like to know is where you grew up.

MYKKI BLANCO: I’m originally from San Mateo, California, and Raleigh, North Carolina. I grew up in both equally for eight years—it was kinda scattered. I lived in California as a small child and then moved to North Carolina, but I used spend every summer with my grandparents in California. When I was 16, I ran away to New York and had that experience, and after I was 16 I lived in California until I was 20, and then moved to Chicago to go to the Art Institute.

CHAPMAN: What was it like when you came to New York at such a young age?

BLANCO: When I first came here as a teenager it was 2003 or 2004. Things were very different—the artist exodus and yuppie-fication of things were definitely under way, but things were still way grittier. I just remember the city being a really dark playground. A lot of people don’t know this, but during that time was when I began to cross-dress. I started dressing like a girl during that period, and actually being mistaken for a girl because I was 16. That, I would say, would be the very beginning inklings of my “transgendered life.”

CHAPMAN: Was that life something you discovered when you came to New York, or something you just could never be anywhere else?

BLANCO: Well, I considered myself gay for so long, and it really wasn’t until I started dressing as the opposite sex pretty regularly that I began to see my gender identity shift. To be flat-out honest, it wasn’t until I started sleeping with men as the opposite sex that things started to really change—when I found out men that I found attractive found me attractive as a woman! It literally is a mindfuck to go through life as a guy, and then to dress as a woman and get cat-called on the street, get men running up to you, asking for your phone number, your e-mail address; to meet men online and have them be smokin’ hot. It’s like a whole entire road opened up and in a lot of ways, it made my life so much better.

CHAPMAN: I’m sure that can be pretty empowering.

BLANCO: It was like a flowering. In my heart and my mind, that two-spirit side of myself—all of my feminine energy and power—flowered, and that’s a really mystical and ancient concept that’s mirrored in many cultures, both indigenous western and eastern. I shouldn’t oversimplify it and say just because I received positive sexual attention from men I continue to cross-dress—it was literally all the chakras aligning, and that sexual energy is a part of life.

CHAPMAN: It’s funny that it’s such a point of conversation now, given that only a few decades ago, New York culture’s best audience and innovators were members or intense supporters of the gay and transgender community.

BLANCO: The AIDS epidemic killed out an entire generation of fun and amazing people, and people often forget that New York City, from like the ’20s through ’80s was littered—and I use the word littered for the reason—with transgendered people. Seeing a transvestite on the street was like drinking water—they were everywhere!

CHAPMAN: It seems like artists compromise their work much more now as a result, but that’s obviously something you do not do.

BLANCO: We’re living in a time where the mediocrity of mainstream pop culture is at an all-time high—I don’t need to go into the cultural implications of a Teen Momphenomenon or a Jersey Shore phenomenon. But when people talk to me about a mainstream crossover, about gays in hip-hop, I address the issue, but it literally defines me the least compared to everything else. You can’t tell me that with Sylvester, the gay disco legend, a millionaire, superstar for his time, RuPaul, or someone I identify with like Marilyn Manson—the anti-Christ superstar of America when he was at his height—you can’t tell me what I’m doing doesn’t have a place. When someone like Big Freedia is out there doing Late Show With Jimmy Kimmel—her fan base is huge. Who gives a fuck [about being mainstream]? I’m not trying to be in the 40/40 Club popping bottles while rappers throw hundred-dollar bills on strippers. I’m just out to make my audience happy, fulfill my creative vision, and be successful on my own terms, which is doable.

CHAPMAN: You certainly haven’t had to change against your own will, or in any way that isn’t you, to do some high-profile stuff.

BLANCO: It’s funny because as an underground artist, I’ve been afraid to talk about the things that I’ve done for fear of seeming boastful or arrogant. But at this point, it’s like “No!” I’m not gonna have these mainstream kids out here ripping people off and taking ideologies. It’s not even really about that, but I’m not gonna have these mainstream kids out here thinking they’re on the come-up when my pedigree is extensive! It’s like, “Don’t play.” [laughs]

CHAPMAN: It’s definitely important for people to know real artists out here, especially when they don’t always get the big-time attention they deserve.

BLANCO: And that’s the thing. Mainstream artists, they have publicists, agents, and marketing outlets—these machines. I only have me, but this is what I’m good at and I have to do it.

CHAPMAN: So when did you start performing?

BLANCO: As a teenager. I came into this life via a performance-art context. My roots are in theater—I was a child actor. I guess I would’ve liked to be in a punk band when I was a teenager, but it was more about my friends and I writing our own little shitty songs and half-heartedly performing them. It wasn’t until I moved to New York that I became really serious about performing music. In 2010, I really discovered I was good at this and it was what my life path was developing into.

CHAPMAN: And what happened to make you take it on as a career?

BLANCO: This is the complete trajectory—I wrote, wrote, wrote, wrote, wrote. I started performing out in the city. June 17, 2011, my first book was published. After that book came out, there was a storm of media attention. The music I’ve made for my first release, which will be Mykki Blanco and The Mutant Angels, some of the songs from that release, the lyrics are the poems in the book. While I was touring and performing the work of the book, Mykki Blanco was just growing and growing. It was an internal thing—it wasn’t something that I had begun to think about as my livelihood. I was living the duality of Mykki, I was cross-dressing everyday and exploring the lifestyle—I had a pretty wild summer, actually! It wasn’t until I began to combine the repertoire of Mykki’s work with the work from the book that things really began to take off.

CHAPMAN: And the whole thing has taken on a really genuine tone, which I’m assuming is because it all comes from you.

BLANCO: I’m not gonna lie—I could use the advance money from a label. Anyone could! But let me put it to you like this: The more noise I keep making, and the more I release quality music, I have no doubt that someone’s gonna try to hit me up. Larger labels, people in high positions who control culture, wanna remain in those positions of controlling culture. When an independent artist starts making too much money or getting a little too much attention, that’s when you start hearing calls from the big fish. But to be as accepted as I have from the music world, the art world, the fashion world—I just had no idea that following your heart could lead you to being so fulfilled and so happy. I haven’t had to kiss ass and social climb, and I’m so lucky for that—I have so many talented friends that, due to the nature of their careers, don’t have that creative freedom. To have that is a blessing and I never take it for granted.

CHAPMAN: So tell me about the music projects you’re working on right now.

BLANCO: These are the three important Mykki Blanco projects: The first release, with UNO NYC, is Mykki Blanco and the Mutant Angels. That is a project I did with DJ Physical Therapy and artist Jeffrey Joyal. We basically created music as a band, but it was a one-time project with my writing.

CHAPMAN: What’s that going to sound like?

BLANCO: That’s my more industrial psych-rock stuff, and it’s coming out late spring. I’m choosing to release that first because everyone’s heard the hip-hop and is waiting for a hip-hop release, but I want people to know the full scope of me. Then, a single from that release is being made into a seven-inch, two-sided record with OHWOW gallery. The second project is Mykki Blanco: Cosmic Angel (The Rebirth of The Showgirl), which is my rap project and will be out this summer. For my third project, I’ll be directing and producing my first musical concert in late May for The Living Theatre, which will have a full-week run.

CHAPMAN: That’s a lot of stuff! Did you plan for it to all smash together?

BLANCO: I didn’t plan for it, but everyday in the morning, for extra energy, I drink a raw garlic smoothie with fruit. I have nothing to lose and everything to gain by working hard. To have this be the beginning of my career and receive this much positive support—I cannot waste a fucking minute, and I’d be a fool to waste a minute.

Dreama Walker for Interview Magazine

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THE INTERPRETATION OF DREAMA

By ALEX CHAPMAN

Dreama Walker is an actress you probably recognize, regardless of your demographic. You might have seen her as Gossip Girl baddie Hazel Williams, opposite Julianna Margulies on The Good Wife, or even as the granddaughter of a particularly prejudiced Clint Eastwood in 2008′s Gran Torino. But with two new projects in the pipeline—the ABC comedy Don’t Trust the B—- in Apartment 23, in which she stars alongside Krysten Ritterand James Van Der Beek as earnest roommate June, who is forced to endure (and strategically outdo) the deceit of Ritter’s menacing but loyal character Chloe, andCompliance, a film following the chilling true story of a prank caller’s power over a fast food restaurant manager—the 25-year-old talent will attempt to take her budding career to a new level.

Interview spoke to the blue-eyed beauty about the importance of range, the process of getting her new show on the air, and getting heckled at Sundance.

ALEX CHAPMAN: Hi Dreama, how are you?

DREAMA WALKER: I’m good, Alex. And you?

CHAPMAN: I’m good, thanks. Congratulations on the show! Tell me about how you got involved.

WALKER: It was over a year ago in January. I was in LA randomly—I lived in New York at the time—and I went in for the audition. It was with the producers, and it went really well and felt like a super perfect fit. When I get nervous, I get word vomit, and it was particularly bad that day, so after we were finished I was giving them a little anecdote about driving in LA and how I didn’t want to offend anyone, and they were cracking up. I was like, “I am June! I’m absolutely her and she is me and this makes perfect sense.” Then I kinda chuckled, walked out, and didn’t think anything of it. But I ended up getting the part.

CHAPMAN: You mentioned the audition was over a year ago. What has that wait been like?

WALKER: Oh my gosh, the wait has been excruciating. Nothing’s worse than telling your family you got a pilot, hearing the pilot got picked up, and then finding out it’s not in the fall lineup. But I think that’s actually really great, because now that we’re airing in the spring, we don’t have to compete with like 50 other brand-new shows. I feel like the network is totally behind the show, and it’s so great to have it coming to fruition.

CHAPMAN: Do you think that time was helpful to the progression of the show? Even the commercials seem different now than they did in May.

WALKER: Absolutely. I feel like we totally found it—we found a groove, we found who are characters are and how they work, and the writers are amazing. We found this really happy, funny place, and we’re excited to show it to the world.

CHAPMAN: The show centers around a really awful roommate. Have you ever had any bad living experiences that the show’s writing reminds you of?

WALKER: I lived in New York for seven years, and I moved there after graduating high school. The first place that I lived in had a bunch of roommates—there were like seven of us, three rooms and one and a half bathrooms, and I had to move into this room that was connected to the toilet. It was kind of a disaster, because everyone always wanted to go in there and do silly things, and I had to be like, “C’mon guys! This is attached to my room, and it’s a basement room and there’s no windows.”

CHAPMAN: That’s rough.

WALKER: Yeah. Then later on, I had an experience living with a girl who was actually wonderful, but she asked me to watch her birds while she was out of town. I just happened to be terrified of birds, and one of her birds—she had two parakeets—died while in my care. I had to go in the cage and remove the dead bird’s body with a plastic bag, and as soon as I stuck my hand in there, the other bird was trying to attack me. I was quivering and crying and it was terrible.

CHAPMAN: Sounds awful—I despise birds. Switching gears, you played a supporting character on Gossip Girl. Do you think having a recurring role on a big-time show like that helped prepare you for Don’t Trust The B—-?

WALKER: Don’t Trust The B—- is the kind of show I’ve dreamed of being a part of since I started working in this business. I knew I wanted to be in a comedy, and I knew I wanted it to be fun, fresh, and edgy, and with really talented people, and I got my wishes. Working on Gossip Girl was a fantastic experience. It was my first real gig and I’m thankful for it—I got to learn a lot. I’m glad I got to explore getting comfortable in my own shoes in the background on a show like Gossip Girl, as opposed to a show like Don’t Trust The B—-, which is in front of America!

CHAPMAN: Your role on the new show is also obviously more demanding.

WALKER: I’ve never had caffeine before, because I was like “I don’t need it, I’m fun and I have plenty of energy!” By week two, I was dragging ass, and I became totally addicted to coffee—two or three cups a day. But I was happy that I had the energy to give 100 takes that were completely different and a lot of fun.

CHAPMAN: A movie like Compliance is a huge contrast from a show like Gossip Girl, which one could argue is a huge contrast from Apartment 23. Is the distinction in your roles intentional?

WALKER: I can totally count my lucky stars thatCompliance and this show are going to be released in the same year, because I feel so lucky to have gotten two projects that I’m really passionate about, but are completely separate. Something that can happen when you enter the world of being an actress is that people see you one way and have a really hard time using their imaginations to see you any other way. I would be completely satisfied if I could go the rest of my life without being super-huge and super pigeonholed—I would love to play different characters the rest of my life.

CHAPMAN: And that’s more important to you than the byproduct of fame.

WALKER: As long as I can feed my dogs and go shopping, I’ll be fine.

CHAPMAN: In that respect, Compliance seems like a movie most actors who love acting would die to take part in.

WALKER: I still feel very privileged to have gotten that part. I was up against a lot of great theater actresses and women I respect, so I never really knew if that part was going to be mine. I was in The Sitter, in a scene that tragically got cut—it’ll be in the director’s cut—but David Gordon Green was directing, and he told me my name was in an e-mail list of names being considered for a little film he was working on. He told me it was really dark and messed up, and at that point my heart was racing and my adrenaline was pumping. I was like, “I can do dark! I can totally do dark!” Then I got a chance to read the script and thought it was unbelievable—I remember the real incident specifically, and it had an impact on me then. I went in for the audition, and then we started having meetings, and at that point, I knew it was down to me and like two other girls. I decided to bring beer into the mix, and I was like [to writer-director Craig Zobel], “Cool, let’s go to a bar and talk, because that’s how I make people fall in love me!” So we did, and he was saying “It’s between you and two other girls,” and I was like, “We have to keep drinking!” And then eventually it was my part[laughs]  I totally won it over with good beer.

CHAPMAN: Very tactical. When the movie premiered at Sundance, you guys got heckled, which it seems was a reaction the movie was searching for. What was that like?

WALKER: The piece was powerful enough that it prompted very emotional, guttural reactions. I don’t think it was a terrible thing—it kinda sucked at the moment, being yelled at.

CHAPMAN: Were you able to grasp the positive in the negative at that exact moment?

WALKER: I absolutely wanted to cry and go into a dark room. Unfortunately, the night before I had this horrible stomach flu, and I had no idea people were going to freak out like that. I’m actually so grateful I wasn’t there by myself! I pretty much shut down—I couldn’t take it.

CHAPMAN: I doubt you’ll be facing that intense of a reaction with Don’t Trust the B—-.

WALKER: Well, that’s the nice thing about the show being a comedy!

Wren Presentation for Paper Magazine Dot Com

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Wren’s FW/’12 Presentation With Sarah Sophie Flicker, Joe Zee and Tavi On Screen

BY ALEX CHAPMAN

PHOTOGRAPHS BY ALEXANDER PORTER/BFANYC.COM

  • Joe Zee
  • Natalie Suarez, Nadia Sarwar, Claire Geist
  • Arden Wohl, Maximilla Lukacs, Hailey Gates
  • Maximilla Lukacs, Michelle Harper and Sarah Sophie Flicker
  • Tennessee Thomas, Nora Zehetner, Erika Spring
  • Nora Zehetner
  • Ilirjana Alushaj, Krystal Simpson
Last night, Champagne brand Nicolas Feuillatte hosted a little bash at Tribeca’s Parlor on behalf of fashion line Wren‘s FW 2012 collection. Guests like Elle‘s Joe Zee and fashion plate Michelle Harper were treated to racks of cool clothes to gawk at (as well as a few models who stood by the bar, one of which wore a leopard-printed jacket that we died for) while DJ Tennessee Thomas spun some of our favorite throwback tunes. Before long, the party’s patrons were gathered into the venue’s viewing room, where a short film featuring fashion wunderkind TaviGevinson adorned in some of Wren’s fetching frocks premièred (see the film and stills below). The film, directed by Maximilla Lukacs and Citizen Band‘s Sarah Sophie Flicker, found Tavi looking dreamy while waltzing along some trees, as well as singing a cool and creepy song called “Beware Of Young Girls,” which acted as the short flick’s title.

We stood next to Thomas while watching the piece and got the British beauty’s thoughts on the film. “Well, Dory Previn [who wrote "Beware Of Young Girls"] is one of my favorite songwriters,” the downtown favorite told us. “She was married to Andre Previn, who left her for Mia Farrow,and the song is about a 24 year-old Mia Farrow coming around to her house with daisies — if you read the lyrics, it also talks about how they were friends.” We love a good history lesson, especially when its filled with classic Hollywood drama. Check out these photos from Billy Farell Agency from the evening.

Wren_Tavi-0007_sm.jpgClick to enlarge image

Wren_Tavi-0114_sm.jpgClick to enlarge image

Wren_Tavi-0183_sm.jpgClick to enlarge image

Film stills courtesy of Amanda Marsalis

3×1 Party for Paper Magazine Dot Com

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3×1 Celebrates Its Ben Watts Skateboard Collab

BY ALEX CHAPMAN

PHOTOGRAPHS BY PHOTOGRAPHS BY DAVID X PRUTTING/BFANYC.COM

  • Ben Watts, Jeanann Williams, and Ruby Watts
  • Cameron Winklevoss
  • Constance Jablonski
  • Jude Law
  • Paul Lahote
  • Behati Prinsloo
  • DJ Chelsea Leyland, Jenne Lombardo, Brandee Brown, and Jeanann Williams
  • Jessica Hart
Denim emporium 3×1‘s normally calm and collected Mercer space was transformed
into a killer club-like party last night in celebration of the brand’s new limited
edition skateboards, a collaboration with famed photographer Ben Watts that finds
Jessica HartLake BellChanel Iman and more on the dashing decks. We wondered
if Watts was a boarder himself? “Well, the skateboards were 3×1′s idea — you can’t
skateboard with these babies,” he told us with a smile, referring to his amazing blue
suede slippers. Touché, Ben.We said our goodbyes to the evening’s guest of honor then danced our way
around the rest of the party thanks to PAPERMAG favorite DJ Chelsea Leyland, who
turned the space out with some bass-bumping tunes while Brandee Brown, Jenne
Lombardo
 and others danced along. Meanwhile, the real-life Winklevosses (that would be Tyler and Cameron) hung in the back corner with some lady friends while the beautiful Jessica Hart continually posed for pics, not to be outmatched by the also-beautiful Elsa Hosk, who chatted it
up with an entourage-heavy Jude Law. Future couple perhaps? Probably not but
we can dream.

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