MAGGOTS by Brian Chippendale

MAGGOTS
Brian Chippendale
(PictureBox)
Paperback
344 pages, two-color
4” x 6”
$21.95

“Fort Thunder co-founder Brian Chippendale’s follow up to his acclaimed NINJA is an immersive, frenetic reading experience. Drawn in 1996 and ‘97 over the pages of a Japanese book catalog, this 344-page graphic novel is now reproduced in a facsimile edition. Chippendale’s dense linework nearly vibrates off the page. The story concerns a group of characters living in a place called Fort Thunder, wandering around and discovering little holes in their universe. They battle a capitalist landlord, eat peanut butter sandwiches and embark on adventures somewhere between dirt punk and epic cosmic science fiction. Chippendale’s drawings are much like his famed drumming for Lightning Bolt: propulsive, soulful and chaotic. But, like his best songs, Maggots opens up into beautiful visual passages, vistas of temples and flowers, all drawn in scorching black marks that tell a story in their own abstractions.”


Arthur contributor Erik Davis on WOLVES IN THE THRONE ROOM for Slate

Deep Eco-Metal

Delve far enough into heavy metal, and you’ll find environmentalists.

By Erik Davis
Posted Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2007, at 1:44 PM ET
slate.com

After 20 minutes of driving around in the dark near Santa Cruz, I found the right road and pulled up in front of a cemetery. I was looking for a rock band called Wolves in the Throne Room, whose gig tonight was advertised as occurring “somewhere in the woods.” Stepping into the chilly evening, I slammed the car door and started walking down an unlit lane toward a forest of cypress and eucalyptus. Where the asphalt gave way to dirt, a scruffy kid with a lantern led me and a few others along trails and over streams. A sign asked us not to smoke, to turn off our cell phones, and to try to refrain from talking. Nobody asked me for any money.

Stumbling through the weeds, I came across 30 or 40 young folks gazing at a black-and-white film loop of ravens and ravaged forests that was projected onto a sheet pegged to a massive conifer. The crowd shuffled and stared and occasionally burped and giggled. Then we lumbered through the bushes toward a nearby clearing marked by a few antique hanging lanterns, a drum kit on a carpet, and a couple of amps and guitars. There was no stage, no risers, no proper lights. A massive tree limb stretched over the clearing, and a few people had clambered up for a better view, young gents with furry hats and Rasputin beards passing around bottles of nameless homebrew. Waves of ambient electronica began flowing out of an old analog synthesizer, merging with the groan of a nearby generator. After 15 minutes of this, three rather nondescript guys shuffled out of the crowd and took up their instruments.

Given the setting, you might think that Wolves in the Throne Room was some West Coast jam band or a freak-folk combo. But what these three fellows played was melancholic and often brutal black metal. READ MORE…


Actionists in Clown Suits Intervene in CIA Recruitment Session at UCSB

‘A routine CIA information and recruitment session was suddenly disrupted on the campus of the University of California, Santa Barbara Thursday when a small group of student protesters walked in and lead a man with bound hands to the front of the room, where he was laid on a table and (voluntarily*) tortured with a CIA-approved technique used to simulate drowning, known as water-boarding. The CIA speakers were struggling to speak over the “torture victim’s” coughs and cries for help, while potential CIA recruits looked on with bewilderment at the incident.’

from The Daily Nexus, the UCSB student newspaper:

Students Protest CIA’s Torture Tactics
UCSB Students Dress in Clown Costumes to Denounce CIA, Follow Presenter Across Campus
By Evan Wagstaff / Staff Writer
Published Thursday, November 15, 2007
Issue 37 / Volume 88

Student protesters dressed as clowns follow a CIA representative from the UCen conference room to his car near Pardall Tunnel on Wednesday evening. The group interrupted the event to perform imaginary torture methods in order to deter recruitment at UCSB. ERIN SALDAÑA / DAILY NEXUS

The clowns interrupt the CIA informational meeting to criticize torture tactics and other allegedly negative influences of the program yesterday. They distributed pamphlets on campus and used the clown theme to try to make a mockery out of the CIA. ERIN SALDAÑA / DAILY NEXUS

A group of several protesters dressed in clown costumes and painted faces followed a CIA recruiter last night from his presentation in the UCen to his car behind the Thunderdome.

A CIA recruitment and informational meeting was taking place in a conference room on the UCen’s lower level, when, at 5 p.m., a group of protesters interrupted the recruiter’s PowerPoint presentation by placing one of their fellow clowns on the front table, binding his hands and arms, and pouring water on his face to simulate waterboarding torture in front of the presentation’s unsuspecting audience. The group also held a mock press conference citing historical torture statistics and played limbo with a fuzzy green boa before the recruiters quickly packed up their equipment and left the room.

The crowd of a dozen clowns and almost 50 onlookers followed the lead recruiter through the halls of the UCen, up and down two flights of stairs, and out to Storke Plaza, chanting “No torture at UCSB” and “CIA, go away.” The recruiter, who did not stop for comment, said only “I’m not in violation of anything,” before getting into his car at the lot next to Pardall Tunnel.

Jennifer Bamberg, a UCSB alumni and protester, was passing out anti-torture signs to fellow supporters in front of the UCen throughout the protest. She said students should reject the CIA and cited various allegations.

“It’s the fact that they practice torture since their inception,” Bamberg said. “They had a hand in the coup in Chile in ‘73, they go into places like Afghanistan and assure opium gets to poor black areas in the U.S.; they supported crop dusting in Columbia and poisoned thousands of families’ farm supplies.”

According to third-year environmental studies major Whitney Walberg, “Community Members Against War” is the unofficial group behind the protest. The group has no set roster of members, but serves as a place for concerned students to plan action. Walberg said that the group chose the clown motif to embarrass the CIA and make a joke out of their meeting.

“The reason they feel this is effective is because they completely make the situation a joke,” Walberg said. “It takes the seriousness and legitimacy away from the CIA. UCSB is one of the only UCs that the CIA recruits at and we want them to stop what they’re doing.”

After the recruiter left, Will Parish, the most costumed of the protesters, spoke against the CIA while in character as a high-pitched clown.

“All I wanted to know was if, by Western standards, it’s OK for me to tickle you in the butt if it’s okay for you to torture people,” Parish said. “That guy was an evasive asshole.”

The protesters also distributed pamphlets detailing several instances of alleged CIA international abuses.

First year zoology and film studies major Lindsey Parker said she heard about the event through Facebook and came to protest what she deemed as unacceptable practices by the CIA.

“We claim to support a peaceful cause but then we do shady things like this,” Parker said. “There are all sorts of barbaric acts that are going on.”

Scenes from Arthur Magazine-presented L.A. River Beautification Meeting featuring NO AGE

riverbeauty.jpg
photo by Richard A. Pleuger

This past Saturday afternoon Arthur Magazine presented an L.A. River Beautification Meeting featuring a performance by NO AGE–a community gathering action in celebration of public space and nature amongst the urban sprawl, powered by a single generator we rented for $58 from a supply store.

Unfortunately, the beautiful, peaceful, all-ages, free public gathering was interrupted by sadly misguided Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority rangers who, working with a dubious understanding of the law, announced by megaphone 19 minutes into No Age’s performance that the band and audience were not allowed to be in or near the riverbed. (Apparently we were supposed to be shopping at the mall or watching sports on television rather than gathering together down by the river as people were doing long before “Los Angeles” existed.)

Still, the event was a wonderful, worthwhile endeavor. Joshua Pressman shot some pix and wrote an account (“What could have been a humdrum Saturday afternoon turned out to be the most memorable I’ve had this entire year”) at LAist.com.

Mark Frohman & Molly Frances of colornational.com shot and edited a film of the event in a single evening. Here it is:

Part one: gathering and music…

Part two: more music…

Part three: busted…

“Did you know you can rent a generator for $52 and set up and play ANYWHERE until the cops come? So do it, do it and send me the pictures. It was such a radical spectacle. You forget that you can do this kind of thing. They made it through 4 songs. And then the cops showed up. Asking everyone who was in charge of this, and nobody knowing. A funny flurry of activity, people packing up and getting out of there. One of the more memorable moments of the Fall. A rich afternoon.” Wonderful photos and account by Cali at teenageteardrops.abstractdynamics.org/archives/009882.html

No Age:
noagela.blogspot.com/

L.A. Park Rangers:
laparks.org/dos/ranger/ranger.htm

More information about the L.A. River is available at Friends of the L.A. River…
www.folar.org

“Nature Trumps,” an L.A. River blog compiled by arthur editor jay babcock:
naturetrumps.wordpress.com

Michael Hurley on NPR's Weekend Edition by Arthur contributor Joel Rose

Nomadic Folk Musician Finds New Fans
By Joel Rose – November 17, 2007

LISTEN…

Michael Hurley’s carefully crafted songs and hand-painted album covers have endeared him to a small but devoted group of musicians and critics. Now, more than 40 years into his career, Hurley is reaching a broader audience — including a younger generation of fans who are covering his songs — and releasing his new record, Ancestral Swamp, on Devendra Banhart’s Gnomonsong label.

Hurley drives a car he calls the “Blue Alligator,” a 1973 Dodge Coronet station wagon, and he talks like he drives: His thoughts are separated by long pauses. His songs don’t seem to be in a hurry, either. Knowing Hurley since the 1970s, music journalist Byron Coley agrees.

“To go to a Michael Hurley concert or listen to one of his records really is to enter another kind of universe where time moves a little more slowly, and narratives develop at their own pace,” Coley says. “But they develop very fully.

“His songs are an unusual combination. The lyrics can be very funny. But few of them tell stories of triumph.”

Hurley briefly recorded for a major label in the 1970s, but those records quickly fell out of print. He’s probably best-known for his contribution to the 1975 recording Have Moicy, a collaboration with the Holy Modal Rounders.

Hurley grew up in Bucks County, Penn., with one of the original Holy Modal Rounders. They were all hanging around New York City in the early 1960s, says Rounders member Peter Stampfel, when they started playing a new kind of folk music.

“It’s a confluence of traditional folk music and, um, drugs, basically, with the latter having a very active influence on the former,” Stampfel says.

Unfortunately ‘Freak-Folk’

According to Stampfel, Hurley’s 1965 song “Intersoular Blues” is one of the first examples of what’s now called “freak folk,” which he calls an unfortunate phrase.

Today, this scene that’s been dubbed “freak folk” by the music press is an informal movement of acoustic musicians around the country. Some are inspired by the same recreational influences of the Holy Modal Rounders, as well as an earlier generation of acoustic performers from the 1960s and ’70s.

Hurley’s songs have been covered by a number of younger artists, including Cat Power and the Philadelphia-based band Espers. Espers’ bassist, Chris Smith, found inspiration in Hurley’s music.

“He was almost like my Bob Dylan, like our Bob Dylan of my friends,” Smith says. “Where he was so American to a point where it was accurate, but it wasn’t based on a decade or an era.”

Bob Dylan and Hurley were born a few months apart in 1941. They both cut their teeth on traditional American folk music, and they’re both painters. Hurley has painted most of his own record covers. They’re populated by roughly drawn animals in human hipster clothing — characters from the comic books Hurley had been drawing since the ’50s, before he was even writing songs.

“A lot of kids were doing that in those days, drawing little stories out and passing them up the aisle,” Hurley says.

Two of his earliest comic-book characters were Boone and Jocko, a pair of wolves who amuse themselves by drinking wine and flirting with women. Stampfel says they were way ahead of their time.

“They’re actually the first underground cartoons, I would say. He was drawing them in 1959, 1960, before there were any underground cartoonists. They were basically Bohemian, ne’er-do-well, layabout, slacker wolves,” Stampfel says.

Conflating Art and Life

The line between Hurley’s art and his life can get blurry. He refers to himself as Snock and sometimes takes on the persona of his cartoon characters. He’s never stayed anywhere long, and he’s been equally restless when it comes to holding a day job.

“I picked string beans. I planted ginseng. I sold hot tamales on the streets of New Orleans. I sold pretzels on the streets of Boston,” Hurley says.

Hurley says that he’s never held a job for more than six months.

“I don’t like having to do something when I get up in the morning,” he says. “I’d rather just hang out, do what I feel like doing, putter around the house, take a walk, you know.”

Coley says it’s partly this refusal to grow up and get a full-time job that’s endeared Hurley to a younger generation of artists and musicians.

“The fact that he’s been creating the way that he has for so long gives a lot of these younger musicians [the idea] that you can do this: be a nomadic, traveling musician in an Middle Age type of mode, today,” Coley says. “And that it actually works.”

Well, sort of. Michael Hurley isn’t getting rich. But he does make a modest living from his paintings and music. He seems grateful that a younger generation is paying attention and helping him get decent gigs.

“They have to have their festivals,” Hurley says. “Whenever they have one, they have to have their grandfather with them, which is good for me, because my peers aren’t going to come out that night anyway.”

Hurley turns 66 next month, though he still doesn’t sound ready to settle down. After six years on the Oregon coast, he may be getting ready to point his old car toward its next destination.

“The floorboards start to seem like they’re coming up at me,” Hurley says. “And I just have to go.”

Arthur and Abrams IMAGE present book release party TONIGHT for Trinie Dalton's "A Unicorn Is Born" in L.A.

From author and longtime Arthur contributor Trinie Dalton:

“The book release celebration, sponsored by Arthur Magazine and publisher Abrams IMAGE, for A Unicorn Is Born is this coming Sunday, Nov. 18th, at Family. I will do a short reading, and my dear sweet lady friends Becky Stark (of Lavender Diamond) and Clare Crespo (of Yummyfun) will read and do a unicorn cupcake demonstration. !! Yes, edible cupcakes. We will commence the event at the start of the night, then party after, so please come at 8:30 and bring your unicorns as there will be oat buckets and diamond collars for each beast who attends. Don’t be shy!”

Family Books
436 N. Fairfax Ave.
LA 90036 (across from Canter’s)
8:30 PM Sunday, Nov. 18th

FELT CLUB TODAY in L.A.

FELT CLUB: XL HOLIDAY featuring MAKER SQUARE

Sunday, NOVEMBER 18, 11am-6pm | LACC, 855 N. Vermont Ave., LA CA 90029

Tickets are $5 at the door—or visit one of these locations and get your tickets in advance for half off! Kids under 12 are free. There are no online ticket sales.

What in tarnation is Felt Club: XL Holiday?
On Sunday, November 18, from 11am-6pm we’re hosting 75+ artists, crafters, and designers from SoCal and beyond who’ll show off their latest and greatest D.I.Y. wares for your handmade-shopping pleasure! Visitors will also enjoy fresh and delicious eats and drinks from renowned Eagle Rock eatery Auntie Em’s Kitchen. You’ll also enjoy happy shopping music from our DJs, Dirty Robot and Lance Rock. With your $5 admission, you’ll receive a ticket to win a fantastic door prize, and the first 250 visitors will be treated to swag bags full of cool magazines, craft patterns, coupons, buttons, li’l gifts and samples from our sponsors and vendors (sneak peeks are viewable in our Flickr pool!). Last but not least, we’re offering a full roster of hands-on craft classes throughout the day.

But what the heck is “Maker Square”?!
Maker Square is our fair-within-a-fair—a mini version of the popular Maker Faire event—hosted by the staff of Make and Craft magazines. Maker Square brings together science, art, craft and engineering in a fun, energized and exciting public forum. The aim is to inspire people of all ages to roll up their sleeves and become makers. Expect to see demonstrations (often hands-on) in robotics, unusual musical instruments, soft circuits, microcontrollers, and more. The Maker Square portion of Felt Club will feature people like Mister Jalopy, who will demonstrate his Mobile Drive-In Movie Projector (featured on the cover of MAKE Vol.11), Jason Torchinsky’s “Super Stick”, a 5-foot tall Atari 2600 joystick (which actually works!!), Jed Berk and his Blubberbots, and many more. In short, Maker Square is DIY meets techno-nerdiness at its best!

Where does XL Holiday happen?
The event happens outdoors on the quad at Los Angeles City College, 855 N. Vermont Ave. (between Santa Monica and Melrose). LACC is spitting distance from several major freeways, the Red Line Metro, and many bus stops. You can enter Felt Club from Vermont or Heliotrope, as the campus runs the length of a city block. Yay for our roomy new location!

Where do I park?
There’s a Felt Club lot on Heliotrope, right near the rear entrance of the campus. (It’s the “Faculty and Staff” lot on this map.) Just look for the colorful flags and banners!

How can I become a volunteer?
THANK YOU for asking! We will be needing a huge amount of help this time around, with everything from set-up and break-down, vendor/maker check-in, to craft class facilitation and more. If you’re interested, please e-mail our Volunteer Coordinator, Wendy Jung, to see what you can do to help. Let us know if you have a particular area of expertise/interest.

XL HOLIDAY SPONSORS + FRIENDS:

ADORN MAGAZINE | CHRONICLE BOOKS | CRAFT MAGAZINE | HANDMADE GALLERIES LA
HANDMADE NATION | LION BRAND YARN | THE LITTLE KNITTERY | MUNKY KING | READYMADE MAGAZINE | REFORM SCHOOL | THE SAMPLER | SECRET HEADQUARTERS | SUBLIME STITCHING | SUBVERSIVE CROSS STITCH

DOOR PRIZES FROM:

CATHY OF CALIFORNIA | CRAFT MAGAZINE | CHRONICLE BOOKS | HANDMADE GALLERIES LA | HANNAHMADE HOUSEWEARS | I HEART GUTS | JAIME ZOLLARS | KLEAN BATH AND BODY | MISS ALISON | MY REBE | REFORM SCHOOL | ROCK SCISSOR PAPER | SUBVERSIVE CROSS STITCH | SUBLIME STITCHING | WHODINI HANDMADE
…and more to be announced!