Austin Psych Fest 3


On APRIL 23-25TH The Mohawk in Austin, Texas will host three full days of music devoted to the sonic and visual onslaught that is Austin Psych Fest. Curated by local band The Black Angels, Alta Real Pictures and The Reverberation Appreciation Society, APF3 will present the nation’s finest from the psychedelic music scene. Throngs of loyal fans from all over the world are lining up for the highly anticipated event now held in central Texas each year.

The Raveonettes, Warpaint, and Ringo Deathstarr will set the tone on opening night (Friday, April 23rd) while The Black Angels, Spindrift, The Vandelles, Headdress, Shapes Have Fangs, Smoke and Feathers, Cry Blood Apache, and Tia Carrera showcase on Saturday. Sunday will feature a crawfish boil to the sounds of Yellow Fever, VoicesVoices, Silver Apples and many more. Arthur Magazine will be on site to follow and report on the event so check back for the full story.

BUY YOUR TICKETS HERE!
Austin Psych Fest 3 three-day weekend and presale day tickets are available for purchase on AustinPsychFest.com

Also, you can check out the trailer from the Austin Psych Fest 2 DVD here:

Austin Psych Fest 2 DVD

NEW TRINIE DALTON COLLECTION: "SWEET TOMB"

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Author, artist, critic, journalist and Arthur veteran Trinie Dalton has a tasty new book out. Sized to fit in a large back pocket, wrapped in a delicious front/back cover by Matt Greene, Sweet Tomb features the short stories “Sweet Tomb,” “Green,” Accessing the Vein,” “Gardeners Anonymous,” Killer Pair,” “Best Cake Ever” and “Death Wish.” 104 pages of high-quality Dalton for only 7 bucks.

Sweet Tomb is published by Madras Press—a new, non-profit publisher of individually bound short stories and novellas, with a mission to donate all proceeds to charitable organizations chosen by the authors. Proceeds from Sweet Tomb are going to the Theodore Payne Foundation for Wild Flowers & Native Plants, a non-profit California native plant nursery, seed source, bookstore, and education center, open to the public year round. Learn more at theodorepayne.org

Sweet Tomb is available from http://www.madraspress.com/bookstore

and also at a few independent bookstores, listed at http://www.madraspress.com/locations

Trinie Dalton archive: http://sweettomb.com/

GREAT RIFFS FROM MALCOLM MCLAREN (RIP)

1. Here’s a sorta-preview from a film on/about McLaren. The interview footage was shot during McLaren’s run for mayor of London in 1999…


2. Here’s a piece from the May 7, 2007 edition of The Scotsman

Anarchy in Gardenstown – how Sex Pistols guru was thrown out of a Highland village
By SHÂN ROSS

MALCOLM McLaren, the godfather of British punk and former manager of the Sex Pistols, has been run out of a small Scottish fishing village after a blasphemous rant during his pitch to become their laird.

McLaren, 61, who was taking part in an ITV reality television show, The Baron, shocked locals at the annual strawberry fair in Gardenstown, Banffshire, when he called their village a “shit-hole” and urged them to go and smoke large quantities of cannabis. He also declared: “Jesus was a sausage.”

The two other contenders to become laird and hold the honourable title 13th Baron of Troup – Mike Reid, former star of EastEnders, and Suzanne Shaw, erstwhile singer with pop group Here’Say – had just finished their election speeches when McLaren began his tirade.

“I’ve been here a few days and I’ve found it absolutely boring. I’m sick to death of it,” he began. “The cod have left this town and I don’t blame them. Soon I’ll be joining them.”

Attempting to drown out a growing chorus of boos and catcalls from the close-knit religious community, McLaren shouted: “Gardenstown must smoke lots of ganga. As baron I will want a free Gardenstown. I will transform it into a heathen’s paradise.”

Michael Watt, the harbourmaster, who has attempted to integrate the celebrities into village life during their ten-day campaign, grabbed the microphone and remonstrated with a bemused McLaren.

Undeterred but puzzled by the angry shouts of “get him off”, McLaren continued with his somewhat alternative manifesto, during which he said the harbour should be painted red and a wicker man built on the beach in which the remnants of the village’s religious life (there are five churches for the 800 residents) should be burned.

“I want to declare a holiday, every year,” he managed before Mr Watt pushed him away from the microphone.

McLaren forced his way back and declared: “Jesus is a sausage,” before being bundled from the podium.

The Rev Donald Martin, a Church of Scotland minister, said: “There were a couple of hundred people at the fair. They were all horrified.”

McLaren was escorted out of the village by the television crew and is now believed to be residing in a hotel in Aberdeen.

An ITV spokesman, attempting to put McLaren’s views in “context”, said: “He is a very outspoken character who believes in freedom of speech.”

Filming of the programme, to be aired in the summer, is continuing without McLaren.

How our consumer electronics—Blackberrys, iPhones, iPads—finance atrocities

“One e-reader requires the extraction of 33 pounds of minerals. That includes trace amounts of exotic metals like columbite-tantalite [or, coltan], often mined in war-torn regions of Africa.” “How Green Is My iPad?” — New York Times, April 4, 2010

Here’s an article on that subject, originally published at headheritage.co.uk/uknow and republished in Arthur No. 10, six years ago…

Gorilla Killers
Merrick explains the ecological costs of cel phones, Playstations and PCs

“Ashamed of your mobile?” asks the voiceover on the Phones 4U ad. Read on, and you may well find you have good reason to be.

Mobile phones are directly responsible for the biggest war in African history, destroying World Heritage site rainforests and driving rare gorillas to extinction.

In our consumer society, we don’t often consider the full history of the things we consume. It feels like stuff just appears in shops, then it disappears when we put it in a bin. This effect is magnified when we buy something with no idea what it’s even made from.

The stuff we’re craving most these days is consumer electronic goods. Playstations, DVDs, PCs, cel phones and the like. Because these gadgets are dinky and lightweight, it might seem like they’re not resource-intensive to make. But, according to a new UN report, computers take about ten times their weight in fossil fuels to manufacture, compared to one to two times for items like washing machines.

In fact, making this technology lightweight has presented new problems for engineers. Fortunately for them there’s a substance called tantalum, a refined metal that stays stable at very high temperatures. Tantalum is the only thing capable of making such tiny electronic processing chips work so well. It’s in absolutely everything that has a small processing chip, and by far the biggest user is mobile phones.

Tantalum is not only essential for all processor products, it is also unrecycleable. All these amazing gadgets–from MP3 players to heart monitors, from in-car GPSs to automatic shop doors–they all use tantalum. But tantalum is running out at an ever-increasing rate. We sometimes wonder what the best computers will be like in a hundred years time. The answer may well be “about 40 years old.”

Tantalum is refined from an ore called columbite-tantalite, or coltan for short. Coltan is only found in a few places on earth. By far the largest amount, some 80% of the world’s reserves, is in central Africa. Some 80% of that–two thirds of all the coltan on earth–is in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is a massive country straddling the equator with vast rainforests, home to a range of diverse and rare wildlife. The forests in the east of the DRC are the last home of the Eastern Lowland gorilla. These forests have been declared National Parks and UN World Heritage sites on account of their amazing and precious ecology. They are also right on top of all that coltan.

Tens of thousands of people have moved into the National Parks and have dug out the riverbeds, panning for coltan. This has poisoned the waterways on which much of the wildlife depends. Such huge numbers of new human residents also need food, and with few other sources many supposedly protected animals – including the eastern lowland gorillas–are being killed for meat.

Six years ago there were around 8,000 of the gorillas in the wild. Since the war and coltan mining, there are around 500, and the numbers are falling.

Coltan mining in National Parks is completely illegal, of course. Which not only means it is working outside of environmental considerations, but outside of human rights and safety considerations. In February 2002, 36 miners were killed when a shoddily excavated riverbank collapsed on them. The illegality of the mining has allowed the controlling militias to use child labor and forced labor. They’ve also turned to other illegal trades, such as ivory. In the Kahuzi-Biega National Park, all but two of the 350 elephant families disappeared in three years. Two tons of tusks were traced to the area in late 2000.

Around a third of children in eastern DRC have abandoned education in order to mine for coltan. And you can hardly blame them. If vast reserves of diamonds were found a few inches under the surface of our nearest National Park, how many of us would still respect the environmental integrity of the place? The blame for this has to rest primarily on the shoulders of those who make coltan so valuable, and that’s the people who buy it. That’s us.

And while the miners get more than they would at any other enterprise available to them, the real money is made by those who trade in coltan. The traders have to be people of real power. Nearer the consumers, that’s wealthy Western corporations. At the mining end of the chain, military leaders from DRC have been running the trading. Huge parts of eastern DRC have been invaded by Ugandan and Rwandan militias, who then take the coltan out and sell it from their own countries.

The war that started ten years ago in Rwanda has never stopped in central Africa. Indeed, it has expanded, drawing in troops from at least ten countries, from Zimbabwe in the south to Libya in the north. It has left tens of millions of people dead. Its effect on Africa is akin to that of the First World War on Europe.

It has been intensified, prolonged and largely paid for by money Westerners have paid for Congolese coltan. The UN described coltan trading as “the engine of the war,” confirming that all parties are using coltan as their funding source.

The World Bank has praised Uganda for the way its economy is doing well under WB advice (curiously, they don’t praise Argentina, who also followed WB advice to the letter, and to economic collapse and social chaos). But the revived Ugandan economy is based entirely on stolen minerals from the DRC. Since its troops went into DRC in 1998, Uganda has suddenly started exporting phenomenal quantities of gold and diamonds. In the year after Uganda invaded the DRC, “Ugandan” coltan production went up 2,800%.

Much of this money was swiftly converted into weapons for what is still inaccurately called the “civil war” in DRC. Our desire to play make-believe wars on Playstations has deepened the real war in central Africa.

As concerned westerners began to understand this, the hi-tech companies were quick to distance themselves. Ericsson, Intel, Nokia, Motorola: they all assured us they never used tantalum made from traders selling Congolese coltan. Given that their suppliers are a bunch of warlords and their friends, how could they trust their assurances? Outi Mikkonen, communications manager for environmental affairs at Nokia said, “All you can do is ask, and if they say no, we believe it.” No further checks were made.

The chain of supply is so convoluted that no electronics buyer can ever be sure of where the raw coltan came from. Each shipment can have a dozen or more intermediary owners between the mine and the consumer.

One of the major tantalum refiners is German company H C Starck, who said, “H C Starck is not being supplied with material from the crisis areas of central Africa.” They get their raw coltan from a number of sources, including the British-based A&M Minerals & Metals, who said “it would be silly for us to try to pretend that we know the origin.” They did say, however, that they buy their coltan in Uganda.

So, speaking about exactly the same batch of coltan, we go from “we know, and it’s none” to “it would be silly to say we know,” with a nudge-nudge that they do know and it is indeed Congolese.

In December, 2002 a peace deal was signed between the governments and militias fighting in DRC. While this promised an end to the colossal bloodshed, it did not provide a solution to the environmental and social problems caused by coltan mining. Indeed, in contravention of the peace deal, the fighting is still going on in the eastern DRC because of the coltan mines. The same brutal military leaders run the operations, using the same sites and methods of mining. The people of DRC stay impoverished and starving, with 40% of their children dying in infancy.

Now that there’s a supposed peace in DRC, no companies have to obscure the routes for Congolese coltan, the trade can be formalized, hastened and expanded. This means the land over the reserves and the wildlife it supports will meet with an even quicker end. The only thing that can stop it is a drastic and immediate reduction in the demand for coltan products.

Unfortunately, there’s another use for tantalum. Its ability to stay stable at high temperatures means it is not just the only metal for computer processors. It is also the ideal material for covering things that are going to get hot by flying very fast. The Bush administration is going to need a shitload of tantalum for the Star Wars project. George Bush Sr. has foreseen this and is already on the board of Barrick, a Canadian mining conglomerate and third biggest buyer of coltan on earth.

Even so, the bulk of the tantalum market is, literally, in our hands in the form of the latest hi-tech gizmo. The pressure on the hi-tech companies to stop using Congolese coltan had been based on the war in DRC. The environmental impact is also more than enough of a reason to stop using Congolese coltan.

Last year the USA threw away around 50 million mobile phones. On average they were 18 months old, and most of them still worked. So, if we all kept our phones for three years, we’d halve the phone makers’ use of tantalum at a stroke.

We must stop being seduced by pointless upgrades. We have to ignore adverts goading of us to be “ashamed” of a phone that works. We have to resist Nokia’s campaign telling us that owning one of their gorilla-killers is “a declaration of independence” (expensive consumer goods are actually a declaration of dependence). Technology should not be a fashion accessory, especially when it’s technology that uses rare and unrecycleable materials like coltan.

Eastern Lowland gorillas, with whom we are a cousin species equally evolved from a recent common ancestor, face extinction. As the UN says, it would be “the first great ape to be driven to extinction–a victim of war, human greed and high technology.”

To remove such a wonderful, intelligent species from earth forever is not worth any amount of digital cameras or mobile phones.


More: http://www.friendsofthecongo.org

New country music: Willie Nelson "Man With the Blues"

williecountrymusic

Stream: [audio:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/ManwBlues.mp3%5D

Download: “Man With the Blues” — Wille Nelson (mp3)

“If you need a little shove in fouling up in love/come to me, I’m the man with the blues”

Sweet-to-these-ears new Wille-penned blues, from this great American outlaw’s new album, Country Music out 4/20 on Rounder Records, produced by T-Bone Burnett (!). More info at Amazon

Subscribe to Arthur’s iTunes Podcast and receive music automatically: click here

Also of interest: Wille Nelson Peace Research Institute

And, very highly recommended: The Tao of Willie: A Guide to the Happiness in Your Heart by Willie Nelson with Turk Pipkin


taowillie

Thanks Kevin B.!

MV & EE + Flower/Corsano Duo No Floor Revue and other hootenannies

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Stream: [audio:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/06-Other-Kinds-Run.mp3%5D

Download: “Other Kinds Run” — Tower Recordings (mono – mp3)

Mono take of Tower Recordings‘ “Other Kind Runs,” which MV sez will probably be in the jams on this upcoming bbqbuster tour with the Flower/Corsano Duo. Dates and MV notes follow…

MV & EE + Flower/Corsano Duo “No Floor Revue” and other hootenannies

4/09/10 : grey matter books/hadley, western mass
4/10/10 : silent barn/brooklyn, NY
4/11/10 : oberlin college/oberlin, OH
4/12/10 : the lager house/detroit, MI
4/13/10 : the boat/toronto, ON
4/14/10 : la sala rossa/montreal, QC
4/15/10 : spring street gallery/saratoga springs, NY
4/16/10 : nom d’artiste/boston, MA
********
4/20/10 : matthew dell solo w/crazy dreams band
grey matter books/western mass

********
5/13/10 : abrons art center/joshua light festival/new york, NY with woods

no floor revue will feature mellow duo exchange of MV & EE and full band Golden Road with John Moloney and Mick Flower. Oberlin also sees a Chris Corsano & Aaron Dilloway duo set.

another view:
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=115016585180995&ref=mf