Categories
Skateboarding News

Converse in Mexico

The Converse team have hit up a small park in Mexico City whilst touring the Prevent This Tragedy premiere with some very special guests providing the music.

Watch below as Raymond Molinar, Nick Trapasso, Sammy Baca and Julian Davidson hit up a wooden park for a rad change of scenery of all the usual smooth concrete malarkey while Matt Costa and Danny Garcia provide the jams.

Categories
Skateboarding News

Kellen James is Gold

Kellen James new Gold Wheels ad has dropped online and its packed full of attitude and bangers.

So whack on some Easy-E as Kellen James is a real muthaphuckkin G.

Categories
Features Skateboarding

Benjamin Deberdt Pause Mag Interview

Benjamin Deberdt has done a great deal within the realms of skateboarding both in Europe and America in the last 15 years: founder of Sugar magazine, founder of Kingpin magazine, and now founder of Pause, the new French word on the street complete with English online editions. Here is the skinny from the man himself.

Portrait Right: Benjamin outside his favourite café in Paris, shot by Éric Antoine.

So tell us about Pause then…

Ehhrrr, it’s a magazine? About what makes skateboarding something worth sacrificing a lot for?

The idea is to speak about the characters, the builders, the behind-the-scene guys, the unsung heroes alongside the rich and famous. If you have a story that is worth telling, we’ll try to find you!

Can France support another magazine?

This seems to be the main question I get these days! And I have no answer to it, to be frank. But, maybe that is not the point of Pause…

Pause also produce top shelf postcards!

Your naturalistic style of photography wins plaudits and criticism in equal measure- can you tell us a bit about why you shoot in the style you do and what you think its merits and shortcomings are?

For people to either hate or give mad props, they should know I even exist! I doubt there are that many people that are aware of me… but I can appreciate the “naturalistic” comment. When we started Sugar with my cousin Seb Caldas, back in the days, I was still learning what the hell I was doing, and also experimenting quite a bit to get different kinds of results and not have the magazine filled with only one type of photography. Which I sometimes regret… but, yep, I’d say I have always been interested in showing what I would see, in the most natural way. This is probably coming from Tobin Yelland’s work, back then. He was shooting the whole San Francisco scene during the EMB days, but in a super gritty way. Everything was super crafted and perfectly printed, but what you saw as a reader was the real deal. Glimpses of those people’s everyday life… the glamour was there, but it wasn’t posed. It was real. And this is what I really go for, more and more: just showing the people for who they are and what they do. Which probably clashes sometimes with the manufactured image skateboarding is aiming for, these days. I understand the need for commercial images, and I certainly don’t judge it, but this is not what I find interesting doing, so I’m going my own way. And there are a whole lot of people out there still documenting skateboarding for what it is. Man, we are part of this world that doesn’t need fantasy; it is already fascinating for what it is. Look at all the characters out there, who needs sunsets in the background!?

Another major influence for me has been, obviously, Thomas Campbell, to this day. His photographic style could be described as more thought through, to make the most visually striking image possible, but in a very organic way. As in to use whatever is lying around to enhance reality and make it a bit more magical, which clashed a lot with my French way of looking at life, then. Thomas taught me everything, really: “Benjamin, you’re going to go to New-York, buy a FM2 and a fish-eye, and then, you’ll be professional…” Haha!

So, yeah, apart from countless other influences, I could say that these two had a great impact on me, then, and still do to this day. Oh, and Ari Marcopoulos, for the genuine feeling of his photos, whatever times and scenes he documented. Another great inspiration, there.

What is your single all-time favourite photo that you’ve shot?

A skate photo might be the Lucas Puig water gap kickflip… Or Javier Mendizabal nosegrinding up a ledge in Casablanca, for all the stories that are told in that one image. I don’t know, really. I don’t think much about my own photos…

As for a “non-skate” photo, I have even less of an answer! I have been pretending that I’m consolidating my archives (I believe this is how you’re supposed to explain you’re opening plastic bags to discover they are full of sequences printed in 1998!), lately, and I have found some images which, then, did not mean much to me, as in: “Oh, I can’t use that in next issue of the mag…” but have grown very fond to me, as they now tell a lot about a time long gone. This tells me how much a photo ages a bit like wine. Some turn to vinegar really quick, and should be consumed right away. Others bloom with time.

When I was digging through for Résumé, the Cliché book, I found some gems, that’s for sure! Sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night, thinking “Did I throw away those pictures of Ricky Oyola rolling a blunt at his house in Philly in 1996!!!???? Because they were a bit blurry!!!!!!????”, haha! Actually, I want to start to work on some book projects, I think. The time has come.

Lucas Puig’s Watergap flip shot by Benjamin Deberdt in Cliché Résumé

The Lucas Puig water gap photo from Greece put you onto a lot of people’s radars outside of France, can you tell us a bit about the context of that shot?

I’ll be frank, it’s all Fred Mortagne’s fault! I would have probably shot a boring picture, but he was already knee-deep in the water, all up in what I thought would be my frame. It was the end of a long day, and the spot looked great, so I was probably cursing him under my breath, when I looked up and realized there were two more stories to that unfinished abandoned mall. I ran up, made sure there was an angle, ran back to put up flashes, screaming for everybody to wait for me, ran back up and shot probably a couple frames of Lucas’s flip and a couple more of Cale Nuske’s backside flip. This being before digital, so it’s only a week later, back in London, that I realized that the reflection showed everything you couldn’t get directly, like the board, Lucas’s face, etc. I also realized that my fish-eye was damaged and that all the pics shot with that lens on the trip were out of focus! But, yep, Lucas’s photo was a total accident. Thanks Fred, let’s get on the road again, sometime soon!

The Kenny Reed Kingpin cover was described by Steve Caballero as one of the best he’d seen in 25 years of skating; what were the circumstances surrounding it?

Really? That’s very kind of Steve! Where do I start with that one? Let’s say this was the end of another long day spent on the border of the Black Sea, for what must have been the first skateboard trip to Bulgaria, from what I believe, unless Rodney Mullen did a Swatch demo there in the 80’s! So, yep, we had a great crew from all over the world, including Kenny. You and him came back from behind some bushes to tell me about some possible spot back there. We went and Kenny told me about the trick he wanted to try. I looked around and told him that by the time I’d be set up it’d be getting dark, he said “let’s do it!”, so I started rushing around… sure enough, he did land it in almost total darkness after being fully blinded by my flashes. Jedi mind trick on that one, and another great surprise at the lab a week later!

You remain the only person to have shot a legit Belfast article for a magazine- what are your memories or impressions of the city and the skaters?

It was a very interesting trip, for sure. We were in town for a few days only, and it was quite filled with action, to say the least. Us getting attacked by about fifty children on glue was a highlight, in a way. I was so convinced that this type of behaviour is not rationally possible, that it just did not register for me. I was just standing there as people were running all over the place… Then, I saw you open the door of a van and scream for me to jump in and I did. Full A-Team style!

In many ways, these four days were very surreal for me. As a French man, religion is not part of my way of thinking, and being confronted with a place where it was all other the place was strange. Just like we were in Jerusalem… But to get back to Belfast, what really stood for me was the kindness of all the people I met, skaters or not. It did have a small town feeling, in many ways, where everybody knows each other, which did not compute with my memories of growing up and seeing Belfast on fire during the news on TV. This was very interesting for me: how can you even have a war going on in such a small town? I understand the roots of it all were centuries old and very deep, of course.

Now, what I want to see is some young Belfast photographer to step up and shoot a sick report on his scene. Let’s see it! Oh, and I want Conhuir to make a comeback! Come on, son!

Pause will have an online dimension in English, what is the deal there?

We just posted issue 01 almost entirely translated on our site. The idea is to give people outside of France the option to also read about the people we think are interesting in skateboarding right now. That, and since nobody really reads English in my slightly autistic country, it can’t really hurt our sales, ha!

What advice would you give to an aspiring photographer?

There was a great portfolio of Ari Marcopoulos in Transworld, in 1998, I believe, mixing pictures of Jean-Michel Basquiat, Julien Stranger or Ryan Hickey with some advice he was giving to young photographers. I’ve had that one taped on a wall everywhere I’ve lived. Try to find it! Because, what the hell do I know, really?

Click above image for the full-size image of Ari Marcopoulos’ article…

Categories
Music News

Download a Radiohead concert for free

Radiohead’s show at Prauge’s Výstaviště Holešovice Exhibition Hall on August 23rd 2009 was filmed by more than 50 fans armed with slick mobile phones. It is now available to download for free from here.

Live in Praha was approved by the band themselves, who contributed the audio masters from the show to the fans to make that concert sound exactly like it did on the night. Absolutely amazing, basically.

The trailer can be seen below, but follow this link for more information.

Categories
Free Downloads Music

Free Downloads – 03/09/10

You know the drill by now. Look below to grab some free music every two weeks from the Crossfire Soundcloud.

This time round Crocodiles have released a trippy and warm instrumental EP while their throats recover from sharing a hobo’s pipe, the title track can be picked up below. We’re also still recovering from the head-opening trip from L.E.D Festival and have loaded two selected cuts that caused Hackey to rise up last weekend courtesy of Aphex Twin and Tiga. We were also treated to new tracks from Atmosphere, Parenthetical Girls, Sufjan Stevens and more!

Tuck in below.

Aphex Twin – On by Crossfire Music

The XX – Shelter (Tiga Remix) by Crossfire Music

Crocodiles – Fires Of Comparison by Crossfire Music

Tim Kasher – Cold Love by Crossfire Music

First Aid Kit – Hard Believer by Crossfire Music

Atmosphere – Freefallin’ by Crossfire Music

P Money – Anyway by Crossfire Music

Jay-Z – Most Kingz by Crossfire Music

Parenthetical Girls – Young Throats by Crossfire Music

Sufjan Stevens – I Walked by Crossfire Music

Categories
Skateboarding News

Joe Brook’s top five cameras

Joe Brook is the latest to get the Crailtap mini top five treatmeant and in this short clip we get a little peek at the cameras he carries with him all the time.

So photography heads stand up because this might as well be safe-for-work pornography for you. Point and shoot…

Categories
Skateboarding News

Three days in Cornwall with Karma

Karma recently went on a three day skating bender and Andy King has just finished editing the lot!

See below for all three days of Owen Hopkins, Tom Shimmin, Channon Wallace and Joey Hurst shredding Truro Plaza, Mount Hawke and some street spots too.

Categories
Skateboarding News

Keith Walsh joins Unabomber

The Irish radar maker Keith Walsh has made a mighty impact on the Unabomber roster this week.

Check out his ‘welcome to’ video edit below. It’s as gnarly as you’d expect, try not to shout out loud at the last trick!

Categories
Live Reviews Music

RBMA Carnival Party – Live

To many, including myself, Notting Hill Carnival is the highlight of the year, the chance to vibes out in the sun, eat copious amounts of jerk chicken and dance with a smile for the entire day. When you add an incredible line-up of DJs, free food and drink and art from the likes of Pure Evil and Inkie, you can be sure that there won’t be one disappointed face in the place. Red Bull’s Major Lazer Carnival Party was, without a doubt, the party of the year so far.

Getting in a little while before Ghislain Poirier’s set, the scene was set nicely with the bars five deep and the bass already wobbling. When the bearded Canadian stepped up, the party was well and truly underway as he dropped his usual diet of dancehall riddims. Ably backed up by his two MCs, his set saw the incredible sight of a man who must have been well into his 50s dancing whilst performing a headstand in the crowd.

Following Poirier was UK producer Sticky who ramped the crowd up immediately by dropping his anthem with Ms Dynamite – Boo – before sending everyone into spasms by nailing Bizzle’s Pow and pulling up three times in the process and dropping another of his own productions, Lady Chann’s Sticky Situation.

Skerrit Boy getting pumped during Major Lazer’s set.

Next up was Trouble & Bass head honcho Drop The Lime with a Rock-A-Billy set. This could easily have fallen flat but when he played tracks like Chuck Berry’s Johnny B Good, it was clear that the party vibes were going nowhere. Despite the guitar music not being the usual Carnival fare, DTL was thrashing around and having the time of his life and eventually submitted by mixing it up with bass lines. Imagine that in the 50s, it would’ve destroyed everyone!

Bristol’s Joker followed and whilst taking a little while to get the crowd’s hype levels back up, he killed it with now mainstream but still awesome tracks Katy On A Mission and I Need Air which he mixed into Mr Oizo’s Flat Beat [nods to Moyboy for that one!] with the crowd also treated to a track of his upcoming album.

David Rodigan stepped up after this and took the entire place by storm. The 59 year old set the first track on its way before running around the decks to face the crowd, beaming, sweating and telling people to make noise. With his T-shirt tucked into his jeans and his pork-pie hat on, he looked like the coolest Grandad on the planet, but he wasn’t about to let his age get in the way of having fun. Wheeling up old records from King Tubby’s studio back in the day and ending with a Bob Marley singalong, Rodigan stole the show, the man is a legend.

Aged 59, David Rodigan is a legend.

Headliners Major Lazer, the duo of Diplo and Switch looking their resplendent best, stepped up to a rapturous roar of a crowd well and truly in the midst of a frenzy. Dropping everything from heavy dubstep to house, dancehall to bassline, there wasn’t one tune that wasn’t loved by everyone. Gun fingers filled the air and every drop, giant cushions were thrown from one end of the floor to the other as tube drivers on the tracks next to the space stopped to look out and savour the atmosphere below. Of course all the Major Lazer album bangers destroyed the speaker with their MC and female dancer hyping everyone beyond previously unthought-of boundaries and when the legendary Lee Scratch Perry joined proceedings, the evening was complete. Without doubt the best party of 2010 and surely won’t be topped for pure energy, vibes and smiles.

Abjekt

Below you can stream the entirety of Major Lazer’s monster set below, and witness the fitness of the forever young David Rodigan. Get in.

Categories
Skateboarding News

Habitat ‘Origin’ Hype…

Habitat’s ‘Origin’ was given a release date last month for October 18th. If you needed any further confirmation then check the image above that was posted on the Origin Tumblr this morning.

The video will indeed be getting an iTunes release if you are one of those ‘can’t go to the shop today but need to see it’ type.

To further stoke your excitement for the retrospective video here’s the trailer and a couple of recent clips from Habitat riders.