“Some of you may have already picked up the latest Ugly Things magazine in which our pal David Biasotti uncovers the amazing journey of guitar raga-pioneer Pat Kilroy and his short-lived group, The New Age. After Kilroy’s 1966 Light of Day album flew right over the heads of most heads, he re-teamed up with flautist/etc. Susan Graubard as The New Age—palling around with the Fish and performing at S.F.’s Human Be-In and The Jabberwock in Berkeley. RD Records has just released the sessions they did for Warner Brothers in the summer of 1967, “a true groundbreaking adventure of the highest order” replete with “incredible raga-esque acoustic guitar, electric bass, Spanish cowbells, bell tree, silver flute, bamboo flutes, viola, tamboura, conga drums, tables, acoustic and electric bass and tambourine.” Sadly, Kilroy died a few months later of Hodgkin’s disease. Graubard went on to play with Robbie Basho, The Floating Lotus Opera Company, and ex-Mighty Babyers The Habibiya, who word has it, will be the subject of Biasotti’s next musical exploration—Sufi outfits, trips to the Middle East and all. Exciting stuff, people, exciting stuff.”
Distress Signals
Some notes on a scandal by John Coulthart.
Members of the Gay Liberation Front picketing a
police station in Hollywood, California, 1971.
One of the more notable things about the fallout from Senator Larry Craig’s tap-dancing antics has been the way the affair put a spotlight on a world of clandestine liaisons which a small but often vocal portion of the American populace doesn’t want to know about and wishes would go away forever. What many news reports managed to miss amid the wailing and rending of garments was the significant point that the only societies whose members feel a persistent need for furtive sexual encounters are those that proscribe those encounters and make gay people feel ashamed–or afraid of the repercussions–of their actions.
A number of reports felt the need to explain for readers or viewers unskilled in cultural anthropology how men seeking sex communicate with each other in the restrooms of the nation. ABC News ran a story last week with the title, “Secret Signals: How Gay Men Cruise For Sex“, as though all gay men are the same and we’re all just counting the seconds until our next toilet encounter. (And I see today they’ve finally changed the title to “How Some Men Cruise For Sex”.) What this and other reports lacked in their elaboration of secret signals was any question as to why men would be compelled to go to these lengths in the first place.
Historically, all persecuted groups have sought a way to identify their members without drawing undue attention to themselves, and the lexicon of ambivalent loitering–toe-tapping or otherwise–was evolved by gay men out of necessity, not choice. When you’re part of a minority that outwardly resembles the majority, finding others like yourself presents a problem. When that majority wants to imprison you for loving the wrong gender, as was the case in Europe and the US until very recently–and is still the case in much of the Middle East, Africa and Asia–you can’t exactly walk around in a t-shirt saying “I’m not gay but my boyfriend is.” Hence the need for secret signals, sly glances and out-of-the-way trysts. In this at least, gay men have been no different to early Christians, or to the Catholics in Protestant England who were persecuted to such an extent that “priest holes” were built into many Catholic houses to give local priests a hiding place when fleeing angry Protestant mobs. (The irony of the persecuted becoming future persecutors needs no undue elaboration here.)
Marginal groups of any stripe bond through shared slang and identifying signals. Criminal gangs in 19th century London used “cant” and backslang so they could talk among themselves without fear of their schemes being revealed through eavesdropping. Tradespeople used similar cant expressions of their own and, sure enough, gay men in the capital evolved their own version of cant, partly so as to be able to gossip about other men in public but mostly as a means of extending mutual solidarity. Polari, as the slang was called, spread from gay haunts into the world of backstage theatre and eventually found its way into the wider culture, giving us terms such as “drag” (which originally meant any kind of clothing) and “rough trade”, trade in Polari being a term for sex. The word “naff” is now a commonly-used piece of English slang meaning “crap” or “useless”, common enough even for Princess Anne who once told photographers to “naff off”. I wonder if anyone informed her that “naff” was a Polari acronym for someone you wouldn’t want to have sex with: Not Available For Fucking.
Public toilets in Polari were known as tearooms or cottages, and the word “cottaging” is still a common one among British gay men. Senator Craig’s alleged tearoom encounter with a NAFF police officer lifted the lid for many appalled Republicans on a world which their own attitudes had helped create. In the days when gay sex was a crime or could have severe repercussions, anyone loitering in a public toilet was obviously there to do more than wash their hands, hence the popularity of such places for random encounters. So too with other all-male places such as saunas or bathhouses. As long as society made it difficult for men to have sex with men, gay men had to find their own spaces to meet. Senator Craig continues to protest his innocence but has he stopped to consider during the past few days that maybe–just maybe–the reason restrooms are policed has some connection with attitudes that push gay people to the margins of society, attitudes that his voting record has helped sustain?
Whether they know it or not, closeted men of Senator Craig’s generation who look for sex in toilets are living out an anachronism, acting as though it’s still the 1950s and they have to sneak around out of sight of wives or workmates or voters. This has never been a safe or convenient way of finding sex. John Rechy’s The Sexual Outlaw, a 1977 study of cruising in Los Angeles in the early Seventies, recounts in detail a period within recent memory when police persecution of gay Americans was persistent and often violent. There was more cruising in those days because there were fewer bars and what bars there were often sustained harassing police raids. Away from the big cities, furtive and desperate loitering was all that many men would have known.
None of the young gay men I know today would dream of looking for sex in a public toilet; they meet new guys through MySpace or Facebook, on dating sites like Gay.com or via gay groups at university. If they’re old enough they can go to bars or clubs. Suggesting to a gay guy below a certain age that they ought to go looking for sex in a park or toilet would inspire the same bewildered reaction as you’d receive from a straight guy if you suggested he should go kerb-crawling for hookers at the weekend.
Some gay men do still enjoy cottaging, of course–ask George Michael–not least for the thrill of possibly being caught. The Spartacus International Gay Guide lists cruising sites for travellers and is updated every year; there are many online equivalents of this. For guys with a fetish for married bisexual men (more common than you might think) random sex in public places is a good way to meet the object of your desire. But that’s all it is today, a fetish, just like dressing in rubber or being peed on in a bathtub. Men of Senator Craig’s generation who were unable to fully acknowledge their sexuality find themselves repeating the impulses of a conflicted and miserable youth, often filled with shame and guilt but unable to prevent their actions all the same. It’s quite probable that in twenty years time this kind of activity in Europe and America will be increasingly rare, passing into history just as Polari has passed from use as the need for a secret slang diminished. There’ll still be guys wanting a quick random encounter but why do that in the uncomfortable confines of a toilet stall with a risk of arrest when you can relax in somebody’s home or hotel room?
The other striking feature of the Craig business has been the way it fits a pattern in which Republicans make all the mistakes that plagued the decadent later years of the last Conservative administration in Britain. Thatcher’s regime in the Eighties was just as intolerant as the current GOP (lesbian daughters or no) so the Conservatives looked equally foolish during the outing of Harvey Proctor, Tory MP for Basildon and a man happy to pander to racists and homophobes in his public pronouncements until he was revealed to enjoy spanking sessions with black rent boys.
When John Major was handed Thatcher’s poisoned chalice following her sacking as PM in 1990, he announced a half-baked “Back to Basics” morality campaign for the UK. His moral drive was undermined immediately by a series of scandals involving Conservative MPs who were either having adulterous affairs, siring illegitimate children or taking bribes from lobbyists. Worst of all was the case of Stephen Milligan MP, found dead from auto-erotic asphyxia while tied to his kitchen table dressed in woman’s stockings. The spectacle of the party of morality trying to dictate to the nation while its MPs were behaving like characters in a bed-hopping farce was too much; “Back to Basics” collapsed and the whole sorry episode did much to further reduce the government’s already seriously eroded credibility.
The Blair administration has suffered far less from this kind of sexual damage. Blair’s Labour Party was the first to have openly gay MPs and it was their example, and the consequent indifference of the public to their sexual orientation, which led the way for other MPs–Conservatives included–to declare themselves. It’s often said that where America leads, Britain follows, but this once-homophobic nation has managed to shed its public intolerance far quicker and with considerably less fuss than the United States.
The lesson for Republicans–if they’re capable of learning any lessons by this point–is that lawmakers who don’t have to live a lie are less likely to bring the party into disrepute in airport toilets. But the intractable problem is that it’s impossible to have a party with openly gay members who are then required to vote against the interests of people like themselves, assuming anyone in a Republican state would vote for an openly gay candidate in the first place. Conservatives in Britain recognise now that the homophobic debates of the past are over, the country has moved on and there are more pressing matters to attend to. Much of America is stuck at the place Britain was circa 1982, with those on the right in thrall to the tiny percentage of the population who find their moral precepts by cherry-picking Leviticus.
Senator Larry Craig exemplifies the dilemma: repeatedly accused of gay activity but unable to ever admit anything, especially after his anti-gay voting record. He claims his tearoom signals were misinterpreted and seems now to have changed his mind about his resignation. Maybe the quantum superposition he exists in–gay or not? resigned or not?–isn’t the dithering of a man in a state of panic, maybe he’s simply large, like Walt Whitman, and contains multitudes.
And speaking of America’s greatest gay poet, Whitman himself struggled with his sexuality for many years until he was able to write in Starting from Paumanok:
I will sing the song of companionship,
I will show what alone must finally compact these,
I believe these are to found their own ideal of manly love,
indicating it in me,
I will therefore let flame from me the burning fires that were
threatening to consume me,
I will lift what has too long kept down those smouldering fires,
I will give them complete abandonment,
I will write the evangel-poem of comrades and of love,
For who but I should understand love with all its sorrow and joy?
And who but I should be the poet of comrades?
Not for the first time, politicians might learn something from poets.
Dots.
Mystical Capitalism at Sea and Space
This Sunday 7-9PM in Los Angeles

The Institute for Mystical Capitalism traces the history of economics in the United States, primarily focusing on the evolution of consumer-driven markets and the mass consumption of industrially manufactured goods. Consumer banking, spectator sports, Detroit rock and roll, conspiracy theory, and the occult synthesize into a unified theory of post-industrial economic evolution, filling in the gaps in classical economic thought.
Video Screening at Sea and Space accompanying an exhibit by Chris Bassett
A pair of documentaries looking at the architecture of Mystical Capitalism. The historical development of energy accumulating structures (baseball stadiums) and currency accumulating structures (banks) will be covered.
Alicia Bay Laurel "Living on the Earth" fashion clothing from Japan
Neu! live '74 clip
Keep your coins, I want change.

Taken at Pitzer College in Claremont, California 9/07. Students are encouraged to use their campus as a canvas. This powerful piece is especially appropriate as it is painted on a wall of the soon to be destroyed Sanborn dorms.
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Now playing: Kaleidoscope – Keep Your Mind Open
via FoxyTunes
A little dream
From a 1996 Gary Snyder interview:
“The marks of Buddhist teaching are impermanence, no-self, the inevitability of suffering and connectedness, emptiness, the vastness of mind, and a way to realization.
“It seems evident that there are throughout the world certain social and religious forces that have worked through history toward an ecologically and culturally enlightened state of affairs. Let these be encouraged: Gnostics, hip Marxists, Teilhard de Chardin Catholics, Druids, Taoists, Biologists, Witches, Yogins, Bhikkus, Quakers, Sufis, Tibetans, Zens, Shamans, Bushmen, American Indians, Polynesians, Anarchists, Alchemists, primitive cultures, communal and ashram movements, cooperative ventures.
“Idealistic, these?” Snyder says when asked about such alternative ‘Third Force’ social movements. “In some cases the vision can be mystical; it can be Blake. It crops up historically with William Penn and the Quakers trying to make the Quaker communities in Pennsylvania a righteous place to live-treating the native peoples properly in the process. It crops up in the utopian and communal experience of Thoreau’s friends in New England.
“As utopian and impractical as it might seem, it comes through history as a little dream of spiritual elegance and economic simplicity, and collaboration and cooperating communally—all of those things together. It may be that it was the early Christian vision. Certainly it was one part of the early Buddhist vision. It turns up as a reflection of the integrity of tribal culture; as a reflection of the kind of energy that would try to hold together the best lessons of tribal cultures even within the overwhelming power and dynamics of civilization.”
courtesy Michael Sigman
Tiger Tateishi
The Vanishing City.

A Band Planet (1991).
-TATEISHI Tiger was born in Fukuoka in 1941.
-In 1963, he submitted a large collage to the 15th Yomiuri Independent Exhibition, which received much attention. Subsequently he went on to be heavily influenced by Pop Art, which he aptly converted to address aspects of Japanese everyday life as well as the country’s current issues.
-From the mid 60ユs, he gradually began to draw cartoons.
-In 1969 he moved to Italy, where he worked for Olivetti typewriters as a designer, while finding time to exhibit his paintings at such places as Alexander Iolas gallery.
-From the mid 80’s his work began to feature epitomizing motifs of Japan, such as Mt. Fuji.
-In 1998, he passed away in Chiba prefecture.From his inception as an artist in 1962, until 1967, TATEISHI Tiger was known by his birth name of TATEISHI Kouichi. But from 1968 until mid 1990, he developed, for its convenient catchiness, the moniker Tiger TATEISHI, which was not only written in ‘kana’, the phonetic notation reserved for non-Japanese words, but the order of first and last name was switched to mimic the Western manner. Although he continues to be remembered posthumously by the same moniker, the ‘kana’ has been converted to Chinese characters and the order of first and last name has been reverted to the original Japanese manner.
Via the essential Giornale Nuovo.
Julian Cope's JAPROCKSAMPLER site
“When I wrote JAPROCKSAMPLER, so little had been published in English on the subject that I was forced to create first my own miniature encyclopedia of information, gradually building up the picture from millions of tiny bits of information. Of course, when the book was finished, I was left with such a colossal repository of information that I have decided to bequeath it to all fans of Japanese rock across the world in the form of these ‘Artist A-Z’ and ‘Group Sounds A-Z’ sections. Hopefully, by employing these biographies as the bedrock, japrocksampler.com will eventually become an essential resource for all future Japanese music research.
JULIAN (September 2007CE)”

Flower Travellin’ Band 1971: (L-R) Hideki Ishema/guitar), Jun Kosugi/bass, George Wada/drums, Joe Yamanaka/vocals

Taj Mahal Travellers with leader Takehisa Kosugi on violin at far left

Far East Family Band c. 1974 deploy their entire arsenal for the cameras




