LUNGS AGAINST WAR.

Allmusic.com Review
by Joslyn Layne

This historic free jazz album is a heavy-impact sonic assault so aggressive it still knocks listeners back on their heels decades later. Recorded in May 1968, Machine Gun captures some top European improvisers at the beginning of their influential careers, and is regarded by some as the first European — not just German or British — jazz recording. Originally self-released by Peter Br??tzmann, the album eventually came out on the FMP label, and set a new high-water mark for free jazz and “energy music” that few have approached since. Br??tzmann is joined on sax by British stalwart Evan Parker and Dutch reedsman Willem Breuker (before Breuker moved away from free music, his lungs were as powerful as Br??tzmann’s). The rest of the group consists of drummers Han Bennink (Dutch) and Sven-?Öke Johansson (Swedish), Belgian pianist Fred van Hove, and German bassists Peter Kowald and Buschi Niebergall. Br??tzmann leads this octet in a notoriously concentrated dose of the relentless hard blowing so often characteristic of his music. While Br??tzmann has played this powerfully on albums since, never again is it with a group of this size playing just as hard with him. The players declare and exercise their right to bellow and wail all they want; they both send up the stereotype of free playing as simply screaming, and unapologetically revel in it. The sound of Machine Gun is just as aggressive and battering as its namesake, blowing apart all that’s timid, immovable, or proper with an unrepentant and furious finality. The years have not managed to temper this fiery furnace blast from hell; it’s just as relentless and shocking an assault now as it was then. Even stout-hearted listeners will nearly be sent into hiding — much like standing outside during a violent storm, withstanding this kind of fierce energy is a primal thrill.

Sweet resonancefm

Today on resonancefm.com:

17.00 GMT
Diggers
Savage Pencil & Sharon Gal

Albert Ayler special
Exploring the life and music of Albert Ayler, the free jazz Saxophonist whose life had been tragicly cut short. For this special Diggers will be joined by photographer and writer Val Wilmer who has been following and documenting this scene and knew Ayler and the rest of the musicians who were and are still shaping and developing black American music.

22.00 GMT
Kosmische
Leo Avanti, Jim Backhaus, Mink Pelican, Tango Mango, Carlos Slazenger and Marcelo Madrid bring exotic fruits from the electronic krautrock utopia that is the Kosmische Club to the Resonance table.

COURTESY M. PILKINGTON!

AL-QAEDA DOES NOT EXIST.

The making of the terror myth

Since September 11 Britain has been warned of the ‘inevitability’ of catastrophic terrorist attack. But has the danger been exaggerated? A major new TV documentary claims that the perceived threat is a politically driven fantasy – and al-Qaida a dark illusion. Andy Beckett reports

Friday October 15, 2004

The Guardian

Since the attacks on the United States in September 2001, there have been more than a thousand references in British national newspapers, working out at almost one every single day, to the phrase “dirty bomb”. There have been articles about how such a device can use ordinary explosives to spread lethal radiation; about how London would be evacuated in the event of such a detonation; about the Home Secretary David Blunkett’s statement on terrorism in November 2002 that specifically raised the possibility of a dirty bomb being planted in Britain; and about the arrests of several groups of people, the latest only last month, for allegedly plotting exactly that.

Starting next Wednesday, BBC2 is to broadcast a three-part documentary series that will add further to what could be called the dirty bomb genre. But, as its title suggests, The Power of Nightmares: The Rise of the Politics of Fear takes a different view of the weapon’s potential.

“I don’t think it would kill anybody,” says Dr Theodore Rockwell, an authority on radiation, in an interview for the series. “You’ll have trouble finding a serious report that would claim otherwise.” The American department of energy, Rockwell continues, has simulated a dirty bomb explosion, “and they calculated that the most exposed individual would get a fairly high dose [of radiation], not life-threatening.” And even this minor threat is open to question. The test assumed that no one fled the explosion for one year.

During the three years in which the “war on terror” has been waged, high-profile challenges to its assumptions have been rare. The sheer number of incidents and warnings connected or attributed to the war has left little room, it seems, for heretical thoughts. In this context, the central theme of The Power of Nightmares is riskily counter-intuitive and provocative. Much of the currently perceived threat from international terrorism, the series argues, “is a fantasy that has been exaggerated and distorted by politicians. It is a dark illusion that has spread unquestioned through governments around the world, the security services, and the international media.” The series’ explanation for this is even bolder: “In an age when all the grand ideas have lost credibility, fear of a phantom enemy is all the politicians have left to maintain their power.”

Adam Curtis, who wrote and produced the series, acknowledges the difficulty of saying such things now. “If a bomb goes off, the fear I have is that everyone will say, ‘You’re completely wrong,’ even if the incident doesn’t touch my argument. This shows the way we have all become trapped, the way even I have become trapped by a fear that is completely irrational.”

So controversial is the tone of his series, that trailers for it were not broadcast last weekend because of the killing of Kenneth Bigley. At the BBC, Curtis freely admits, there are “anxieties”. But there is also enthusiasm for the programmes, in part thanks to his reputation. Over the past dozen years, via similarly ambitious documentary series such as Pandora’s Box, The Mayfair Set and The Century of the Self, Curtis has established himself as perhaps the most acclaimed maker of serious television programmes in Britain. His trademarks are long research, the revelatory use of archive footage, telling interviews, and smooth, insistent voiceovers concerned with the unnoticed deeper currents of recent history, narrated by Curtis himself in tones that combine traditional BBC authority with something more modern and sceptical: “I want to try to make people look at things they think they know about in a new way.”

The Power of Nightmares seeks to overturn much of what is widely believed about Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida. The latter, it argues, is not an organised international network. It does not have members or a leader. It does not have “sleeper cells”. It does not have an overall strategy. In fact, it barely exists at all, except as an idea about cleansing a corrupt world through religious violence.

Curtis’ evidence for these assertions is not easily dismissed. He tells the story of Islamism, or the desire to establish Islam as an unbreakable political framework, as half a century of mostly failed, short-lived revolutions and spectacular but politically ineffective terrorism. Curtis points out that al-Qaida did not even have a name until early 2001, when the American government decided to prosecute Bin Laden in his absence and had to use anti-Mafia laws that required the existence of a named criminal organisation.

Curtis also cites the Home Office’s own statistics for arrests and convictions of suspected terrorists since September 11 2001. Of the 664 people detained up to the end of last month, only 17 have been found guilty. Of these, the majority were Irish Republicans, Sikh militants or members of other groups with no connection to Islamist terrorism. Nobody has been convicted who is a proven member of al-Qaida.

In fact, Curtis is not alone in wondering about all this. Quietly but increasingly, other observers of the war on terror have been having similar doubts. “The grand concept of the war has not succeeded,” says Jonathan Eyal, director of the British military thinktank the Royal United Services Institute. “In purely military terms, it has been an inconclusive war … a rather haphazard operation. Al-Qaida managed the most spectacular attack, but clearly it is also being sustained by the way that we rather cavalierly stick the name al-Qaida on Iraq, Indonesia, the Philippines. There is a long tradition that if you divert all your resources to a threat, then you exaggerate it.”

Bill Durodie, director of the international centre for security analysis at King’s College London, says: “The reality [of the al-Qaida threat to the west] has been essentially a one-off. There has been one incident in the developed world since 9/11 [the Madrid bombings]. There’s no real evidence that all these groups are connected.” Crispin Black, a senior government intelligence analyst until 2002, is more cautious but admits the terrorist threat presented by politicians and the media is “out of date and too one-dimensional. We think there is a bit of a gulf between the terrorists’ ambition and their ability to pull it off.”

Terrorism, by definition, depends on an element of bluff. Yet ever since terrorists in the modern sense of the term (the word terrorism was actually coined to describe the strategy of a government, the authoritarian French revolutionary regime of the 1790s) began to assassinate politicians and then members of the public during the 19th century, states have habitually overreacted. Adam Roberts, professor of international relations at Oxford, says that governments often believe struggles with terrorists “to be of absolute cosmic significance”, and that therefore “anything goes” when it comes to winning. The historian Linda Colley adds: “States and their rulers expect to monopolise violence, and that is why they react so virulently to terrorism.”

Britain may also be particularly sensitive to foreign infiltrators, fifth columnists and related menaces. In spite, or perhaps because of, the absence of an actual invasion for many centuries, British history is marked by frequent panics about the arrival of Spanish raiding parties, French revolutionary agitators, anarchists, bolsheviks and Irish terrorists. “These kind of panics rarely happen without some sort of cause,” says Colley. “But politicians make the most of them.”

They are not the only ones who find opportunities. “Almost no one questions this myth about al-Qaida because so many people have got an interest in keeping it alive,” says Curtis. He cites the suspiciously circular relationship between the security services and much of the media since September 2001: the way in which official briefings about terrorism, often unverified or unverifiable by journalists, have become dramatic press stories which – in a jittery media-driven democracy – have prompted further briefings and further stories. Few of these ominous announcements are retracted if they turn out to be baseless: “There is no fact-checking about al-Qaida.”

In one sense, of course, Curtis himself is part of the al-Qaida industry. The Power of Nightmares began as an investigation of something else, the rise of modern American conservatism. Curtis was interested in Leo Strauss, a political philosopher at the university of Chicago in the 50s who rejected the liberalism of postwar America as amoral and who thought that the country could be rescued by a revived belief in America’s unique role to battle evil in the world. Strauss’s certainty and his emphasis on the use of grand myths as a higher form of political propaganda created a group of influential disciples such as Paul Wolfowitz, now the US deputy defence secretary. They came to prominence by talking up the Russian threat during the cold war and have applied a similar strategy in the war on terror.

As Curtis traced the rise of the “Straussians”, he came to a conclusion that would form the basis for The Power of Nightmares. Straussian conservatism had a previously unsuspected amount in common with Islamism: from origins in the 50s, to a formative belief that liberalism was the enemy, to an actual period of Islamist-Straussian collaboration against the Soviet Union during the war in Afghanistan in the 80s (both movements have proved adept at finding new foes to keep them going). Although the Islamists and the Straussians have fallen out since then, as the attacks on America in 2001 graphically demonstrated, they are in another way, Curtis concludes, collaborating still: in sustaining the “fantasy” of the war on terror.

Some may find all this difficult to swallow. But Curtis insists,”There is no way that I’m trying to be controversial just for the sake of it.” Neither is he trying to be an anti-conservative polemicist like Michael Moore: “[Moore’s] purpose is avowedly political. My hope is that you won’t be able to tell what my politics are.” For all the dizzying ideas and visual jolts and black jokes in his programmes, Curtis describes his intentions in sober, civic-minded terms. “If you go back into history and plod through it, the myth falls away. You see that these aren’t terrifying new monsters. It’s drawing the poison of the fear.”

But whatever the reception of the series, this fear could be around for a while. It took the British government decades to dismantle the draconian laws it passed against French revolutionary infiltrators; the cold war was sustained for almost half a century without Russia invading the west, or even conclusive evidence that it ever intended to. “The archives have been opened,” says the cold war historian David Caute, “but they don’t bring evidence to bear on this.” And the danger from Islamist terrorists, whatever its scale, is concrete. A sceptical observer of the war on terror in the British security services says: “All they need is a big bomb every 18 months to keep this going.”

The war on terror already has a hold on western political culture. “After a 300-year debate between freedom of the individual and protection of society, the protection of society seems to be the only priority,” says Eyal. Black agrees: “We are probably moving to a point in the UK where national security becomes the electoral question.”

Some critics of this situation see our striking susceptibility during the 90s to other anxieties – the millennium bug, MMR, genetically modified food – as a sort of dress rehearsal for the war on terror. The press became accustomed to publishing scare stories and not retracting them; politicians became accustomed to responding to supposed threats rather than questioning them; the public became accustomed to the idea that some sort of apocalypse might be just around the corner. “Insecurity is the key driving concept of our times,” says Durodie. “Politicians have packaged themselves as risk managers. There is also a demand from below for protection.” The real reason for this insecurity, he argues, is the decay of the 20th century’s political belief systems and social structures: people have been left “disconnected” and “fearful”.

Yet the notion that “security politics” is the perfect instrument for every ambitious politician from Blunkett to Wolfowitz also has its weaknesses. The fears of the public, in Britain at least, are actually quite erratic: when the opinion pollsters Mori asked people what they felt was the most important political issue, the figure for “defence and foreign affairs” leapt from 2% to 60% after the attacks of September 2001, yet by January 2002 had fallen back almost to its earlier level. And then there are the twin risks that the terrors politicians warn of will either not materialise or will materialise all too brutally, and in both cases the politicians will be blamed. “This is a very rickety platform from which to build up a political career,” says Eyal. He sees the war on terror as a hurried improvisation rather than some grand Straussian strategy: “In democracies, in order to galvanize the public for war, you have to make the enemy bigger, uglier and more menacing.”

Afterwards, I look at a website for a well-connected American foreign policy lobbying group called the Committee on the Present Danger. The committee features in The Power of Nightmares as a vehicle for alarmist Straussian propaganda during the cold war. After the Soviet collapse, as the website puts it, “The mission of the committee was considered complete.” But then the website goes on: “Today radical Islamists threaten the safety of the American people. Like the cold war, securing our freedom is a long-term struggle. The road to victory begins … “

¬? The Power of Nightmares starts on BBC2 at 9pm on Wednesday October 20.
Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2004

COURTESY J. COULTHART!

ON THE NEED LIST.

Sergius Golowin (geb. 1930) . Born on 31 January 1930 in Prague (Tschechien). Librarian, Volkskundler, myth researcher and writer. If 1933 came into the city Berne, animates today in Allmendingen.

Golowin lies within that range, which we call today in an extensive sense “Esoterik”. Better however probably the designation than myth researchers with a slope is to the magic one with it. The term of the Esoterik as term by the hiding and/or the teachings (secret knowledge), hidden of, becomes understandable with its literature-archaeological journeys. Golowin belongs to the most important writers of that generation of Esoterikern, which worked themselves out v.a. in the course of the ecological movement from the pure Esoterik and became socially active. So Golowin was also politically active: of 1971-1981 as a member of the Bernese large advice (today: Government advice). In the history of art it (occasionally) is assigned to a fantastic realism (see also: magic realism in the literature of South America). That he wrote also important volkskundliche writings (among other things over Jeni in Europe), shows Golowins meaning beyond the range of the pure Esoterik. Its place he also earned himself here, as important collecting tanks of old legends from the alpine region. With its way to regenerate and to the present and future transfer the past in certain ranges (rather hidden), it stands in the coming tradition of a post office-modern Integralitaet. Because the present is always connected with the past, from which it followed, and which future, into which it flows. From Golowins work one can also derive that time consciousness (in addition to space consciousness) is an important factor of the post office-modern Integralitaet.

Works: “the lost hoar frost. Poems “(1959),” Ilja of Muron. Legend “(1959),” of the Erdleutlein and the golden age. People legends from the Bernese country “(1961),” Theophrastus Paracelsus in the fairy tale country. From the people excessive quantity of the outgoing Middle Ages “(1962),” Maeren around the dear God. From the people seal of the evening country “(1962),” magic present. Research travels by modern superstition “(1964),” of Berne city ghosts “(1965),” legends from Berne-offer (first and second consequence)”(1965/66),” Gods of the atomic time. Modern legend formation around spaceships and star human being “(1967),” Bernese in the witch circle “(1967),” Bernese Maerit poets. Baenkelsaenger seal before 250 years “(1969),” Hexer and Henker in the Galgenfeld. Strange humans and herbs before of Berne unter-Tor “(1970),” humans and powers. Legends between law and alps “(1970),” merry oath comrades. From the fantastic history of free Switzerland “(1972),” we want to be free… like the fathers were. Did Tell come draus?” (1972), “gypsy magic in the alpine country. Stories around a forgotten people “(1973),” the magic of the forbidden fairy tales. Of witch herbs and Feendrogen “(1974),” the world of the Tarot. Secret and theory of the 78 maps of the gypsies “(1975),” witches, Hippies, rose cruiser. 500 years magic morning land travel “(1977),” Dada in the Middle Ages. Notes to an anti-literature “(1980),” Magier Merlin. Fairy tale realms and knights in the Middle Ages “(1981),” the wise women. The witches and its welfare knowledge “(1982),” the dream interpretation book of of the driving people “(1983),” jewels. Crystal gates to the soul “(1986),” goddess cat. The magic animal at our side “(1989),” Paracelsus. Physician? Soundly? Philosopher. The large Biographie to 500. Birthday “(1993),” the secret of the animal people. Of Vampiren, nixen, who wolves and similar creatures “(1998),” the large myths of mankind “(1998),” the fantastic history of free Switzerland/merry oath comrades. Extended New edition “(1998),” Bernese upper country “(with Marcus Gyger and Christine Kopp, 1998),” Dr bear isch loosely. Alive Bernese chamfering night history and stories “(1999),” of jenischen Kesslern and Korbern “(1999),” encyclopedia of the symbols. Myths, symbols and indications in culture, religion, art and everyday life “(with Wolfgang farmer and Irmtraud Duemotz, 2000).

"If you chase a dollar, it'll blow away."

From the 8 October 2004 Independent

Ian Brown: Turn on, tune in, chill out

Despite the end of The Stone Roses, a jail term and a dislike of making money, Ian Brown has prospered, finds Andy Gill

In a quiet suite of a swish hotel round the corner from his west-London home, Ian Brown lets out a chuckle: a gurgling, infectious vocal tickle that, like the man himself, seems entirely free of malice and artifice. We’re talking about the previous night’s BBC3 documentary about the business tribulations of his former band, The Stone Roses.

You wouldn’t have thought there’d be much for him to laugh about in such a catalogue of catastrophic disorganisation and financial disaster, but Brown can’t help it when he recalls the appearance of the band’s former manager Gareth Evans, a local hairdresser who steered the Roses into their disastrous contracts with the Jive and Geffen labels, then sued them for his one-third share of their gross earnings when they sacked him. Evans’s performance is hilarious, an outrageous cartoon of managerial hyperbole in which he takes credit for the band’s success, their style, their sound, their ideas, the guitarist John Squire’s Pollock-esque cover paintings – just about everything, in fact, short of actually writing and recording the songs.

“When it came on, I thought I was gonna be, like, blazing by the end of it, but I was laughing,” says Brown with a smile. “After all these years, there’s no animosity, it’s just really funny. I mean, in the first place, we got him in because he had the front, the bottle. He wasn’t frightened of no one; he was full of himself – the perfect manager. He just got out of his depth when we got to a certain level. It was like he was able to get us there, but once we were there, he didn’t know what to do.”

The programme ends with Evans holding court at the golf course that he built with the proceeds of his time with the Roses, a fittingly banal conclusion for a career blessed, according to the band, with no discernible grasp of contemporary musical tastes or youth culture. “I’ve always said those first nine holes are mine, whenever I drive past it,” chuckles Brown. “I thought about pouring barrels of oil on the putting greens, but then I thought, is it worth doing the time for? And no, he’s not. So I haven’t. But y’know, what goes around comes around, so he’ll get his. I still feel that.”

The faith in karmic payback is characteristic of a singer whose loved-up placidity formed the spiritual counterbalance to Shaun Ryder’s untrammelled hedonism at the heart of the late-Eighties “Madchester” dance-rock boom. Brown’s high cheekbones and angelic countenance made him the pin-up of the scene, but his gentle attitude proved ill equipped to deal with both the band’s disastrous business side and the internal ructions that split the group asunder after the poor second album, The Second Coming.

Brown and Squire, the creative heart of the Stone Roses, haven’t spoken in eight years. At the time, the widespread opinion was that Squire, a gifted guitarist, would have no problem developing a new career, while Brown, the non-musician who couldn’t play a note and often struggled to sing in tune, would end up on the rock’n’roll scrapheap.

“In those days, I couldn’t play anything,” Brown admits. “Reni [the Roses’ drummer] bought me an acoustic guitar in 1994, and I got the Marley songbook and a blues songbook and started teaching myself. I used to work out the vocal melodies on a little Bontempi organ – that’s why they all sound sort of hymn-like, because everything sounded like ‘Fight the Good Fight’ on this little Bontempi organ! Now, I can play a bit of keyboards, and a bit of bass and guitar, but I only really use it as a songwriting tool. I’ve played a little bit on my solo albums, but I’m not good enough to play and sing at the same time. It’s more fun anyway if I work something out and then get my pals to come and play it for me.”

The result has been a quartet of intriguing albums, through which Brown has progressively refined his dub-rock groove style to the organic, infectious pitch reached on Solarized. By contrast, Squire’s post-Roses output has been uniformly poor, his guitar-playing displaying none of its former panache. “That was the saddest thing for me,” says Brown, shaking his head. “The kid’s the best of his generation, and that solo stuff was just average pub rock.”

Now, Brown is relishing the prospect of playing a couple of nights each at large venues in Manchester, Glasgow and Brixton, with an 11-piece band. His situation is probably more stable now than ever before. When Polydor, the parent company of his label, Fiction, dropped 90 acts from its roster during last year’s takeover by Seagrams, Brown’s run of gold and platinum albums ensured he made the cut. He has, though, been told: “We’ve got to make some money now.”

Money has never figured that highly in Brown’s worldview. “If you chase a dollar, it’ll blow away,” he maintains. “If you do your own thing, it might come. At Spike Island [the Roses’ big 1990 gig], we made sure tickets were ¬£13, which meant we were only breaking even – we did so many things like that, where we weren’t chasing the dollars. So it’s our own fault, because we didn’t look out for ourselves. Maybe I’d have regrets if that had been it for me, but I’ve been able to keep working.”

It could all so easily have gone wrong for Ian Brown – and nearly did when he was charged over an alleged in-flight fracas, winding up in HM Prison Strangeways. His sentence was three months, but he was let out early for good behaviour. He still maintains that he was innocent of the charges. “I didn’t even cuss that woman on the plane,” he claims, “and I wasn’t drinking. They say I beat on the cockpit door – but if I had, why wasn’t I charged with endangering lives?”

Unlike REM’s Peter Buck, charged with similar offences, Brown didn’t get a big London barrister to defend him or St Bono to testify on his behalf – he was advised: “They’ll think you’re being flash” – and he suffered the consequences. In Strangeways, Brown’s celebrity proved a problem for the authorities. “My lawyer told me I was the only man who was category D – meaning unlikely to harm myself or anyone else – that served his full sentence in a category-A prison,” he says. “I was in with lads doing sevens and 10s and 12 years, armed robbers aged 24 who were Big Men, but just young lads. I got loads of attention in there. I’d have, like, 50 kids outside my cell wanting to meet me, and the authorities got pissed off with that and kept moving me from wing to wing. They didn’t know what to do with me.”

“It wasn’t too pleasant,” he says of his incarceration. “You spend all your time in prison starving hungry – the food’s just mush, like boiled potatoes in water, and the pies, you just don’t know what’s in them.”

Brown was threatened only once, and suddenly found himself surrounded by a group of inmates who offered to sort out the offender in question. “They’d say: ‘I don’t mind doing an extra 21 days for you,'” he says. “I was touched by the way kids looked after me inside – they’d give me coffee and sugar and newspapers and apples and tobacco and phonecards.”

Like many an intelligent lad who left school too soon, he has become an autodidact, devouring books about colonialism, such as Guns, Germs & Steel and The Scramble for Africa, and the biography of the black nationalist Marcus Garvey (“amazing, 22 years old and he’s trying to unite Africans worldwide”, he marvels). He views Tony Blair with contempt, seeing dark echoes of previous crusades in his description of Iraq as the “crucible” of the conflict between notional good and evil. “They’ve drawn every crazy in the Middle East to that area,” he says. “How smart are al-Qa’ida, to get America out of their own country and get them on their turf?”

Brown remains a spiritual man, though on his own terms. “The organised churches have hijacked religion off all of us; they’ve stolen God from us, they’ve put the priest next to God,” he believes. “Yet the priest might be abusing kids, while the guy digging roads might have a bigger spirit. I believe in the spirit – when I sang ‘I Am the Resurrection’ (from the first Stone Roses album), I didn’t mean it in the sense of ‘I’m the Messiah’; it was more that we’ve all got that in us. We all have that human spirit.”

With his gentle, spiritual nature, his love of weed, his belief in karma, his individualism and his refusal to be swayed by money, Brown is an oddity in today’s bland, homogenised and ruthlessly commercial pop culture, a throwback to an earlier era of peace and love. Isn’t he, I suggest, just a hippie born out of time?

“I think there’s a bit of hippie in all of us who believe in peace and love,” he admits, “but I don’t believe the hippie thing about copping out of society. I believe in getting in the middle of society and trying to change it. That’s why I’m on a major label. I don’t want to be a hippie out in my own little commune, I want to be part of what’s going on, and try to change it.”

‘Solarized’ is out now. ‘Reign’, a collaboration with Unkle, is out on 8 November. Brown plays at Leeds University Union on Wednesday; Manchester Apollo, 18 & 19 October; and Brixton Academy, London SW9, 21 & 22 October

THE ARTHUR MAILING LIST BULLETIN No. 0009

“COMMAND PERFORMANCE”

THE ARTHUR MAILING LIST BULLETIN No. 0009

WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 13, 2004

(((1))) ARTHUR 13 OUT OCTOBER 26.

It’s done, it’s a doozy, it’s at the printer, it’ll be hitting streets and subscribers’ mailboxes on or around October 26. This one almost did us in. The cover feature is a mega oral history of the 1967 exorcism/levitation of the Pentagon and the birth of Yippie!. This piece was painstakingly compiled from old and new interviews with Abbie Hoffman, Allen Ginsberg, Ed Sanders, Kenneth Anger, Paul Krassner, Bob Fass, Norman Mailer, Tuli Kupferberg, Anita Hoffman, Jerry Rubin and many many others. Also: stunning photographs, Ed Sanders’ original magical rite program, a page from The Oracle (San Fransciso’s mid-’60s pyschedelic newspaper), event buttons and more — plus cover artwork by John Coulthart that may render you mindless. You have been forewarned. And you can fore-order a copy  of the mag at:

http://www.arthurmag.com/news/

(((2))) ARTHUR PRESENTS TWO SHOWS AROUND THIS CMJ THING HAPPENING IN NEW YORK CITY.

A.

Date: Saturday, October 16

Event:  ARTHUR/NARNACK PARTY

Location: Asterisk

Address:  258 Johnson St. Between Bushwick and White  (Montrose “L” train stop)

Price: $10-12 @ the door

Time: Doors at 7:30

**FREE BEER COURTESY OF PABST BLUE RIBBON (from 8-9PM)

Performing:

1:00 am  The Fall

12:00 am The Coachwhips

11:00 pm Intelligence

10:00 pm Langhorne Slim

9:40 pm Aa

8:30 pm The Bunnybrains

8:00 pm Fast Fourier

B. 

Sunday, October 17

Event:  a CMJ COME DOWN

ARTHUR MAGAZINE, in association with the KORK AGENCY

Location: Mercury Lounge

225 E. Houston St. New York, NY 10009

Price: $8 Advance/$10 Door (no badges)

Time: Doors at 7 PM

Performing:

11:30PM Growing

10:45PM PG Six

10: 00PM Double Leopards

9:15PM Dan Friel

8:30PM Tyondai Braxton

7:30PM  DJ’s TEETH & CAVEMAN SKULL (Stephen O’Malley of SUNNO))))

(((3)))  MAGPIE, THE ARTHUR SORT-OF BLOG.

Magpie, part of Arthur’s continuing mission to keep Earth weird, is updated daily by Arthur editor Jay Babcock. Like a scrapbook of interesting found stuff, made public. Dig it daily at

http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/

(((4))) SUNBURNED HAND OF THE MAN PREPARE THEIR BASTET RELEASE.

“No Magic Man” will be released by Arthur’s BASTET imprint later this year. The band descibes it thusly:

“A collection of all new, all-weather nighttime sounds from one of the greatest tellin’ it like it is, Apocalypse Later! bands around right now! ‘No Magic Man’ is specificly designed for those with chronic cases of peek-a-boo, long eye, and post-election stress disorder. 12 reports from the never-ending ritual running just under an hour, this is the next page in the Book of Sunburned, and its yours!”

We will have ordering info on the website shortly. This CD will be issued in time for you to order it for all of your friends (and some of your especially needy enemies too) during this winter’s gift-giving seasons. 

(((5)))) THE DEVENDRA BANHART-COMPILED “GOLDEN APPLES OF THE SUN” IS AVAILABLE AGAIN.

“8.6 (out of 10): [Its] sprawling landscape presents a persuasive case for the depth of a scene that seemingly sprung up (like mushrooms) overnight.” — Pitchfork, July 8, 2004

“Essential.” — Mojo, September 2004

“Sparkling.” — The Wire, July 2004

“The Golden Apples of the Sun,” Devendra Banhart’s 20-artist compilation of contemporary underground folk music released through Arthur’s Bastet label, is now available again in a second printing of 1,000 copies. You can purchase a copy for $12USA/$14 Can/$17 world postpaid now via PayPal at

http://www.arthurmag.com/store/bastet_cds.php

(((6)))  ONE THOUSAND “MILLION TONGUES” FOR YOU

Now available — the limited edition, 1,000-copy 20-track “Million Tongues Festival” commemorative CD, curated and hand-lettered/drawn by coosmic superfreek PLASTIC CRIMEWAVE. 

75 minutes of previously unreleased garage bubblegum, Japanese mind-off rip-roarers. urban psych-out treks to the center of your aural sweet spot, darknight acid-folk for the comedown and psycho-spiritual sung rants for morning risings.  

The lineup: Michael Yonkers and the Mumbles (unreleased track!), P.G. Six, Espers, LSD March, Fur Saxa, Josephine Foster and the Supposed (live!), Kawabata Makoto (Acid Mothers Temple) with Kinski, Matt Valentine and Erika Elder Medicine Show, Plastic Crimewave Sound, Spires That in the Sunset Rise, Inner Throne, The Civilized Age, Simon Finn, Jutok Kaneko/Shimura Koji/ Takuya Nishimura, Nisennenmondai, Frankie Delmane, Nick Castro, Taurpis Tula, M.V. Carbon and Panicsville.

Available now for $12USA/$14 Can/$17 world postpaid  from

http://www.arthurmag.com/store/bastet_cds.php

(((7)))  ARTHUR: THE MAGAZINE OTHER MAGAZINES LIKE TO WRITE ABOUT.

a. From Print Magazine’s Sept/Oct 2004 issue:

MAGAZINE WATCH: Up the Zeitgeist! Arthur remembers the old Rolling Stone, even if Rolling Stone doesn’t. By Steve Dollar…

b. From LAWeekly’s “Best of LA” issue: 

When the first ish of Arthur crossed my radar two annums back, envy devolved into self-pity. Why do these scribes get to be dangerously edgy? Why doesn’t the text show any evidence of hack editors hacking freespeak? Why is there nary a sign of yuppie lifestyle? Why them, not me?

The answer is that a crew of writers and artists, tired of fewer outlets for cutting-edge cultural reporting sans the stink of corporate commerce, got off their asses and started their own bimonthly national freebie newspaper. Many are Angelenos, including chief editor Jay Babcock, art director W.T. Nelson and regulars Kristine McKenna, Paul Cullum, Trinie Dalton and Oliver Hall (some of whom you may recognize as Weekly contributors). Columnists include Thurston Moore and Byron Coley, who review outre books, zines and music; Daniel Pinchbeck, who theorizes on drugs and consciousness; and elderly bluesman T-Model Ford, who dispenses dating advice. Arthur has a baroque, multicolored, psychedelic look with comics in the margins and everywhere else. In short, it doesn’t belong to that increasingly bottom-lined and bantamweight category called “alternative,” it’s full-blown contrarian.

Refreshingly, the Arthurians refuse to engage in the hoariest of countercultural arguments: hippie vs. punk. In fact, like Vonnegut’s Billy Pilgrim, the paper exists in an anti-temporal warp where the past, present and future of mavericks coexist, creating a cohesive community in an increasingly fragmented society of subcultures. Features on Johnny Cash and Joe Strummer live happily next to ones on young acid-folk king Devendra Banhart and gonzo comics writer Grant Morrison (known as “the Philip K. Dick of the 21st century”), as well as secret histories of obscure art car races in Humboldt County, and the Cacophony Society. Babcock allows writers to riff in extended pieces, unencumbered by word counts, giving them the space to work in detail. It’s a more picturesque New Yorker, created by and for freaks, produced from inside the avant mondo as opposed to merely chronicling it.–Michael Simmons

Thanks, Michael.

Over to you,

Arthur Angry Dove Squad

Wednesday the 13th of October, 2004

OLD TRICKS.

From the October 10, 2004 Sunday Times of London
Pop
Romancing the stones
Julian Cope, former rock god and pagan poet, has an oddly Establishment sideline–he’s a whizz on archeology, as his latest book proves. By Stewart Lee

Julian Cope, the former lead singer of the chart-topping 1980s pin-ups the Teardrop Explodes, is playing a secret solo show in the back room of a community arts centre in the Hampshire frontier town of Aldershot. Union Jacks flutter in all the pubs. Cope’s hair is, by some margin, the longest in the surrounding area. On stage, alone, in a floppy hat and sunglasses, he surveys the small but swollen space and modestly takes stock of the situation. “I know I’m not current,” he laughs, “and I don’t believe I’m timeless. I am in my forties, and in sight of 50. And once you’re over 50, 60’s not far away. And then you are allowed to be legendary. So I just have to keep my head down and keep working. Then I can be legendary.”

To many, the antics that have characterised Cope’s career are already the stuff of legend. He appeared on the cover of his second solo album wearing only a turtle shell, protested against the poll tax dressed as a giant baby from space and is winning new fans in America with his “ambient metal” project, LAMF. To most people, Cope admits, he is “that World Shut Your Mouth guy,” best known for the anthemic smash hit to which even Terry Wogan succumbed in 1986. But perhaps his strangest achievement is the completion of two heavyweight books on prehistoric archeology, the second of which, The Megalithic European, is published this month.

Its predecessor, 1998’s The Modern Antiquarian, a colour-coded gazetteer of British prehistoric sites, was the answer to a prayer for those of us who had spent years trekking across moors to stone circles on advice pieced together from quasi-mystical pamphlets or dry academic tomes. Stand at the centre of the Orkney mainland with The Modern Antiquarian in your hand and lost civilisations rise up around you. Now Cope has applied the same utilitarian ethic to the monuments of continental Europe. At his home in the Wiltshire countryside, within striding distance of the stone circle at Avebury, he holds forth.

“My job is to make uncool things seem cool,” he says, his foot up on a kitchen chair, like a rock star bestriding a monitor. “If you can find a way of presenting these things correctly, people will get into them. And if you can get people out of believing that stone circles are about wellington boots and anoraks, that they can be elegant, why not do it? When I put together my Scott Walker compilation album, for example, he was just thought of as a git. I am a total field worker. I get into things and go to places and see if they do it for me–and if they are going to do it for other people. Is there enough remaining above ground? Or, if the thing is underground, is it superbly underground? Is it the mother of all underground temples? Is it a hypogeum from hell? Can you go in and lose yourself?”

Initially, I’m uncertain whether Cope is using subterranean prehistoric temples as a metaphor for the 1960s balladeer Walker, or whether he is actually talking about subterranean prehistoric temples. Then I realise that it’s both at the same time. Cope in conversation doesn’t so much free-associate as make entirely unrelated ideas occupy exactly the same space. He has barged into the world of archeology with the open-minded enthusiasm of the very gentleman amateurs on whose work the science was historically built. Has he been welcomed?

“There are two types of archeologists,” he explains, putting down a toy wooden guitar he is making for his 10-year-old daughter, who wants to attend the local Hallowe’en event as Angus Young from AC/DC. “The older guys are pleased to be able to debrief to someone. They are like spies, with all this information, so they can afford to be generous. Aubrey Burl ‚Äî who writes books with flat names like Stone Circles of the British Isles–and I get on really well. I can call him up and go, ‘Aubrey, I think I’ve found a new stone circle.’ And he goes, ‘I suppose it’s quite possible, but don’t tell my wife, because I’m too old to start visiting it now.’ If I’ve ever had a problem, it was with archeology’s middle management, which felt we should have taken more official routes.”

Invited to lecture at the British Museum in 2001, Cope chose as his subject the Norse god Odin in Christian symbolism. “I went from Odin to Christ via the various pagan precursors of Christ. The nice old guys in dicky bows at the British Museum had been saying, ‘You’re not the normal kind of person we have here, but you do it the way you want.’ So I did the lecture in full face paint and five-inch platform shoes–two nights, sold out. It was amazing.”

In The Modern Antiquarian, Cope’s analysis reflected his own performance background. Stones with quartz in them would look great glittering in the moonlight if you were a prehistoric audience on mild natural hallucinogens watching the ancient equivalent of Julian Cope. At the Lyric Hammersmith earlier this year, Cope’s own persona seemed influenced by his archeological imaginings. In psychedelic combat clothes, giant shoes and face paint, Cope became an absurd priest-clown figure and spent most of his two-hour set in the audience, declaiming over a primitive punk-metal backdrop.

“Being on stage, dealing with an audience, with hysteria, with a really barbarian art form, is the closest you get to a religious experience,” he says. “The shaman and the showman are inextricably linked. Little Richard recognised that. Jerry Lewis was damned the moment he opened his mouth. Cliff Richard and Tommy Steele, however, were never in any danger.”

The Aldershot show was supposed to be low-key, reacquainting Cope with live performance after months of writing. But with him, nothing is ever low-key. The fanatical fan base is out in force, undiluted by the less evangelical onlookers present in bigger venues. Cope is derailed by enthusiastic interjections from proprietary fans and the show lurches from one interruption to another. There’s a section of every Cope crowd that thinks he is their own private cult figure, a rock legend they can still reach out to and touch, insult or fondle at will. Tonight, guitar in hand, Cope appears happy to indulge this. However, there is a mighty 4WD in the car park, waiting to whisk him back to Wiltshire, where, one suspects, he is already planning his next adventure.

“I’m in a unique position,” he had said earlier, “but through luck, not judgment. There are people from my time, like Billy Bragg or Nick Cave, still doing everything with real dignity, but they have their feet in the officially straight world. There might be a South Bank Show on them. But me? I’m doing an ambient-metal installation in a Greek art gallery and writing about ziggurats.”

The Megalithic European is published by Element on October 18

COURTESY R. TURNER!