Albini.

“The Plumber”

Steve Albini on Touch and Go, the Stooges, and how his analog work ethic is faring in the digital age

by BOB MEHR

September 29, 2006 Chicago Reader

It’s been more than two decades since guitarist and recording engineer Steve Albini emerged as the gadfly of the midwestern rock underground. In his 20s he led the notoriously abrasive, crowd-baiting bands Big Black and Rapeman, but he’s since mellowed considerably — though his current outfit, Shellac, is hardly warm and cuddly, at 44 he no longer goes out of his way to make himself a lightning rod for controversy. His reputation as an iconoclast persists, however, and he remains the sort of public figure folks either love or hate. “There are specific people who have a bee in their bonnet about me,” Albini says. “I can’t do anything about that. I trust the bands and people I work with every day — the ones that know me on a personal level and actually know me as opposed to the image of me — they have the real perspective. If those people thought I was a jerk, then I’d feel bad.”

Albini can afford to brush off his critics: It’s been nearly a decade since he opened Electrical Audio in its current location, on Belmont near the river, and his studio has weathered both the end of the 90s alt-rock boom and the spread of cheap digital home recording. Despite Albini’s notorious refusal to install a digital rig at Electrical, this has been one of his busiest years yet at the studio — he’s scheduled to complete more than 40 projects by the end of December. Shellac has just finished recording a new LP, and this week Albini starts work on a comeback album by proto-punk icons the Stooges.

The forthcoming Shellac record, the band’s first since 1000 Hurts in 2000, will be called Excellent Italian Greyhound — originally what drummer Todd Trainer would say to his dog instead of “good boy,” it was quickly adopted by the band to refer to anything praiseworthy. “If you’re familiar with our stuff you probably won’t be surprised,” Albini says. “I guess Todd has a cowbell now, so that’s new.” Touch and Go has tentative plans to release the album in early 2007, and the band has a couple spring shows planned for the UK, which may turn into the nucleus of a European tour.

Albini has been playing in Shellac with Trainer and bassist Bob Weston for 14 years, and calls it “absolutely my favorite thing in the whole world to do” — though he’s quick to point out that he still considers it a hobby. The studio is his job, and he puts in an average of 300 days a year as an engineer. In 2006 his work has appeared on releases by Canadian roots band the Sadies, Sicilian art punks Uzeda, power-pop legends Cheap Trick, and even the Lovehammers, the group led by Rock Star: INXS runner-up Marty Casey. He’s not a fan of every act he records, but he’s looking forward to working with the Stooges, who he calls one of his all-time favorite bands. The re-formed lineup includes three original members — Iggy Pop, Ron Asheton, and his brother Scott — along with Minutemen bassist Mike Watt and Fun House saxist Steve MacKay.

Albini has never met any of the Stooges — so far he’s just had a couple phone conversations with them — and only knows Watt casually. “I got a call out of the blue from Ron Asheton,” he says. “They basically expressed a desire to set up and play live. We’ll see how that goes. I’ve yet to see the reconstituted Stooges, but by all accounts they’re playing like champions.” In a recent Spanish-language interview, Iggy says hiring Albini was something Ron pushed for, in part because Albini has said he arrived at a lot of his ideas about recording by listening to Fun House. Iggy also praises Albini’s no-nonsense blue-collar approach, comparing it to a plumber’s.

One rumor that’s been following the project is that Jack White will play on the disc or produce it, but Albini has heard nothing either way. “I really have no idea. . . . There may be a point where an Edwardian carriage pulls up in front of the studio and Jack White and his footmen step out,” he says. “By the way, I’ve never used the word ‘footmen’ in conversation before.”

Electrical Audio, like most full-service studios, has suffered as digital recording has gotten cheaper and more accessible. But because it’s still primarily an analog facility, it continues to attract musicians who don’t see the two methods as interchangeable. (Albini’s rep doesn’t hurt either, and even people who don’t care what kind of tape they use agree that the rooms sound great.) The studio hosts digital sessions for outside engineers, but Albini has never used Pro Tools himself. “I wouldn’t even know how to turn it on,” he admits. “It would be like asking me to translate a Chinese poem.” He claims he’s never encountered a situation where the use of analog tape was the problem, and he’s not about to fix what isn’t broken. “Many of our peer studios that have slavishly followed the fashions in recording have either gone broke or run themselves into the ground,” he says. “So I don’t see any indication that we’re doing things wrong.”

Electrical is far from broke, but over the past few years it’s lowered its fees repeatedly to stay competitive as the demand for pro recording declines. Albini says that when he arrived in Chicago in 1980, the average daily rate for a comparable studio was between $1,000 and $2,000; at Electrical the top room rate is currently $600 a day, down from a peak of $850. “To survive under those conditions requires a different mind-set,” he says. “You can’t treat a studio as a pure business venture. You have to treat it as something you’re doing for its own sake. The same is true for indie labels: they’re a viable business, but only just. So having a punk-rock mentality — doing as much as you can yourself and keeping things as cheap as possible so it doesn’t have to be expensive for the bands — is the approach we take.”

Every one of Albini’s bands has released records on Touch and Go, the indie label run by Corey Rusk, and two of them — Shellac and Big Black — played at the label’s 25th-anniversary party earlier this month. Albini is generally loath to indulge in nostalgia (during Big Black’s mini set he commented, “You can tell it’s not something that we had a burning desire to do”), but he’s long been a vocal cheerleader for Touch and Go and helped persuade Rusk to move the operation to Chicago in 1986. For Albini the Touch and Go celebration was a reminder of why he’d invested so much of himself in underground music to begin with. “Seeing Scratch Acid again, seeing Killdozer, seeing the Didjits — all of the reconstituted bands were as good as in their heyday,” he says. “And even though those bands were dissimilar to one another, they were still comrades in this cultural movement.

“There’s nothing cornier than grandpa music scenester saying, ‘Back in my day, things were so much better,'” he continues. “But to see all those bands that really got me super excited about music in the first place, and seeing them in full flight again, made me realize I wasn’t a fool back then.”

The “punk-rock mentality” that guides both Electrical Audio and Touch and Go has been vindicated by time, and Albini takes great satisfaction in that. “When we started, everyone was rather adamant that you couldn’t do things the way we wanted to. That it would be impossible to run a record label without contracts or more professional accoutrements. Everyone said it would be impossible to run a recording studio that catered to a punk-rock client base because they don’t have any money and they’re not reliable, or whatever,” he says. “I like the fact that Touch and Go and Electrical Audio have proven that all those people who thought they knew best were wrong. Not just that they were wrong to offer their opinion, but that they were wrong, period. It’s quite gratifying to realize you were smarter than all the people who were telling you you were gonna fail.”

ARTHUR NIGHTS (2006)

Poster by Maya Hayuk.

(Late booking, not on poster: KYP MALONE (TV on the Radio) solo set)


INS & OUTS ALL NIGHT * ALSO CHECK OUT CLIFTON’S CAFETERIA FOR AFFORDABLE AMERICAN FOOD FARE AND A DECOR THAT WILL GIVE YOU A CONTACT HIGH — OPEN ONLY TIL 9PM *

GOOD AFFORDABLE FOOD TOO, RECORDS AND BEAUTIFUL HANDMADE CLOTHES PLUS MORE ON THE FOURTH FLOOR


THURSDAY, OCT. 19, 2006 [stage/schedule is lost, sorry!]

DEVENDRA BANHART
a special performance to close the current cycle

BERT JANSCH
first US visit in 8 years from the ex-Pentangle musician–a guitar hero to Neil Young, Jimmy Page, Johnny Marr and countless others–his new album just got 5 stars from Mojo magazine

ESPERS
gorgeous psychedelic folk-rock from Philly co-ed ensemble

JACKIE BEAT
singing spirit guide to Silver Lake scene queens

BELONG
ambient post-My Bloody Valentine fog-throb duo from New Orleans, spotlit in Arthur 23

BUFFALO KILLERS
lumbering, melodic rock ‘n’ roll from Cincinnati bros featuring former members of Thee Shams

YELLOW SWANS
psychedelic Bay Area agitnoise peacegrunt duo

GROUPER
Bay Area neo-ambient noiselady — ‘some of the most ethereal and powerfully heavy-lidden sounds this side of Brian Eno and Arvo Part’ says Mojo

AXOLOTL
San Francisco drone/noisefella

PLUS:
DJ sets by Dublab rats, Brian Turner (WFMU) and The Numero Group


FRIDAY, OCT. 20

7:20 MAIN HALL

AWESOME COLOR

awesome garage-mantra rock in a Stooges/Spacemen 3 ancestor worship mode

7:30 FIFTH FLOOR

SEAN SMITH

Berkeley-based fingerpicking acoustic guitarist in the great John Fahey-Robbie Basho tradition, part of the Imaginational Anthem tour 

8:05 MAIN HALL

THE HOWLING HEX

He was a prime mover in Pussy Galore and Royal Trux… a brilliant solo career and now his latest project, The Howling Hex… guitarist/genius Neil Hagerty in harmolodic prog-jazz-rock-whatsit flight 

8:15 FIFTH FLOOR

CHRISTINA CARTER

Texan matriarch of the current avant-folk-psych scene, and member of Charlambides, in solo guitar and voice set, part of the Imaginational Anthem tour

8:55 MAIN HALL

HEARTLESS BASTARDS

walloping Ohio rock trio led by wailer/guitarist Erika Wennerstrom–second album just out on Fat Possum

9:05 FIFTH FLOOR

FORTUNE’S FLESH

features ex-Starvations members; “Cockroach’s larvae stage of death doo-wop”

9:45 FIFTH FLOOR

TALL FIRS

mellowside trio on Thurston Moore’s Ecstatic Peace record label

9:55 MAIN HALL

BE YOUR OWN PET

Nashville teenage action-punk quartet led by firecracker vocalist Jemina Pearl

10:30 FIFTH FLOOR

SHAWN DAVID MCMILLEN

“Soporific, glazed” (sez ‘The Wire’) Texas psych, part of the Imaginational Anthem tour

10:50 MAIN HALL

TAV FALCO & THE UNAPPROACHABLE PANTHER BURNS

Charlie Feathers, Alex Chilton, Rural Burnside and more…The truly legendary ‘Dorian Gray of Rock ‘n’ Roll’ from Memphis–admired by rock n roll luminaries like Spiritualized’s Jason Pierce, The Cramps and The Black Keys–in his first L.A. appearance in a decade!

11:15 FIFTH FLOOR

CHARALAMBIDES

beyond-rare L.A. perf by co-ed twin-guitar psych/dream duo on the brilliant Kranky label

12midnight MAIN HALL

BORIS

Japanese doom/rock/blissout superpower trio in performance ahead of the Halloween release of their devastating new album-length collaboration with dronekings Sunn0))) 


Saturday October 21

4:00-on FOURTH FLOOR

SCHOOLHOUSE DROP-INS: “Visit the geodesic tent as the 9 Sundown Schoolhouse residents present projects to partake in, forums for engagement, acts of interaction, thoughts for collective inquiry and general happenings.”

4:20 MAIN HALL

RESIDUAL ECHOES

Stomping West Coast high-energy rock attack unit who blew us away at loast year’s ArthurFest.

5:10 MAIN HALL

FUTURE PIGEON

galactic dance-dub heroism from local ensemble 

5:30 FIFTH FLOOR

WOODEN WAND

mercurial, provocative, prolific folk-rock dude in a solo turn 

6:10 MAIN HALL

WATTS PROPHETS

righteous word jazz elders 

6:25 FIFTH FLOOR

NVH/BEN CHASNY

noize proj from Comets on Fire’s echoplexist/drummer Noel Von Harmonson and guitarist Ben Chasny

7:10 MAIN HALL

MONEY MARK

always imaginative keyboardist/music man–best known for co-writing work with Beastie Boys 

7:10 FIFTH FLOOR

MIA DOI TODD

L.A. singer/instrumentalist on guitar, vocals and harmonium

8:05 FIFTH FLOOR

RUTHANN FRIEDMAN

Folk singer-songwriter, a real child of the ‘60s canyon scene, introduced at Big Sur Folk Festival in 1967 by Joni Mitchell –She wrote “Windy” and so much more–now returning to live performance at age 62!–she lived the ’60s and she remembers it 

8:10 MAIN HALL

SIX ORGANS OF ADMITTANCE

apocalyptic free-mind guitar & voice from Ben Chasny 

8:55 FIFTH FLOOR

MICHAEL HURLEY & JOSEPHINE FOSTER

Hurley is a legendary mellow bard with a hint of wry 

Josephine – you gotta hear this woman sing! “She’s a genius” – Joanna Newsom

9:10 MAIN HALL

WHITE MAGIC

long-awaited return of Mira Bilotte’s NYC-based unclassifiable folk band, new album out next month; this perf will feature Dirty Three drummer Jim White!

10:10 MAIN HALL

OM

return of Bay Area metal trance/mind expander duo who laid peacewaste at this spring’s ArthurBall

11:00 FIFTH FLOOR

LIVING SISTERS

joyous acoustic trio featuring Inara George, Eleni Mandell & Becky Stark (Lavender Diamond), with special guest VAN DYKE PARKS 

11:20 MAIN HALL

SUN RA ARKESTRA

11-piece Arkestra still going deep, now led by the great Marshall Allen 

~12:30am MAIN HALL

NUMERO GROUP DANCE PARTY

“Misplaced soul/funk hits” dance party DJed by the 20th-century pop archaelogists of THE NUMERO GROUP label from Chicago… They’ll be spinning throughout the day, with special sets before and following the Sun Ra Arkestra….


Sunday, Oct 22 

4:40pm in the Main Hall

SSM

John Szymanski, David Shettler and Marty Morris –rawk n roll from Deeetroit on the Alive label

5:30pm on the Fifth Floor

C.B. BRAND

local cosmic California country rock

5:30pm in the Main Hall

THE NICE BOYS

grade-AAA glam rock from Birdman recording artists

6:15pm on the Fifth Floor

THE COLOSSAL YES

Comets on Fire’s Utrillo’s brilliant piano pop proj 

6:20pm in the Main Hall

THE SHARP EASE

Paloma Parfrey-led liberation rockers featured in current issue of Arthur 

7:05pm on the Fifth Floor

CHUCK DUKOWSKI SEXTET

L.A.’s own… featuring Ms. Lora Norton – Vocals, Mr. Chuck Dukowski – Bass (Black Flag), Mr. Lynn Johnston on Horns, Mr. Milo Gonzalez – Guitar, Mr. Tony Tornay – Drums (Fatso Jetson)

7:10pm in the Main Hall

ARCHIE BRONSON OUTFIT

sharply shaped rock music from new English four-piece

7:55pm on the Fifth Floor

EFFI BRIEST

all-female experimental/noise combo

8:05pm in the Main Hall

KYP MALONE

extremely rare solo set from the TV on the Radio singer-guitarist–he’s flying in from the Darfur benefit show in Philadelphia

8:55pm on the Fifth Floor

OCRILIM

solo electric guitar hotwork set from prog-metal-avant maestro Mick Barr 

9:15pm in the Main Hall

THE FIERY FURNACES

justly acclaimed thrill-a-minute brother-and-sister-led clever combo, gifted with pop sense, improvisational chops and conceptual ambition

10:45pm in the Main Hall

COMETS ON FIRE

Quite possibly Earth’s greatest living rock ‘n’ roll band–see present issue of Arthur for more details

DJ sets by Dublab rats and Brian Turner (WFMU)

"Sinclair Lewis' darkly humorous tale of a fascist takeover in the US."

“It Can’t Happen Here” by Sinclair Lewis

Reviewer: Charles Häberl (Cambridge, MA United States)
Sinclair Lewis’ darkly humorous tale of a fascist takeover in the US.

… As dated as it is (1935), its themes will be quite familiar to Americans today. It starts with the highly contested election of an oafish yet strangely charismatic president, who talks like a “reformer” but is really in the pocket of big business, who claims to be a home-spun “humanist,” while appealing to religious extremists, and who speaks of “liberating” women and minorities, as he gradually strips them of all their rights. One character, when describing him, says, “I can’t tell if he’s a crook or a religious fanatic.”

After he becomes elected, he puts the media – at that time, radio and newspapers – under the supervision of the military and slowly begins buying up or closing down media outlets. William Randolph Hearst, the Rupert Murdoch of his times, directs his newspapers to heap unqualified praise upon the president and his policies, and gradually comes to develop a special relationship with the government. The president, taking advantage of an economic crisis, strong-arms Congress into signing blank checks over to the military and passing stringent and possibly unconstitutional laws, e.g. punishing universities when they don’t permit military recruiting or are not vociferous enough in their approval of his policies. Eventually, he takes advantage of the crisis to convene military tribunals for civilians, and denounce all of his detractors as unpatriotic and possibly treasonous.

I’ll stop here, as I don’t want to ruin the story — I can imagine that you can see where all this is going.

ARTHUR EMAIL BULLETIN No. 0054

“COMMAND PERFORMANCE”

The Arthur Magazine Email Bulletin

No. 0054

September 29, 2006

Website:

http://www.arthurmag.com

Comments:

editor@arthurmag.com

The main hall in the historic Palace, founded in 1911, which will be the site of Arthur Nights.

Wata of BORIS, who will be performing Friday, October 20 at Arthur Nights.

$24/night, or $80 for a four-night pass

Buy tickets at Amoeba, Benway, Fingerprints and Sea Level, or online at

Ticketweb.com

Save your tabs,

Heads of Arthur

Philadelphia – Brooklyn – Los Angeles

~Poets can change the world~

Shivastan Publishing presents
The Woodstock Mountain Poetry Revolution!
~Poets can change the world~

Sept.30 & Oct.1 at the Colony Café
22 Rock City Rd. Woodstock NY 845 679 5342

Saturday September 30th
6 to 9 pm: Poet’s Benefit for “Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting”
Jeff Cohen (co-founder of F.A.I.R.) ~author of “Cable News Confidential”
Ed Sanders ~author of “America: a History in Verse”
Eliot Katz ~author of “Unlocking the Exits”
Vivian Demuth ~author of “Breathing Nose Mountain”
Janine Pommy Vega ~author of “The Green Piano”
Hosted by Andy Clausen ~author of “40th Century Man”
+ Music by Tom Pacheco!
Admission $10
{warning: this event may be extremely political}

9pm to midnite: Open Mic Poetry Orgy!
celebrating the new issue of
“wildflowers ~a Woodstock mountain poetry anthology”
Woodstock’s only poetry magazine ~13 great poets~ vol. 7
Printed in Kathmandu, Nepal on Handmade Paper by Shivastan
Hosted by publisher Shiv Mirabito ~author of “Transcendental Tyger”
Free admission!
{this event will highlight this very unusual local publishing company}

Sunday October 1
7 to 9 pm: Moorish Orthodox Revival & Poetry Reading
Robert Kelly ~author of new Shivastan chapbook “Sainte Terre”
{of Bard College}
Peter Lamborn Wilson ~author of “Atlantis Manifesto”
Carey Harrison ~author of “Richard’s Feet”
Hosted by Shiv Mirabito
Admission $10

Associated Press Podcast report on military recruiting and Arthur's SO MUCH FIRE TO ROAST HUMAN FLESH album.

Debate: Recruiting soldiers in schools
Preying on young people, or offering them an opportunity?

With the debate over military recruitment heating up, JAIME HOLGUIN looks at both sides.

Friday, 22 September, 2006, 22:54 EDT, US

It’s a contentious question: How much access should military recruiters have to students and their information?

The debate is not a new one, but its importance seems particularly acute today, with the unpopularity of the Iraq war — along with its death toll — continuing to grow.

Persuading young people to join the military, particularly the Army, has become a hard sell. To compensate, the Army — which is bearing the brunt of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan — increased its corps of recruiters, took to the Internet to attract potential recruits and revamped its benefits package.

The strategy seems to have worked. On Friday, the Army enlisted its 80,000th soldier, reaching its recruiting goal for the year, which ends Sept. 30.

While military officials marked the occasion with a celebratory enlistment of that 80,000th soldier in New York’s Times Square, groups that accuse the military of “manipulative recruiting tactics” continued efforts around the country to keep those numbers down.

Each of these groups is doing what it can to reach young people before the military does — especially in the nation’s schools. They range from a Los Angeles educator’s coalition that distributes anti-recruitment literature at schools, to the editor of counterculture underground magazine “Arthur,” who put out a new compilation record — “So Much Fire To Roast Human Flesh” — that benefits anti-war groups.

In this podcast, asap talks to people on both sides of the fiery debate to find out where it stands today.

ARTHUR EMAIL BULLETIN No. 0053

“COMMAND PERFORMANCE”

The Arthur Magazine Email BulletinNo. 0053September 26, 2006Website:http://www.arthurmag.comComments:editor@arthurmag.comThank you,1. ARTHUR NO. 24 (OCT 06) IS OUT NOW…featuring…* How Comets on Fire and Howlin’ Rain singer-guitarist ETHAN MILLER got his cosmic California yawp. By Trinie Dalton, with photography by Eden Batki.* DOUGLAS RUSHKOFF ON FASCISM, AMERICAN-STYLEThe propaganda state attempted in 1930s Europe has finally reached fruition here in the US.A. Now what do we do? Read this column online now:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/?p=1451* Making clothes for fall from new BUILT BY WENDY patterns. Photography by Glynnis McDaris, modeling by Nicole Lombardi.* LET ‘EM IN: An appreciation of ALL-AGES SHOWPart 1: A chat with MC5 manager/scholar/poet John Sinclair.By Jay Babcock, with artwork by Geoff McFetridge.* Chris Ziegler meets Los Angeles’ fabulous liberation rockers SHARP EASE, with photography by Molly Frances.* DAVE REEVES: Getting into it with Iran will be twice as fun as the party in Iraq! Just ask the British.* Scenes from a 1967 LOVE-IN AT LOS ANGELES’ GRIFFITH PARKPhotographed by the late Seymour Rosen. Text by Kristine McKenna.* COMICS: “Mulberry Season” by John Hankiewicz and  “Strings” (now in full color) by Pshaw.* The Center for Tactical Magic on CELL PHONES, BLUETOOTHS AND MAGIC SPELLS.* New Herbalist Molly Frances goes cuckoo for the ultimate natural brain food: NUTS* Byron Coley & Thurston Moore on dozens of new excitements from the planetary underground, including work by Upset the Rhythm, Leopard Leg, T.I.T.S., Marcia Bassett & Matthew Bower, Michael Bowman, Hello Trudi, Garry Davis, Dinosaurs, Baseball & Hopscotch, Glen or Glenda, Kapital Ink, Dumb Angel, Dream, Genders, the Mall, Sonic Transmission: Television, Tom Verlaine, Richard Hell, Astral Blessing, Vanishing Voice, Outlaw Con Bandana, Eric Amling, Trash Ritual, Government Alpha, Genius Females, Circuit Wound, Emily Maguire, Impractical Cockpit, Fat Worm of Error, Ian Svenonius, Chris Kraus, Suicide, New York Dolls, Patter, Robert Amft, C.M. von Hasswolff, Aritoma Nishihara, Galaxie 500, Damon & Naomi, Lifespan, The Devil’s Sword, So Wrong They’re Right, Sonic Outlaws, Golden Digest and Trash Talking.* C & D think as hard as they can about records by Akron/Family, Beach House, Mick Barr & Zach Hill, The Horrors, Primal Scream, The USA Is a Monster, Wolf Eyes, The Thermals, Trainwreck Riders, The Black Keys, Buffalo Killers and Graham Coxon, as well as a new Blind Faith dvd, a new Byrds box set, the Numero Group’s “Good God!: A Gospel Funk Hymnal” compilation and of course “Ed Rosenthal’s Big Buds 2007 Calendar.”Read this column online now:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/?p=1454Can’t find a copy? Can’t afford to mail-order a copy from us?Feel free to download the complete issue in PDF format in two parts:Part 1 (8.6mb)http://www.arthurmag.com/pdfs/Arthur24part1of2.pdfPart 2 (X.X mb)http://www.arthurmag.com/pdfs/Arthur24part2of2.pdfMore info:http://www.arthurmag.com2. COR! STOP THE PRESSES AND BUY YOUR PLANE TICKETS: ARTHUR NIGHTS UPGRADES ITS LOCATION TO HISTORIC PALACE THEATRE IN DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES. **HOUDINI** PERFORMED THERE FOR CRISSAKES!All of Arthur Nights is happening October 19-22, 2006 at the Palace Theatre (630 South Broadway).“The Downtown Palace Theatre, at 630 S Broadway, was built in 1911 as the third Los Angeles home of the Orpheum Vaudeville circuit. It was originally know as the “Orpheum” and is the oldest remaining Orpheum theatre in the country. Renamed the Palace Theatre in 1926, it became a silent movie house and later added sound.  “The intimate scale of the Palace Theatre in concert with its elegant French details compares to a 17th-century European opera house. With garland-draped columns, a color scheme of pale pastels, wall murals depicting pastoral scenes, and ceiling murals of whimsical girls, the Palace offers an unusually charming and graceful setting. As an early vaudeville house, built without amplified sound, it is designed so that no seat is further than 80 feet from the stage. While the interior is French, the exterior is loosely styled after a Florentine Renaissance palazzo, with multicolored terra cotta swags, flowers, fairies and theatrical masks illustrating the spirit of entertainment. “From its beginning in the late 1800s, the Orpheum Vaudeville circuit ruled the west coast. The most popular singers, dancers and comediennes played the circuit which extended from the Midwest through the West to the Pacific. The crowning stop for the most elite was to play in Los Angeles. The first Orpheum Theatre was built in Los Angeles in the 1880s. “When the second L.A. Orpheum Theatre burned down, another larger more ornate palace was built. Opening in 1911 our theatre was originally named the Orpheum. It is the oldest of the remaining Orpheum theaters in the United States. “Every major vaudeville star on the Orpheum circuit performed in this theatre. The names in light included: the Marx Brothers, W.C. Fields, Sarah Bernhardt, Bob Hope, Al Jolson and Will Rogers. When Harry Houdini performed his stage magic and death-defying escapes, an ambulance was kept parked on the curb in case of emergency. “The principal architect was G Albert Landsburg, who later also designed the new Orpheum Theatre down the block. He was a principal theatre designer in the west between 1909 and 1930. His local work includes the Warner Bros. Theatre Building in Hollywood, and the interiors of the Wiltern and El Capitan theatres. “While the interior is French, the exterior is loosely styled after a Florentine Renaissance palazzo, with multicolored terra cotta swags, flowers, fairies and theatrical masks illustrating the spirit of entertainment. The façade includes four panels depicting the muses of Song, Dance, Music and Drama (sculpted by Domingo Mora, a Spaniard whose work also decorated New York’s old Metropolitan Opera House.) “G Albert Landsburg built the theatre with fire safety in mind. In 1906 there was a devastating fire in a Chicago theater during a children’s matinee show. Because of the poor standard of fire-safety codes such as exit doors that only opened inwards–the patrons were trapped inside and all perished. As a direct response to new fire concerns and codes, the Palace was built with 22 fire escape exits and has one of the first sprinkler systems built in the city. “This specific style of decor is indicative of G Albert Landsburg’s work. He loved to use recessed lighting that can be seen in the three mural domes in the ceiling. Reflectors were built around the bulbs to give a kind of “holy glow”. As you look at the borders of the balcony you can see bare bulbs; this was not a cheap decorative technique. It was actually very exciting for a theater to have electricity at the turn of the century, so they showed them off. “In 1911, the theater could house 2,200 people on the orchestra and two balconies, the mezzanine and the gallery. The gallery was designed for “Negroes Only,” in a rare artifact of the generally tolerant Los Angeles. There is some controversy whether it was used as a minority balcony for people who were not white or if it was a “third class” balcony for the poor with cheaper seating. Either way, the gallery had a separate entrance from the alley and separate restrooms. The gallery was closed in the forties when the theatre was renovated to be movie theatre. Today the theater utilizes 1050 seats in the orchestra and mezzanine only. “The theater was built with beautiful box seating along the sides of the auditorium. When the primary entertainment shifted to film, the box seats were removed because they had ridiculously bad sightlines for movie viewing. They were replaced with two beautiful murals done by Anthony Hiemsburgen, a famous Los Angeles muralist. Later, these murals were covered with red velvet. They were uncovered five years ago. “One interesting feature is the Women’s Lounge. It has glass doors that overlook the theatre entrance. In 1911 women were not permitted by custom to go to the theater unescorted. Women were also not permitted to travel with a young man without a chaperone. This room protects against these social pitfalls. The windows looking into the foyer were designed to help women watch for their dates. “After a long history as a first run movie theatre, the history of the theatre declined with the decline of Broadway and its once flourishing entertainment district. The theatre continued with second run films and Spanish language films until it closed in the mid nineties. The theatre has continued as a featured location for films and television. In the coming year the Palace Theatre will reopen as a live performance venue, once again serving all of Los Angeles….”Thurs. Oct. 19, 6pmDEVENDRA BANHART (special performance!), BERT JANSCH (ex-Pentangle guitarist! hero to Neil Young and Jimmy Page! new album just got 5 stars in Mojo!), ESPERS (now nearing height of their powers!), WATTS PROPHETS (legendary!), JACKIE BEAT (outrageously great!), BELONG (ambient post-My Bloody Valentine fog-throb from New Orleans), YELLOW SWANS (psychedelic agitnoise from Bay Area!), BUFFALO KILLERS (lumbering brother rock n roll a la Mountain, the Beatles and Screaming Trees!) and GROUPERFriday, October 20, 6pmTAV FALCO & THE UNAPPROACHABLE PANTHER BURNS (legendary! see Arthur No. 21 for details!), BORIS (new collabo album with Sunno))) out on Halloween!), BE YOUR OWN PET (l.a. debut of new teenage drummer!), HEARTLESS BASTARDS, THE HOWLING HEX (feat legendary Neil Hagerty [ex-Royal Trux]), CHARALAMBIDES (beyond-rare L.A. perf), AWESOME COLOR (Stooges/Spacemen 3 ancestor worship!), TALL FIRS and “Imaginational Anthem Tour” acoustic guitar superstars CHRISTINA CARTER, SHAWN DAVID MCMILLEN and SEAN SMITHSat., October 21, 3pmSUN RA ARKESTRA (featuring 11 musicians, many of whom played in the Arkestra under Sun Ra, the Arkestra is now led by Marshall Allen!), OM (metal trance/mind expanders who laid peacewaste at ArthurBall), WHITE MAGIC (new album out in November!), MONEY MARK (whoa), SIX ORGANS OF ADMITTANCE, MICHAEL HURLEY (legendary!), JOSEPHINE FOSTER, FUTURE PIGEON, RUTHANN FRIEDMAN (legendary!), LIVING SISTERS feat. Inara George, Eleni Mandell & Becky Stark (Lavender Diamond), MIA DOI TODD, WOODEN WAND, RESIDUAL ECHOES and NVH (Comets on Fire’s Noel Von Harmonson noize proj, with special guest Ben Chasny). Plus: Closing “misplaced soul/funk hits” dance party DJed by THE NUMERO GROUPSun., Oct. 22, 3pmCOMETS ON FIRE, THE FIERY FURNACES (now featuring Jason Lowenstein on drums!), UNANNOUNCEABLE GUEST (WHO HAS RAMBLED NEAR AND FAR FOR DECADES), THE SHARP EASE (6 out of 7 songs on new EP are HITS!), ARCHIE BRONSON OUTFIT (from England), SSM (rawk n roll from Deeetroit), THE COLOSSAL YES (Comets on Fire’s Utrillo’s brilliant piano pop proj), THE NICE BOYS (glamorous rock), EFFI BRIEST and C.B. BRAND (local cosmic California country rock)* Festival will feature between-band DJ sets by Brian Turner (wfmu) and dublab DJs and many more TBA…* LOTS of surprise stuff yet to be announced.* All artists will perform full sets.* Tickets are $24/night, or $80 for a four-night pass.* ALL AGES are welcome. (Ask about our senior discount!)Buttloads of info on Arthur Nights at murdochSpace:http://www.myspace.com/arthurnights  Visit the official site at http://arthurnights.imeem.com3. A MESSAGE FROM SIR PLASTIC CRIMEWAVE, FRIEND OF ARTHUR.”greetings friendz!just wanted to offer up a subscription for my lil mix-tape club, which is about to go into it’s second year. The deal is this: You get 6 audio cassette tapes a year, delivered to your home– one every other month of all sorts of rare and psychedelical delights–past themes have been heavy rock, floaty acid folk, psych-pop, spacey jams, and super-scarce live/unreleased stuff…each features exclusive artwork, and ya get like a membership card/decree and some random shit.this time around plans for themes like biker rock, obscure shoegazer stuff, rare krautrock, communal freak-outs, satanic rock, and some more random pastiches…needless to say some personal recordings and totally unreleased stuff from my own collection makes it in there….at present the tape club has about 30 members, in 6 countries, and the feedback has been enthusiastic–everyone from midwest farmers to SF lesbians, music nerds (big surprise) from all over seem to dig it.so rates are$35 a year for USA$50 for overseasi am open to negotiation for trades or blank tape providing discounts……you can paypal me at plasticcw@hotmail.comor send a check or money order to:1061 n.western avechicago Il 60622thanks!! please reply before November 1, when the next year of tapes begins……………………”4.  A MESSAGE FROM SIR ERIK DAVIS, FRIEND OF ARTHUR AND AUTHOR OF THE ESSENTIAL NEW BOOK, “THE VISIONARY STATE: A JOURNEY THROUGH CALIFORNIA’S SPIRITUAL LANDSCAPE” WITH PHOTOGRAPHER MICHAEL RAUNER…* This Saturday, Sep 30, 2006:Visionary California in FilmIn this talk, I’ll focus on the desertscapes in the California imagination, as reflected in the book _The Visionary State_. I’ll show slides of Michael Rauner’s photos and some clips of cosmic Mojave films. Followed by Aron Ranen’s flick, “LSD in the 60s.”ATA, 992 Valencia Street, San Francisco8:30pm; $5* Monday Oct 2, 2006        Lecture: “The Visionary State”Hillside Club, 2286 Cedar Street, Berkeley7:30 pm* Thursday, Oct 5, 2006Reading: “The Visionary State”Gateways Books, 1126 Soquel Avenue, Santa Cruz7pm5. ARTHUR COLUMNIST DOUGLAS RUSHKOFF & FORMER ARTHUR COLUMNIST DANIEL PINCHBECK DIALOGUE IN NYC THIS THURSDAY — FREEArthur columnist Douglas Rushkoff writes:”I’ll be making a rare NYC public appearance this week (they’ve become rare because of the duties of fatherhood), engaging in a conversation with author Daniel Pinchbeck, who was recently contextualized as something of a Burning Man apocalyptic guru in a Rolling Stone.  “Emails from friends and readers (who know my bias against guruhood and fundamentalist prophecy of all kind) have been pouring in asking if I’m going to “square off” against him. All I can say is that while our views on the role and reality level of prophecy and psychedelic experiences may differ, I’m not the combative type, and see less value in dialectic or fiery rhetoric than in the honest quest for common ground and shared objectives.  “So while our methods of investigation and idea dissemination might not be compatible, many of our views on what needs to be done to fix civilization’s messes are the same. I expect nothing more and nothing less than conversation aimed at determining the appropriate application of prophecy in our times, however it may have been dislodged from the noosphere.  “Here are the details. My next scheduled NYC appearance will be at Barnes and Noble Astor Place, at the end of February, when the second collected edition of my comic book, Testament, is released.”September 28, 2006, 7 p.m.McNally Robinson Booksellers50 Prince StreetNew York City, NY10012-3325Phone 212-274-1160“Post-Modern Prophecy: Urgent Myths for Urgent Times?”A dialogue between authors Daniel Pinchbeck and Douglas RushkoffDaniel Pinchbeck is the author of “Breaking Open the Head” (Broadway Books), and “2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl” (Tarcher/Penguin). His articles and essays have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Wired, The Village Voice, Arthur, and many other publications. His “Here and Now” column ran in Arthur magazine from No. 9 (Mar 2004) to 18 (Sept 2005).Douglas Rushkoff’s titles include Cyberia, Media Virus, Nothing Sacred: The Truth about Judaism, Coercion (winner of the Marshall Mcluhan Award), and “Get Back in the Box.” The first collection of his Bible-based comic book, “Testament,” was published this year by DC/Vertigo. He has been a columnist for Arthur since No. 15 (Mar 2005) .6. FROM SIR R.A. PLEUGER, FRIEND OF ARTHUR:”Check JA Caesar and the ecsasy of “Jashumon”.It was rewarding for me.Scroll down to the third record and you can downloadthis beautiful music for a ghostly theatre play:”http://citiesonflamewithrockandroll.blogspot.com/2006_07_01_citiesonflamewithrockandroll_archive.htmlHypereducation is our only hope,Arthur Peace VigilantesBrooklyn – Philadelphia – Los Angeles