James Carr The Complete Goldwax Singles (2001)


"All 28 songs from Carr's 1964-1970 Goldwax singles are here, which is enough to make it a fair bid for a good best-of compilation, although it doesn't have everything he recorded. About half of the songs on this British import are not on the most well-known American CD compilation of Carr's work, The Essential James Carr, and those tracks are consistent with the level of his other Goldwax recordings, although they don't include anything on the level of 'The Dark End of the Street' or 'Pouring Water on a Drowning Man.' This disc is particularly valuable for filling in some of his earliest 1964-1966 sides, which have a very slightly poppier and more up-tempo bent than his most esteemed songs. ..."
allmusic
amazon
NPR - Goldwax Records: A History Of '60s Memphis Soul
YouTube: The Dark End Of The Street, A Man Needs A Woman, You've Got My Mind Messed Up, Pouring Water On A Drowning Man, Everybody needs somebody, These Ain't Raindrops, You got my mind Messed Up, Stronger Than Love, Lovable Girl, She's Better Than You, That's What I Want To Know

2010 November: James Carr

Nostromo - Joseph Conrad (1904)


Wikipedia - "Nostromo (full title Nostromo, A Tale of the Seaboard) is a 1904 novel by Polish novelist Joseph Conrad, set in the fictitious South American republic of 'Costaguana'. It was originally published serially in two volumes of T.P.'s Weekly. ... Conrad set his novel in the mining town of Sulaco, an imaginary port in the occidental region of the imaginary country of Costaguana. The book has more fully developed characters than any other of his novels, but two characters dominate the narrative: Señor Gould and the eponymous anti-hero, the 'incorruptible' Nostromo.”
Wikipedia
Nostromo, by Joseph Conrad - Project Gutenberg
W - Nostromo (TV serial)
PBS: Masterpiece Theatre
YouTube: NOSTROMO by Joseph Conrad. Directed by Alastair Reid, Roberto Escobar & Colin Firth in a scene from Nostromo, Roberto Escobar and Claudio Amendola scene from Nostromo

2011 November: Heart of Darkness, 2013 August: Victory (1915).

ABCNT


"ABCNT has always been a favorite artist of ours, as his work demonstrates the power and potential of art to invade the corporate-dominated public spaces of the city. His multidisciplinary work includes clothing, music, and a wide variety of visual art which all speak to the idea that the streets belong to the people. ABCNT recently sat down with Erwin Recinos to discuss art, power, politics, Los Angeles, and tacos… "
L.A. TACO Interview with ABCNT
ABCNT (Video)
ABCNT - Wordpress
ABCNT Street Art SF
vimeo: ABCNT

John Lennon - Mind Games (1973)


"After the hostile reaction to the politically charged Sometime in New York City, John Lennon moved away from explicit protest songs and returned to introspective songwriting with Mind Games. Lennon didn't leave politics behind -- he just tempered his opinions with humor on songs like 'Bring on the Lucie (Freda Peeple),' which happened to undercut the intention of the song. ... While the best numbers are among Lennon's finest, there's only a handful of them, and the remainder of the record is simply pleasant. But compared to Sometime in New York City, as well as the subsequent Walls and Bridges, Mind Games sounded like a return to form."
allmusic
W - Mind Games
The Beatles Bible
40 Years Ago: John Lennon Releases ‘Mind Games’
YouTube: "Mind Games" (Live)
YouTube: Mind Games (Full Album)

The songs of summer


"Memorial Day Weekend fills us with restless anticipation of how we will spend the long, hot days ahead, but it also brings fond memories of summers past, each one marked by a ubiquitous song that still has the power to bring us back to that time. Travel through the last 100 years to discover which summer songs were either released or peaked in popularity during the summer of their respective years. Some are about the summer or the stuff of summer: parties, picnics, fleeting love, nostalgia or fun. Some have that summer feeling in sound alone. Many are relevant to their times. Some have become standards. Some annoy, like a sticky day with too many mosquitoes. Others slow down time, like an unexpected breeze one hopes will never stop. Songs were chosen based on a loose criteria of release date, when they peaked in popularity, and because they help illustrate how we enjoyed music that summer."
Boston Globe (Video)
1965: "Satisfaction" - Rolling Stones
1966: "Summer In The City" - The Lovin' Spoonful
1967: "Respect" - Aretha Franklin
1968: "Dance To The Music" - Sly & The Family Stone
1969: "Come Together" - The Beatles - on - 1969: "Honky Tonk Women" - The Rolling Stones
1991: "Smells Like Teen Spirit" - Nirvana

“Have I Ever Left It?” by Mark O'Connell


"On a bright and blustery morning in February, I stepped out my front door and walked until I reached the north bank of the River Liffey, where I crossed a bridge and stopped in front of a dark gaunt house on Usher’s Island. The house stood a little back from the street, as though in quiet reproach of its surroundings, the only Georgian redbrick in a row of humbler buildings facing the river; it was flanked squatly on one side by a small car upholstery concern, and, on the other, by a large modern block of apartments. The windows of this dark gaunt house were opaque with brownish grime from the heavy traffic along the south quays, but in one of the dim street-level rooms I could make out the looming profile of a massive papier-mâché head, perhaps 3 feet high. The sheer slope of the nose, terminating in a trim gray mustache; the almost comic nobility of the chin; the gigantic fedora overmastering a high forehead: It was instantly apparent whom this cartoon head was intended to represent."
Slate
Joyce Centre Dublin

2011 March: Passages from James Joyce's "Finnegans Wake" (1965-67), 2010 March: Ulysses Seen, 2013 February: ULYSSES “SEEN” is moving to Dublin!, 2013: Dubliners, 2014 May: The Dead (1987 film).

Todd Webb


Wikipedia - "Todd Webb (1905–2000) was an American photographer notable for documenting everyday life and architecture in cities such as New York, Paris as well as from the American west. His photography has been compared with Harry Callahan, Berenice Abbott, Walker Evans, and the French photographer Eugène Atget. He traveled extensively during his long life and had important friendships with artists such as Georgia O'Keeffe, Ansel Adams and Harry Callahan. He photographed famous people including Dorothea Lange. His life was like his photos in the sense of being seemingly simple, straightforward, but revealing complexity and depth upon a closer examination. Capturing history, his pictures often transcend the boundary between photography and artistic expression."
Wikipedia
Todd Webb Photographs
ICP - Picture Windows: Todd Webb

Gauguin: Metamorphoses


Siesta, 1893
"This exhibition focuses on Paul Gauguin’s rare and extraordinary prints and transfer drawings, and their relationship to his better-known paintings and his sculptures in wood and ceramic. Comprising approximately 150 works, including some 120 works on paper and a critical selection of some 30 related paintings and sculptures, it is the first exhibition to take an in-depth look at this overall body of work. Created in several discrete bursts of activity from 1889 until his death in 1903, these remarkable works on paper reflect Gauguin’s experiments with a range of mediums, from radically 'primitive' woodcuts that extend from the sculptural gouging of his carved wood reliefs, to jewel-like watercolor monotypes and large, mysterious transfer drawings."
MoMA
MoMA: Gauguin: Metamorphoses
NYT: The Man, Not the Myth
Brooklyn Rail: Myths of Eden and Gauguin’s Metamorphoses

2011 December: Gauguin Tahiti, 2012 May: Gauguin, Cézanne, Matisse: Visions of Arcadia.

Curtis Mayfield - Super Fly (1972)


"The choice of Curtis Mayfield to score the blaxploitation film Super Fly was an inspired one. No other artist in popular music knew so well, and expressed through his music so naturally, the shades of gray inherent in contemporary inner-city life. His debut solo album, 1970's Curtis, had shown in vivid colors that the '60s optimist (author of the civil-rights anthems 'Keep On Pushing' and 'People Get Ready') had added a layer of subtlety to his material; appearing on the same LP as the positive and issue-oriented 'Move On Up' was an apocalyptic piece of brimstone funk titled '(Don't Worry) If There's a Hell Below, We're All Going to Go.' For Super Fly, Mayfield wisely avoids celebrating the wheeling-and-dealing themes present in the movie, or exploiting them, instead using each song to focus on a different aspect of what he saw as a plague on America's streets. "
allmusic
W - Super Fly (soundtrack)
YouTube: Super Fly Live, We Got To Have Peace, Keep On Keeping On
YouTube: Superfly Full LP

2013 June: Roots (1971)

Aspects by Fernando Pessoa


"The Complete Work is essentially dramatic, though it takes different forms — prose passages in this first volume, poems and philosophies in other volumes. It's the product of the temperament I've been blessed or cursed with — I'm not sure which. All I know is that the author of these lines (I'm not sure if also of these books) has never had just one personality, and has never thought or felt dramatically — that is, through invented persons, or personalities, who are more capable than he of feeling what's to be felt. There are authors who write plays and novels, and they often endow the characters of their plays and novels with feelings and ideas that they insist are not their own. Here the substance is the same, though the form is different."
This Recording

2008 March: Fernando Pessoa, 2011 October: Autopsicografia, 2012 October: The Book of Disquiet, Fernando Pessoa and Co.: Selected Poems.

Camille Henrot: Grosse fatigue


"Best-known for her videos and animated films combining drawn art, music and occasionally scratched or reworked cinematic images, Camille Henrot’s work blurs the traditionally hierarchical categories of art history. Her recent work, adapted into the diverse media of sculpture, drawing, photography and, as always, film, considers the fascination with the 'other' and 'elsewhere' in terms of both geography and sexuality. This fascination is reflected in popular modern myths that have inspired her, such as King Kong and Frankenstein. The artist's impure, hybrid objects cast doubt upon the linear and partitioned transcription of Western history and highlight its borrowings and grey areas."
Camille Henrot
Selected works
Artforum
Camille Henrot: The Restless Earth
Film/Art | Camille Henrot: A Hunter-Gatherer During a Time of Collective “Grosse Fatigue”
vimeo: Camille Henrot "Grosse Fatigue"
YouTube: Camille Henrot, Grosse Fatigue, 2013 @ Venice Biennale, Grosse Fatigue Part 2

Afrobeat, Brazilian Style


"... In the midst of the global youth counter-cultural rebellion of the late 1960′s, Brazilian musicians looked to the U.S. and Europe for inspiration while living under a pro-West military dictatorship. They merged rock, jazz, and soul music with their own African-influenced popular musics to create a rebellious and internationally celebrated sound. However, what in hindsight may seem like an obvious connection at the time, engagement with contemporary African artists such as Fela Kuti was limited. ... Although, the song of Orquestra Afro-Brasileiro is missing the typical drum beat of Tony Allen, it has more African percussion than is common to Afro-Brazilian music styles such as afoxé, jongo, maracatú, samba, etc. Fast forward to the 21st century [and an African consciousness growing alongside the many contemporary social movements] and the afrobeat resurgence popping around the world has reached Brazil."
Africasa Is A Country (SoundGoods)
Globalize This!?: A Place for Brazilian Rap in “Afro-Beat”

Nolita


Wikipedia - "Nolita, sometimes written as NoLIta, and deriving from 'NOrth of Little ITAly' is a neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. Nolita is bounded on the north by Houston Street, on the east by the Bowery, on the south roughly by Broome Street, and on the west by Lafayette Street. It lies east of SoHo, south of NoHo, west of the Lower East Side, and north of Little Italy and Chinatown. The neighborhood was long regarded as part of Little Italy, but has lost much of its recognizable Italian character in recent decades because of the migration of Italian-Americans out of Manhattan. Many elderly descendants of Italian immigrants continue to live in the neighborhood. Moreover, the Feast of San Gennaro, dedicated to Saint Januarius ('pope of Naples'), is held in the neighborhood every year following Labor Day, on Mulberry Street between Houston and Grand Streets."
Wikipedia
airbnb: Nolita
YouTube: Tour of Little Italy, NYC, Italian Corners - Little Italy - Manhattan - From Mulberry Street to Grand Street, New York | Knocking Around Nolita, World cup in Little Italy (Nolita)

2012 September: Little Italy

David Behrman - On the Other Ocean/Figure in a Clearing (1977)


"A welcome CD reissue of the original subtle, sustained, and serene vinyl recording. The beautiful and meditative 'On the Other Ocean,' a new music classic, is Behrman's first interactive piece in which the musicians played acoustic instruments that triggered the production of harmonies from computer-driven synthesizers, and the musicians were in turn influenced in their spontaneous improvising by what the computer did. This is the basic setup for interactive computer music. The computer in this case was a microcomputer called the KIM-1, a precursor to the Apple II, and one of the first personal computers available. Flutist Maggi Payne and bassoonist Arthur Stidfole improvised around six pitches chosen by Behrman, and when they played one of the six notes activating the pitch-sensing circuits, Behrman's homemade synthesizers would produce harmonic responses. ..."
allmusic
W - David Behrman
On the Other Ocean - Lovely Music
vimeo: On the Other Ocean/Figure in a Clearing 43:04

2010 October: Roulette TV: David Behrman, 2012 January: The Siren Orchestra.

Iphigenia in Tauris - Pina Bausch (1972)


"... 'Iphigenie,' the choreographer’s second work for her new Wuppertal company, formed just a year earlier, feels, rather touchingly, like the work of a younger [Pina] Bausch. It offers a more or less literal danced depiction of the opera’s libretto, using the 1871 German version based on Euripides’s 'Iphigenia in Tauris.' ... The siblings’ realization of one another’s identity, close to the end of the opera, and as Orestes lies, throat bared to Iphigenie’s dagger, is the dramatic high point of the tale, and Bausch’s piece ends soon after, omitting the more complex ending of the Euripides play. But even in this relatively straightforward, pure-dance account, Bausch’s instinct for the creation of drama through movement alone, and her talent for the conjuring of psychic landscapes and the frightening depthless descent into nightmare, is immediately apparent."
NYT: ‘Iphigenie’ True to Bausch’s Vision
Guardian: Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch - review
Telegraph: Iphigenie auf Tauris, Tanztheater Wuppertal, Sadler's Wells, review
YouTube: Orfeo y Eurídice visto por Pina Bausch, Iphigenia in Tauris - Pina Bausch, Iphigenia in Tauris

2008 May: Pina Bausch, 2009 June: Pina Bausch 1940-2009, 2012 August: Pina Bausch Costumes.

Northern Soul: Keeping The Faith - The Culture Show


"In my opinion, this is the best documentary about the Northern Soul scene to date, it's been done with love and affection. Produced and Directed by Maurice O'Brien and Edited by David Arthur. Most documentaries covering the music that I love make me cringe, this one gives me goosebumps."
YouTube: Northern Soul: Keeping The Faith

2012 October: Northern Soul, 2012 December: The obsession that is Northern Soul, 2013 November: Poor-Man's Speed: Coming of Age in Wigan's Anarchic Northern Soul Scene.

Jack Kerouac’s Poems Read by Patti Smith, John Cale & Other Cultural Icons (with Music by Joe Strummer)


"Jack Kerouac was cool before it was cool. Kerouac’s breakout novel, On the Road, influenced generations of artists, writers and musicians. His prose was vital and messy and new. He wrote frankly about sex, drugs and spiritual yearning. He was young and movie star good looking. And he was a friend with just about every other literary rock star of the era – William S. Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder and Neal Cassady — many of whom ended up characters in his books. ..."
Open Culture (Video)

Sally Cruikshank


Wikipedia - "'Quasi at the Quackadero' is a 1975 animated short by Sally Cruikshank. This cartoon follows two ducks and a pet robot at an amusement park in the future where time travel is exploited. In 2009, it was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress. Animator Sally Cruikshank, while a graduate student at the San Francisco Art Institute, in San Francisco, California, created the animated short 'Chow Fun' (1972), editing it at the city's Snazelle Films, a commercial-film company that also rented space and film equipment. This led to Cruikshank being hired there, and becoming head of animation by the end of summer 1972."
Wikipedia
W - Sally Cruikshank
Boiling Sand
YouTube: Quasi at the Quackadero, Make Me Psychic, Face Like a Frog, Fun on mars, Island of Emotion, Above It All, Sally Cruikshank interview 1980

Astor Piazzolla - Live at The Montreal Jazz Festival (1986)


"In a nod to an Argentine musician who revolutionized the genre-not without sometimes fierce resistance-it's often said that there are two types of tango: before and after Piazzolla. The Argentine's music found inspiration in the traditional tango of his homeland, but infused it with highly contemporary harmonies, a sustained rhythm, and inventive writing that is seductive, warm and superbly eloquent. His bandoneón solos are masterpieces that draw from jazz as well as a mysterious and abidingly Latin musical vocabulary."
Festival International de Jazz de Montréal
amazon: Live at the Montreal Jazz Festival (2008)
YouTube: Live at The Montreal Jazz Festival (COMPLETO) 59:49

2008 March: Astor Piazzolla, 2010 September: Astor Piazzolla Remixed, 2011 February: Adios Nonino, 2011 April: Milonga del angel, 2011 August: 1985. Utrecht, Netherlands.

Camille Lepage


Wikipedia - "Camille Lepage (January 28, 1988 – May 9, 2014) was a French photojournalist who was killed during the conflict in the Central African Republic in 2014. Her death was described as a 'murder' by the French presidency and it marked the first death of a Western journalist in the conflict. ... Lepage spoke passionately about the seriousness of the news stories surrounding the Central African Republic conflict that are not covered by the mainstream media: 'I can’t accept that people’s tragedies are silenced simply because no one can make money out of them,' she said. 'I decided to do it myself, and bring some light to them no matter what.' A week before her death, Lepage's last entries on Instagram and Twitter said that she was traveling by motorbike for hours with an anti-balaka militia down routes chosen to avoid checkpoints of African peacekeepers to Amada Gaza about 120 km away from Berbérati, where 150 people had been killed by Séléka rebels since March. On May 13, 2014, Lepage's body was found by French troops patrolling in the Bouar region in the west of the country in a vehicle driven by anti-balaka rebels."
Wikipedia
Camille Lepage
New Yorker - Slide Show: Remembering Camille Lepage (1988-2014)
TIME: Photographer Camille Lepage Killed in Central African Republic
The Courageous Career of Slain French Photojournalist Camille Lepage

How New York City invented the penthouse


1930s
"Penthouse: the word conjures up luxury and exclusivity. Thing is, it’s a clever 1920s rebranding of the top of a building, where no one with any choice used to want to live. For most of the city’s history, the single-structure mansion was the preferred domicile for the rich. At the turn of the 20th century, monied New Yorkers were increasingly occupying 'French Flat' cooperative apartments. But even then, the undesirable rooftop apartment was given over to servants. Until the city and its tastes changed in the Jazz Age. ..."
Ephemeral New York

“Walker Evans and Robert Frank – An Essay on Influence by Tod Papageorge” (1981)


Parade, Hoboken, New Jersey, 1955
"The purpose of this monograph is to describe the influence of Walker Evans’ American Photographs (1938) on The Americans (1959) of Robert Frank. To do this, the photographs in the two books have been edited and yoked together in a series of comparisons. What follows, then, is an exercise in speculation, one born of love and respect. It is offered as a working idea rather than an assured truth, a reasoned pretext for returning to the two great books it examines."
ASX
amazon: Walker Evans and Robert Frank, an essay on influence

GP (1973)


"Given Gram Parsons' habit of taking control of the bands he played with (and his disinclination towards staying with them for very long), it was inevitable that he would eventually strike out on his own, and his first solo album, 1973's G.P., is probably the best realized expression of his musical personality. ... Parsons also discovered that rare artist with whom he can be said to have genuinely collaborated (rather than played beside), Emmylou Harris; Gram and Harris' spot-on harmonies and exchanged verses on 'We'll Sweep out the Ashes in the Morning' and 'That's All It Took' are achingly beautiful and instantly established her as one country music's most gifted vocalists. ..."
allmusic
W - GP (1973)
Perfect Sound Forever
GRAM PARSONS: GP. Bud Scoppa - Rolling Stone, 1 March 1973
YouTube: Still Feeling Blue, We'll Sweep Out the Ashes in the Morning, A Song For You, Streets of Baltimore, She, That's All It Took, The New Soft Shoe, Kiss the Children, Cry One More Time, How Much I've Lied, Big Mouth Blues - Live texas

2008 March: Gram Parsons, 2011 March: Gram Parsons & Emmylou Harris. Liberty Hall, Texas, 1973, 2012 May: Sweetheart of the Rodeo, 2013 January: Gram Parsons: Fallen Angel, 2013 September: Flying Burrito Brothers - Live At The Avalon Ballroom 1969, 2014 February: The Gilded Palace of Sin - The Flying Burrito Brothers (1969), 2014 March: Burrito Deluxe - The Flying Burrito Brothers (1970).

John Ashbery, The Art of Poetry No. 33


Pyrography: John Ashbery working, 1984. Larry Rivers.
"The interview was conducted at John Ashbery's apartment in the section of Manhattan known as Chelsea. When I arrived, Ashbery was away, and the doorman asked me to wait outside. Soon the poet arrived and we went up by elevator to a spacious, well-lighted apartment in which a secretary was hard at work. We sat in easy chairs in the living room, Ashbery with his back to the large windows. The predominant decor was blue and white, and books lined the whole of one wall. We talked for more than three hours with only one short break for refreshment—soda, tea, water, nothing stronger."
The Paris Review

Jane and Louise Wilson - Stasi City {1997)


"Jane and Louise Wilson’s Stasi City is a psychological exploration of the mute, abandoned architectural spaces of the Stasi, the former headquarters of the East German secret police. For five minutes, a video camera slowly and deliberately pans through the building’s hallways and interrogation rooms, invoking the long history of abuses that took place there, as a human figure floats gently upwards unpinned from the laws of gravity. The four channel video installation is shown on opposite corners of the enclosed installation space, reinforcing a sense of confinement and surveillance."
Zero Gravity
spacearts
Film Space - Invisible Sculpture: Jane and Louise Wilson's Haptic Visuality
UbuWeb: Stasi City (1997)

2013 August: Jane and Louise Wilson

The Apartment (1960)


Wes Anderson’s 10 Favorite New York Movies
Wikipedia - "The Apartment is a 1960 American comedy-drama film produced and directed by Billy Wilder, which stars Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, and Fred MacMurray. ... Calvin Clifford (C. C.) 'Bud' Baxter (Jack Lemmon) is a lonely office drudge at a national insurance corporation in a high-rise building in New York City. In order to climb the corporate ladder, Baxter allows four company managers, who reinforce their position over him by regularly calling him 'Buddy Boy', to take turns borrowing his Upper West Side apartment for their various extramarital liaisons, which are so noisy that his neighbors assume that he is bringing home different women every night. The four managers (Ray Walston, David Lewis, Willard Waterman, and David White) write glowing reports about Baxter, who hopes for a promotion from the personnel director, Jeff Sheldrake (Fred MacMurray)."
Wikipedia
Roger Ebert
THE APARTMENT by Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond
YouTube: The Apartment - Trailer, Office Party Scene

Body Politic: Contemporary Art and Culture In Rio


Gondola lift, Complexo do Alemão, Rio de Janeiro, July 7, 2011.
"FOR THIS ISSUE’S Dispatch, Artforum goes south, to Rio de Janeiro—a city as defined by myths of sensualist extravagance as it is by horror stories of yesterday’s military dictatorship and today’s slum violence. Yet one does not have to subscribe to cliché to recognize that Rio is somehow singular; that, in the past half century alone, it has been a place of extraordinary innovation and devastation alike, from the decadent inventions of bossa nova and Tropicália to the human-rights abuses of the postwar period and the unsettling rise of the modern favela in the 1970s. Such paradoxical histories are still with us: This year, as Rio prepares to host the World Cup in June and gears up for the Summer Olympics in 2016, spending astronomical amounts on infrastructural changes and in many instances attempting to eradicate portions of the favelas, it also observes (without celebrating) the fiftieth anniversary of the 1964 coup that brought the military to power."
ARTFORUM
GUILHERME WISNIK
IRENE V. SMALL
DANIEL STEEGMANN MANGRANÉ

"And This Is Free" (1964)


"After languishing out of print for many years, Mike Shea's legendary film on Chicago's Maxwell Street Market, And This Is Free, has finally been reissued by Shanachie and I imagine news of this will stir up quite a bit of excitement in blues circles. Shanachie has done an exemplary job with the packaging; housed in a soft covered fold out set is a two disc set containing the 50 minute documentary And This Is Free, the 30 minute documentary Maxwell Street: A Living Memory, some fascinating archival footage, an interview with sound man Gordon Quinn, a separate CD of performances by artists associated with Maxwell Street plus an illustrated 36 page booklet."
And This Is Free: The Life And Times Of Chicago's Legendary Maxwell Street
CBG
allmusic: Various Artists - And This Is Maxwell Street
Gordon Quinn
amazon
vimeo: "And This Is Free" (1964) 47:50

2011 January: Maxwell Street

FIRST LOOK: Feature Film Sign Painters. Premieres Today.


"Since founding the Wooster Collective more than ten years ago, some of our favorite artists featured on the website have been trained in the art of sign painting.  Today, the highly anticipated feature film SIGN PAINTERS, directed by Faythe Levine & Sam Macon, is now available on iTunes and for download and streaming worldwide through the film's website signpaintersfilm.com The film explores and celebrates the 150 year-old American history of the artform through anecdotal accounts from artists across the country including Ira Coyne, Bob Dewhurst, Keith Knecht, Norma Jeane Maloney and Stephen Powers. We're thrilled to be involved with SIGN PAINTERS and are releasing it through BOND/360, the film distribution arm of Marc's firm, BOND Strategy and Influence.
Wooster Collective (Video)

Anthology Film Archives


Wikipedia - "Anthology Film Archives is an international center for the preservation, study, and exhibition of film and video, with a particular focus on independent, experimental, and avant-garde cinema. The film archive and theater is located at 32 Second Avenue on the corner of East Second Street in the East Village neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. It is one of the largest archives of avant-garde and experimental cinema in the world and is the only non-profit organization of its kind in New York City, independent through self-support. Anthology screens nearly 1,000 public programs annually; features weekly in-person appearances by artists with their work; and publishes historical and scholarly books and catalogs."
Wikipedia
Anthology Film Archives
New Yorker: The Singularities

The 9/11 Story Told at Bedrock, Powerful as a Punch to the Gut


Airplane fragments displayed at the Sept. 11 museum.
"After a decade marked by deep grief, partisan rancor, war, financial boondoggles and inundation from Hurricane Sandy, the National September 11 Memorial Museum at ground zero is finally opening ceremonially on Thursday, with President Obama present, and officially to the public next Wednesday. It delivers a gut-punch experience — though if ever a new museum had looked, right along, like a disaster in the making, this one did, beginning with its trifurcated identity."
NY Times (Video)
NY Times: 9/11 Memorial Museum Faces the Latest Hurdle: Its Opening (Video)
NY Times: A New Story Told at Ground Zero - The National September 11 Memorial Museum (Video)

2011 September: The Encyclopedia of 9/11, 2011 September: WNYC's Guide to 9/11 Arts Events, 2011 September: September 11, 2001.

Gig Alert: Marc Ribot Trio


"Guitarist Marc Ribot plays art-rock with his band Ceramic Dog…he plays soul with The Young Philadelphians…and writes scores for silent films like Charlie Chaplin’s The Kid. Oh, and when he has free time, he plays with a couple of the finest jazz musicians in the city, too. Here’s Albert Ayler's 'The Wizard' from the new recording of the Marc Ribot Trio Live at The Village Vanguard. They play at Le Poisson Rouge tonight."
WNYC (Video)

2011 February: Selling Water By the Side of the River - Evan Lurie, 2012 September: Marc Ribot, 2013 February: Silent Movies, 2013 November: The Nearness Of You, 2014 January: Full Concert Jazz in Marciac (2010).

Portfolio by Anna Plesset


"It starts with a found film. According to Plesset, sometime around 1945 her grandfather, a division psychiatrist in the US Army during WWII, exchanged a pistol for a 16mm camera. The footage from this camera is a record of his passage through Europe during the last years of the war, lingering almost equally on landmarks, monuments, and landscapes as on bombed-out roads and abandoned cities. ... The project is fragmented in its constant shifting between these two axes, but it’s the details—locations on a map, stills from the grandfather’s film, a stub from a museum ticket, a postcard—that make it resonate as a document that is intimate in scale and ambitious in the way it reflects history, technology, time, and how these alter our experience."
BOMB (Video)

INTERVIEW: “An Interview with Edward Hopper, June 17, 1959″


Sunday, 1926
"The following oral history transcript is the result of a tape-recorded interview with Edward Hopper on June 17, 1959. The interview was conducted by John Morse for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution."
ASX

2008 July: Edward Hopper, 2010 October: Finding Nighthawks, 2010 December: Modern Life: Edward Hopper and His Time, 2012 Wednesday: Through Edward Hopper's eyes: in search of an artist's seaside inspiration, 2013 July: Hopper Drawing.

Spirit


Wikipedia - "Spirit was an American jazz/hard rock/progressive rock/psychedelic band founded in 1967, based in Los Angeles, California. Their most commercially successful single in the US was 'I Got A Line On You', but they were at least as well known for their albums including The Family That Plays Together, Clear, and Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus. ... [Ed] Cassidy was instantly recognizable by his shaven head (hence his nickname 'Mr. Skin') and his fondness for wearing black. He was around twenty years older than the rest of the group (born in 1923). His earlier career was primarily in jazz and included stints with Cannonball Adderley, Gerry Mulligan, Roland Kirk, Thelonious Monk and Lee Konitz. He was a founding member of Rising Sons with Taj Mahal and Ry Cooder."
Wikipedia
Progarchives
YouTube: I got a line on you, Spirit (1968) 1:03:18, The Family That Plays Together (1968) 38:48, Twelve Dreams Of Dr. Sardonicus (1970) 54:09

Rev. Robert Wilkins


Wikipedia - "Robert Timothy Wilkins (January 16, 1896 – May 26, 1987) was an American country blues guitarist and vocalist, of African American and Cherokee descent. His distinction was his versatility; he could play ragtime, blues, minstrel songs, and gospel with equal facility. Wilkins was born in Hernando, Mississippi, 21 miles from Memphis. He worked in Memphis during the 1920s at the same time as Furry Lewis, Memphis Minnie (whom he claimed to have tutored), and Son House. He also organized a jug band to capitalize on the 'jug band craze' then in vogue. Though never attaining success comparable to the Memphis Jug Band, Wilkins reinforced his local popularity with a 1927 appearance on a Memphis radio station."
Wikipedia
allmusic
NPS: Rev. Robert Timothy Wilkins - Memphis School
Illustrated Robert Wilkins discography
YouTube: Prodigal Son, Streamline 'Frisco Limited, Holy Ghost Train, Don't Let Nobody Turn You 'Round, New Stock Yard Blues, Alabama Blues, Dirty Deal Blues
YouTube: The Legendary Piedmont Recordings (Full Album) 36:40

Robert Dodge: Vietnam 40 Years Later


"As Americans and Vietnamese observe the 40th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, award-winning journalist and photographer Robert Dodge asks us to give up our horrific war-era memories of this Southeast Asian country in favor of a more hopeful and modern vision. In an eight-year project that promotes reconciliation and healing, Dodge offers more than 100 beautiful and poignant images of Vietnam and its people that depict a country with one foot in ancient Asia and another tentatively leaping towards joining the global economy."
Robert Dodge: Vietnam 40 Years Later (Video)
Robert Dodge
Foreword: Vietnam 40 Years Later

Les Aambassadeurs Internationaux feat Salif Keita-Mandjou 1978


"Classic ode to president Sékou Touré (Guinea) by Les Ambassadeurs featuring singer Salif Keita and guitarist Manfila Kanté."
W - Salif Keita
YouTube: Les Aambassadeurs Internationaux feat Salif Keita-Mandjou 1978

Afro-Cuban jazz


Machito/Chico O'Farrill/Dizzy Gillespie - Afro-Cuban Jazz
Wikipedia - "Afro-Cuban jazz is the earliest form of Latin jazz. It mixes Afro-Cuban clave-based rhythms with jazz harmonies and techniques of improvisation. Afro-Cuban jazz first emerged in the early 1940s with the Cuban musicians Mario Bauza and Frank Grillo 'Machito' in the band Machito and his Afro-Cubans, based in New York City. In 1947 the collaborations of bebop innovator Dizzy Gillespie with Cuban percussionist Chano Pozo brought Afro-Cuban rhythms and instruments, most notably the tumbadora and the bongo, into the East Coast jazz scene. Early combinations of jazz with Cuban music, such as Dizzy's and Pozo's "Manteca" and Charlie Parker's and Machito's 'Mangó Mangüé', were commonly referred to as 'Cubop', short for Cuban bebop."
Wikipedia
allmusic: Machito - Afro-Cuban Jazz Suite 1950
Afro-Cuban Jazz
Discogs
YouTube: Machito & Charlie Parker - The Afro-Cuban Jazz Suite, Mario Bauza & His Afro Cuban Jazz Orchestra - El Manicero, Chico O'Farrill & Afro Cuban Jazz Big Band - Trumopet Fantasy, Machito & His Afro-Cuban Orchestra - Gone City

2011 June: Mario Bauzá, 2011: Machito.

The Last Sentimentalist: A Q. & A. with Duane Michals


"The photographer Duane Michals is perhaps best known for his 'fictionettes': dream-like stagings in which Marcel Duchamp, René Magritte, and Andy Warhol have all appeared. These enchanting photo sequences and montages, which are often accompanied by Michals’s handwritten prose, make innovative use of the medium’s ability to suggest what cannot be seen. Michals was born in 1932, in Pittsburgh. He moved to New York in the mid-nineteen-fifties, and he had his first exhibition in 1963, at the Underground Gallery, in Greenwich Village. A prolific photographer, Michals has published his work in dozens of books, including 'Questions Without Answers,”' from 2001. 'Empty New York,' a series of photographs that he produced at the start of his career, is currently on view at the D.C. Moore Gallery, in Manhattan."
New Yorker
DC Moore Gallery - Duane Michals: Empty New York

2011 October: Duane Michals

Chantal Akerman


Wikipedia - "Chantal Anne Akerman (... born 6 June 1950) is a Belgian film director, artist, and professor of film at the City College of New York. Akerman's best-known film, Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975), broke new ground and still exemplifies a dedication to the ellipses of conventional narrative cinema. Akerman was born to an observant Jewish family in Brussels, Belgium. Her grandparents and her mother were sent to Auschwitz; only her mother came back. This is a very important factor in her personal experience. Her mother's anxiety is a recurrent theme in her filmography."
Wikipedia
European Graduate School
vimeo: Interview with Chantal Akerman
Icarus Films
Voice: Chantal Akerman's New York
YouTube: Hotel Monterey (1972), Hotel Monterey - 1, News From Home (1972), La chambre (1972)
YouTube: Interview - Too Far, Too Close<//a>

Joseph Cornell: Navigating The Imagination


"American artist Joseph Cornell (1903–1972) has been celebrated internationally for his boxes, collages, and films since the 1930s. His mining of far-flung ideas and traditions and elegant integration of woodworking, painting, papering, and drawing define the innovation and visual poetry associated with his work. Above all, he forever altered the concept of the box—from a time-honored functional container into a new art form, the box construction."
PEM - Joseph Cornell: Navigating The Imagination (Launch Page)
[PDF] Joseph Cornell: Navigating the Imagination. The following checklist lists those works ...
NYT: Poetic Theaters, Romantic Fevers
YouTube: Joseph Cornell: Navigating The Imagination

2007 November: Joseph Cornell, 2010 September: Stan Brakhage, Joseph Cornell - The Wonder Ring, 1955, 2011 April: Rose Hobart (1936), 2012 June: "Bookstalls" - Joseph Cornell, 2012 December: Joseph Cornell's Manual of Marvels.

Photo booth


Wikipedia - "A photo booth is a vending machine or modern kiosk that contains an automated, usually coin-operated, camera and film processor. Today the vast majority of photo booths are digital. Traditionally photo booths contain a seat or bench designed to seat the one or two patrons being photographed. The seat is typically surrounded by a curtain of some sort to allow for some privacy and help avoid outside interference during the photo session. Once the payment is made, the photo booth will take a series of photographs (though most modern booths may only take a single photograph and print out a series of identical pictures)."
Wikipedia
Behind the Curtain: A History of the Photobooth by Mark Bloch
Photobooth.net
amazon: American Photobooth, Photobooth by Raynal Pellicer, Photobooth by Babbette Hines
Photobooth: A Biography by Meags Fitzgerald (Graphic novel), vimeo
YouTube: Weekend Explorer: History of the Photo Booth

Bill Laswell - ROIR Dub Sessions (2003)


"Few American record labels have done more to further the cause of modern dub than New York's ROIR imprint, which has not only reissued classic dub recordings, but also actively encouraged contemporary artists to reinterpret the tradition according to their own vision. And since bassist and producer Bill Laswell is among the most prolific and original modern exponents of dub, it was inevitable that the two would find their way to each other. Laswell has recorded four albums of progressive dub under his own name for ROIR, and this retrospective collection brings together one track from each of them to make a more-or-less full-length compilation. At just over 46 minutes, the program is a bit skimpy, but it does sell at budget price, and there's certainly no arguing with the quality of the content. ..."
allmusic
Blog Critics
amazon
YouTube: Dread Iternal, Ethiopia, Thunupa, Cybotron

A People's History of the United States - Howard Zinn (1980)


Wikipedia - "A People's History of the United States is a 1980 non-fiction book by American historian and political scientist Howard Zinn. In the book, Zinn seeks to present American history through the eyes of the common people rather than political and economic elites. ... Reviews have been mixed. Some have called it a brilliant tool for advancing the cause of social equality. Others have called the book a revisionist patchwork containing errors. In a 1998 interview, Zinn said he had set 'quiet revolution' as his goal for writing A People's History. 'Not a revolution in the classical sense of a seizure of power, but rather from people beginning to take power from within the institutions. In the workplace, the workers would take power to control the conditions of their lives.'"
Wikipedia
A People's History Of The United States by Howard Zinn. Presented by History Is A Weapon. A Note and Disclaimer are below.
Voices of a People's History of the US: Bringing history to life
YouTube: A People's History of American Empire by Howard Zinn. Narrated by Viggo Mortensen., Conversations with History 42:21, Three Holy Wars 36:49

Chamade - Vintage French Photos


Café de Flore - St-Germain, Paris, 1949
Chamade - Vintage French Photos

Georges Adéagbo


The Becoming of the Human Being
Wikipedia - "Georges Adéagbo (born 1942) is a Beninese sculptor known for his work with found objects. A native of Cotonou, Adéagbo studied law in Abidjan before moving to France to continue his studies. He returned to Benin in 1971 upon the death of his father, and began creating installations and environments in isolation from family and society. By the early 1990s he had begun to receive recognition, culminating in the reception of the Prize of Honor at the Venice Biennale in 1999. Adéagbo gathers the material for his art wherever he travels."
Wikipedia
Synchronizing Archaeology- Designation of Events
MoMA/PS1: Abraham – L’ami de Dieu
vimeo: La personne de Georges Adéagbo

History of Harlem


Wikipedia - "Founded in the 17th century as a Dutch outpost, Harlem developed into a farming village, a revolutionary battlefield, a resort town, a commuter town, a ghetto, and a center of African-American culture. ... Since the 1920s, this period of Harlem's history has been highly romanticized. With the increase in a poor population, it was also the time when the neighborhood began to deteriorate to a slum, and some of the storied traditions of the Harlem Renaissance were driven by poverty, crime, or other social ills. For example, in this period, Harlem became known for 'rent parties', informal gatherings in which bootleg alcohol was served and music played. Neighbors paid to attend, and thus enabled the host to make his or her monthly rent. Though picturesque, these parties were thrown out of necessity. Further, over a quarter of black households in Harlem made their monthly rent by taking in lodgers, many of whom were family members, but who sometimes brought bad habits or even crime that disrupted the lives of respectable families."
Wikipedia
Harlem History
New York Metro - A Harlem History
PBS: Harlem in the 40s
History: The Roaring Twenties (Video)
NBC: Living history in Harlem (Video)
YouTube: Ann Petry and Harlem's History, Daily Life In Harlem, Walking in Harlem - 125th street, The Streets of Harlem Documentary

2010 October: Apollo Theater, 2010 August: A Nightclub Map of Harlem, 2011 August: Memories of Sugar Hill, 2012 July: Dawoud Bey - Harlem, U.S.A..

How to be Perfect - Ron Padgett (2007)


"Ron Padgett has written his recherche du temps perdu. Throughout this specular book he loses again what has been lost, waits for what has come and because most poetry saves nothing but time, is perfect timing. A basic rhythm, true to the moment of writing, appears to be one of holding and releasing. The poems are connected across gaps but the head comes away from the body more than once, and the attack of the collection — ‘Mortal Combat’ — sees the author trying to stop the idea of an English muffin from descending further than his salivary glands to his fingers, perhaps, where it is too late, and from ‘trying to pull me away from who I am. I am / a squinty old fool stooped over / his keyboard having an anxiety attack over an English muffin!’"
Jacket 37
Pataphysic
Excerpts from How to be Perfect
amazon

March 2008: Ron Padgett 

40 maps that explain the Middle East


11 - The 2011 Arab Spring
"Maps can be a powerful tool for understanding the world, particularly the Middle East, a place in many ways shaped by changing political borders and demographics. Here are 40 maps crucial for understanding the Middle East — its history, its present, and some of the most important stories in the region today."
Vox