Polarity/1
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Polarity/1

Brooklyn, New York, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2020 | INDIE

Brooklyn, New York, United States | INDIE
Established on Jan, 2020
Solo Alternative Fusion

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Music

Press


"Review of CD Speechless"

Polar Levine, a/k/a Polarity/1, has been making textural music for roughly 20 years, creating an intriguing plate of jazz slapped with interference, loops and found noise. … The splicings are far from random -- Levine knows exactly what he’s doing and why… I love the fact that Polarity/1 uses several live musicians instead of relying exclusively on samples; saxmaster Michael Blake is particularly adept at his craft. Levine succeeds in his mission of forcing you to pay attention and not lull into the sounds you “expect” to hear. However, the result is even more effective if you enjoy without reservations the sounds you hear instead. - StarPolish.com


"Album Review (staff review) of CD, Speechless"

It's all too easy to slot instrumental electronic albums into neat little subcategories. Exotic world music instruments with heavy dance beats? "Tribal techno," right over here. Jazz soloists playing over synthesizers? Go stand over there under the sign that says "acid jazz." Brazilian rhythms mixed with lazy electronic billows? Um, okay, let's call you "electro-nova." This obsession with assigning slots to everything is a huge part of what makes newcomers and non-fans dismissive of the style as a whole: clearly, the records must actually be fairly interchangeable once they're categorized. That's definitely not the case with Polarity/1's Speechless, which is a big part of what makes this such an enjoyable release. All of the above elements are to be found here, occasionally within the same song, along with the clever, rhythmic use of found-speech samples and a wider variety of arrangements than usual, ranging from '70's-style fat slap-bass ("Blues For Chucky," "The Sumo Glide") to more abstract soundscapes built of cut-up rhythms and pealing saxophone solos ("Land O' Debbies"). It may not be easy to categorize, but with its inventive rhythms and wide-ranging choices of instrumentation, Speechless is thoroughly entertaining.
- iTunes


"Review of CD Speechless"

Polarity/1 is the brainchild of NYC composer/producer/visual artist Polar Levine, who when not making music, is running his own little spin of web subversion, with PopCultMedia In it's entirety, Polarity/1's "Speechless" immediately strikes you as a lost soundtrack to some latenight & long forgotten acid trip. An electronic soup of beats, retro, tribal, and fragmented house peppered with bits of incoherent, nanosecond splices of altered speech snipits, off-time breaks, and unrecognizable audio from way back when, in pop cultures collective consciousness. As a sample in one of the tracks states, "If you don't like the music, go out and make some of your own.", but, chances our that you will dig on this funky little electro unit. Highly recommended. Download the track and buy the damn CD already.
- TheRecordIndustry.com


"Best Electronic CD Nomination"

Polarity/1's CD Speechless was was nominated Best Electronica album by Just Plain Folks, a music site that covers music from 85 countries in over 60 different genres of music. John Hollander has choreographed four tracks from Speechless for New York's Battery Dance Company's fall season opening in November 2006. The CD has been remastered and was recently re-released. - Just Plain Folks.com


"Polarity/1 All Over Broadjam's Charts"

broadjam.com has placed eight Polarity/1 songs in their Top Ten categories including Best Song All Genres, Alternative, Electronic, Experimental Electronic. Four of those have placed #1 in their respective charts. - broadjam.com


"Review of Song"

for full text: www.polarity1.com/fcwd10a.html

“Di Hard” is a medium tempo groove with rapped and sung vocals, everything done by Polar except for exquisite backing vocals by Scott Parker Allen and Sabina Sciubba. The song, taken from the Polarity/1 CD “Yankin’ The Food Chain,” is a comment on Princess Di’s demise, the role of the media, and the times we live in, serious without becoming sentimentalized or preachy.

We’d like to hold this track up as an example of several successful techniques: Vocal treatment, drum programming, track building, using eq as a dynamic tool — do we have all day?

Polar doesn’t jump from effect to effect, he knows how to “work the line like a good fisherman works the catch.”His drums are very sparse and standard at first, but he gradually adds more percussive elements, some of them defying traditional description, that build to a complex pattern, increasing the tension of the song where needed. And when he goes back to the basic kick/snare pattern, it’s no let-down because that pattern alone holds up well. Again, he doesn’t give away what he’s about to do, and when the change occurs, it feels right because the song demands it.The song has so many segments, from sparse to complex, that it reads like a book. Tension, release, suspense, it’s all there, yet none of the quieter moments feel weak, they are part of an overall plan that simply works.
- Recording Magazine


"Review of CD Yankin’ The Food Chain"

He's an artist with attitude, a musician with mishigas, and a creator with a consciousness. Polarity/1 (Polar Levine) is a musical force unleashing some of the hippest beats and timely lyric on the scene. Never heard of him? No surprise. Some of our best musicians have to struggle to be heard especially when the ideas they are struggling with matter. Who else takes on the testy relationship between blacks and jews with such honesty, affirming the common bonds that are often frayed in a song called "HOWL." In "News Goo" Polarity/1 fires off a hip hop attack on media mergers and censorship of what matters. Sample line: "So where's the news of a people left out?/ Put a camera in my face to hear me shout/But they don't want to hear what I shout about."(You can hear this one on media channel.org, the global eye on media site--in the media reader representing 480 affiliates). But Polarity/1 doesn't stop with safe subjects....His "Di Hard" looks at the Death of our late lamented Princess skewering both her media whore obsession and the disgusting attention paid to her by the paparazzi (and the men who hire them)

I lean to the more timely newsy songs but no one is left out--the music is strong and the subjects varied. He'll be yankin' your chain if you let him. And you will be better for it!
- MediaChannel.org


"Review of CD Yankin’ The Food Chain"

Chuck U. here. A friend of mine dropped by my show with a copy of the News Goo CD that he got at the Media and Democracy conference. It's way wicked cool, and I played 4 tracks of it on the air in the course of my 2 hour show. I would love to put it into heavy rotation in the course of the up-coming Friday nights. The name of my show is No Censorship Radio. — Chuck U., WMBR Boston - WMBR-FM, Boston


"Article on song "No More""

Junoon's Musical Plea: No More Terrorism by Vatsala Kaul

Amidst all the tributes to 9/11 victims, comes one from an unlikely country - Pakistan. Junoon, the Pakistani band that rocked the Indian charts inâ98 with Sayonee, have just released an empathetic 9/11 tribute, No More. Composed by lead guitarist-songwriter Salman Ahmad, the song is based on a poem by a New York musician, lyricist and journalist, Polar Levine.

As the twin towers collapsed, dust collected in Levine’s apartment 10 blocks away. Blocked off from home, he choked on the realization that along with charred plastic and crushed concrete, he was ãinhaling firefighters, police officers, cafeteria workers, secretaries and executives· Muslims, Jews, Christians, atheists, heterosexuals and homosexuals.ä He wrote a poem about it.

Ahmad was personally affected by the 9/11 attacks. New York city had been his childhood playground: “...where I saw my first rock concert, first bought a guitar, joined my first garage band, first kissed a girl.ä After listening to a Junoon concert at the Tribeca College, two blocks from Ground Zero, Levine entrusted his poem to Ahmad. He admired Junoonâs seamless merging of American rock with South Asian music and their multicultural makeup (lead singer Ali Azmat is Pakistani and Brain OâConnell, bass guitarist, an American). “After the Karachi suicide bombings and the threat of a Indo-Pak nuclear war, I came up with lyrics and melody to go with Polar’s lines,” says Ahmad.
No More may be Junoonâs first English song, but its concern over terrorism, grief and hope are themes they have sung for over a decade in Urdu and Punjabi. They were the first band to perform at the UN General Assembly last year. Ahmad has also written to the Indian and Pakistani governments, requesting permission for a Peace Concert at the LoC.

Will peace remain a dream? Perhaps. But Junoon are willing to chase it with roses, not guns. 
- Hindustani Times


Discography

STRONGMAN SAD (Donald Trump's words, Polarity/1's music)
  The President of ME
  Mr. Trump and the Woman
  The Donald Loves Tacos
  A Very Truthy Trump
  Bing Bing Believe Me
  Strongman Sad
  bonus track: Mrs. Moore's Attorney
 
INSTRUMENTALS
SPEECHLESS
  Bring On The Sudz
  Senhor Softee
  The Marvin Stomp
  Speechless
  The Eagle Has Descended
  Nilestones
  Land O' Debbies
  Blues For Chucky
  The Sumo Glide
  Munton's Revenge
 
AUDIOPLASM (Polarity/1 & Rubio) - HEAVY MEADOW 
  Guillermo Ate My Lunch
  Heavy Meadow
  Naddy Waddy
  Pa La Lucha
  Egg-shaped Egg
  Bob Smith Of The FBI
  Miss Bunnel's Holiday
  Ass Man
  Many Thanks To You Jack
 
music for AUTOBIOGRAPHICA (soundtrack for Battery Dance Co.)
  Circle Dance
  Bafana
  Waterworks Pt. 1
  Waterworks Pt. 2: Waterplena
  Carmen
  Sean's Bad Night
 
music for THE OTHER SIDE (soundtrack for Quorum Ballet, Lisbon
  Some Things Will Happen
  Voices in the Dark Pt.1 & Pt. 2
  Fulano De Tal (Instrumental)
  Many Thanks
 
Pepperspray Tan (Polarity/1 & members of Occupy Wall St.) - OCCUPY THIS!
  Occupy This!
 
WE ARE FAMILY (Nile Rodgers' post-911 project) 
  A Family Situation (feat. Pete McCann)

SONGS
  FREE MONEY (But You Have To Pay) 
  Plunder
  Winter In America (Chills To The Bone) feat. DAV
  Audioplasm - I'm So Broke (feat. Rubio)
  Koko Dozo - D.C. Whore (subprime version)
  Home Sweet Home
  St. James Infirmary
  Free Money  (But You Have To Pay)
  Swami Rivers - Free Money Blues

PRETTIER THAN YOU
  Love is Hard
  Prettier Than You
  There's Music
  70 Virgins
  Swing That Kaddish
  KaChing
  Duck
  Free Money
  Garbage Man
  Dança da Solidão
  Charge It
 
YANKIN' THE FOOD CHAIN
  Jam Inya Jammies
  Salesman
  News Goo (The More You Watch, The Less You Know)
  The Blood
  Look At Your Shoeshine
  Bag of Bones
  Cincinnati Pink
  Boomer's Blues
  Di Hard
 
KOKO DOZO (Polarity/1, Amy D, Rubio) - ILLEGAL SPACE ALIENS
  Face On The Dancefloor
  Second Time
  Shine
  Boomchi
  D.C. Whore
  Down
  Fulano de Tal
  Kokodozonomics
  The Heart
  
KOKO DOZO (Polarity/1 & Amy) - FEEL THE ZUZZ
  Spaceman
  Lay That Body Down
  Gangsta
  Grab Ya
  Bastards In Bazbador

Photos

Bio

    Growing up in and around NYC I was exposed to every genre of everything from everywhere. The first kiddie record I remember had and African groove. The first drawing I remember making was a mushroom cloud and poem for a 3rd grade class. First songs I wrote were protest songs. Somehow it all got marinated in FunnySurreal sauce and stuck to my creative DNA. Genres are colors. All creative mediums share the same compositional elements which makes it easy to shift aroung; and each medium draws out a different part of my nature.

    The new project - STRONGMAN SAD - explores the character of Donald Trump through his statements about women, Mexicans, his narcissism and his lying as a default MO. Aside from the obvious pathological angle, I've found him to be an extraordinary vocalist. His body language led me to making animated videos chorographed to the music and words. The vids & music (free download) are for sharing and getting us to the voting booth in 2020.