Mochipet on Autonomous Music's Va-Array Vol 2

Autonomous Music is the type of projects that should exist in a heap. This organization uses music and performances live from an impressive list of artists as a tool for social change. Art as a hammer that hits the nail of the meanings.

His proposal is specifically political, and if you know even at some of the names of the musicians involved you will see that everything is more than real, that are putting force into a target clear and thus are making an important contribution. The roster is composed by Dj Vadim, Filastine, Quantic, Mochipet, Natasha Kmeto, The Polish Ambassador, Resident Anti-Hero, Octopus Nebula, Ott, Ott & The All-Seeing I, Ill-Esha, Emancipator, Alex B, Anomie Belle, Blietech, Conduits, Cry Wolf, Dr Israel, Etheric Double, Intelepaths, Invisible Allies, Little People, Marley Carroll, Papadosio, Paper Diamond, Paper Tiger, Phutureprimitive, Pnuma Trio, Random Rab, The Great Muandane, The Nadis WarriorsYppah and Unlimited Gravity.
Last November 28 have released their second compilation for so-called free descent “Array Vol 2″, which contains tracks from all of their artists.” As it is logical, because the reason that unites all of these names is not a musical line but an eagerness in common, styles that handles are the most heterogeneous. On this album they may listen to hip hop, house, future step, indie hop, IDM, synth hop, trip hop, dubstep, reggae dub, techno pop and electro. But mysteriously this stylistic explosion runs evenly. The disk draws a journey that will unveil the adventure of track in track.

A very good album with a very good proposal back.”

http://www.cassetteblog.com/2012/12/va-array-vol-2-autonomous-music/

Groovemine.com Review: Chicxulub by Mochipet

I like albums with audacious concepts. Often, though, the music itself is boring, the concept simply serving as a crutch. When I first heard the newest offering by Mochipet (Taiwan-born David Wang), I had no idea that it was a concept album — and I liked it. My point being that good concept albums don’t ever live in the shadow of their concepts: the music is simply enriched by an understanding of the artist’s singular intentions. And in this case, they’re quite singular: Chicxulub, as the press release states, “is the soundtrack for an animated novel in which the Dinosaurs make their way through the impact of the comet believed to have destroyed them.”

Chronology is kind of a funny thing. If I had read that ridiculous description before my maiden voyage with the album, the music would definitely have disappointed me. The bombastic concept would have completely drowned out the music, I’m sure. But because I read it after listening to the album, everything instead clicked into place, and all of the elements of the music that I liked made more sense, giving the album a level of narrative depth of which I was previously unaware, appreciative as I was of the record’s epic synth textures. Suddenly the album’s scope, its plodding glitch-hop and huge synths, became panoramic.

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Sub-Radar Album Radar: Mochipet – Chicxulub

Fresh off of 1320 Records (Eliot Lipp, Alex B, Emancipator and other amazing artists that will eventually have a feature here) comes Mochipet’s latest glitch-funk audio fest, groovy, messy and cheeky…Mochipet is one of the best-known Taiwanese producers out there, and has collabs to the moon and back with everyone from hip hop MC’s to techno producers, but this album seems to be a return to his avant-garde electronic hip hop roots. Only 8 tracks, but definitely 8 tracks worthy of being on 1320 Records.

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Groovemine Review: Mochipet-Chicxulub

I like albums with audacious concepts. Often, though, the music itself is boring, the concept simply serving as a crutch. When I first heard the newest offering by Mochipet (Taiwan-born David Wang), I had no idea that it was a concept album — and I liked it. My point being that good concept albums don’t ever live in the shadow of their concepts: the music is simply enriched by an understanding of the artist’s singular intentions. And in this case, they’re quite singular: Chicxulub, as the press release states, “is the soundtrack for an animated novel in which the Dinosaurs make their way through the impact of the comet believed to have destroyed them.”

Chronology is kind of a funny thing. If I had read that ridiculous description before my maiden voyage with the album, the music would definitely have disappointed me. The bombastic concept would have completely drowned out the music, I’m sure. But because I read it after listening to the album, everything instead clicked into place, and all of the elements of the music that I liked made more sense, giving the album a level of narrative depth of which I was previously unaware, appreciative as I was of the record’s epic synth textures. Suddenly the album’s scope, its plodding glitch-hop and huge synths, became panoramic.

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Get your own copy of Chicxulub HERE

Beat Traps: MOCHIPET “CHICXULUB”

Look, I’m only human. As much as I try to keep strict editorial rules in place when I get ready to review an album, if I find out ahead of time that it’s a concept “soundtrack for an animated novel in which the Dinosaurs make their way through the impact of the comet believed to have destroyed them,” well, you’re already ahead of the game before the needle even hits the wax. Then tell me it follows said dinosaurs as they escape into outer space, only to have their plans thwarted by marauding aliens? Shit, just sign me up as a fan of Mochipet’s CHICXULUB now.

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507 Projex on Mochipet’s Spacezilla EP

Mochipet is back this summer with Spacezilla, a seven-track EP containing three brand new smashers and four remixes courtesy of Minnesota, Udachi, Konekta and Fresh Young Minds & Skulltrane.  Spacezilla starts off larger than a brontosaurus with the track, For When the World Ends–a slow-to-build throwdown that percolates into a laser bass frenzy smartly incorporating a dubstep sound design while remaining wholly independent of the trappings of that genre.

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Mochipet – For When the World Ends” from “Spacezilla” out now on Mallabelmusic by Mochipet

Mochipet in Hyphen Magazine

By: Zoneil
Bunnies and Muffins

mochipet.com

San Francisco Bay Area-based electro wizard David Wang, aka Mochipet, is known equally for the versatile dance floor jams he produces and the purple dinosaur suit he dons when performing them. While his previous outing, last year’s Microphonepet, featured a West Coast rap extravaganza of guests, his latest offering, Bunnies & Muffins, is void of vocals. Not to worry, Mochipet fills the space well with an orgy of sounds that stretch from glitch-hop and dubstep to global and symphonic stylings. More melodic and down tempo than his previous work, Bunnies & Muffins also employs a variety of instruments. “The Erhu Song” finds him flipping the Chinese instrument over a drum break while bringing the funk on “Fool” with a slap bass and crafty flute work from guest Spaceheater. Whatever it is, Mochipet’s got the shit you like. Album opener “Anthem” starts with powerful glam rock metal riffs and wobbly synths, with a sudden tempo shift three-quarters through that kicks the track into a high-speed frenzy while “Oly,” soft and airy, sounds like a forgotten track from The Postal Service.

-Z.M.

Doktor Krank Reviews Master P on Atari Transformed!

Mochipet continues his Atari saga with another fantastic, heavy and sick release of remixes off the mighty Master P on Atari. As usual, he collected a motley crew of contributors delivering smashing and varied reworks of the crunky originals. All of them remained true to the turbo crunk spirit of Mochipet’s tunes, while adding their distinctive features. Starting from the absolutely killing highlight of the entire release, namely a totally ridiculous heavy metal glitch Marshall Bass Smacks by Kraddy.  Baaaangerrrrrrr! I love these distorted guitars. And now thanks to the dudes from Daly City Records you can have this track for free – cop this mayhem you will not be disappointed:

Mochipet in Italy?

Mochipet

Girls Love Mochipet

Nerd, cazzone, eterno teenager, ostentatamente simpatico, tecnicamente dotato. Mochipet si è fatto conoscere per il suo breakcore straludico e ora cerca la legittimazione come produttore tout court

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Mochipet

Girls Love Mochipet

Nerd, cazzone, eterno teenager, ostentatamente simpatico, tecnicamente dotato. Mochipet si è fatto conoscere per il suo breakcore straludico e ora cerca la legittimazione come produttore tout court
Mochipet (David Wang)

Mochipet
Mochipet (David Wang)

David Wang aka Mochipet, taiwanese di nascita, californiano d’adozione (e probabilmente per vocazione), ha cominciato a pasticciare con aggeggi elettronici da piccolissimo. Il minimo, con un padre incarnazione dei sogni proibiti di qualsiasi bambino: ingegnere aerospaziale. Scienziato pazzo insomma. Quando David ha scoperto che con l’elettronica ci si poteva pasticciare anche la musica, ha imboccato la via del non ritorno. Adolescenza a base di heavy metal, jazz e hip-hop commerciale, e trafila da smanettone d’oggi, internauta (e web designer), dj in radio e per set festaioli, compilatore, produttore.

Revolver Distribution Picks “Bunnies & Muffins” as #2 Album of 2009!


Uli Elser, Sales, Export Sales, Exclusive Label Relations

1. Yppah * They Know What Ghost Know (Ninja Tune)
2. Mochipet * Bunnies & Muffins (Daly City)
3. The Joy Formidable * A Balloon Called Moaning (Pure Groove)
4. DJ /Rupture and Matt Shadetek * Solar Life Raft (Agriculture)
5. Wye Oak * The Knot (Sub Pop)
6. Spider Bags * Goodbye Cruel World, Hello Crueler World (Birdman)
7. Kevin Blechdom * Gentlemania (Sonig)
8. Hex Dispensers * Winchester Mystery House (Douchemaster)
9. Summer Cats *Songs For Tuesdays (Slumberland)
10. Fredrik * Na Na Ni (Kora)
Honorable Mention:
James Blackshaw * The Glass Bead Game (Young God)
Smith Westerns * Smith Westerns (Horizontal Action)
Washed Out * Life of Leisure – EP (Mexican Summer)

Click here to listen to Bunnies & Muffins

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