Listen!

Listen to a track from Night Ripper by Girl Talk. If you cannot see the music player below, click here to download the free Flash Player.

Listen!

Listen to a track from Night Ripper by Girl Talk. If you cannot see the music player below, click here to download the free Flash Player.

Listen!

Listen to a track from Night Ripper by Girl Talk. If you cannot see the music player below, click here to download the free Flash Player.

Girl Talk
Local 506, Chapel Hill
Saturday, Dec. 2, 10 p.m.
with Kerbloki, Robo Sapien and Ricky Dollars
Tickets: $10

In a review on Stylusmagazine.com, Cameron Macdonald criticized the latest Girl Talk record, Night Ripper, for its lack of โ€œsubversion.โ€ He argued that the album wasnโ€™t explicit with its implicit social commentary. It was a criticism brought on by what the writer considered an undeserving public endorsement Night Ripper received from Negativlandโ€™s Mark Hosler.

To be fair, promotional material said Hosler called the album a โ€œplunderphonics party record,โ€ which is high praise, especially considering the source. Those acquainted with the work of Negativland ought to be familiar with the term โ€œplunderphonicsโ€โ€“the act of sampling and rearranging a recorded song without permission. The practice was made most (in)famous by Hosler and company back in the early โ€™90s, when Negativland came under serious legal fire for melding expletive-laden outtakes of Kasey Casemโ€™s weekly show with manipulated portions of U2โ€™s โ€œStill Havenโ€™t Found What Iโ€™m Looking For.โ€

But Macdonald makes his mistake in assuming that the important part of Hoslerโ€™s sales pitch is in The Plunder (perhaps for the simple fact that Negativland was overtly critical). On the contrary, itโ€™s the latter partโ€“the โ€œpartyโ€ partโ€“that really matters.

Night Ripper is a carefully chaotic collection of over 200 samplesโ€“from Phantom Planet to The Clipse to Bruce Hornsby to X-Ray Spex. Nirvana grunge crawls beneath Young Jeezy coke raps. Kansas looms over Boyz II Men. Neutral Milk Hotel scuffles with Dipset. Itโ€™s the importance of the knock-down-drag-out that Macdonald failed to note in his review. The value of Night Ripper is in the mirror it turns to post-filesharing, Jack FM music listeners.

Today, we have access to more information than ever, and Girl Talk sole proprietor Gregg Gillis is attempting to tell every story available to him at once. Like a roomful of kids screaming each syllable of a ten-dollar word, the album cycles through snippets of hip hop, R&B, grunge, indie and soft rock at a breakneck pace. Cultural ephemera become a strange new blur. With each 30 seconds, weโ€™re reminded of the context in which the source material originally existed. Weโ€™re reminded of the story behind each piece, and what it meant the first time we heard it.

But Night Ripper is about more than nostalgiaโ€“or novelty. Itโ€™s about us, and what we listen to. And, luckily, itโ€™s nowhere near as heavy-handed as Macdonald had hoped. So, no, โ€œOh Bondage Up Yoursโ€ doesnโ€™t holler at โ€œWait (The Whisper Song)โ€ and smack us in the face with commentary. Instead, it lurks behind โ€œSugar, Weโ€™re Going Down Swinging,โ€ pointing subtly to the misogynists in the pit and on the stage at Warped Tour. And, no, Gillis doesnโ€™t use Elton John to make a comment about homophobia in hip hop. Instead, he slaps โ€œTiny Dancerโ€ under Biggie Smallsโ€™ โ€œJuicyโ€ and lets the music and oxymoronic collocation do the work. Night Ripper is overtly experimental, but itโ€™s essentially far from pretentious. This is populist art at its best. Itโ€™s a new form of cultural storytelling. Itโ€™s ours to enjoy.

INDEPENDENT: Where the hell did Night Ripper come from?

GREGG GILLIS: I never made any direct decision to make an album like Night Ripper. It just kind of happened naturally. For my live performances, I mix and match a bunch of sampled loops on the fly. Before the shows, I organized different templates of loops, which is kind of like me writing a song before performing it. Three or four years ago, these loops were mostly โ€œoriginalโ€ sounding beats and melodies made from small pieces of other peopleโ€™s music. I decided to start incorporating more recognizable samples, melodies, beats and vocals. These more blatant elements became the highlights of every show. Slowly over the course of a couple years, my live performances developed into the sound and style of Night Ripper.

Were you at all intimidated by this massive undertaking?

By the time I decided to make an album based around the style I was performing live, I already had a bunch of material organized. Starting the editing process was intimidating, and it took me a good while. But throughout the process, I had plenty of shows to go through a trial-and-error process with the material.

How did you choose the tracks for Night Ripper and what did you have to leave out?

For every combination you hear on the record, there was probably at least 10 alternate versions put together at some point. And for every sample on the record, there were probably 50 samples I didnโ€™t use. I just began building the album as three separate chunks and just kept trying to piece it together. The stuff I didnโ€™t use wasnโ€™t because I didnโ€™t like the samples. It was more because it didnโ€™t naturally fall into place as I was putting the album together.

Do you think, as a whole, music listeners are more omnivorous these days?

In general, as information exchange becomes easier and more ideas are recycled, I think genre and style barriers will naturally crumble, which makes it easier to be into a lot of different things. Maybe itโ€™s just my own little world that I live in, but it seems like everyone is breaking out of their own personal genre taste constraints these days.

The Internet has practically forced us to be aware of more music. Do you see Night Ripper as a product of the way people consume music now?

Yeah, I think itโ€™s very connected. Ideas and music like Night Ripper have definitely existed before file-sharing, from musique concrรจte to John Oswald to sample-based hip hop. But the Internet and file-sharing have made something like Night Ripper a lot easier to construct and distribute.

So, what is Night Ripper for?

Well, first of all, Iโ€™ve never considered it a novelty. Iโ€™ve spent six years of my life dedicated to sample-based music, so this is my instrument of choice. As far as what it is for, I think thatโ€™s entirely up to the listener. My own personal goal was to make something that you can party to and also something you can sit down by yourself, dissect and enjoy as a sound collage. Traditional dance music is based around repetition, but I was trying to put something together with a dual, conflicting style: danceable and experimental. Overall, though, Iโ€™m mainly focused on just putting together fun music.

Some reviews of the record have criticized it for not being subversive enough. How does that criticism sit with you?

The albumโ€™s not meant to be subversive. Iโ€™m a huge fan of all of the source material, so itโ€™s meant as a celebration of that particular music. The mentality that Top 40 music can only be worthwhile in a subversive context seems a little juvenile to me. The only thing really subversive about the album kind of happened by accident, where more indie-minded music fans are now getting down to James Taylor and Slim Thug because Pitchfork said they liked the album.

SOLID SNIPPETS

Over 200 samples made Night Ripper. A few thousand didnโ€™t make it. Here are a few that crafted an album thatโ€™s among the yearโ€™s best.

โ€œOnce Againโ€
Ying Yang Twinsโ€™ โ€œWait (The Whisper Song)โ€ vs. The Verveโ€™s โ€œBittersweet Symphonyโ€


We all remember what happened to The Verve. After failing to clear the sample of โ€œThe Last Time,โ€ a 1965 Rolling Stones song on which the entirety of โ€œBittersweet Symphonyโ€ was built, a big fat lawsuit bit them in the ass. Here, the songโ€™s swelling strings flirt with the gutter-mouthed Twins and completely change the character of the line โ€œWait till you see my dick.โ€ In this go-round, the proposed sex sounds almost consensual.

โ€œHold Upโ€
Mariah Careyโ€™s โ€œItโ€™s Like Thatโ€ vs. James Taylorโ€™s โ€œYour Smiling Faceโ€ vs. Ludicrousโ€™ โ€œNumber One Spotโ€


This is one of the strangest portions of Night Ripper. The big Austin Powers-sampled orchestral stabs of โ€œNumber One Spotโ€ are at melodic odds with the synth-grind of โ€œItโ€™s Like That.โ€ But then our very own James Taylor comes in singing โ€œNobody can tell me that Iโ€™m doing wrong.โ€ Presumably, itโ€™s the voice of Gillis telling us to quit bitching.

โ€œSmash Your Headโ€
Elton Johnโ€™s โ€œTiny Dancerโ€ vs. The Notorious B.I.G.โ€™s โ€œJuicyโ€


The laughs! First, thereโ€™s the visual gag of seeing โ€œTinyโ€ and Biggie side by side. Then thereโ€™s the absurdity of Big and his weed-smoking lyrics lacing Eltonโ€™s anthemic arena pianos. Two worlds colliding never sounded so hilarious.

โ€œFriday Nightโ€
Chris Brown & Juelz Santanaโ€™s โ€œRun Itโ€ vs. The Waitressesโ€™ โ€œI Know What Boys Likeโ€


When Dipsetโ€™s Juelz Santana launches into the party line โ€œI know what girls wantโ€ฆ,โ€ heโ€™s answered by The Waitressesโ€™ Patty Donahue (reminding us who was there first) with the original songโ€™s refrain, โ€œI know what boys likeโ€ฆ.โ€

โ€œPeak Outโ€
2 Live Crewโ€™s โ€œWe Want Some Pussyโ€ vs. Wingsโ€™ โ€œSilly Love Songsโ€


2 Live Crew had their fair share of legal trouble when it came to sampling, but thatโ€™s not the point of this one. Its laughs come when Paul and Linda McCartney are cooing the words โ€œI love youโ€ and a gang of voices repeatedly screams โ€œHey! We want some pu-say!โ€ Talk about conflicting.