FOLLOW US ON:
GET THE NEWSLETTER
CONTACT US
Passport to Frestonia: Photo documentation of the ‘free state’ of Frestonia
01.13.2011
03:57 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
A few days ago, I stumbled across photographer Tony Sleep’s amazing black & white documentation of “Frestonia,” the 1.8 acre “free state” of London’s Notting Hill area, that attempted to (or did, depending on how you look at it) secede from the UK in 1977. It’s one of the best things I’ve seen on the Internet in some time.

Since the early 70s, Freston Road, a run down street with several condemned and empty buildings, had become the one of the city’s epicenters of the squatters movement. Many of the buildings housed artists who needed a place to work. In October of 1977, the Greater London Council made plans to raze the derelict buildings of Freston Road but met with rioting from the hippies and the punks who lived there.
 
image
 
Led by Nicholas Albery, approximately 120 squatters living on the street declared themselves the “Free And Independent State Of Frestonia” (the similarity to the kingdom of Freedonia in the Marx Brothers’s Duck Soup was not coincidental). The residents of the squatted buildings took on the adopted surname “Bramley” so that the GLC would be obliged to accommodate them, in the event of a successful eviction, en masse, as one family. It was simultaneously a PR stunt inspired by the Ealing comedy Passport to Pimlico, a crafty legal maneuver and poetically-inspired anarchism in action.
 
image
 
Poet, actor, playwright and graffiti polemicist, Heathcote Williams (who later appeared in an episode of Friends) served as Frestonia’s ambassador to the UK and dwarf actor David Rappaport-Bramley (who played Randall, the leader of the dwarves in Terry Gilliam’s Time Bandits and “Markoff Chaney” in Ken Campbell’s stage play of Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea’s lluminatus! trilogy) was made Foreign Minister. The Frestonian postage stamps had no price and bore the face of “Guy the Gorilla.” The Minister of Education was a two-year-old, Francesco Bogina-Bramley. A major part of Frestonian communal life took place at The People’s Hall, where films were shown and plays staged. It later became a recording studio. The Clash famously recorded their Combat Rock album there in 1982, perhaps looking to soak up some revolutionary, and authentically countercultural, inspiration.
 
image
 
The Frestonians annoyed the GLC for a few years before many of the original squatters simply moved away, replaced by folks who were less committed to the poetic ideals of an Albionic anarchist collective and more committed to shooting smack and having someplace free to live. Some of the original squatters and their offspring still live in the area, but the buildings (which had been condemned since the 1950s) are mostly gone now, except for the People’s Hall building, which still stands.
 
image
 
Squatting is a subject I know something about. From early 1983 until the end of 1984, I lived in several different squatted buildings in the Brixton area of London, and in the infamous (and huge) Wyers squat of Amsterdam. I’ve never seen better documentation of what it’s like to live in a squat than in these amazing photographs by Tony Sleep, who was himself a resident of Frestonia. It’s a glimpse at what now appears to be a lost world. With the last vestiges of squatting are being stamped out all over Europe (Holland’s strict anti-squatting laws passed in the Summer of 2010, effectively ending what was at one time the most vibrant squatters movement on the continent) this way of life will no longer be there to inspire, and to assist and help others who want to drop out of the rat race as much as possible, or who simply need a safe place to sleep at night.

If there are empty buildings, it should be legal for people without homes to live in them. Figure it out later, but find the poor and the indigent somewhere to stay first, that’s what I say. Self help housing should be legalized everywhere.

The Squatter’s Handbook

Below, a Hugh Laurie-hosted documentary on the post-apocalyptic performance art troupe, Mutoid Waste Company, who came out of Frestonia’s “Car Breaker Gallery.”
 

 
Part 2 after the jump…

READ ON
Posted by Richard Metzger
|
01.13.2011
03:57 pm
|
Patti Smith porcelain plate
01.13.2011
03:19 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
If you love Patti Smith and like antique French porcelain, then you’re certainly going to dig the Patti Smith plate from Etsy seller Beat Up Creations.

This plate can be used for dining. I recommend washing by hand to preserve gold. Great display item as well. Wonderful alternative to traditional framed art.

The plate measures 6” in diameter and sells for $42.00.

 

Posted by Tara McGinley
|
01.13.2011
03:19 pm
|
Sarah Palin’s breath
01.13.2011
01:46 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
Again, no amount of “sincere” breathing is going to win her an Oscar.

 
(via TDW)

Posted by Tara McGinley
|
01.13.2011
01:46 pm
|
Unfortunate Rush Limbaugh billboard in Tucson
01.13.2011
01:01 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
Via Reddit

Posted by Richard Metzger
|
01.13.2011
01:01 pm
|
Hip-hop noise: Is 21-year-old AraabMuzik the Hendrix of sampling?
01.13.2011
12:00 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
Designed by Roger Linn and released by the Japanese company Akai in 1989, the MIDI Production Center or MPC has proven to be the backbone of hip-hop production. Its 16-pad interface allows for 64 continuous sample tracks, and has provided producers with some of the intense sound-granulating control that you’ve heard in the genre’s last 20 years.

The MPC has been around for pretty much all of Providence, R.I.’s Abraham Orellana’s life. So it makes almost cosmic sense that Orellana—who does business under the puzzlingly given name of AraabMuzik—has a masterful way of pounding the pads. He came to most peoples’ attention as the man who produced this summer’s “Salute,” the reunion track for Harlem’s Dipset crew (after the jump). Personally I think the kid’s talent far outclasses Dipset’s extreme-swagger stance, but whatever.

Here he is in raw form in the studio with his buddy the MPC-5000…a visual treatment of his virtuosity to follow…
 

 
After the jump: the Death by Electric Shock video crew and visuals freak System D-128 collaborate to spotlight AraabMuzik’s technique…

READ ON
Posted by Ron Nachmann
|
01.13.2011
12:00 pm
|
The sauerkraut synthesizer
01.13.2011
11:22 am
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
Better yet, keep your Italo disco. Here’s some actual Krautrock. Yes, It’s the Sauerkraut synthesizer, the work of one Gordon Monahan.

Gordon Monahan’s Sauerkraut Synthesizer is an experimental synth, built around fruits, vegetables, and a jar of sauerkraut as voltage controllers for a software synthesizer, built with ppooll-max/msp and an Arduino interface.
The video captures a live performance on the Sauerkraut Synthesizer at the Subtle Technologies Festival, on board a cruise ship in Toronto Harbour, June 5, 2010.
The Sauerkraut Synthesizer is based on a technical prototype using lemons (The Lemon Synthesizer), developed as a collaboration between Gordon Monahan, Akemi Takeya, and Noid, in Vienna, March, 2009.

 

 
Witness the majesty of the Lemon Synthesizer after the jump…

READ ON
Posted by Brad Laner
|
01.13.2011
11:22 am
|
Some Best of 2010 mixtapes
01.13.2011
06:57 am
Topics:
Tags:


 
Everyone loves lists, and everyone loves music, right? So here a few different “Best of 2010” mixtapes that combine both, and give an insight into the kind of music I am going to be posting about here in the coming months.


THE JOIZE OF NOIZE

Let’s get the heavy shit out of the way first. Andy Brown is the drummer in Glasgow noiseniks Divorce, as well as bong rock champions Remember Remember (also see this post). He has put together his top 24 noise-rock tracks of the past 12 months via Soundcloud. Think 7inch records with paper inserts, gigs with bleeding ears and crushed toes, bands like AIDS Wolf, Action Beat, Comanechi, Daughters, Neon Blud and lots more you have never heard of.

Browntown’s The Joize of Noize 2010 on Soundcloud


THE NIALLIST Best of 2010

From the other end of the spectrum is my own run-down of top tunes from the oh-ten. This comp has a bit of a “synth” vibe, with a lot of synth-based electronica (SIlverclub, Dam Mantle, Goldfrapp, Detachments) and disco (LCD Soundsystem, Lindstrom & Christabelle, Space Dimension Controller, Brassica), and dashes of hip-hop, skwee, witch house and a track from Divorce. I will be covering some of the acts on here in more depth very soon. More info here.

Stream The Niallist’s Best of 2010 Mixtape via Radio Magnetic
OR
Download The Niallist’s Best of 2010 Mixtape via Radio Magnetic


FOUND pres ComputerScheisse Vol 5

Also on the UK’s longest running internet radio station Radio Magnetic is Chemikal Underground’s FOUND, who describe themselves as an art collective/experimental pop-band. They have compiled their 2010 favorites into one almost-seamless mix under the guise ComputerScheisse. It takes in hip-hop, folk, indie, retro and a smattering of pop. This is highly recommended, and not just for the exclusive cover of Men Without Hats’ “Safety Dance” by Malcolm Middleton (of Arab Strap) over a J Dilla beat - check out the intro and outro skits.

Stream ComputerScheisse Volume 5 via Radio Magnetic
OR
Download ComputerScheisse Volume 5 via Radio Magnetic

 

 

 

Posted by Niall O'Conghaile
|
01.13.2011
06:57 am
|
Vee and Simonetti: Italian disco so mysterioso
01.13.2011
05:36 am
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
You can have your Krautrock. Give me Italo disco!

Vivien Vee was discovered by Italian keyboard player Claudio Simonetti in 1978 when she 18 years old. Simonetti who composed the monolithic electronic score for George Romero’s Dawn Of The Dead and played in the legendary Italian cult band Goblin achieved his biggest commercial success with Ms. Vee. The chemistry was cooking.

In my opinion Simonetti is every bit as good as Giorgio Moroder and in the soundtrack work he did for Dario Argento created something far darker, more atmospheric and to me more satisfying than Moroder. But I like the gothic stuff.

“Higher” is straight ahead Italo disco. But the zombies-on-meth head-jerking of the back up dancers (the only way to stop them is to shoot them in the head) propels the video into the realm of the ridiculously sublime. “Blue Disease,” which appears after the jump has an edgier Goblinesque feel that will probably resonate with German rock enthusiasts.
 

 
“Blue Disease” after the jump…

READ ON
Posted by Marc Campbell
|
01.13.2011
05:36 am
|
Looking through a glass onion: ‘Enter The Void’ mood elevating visual effects video
01.13.2011
03:08 am
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
French special effects genius Geoffrey Niquet collaborated with Gaspar Noe on the creation of the mindblowingly wonderful Enter The Void. Here’s a clip that shows the multi-layered visuals that were composed for the film. It’s like looking through a glass onion. For those of you have seen the movie, this will be a reminder of its loveliness. For those of you who haven’t experienced the Void, this will tantalize and perhaps compel you to see it.

Music by Sigur Ros.
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
|
01.13.2011
03:08 am
|
‘The Sissy’: Chick Christian Comics get the PIxar treatment
01.12.2011
08:01 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
“The Sissy?” one of the more, er, memorable Chick Christian comics tracts has been rendered in 3D animation and it’s a… blessing.

Read the original here.
 

 
Via The American Jesus

Posted by Richard Metzger
|
01.12.2011
08:01 pm
|
Gilbert and George: Living Sculptures
01.12.2011
07:58 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
Perhaps best known for their brilliantly-colored, wall-sized paintings, artists Gilbert and George have been working together since they first met at St. Martin’s School of Art in London, 1967. The pair claim they became friends as George was the only person who could understand the Italian-born Gilbert’s poorly spoken English. “It was love at first sight,” they have since claimed. It was while they were students that Gilbert and George first devised their trademark performance art called Living Sculptures, where they wandered through the city streets covered in metallic make-up. The idea was to “collapse the distance between art and artists.”

In 1970, Gilbert and George developed this further and first performed their famous Singing Sculpture, at the Nigel Greenwood Gallery. Again coated in metallic make-up, the duo stood on a table and moved in robotic movement to comedy double-act, Flannagan and Allen’s 1930’s music hall song “Underneath the Arches” - about the homeless men who slept under railway arches during the Great Depression. Their show proved controversial and divided audiences, which is will no doubt happen with the pair’s latest show, The Urethra Postcard Art of Gilbert and George, which has just opened at the White Cube Gallery in London.

For this latest show, Gilbert and George have created 564 pieces of art from their personal collection of tourist postcards and telephone booth sex cards, advertising prostitutes’ services. Collecting the tourist postcards was easy, the call girl cards more difficult, as they explained to the Guardian:

The phonebox sex cards were trickier. When they saw one they liked – “Luke man 2 man horny fit lad 27 years” – they would dive in and grab it, but would then have to scour the area looking for 12 more. “Transexual Linda new in town” must have found business collapsing as all the ads within half a mile disappeared.

The prostitutes’ cards are a vanishing artform, along with the phoneboxes themselves – “almost fizzled out now,” George said mournfully.

The Urethra Postcard Art of Gilbert and George is at the White Cube until 19 February. And if you’re interested in contacting the pair, then you’ll find them under “artists” in London’s Yellow Pages.

This short documentary explains the background to Gilbert and George’s Living Sculptures, discussing their Singing Sculpture and how everything they do is a form of art.
 

 
More from Gilbert and George, including ‘Bend It’, after the jump…
 

READ ON
Posted by Paul Gallagher
|
01.12.2011
07:58 pm
|
Little boy gets wish to drive around in Gary Numan’s car (1982)
01.12.2011
07:17 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
Last night Richard and I watched the Awfully Good TV special hosted by Little Britain’s David Walliams. It’s one of those clip shows of “so bad that it’s good” TV moments that normally aren’t that great, but this one actually was hilarious. I nearly peed myself when this clip came on. A kid named Matthew wrote in to the Jim’ll Fix It TV show and asked the host (Jimmy Saville) if he could “fix it” so that Matthew could drive around in Gary Numan’s “Down in the Park” car. And Jim came through! Watch as young Matthew, in crap shades, takes a little ride as Numan croons “Music for Chameleons.”

Matthew actually chimed in on the YouTube comments, writing:

All I can say is…HAHAHAHAHA…can’t stop laughing because that miserable kid is me! Blame the BBC for making me put those stupid glasses on just before filming…I hated them but they thought they looked futuristic. *ahem*

Apart from that had an ace day.

They wanted me to look spooky…but my grumpy face was just me being mardy and also scared. The jacket is too small for me these days, not that I’d ever wear it out for fear of damaging it.

.
The clip of Boy George on The A-Team was also from that program to give credit there, too.

Read the letter from Matthew and watch the hysterical video from Jim’ll Fix it below:
 
image
 

Posted by Tara McGinley
|
01.12.2011
07:17 pm
|
Ubuntu Release Party
01.12.2011
07:00 pm
Topics:
Tags:
Posted by Tara McGinley
|
01.12.2011
07:00 pm
|
The Dot and the Line: A Romance in Lower Mathematics
01.12.2011
06:11 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
The Dot and the Line: A Romance in Lower Mathematics is the name of a book by Norton Juster (who also wrote The Phantom Tollbooth) which was made into an Academy Award-winning animated short in 1965 by the great Chuck Jones. Jones was the creator of the Road Runner, Wile E. Coyote, Sylvester, Pepé Le Pew as well as as the director of several Bugs Bunny shorts considered to be masterpieces of the art of animation.

Frequently seen in 70s and 80s classrooms, The Dot and the Line: A Romance in Lower Mathematics, is the engaging tale of an uptight line who is aced out at every turn by an unkempt squiggle for the affections of a female dot. Math teachers used to show this to geometry students in an effort to get them excited by the subject. In many cases, I’ll bet it worked. Not for me, though, I sucked in math, but I do recall seeing this cartoon in the eighth or ninth grade.
 
image
 
This is truly an incredible piece of work. It’s as minimalist as you can get in animation, but at times it evokes MC Escher, Blue Note album covers, even the work of artist John Baldessari. The story is read by British actor Robert Morley. It’s pretty amazing. If the snow’s got you home today (it’s in the 70s here in Los Angeles, not to rub it in) you couldn’t find a better way to waste some time than with this delightful film. If you’re of a certain age, then chances are you’ll probably remember seeing it. Jones would work with Norton Juster’s material once again with The Phantom Tollbooth in 1970, a film Juster was not supposed to be very fond of.
 

Posted by Richard Metzger
|
01.12.2011
06:11 pm
|
In a moment of sobriety… Glenn Beck finds his son
01.12.2011
03:09 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
Good Lord is this disturbing! And yes, I know the photo has been tinkered with.

(via BB Submitterator)

Posted by Tara McGinley
|
01.12.2011
03:09 pm
|
Page 1227 of 1503 ‹ First  < 1225 1226 1227 1228 1229 >  Last ›