PAUL KRASSNER ON DENVER COPS

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“The Denver Police Department is facing several lawsuits over confrontations with protesters at the Democratic National Convention. The officers had conducted mass arrests and detentions of 154 individuals before and during the convention. One cop, for example, was videotaped pushing a woman to the ground with his baton as he yelled, “Back up, bitch!” The police are being charged with systematically condoning violence against antiwar demonstrators, and now, a commemorative T-shirt (pictured above) created and distributed by their union, the Denver Police Protective Association, could be offered as evidence of the cops’ state of mind.” CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING


On Dan Deacon and what's at stake

Arresting Development

Dan Deacon, Myth, and Magic: Some Notes On Exploding Up From The Underground

By Rjyan Kidwell

June 11, 2008 Baltimore City Paper

I’ve seen Dan Deacon many times on his home turf, the warehouse show. After moving to Baltimore in 2004, he mastered that setting over the course of three years of ambitious touring and regular local performances in his living space at the Copy Cat, the old artists’ dojo three blocks east of Penn Station. As his blade got sharp, the crowds grew and grew, eventually exceeding what the space could support, and it strained his relationship with the landlord. I was supposed to play a show with Deacon one night last August, a show on his 26th birthday intended to break a yearlong abstinence from performing in the building. After the first two acts, though, Deacon had to get on the microphone and tell everyone–at least 300 kids–to leave. Something to do with the police, I think–I was never totally clear on the details, but I know neither of us got to play that night. Now Deacon is a very positive guy, but I could tell it burned him, returning from a few immensely successful tours to be hassled trying to play in his old home. That was the first night that I started to see the outline of Deacon’s heroic mission, and I began to truly understand how his destiny and our city had intertwined. I could also see that the last challenge rising up between him and that destiny was the very sort of beast he had to face Friday, May 30, in the big room at Sonar: an enormous mob of voyeurs.

You’re probably curious as to how I knew that virtually all of the 900 people at the club that night were voyeurs, and I’m tempted simply to explain about the kind of sensitivities you develop over 14 years of working in establishments that combine strangers and alcohol and loud music. But in the interest of full disclosure I must confess: I’m actually part voyeur myself. Not a big part, but it does run in my family. Between nature and nurture, my voy-dar is pretty damn reliable.

I went down to Sonar and, as I suspected, the voyeurs were swarming. Most were dressed to blend in and dancing like horny zombies, all of them animated by expectations drawn from the images and video and sound they found with their computers: digital glimpses of Deacon’s show made accessible by today’s efficient compression algorithms. While waiting for his set to start, I got bored and tried to buttonhole a few random people; it’s about as fun as poking pill bugs, but feels less cruel. Both of the hulking, frat-tastic gentlemen I tried to engage just gaped at me as if I had asked them to hold a severed penis until I walked away. I had better luck with a smaller guy named Ian, a recent transplant who works in the video-game industry. I asked him if he loved Dan Deacon, and he said yes without any hesitation. When I asked why, Ian squinted and looked up at the ceiling and thought about it. After a minute or two, standing there watching him think started to make me anxious, so I waved my question away and changed the subject to video games.

Meanwhile, the wisest parts of the mob were clumping in front of the stage. Deacon, as usual, set up his table of gear on the floor, and, normally, if you don’t push up for a good spot you won’t be able to see much other than a couple of flashing lights in the middle of a churning sea of hair. As Deacon began his performance, I thought about penetrating the mob for a closer look but quickly reconsidered when a better view appeared projected on either side of the stage. A layer of psychedelic video effects obscured some of the details, but settling for the screen made it less likely I’d have to enter a teenager’s personal space.

Before playing any music Deacon addressed the crowd over the PA, leading them through a maniac warmup routine that involved stretching and pointing and kneeling down, and then a series of contradictory gestures and light stranger-interaction. This continued for almost the length of a song, and the crowd was enthusiastically participatory.

Then the music started, and it sounded immense. You could feel the kick drums in your throat and behind your ribs. Deacon does very upbeat material, and positive music is always much more convincing when it’s loud as hell. The voyeurs were convinced immediately, and they pushed like crazy right up onto Deacon’s table and at every side of him. His songs are four-fifths climax, so they don’t have to stop pushing until the song is over, and they get especially riled when Deacon sings dramatically, his voice transposed up an octave or two by a Digitech Whammy IV.

The music itself sounds like Lightning Bolt covering John Philip Sousa on Nickelodeon–and I’m not just playing the “this sounds like that” game here, either: This is crucial genealogy. Deacon and his Wham City crew’s warehouse shows have always drawn heavily from the mythology surrounding Lightning Bolt and its productive Providence, R.I., art space, Fort Thunder. The Fort Thunder building was demolished in 2002 to make room for a Shaw’s supermarket parking lot, but in the six years prior, the artists who lived in Fort Thunder created many bands, comics, posters, costumes, and video work that would gradually be discovered and adored by younger aspiring artists. Their eccentric aesthetic mixed dystopian anxiety with youthful energy. Deacon’s music definitely seizes way more on the latter of those two aspects, but when you hear his jams blasting out of a big-ass system, the gnarlier part of the Providence aesthetic peeks–and peaks–through, too.

At the end of the first song Deacon tried to convince everybody to spread out and use more of the space in the room, but most people appeared to assume he was talking to somebody else, and the mob pretty much stayed concentrated around him. As the set continued, he alternated songs with more surrealist calisthenics and two rather complex group activities: an unfortunately short-lived two-man dance circle and a much more successful dance “gauntlet.” He shouted out the rules for the complicated games clearly and concisely, but with the kind of urgency often encountered with instructions about how to exit a flaming aircraft.

It built gradually in the tone of his entreaties, and then halfway through the set Deacon confirmed the scent of tension I detected when he announced that he felt “like a second-grade teacher.” He was putting it all down, but those voyeurs, they weren’t picking it all up. In that great big sweaty great time, there was a dramatic struggle happening just under the surface. Deacon alluded to this struggle in a recent interview with Pitchfork, explaining how his new compositions focused on “mass movement” instead of conventional “dancing at a party.”

“As long as the crowds don’t become too rowdy or violent, I’m excited for my audience to grow,” he said. It sounds clear to me that Deacon has big ideas about what can happen when large groups of people get together in one room, but that he expects the audience to trust and commit completely to his leadership if something transcendent is to be achieved. The crowd that night was undeniably happy, everything was good and fine–the set certainly fulfilled the expectations aroused by the internet images many times over, and that’s good as it needs to be for a voyeur. But the underlying tug of war was never completely resolved–it didn’t seem good enough for Dan. I have the feeling it won’t take many more shows in rooms like that one to teach Deacon that the voyeurs–even when they appear to resist–truly and deeply desire to be bossed around and made into instruments of action. They just sometimes need something more forceful than a friendly invitation to get there.

When voyeurs start to realize they’re affecting the thing that they desire, the protective barrier that defines voyeurism begins to crumble. Walls coming down, outside coming in–always a scary thing, and most people’s instinct is to pull back. But if you wanna go skinny dipping, you have to jump in the pool: Trying to wade in a little at a time is for suckers; it just doesn’t work. It’s happening on both sides, too. I sense that Deacon might still be a little scared of the power that comes with conducting enormous crowds–it can taste a little bit fascist. He’ll get used to it, though. I mean, Superman is a little bit fascist, too, right? And look at the symbolism underlying the title of Deacon’s most recent (and most popular) album, Spiderman of the Rings: Peter Parker, the ordinary boy who gets superhuman powers and decides, despite the challenges presented by his ordinariness, to dedicate himself to the well-being of his fellow man; and Tolkien’s epic tale about the little man-child whose bravery saves his whole world from apocalypse. These aren’t just cheeky references to popular culture. I think Deacon, Frodo-style, is creeping his way up the mountain to face the very evil that decimated the home of his artistic forebears and has interfered with his own attempts to set up a stable location for Wham City: the forces of greed and gentrification that are cannibalizing American cities and culture.

Back in Providence, in 1999, after persistent rumors of the Fort Thunder building’s sale eventually proved to be true, members of the Fort and others sympathetic to the cause spent more than a year trying to influence the process, meeting with preservationists, community activists, and politicians. Despite an outcry of support from far and wide–I personally heard about the threat to Fort Thunder when a Japanese record label mass-mailed a call to arms to every band that had ever performed there–the out-of-state developer Feldco demolished the old mill building and built its strip mall. Later there would be rumors that Feldco slyly bought its way out of promises to set aside a certain number of affordable studio spaces in the new property, the main concession that was made to those protesting the development plan.

The story of Fort Thunder and its frustrating ending looms heavily over the artists and performers in Baltimore today–in every major city, really. We’ve watched the condos follow us around long enough now to know that we are the unwitting pawns of opportunistic entrepreneurs. We go to “undesirable” places, places the bourgeoisie fear and avoid, because that is where rent is affordable on an artist’s wages. If we do not thrive there, we are ignored, but if we do, developers and speculators quickly buy up the neighborhood, erect prohibitively expensive luxury housing, and whine to the police and politicians about the crowds at our shows and the noise made by our bands. Deacon is easily one of the most famous one-man bands in the country right now, but so far he’s been powerless to settle the score with the inhumane elements that mercilessly reshape our city around their materialistic ambitions–and so Deacon knows that conventional success is not enough. He knows he’s still approaching the climax of his own story, that his destiny lies at a higher altitude. I honestly believe that this man, whom some might call “wacky,” aspires to the kind of heroism that far exceeds what it requires to get over with Pitchfork.

When Deacon is comfortable and in control of a crowd, he makes it appear quite easy to turn a familiar situation into a unique and empowering experience. He makes it fun to believe in him. The stretching and pointing, though–that’s just a warmup to the real “mass movement” I expect from him. It might only take the symbolic step of raising his table up off the floor, for all to see, and commanding the crowd from an elevated position, or perhaps it might come with the transition from prerecorded electronics into a live band, a plan he described excitedly near the end of his set. But when he does master these 1,000 capacity clubs the way he mastered the warehouse setting, I think Dan Deacon and his army of acolytes are destined to face off with the real estate-obsessed parasites who have been exploiting the artistic community for years. And wouldn’t that be wacky?


SUNSPOT GENESIS

from spaceweather.com:

“Oct. 11: A new sunspot is emerging near the sun’s northeastern limb. It’s the biggest active region in months and appears to be a member of new Solar Cycle 24. Readers, if you have a solar telescope, now is the time to watch sunspot genesis in action. Image from Pete Lawrence of Selsey, West Sussex, UK…”

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“Coronado’s Personal Solar Telescope–PST for short–is a great way to get started with solar astronomy. The telescope is small, portable, and inexpensive–but it is a big performer. Looking through the eyepiece of a PST you can see vast dark solar filaments, red glowing prominences, and seething active regions where sunspots break through the sun’s surface.

“At the heart of the PST is a Coronado ‘H-alpha’ filter tuned to the red glow of solar hydrogen. It reveals phenomena invisible to ordinary white-light telescopes and, best of all, it is utterly safe. You can’t hurt your eyes looking through a PST.”


TONIGHT in NYC: "How to Make a Happening for 100 Radios"

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How to Make a Happening for 100 Radios

A Launch for Allan Kaprow’s How To Make a Happening CD
Presented by Primary Information

Maccarone
Saturday, October 11, 2008, 6:00 – 8:00 PM

“Primary Information is pleased to announce the CD release of Allan Kaprow’s How to Make a Happening with a one-night only event: How to Make a Happening for 100 Radios. As the title implies, the event will be comprised of Kaprow’s lost classic from 1966 How to Make a Happening broadcast continuously over a small orchestra of 100 FM Radios. The event will take place at Maccarone at 630 Greenwich Street from 6:00 to 8:00 PM.

Lost for 40 years, Primary Information has remastered and released How to Make a Happening as a CD, making it accessible on a wide scale for the first time in the title’s history. Simple in construction, yet profound in context, How to Make a Happening is Allan Kaprow delivering 11 rules on how, and how not, to make a Happening, an movement begun by Kaprow in the late fifties that is known for its unpredictability, open scores, and constantly-evolving form.

How to Make a Happening for 100 Radios is an auto-improvised event that you can’t get from the CD alone, yet is based on the both the piece itself as a discursive act and its format as a sound multiple. The installation will consist of 100 radios (of all varieties and ages) tuned to the same frequency, in which the CD will be broadcast, endlessly, from FM transmitters. The performance hinges on the imprecision of radio technology, providing a platform for the broadcasts/frequencies to interact with each other and audience members in an uncontrolled manner as the piece plays out, creating an aurally-roving sound collage.

How to Make a Happening was re-issued with the cooperation of the Estate of Allan Kaprow and the Getty Research Institute. For more information, please email info@primaryinformation.org or visit www.primaryinformation.org

How to Make a Happening for 100 Radios is made possible through the support of Maccarone and Hauser & Wirth.


SLICES OF NYC LIFE…

from Marisha Camp:

This guy was playing the screechiest, most atonal, noisy mess on the subway, and, at the end, he asked for donations to take him back to his home planet… At first I sort of bought it in a George Clinton Planet Mothership kind of way, and then he offered to take George Bush with him and, for even more money, move it all to another car…

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I never got a good photo, but there was a cuh-razy, weave pulling fight at McDonald’s… And when they finally got the first girl’s hand out of the other girl’s hair, girl #2 grabbed a scalding pot of coffee…

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Zach Cowie's Hour of Wisdom at "Rotter and Friends"

“FRIENDS! I’m Zach Cowie, resident DJ for the Rotter & Friends organization. By clicking the Link link below (ha!) you’ll be re-directed to a stream containing the first installment of a NEW and soon-to-be-regular happening here at R+ F– The Hour Of Wisdom. The HOW is a crash course of stories and sounds aimed at informing the masses about the artists we’ve chosen to immortalize in t-shirt form with the Rotter & Friends label….”