photo by Ralph Matheu
"NET EFFECT: It's not too late for humanity to survive the digital" by Douglas Rushkoff
NET EFFECT: It’s not too late for humanity to survive the digital
by Douglas Rushkoff
October 12, 2009
The first time I worked with a computer, way back in high school in the late ’70s, there was no such thing as software. To use the terminal, I had to write my own code and then input it into the computer. Only then would the computer be a typewriter, a calculator, a psychiatrist, or an elevator controller. A computer was an “anything” machine. Moreover, everything I wrote and saved—my “content”—was accessible and changeable by anyone else on the system—unless I specifically ordered otherwise. Media was no longer fixed, it was changeable. Not only ownership, but also the notion of finality itself had become arbitrary—even artificial.
Today, most of us think of computers—and all of our digital devices—in terms of the applications they offer: “What does it already do” instead of “what can I make it do?” Likewise, instead of teaching computer programming in school, we teach kids how to use Microsoft Windows. This difference is profound. It exemplifies the core difference between a society capable of thinking its way beyond its current limitations, and one destined to repeat the same mistakes until it drives itself to extinction.
Computers and networking technology present humanity with the greatest opportunity for renaissance since the invention of the 22-letter alphabet in about the second millennium BCE. But, just like then, we are squandering the opportunity. Continue reading
Vintage small press gospel soul from FAMOUS L. RENFROE (1968?)
Stream: [audio:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Believe.mp3%5D
Download: “Believe” – Famous L. Renfroe (1968?) (mp3)
Children is an album of electric gospel spirituals by a Memphis, Tennessee gentleman named Famous L. Renfroe performing as “The Flying Sweet Angel of Joy.” Famous wrote and produced all the album’s songs, played all the instruments except for the drums, and then released the album on his own sometime around 1968, without a label name. Long out of print, Children is available again on vinyl, the Lord’s preferred format for recorded music, thanks to the efforts of Oxford, Mississippi’s Big Legal Mess Records.
Click here for info on how to obtain a copy.
Subscribe to Arthur’s iTunes Podcast and receive music automatically: click here
Excerpt from FLOWING WELL Issue 4, edited/published by Leif Goldberg and Erin Rosenthal
Providence, Rhode Island-based artist-naturalists Leif Goldberg (National Waste, Paper Rodeo, Free Radicals) & Erin Rosenthal are editing and self-publishing “Flowing Well,” a homemade seasonal newsletter for friends. Here are two excerpts from the front and back of the current issue. Click on each image to enlarge…
“Flowing Well” subscription info: $6 per year (four issues). Send well-concealed bills to: LG & ER, 42 Temple St., Providence, RI 02905.
It’s time to make root beer!
Today's Autonomedia Jubilee Saint – MOSES HARMAN

OCTOBER 12 — MOSES HARMAN
Lucifer editor, agrarian socialist, paradigm of male feminism.
OCTOBER 12, 2009 HOLIDAYS AND FESTIVALS
INTERNATIONAL MOMENT OF FRUSTRATION. Marshall, Texas: “Fireant
Festival,” including fireant chili and ritual roundup.
SCREAM DAY: Thirty-second global scream at 1200 hours GMT
ALSO ON OCTOBER 12 IN HISTORY…
1492 — Arawaks discover Columbus and his crew, who return the favor
with rape and pillage which continues to this day.
1830 —Lucifer editor, agrarian socialist Moses Harman born, Pendelton County, VA.
1875 — British occultist Aleister Crowley born.
1990 — Mexican writer Octavio Paz wins Nobel literature prize.
Excerpted from The 2009 Autonomedia Calendar of Jubilee Saints: Radical Heroes for the New Millennium by James Koehnline and the Autonomedia Collective
Today's Autonomedia Jubilee Saint – HULDRYCH ZWINGLI

OCTOBER 11 — HULDRYCH ZWINGLI
Swiss protestant radical leader, humanist leveller.
OCTOBER 11, 2009 HOLIDAYS AND FESTIVALS
DESSERT DAY. IT’S MY PARTY DAY. FEAST OF REAL FAMILY VALUES.
ALSO ON OCTOBER 11 IN HISTORY…
1424 — Religious reformer Jan Zizka dies.
1531 — Swiss religious rebel Huldrych Zwingli killed in Battle of Kappel.
1868 — Electric vote recorder patented, Edison’s first invention.
1874 — Masseseditor Mary Heaton Vorse born, New York City.
1924 — Founding of the Bureau of Surrealist Research.
1961 — Film comedian Chico Marx dies.
1963 — Jean Cocteau dies, Milley-la-Fôret, Paris, France.
Excerpted from The 2009 Autonomedia Calendar of Jubilee Saints: Radical Heroes for the New Millennium by James Koehnline and the Autonomedia Collective
New music: ZAKEE KUDURO of Philadelphia
Stream: [audio:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/3a-SANE-EBA.mp3%5D
Download: “Sane Eba” – Zakee Kuduro feat. Anbuley (mp3)
Congotronics meets M.I.A., maybe? Nice and wicked.
Subscribe to Arthur’s iTunes Podcast and receive music automatically: click here
NEW SLOW, MASSIVE, HEAVY METAL

Shrinebuilder’s “Pyramid of the Moon” (7 minutes, 35 seconds) has been posted on Shrinebuilder’s myspace page
SHRINEBUILDER is:
Al Cisneros (Sleep, Om)
Wino (St. Vitus, The Obsessed, Spirit Caravan, The Hidden Hand)
Scott Kelly (Neurosis)
Dale Crover (Melvins)
Note: Al Cisneros’ 2009 Arthur CD “Transmissions From Sinai” is now available from the Arthur Store for $12US postpaid. Also, a few copies of Arthur No. 9, which featured Wino on the cover, are still available from the Arthur Store as well.
"Fire In My Bones" preview No. 3 of 3: "Storm Thru Mississippi" by Henry Green (1951)
Stream: [audio:http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/03-Storm-Thru-Mississippi.mp3%5D
Download: “Storm Thru Mississippi” – Henry Green (1951) (mp3)
Here is the second of three songs we’re presenting this week from the forthcoming, eagerly awaited Fire In My Bones: Raw, Rare & Otherworldly African-American Gospel, 1944-2007, a stunning 80-song, triple-CD set compiled by Mike McGonigal of Yeti Magazine fame. Most of the songs on Fire are sourced from independent regional labels, and almost none have ever been widely available. These are some genuine lost treasures of American devotional music, folks. Mike has done some serious collecting, culling, and sequencing on this set, and we’re all the lucky beneficiaries.
Henry Green’s “Storm Thru Mississippi” is from the set’s opening disk, “The Wicked Shall Cease from Troubling.” From the liner notes: “[‘Storm’] was issued as a single on realtor Steve Chandler’s Chicago-based Chance label. The song, subtitled ‘Storm Thru Tupelo,’ might be about the devastating 1930s flood described in John Lee Hooker’s ‘Tupelo.’ Regardless, it’s one of many gospel songs which make an Old Testament styled interpretation of contemporary ‘extreme weather’ events.”
Fire In My Bones: Raw, Rare & Otherworldly African-American Gospel, 1944-2007 is being released on October 27, 2009 by the good people of Tompkins Square Records of New York City. You can pre-order now from Amazon.
Previously:
“How Long” by Sister Ola Mae Terrell (1948)
“Don’t Let Him Ride” by the Mississippi Nightingales (1971)
"Google 'broccoli casserole' and make the first recipe you find. I guarantee it will be disappointing."
WHAT WE ARE LOSING: Part 55 (maybe) in an occasional series…
A recent thinkpiece from Cook’s Illustrated magazine publisher Chris Kimball at the New York Times:
“…The shuttering of Gourmet reminds us that in a click-or-die advertising marketplace, one ruled by a million instant pundits, where an anonymous Twitter comment might be seen to pack more resonance and useful content than an article that reflects a lifetime of experience, xperts are not created from the top down but from the bottom up. They can no longer be coronated; their voices have to be deemed essential to the lives of their customers. That leaves, I think, little room for the thoughtful, considered editorial with which Gourmet delighted its readers for almost seven decades.
“To survive, those of us who believe that inexperience rarely leads to wisdom need to swim against the tide, better define our brands, prove our worth, ask to be paid for what we do, and refuse to climb aboard this ship of fools, the one where everyone has an equal voice. Google ‘broccoli casserole’ and make the first recipe you find. I guarantee it will be disappointing. The world needs fewer opinions and more thoughtful expertise — the kind that comes from real experience, the hard-won blood-on-the-floor kind. I like my reporters, my pilots, my pundits, my doctors, my teachers and my cooking instructors to have graduated from the school of hard knocks.”






