Today’s Autonomedia Jubilee Saint — ALAIN ROBBE-GRILLET

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AUGUST 18 – ALAIN ROBBE-GRILLET
French proponent of the “noveau roman,” filmmaker.

Marienbadposter

August 18, 2009 HOLIDAYS AND FESTIVALS
Wales: Ancient Bardic TOURNEY OF DRUIDS. Group singing, processions,
musical & literary competitions, awarding of bardic degrees.

ALSO ON AUGUST 18 IN HISTORY…
1587 — Virginia Dare, first English child born in North America, born in North America.
1812 — Lady Ludd leads corn market riots at Leeds, England.
1922 — Alain Robbe-Grillet, French “nouveau roman” writer, born, Brest.
1977 — Black rights activist Steve Biko arrested, South Africa.

The superior culture

Author Jared Diamond in a recent interview with The Financial Times:

“If we continue to operate non-sustainably, then in 50 or 60 years, the US and Japan and Europe will be in bad shape. But my friends in the highlands of New Guinea will be fine. Some of my friends made stone tools when they were children and they could just go back to what their ancestors were doing for 46,000 years. New Guinea highlanders are not doomed.”

'44 PRESIDENTS' by MZA & Maria Sputnik

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Forty Four Presidents by MZA & Maria Sputnik. Available in hardcover from Garrett County Press.

A brief illustrated history of the U.S. presidency told by the presidents themselves in the style favored by modern social networking web sites, Forty Four Presidents imagines 220 years of presidential succession pancaked into a single moment — documented simultaneously by each commander-in-chief in status updates designed for easy consumption by their Facebook friends. Each status update is accompanied by a jaunty, high-contrast profile picture intended to reflect something of the essential personality (and hotness) of the president.

Lightning Bolt "Earthly Delights"

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Band sez:

October 13th 2009 sees the release of the new album “Earthly Delights”. gatefold packed 3 sided LP, CD(still around!) and whatever download where-ever.

destined to be leaked onto the internet by……hmmm. take a guess, maybe august 31? early september? you tell me. but i think the art of this one is good. get the LP!

songs.
1. Sound Guardians
2. Nation of Boar
3. Colossus
4. The Sublime Freak
5. Flooded Chamber
6. Funny Farm
7. Rain on Lake i’m Swimming in
8. S.O.S
9. Transmissionary

Older stuffs:

What we've lost, concisely stated…

From “The spirit of Woodstock is dead” by Rebecca Armendariz in The Guardian:

Woodstock was all about the bands and the vibe. Today’s corporate festivals simply cannot foster the same camaraderie

….At festivals these days, everything’s about the lineup, the merchandise, the overpriced beer and complaining about having to suffer through many mediocre 40-minute sets to get to the good stuff. At Woodstock, it was all good stuff.

The wealth of music and its many specialised genres today make it harder to hold a festival everyone wants to check out. Then, who wasn’t going to want to see Jefferson Airplane as the sun rose? Nobody, man. Everyone could agree upon a shared love of Joan Baez and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young.

Now, the internet has turned listening to music into a very solitary pastime. No one’s going to record stores anymore and getting face-time with other music fans. The thrill of the physical search for good music is gone, replaced by a glowing screen with a bed nearby. Kids scour blogs and music news sites to find hidden gems that will mould their personal taste into something worthy of bragging rights, creating something so individual and hand-picked it’s almost special (or, at least, people like to think so).

Americans today define themselves individually through their musical tastes instead of forming a collective identity with others. We’ve changed the way we consume music and have access to whatever we want immediately. Being first in line, knowing what’s cool before it’s cool, ups one’s status as a music-connoisseur.

But there was nothing singular about watching the Who play a 24-song set at 5am. Only solidarity.

The Diggers Papers No. 18: another BEDROCK ONE event flyer/poster

Arthur is proud to present scans of essential documents produced by and about the San Francisco Diggers, who were in many ways the epicentral actors in the Haight-Ashbury during the epic, wildly imaginative period from late ’66 through ’67. The Diggers’ ideas and activities are essential counter-cultural history, sure, but they are also especially relevant to the current era, for reasons that should be obvious to the gentle Arthur reader.

Most of the documents that we are presenting are broadsides originally published on a Gestetner machine owned and operated in the Haight by the novelist/poet Chester Anderson and his protege/sidekick Claude Hayward, who used the name “Communication Company,” or more commonly, “Com/Co.” According to Claude, these broadsides were then “handed out on the street, page by page, super hot media, because the reader trusted the source, which was another freaky looking hippie who had handed it to him/her.”

This particular Com/Co document is a flyer/poster/broadside by an unknown artist advertising BEDROCK ONE, a March 5, 1967 event organized by Anderson himself. (See Robert Crumb’s flyer for the same event here.)

Check out that lineup, a real who’s who of the contemporary Haight-Ashbury arts/life scene: the Steve Miller Band, the Orkustra (the band led by guitarist Bobby Beausoleil, who would later be associated with both Kenneth Anger and Charles Manson), poet Richard Brautigan, the infamous street agitators San Francisco Mime Troupe, the San Francisco League for Sexual Freedom, the Lysergic Power & Light Company, and more.

More on Bedrock One in coming days…

Click on the image to see at a larger size…

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