JULY 18-22: A FESTIVAL OF NATURALISMO IN LOS ANGELES, CURATED BY DEVENDRA BANHART

The Fold & Arthur Magazine present…

HYPNORITUALS AND MESMEMUSICAL MIRACLES HANGING IN THE SKY: 5 NIGHTS OF SOLEROS AND BANDOLEROS AT EL CID

Programmed by DEVENDRA BANHART

Tuesday, July 18 through Saturday, July 22

The Fold in El Cid
4212 Sunset Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA

21 & over (sorry!)

$10 tickets for each show or limited $30 full festival passes available now at
http://virtuous.com/events/thefold/

Night One – Tuesday, July 18 – El Cid – $10
FEATHERS http://feathersfamily.typepad.com/
JANA HUNTER http://www.myspace.com/janahunter
ENTRANCE http://profile.myspace.com/entranceguyblakeslee
THE WHITE WHITE QUILT http://www.myspace.com/thewhitewhitequilt and more!!!!!
Astral Advancement by Eric Ernest Johnson! dublab DJ sets all night on the El Cid patio!!!!!! +more….

FEATHERS
”Vermont musical collective Feathers mainly operate out of a rural farmhouse….Their instruments include a lap harp, a toy xylophone, a Middle Eastern hand drum and an acoustic guitar hand-painted with animals and rainbows. ” – NY Times

JANA HUNTER
“Jana Hunter is apparently the mysterious “Power Woman,” that elusive feminine force that guides Devendra Banhart and Andy Cabic’s new Gnomonsong. The first artist to record on Gnomonsong, she has a velvety tone with a low range that extends beyond most women’s, combined with an unexpectedly childlike higher register. She also sings with an unforced genuineness that warms and deepens every song.”-Jennifer Kelly (www.neumu.com)

ENTRANCE
Entrance’s recently sparked obsession with the music of modern day nomadic peoples of the Sahara Desert, Entrance’s music making for a Fully Amplified, Heavy and Psychedelic Sound that is as much Punk as it is the Blues.

WHITE WHITE QUILT
Conceived in 2005, the white quilt is stitched up with guitar, rhodes bass piano, sub bass, tender vocals, and a two drummer percussion quilt. Creating a musical mountain of love!

Eric Ernest Johnson
A native Angeleno, divulges in multi-media works featuring mobiles, paintings, drawings, & sculptures. He lives in Los Angeles, working as an artist, writer, and musician in the band Fleshpot.

Night Two: Wednesday, July 19 – El Cid – $10
RUTHANN FRIEDMAN http://ruthannfriedman.com
VIKING MOSES http://www.myspace.com/vikingmoses
CASUAL FOG (Grass Valley) http://www.myspace.com/casualfog
ADAM TULLIE AND FRIENDS
DHAYAN ROARK and more!!!!!
Astral Advancement by Eric Ernest Johnson! dublab DJ sets all night on the patio!!!!!! +more….

RUTHANN FRIEDMAN
“A little known folk singer named Ruthann Friedman had written a song about her old man, ‘Windy’, and his free wheeling life style. She played the song one night for the Association and they knew they had found another hit record.” allmusic.com

CASUAL FOG
“Ryan Donnelly a.k.a.Casual Fog is pretty alt-indie, and ‘a sucker for making some songs.’ Donnelly makes all his music and occasionally a friend will play also, which is when he has the most fun.”

Eric Ernest Johnson (See above)

Night Three – Thursday, July 20 – El Cid – $10
NOBODY AND THE MYSTIC CHORDS OF MEMORY
http://www.myspace.com/nobodyelvin
http://www.myspace.com/mysticchordsofmemory
SUBTITLE http://www.myspace.com/subtitle
ENTRANCE http://profile.myspace.com/entranceguyblakeslee
MOUNTAIN PARTY http://www.myspace.com/mountainparty
Astral Advancement by Eric Ernest Johnson! dublab DJ sets all night on the patio!!!!!!

NOBODY AND THE MYSTIC CHORDS OF MEMORY
“It’s a collaboration between LA-based trippy hip-hop producer Nobody and San Francisco-based psych-popsters Mystic Chords of Memory, and though the collaboration might not seem that obvious, it takes all of about one listen to their debut Tree Colored See to realize that they’ve created a wonderfully magical record.” -MUNDANE SOUNDS

SUBTITLE
“Subtitle is a rap innovator/MC-as-hypnotist”-Pitchfork

MOUNTAIN PARTY
Mountain Party is Erica Garcia, an Argentinean x-popstar, multi-instrumentalistsongwriter, experimenting with a mix of Andean flutes and percussion in psychedelic groovy songs. She sings in Spanish, English and a nonsense universal language.

Night Four – Friday, July 21 – El Cid – $10
RUBIES
http://www.myspace.com/rubies
http://www.simonerubi.com/rubies.html
HECUBA
COCONUT
BENNY GILLESPIE
Astral Advancement by Eric Ernest Johnson!
dublab DJ sets all night on the patio!!!!!!
+more….

RUBIES
“Organic Disco” feat. Simone Rubi from Call and Response. Influences are the plants, cloudlike modulations, scifi disco, teary love love love songs, animals, people and ambient channels through synthesis, sounds like harmony with ivory, bubble gum, travelling, the flip side, danceable folk, new ways to play a simple song on guitar.”

HECUBA
Isabelle Albuquerque and Jon Naheed met three years ago while making a film about alien abductions. They have since continued to traverse worlds in film, art and music. Their must recent project, Hecuba is a world as diverse and electric as anything that they have produced to date. It combines elements of Electronic Pop, Hip Hop, Broadway and from- the- gut beltin to create a storytelling for the new age. Ten Cuidado!

Night Five – Saturday, July 22 – El Cid – $10
MICHAEL HURLEY
http://www.myspace.com/michaelhurley
SIR RICHARD BISHOP (Sun City Girls)

Home


http://www.myspace.com/sirricardo
http://www.suncitygirls.com
STUART AND CAAN (India – First ever US performance)
Astral Advancement by Eric Ernest Johnson!
dublab DJ sets all night on the patio!!!!!! +more….

MICHARL HURLEY
“For close to 40 years Michael Hurley has lived the life of a modern day Johnny Appleseed: moving about the country collecting great tales, drawing funny pictures, sharing his crazy-beautiful songs and building an unflinching fan base (including, among others, Cat Power and Yo La Tengo) that extends from Portland, Oregon to Portland, Maine and the world over.” -Locust Music

SIR RICHARD BISHOP
“For many in the musical cosmos, he has occasion to travel the smoke filled carnie circuit as 1/3 of the Sun City Girls medicine show. But in the twilight hours of a shadow world sensed only by few, Bishop is a dazzling unaccompanied guitarist.”-Locust Music

STUART AND CAAN
“An eight hour dream of underwater honey bees building a new universe inside the old one…” – bio

$10 tickets for each show or limited $30 full festival passes available now at http://www.virtuous.com

'THE REST IS TOTAL SILENCE' – opening tonight


The Rest is Total Silence
Brian Degraw
French
Maya Hayuk
Kiyoshi Kuroda

Curated by Taka Kawachi

July 6 to July 28, 2006
Opening Reception: Thursday, July 6, 6-9pm

ATM Gallery is proud to present a group exhibition ‘The Rest is Total Silence’

‘The Rest is Total Silence’ is a group exhibition of four artists from New York, Brooklyn, London and Tokyo. One of the participating artists commented “My friend described my work as ‘looking like the walls of a pubescent teenage boys room or the inside covers of his school books. A comment I was quite flattered by.” This statement interestingly reflects some aspect of this show. All their works are painted and drawn in very meditative way with delicate lines revealing an anarchic and wild boy(and girl) sensibility. Another common thing is they tend to get inspiration from various types of music, actually one of the participating artists is also known as a professional musician. They fuse music and art as a core inspiration source.

BRIAN DEGRAW was born in 1974, lives in New York. Degraw practices drawing, video, sculpture, and writing. He is also a musician in many bands (Angelblood, Gang Gang Dance, Saab Song with Harmony Korine). Artist and actor of the New York scene, he composes a dense, inhabited and luminous work. Degraw’s paintings and drawings assault the viewer with their total humanity, and goth, underworld, grittiness.

FRENCH’s works contain a range of subjects, generally pretty dark in theme, metal logo’s, evil metal band’s, satanic imagery, buildings, tanks, skeleton’s, anatomical drawings, pirates, surfing skeletons, Jesus, ravens, eagles and skulls. This London artist claims that those elements are all side effects of listening to too much metal music. For the recent work, he has been obsessed with drawing tree roots and veins almost like a spreading disease across his work. They are a bit like something from a sci-fi or horror film.

MAYA HAYUK’s paintings are equal parts disturbing and provocative and hilarious. The images themselves are refreshingly straightforward: clean, simple lines that convey the figure with a minimum of distraction and bright, often acid colors with a feel reminiscent of advertising in the sixties and seventies. Hayuk’s work serves as much as a starting point, a place of departure as it does a destination, and ends in itself.

KIYOSHI KURODA places emphasis on lines depicting ‘Unbalanced World.’ He uses plant, insect, anatomy and animal motifs in his paintings, and while rendering his subjects with arresting curves, his finished works tend to be both venomous and cool in appearance. He weaves in some poisonous and stimulating factors and by using this method, the artist lets the antithetical concept of ‘Sweet & Charming’ and the ‘Dreadful and Terrifying’ coexist.

‘The Rest is Total Silence’ is curated by Taka Kawachi, who had curated Saeko Takagi’s solo show and a group show ‘Remarkable Hands’ at ATM Gallery last year, which turned to be a very successful and critically acclaimed show. Both shows were reviewed by The New York Times.

619 b west 27th street
new york, ny 10001

tel: 212.375.0349

gallery hours: tues -sat 11pm to 6pm & by appointment

http://www.atmgallery.com/

ARTHUR/BASTET TO RELEASE JOSEPHINE FOSTER-CURATED ALBUM ON AUG. 1, 2006 TO BENEFIT ANTI-MILITARY RECRUITING CAMPAIGNS

“So Much Fire to Roast Human Flesh”
a benefit album curated by Josephine Foster

“All profits from sales of this compilation will be distributed to specific counter-military recruitment and pacifist organizations and programs. We hope to assist them in their efforts promoting peace and non-militarism in the United States.

“All of the musicians represented here are US citizens. Our voices join with many others across this land that freely question and openly oppose war.” –Josephine Foster

Track listing:
THE CHERRY BLOSSOMS – “Dragonfly” (live)
FEATHERS – “Dust”
MICHAEL HURLEY – “A Little Bit of Love for You”
MEG BAIRD – “Western Red Lily (Nunavut Diamond Dream)”
ANDREW BAR – “Don’t Trust That Man”
GOATGIRL – “President Combed His Hair”
DEVENDRA BANHART – “I Know Some Souls” (demo)
KATH BLOOM – “Baby Let It Come Down On Me”
CHARLIE NOTHING – “Fuck You and Your Stupid Wars”
DIANE CLUCK – “A Phoenix and Doves”
JOHN ALLINGHAM & ANN TILEY – “Big War”
JOSEPHINE FOSTER – “Would You Pave the Road?”
ANGELS OF LIGHT – “Destroyer”
RACHEL MASON – “The War Clerk’s Lament”
PAJO – “War Is Dead”
MVEE – “Powderfinger”
KATHLEEN BAIRD – “Prayer for Silence”
LAY ALL OVER IT – “A Place”

Cover artwork by Fred Tomaselli

Available August 1. $12US/14Can/17World postpaid.

If you would like to pre-order a copy:

1. PAYPAL
USA – $12 postpaid

Canada – $14 postpaid

World – $17 airmail

2. CHECK OR MONEY ORDER
Payable to LIME PUBLISHING
Order will not ship until check clears.
Send your order to:
Lime Publishing
13104 Colton Lane
Gaithersburg, MD 20878

Mt. Misery and Ballintober: Where Rumsfeld & Cheney spend their weekends….

June 30, 2006 New York Times

Weekends With the President’s Men
By PETER T. KILBORN

ST. MICHAELS, Md.

JUST an hour and a half from Washington, across the 4.3-mile Chesapeake Bay Bridge, or less than 30 minutes in a government-issue Chinook helicopter, is the Eastern Shore of Maryland and the primly groomed waterside village of St. Michaels.

St. Michaels has begun to lure V.I.P.’s who, some boosters would have it, could propel it into the gilded realm of the Hamptons and Nantucket. But that will take a while. There’s little for the young — just a few bars and no beaches or nightclubs — and these new householders are too circumspect and perhaps too old to be showcasing their excesses, baubles and abs.

One is Vice President Dick Cheney, 65, who paid $2.67 million last September for a house that resembles a wide, squat Mount Vernon. Another is his old friend Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, 73, who in 2003 paid $1.5 million for a brick Georgian that was last a bed-and-breakfast. Among other recognizable owners in the area are Tony Snow, President Bush’s new press secretary; Joe Trippi, Howard Dean’s presidential campaign manager in 2004; Nicholas Brady, President George H. W. Bush’s treasury secretary; and John S. D. Eisenhower, a writer and historian and the son of President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

St. Michaels, population 1,200 within the city limits and perhaps a thousand more in the same ZIP code, sits on the wrist of a peninsula that bends deep into Chesapeake Bay. With two broad clawlike fingers, spotted and wrinkled by coves and creeks that reach beyond the town and down to Tilghman Island and Nelson Point, it is a place of waterfront sunsets and white sails, of oysters and crabs, of birding, fishing and hunting, and of affluent retirees, tourists and weekenders. Most, like the Cheneys and Rumsfelds, are past 50.

With many less luminous who have made their marks in business, medicine, law, government and the military, St. Michaels is too proud and indifferent for celebrity gawking. “They’re just people living in town,” said the Hawaiian shirted bartender at the Carpenter Street Saloon, who thought giving his name would be indiscreet. “They’re not the first important people living in town, and they’re not the last. They’re just here.”

The town is beginning to contend, however, with 21st-century perils to its composure. After eight years of resistance, construction will soon start on a development that will bring around 250 new homes and swell the year-round population by about 50 percent. In summer, traffic is choking and decivilizing Talbot Street, the only road through town. Housing developments are crowding Tilghman Island, once almost exclusively home to fishermen — or watermen, as they’re called.

One morning in May, Francis Zeglen put on a khaki windbreaker and his wife, Georgia, a turquoise sweater for a shopping stroll along Talbot. They were in a crosswalk when a light-brown pickup knocked them down.

Urged not to move, they were lying there blinking, Mr. Zeglen, 76, on his back, Mrs. Zeglen, 78, on her side. The Rev. Mark Nestlehutt, a tall young sailor and the rector of Christ Episcopal Church, hurried over, not solely on a spiritual mission. He is also chairman of the town’s Advisory Committee for Traffic Planning and Pedestrian Friendly Streets — which, in a place with a speed limit of 25 miles an hour and few hot-blooded young drivers, they usually are.

The Zeglens were treated at a hospital in nearby Easton, he for a broken left arm, she for immobilizing bruises, and drove home to Philadelphia the next day. “I turned and looked,” Mr. Zeglen said when he gave his own account of the accident, “and he just kept coming.” The driver of the pickup was charged with failure to stop for a pedestrian in a crosswalk. It had been a more eventful morning than most, the first pedestrian accident in 23 years — at least the first that the town manager, Cheril S. Thomas, could recall.

In St. Michaels, you also don’t see much of the one-upping of Joneses or architectural bullying found in showier coastal resorts. The old farm families and the wealthy weekenders like the Rumsfelds and Cheneys look out over acres of lawn rolling down to the sea grass and their own private docks. But the homes are hidden down two-lane roads with cunning yellow signs on utility poles that say, menacingly and untruthfully, “No Outlet,” and then down driveways shrouded by trees and lined with thick and impenetrable hedgerows.

The houses have names. Mr. Rumsfeld’s is Mount Misery and is just across Rolles Creek from a house called Mount Pleasant. On four acres, with four bathrooms, five bedrooms and five fireplaces, built in 1804, the Rumsfeld house is just barely visible at the end of a gravel drive.

Thomas M. Crouch, a broker at the Coldwell Banker office in town, says one legend attributes the name to the original owner, said to have been a sad and doleful Englishman. His merrier brother then built a house, and to put him on, Mr. Crouch supposes, named it Mount Pleasant.

But there is some historical gravity to the name, too. By 1833, Mount Misery’s owner was Edward Covey, a farmer notorious for breaking unruly slaves for other farmers. One who wouldn’t be broken was Frederick Douglass, then 16 and later the abolitionist orator. Covey assaulted him, so Douglass beat him up and escaped. Today, where the drive begins, Mount Misery seems a congenial place, with a white mailbox with newspaper delivery sleeves attached, a big American flag fluttering from a post by a split-rail fence and a tall, one-hole birdhouse of the sort made for bluebirds — although the lens in the hole suggests another function.

Less than two miles from the Rumsfelds’, past Southwind, where the late James A. Michener wrote much of his epic novel “Chesapeake,” Church Neck Road dead-ends at private Fuller Road on the left. About a quarter-mile up, past grazing cattle and sheep and four other homes, is Vice President Cheney’s nine-acre place, Ballintober.

The house, built in 1930, is rambling and white. It has a five-car garage, a pool, stately formal gardens, a laundry chute and large, glass-walled waterside rooms for entertaining. Coldwell Banker’s real estate listing called it an “individually designed dwelling.” It is also unapproachable. “The last time I went up Fuller Road,” Katie Edmonds, an agent at Meredith Real Estate, said, “S.U.V.’s came out of the woods at me.”

Neighbors also complain about federal security agents’ shutting down Church Neck Road to let the Cheneys pass in their speeding brigades of shiny black S.U.V.’s. But they don’t complain much, because the newcomers are thought to be good for property values. If the Cheneys and Rumsfelds are willing to buy here, after all, who wouldn’t be?

St. Michaels was traditionally a center of farming, boat building, crabbing and tonging for oysters. For 100 years, it has also attracted older, upper-crust retirees from Washington, Baltimore and Philadelphia who buy waterfront sites and, more recently, century-old houses downtown.

The second-home owners cannot vote in local elections, but their needs, whimsies and appetites set the tone of the town. Approaching St. Michaels, Route 33 — the only way in or out — passes a lumberyard’s lawn full of rocking chairs. In the town itself, where 33 becomes Talbot Street, a flag hanging from one store declares, “Quilters welcome.” There are at least 20 bed-and-breakfasts downtown or nearby, no neon signs, no stoplights and, except for the plants and waist-high pink ceramic flamingos that the Acme supermarket features in front, no obstructions blocking sidewalks.

Except for the Acme, shops on Talbot cater to people with money to burn: the Calico Gallery, St. Michaels Candy Company, the Cultured Pearl, the Scented Garden, Rings & Things, Gourmet-by-the-Bay (an upscale food shop and caterer that has made Thanksgiving pies for the Rumsfelds), Justine’s ice cream parlor, Flying Fred’s Gifts for Pets. Bistro St. Michaels and 208 Talbot are expensive restaurants.

Only Big Al’s — an emphatically lowbrow seafood and souvenir shop where Joyce Rumsfeld, the secretary’s wife, comes in for bushels of cooked blue crabs — breaks with the Laura Ashley look of St. Michaels. Two small picnic tables sit out front, and the proprietor, Al Poore, offers sandwiches of crab cake for $5.95, soft crab for $6.95, oysters for $5.95 and fish for $4.95. Mr. Poore, who is 71 and about 6 foot 4 with a thicket of tousled gray hair, sinks like a ball in a catcher’s mitt into the cavernous black leather easy chair in his memento-strewn office at the rear of the store. He opened it in 1968. “When I came here,” he said, “there was one place where you could stay overnight. Now we’ve got one on every corner.”

Merchants say they’re wary of intruding on the privacy of the Cheneys and Rumsfelds, but they do it anyway. “I’m a businessman,” said Mr. Poore, a registered Democrat who voted twice for George W. Bush. “I probably mention them to customers five or six times a week. They bring a lot of prestige.”

Paul Gardner, the front office manager at the $250-to-$700-a-night Inn at Perry Cabin, a plush waterside resort at the far end of town, said, “We’ve had Rumsfeld in for dinner.” Once last year, the Cheney Chinook landed near the inn’s laundry and maintenance facility. “We’re very pleased to have them in the area,” he said.

Some people view the new neighbors less cordially. On Railroad Avenue, which the Cheneys and Rumsfelds use to reach Church Neck, Cassandra Harrison, a mother of two who waits tables and cleans houses, was resting on the stoop of her one-story white ranch house.

She is grateful that the air space above the Cheneys’ house is blocked. “It’s a no-fly zone, and that’s good,” she said. “But I’m not happy. I don’t think society’s liking them so much.” Ms. Harrison, 23, voted for the first time in 2004, she said, “just because I did not want him. I don’t think that they tell us the truth.”

But that is a minority view in Talbot County, which went 61 percent for Mr. Bush in 2000 and 58 percent in 2004. Support for the war in Iraq is waning here as it is most everywhere else. But the great majority of Mr. Nestlehutt’s 790 parishioners, he said, are “tolerant,” live-and-let-live urban Republicans, not hard-core social conservatives. Mr. Cheney and Mr. Rumsfeld, he said, seem to fit right in.

Chavez Urges Africa to Unite Against "Count Dracula"

By REUTERS – July 1, 2006

BANJUL (Reuters) – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez called on Africa on Saturday to forge closer ties with Latin America to combat what he called a threat of U.S. hegemony.

Chavez, whose repeated criticism of America has raised hackles in Washington, called on an African Union summit to cooperate with Latin America in everything from oil production to university education to counter “colonial” meddling in developing nations.

Citing the example of Venezuela and Bolivia, he urged Africa to seize greater control of its energy resources. He described the low royalty payments made by some foreign oil companies as “robbery.”

“We should march together, Africa and Latin America, brother continents with the same roots … Only together can we change the direction of the world,” he told the opening day of the AU summit, to applause.

“The world is threatened by the hegemony of the North American empire,” said the former paratrooper, following speeches from African leaders which had criticized colonialism.

Africa’s abundant natural resources — ranging from precious metals to iron ore and oil — should make it a wealthy continent if it were freed from outside exploitation, Chavez said.

“Africa has everything to become a pole of world power in the 21st century. Latin America and the Caribbean are equipped to become another pole,” he said.

In a nod to another outspoken opponent of U.S. foreign policy, Chavez hailed Iran’s right to develop nuclear technology for peaceful purposes.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is also attending the summit in the Gambian capital Banjul.

The Venezuelan leader called for a commission to evaluate joint energy projects between Africa and Latin America, as well as a media venture dubbed Telesur (TeleSouth) and a joint bank Banco del Sur (Bank of the South).

“In Venezuela, we were tired of all our oil going to Count Dracula,” said Chavez, referring his government’s decision to raise taxes on U.S. oil companies. “Now Venezuela is free and we have recovered control over our oil.”

Venezuela is the world’s fifth largest oil exporter.

From CAMS ~ The Coalition Against Militarism In Our Schools

“As the government’s permanent resource wars continue to destroy the nations credibility and peoples lives, all across America people are starting to react with anti-war messages and themes. Graffiti art and public space reclamation for common sense messages are examples of this rebuttal of government propaganda.”

MISSION STATEMENT OF THE COALITION AGAINST MILITARISM IN THE SCHOOLS:

“To inform and educate the public, especially students, parents and school personnel about the growing militarization of our schools, and to create and present positive nonviolent alternatives which promote the value of human life, justice and equity for all persons.
We envision accomplishing this in the following ways:

By bringing together a network of organizations and individuals to oppose the growing intrusion of the military commonly present in the lives of young people throughout Southern California, and to present organizing strategies, campaigns and actions.

By sharing information, legislation, advocacy efforts, and resources in order to raise awareness and mobilize against the aggressive and deceptive tactics of the military, which especially target African American and Latino males and females.

By bringing awareness about these issues through a speakers bureau, workshops and presentations, along with written articles, media contacts, school board actions, brochures, educational curriculum (e.g. Addicted to War), online resources and multimedia.

By providing resources for youth activists and encouraging youth leadership roles and mentoring in the movement to demilitarize our schools.  By facilitating the sharing of alternatives and exposing the myths and realities to militarism and war.

By collaboratively working to ensure equal access in all public school areas and spaces regarding the presence of counter recruitment literature, presentations and nonmilitary options.

By working to eliminate the Junior Reserves Officer Training Corp in our High Schools and the California Cadets in our Middle Schools, along with the school community.

By sponsoring and co-sponsoring events and activities with students, families, educators, and community/labor organizations to include conferences, teach-ins, forums and workshops.

By reinforcing and promoting through training’s and workshops the values of critical thinking, dialogue, conflict resolution and nonviolence.”