Tellus #10: All Guitars! (1985)
"Tellus 'All Guitars' issue came out in 1985 and was curated by Tom Paine (Live Skull) and a cover art was created by Jane Bauman. As the title suggests, this is a collection of guitar pieces by various New York artists (and some of non-natives, as well). Thanks to UbuWeb sound archive, the compilation is available for download here."
I Heart Noise, UbuWeb
Juke joint
Cross Roads Store Bar juke joint. Melrose, Louisiana 1944
Wikipedia - "Juke joint (or jook joint) is the vernacular term for an informal establishment featuring music, dancing, gambling, and drinking, primarily operated by African American people in the southeastern United States. The term 'juke' is believed to derive from the Gullah word joog, meaning rowdy or disorderly. A juke joint may also be called a 'barrelhouse'. It could also derive from the Irish language 'deoch dionta' (drinking roofed place)."
Wikipedia, YouTube - Juke Joint, It Ain't A Juke Joint Without The Blues - Carl Sims, Fats Waller- This Joint Is Jump'in, Boogie Woogie Dream -Albert Ammons & Pete Johnson
Nurse with Wound
Wikipedia - "Nurse with Wound (or shortened as NWW) is the main recording name for British musician Steven Stapleton. Nurse with Wound was originally a band, formed in 1978 by Stapleton, John Fothergill and Heman Pathak. The band ranges in many genres such as avant-garde, industrial, noise, dark ambient, and drone."
Wikipedia, Nurse with Wound, lsat.fm, YouTube - The Bottom Feeder, I've Plummed This Whole Neighborhood, David Tibet live at Donau Festival, Trabendo, Paris - Part 1, Trabendo, Paris - Part 2
Simone de Beauvoir
Wikipedia - "Simone Lucie Ernestine Marie Bertrand de Beauvoir, called Simone de Beauvoir (French pronunciation: [simɔn də boˈvwaʁ]; January 9, 1908 – April 14, 1986), was a French writer, existentialist philosopher, feminist, Marxist, Maoist[1] and social theorist. She wrote novels, monographs on philosophy, politics, and social issues, essays, biographies, and an autobiography in several volumes."
Wikipedia
Locus Solus
"The history and contents of the magazine Locus Solus provide insight into the type of progressive poetry circles and ideas Burroughs started tapping into with his small scale, textual cut-up works of the early 1960s. A testament to refined taste, Locus Solus was impeccably edited by John Ashbery (Issue 3/4), Kenneth Koch (Issue 2), and James Schuyler (Issue 1 and 5). Harry Matthews published the magazine in France."
RealityStudio, RS -Eureka: Locus Solus V
The Shirelles
Wikipedia - "The Shirelles were an American girl group in the early 1960s, and the first to have a number one single on the Billboard Hot 100."
Wikipedia, lsat.fm, YouTube - Will you still love me tomorrow?, Soldier Boy, Boys, Mamma Said, Dedicated to the one I love, Tonight's the night
Back to Rage Anew, Fires Smoldering Still
"'For your dubious pleasure!' John Lydon proclaimed as Public Image Ltd. started its set on Tuesday night at Terminal 5. That was Mr. Lydon’s famous cynicism. His corrosive mockery made him the voice of anarchy and nihilism for the brief, indelible punk flare-up of the Sex Pistols and then, from 1978 to 1992, a provocateur and post-punk pioneer as the leader of Public Image Ltd., abbreviated to PiL for the band’s logo."
NYT, npr - Public Image Ltd. Returns For A Thrilling Live Concert
Avantacular Press
"collaged from national geographics & a medical dictionary, CHEMICAL is designed to re-wire your retinas to your taste buds."
Avantacular Press
Jordan Wolfson
"Mixing and combining opposites, playing with analogies and ambiguity Jordan Wolfson creates a distorted mix of reality, imagination and cultural critique. He investigates the relationships of technology and media merged with his own personal experience, poetically balanced somewhere between pop and conceptual art."
UbuWeb
John Grade
Collector, 2007. Documentation shot of wooden sculptures.
"John Grade. Born: Minneapolis, 1970. Resides: Seattle. Education: Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY. (B.F.A., 1992)"
John Grade, YouTube
Flower power
Wikipedia - "Flower power was a slogan used by the American counterculture movement during the late 1960s and early 1970s as a symbol of passive resistance and non-violence ideology. It is rooted in the opposition movement to the Vietnam War."
Wikipedia, W - Hippie
Orpheus Charms the Underworld
"The music is divine and the ballet, divided into four parts, 'In Mourning', 'Violence', 'Peace', and 'Death' is a masterpiece. Bausch has invented dual roles, representing Orpheus, Eurydice and Love not only by the dancers, but also by singers on stage who form an integral part of the action. Orpheus, the myth goes, equals the gods with his song and music, so when Eurydice, his lovely young wife, dies from a snake-bite shortly after their wedding, the grief-stricken musician goes down into the Underworld to bring her back to earth."
culture kiosque, YouTube - Pina Bausch: Orphée et Eurydice - Paris Opera Ballet
Holy minimalism
Alio Die :: Under An Holy Ritual
Wikipedia - "Holy minimalism, mystic minimalism, spiritual minimalism, or sacred minimalism are terms used to refer to a number of late-twentieth-century composers of Western classical music, whose works are distinguished by a minimalist compositional aesthetic and a distinctly religious or mystical subject focus."
Wikipedia, Be Still, And Know That I Am God: Concert Halls Rediscover the Sacred, YouTube - Symphony of Sorrowful Songs - Henryk Górecki - 1st movement, Arvo Pärt - Cantus in Memory of Benjamin Britten
Andrea Zittel
Season 1
Wikipedia - "Andrea Zittel (born 1965) is an American sculptor and installation artist. In the early 1990s, Andrea Zittel began making art in response to her own surroundings and daily routines, creating functional objects that fulfilled the artist’s needs relating to shelter, food, furniture, and clothing."
Wikipedia, art 21
Tammy Wynette
Wikipedia - "Virginia Wynette Pugh, known professionally as Tammy Wynette (May 5, 1942 – April 6, 1998), was an American country music singer-songwriter and one of country music's best-known artists and biggest-selling female vocalists."
Wikipedia, YouTube - Stand By Your Man, D-I-V-O-R-C-E, I don't wanna play house, Your good girl's gonna go bad, KFT
Mercedes Matter
Wikipedia - "Mercedes Matter née Carles (1913 – 2001) was an American painter and draughtswoman. Her father was the American modernist painter Arthur Beecher Carles who had studied with Henri Matisse. Her mother, Mercedes de Cordoba, was a model for Edward Steichen. Ms. Matter grew up in Philadelphia, New York and Europe."
Wikipedia, Mercedes Matter, M____B__/ ___F _ __A
Auden—September 1, 1939
"This poem achieved great resonance after the events of September 11, 2001—it was widely reproduced, recited on NPR, and interpreted with a link to the tragic events of that day. Indeed, it starts in Manhattan, 'in one of the dives on Fifty-second Street,' which Auden later clarified: the Dizzy Club, 62 West 52nd Street (the premises are now occupied by a Beefsteak Charlie’s, I checked). But it captures Auden’s reaction to another tragedy, namely the outbreak of World War II. The poem expresses anger and sadness towards those events, and it questions the historical and mass psychological process that led to the war."
Harpers
Celluloid Records
Choco The New Harlem Sound
Wikipedia - "Celluloid Records, a French/American record label, founded by Jean Karakos[1] operated from 1976 to 1989 in New York, and produced a series of eclectic and ground-breaking releases, particularly in the early to late 1980's, largely under the auspices of de facto in-house producer Bill Laswell."
Wikipedia
Epilogue: The Last Range (1997–1999)
"On May 28, 1997, surgeons at Colorado University Hospital in Denver determined that poet Ed Dorn (photo, left) was suffering from a nonresectable (inoperable) adenosarcoma of the pancreas, stage II/III (locally advanced). Dorn had once written that he preferred the warrior figure Hector to the victim figure Christ: 'Hector is not resurrectable. He lives in the manor of the mind and stands for unalienated beauty.'”
Jacket 16 — March 2002
Edwin Starr
Wikipedia - "Edwin Starr (January 21, 1942 – April 2, 2003) was an American soul music singer. Starr is most famous for his Norman Whitfield produced singles of the 1970s, most notably the number one hit 'War'."
Wikipedia, W - "War", lsat.fm, YouTube - War, WAR (live in TV Show), 25 Miles, You`ve Got My Soul On Fire, Happy Radio
The Atlas of True Names
"The Atlas of True Names reveals the etymological roots, or original meanings,
of the familiar terms on today's maps of the World, Europe, the British Isles and the United States."
The Atlas of True Names
The Heptones
Wikipedia - "The Heptones are a Jamaican rocksteady and reggae vocal trio most active in the 1960s and early 1970s."
Wikipedia, lsat.fm, YouTube - Make Up Your Mind, Cool rasta, Equal Rights, Ting A Ling
The Abandoned Palace On Beekman Street
"5 Beekman Street has a secret. You’ve probably passed it a million times in your travels through downtown Manhattan. Anyone who has ever visited J&R Row or hit the Starbucks on the opposite corner for a post-Brooklyn-Bridge-walk bathroom break has probably noticed its twin towers, and perhaps wondered how much its wealthy tenants must pay to live behind its beautiful brick and terra-cotta facade."
Scouting New York
Gwangju Biennale 2010
"Titled 10,000 Lives, the Biennale will develop as a sprawling investigation of the relationships that bind people to images and images to people. With works by more than 100 artists, realized between 1901 and 2010, as well as several new commissions, the exhibition will be configured as a temporary museum in which both artworks and cultural artifacts are brought together to compose a idiosyncratic catalogue of figures and icons, faces and masks, idols and dolls."
Gwangju Biennale 2010, 10000 LIVES
Crossing the Channel: Friendships and Connections in London and Paris 1946-1965
Francis Bacon
"Gagosian Gallery is pleased to present the exhibition 'Crossing the Channel: Friendships and Connections in London and Paris 1946-1965,' which examines the vibrant exchange of ideas and influences between Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud and Alberto Giacometti in Paris and London during the postwar years."
Gagosian Gallery, Ars Life, DAILY MAGAZINE, Google
The Shangri-Las
Wikipedia - "The Shangri-Las were an American pop girl group of the 1960s. Between 1964 and 1966 they charted with often heartbreaking teen melodramas, and remain known for 'Leader of the Pack' and 'Remember (Walkin' in the Sand)'."
Wikipedia, lsat.fm, Dailymotion - Leader of the Pack, YouTube - Remember Walkin' in the sand, YouTube - Give Him A Great Big Kiss
Tom Cora
Wikipedia - "Thomas Henry Corra (September 14, 1953 – April 9, 1998), better known as Tom Cora, was a United States cellist and composer, best known for his improvisational performances in the field of experimental jazz and rock. He recorded with John Zorn, Butch Morris and The Ex, and was a member of Curlew, Third Person and Skeleton Crew."
Wikipedia, MySpace, YouTube - The Passing, Duniis - Paris, State of schock
Wikipedia, MySpace, YouTube - The Passing, Duniis - Paris, State of schock
Baseball card
Wikipedia - "A baseball card is a type of trading card relating to baseball, usually printed on some type of paper stock or card stock. A card will usually feature one or more baseball players or other baseball-related sports figures."
Wikipedia
Strummerville
"Strummerville is a registered charity that aims to create new opportunities for aspiring musicians. Set up by the friends and family of Joe Strummer in the year after his death, the charity seeks to reflect Joe's unique contribution to the music world by offering support, resources and performance opportunities to artists who would not normally have access to them."
Strummerville, Wikipedia
Tellus #12 - Dance (1986)
"Curated by Gretchen Langheld and Bruce Tovsky, ŒDance¹ is a gathering of 1) works comissionned by choreographers, 2) instrumental songs based on dance rhythms or even 3) plain, unadulterated dance music. This Tellus issue include the most straightforward music to be found in the entire series."
UbuWeb
Yugen
"Several years ago, I wrote on the potential joys of collecting Charles Olson. Olson loomed as a literal giant over the small press and little magazine scene from 1950 until his death in 1970. As a result, his work appeared in some of the most interesting chapbooks and magazines of the period. His books are beautiful and expansive (I am thinking of the Jargon Press Maximus Poems) as objects above and beyond the epic scope of their contents."
RealityStudio
Phyllis Galembo
"Went to an opening of a photo exposition by my friend Phyllis Galembo last night. I hadn’t seen her new work for a few years, so this was a chance to catch up. Wow. I was knocked out. The show was in a relatively out of the way gallery (Sepia International), that is not on street level, so there won’t be the walk-in traffic of the Chelsea galleries. Worth checking out, as I think it puts a lot of contemporary 'fictional' photo work to shame. Hell, it puts a lot of stuff in other mediums outside photography to shame too."
David Byrne's Journal, Phyllis Galembo, Steven Kasher Gallery
Political Cinema
Wikipedia - "Political Cinema in the narrow sense of the term is a cinema which portrays current or historical events or social conditions in a partisan way in order to inform or to agitate the spectator. Political cinema exists in different forms such as documentaries, feature films, or even animated and experimental films."
Wikipedia, italica, Celluloid Activism - A short history of political cinema by Julian Upton
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