ARTHUR BEST OF 2007 LISTS No. 15: Steve Aylett

Steve Aylett: Good stuff from my stupid year –

Efterkland Parades CD – strange toytown parades & ghosty nebulae from Copenhagen.

Josie Long – comedian who is happy, optimistic and basically the opposite of me in almost every way, while somehow not being irritating.

Cardiacs gig at London Astoria – Tim looking like a school headmaster, Jim and the other guy looking like Lord Mayors, plus two strange women in red. All was happy in the pond.

The Fountain (Darren Aronofsky). Shut up, that’s why.

7-Inch Stitch’s Phosphorus Tarot of Matchbooks CD – band from Austin Texas bases an album around the works of Jeff Lint. Really.

Monique Ortiz – big & hot angst from the singer/guitarist of AKACOD and Bourbon Princess.

Colette Phair’s Nightmare in Silicon – the cold horror of a roboticized human is perfected in the chill of this book.

Catherynne M. Valente’s Orphan’s Tales books – rich fairy tales within fairy tales.

Joanna Newsom’s Ys CD – obviously.

Scott Lynch’s Locke Lamora books – rip-roaring con-games and pirate shenanagins.

Steve Aylett is an author, Lintophiliast and real live wire. He discussed the obscure pulp author Jeff Lint in Arthur No. 2 and the Matrix films in Arthur No. 8, and, in Arthur No. 17, he presented a two-page excerpt from a vintage Jeff Lint-penned comic book, sparking a new round of eBay bidding war madness that has yet to subside.


ARTHUR BEST OF 2007 LISTS No. 14: John Payne

A top 20 list from John Payne…

Reissues floated my boat most deeply, as I find most contemporary cultural life far too cold and cruel. This list is in no particular order:

1) Robert Wyatt, Comicopera (Domino)

2) Ryuichi Sakamoto and Christian Fennesz,Cendre (Touch Music)

3) Marissa Nadler, Songs III: Bird on the Water (Peacefrog/Kemado)

4) Ed Sanders, Sanders’ Truckstop and Beercans on the Moon re-releases (Collectors’ Choice)

5) Supersilent – Supersilent 8 (Rune Grammofon)

6) Devendra Banhart– Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon (XL)

7) Tuxedo Moon – Vapour Trails (Crammed Discs)

8. Liars– Liars(Mute)

9) Amon Tobin– Foley Room (Ninja Tune) and at the “Pravda” event at Disney Hall on May 28

10) Christina Rosenvinge — Continental 62 (Smells Like)

11) SWR Stuttgart Symphony Orchestra —Valentin Silvestrov: Symphony No. 6 (ECM)

12) Stefano Battaglia– Re: Pasolini (ECM)

13) Oxbow– The Narcotic Story (Hydra Head)

14) J.D. Blackfoot– The Ultimate Prophecyreissue (Fallout)

15) Stephane Ginsburgh– Morton Feldman: For Bunita Marcus reissue (Sub Rosa)

16) Chris Watson + BJ Nilsen– Storm (Touch Music)

17) Sunburned Hand of the Man– Fire Escape (Smalltown Supersound)

18) Ghost – Overture: Live in Nippon Yusen Soko 2006cd + dvd (Drag City)

19) Pauline Oliveros – The Wanderer and Accordion & Voice reissues (Important)

20) Pentangle– The Time Has Come 1967-1973 box set (Castle Music)

John Payne has been writing about exciting music and culture for eons. He profiled Jon Hassell in Arthur No. 18 and discussed Magma and the Mars Volta at length in Arthur No. 16.

ARTHUR BEST OF 2007 LISTS No. 13: Tracy Nakayama & Jeremy Yoder

TRACY NAKAYAMA + JEREMY YODER’S BEST OF 2007

MUSIC
– “Valerie and Her Week of Wonders” (OST) reissue on Finder’s Keeper’s and The Valerie Project’s score on Drag City as well as their performance at The Silent Movie Theatre, LA.
– Prinzhorn Dance School “S/T” (DFA)
– Harmonia 74 (Water)
– Mani Neumeier “Sketches” (Important)
– Aluk Todolo 7″ (Implied Sound)
– Wooden Shjips bonus disc with all the vinyl stuff (Holy Mountain)
– Panda Bear “Person Pitch”
– The Entrance Band live shows
– Erik Bluhm’s new “Soft Sounds For Gentle People” comp and Turkish Psych CD-Rs
– Andy Votel and Cherrystones mix CDs and podcasts
– M.I.A. “Kala”

MOVIES
– Mike Mills’ documentary “Does Your Soul Have A Cold?”

BOOKS
– “The Park” (reprint) by Kohei Yoshiyuki
– “Unmonumental” – catalog from the New Museum exhibit
– “The Source: The Untold Story of Father Yod, YaHoWa 13 and the Source Family” by Electricity Aquarian
– “Tree of Smoke” by Denis Johnson

MAGAZINES
– Arthur, ANP Quarterly, Bixobal (#1), Daddy (#4)

THANKS TO
– Hiromi Yoshii Gallery, Rocket Magazine, and Somone’s Garden in Japan, as well as Gabie Strong and David Patton in LA for their support.

– Jay Babcock for keeping Arthur alive and his many good deeds which include turning us on to the films of Jordan Belson, the new Om and White Rainbow records, and for giving us our first opportunities to DJ.

SORRY WE MISSED IT
Boredoms 7/7/07, Daft Punk tour, Mike Nelson installation in NYC, Carol Bove’s show at Maccarone, Charles Ray’s new tree sculpture

Artists Tracy Nakayama & Jeremy Yoder moved to Los Angeles a year ago, and are still breathing. Happy anniversary, dudes!


ARTHUR BEST OF 2007 LISTS No. 12: Ben Blackwell

Ben Blackwell’s Top 20 for 2007

1. 7″ vinyl singles: Somehow managed to convince Detroit’s weekly rag to let me do a singles column once a month. Armed with a valid excuse, I bought 7″s like crazy. A bunch of shit blew my mind…”Jiggle City” by Noot D’Noot, “October Fires” by Wolf People, “See Me Mariona” from Brian Olive, “I Know a Place” by Jay Reatard are all bona fide in the truest sense. Seriously, that Wolf People single will blow even the arm-foldingest hipster’s minds.

2. Arby’s Cheese Cake Bites: the only time I’ve ever made a phone call immediately following a meal was after I first tasted the succulent richness of these piping hot beauties. Well-worth eating a roast beef sandwich for the chance to have these as dessert.

3. Guerilla Poetics: never before have I found a movement that so accurately captures my very own mindset and ideals. Under a vague guise of anonymity, this collective letterpresses poetry broadsides and dispatches them to operatives the world over who then smuggle them into books of particular significance in libraries, bookstores, etc. I makes me feel subversive and happy all at the same time. www.guerillapoetics.org

4. Time spent in Iqualuit, Nunavut: eating raw caribou meat, climbing a beastly hill in a full suit and tie and Florsheim dress shoes, the eerie faux daylight experienced at 3am a week after solstice, watching Inuit elders dancing, finding random LPs near the ice floe’s edge that’d been used for target shooting with the bullet holes to prove it, a veggie tray that cost $50, watching the White Stripes fly the far reaches of the Earth to spread the word. In one word: astonishing.

5. Summer of Love Exhibit at the Whitney NYC: Vernor Panton’s Phantasy Landscape Visions II and La Monte Young’s Music and Light Box were both well worth taking my shoes off for.

6. Re-birth of Arthur Magazine: maybe now Jay will run my tour diary via post card ramblings

7. CD-r of unreleased tunes from forgotten Detroit band Death: holy shit. Three Afro-American, Jehovah’s Witness brothers from the east side of Detroit locked onto some mad pre-punk squalor back in 1974. Email me for a devastating Mp3 of “Politicians in My Eyes” poignant now more than ever.

8. Quick trip to Cannes for the film festival: slept most of the time there, but Schnabel was a genuine sweetheart.

9. Late 80’s/Early 90’s ghetto bass/r’n’b/hip-hop: the iTunes giftcard proved valuable for how many old school favorites I was able to grab to help recapture my youth. Poison Clan, Oaktown 3-5-7, DJ Magic Mike, Black Sheep, Nice & Smooth and I still know most of the lyrics.

10. Garage rock alive and well: Killer full-lengths from the Black Lips, the Horrors, the Hives and the Alarm Clocks is proof positive that some shit just never goes out of style.

11. Three days of employment at Archer Record Pressing, Detroit: I can honestly say I’ve fully-experienced blue collar life albeit for less than half a week. From grinding down cast-off Lp’s (warped, scratched, off-center labels), filling vinyl vats, putting records in paper sleeves, putting those in jackets, working the “wrapped” end of the shrinkwrap machine and packing ’em up in boxes of 50 was the three most fulfilling days of the year.

12. Buying a Levis “Big E” jean jacket in Halifax: my lone sartorial extravagance of the year

13. Movies I’d missed the first time around: Old Boy and The Prestige both did my head in.

14. My FreeDamn Vols. 5-6: Rin Tanaka’s studious chronicling of clothing in American subcultures is the best coffee table book out there. Somehow makes all your thrift store scores that much more lame.

15. Bagazine: leave it to mail art stalwart Johnny Brewton of X-Ray Book Company to round up the likes of Billy Childish and Mark Mothersbaugh to contribute to this “magazine in a bag” filled with an assortment of chapbooks, poetry, art prints and all-around exciting and impressive ephemera. www.bagazine.com

16. The Ice Cream Man: cooling refreshment at Bonnaroo and saviour hunger suppressant at CMJ. And he likes the Dirtbombs! www.icecreamman.com

17. Human Eye live at the MoCAD, Detroit: paint-splattering, a pillow full stuffing raining down on the crowd, fire…what a way to turn a staid, boring art exhibit (Shrinking Cities) into a living, breathing art experience.

18. Not Not Fun Records: the only label around whose every release I purchase without discrimination. Britt and Manda have tapped into something truly fun, interesting and original. www.notnotfun.com

19. Z-Gun magazine: sometimes it’s just nice to hold something tangible, you know? www.z-gun.org

20. High Bias Recording Studio: the most comfortable, inviting recording environment I’ve ever been in. The only studio that matters in Detroit. www.myspace.com/turnmymicup

Detroit’s Ben Blackwell runs Cass Records and drums for the Dirtbombs. You’d think that was enough but wait, there’s more: he blogs at www.trembleunderboomlights.blogspot.com


ARTHUR BEST OF 2007 LISTS No. 11 – Steve K

STEVE K’s Best of 2007 list:

White Magic at Mercury Lounge

Pan’s Labyrinth at Sunshine with Jen and Fred

Benjy Ferree at Tonic (I think this was the last show I saw there)

Favourite Sons at Joe’s Pub. Some fans brought a banner and waved it the whole show. Another drunk guy yelled “R.E.M.!” The lead singer didn’t pay any attention and proceeded to destroy the place with his vibrato.

East of Havana screening at Soho House

Before the Revolution at Film Forum

Clipse at the El Rey with Brett

Zodiac at the Vista with Little Chimo

Dinner with Iris at the Pacific Dining Car

Ignacio Gonzales-Lang opening at Harris & Lieberman

Curating The Golden Age of VHS at the Anthology Film Archives

Watching Sunrise Earth with Jay Babcock

Brightblack Morning Light and Gary Higgins at Mercury Lounge

Inland Empire at the IFC Center

D. Charles Speer at Glasslands

Looking out at the sunset across Manhattan from the Top of the Rock

Watching Confessions of a Matchmaker with Shannon Taggart (it’s filmed in Buffalo, cut me some slack)

The King of Kong at the IFC Center (quote of the year: “there’s a Donkey Kong kill screen coming up”)

Watching the Prophet’s fall from grace on Big Love

The Simpsons Movie with Olivia and Phillipa

Hanging out with Michael Evans and Larry 7 before seeing the 77 Boadrum on 7/7/07 in DUMBO!

Seeing every film in the Yugoslavian Black Wave series at BAM plus getting to see Buck Henry speak in person!

Stevie Wonder at Madison Square Garden (w/ Tony Bennett and Prince!!!)

Thom Anderson’s Red Hollywood at the Anthology Film Archives

Pizza at John’s on 44th st. (best place to eat pizza in a former Catholic church!)

Ron Hawkin from Lowest of the Low at Stephanie & Chris’s wedding a Kleinhan’s

Listening to “No Quarter” during the Zeppelin reunion broadcast. They sound great, almost as good as Jimmy Page with the Black Crowes at the Greek in ’99!

Raiders of the Lost Ark remake at Anthology Film Archives with Wendy

Finally getting my hands on a Wii and bowling with Bryan, Keith, Calder, John Allen and my Mom! My Mom beat me the first game!

Hearing Mark Lanegan sing with Soulsavers (my first time seeing him) at the Grammercy Theatre

Welcome to Nollywood at the Paley Center doc fest

Mudhoney performing Superfuzz Bigmuff at the Bowery (my first time seeing them)

Birthday dinner at Hill Country (best BBQ in NYC!) with John

Seeing Coppola introduce Youth Without Youth with Amanda at the Paris Theatre in NYC

First submarine ride in Aruba – saw a wrecked ship and brain coral!

Finishing an advance copy of Carl Ogelsby’s forthcoming memoir Ravens in the Storm – a must read for 2008!

Steve K monitors, records and instigates cultural developments from a secret location in the East Village. He invites you to his dance party.


ARTHUR BEST OF 2007 LISTS No. 10: PShaw

Pshaw’s Lucky 13 for 2007

1. Popeye Vol. 1 [Fantagraphics] America’s first comic super hero from 1929 [Superman debuted in 1938] from the original Thimble Theatre newspaper comic strips. Matchless and defying all imitations [Boo! to the animated cartoons! Read the book.]. Sunday’s reprinted for the first time in full color. Arf Arf!

2. Little High People takes 7 & 8 [Complete Jack Johnson box: Miles Davis] Have replaced Kraftwerk on Bremen Radio as my temporary fave. Two Electric keyboards and organ, plus cuica and kazoo, nice!

3. Powr Mastrs Vol.1 [Picturebox] CF of the band Kites makes a big splash.

4. Ernst Haeckel 19th century German biologist,naturalist, and proto-psychedelic illustrator of sea creatures.

5. Ben Jones [member of Paper Rad] as inspirational as Gary Panter.

6. Ron Regé Jr. go to Plight of the Cartoon Utopian [http://ronrege.blogspot.com/]

8. MIT’s Joint Program on the Science & Policy of Global Change researching our climate dynamics on the Charles River.

9. Lucid Absinthe the green muse served up right in Allston, Mass.

10. Buddha’s Hand smells nice, looks weird!

11. Capital Reef National Park Utah dazzling geological wonder. Way far away from civilization, hardly any tourists or food!

12. Black Cat/White Cat [1998 Emir Kusturica] very entertaining and fun spirited. Great cast of characters.

13. Lazy Magnet He Sought For That Magic By Which All The Glory And Mystic Chivalry Were Made To Shine – or – Is Music Even Good?
[2007 Corleone CD] Jeremy Harris defends his title with a sense of Doom, and remains the Champ.

PShaw is PShaw. He’s been drawing the “Strings” comic strip for Arthur since No. 19.


ARTHUR BEST OF 2007 LISTS No. 9: Stacy Kranitz

Notable moments from 2007
by Stacy Kranitz

A small victory for justice, when in September an appeals court threw out
the all white jury conviction of Mychal Bell, 17 in Jena, Louisiana.

The death of an ancient blood sport. Louisiana State legislature passed a
law this summer that will make cockfighting illegal at the end of the 2008
season. This is the last state where the sport that used to be fought on the
lawn of the White House is still legal. By the end of 2008 there will be no
legal cockfighting anywhere in the United States.

Listening to the Arson Anthem EP

Listening to Lil Wayne, Da Drought 3

Listening to Wolves In the Throne Room, Two Hunters

Listening to Kevin Nutt’s weekly gospel radio show, Sinners Crossroad

Watching R. Kelly, Trapped in the Closet Ch. 1-22

Watching Werner Herzog’s Rescue Dawn

Reading LENI: The Life and Work of Leni Riefenstahl by Steven Bach

Reading Atchafalaya Houseboat by Gwen Roland

Photojournalist Stacy Kranitz photographed Celebration for Arthur No. 27. Her photo essay on contemporary extreme Scandinavian metal musicians way back in Arthur No. 16 is still talked about. She is at work on two new features for Arthur about… well, that would be telling.


ARTHUR BEST OF 2007 LISTS No. 8: Richard Pleuger

Richard Pleuger’s top something of 2007:

1. Listening to “These Days” by XuXu Fang while pounding down the snowy slopes and spectacular vistas of the Swiss Alps.

2. The Valerie Project at the Silent Movie Theatre (1st night), LA

3. Roky Erickson Live at El Rey, LA

4. Spiritualized at the Vista Theatre (first night), LA

5. Caribou Andorra

6. Remy the Rat in Ratatouille (Pixar)

7. Eight Miles High, the movie on Germany’s 60’s icon Uschi Obermaier

8. Alan Vega Station

9. Filming “Urania Descending” with Tav Falco at the Attersee, Austria

10. Watching Dali’s Destino on a big screen and taking in the sharpest and most dangerous paintings of his career in the “Dali & Film” exhibition, LACMA

11. Retreiving and watching my “lost” master tape of the concert by Berlin’s The Legendary Golden Vampires from 1985. Nineteen atomic minutes, enjoyable someday on the net!

Richard Pleuger is an international man of mystery and longtime contributing editor, writer, photographer, archivist, humorist and general inspiration to Arthur Magazine. His profile of Tav Falco in Arthur No. 21 is one of the most beloved features ever published in the mag.


ARTHUR BEST OF 2007 LISTS No. 7: Trinie Dalton

TOP stuff all of equal greatness
by Trinie Dalton

Valerie Project is a live re-soundtracking by members of Espers, Fursaxa, and Fern Knight of Czech New Wave film Valerie and Her Week of Wonders. Live, the orchestra kills the original sound and plays their own magic, creepy score to this goth horror fairy tale about a girl losing her virginity. Lubos Fiser’s OG soundtrack has been recently re-released on CD and that is a treat as well. But live, the show is stunning, with full instrumentation beyond the average rock band, including Mary Lattimore’s lovely harp playing. CD’s out on Drag City if you miss the live show.

Meramec Caverns in Stanton, Missouri: killer caves, unreal cave classroom in which boy scouts learn speleology and geology, and an annual gospel retreat accommodating 600 people underground that I REALLY want to go to. There is also a disco ball in the cave entrance. Won’t spoil the highlights of the tour, but let’s just say it’s an hour and a half of mind-blowing wonder.

Salt Point State Park in Sonoma County, California: land holdings include one of the last protected pygmy forests, in which topsoil has eroding, causing nutrient-starved plants to flourish despite stunting conditions. This mixed conifer and redwood forest is ideal for mushroom hunting as well, not psychedelics but other showy varieties.

Gore (Picture Box Inc.) by Black Dice and Jason Frank Rothenberg: features collages by the talented Bjorn Copeland. Psychedelic humor and bold color palette.

Ariel Pink: new album recorded this year, unreleased as of yet? Played several spot-on Los Angeles shows, such as an opening gig for Gang Gang Dance at the Henry Fonda Theater and a rooftop blowout in Echo Park the same night Devendra Banhart closed his long Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon Tour at the Orpheum. Catch him live.

Les Mangalepa: Endurance

New American Writing series at the Hammer Museum: hosted by Benjamin Weissman is the best reading series and is even better now that the Hammer’s hot pink-seated Billy Wilder theater has opened. Highlight shows in this venue were Miranda July reading from her new book and artist Jim Shaw performing with orchestra of handmade instruments for the closing of the Eden’s Edge exhibit.

Panda Bear: Person Pitch

Family Books: the bookstore hosted many fun events, including a mini-reading series I curated, and continuously offers new titles to browse while visiting. Brings the boutique-style, niche-shop of New York to Los Angeles, and also proves to me that there’s a younger generation who read.

Denise Emmer: Canto Lunar

Kenneth Anger Volumes I & II released on DVD: my favorite director now has DVDs available with Anger-approved soundtracks and film quality. Director’s commentaries on each film are invaluable. Scorpion Rising, Puce Moment, two versions of Rabbit’s Moon, a letter Bobby Beausoleil wrote about his trials and tribulations battling Satan while recording the Invocation soundtrack from prison, the list of greatness continues.

The Killing Kind: this lost-classic directed by Curtis Harrington is now easy to watch, and wow, is it a creepy tale of a serial killer and his psychotic mother. Best Horror Film 2007!

Oaxaca: visiting Oaxaca City and taking day trips out into each of the four mountain ranges that form its basin gave me a lifetime of inspiration. Monte Alban, the hub of Zapotec culture, was a highlight, as were visiting a calcified waterfall called Hierve el Agua and hiking into the montane cloud forest to caves, wild orchids, and several bromeliad species.

Olympic Spa in L.A.’s Koreatown: $15 gets you a pass into a world of hot baths, dry saunas, steam rooms, and a heated jade-tiled floor to lie on. Ladies only.

Diving Bell and the Butterfly: directed by Julian Schnabel makes you want to give the egomaniac another chance. This retelling of Jean-Dominique Bauby’s paralyzing stroke and his struggle to write a book by learning a blinking alphabet to spell each letter out to a secretary for transcription is completely tragic and beautifully filmed.

Fit To Print: Printed Media in Recent Collage at Gagosian: was my favorite group show this year, solidifying collage’s recent return into the art critical spotlight. Fifty people in this show, but highlights were Jim Drain, Rachel Harrison, Richard Prince’s nurse novel book covers, Bjorn Copeland, Paul McCarthy & Benjamin Weissman, Christian Holstad, Jason Meadows, and many more. Coincides with the collage portion of New Museum’s (Un)Monumental exhibit, inaugurating their new space on the Bowery.

Liz Craft at Marianne Boesky: best solo show starred maybe twenty new all-white painted bronze and mixed media Aztec-style boxes with windows, terraces, and various objects attached inside, outside, above, below, and around these intriguing forms. These surreal dream objects reminded me of Magritte, Cornell, Duchamp, Oppenheim, though with more Mexican-California flair.

The Art of Raising A Puppy
(Little, Brown, and Company) by the Monks of New Skete: was a book that taught me a lot about fostering the pup I adopted from the pound. Written by Eastern Orthodox Monks in upstate New York, this book describes positive-reward method training techniques for German Sheperds, though the theories apply to all canines.

LAMA annual mushroom fair: this year’s was totally dried up due to drought, but usually the display tables feature all the species people find and bring in for I.D., some dudes with microscopes identifying, slide lectures, and displays showing all the native Southern California fungus varieties.

Wanda, directed by Barbara Loden, was screened at the Redcat in conjunction with the WACK! exhibition at MOCA. This great, 1970s feminist-era film, turns the then-popular ideas of feminism on their head, starring an incompetent, redneck loser, Wanda, who continuously digs herself into holes she can’t get out of. She is a charming, funny protagonist who actually convinces the viewer that males are the ones who make the most sense sometimes. This film presents a complex view of gender politics, rejecting stereotypes either way, and can be hard to see, though hopefully one day it will be released on DVD.

TRINIE DALTON is an author, artist, mushroom enthusiast and longtime contributor to Arthur Magazine. Her most recent books are the illustrated novella A Unicorn Is Born (with artist Kathrin Ayers) (Abrams), the short story collection Wide Eyed (Akashic) and a collection of confiscated schoolroom notes, Dear New Girl or Whatever Your Name Is (McSweeney’s). She profiled Ethan Miller of Comets on Fire and Howlin Rain in Arthur No. 24, Delia and Gavin in Arthur No. 21, Animal Collective in Arthur No. 19, Henry Darger documentary filmmaker Jessica Yu in Arthur No. 15, RTX in Arthur No. 12 and both Devendra Banhart and CocoRosie in Arthur No. 10. Trinie just moved to New York and is working on at least three secret projects.