Chatting with Artist & Composer Silas Hite

January 23, 2012 in Art, Music


I love people who fly under the radar especially those whose talents speak for themselves. And with that in mind, please allow me to introduce to you Silas Hite, an artist/composer/musician/band front man etc… Originally from Ohio, Hite resides in LA, but you’ve probably heard or seen his art or scores in numerous commercials, films, TV shows, and video games. Not to mention his bands which include Thunderdikk and Hellbeast of the Night (with his lovely wife Lisa McIntyre Hite). I had a chance to speak with Silas about his latest music and art endeavors.

Dude, you’re extremely accomplished, but super low key about it. I mean, Emmy nominated, Adweek’s spot of the year, Cyber Gold Lion award from Cannes… Pretty impressive. What’s your secret?

Ah shucks, well thank you. There is no secret. I just try to do the best I can and I have been fortunate enough to have opportunities to write for some high profile things.

Humble. Love it. So, when you’re not scoring TV shows, video games, films, and commercials, you’re creating your own music in various bands, one being Thunderdikk. (WHICH I LOVE) Don’t you get tired? What inspires you?

Once in awhile, I’ll feel overwhelmed when I think about all the projects I’m juggling at once, but then I remind myself that I chose to take them on and I get over it. Bands that are doing something really well inspire me. Hiking and travel inspire me. Great artists and design inspires me.

You’re living your dream now, but did you ever have to do a shit job to pay bills before you hit it big?

Not a typical McDonald’s job or something, I always tried pretty hard to avoid those. When I was younger, like old enough to hold a shovel all the way through high school, I dug quite a few ditches for my father and we would work construction together. Of course, since I had no real skills I would just have to carry materials and do grunt work. I think doing manual labor when I was young really gave me extra incentive to figure out how to make a living NOT doing that! By the time I went to college, I knew I wanted a career in music but I knew it was a long shot so, I studied hard and took it very seriously. I practiced and played in bands in and out of school and learned as much as I could.

Of course, my big break happened when I convinced my uncle (Mark Mothersbaugh of Devo) to let me intern at his studio. I started out there doing typical intern stuff, cleaning, errands, etc. but when I was given opportunities to write music for projects I gave it my all and did well and soon I was a full-time composer. I really learned my craft at his studio, Mutato Muzika. In a single day, I’d score music for commercials, video games, TV, and films. It was high energy and quick deadlines. I loved it. Writing at such a fast pace really comes naturally to me now. I don’t sit in front of a keyboard and wonder. I sit down, throw my hands on an instrument, hit record and trust my gut.

That’s awesome. BTW, I love the mullet that you wear in ‘Thunderdikk.’ Do you wear it out in public? Why or why not?
Ha, no I don’t get dressed up and parade around in that outfit. That look, that band, started as a reaction to working on Sunset Strip and watching people walk by who clearly wished the 80′s hair metal days had never ended! Then I had to write some 80s rock for a commercial and I thought, “Wow this is kinda fun”. So I called up my buddy J.P. who is a real rocker and told him we were starting a rock band called Thunderdikk and we were only gonna write songs about partying, sex, and rock and roll. It all came together way too easily and we’ve actually had great success getting our songs into tons of TV shows.

Okay, let’s talk about your art that is shown in galleries all across America. And your current one here in LA. Tell us about it. What are your influences when you create?
Well, I just put together a group show at the Angel City Brewery Gallery. It was a Christmas show, of sorts. The influence for this show was Krampus, an Austrian folk legend. His story is that he comes with St. Nick but instead of giving out presents, he punishes the bad kids. He is a really interesting character and there are many depictions of him floating around out there. Typically he looks like a rascally, hairy, devil fellow. I portrayed him in a few typical Christmas scenes and a few atypical scenes. In the largest drawing, Krampus has knocked the father and Santa unconscious and is spanking the mother while the children watch. Another features him collecting three brats for punishment on Christmas Eve. A few more modern sketches feature Krampus as more of a neighborhood nuisance, pissing in the pool, tagging, etc.

Haha. Thanks for introducing us to Krampus. So, as an artist/composer, what is your process when you’re asked to score a project? Is it something that flows naturally or do you have a way that you approach it?
Well, it really differs from a video game to a film, for example. Let’s focus on a film. generally the director and/or producer will tell me there thoughts about what emotions they might want the music to evoke and what moments in the film can be accented by the music. Often they will have already put in some ‘temp” music that comes close to the mood they are thinking, such as a song from a band they like.

So I take those things into consideration, watch the scene and start with an instrument that I feel is appropriate. For instance, a marimba. I will pull up a marimba on my keyboard and play along to the scene, trying to play the sound of “sadness” or “danger” or whatever.

You’re married to the uber-talented Lisa McIntyre, with whom you have another band. Tell us about that. Also, how do you separate work from home life when you’re both working on music together?
Yes, we have a band together called Hellbeast of The Night. We call it good music for late nights and bad choices. It’s rock music that makes you want to dance, essentially. As far as the separating home life from work, well, I don’t know. From my side, I just try not to push our music into what we are doing all the time. We work on it when we want to and I think that is a healthy attitude. I have a much higher tolerance for being in the studio than my wife does, so when she gets restless, we stop and I work on something else. I’m always juggling a few albums.

I think the trick is to remember that your relationship is what is important and doing music together should just be a fun activity. I don’t mean to minimize the importance of our band in our lives, we do take it quite seriously, but if it starts to be something that is too stressful for the relationship then it’s just not worth it.

You’re living your dream, but do you have advice for artists that haven’t made it yet or are just stuck?
There is no substitute for hard work. If you are just stuck, take a class or some lessons in the field that you are in. For instance, I take music lessons on new instruments all the time. Or sometimes I will just study a particular style on an instrument I already play. Right now I am taking piano lessons, focusing only on old boogie-woogie style blues. I am also taking vocal lessons to become a better rock screamer. The point is to learn something new or to approach your art in a different way, but above all, just keep doing it!

Some fun ones…

Last meal on earth?
My mom’s fried chicken, mac & cheese, mashed potatoes and gravy.

Secret to a good relationship?
Mutual thoughtfulness and respect.

Jon Stewart or Colbert?
You can’t go wrong with either, but I am a huge Colbert fan. If I was asked to perform on Colbert, my head would explode.

Thanks for the interview Silas, and if you’d like to check out more his work, check out his website.

Summertime…

August 24, 2011 in Art, Photographs

Summertime isn’t only for going to open mics and trying to figure out a marketing strategy for your parents’ cheesesteak/hoagie shop. It’s okay to relax and have a little fun too. Ya heard?

Thanks to the boyfriend, Dillon VO, for taking these pics using the Hipstamatic iphone app. Isn’t this awesome? He’s a natural photographer but this app makes everything look really antique and rustic. I’m obsessed.
P.S. Hipstamic is running a contest with the band ‘Foster the People’ where you could win a signed copy of their album or tickets to their next show. You know them…they have that catchy song, “Pumped up Kicks.” Or you could listen it to it here below.

Can you believe summer is almost over? Sigh.



Summer is for chasing birds who just ate lizards

I think this year will be one where there will be more to smile about. :)

My Bro Produced a Foo Fighters Video. NICE!

May 15, 2011 in Acting, Art

Growing up, I used to try to hang out with my older brother, Andrew, and his friends while they played sports, played video games, and did ‘boy’ things. In turn, they would put shaving cream on my face and put my hands in cold water while I slept. Guess what happened next?
EDITED TO ADD: My brother read this post and wanted me to add that he and his friends used to also fart on my pillow as a “fun surprise.” See, this is why I wanted sisters..
ANYWAYZ…
I’m proud of my brother who produced this ‘Miss The Misery’ music video for the Foo Fighters This Video Sucks contest. The video was directed by Peter Levin, and I think the execution of this video is pretty sick.

Life Struggles, Feeling Like a Freak, and Networking…

October 12, 2010 in Acting, Art, comedy

I think in cartoons. Damn my right-brained mind! :)

Life Struggle

Feeling Like a Freak

I Hate Networking

Do You Think in Comic Strips?

September 30, 2010 in Acting, Art, comedy

I think in cartoons. That’s totally and completely normal right? My 4th grade teacher would always tell my mother, “Kathrien is bright, but is a nuisance because she is a constant daydreamer.” I remember being like, “Um…I can’t help that my brain keeps going into cartoon mode.” Unlike a lot of other Asian kids, I was not good at math or science. Instead, daydreaming was my hobby. WORD.

This is a cartoon board I made for my boyfriend. I think he liked it. Yay.

Just Some Positive Cartoons

September 12, 2010 in Art, blogs

I’m not exactly a talented artist. I do get points for effort, right? From my ‘How to Be Positive When Things Suck’ Manifesto. :)




Interview with Turner Lange, Creator of “The Adventures of Wally Fresh”

July 30, 2010 in Art, Interview, LA


Turner Lange is a talented dude. As an animator/writer/advertising illustrator, Turner is someone whose creativity is just a part of his DNA. I had a chance to check out his new comic book, “The Adventures of Wally Fresh,” about the Wally Fresh, a character who gets his life put in weird and interesting situations. Check out the interview!


Tell us about yourself. How did you get started as a comic book writer?
This entire project from beginning to end is a labor of Love. I was primarily trained as an animator and after school I went into advertising illustration (storyboards, style frames, concept design) I’ve been bouncing around the industry for a little over six years now Jumping back and forth from music videos to television and commercials. The writing portion kinda came about from my film directing background, I’ve written a slew of short film scripts a few spec pilots and a feature. Wanting to take up a new project I decided to try my hand at comics.

So..the title of your comic is “The Adventures of Wally Fresh.” Please do elaborate on how this story came about?
Wally Fresh is my attempt at genre mashing I lived in New York for almost ten years and really dug my time there, Plus the city itself is such a great backdrop for stories cuz anything can and will happen. So I was looking for a premise that would kinda let me go anywhere I wanted in terms of storytelling. I think at one point I kinda had it as an idiosyncratic kind of book where it was more about the everyday stuff, but when I did a first pass on it it felt kinda stale so I went back retooled it and kinda tried to build into the premise ways to take the characters to other places. And kinda of bring an extraordinary twist to mundane situations. Thats kinda where the spirit animal Barry comes in. Once I gave him to Wally then it was kinda like “well, a talking animal is kinda the tip of the iceberg”

Did you grow up reading tons of comic books? If so, which ones were your favorites?
Yeah My brother and I were comic kids growing. He was pretty instrumental in my creative development and even now he’s still the one feeding me whats hip and whats cool. but growing up I was a big image kid Wildstorm had a bunch of titles I would pick up.( until about 11th grade I thought Jim lee was the man) but Alot of Image, Marvel, DC and Valiant.

Hollywood loves comics. Especially taking them and making them into big Blockbuster films… What do you envision for “The Adventures of Wally Fresh.”
Well first and foremost is to finish this initial story arc. But There’s a lot of places these character could go, and what I’m trying to do is establish Wally Fresh as kind of the initial window into that universe. Kinda like it’s the intersection where all this stuff happens, where crazy characters meet and interact but everything kind of expands out of that initial window. As for different forms it could take (animation, live action, CG) I’m letting the idea itself kinda dictate that.

Very cool. How can we get a copy of this comic?
Well this inital print run has completely sold out I’m happy to say. But we’ll be doing a second run with a local L.A distribution. The spots we’re looking to hit are Secret head quarters, House of Secrets, Meltdown, and Golden apple.

What’s your creative process? How do you get inspired to write/create your projects?
I think of the stuff I want to see or stuff I haven’t seen that I think should be going on and kinda start from there. Alot of ” oh man it would be sweet if this would happen here or if that would happen there,” and then kinda work backwards from there, it’s kinda like “well what would happen if Wally went back in time? okay how would he go back in time, what would he need?”

Last meal on earth?
Italian dinner at La Mela in NoLita.

NYC! Top 5 songs in your ipod?
Conceptions (4hero)
Said and done (orgone)
Ruling ‘is it’s own reward’ (Supagroup)
Alright (Janet Jackson)
Bad Boys theme (Mark Mancina)

Thanks for your time, Turner! For more information about Wally Fresh, CLICK HERE.

What a Girl Wants

April 14, 2010 in Acting, Art, beauty, Dating and Relationships, LA

what-a-girl-wants-1

I’m a pretty good listener amongst my friends and I’ve usually been the shoulder to cry on when their boyfriends have done some not-so-cool things or taken away the pints of ice cream when they tell me that they’re planning to inhale the entire thing in minutes. ( I usually get thanked for this later) I’ve also been the one to scold them and tell them if they screwed up. Yes, I do realize that not all guys are bad and that sometimes, we females also make mistakes. Read the rest of this entry →

Learning to Appreciate Art…Sort of

November 3, 2009 in Art

I’ve had a vendetta against art from painting to sculptures since I was mediocre in Art class growing up. I could never figure out how to draw fruit bowls, sketches, or anything that looked remotely pretty. Well, my mother recently came back from Korea after studying calligraphy abroad. (She’s uber talented), and I took her to the LACMA. Free after 5 PM, baby!

This is me pretending to be scary at this Japanese exhibit. I have no idea why I keep making this scary face these days. As I made this face, my mother rolled her eyes at me and told me to keep it moving. haha…
kat-scary-at-lacma

A Picasso painting that I really liked…I’m sure this is worth a crapload of cash. Isn’t it cute, in a demented sort of way?
picasso

And this room filled with paintings that had random lines on each one. I tried to differentiate them, but was puzzled. I’m so not an art critic.
lacma1

The Soloist and the Power of Music

April 24, 2009 in Art, beauty

I’ve embedded this before, but “The Soloist,” deserves a second embed. Muhahaha. Amazing film about LA Times reporter named Steve Lopez who formed an unlikely friendship with a schizophrenic musical genius named Nathaniel Anthony Ayers. Here’s the real story behind the film.

I talk all the time about the power of music and how it has and still does play an important part in my life. It inspires and touches so many people and I couldn’t really do anything without it. In today’s rough times, we need to see stories of beauty and redemption such as this. This doesn’t mean that pain isn’t involved, but when you can see the positivity and beauty in harshness, then you’ve seen the light.