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Nick Cave in car crash
12.08.2010
04:32 pm
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Nick Cave smashes into a speed camera with his Jaguar and walks away.

The grinderman’s latest hit.

British paper The Telegraph reports:

Cave, 53, was travelling along Hove seafront in Sussex with his two boys, Arthur and Earl,10, when he crashed through a metal barrier and collided with the camera. Nobody was injured in the accident, which happened on Tuesday evening.

Police were called to the crash, which left the camera bent at a 45 degree angle, but Cave was not arrested.

 
Via The Telegraph
 
More photos after the jump…

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Posted by Marc Campbell
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12.08.2010
04:32 pm
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Odd Star Wars family portraits
12.08.2010
04:16 pm
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Odd Star Wars family portraits by artist and blogger Steven Quinn. You can veiw more of Steven’s work over at his Flicker account.
 
See more portraits after the jump…

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Posted by Tara McGinley
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12.08.2010
04:16 pm
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Six Led Zeppelin songs that you have probably never heard before
12.08.2010
04:14 pm
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Unlike most of their classic rock contemporaries, Led Zeppelin seem to have had an easier time keeping their studio demos out of the hands of bootleggers. Live material? That’s easy. There are live Led Zeppelin concerts all over the Internet, but previously unreleased studio material is quite a bit harder to come by. Here are six Led Zeppelin recordings that you probably have never heard before. (Plenty of Led Zeppelin rarities here, too)

“Jennings Farm Blues” is basically an amped-up version of “Bron-Y-Aur Stomp,” from Led Zeppelin III. Bonzo’s amazing here, as always, but especially amazing, if you ask me.
 

 
Five more EPIC Led Zeppelin studio out-takes after the jump!

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Posted by Richard Metzger
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12.08.2010
04:14 pm
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When Facebook becomes a book
12.08.2010
03:59 pm
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Siavosh Zabeti, and Alexander Kalchev create a FaceBOOK, a social network in hard copy form. De-evolution.

Bouygues Telecom asked us to come up with an idea to launch their facebook platform. They wanted us to create something that would go beyond using your profile picture in a funny way, or pranking your friends with a small joke.

We decided to look at the way we use facebook and found that even though we use the social networking site everyday, we forget our favorite moments we share online. So we created an app that could change that, and keep your facebook, in a book.

 

Via Abduzeedo

 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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12.08.2010
03:59 pm
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Did Brian Epstein’s Ghost Predict John Lennon’s Assassination in Rare BBC Documentary?
12.08.2010
03:32 pm
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John Lennon 24 Hours is a “rarely seen” BBC documentary following John and Yoko over five days in early December 1969. It’s an intimate and interesting film with some very fine moments - a few you may have seen before, but even so it’s well worth watching.

There’s a spooky moment for Lennon-philes at around 1 minute 20 seconds in part 3 (below), when Lennon reads out a letter from a concerned fan who wrote:

Dear Mr Lennon, From information I received whilst using ouija board I believe there will be an attempt to assassinate you. The spirit who gave me this information was Brian Epstein.

Enjoy!
 
John Lennon 24 Hours - Part 1
 

 

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Posted by Paul Gallagher
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12.08.2010
03:32 pm
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British Prime Minister confronted in House Of Commons over liking The Smiths
12.08.2010
03:21 pm
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British Prime Minister David Cameron is a Smith’s fanboy, much to the chagrin of Morrissey and Johnny Marr who can’t stand the PM. Morrissey, a vocal animal rights activist, is particularly disturbed by the fact that Cameron wants to “repeal the Hunting Act, which would mean the brutal killing of foxes, hares, deer, badgers, otters – just about anything that moves.”

Today Labour MP challenged Cameron over Morrissey and Johnny Marr’s comments.

Ahead of tomorrow’s controversial vote on raising tuition fees, Cameron was challenged by Labour MP Kerry McCarthy, who mentioned The Smiths in her argument.

“As someone who claims to be an avid fan of The Smiths, the Prime Minister will no doubt be rather upset this week to hear that both Morrissey and Johnny Marr have banned him from liking them,” McCarthy said.

She added: “The Smiths are, of course, the archetypal student band. If he wins tomorrow night’s vote, what songs does he think students will be listening to? ‘Miserable Lie’, ‘I Don’t Owe You Anything’ or ‘Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now’?”

Cameron’s response included several Smiths song titles, too.

He said: “I expect that if I turned up I probably wouldn’t get ‘This Charming Man’ and if I went with the Foreign Secretary [William Hague] it would probably be ‘William It Was Really Nothing’.”

 
Via EOMS

Posted by Marc Campbell
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12.08.2010
03:21 pm
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My obligatory John Lennon post
12.08.2010
01:47 pm
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My favorite post-Beatles solo track by my hero. 30 years ago today I lost my innocence and became prematurely cynical about the world at age 14. John forever.
 

Posted by Brad Laner
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12.08.2010
01:47 pm
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Deconstructing ‘Revolution’: Hear The Beatles in the Studio, 1968
12.08.2010
11:24 am
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It’s the Kennedy moment for a generation, who know where they were, and what they were doing when they heard about John Lennon’s murder thirty years ago today.

I was woken from sleep, and half-awake, half asleep, the news was dreamlike, “John Lennon’s dead. He was shot.” It didn’t make sense, and three decades on, still doesn’t.

Lennon’s loss is immeasurable, for we are left with unfulfilled expectations. That said, Lennon’s creative work as a solo artist, but more importantly with The Beatles changed everything. John, Paul, George and Ringo were the most revolutionary and influential quartet since Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.

To celebrate their revolutionary drive, here is “Revolution” deconstructed.

Lennon started writing “Revolution” in early 1968, when off on retreat with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Arguably, it was the first real political song The Beatles produced, and was a considered move away from the lovable mop-top image, as Lennon explained:

“I thought it was about time we spoke about it [revolution], the same as I thought it was about time we stopped not answering about the Vietnamese war. I had been thinking about it up in the hills in India.”

1968: the Vietnam War, My Lai Massacre, Grosvenor Square demonstration, student riots in Paris, Rome and Brazil, Andreas Baader and Gudrun Ensslin start a bombing campaign, Russia crushes the Prague Spring revolt in Czechoslovakia, Martin Luther King assassinated, Bobby Kennedy assassinated. It was a hell of a year.

In May The Beatles recorded Take 1 of “Revolution”, a slow almost Blues-like number with Lennon singing his vocal while lying on the floor. During this recording Lennon included the word “in” at the end of the line “You can count me out” as he was undecided about supporting violent revolution. Even so, Lennon was keen to have this version released as the next Beatles’ single. McCartney, however, was against causing any controversy, and argued, along with Harrison, that the track was far too slow to be a hit. It was eventually released, with lots of overdubs, on the White Album

A longer version (Take 20), lasting over 10 minutes was recorded and begins with Lennon shouting “Take your knickers off and let’s go.” Yoko Ono can be heard on this track, saying “Maybe it’s not that,” to which Harrison replies, “It is that.” Parts of this were later incorporated into “Revolution No. 9”.

Lennon was still adamant about releasing a version of “Revolution” and a faster, more up-tempo version was recorded on 9 July. It begins with “a startling machine-gun fuzz guitar riff,” with Lennon’s and Harrison’s guitars prominent throughout. Their distinct fuzzy sound was achieved by plugging the guitars directly into the recording console, and then routing the signal through two microphone preamplifiers, almost causing the channel to overload. Lennon overdubbed the opening scream, and double-tracked some of the words “so roughly that its careless spontaneity becomes a point in itself.” This version of “Revolution” was released as the B-side to “Hey, Jude” in August 1968. Highly controversial at the time, dividing both Left and Right, “Revolution” is now regarded as one of the “greatest, most furious rockers” with “challenging, fiery lyrics” where the listener’s “heart immediately starts pounding before Lennon goes into the first verse.” Rock critic Dave Marsh included “Revolution” in his 1989 book of 1001 greatest singles, describing it as a “gem” with a “ferocious fuzztone rock and roll attack” and a “snarling” Lennon vocal. Who can disagree?
 
John Lennon - Vocals
 

 
More tracks plus bonus clips of The Beatles after the jump…
 

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Posted by Paul Gallagher
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12.08.2010
11:24 am
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Seasons greetings from Poly Styrene: Have yourself a scary little Xmas
12.08.2010
05:32 am
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I hate Xmas, so this new tune from Poly Styrene makes me quite happy. I’m happier still to see Ms. Styrene back in action and sounding so good. ‘Black Christmas’ was written by Poly and her daughter Celeste, who appears in the video.

This is from Poly’s second solo album (her last one was released 30 years ago) which coming out in March, 2011. It’s called ‘Generation Indigo’ and was produced by Youth (Killing Joke). I can’t wait. She seems to have worked thru her Hare Krishna phase.
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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12.08.2010
05:32 am
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John Lennon and the People’s Park riots
12.07.2010
11:57 pm
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Photograph by Ted Streshinsky, “People’s Park Riots, National Guard and Protester”
 
John Lennon and The Beatles were synchronous with most of the pivotal points of my life in the sixties. They weren’t leaders, they weren’t my gurus, they were my companions, my spiritual allies on a magical and very mysterious trip. And John was the one I felt closest to. I could relate to his peace and love approach, but I also deeply felt his angrier side, his revolutionary spirit.

(The following is an edited excerpt from a rough draft of my memoirs)

The People’s Park situation had gotten out of control. Reagan declared Martial Law.

On May 29, 1969 John Lennon called the People’s Park protest organizers (UCB students) twice to offer his support. It was the day before a major march was to be held and there was a lot of tension in the air. The calls were broadcast on KPFA radio. Lennon’s exhortations to stay cool could be heard from radios perched on window sills throughout the city:

“There’s no cause worth losing your life for, there isn’t any path worth getting shot for and you can do better by moving on to another city. Don’t move about if it aggravates the pigs, and don’t get hassled by the cops, and don’t play their games. I know it’s hard, Christ you know it ain’t easy, you know how hard it can be man, so
what? Everything’s hard. It’s better to have it hard than to not have it at all.

Entice them, entice them! Con them-you’ve got the brains, you can do it. You can make it, man! We can make it together. We can get it together!”

It was almost two weeks after Bloody Thursday, but the streets were still crawling with National Guard, cops in riot gear, and military tanks. It looked like Prague 1968. I was in the middle of it all. I decided to leave town. I was a peacenik and didn’t want anything to do with the violence that was erupting all around me, most of it instigated by jackbooted cops from Oakland.

My girlfriend Vicki and I were walking down University Ave. toward a freeway onramp when a cop car, sirens wailing, screeched up along side us and a bunch of bulls spilled out wildly waving their nightsticks and knocked us to the ground. They ripped the backpacks off our bodies and tore them open, scattering our stuff all over the sidewalk. Instead of bombs or guns or whatever the fuck they were looking for, they ended up with a few bags of granola, dried fruit and brown rice. As the cops were piling back into their car, a van pulled up to the curb and its longhair driver shouted for us to “get in, get in!”  We threw our backpacks and ourselves into the van and slammed the door shut.  This infuriated the cops. They leaped back out of their car and started slamming billy clubs upside the van as we sped off. The cops were out of their fucking minds, rabid Keystone Kops gone mad with the smell of hippie blood.

I decided not to leave Berkeley but to stay and join my neighbors in protest of the cop riot and the occupation of our city by Reagan’s goon squads. This was happening on my turf and I had to be involved. It wasn’t going away. And avoiding it was a chickenshit approach that I couldn’t live with.

On May 30th over 30,000 people (one third of Berkeley’s population) marched to People’s Park to save it from destruction. Vicki and I were among them. The National Guard and the cops were out in full force. But, they were outnumbered and overwhelmed. Young girls slid flowers down the muzzles of bayoneted rifles and a small airplane flew over the city trailing a banner that read, “Let A Thousand Parks Bloom.”

The park was surrounded by a fence. Inside the fence were hundreds of young Guardsmen. Outside the fence were thousands of peaceful protesters. Some of the Guardsmen looked terrified; others were smiling and flashing peace symbols. Community leaders and organizers were making speeches from a couple of flatbed trucks. Music played. At one point a bunch of us jumped up on one of the flatbeds, took off our clothes and started dancing. We were chanting to the soldiers inside the fence to “join us, join us”. Most of them looked like they were ready to leap the fence and do exactly that. Seeing a bunch of cute hippie chicks naked and offering their bodies to them was mighty tempting to those horny young guys, some of whom were actually UCB students who had joined the guard to avoid going to Vietnam. They knew they were on the wrong side of the fence. I later read that several of them did end up joining the protesters and were severely punished for having done so. The following week, a picture of me dancing nude on that flatbed truck appeared on the cover of the Berkeley Barb. Rocking out with my cock out!  Mao said “political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.”  I had a different approach.

Two years later, People’s Park was resurrected. It exists to this day. Power to the people and their parks.

Here’s a wonderful video clip that includes John’s phone call to KPFA.

 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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12.07.2010
11:57 pm
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MIT designs intelligent wallets that help you control your spending
12.07.2010
07:11 pm
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This wallet has a hinge that automatically locks when you’ve exceeded your monthly spending limit.
 
Designers at MIT Media Lab have created Proverbial Wallets that vibrate, swell, shrink or lock in accordance with the amount of money or credit you have and/or monthly budget goals.

Financial sixth sense.

We have trouble controlling our consumer impulses, and there’s a gap between our decision and the consequences. This is magnified by the digitization of money. When we pull a product off the shelf, do we know what our bank account balance is, or whether we’re over budget for the month? Our existing senses are inadequate to warn us.
The Proverbial Wallet gives us that financial sense at the point of purchase by un-abstracting virtual assets. Tactile feedback reflecting our personal balances and transactions helps us develop a subconscious financial sense that guides responsible decisions. In addition to providing a visceral connection to our virtual money, tactile output keeps personal information private and ambient.

 

Via TWBE

Posted by Marc Campbell
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12.07.2010
07:11 pm
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The Beaver recut
12.07.2010
04:27 pm
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You knew this was coming, but oh did they do it so well…

Plagued by his own demons, Walter Black was once a successful toy executive and family man who now suffers from being a total dickhead. No matter what he tries, Walter can’t seem to get himself back on track… until a beaver hand puppet enters his life.

Edited by Dan Samiljan and Craig James Hildebrand

Via FBLA

Posted by Richard Metzger
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12.07.2010
04:27 pm
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All Mod Cons: Not So Groovy British Ads From The Swinging Sixties
12.07.2010
04:23 pm
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London. The Swinging Sixties. Beat Combos. Guitars. Bri-Nylon Shirts. Bad Teeth. Fast Cars. Chicks. Guys. Fights. Suits. Fights. Chocolates. Exotic Locations. Hair. Lots of Hair. More Chicks. More Guys. George Lazenby. Glossy Color Magazines. Shaw Taylor. Newspapers. Weddings. Symbolism. Cigarettes. What more could you ask for?
 

 
With thanks to Simon Wells
 

Posted by Paul Gallagher
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12.07.2010
04:23 pm
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When John Waters met Justin Bieber
12.07.2010
04:01 pm
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I do not want to know what John Waters is thinking here, but I’ve got a penny for scarf-wearing man’s thoughts…

(Coincidence? I think not.)

Via Vulture

Posted by Richard Metzger
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12.07.2010
04:01 pm
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Klaus Nomi: Watch ‘The Nomi Song’ documentary for free
12.07.2010
03:37 pm
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Watch a FREE video stream of The Nomi Song, Andrew Horn’s excellent 2004 documentary about New Wave opera diva from outer-space, Klaus Nomi. Follows the rise of Nomi’s unlikely career until his death in 1983 from AIDS complications. With Kristian Hoffman, Kenny Scharf, Ann Magnuson, Tony Frere, Page Wood, David McDermott and in a great performance clip, David Bowie and Joey Arias. Oddly sponsored by American Express.
 

 
Previously on Dangerous Minds:

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