Thursday, September 10, 2009

Back, after being neglected, images - few, borrowed, good, here, now

From: http://catherinejeanette.tumblr.com/post/176175866/abandoned-library

Abandoned library



From: http://mogadonia.tumblr.com/post/176550507

PARAPHILIA MAGAZINE ISSUE 4 - Cover art by John Coulthard
FEATURING: JOHN COULTHART, ARNAUD LOUMEAU, JIM LOPEZ, MICHAEL K, MICHAEL ROTH, CHRIS BRANDRICK, CLARE GODDEN-ROWLAND, MALCOLM ALCALA, SALENA GODDEN, THOMAS EVANS, GENE GREGORITS, DOLOROSA, A.D. HITCHEN, CHRISTOPHER NOSNIBOR, MAX REEVES, IAN MILLER, RICH FOLLETT, NICK TOSCHES, CHARLES CHRISTIAN, ROBERT AGASUCCI, ELE-BETH LITTLE, ALFRED MURO, DAVID CONWAY, DARIUS JAMES, DESTINY MCKEEVER, STEWART HOME, PATRICK WRIGHT, CRICKET CORLEONE, RICHARD A. MEADE, RICK GRIMES, LITTLE SHIVA, HANK KIRTON, CRAIG WOODS, JAD FAIR, CLAUDIA BELLOCQ, TOM GARRETSON, ANGELA SUZZANNE, RON GARMON, DAVID GIONFRIDDO, KATE MACDONALD, MARY LEARY, CHRIS MORRIS
FREE PDF download here: http://www.paraphiliamagazine.com/magazine.html#issuefour



From: http://tsutpen.blogspot.com/2009/09/artists-in-action-519.html

Artists in Action #519
Badass composer Igor Stravinsky holds a negative view of W.A. Mozart



From: http://trixietreats.tumblr.com/post/178317699/kris-kuksi

Kris Kuksi



From: http://pleasedontsqueezetheshaman.tumblr.com/post/178797046/its-never-too-early-for-organy-porn-oh-yeah

This Mellotron M400 is letting it all hang out in clear lucite.



From: http://janitoroflunacy.tumblr.com/post/179831855/misstugui-thethirdmind-learn-hindi

misstugui:thethirdmind: Learn Hindi.



From: http://juliasegal.tumblr.com/post/180090479





From: http://exclamationmark.tumblr.com/post/180708368/barbara-steele

Barbara Steele



From: http://trixietreats.tumblr.com/post/181271960/european-surrealists-in-1930-front-row-tristan

European surrealists in 1930. Front row: Tristan Tzara, Salvador Dali, Paul Eulard, Max Ernst, Rene Crevel. Back row: Man Ray, Jean Arp, Yves Tanguy, Andre Breton (via Dream Views)



From: http://thesweetestpsychopath.tumblr.com/post/181175885/afogofideas-incredible-japanese-science

Incredible Japanese Science Fiction/Horror Illustrations over at: http://monsterbrains.blogspot.com/



From: http://pleasesirblog.blogspot.com/2009/09/on-road.html





From: http://ajourneyroundmyskull.blogspot.com/2009/09/frolicsome-flowers-of-evil.html

Scans from Frolicsome Flowers - They See the Wonderful "Rajah Rug," story and illustrations by T. Benjamin Faucett (New York: A. L. Burt Company, 1924).
I have not read this book -- and probably never will read it -- but I can't stop staring at the giant bumblebee, the moleman in the mirror, and the creepy-as-fuck flowers. I'm waiting for the other three books to arrive and plan to feature them. I've seen the books listed for between $20 and $300.



From: http://gmtplus9.blogspot.com/2009/09/pistol-packin-mama.html

Al Dexter & His Troopers... Pistol Packin' Mama (1943, OKeh 6708 .mp3 audio 02:47)-download



From: http://retro-troll.tumblr.com/post/182722903/karl-meersman-keith-richards-caricature

Karl_Meersman_Keith_Richards_caricature



From: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sami_family_1870s.jpg

Sami family in front of their home, albumen print; 21,7 x 17 cm
Unknown photographer.



From: http://janitoroflunacy.tumblr.com/post/182496257/erik-satie-santiago-rusi-ol-1891

Erik Satie ~ Santiago RusiƱol, 1891



From: http://nickdrake.tumblr.com/post/183921918/the-pretty-things

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

HAAM BENEFIT DAY 2009 & GOOD EGGS & HAAM FIRST ANNUAL BENEFIT

"This is one fine organization & a Godsend to yours truly & many other needy Austin musicians. I'd probably be dead or soon-dead if they hadn't offered me a helping hand. Please be generous with your support." -- T. Tex Edwards

HEALTH ALLIANCE FOR AUSTIN MUSICIANS SUPPORTER NEWS
SPECIAL HAAM BENEFIT DAY EDITION
(a newsletter from HAAM)

www.healthallianceforaustinmusicians.org
www.myhaam.org
www.myspace.com/myhaam
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Austin-TX/Health-Alliance-for-Austin-Musicians/48911101474
http://twitter.com/myhaam


EAT, SHOP, DONATE, AND ENJOY ON THE FOURTH ANNUAL HAAM BENEFIT DAY!


On Tuesday, September 22, join the Health Alliance for Austin Musicians (HAAM) in keeping music in Austin alive and well.

Here’s how you can help:

EAT & SHOP at 170 local participating businesses and restaurants, with 5% of your purchase going to HAAM. Download the list of participating businesses and music schedule.
DONATE your spare change to the HAAM Benefit Day donation boxes at each of the music performances. Your donation will be matched dollar for dollar by Topfer Family Foundation.
ENJOY live performances from over 90 local musical acts throughout the day. Download the list of participating businesses and music schedule.
Also,

Forward this message to your friends to let them know how they can help!
Are you on Twitter? Find us at @myhaam and make sure you tweet on September 22 to keep your followers up to date on the HAAM Benefit Day happenings.
On Facebook? Become a fan of Health Alliance for Austin Musicians.
Play Your Part! Come out on Tuesday, September 22nd to support local musicians’ health!

Health Alliance for Austin Musicians was founded in April 2005 when Seton Family of Hospitals and St. David’s Foundation joined forces with The SIMS Foundation to provide medical, dental, and mental health care to the city’s hard-working, uninsured low-income musicians. More than 1,600 member-musicians, most 35 and younger, have been served.

To learn more or to make a donation, visit www.MyHaam.org.


GOOD EGGS & HAAM FIRST ANNUAL BENEFIT

Good Eggs & HAAM, the new outreach group of Health Alliance for Austin Musicians that spreads the word about HAAM and musicians’ health care, hosts a benefit concert in September with Austin-based pop-rock band nelo.

Doors open at 8 p.m., and the music by nelo starts at 9 p.m. Thursday, September 17, at Stubb’s Bar-B-Q, 801 Red River St., on the inside stage. Tickets are $25, on sale now through Frontgate Tickets and www.stubbsaustin.com.

Good Eggs & HAAM members — young professionals passionate about live music, who understand that musicians are a unique and important cultural and economic part of Austin, and who have a desire to give back and support musicians' health care — are inviting their friends and the public to the concert. Proceeds benefit Health Alliance for Austin Musicians.


The Health Alliance for Austin Musicians (HAAM) provides access to affordable health care to Austin’s low-income, uninsured working musicians with a focus on prevention and wellness. Tax-deductible donations can be made on-line at: https://www.austincommunityfoundation.org/?nd=donate_detail&donation_id=18 or by mail with a check payable to Austin Community Foundation/HAAM Fund to PO Box 301496, Austin, TX 78703-0025. HAAM is a special project fund of the Austin Community Foundation.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Peter Green - Black Magic w/Discography

"...Green inspired B. B. King to say, "He has the sweetest tone I ever heard; he was the only one who gave me the cold sweats." Green's playing was marked with a distinctive vibrato and economy of style..."

http://thesweetestpsychopath.tumblr.com/post/182216593/fleetwood-macs-black-magic-woman-7-single-1968

Fleetwood Mac’s Black Magic Woman 7” single 1968

Listen & download Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac - Black Magic Woman (1968) here:
http://thesweetestpsychopath.tumblr.com/post/182135884/peter-greens-fleetwood-mac-black-magic-woman


Peter Green - founder of the band Fleetwood Mac (on stage 1969)

Green played lead in Peter Bardens’ band, Peter B’s Looners, in 1966. After a three month stint, he had the opportunity to fill in for Eric Clapton in John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers for three gigs. Upon Clapton’s permanent departure not long after, he was hired full-time

Green made his full album debut with the Bluesbreakers with A Hard Road. It featured two compositions by Green, “The Same Way” and “The Supernatural”. The latter was one of Green’s first extended instrumentals, which would soon become a trademark. Like Clapton, whose playing inspired the “Clapton is God” graffiti around London during his time with the Bluesbreakers, Green would earn the nickname “The Green God” for his interpretation of the blues.

In 1967, Green decided to form his own blues band, and left Mayall’s Bluesbreakers after appearing on just one album (just as Clapton had done).

The name of Green’s new band was Fleetwood Mac. Originally billed as “Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac”; it originated from the band’s rhythm section that comprised Mick Fleetwood and John McVie, both of whom, like Green, had played most recently in Mayall’s band. In the mid 1970s the re-organised band topped the charts with mainstream pop/rock, but initially it was a straight-up blues-rock band playing blues classics and some original material. Green wrote the song “Black Magic Woman” that was later picked up by Santana.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Green_(musician)
Peter Green (musician)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter Green (born Peter Allen Greenbaum, 29 October 1946, in Bethnal Green, London) is a British blues-rock guitarist and founder of the band Fleetwood Mac.
A figurehead in the British blues movement, Green inspired B. B. King to say, "He has the sweetest tone I ever heard; he was the only one who gave me the cold sweats." Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page have both lauded his guitar playing as well. Green's playing was marked with a distinctive vibrato and economy of style. Though he played other guitars, he is best known for deriving a unique tone from his 1959 Gibson Les Paul - a result of the magnet of his guitar's neck pickup being accidentally reversed to produce an 'out of phase' sound. The Les Paul would come to be referred to as Green's "magic guitar" but Green told Guitar Player in 2000 that "I never had a magic one. Mine wasn't magic...It just barely worked."
Green was ranked 38th in Rolling Stone magazine list of the "100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time"

Biography

John Mayall's Bluesbreakers
Green played lead in Peter Bardens' band, Peter B's Looners, in 1966. After a three month stint, he had the opportunity to fill in for Eric Clapton in John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers for three gigs. Upon Clapton's permanent departure not long after, he was hired full-time. In an interview with Guitar Player in 2000, Green acknowledged Clapton's influence, stating "I followed him to John Mayall's Bluesbreakers. I loved his playing. At the time he did everything on a Telecaster. It sounded absolutely fabulous."

Green made his full album debut with the Bluesbreakers with A Hard Road. It featured two compositions by Green, "The Same Way" and "The Supernatural". The latter was one of Green's first extended instrumentals, which would soon become a trademark. Like Clapton, whose playing inspired the "Clapton is God" graffiti around London during his time with the Bluesbreakers, Green would earn the nickname "The Green God" for his interpretation of the blues.

In 1967, Green decided to form his own blues band, and left Mayall's Bluesbreakers after appearing on just one album (just as Clapton had done).

Fleetwood Mac
The name of Green's new band was Fleetwood Mac. Originally billed as "Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac"; it originated from the band's rhythm section that comprised Mick Fleetwood and John McVie, both of whom, like Green, had played most recently in Mayall's band. In the mid 1970s the re-organised band topped the charts with mainstream pop/rock, but initially it was a straight-up blues-rock band playing blues classics and some original material. Green wrote the song "Black Magic Woman" that was later picked up by Santana. Green was the leader of the group throughout its initial period of success in the late 1960s, with hits including "Oh Well", "Man of the World", "The Green Manalishi" and the #1 British chart hit "Albatross". Green remains ambivalent about his songwriting success, telling Guitar Player "Oh, I was never really a songwriter. I was very lucky to get those hits. I shouldn't have been distracted from my fascination with the blues...I have been known to come up with the odd bit, but I'm not all that wild about the big composer credit."

Following the release of "Albatross" and his consequent rise in fame, Green struggled with success and the spotlight. His personality changed drastically after incidences of LSD abuse: he began wearing a robe, grew a beard, and wore a crucifix on his chest. His abuse of LSD may have incited his schizophrenia, much like his contemporary Syd Barrett.

While touring Europe, Green binged on LSD in Munich. In his own words, he "went on a trip, and never came back."

Communard Rainer Langhans mentions in his autobiography that he and Uschi Obermaier met Peter Green in Munich, where they invited him to their "High-Fish-Commune". They were not interested in Peter Green really. They wanted to get in contact with Mick Taylor because they wished to organize a "Bavarian Woodstock." They wanted Jimi Hendrix and The Rolling Stones as leading acts of their Bavarian open air festival. Langhans and Obermaier used the "Green God" to get in contact with the Rolling Stones via Mick Taylor.

Green quit Fleetwood Mac in 1970, performing his final show as a member on 20 May 1970. He recorded a jam session and released it as the album The End of the Game and faded into obscurity, taking on a succession of menial jobs. It was during this period that Green sold his trademark 1959 Sunburst Gibson Les Paul Standard to Irish guitarist Gary Moore and recorded with Bobby Tench's band Gass, on their eponymous album.

Green had a brief reunion with Fleetwood Mac when Jeremy Spencer left the group (Green flew to the USA to help them complete the tour) and he was also an uncredited guest on their 1973 Penguin album on the track "Night Watch". He also appears on the track "Brown Eyes" from 1979's Tusk.

Illness and first re-emergence
Green was diagnosed with schizophrenia, a mental illness commonly characterised by hallucinations and paranoia, and he spent time in psychiatric hospitals undergoing electroconvulsive therapy in the mid-1970s. Many sources attest to his lethargic, trancelike state during this period. In 1977, he was arrested for threatening his accountant, Clifford Davis, with a shotgun, but the exact circumstances are the subject of much speculation, the most popular being that Green wanted Davis to stop sending money to him.After this incident he was sent to a psychiatric institution in London. This was prior to his re-emergence as a recording artist with PVK Records in the late 1970s and early 1980s. He suffered a relapse in 1984 and effectively lived the life of a tramp-like recluse for six years until he was rescued by his brother Len and his wife, going to live with them in Great Yarmouth and regaining some of his former health and strength.

Resurgence
Apart from his solo work in the late 1970s and early 1980s, he contributed to "Rattlesnake Shake" and "Super Brains" on Mick Fleetwood's solo album, The Visitor, and recorded various sessions with a number of other musicians. Despite some attempts by Gibson at a German trade show to start talks about producing a Peter Green signature Les Paul, Peter's instrument of choice at this time was in fact a Gibson 'Howard Roberts' Fusion, very often seen accompanying him on stage in recent years.

A 1990s comeback saw Green form the Peter Green Splinter Group, with the assistance of fellow musicians including Nigel Watson and Cozy Powell. The Splinter Group released nine albums between 1997 and 2004. It was in the latter part of this period that he picked up a black Gibson Les Paul again. Green signed and sold this Les Paul, which had been tweaked for Peter to sound like the famous 'green burst' and is now owned by a UK enthusiast.

A tour was cancelled and recording of a new studio album stopped in early 2004, when Green left the band and moved to Sweden. Shortly thereafter he joined The British Blues All Stars, but their tour in 2005 was also cancelled after the death of saxophonist Dick Heckstall-Smith following a long illness. Green has said that the medication he takes to treat his psychological problems makes it hard for him to concentrate and saps his desire to pick up a guitar.

Green, with a new band "Peter Green and Friends", began playing concerts again in February 2009.. He was also the subject of the BBC 4 documentary "Peter Green. Man of the World", produced by British music impresario Henry Hadaway and broadcast on 8 May 2009. The documentary contained interviews of himself and his former bandmates John McVie, Mick Fleetwood and Jeremy Spencer.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Green_discography
Peter Green discography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

With Fleetwood Mac

Singles
I Believe My Time Ain’t Long / Rambling Pony (1967)
Black Magic Woman / The Sun Is Shining (1968)
Need Your Love So Bad / Stop Messin’ Round (1968)
Albatross / Jigsaw Puzzle Blues (1968)
Man Of The World / Someone’s Gonna Get Their Head Kicked In Tonite (1969)
Oh Well Pt.1 / Oh Well Pt. 2 (1969)
The Green Manalishi / World In Harmony (1970)
B-sides varied from country to country, and reissues often had different B-sides.

Albums
Fleetwood Mac (1968)
Mr. Wonderful (1968)
Then Play On (1969)
Penguin (1973) on "Night Watch" (uncredited)
Tusk (1979) on "Brown Eyes" (uncredited)

Compilations
Fleetwood Mac in Chicago/Blues Jam in Chicago, Vols. 1-2 (1969)
English Rose (1969)
The Pious Bird of Good Omen (1969)
Greatest Hits (CBS, 1971)
Greatest Hits (Warner Bros, 1988) 8x Platinum
25 Years - The Chain (1992)
The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions 1967-1969 (1999)
The Best of Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac (2002)
The Very Best of Fleetwood Mac (2002) Platinum
The Essential Fleetwood Mac (2007)

Archival releases
The Original Fleetwood Mac (CBS, 1971)
Live at the Marquee, 1967 (released 1992)
Live at the BBC (released 1995) (UK #48)
Masters: London Live '68 (released 1998)
Live at the Boston Tea Party, Vols. 1-3 recorded Feb 5-7, 1970 (Snapper, 1998-2000)
The Vaudeville Years of Fleetwood Mac: 1968 to 1970 (2 CD) (1998)
Shrine '69 (live 1969, released 1999)
Original Fleetwood Mac: The Blues Years (3 CD) (Castle, 2000)
Show-Biz Blues: 1968 to 1970 Volume 2 (2 CD) (Castle/Sanctuary, 2001)
Jumping at Shadows: The Blues Years (Castle/Sanctuary, 2002)
Men of the World: The Early Years (3 CD) (Sanctuary, 2005)

Solo

Singles
Heavy Heart / No Way Out (1971)
Beasts of Burden / Uganda Woman (1972) with Nigel Watson
Apostle / Tribal Dance (1978)
In the Skies / Proud Pinto (1979)
Walkin' the Road / Woman Don't (1980)
Loser Two Times / Momma Don'tcha Cry (1980)
Give Me Back My Freedom / Lost My Love (1981)
Promised Land / Bizzy Lizzy (1981)
The Clown / Time for Me to Go (1982)
Big Boy Now / Bandit (1983)
B-sides varied from country to country.

Albums
The End of the Game (1970)
In the Skies (1979)
Little Dreamer (1980)
Whatcha Gonna Do? (1981)
White Sky (1982)
Kolors (1983)
A Case for the Blues (as Peter Green's Katmandu) (1984)

Compilations
Blue Guitar (1981)
Legend (1988)
Backtrackin' (1990)
A Rock Legend (1991)
Last Train to San Antone (1992)
Baby When the Sun Goes Down (1992)
Collection (1993)
Rock and Pop Legends (1995)
Green And Guitar (1996)
Bandit (1997)
Blues for Dhyana (1998)
Alone with the Blues (2000)
The Clown (2001)
A Fool No More (2001)
Promised Land (2001)

Splinter Group albums

Peter Green Splinter Group (1997) Snapper Music SARCD 101
The Robert Johnson Songbook (1998)
Soho Session (1998)
Destiny Road (1999) Snapper Music SMACD 817
Hot Foot Powder (2000)
Time Traders (2001)
Me and the Devil (2001) Snapper Music SMBCD 844 (limited edition box set, 3 CDs, 1 of Robert Johnson recordings)
Blues Don't Change (2001)
Reaching The Cold 100 (2003)
The Best Of Peter Green Splinter Group (2006 compilation)

Guest contributions and other groups (albums unless stated otherwise)

With Peter B's Looners
If You Want to Be Happy / Jodrell Blues (1966 single)

With John Mayall
Looking Back / So Many Roads (1966 single)
Sitting in the Rain / Out of Reach (1967 single)
Curly / Rubber Duck (1967 single)
Double Trouble / It Hurts Me Too (1967 single)
Jenny / Picture on the Wall (1967 single)
A Hard Road (1967)
John Mayall's Bluesbreakers with Paul Butterfield (1967 EP)
Living Alone / Walking on Sunset (1968 single)
Blues from Laurel Canyon (1968)
Thru the Years (compilation)
Looking Back (compilation)
Along for the Ride (2003)

With Eddie Boyd
Eddie Boyd and His Blues Band featuring Peter Green (1967)
The Big Boat / Sent for You Yesterday (1968 single)
7936 South Rhodes (1968)

With Duster Bennett
Smiling Like I'm Happy (1968)
Smiling Like I'm Happy / Talk to Me (1969 single)
Bright Lights (1969)
12 Dbs (1970)
Out in the Blue (1995 compilation)
The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions (2005 compilation)

With Gordon Smith
Long Overdue (1968)
Too Long / Funk Pedal (1969 single)

With Otis Spann
Walkin' / Temperature is Rising (98.8F) (1969 single)
The Biggest Thing Since Colossus (1969)
Blues For Hippies/Bloody Murder (1972 EP)

With Brunning Sunflower Blues Band
Trackside Blues (1969)
I Wish You Would (1970)

With Clifford Davis
Man of the World/Before the Beginning (1969 single)
Come On Down and Follow Me/Homework (1970 single)

With Gass
Juju (1970)

With Jeremy Spencer
Jeremy Spencer (1970)

With Peter Bardens
Homage to the God of Light Pt. 1 / Pt. 2 (1970 single)
The Answer (1970)
Write My Name in the Dust: The Anthology (2005 compilation)

With Memphis Slim
Mason Dixon Line / Boogie Woogie (1970 single)
Handy Man / Mason Dixon Line (1970 single)
Blue Memphis (1971)

With B. B. King
B. B. King in London (1971) Green plays on "Caledonia".

With Dave Kelly
Dave Kelly (1971)

With Country Joe McDonald
Hold On It's Coming (1971)

With Toe Fat
2 (1971)

With Richard Kerr
From Now Until Then (1973)

With Duffo
The Disappearing Boy (1980)

With Mick Fleetwood
The Visitor (1981)

With Brian Knight
A Dark Horse (1981)

With SAS Band
SAS Band (1997)

With Dick Heckstall-Smith
Blues and Beyond (2001)

With Chris Coco
Next Wave (2002)

With Peter Gabriel
Up (2003)

Tribute albums
Rattlesnake Guitar: The Music of Peter Green (1995) (Reissued in 2000 as Peter Green Songbook)
TWANG! A Tribute to Hank Marvin and the Shadows (1996) (Song - Midnight)

Portland SubGenius Devival!

http://pdxdevival.com/

Portland SubGenius Devival!


We’ve all been instructed to keep Portland weird, beered, queered, etc. - but is Portland sufficiently mutated? The Church of the SubGenius says HELL NO! The entire Pacific Northwest is crammed to the gills with smarmy scenesters, inert activists, derivative artists, hypocritical hippies, and crypto-Pinks of all stripes – but few true mutants! The rate of REAL MUTATION amongst the region’s inhabitants is disturbingly low. However, J.R. “Bob” Dobbs has proclaimed that there is one place in the PNW worth saving – Portland, Oregon!

On October 10, 2009, a Cyclone of Slack will slam into Portland bringing true SubGenius mutation back to Stumptown for the first time in a decade!

Cast aside your false profiteers and your hipster biscuits, and bask in the Yetisyn glow of true Dobbsian mutation! Experience the gene-twisting joy of a SubGenius Devival in all of its mutated glory!

See the psychedelic sights not meant for mere Normals!
Hear the hindbrain-boggling ranting of SubGenius Doktors directly channeling the Elder Gods!
Smell the third-nostril opening aromas of full-bore Yetis in heat!
Feel the tidal wave of the TRUE SLACK that we were all meant to experience
when the CYCLONE OF SLACK hits Portland!

Featuring:
REV. IVAN STANG!
DR. HOWLAND OWL!
PRINCESS WEI R. DOE!
REV. DR. ONAN CANOBITE!
THE DUKE OF UKE!
REV. CRAWFORD!

With the Musical Stylings of:
POWER CIRCUS!
NEQUAQUAM VACUUM!
CULT OF ZIR!

And:
an utter lack of NENSLO!

Follow link at top for more info & advance tickets!



http://blacksungazette.com/?p=518

Black Sun Gazette: Portland SubGenius Devival!

The founder of the Church of the SubGenius, The Right Honorable Rev. Dr. Ivan Stang will be in the house, as will over SubGenius luminaries Dr. Howland Owl, The Duke of Uke, and Rev. Dr. Onan Canobite. The Church will invade Portland, OR to make it more friendly to mutants and other allies of high weirdness. Remember- The Church of the SubGenius founders are all old farts now. This may be the last time you see them outside of a grave. If you miss this, go get a job at a bank or something.
Did I mention that it’s esoZone weekend? Seriously. Don’t embarrass yourself. Get a ticket now (CHEAP!) and take in the whole experience of awesome.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

James Williamson & the Careless Hearts live at the Blank Club San Jose 9-5-09

Here's some video & photos & setlist from James Williamson/Careless Hearts at The Blank Club in San Jose California on September 5, 2009. Plus at the end is some J-Williamson interview links.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3aLhZxCYrM


James Williamson and the Careless Hearts open their set with "Raw Power"


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nA1xet-8K2I


James Williamson and the Careless Hearts play "No Sense of Pride"


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlDmV2pD9P8


James Williamson and the Careless Hearts play "Cock in My Pocket"


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65ah7DI8AzQ


James Williamson and the Careless Hearts play "Search and Destroy"



Plus here's some photos & captions from our buddy, Poke Choppums...

James Williamson - STOOGES

James Williamson - STOOGES

Damon and James Williamson - STOOGES

Steve Mackay - STOOGES

James Williamson - STOOGES
(with The Careless Hearts)


http://thebarmansrant.blogspot.com/2009/09/what-they-played.html

From The Barman:

What they played
Courtesy of Kristy, here's the set list for James Williamson with The Careless Hearts at The Blank Club in San Jose:

Raw Power, Cock In My Pocket, Johanna, 1970, Funhouse, No Sense Of Crime, Gimme Danger, I Need Somebody, Penetration, Night Theme, I Got Nothin', Loose, TV Eye, Search and Destroy, I Gotta Right, I Wanna Be Your Dog, Louie Louie.



Download James Williamson & the Careless Hearts' Sept 1, 2009 Pirate Cat Radio interview & Listen to mp3 of James Wiliamson's August 16, 2009 interview on WERS online radio & James playing his Weissenborn, February 2009: Listen to "Poki" all here:
http://straightjameswilliamson.com/JWmedia.html

Bo Diddley in 1966 (plus How records are made narrated by Leonard Chess)

Bo Diddley & his band live on stage & recording in the Chess studios in 3 parts, includes footage of how records are made narrated by Leonard Chess.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vXeT5LoJ_s



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lTAJSZIVP0



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=087B_oWH0kQ





To learn more about record manufacturing:

http://www.archive.org/details/CommandP1942


How shellac records were produced and manufactured.
This movie is part of the collection: Prelinger Archives: http://www.archive.org/details/prelinger
Producer: Ganz (William J.) Co.
Sponsor: RCA Victor Corporation
Audio/Visual: Sd, B&W
Keywords: Media: Phonograph; Music
Creative Commons license: Public Domain

(Thanks to nimereht & rockndog_1999 at the staysick yahoo group http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/staysick/ for the referrals.)

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Syd on "The Madcap Laughs"

'Hipgnomis' at the VegetableFriendsYahooGroup, shared some things Syd Barrett himself has said about "The Madcap Laughs":
http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/VegetableFriends/




Here are some things Barrett himself has said about 'The Madcap Laughs', listed below. If anyone can think of any other Barrett quotes (on this topic), do not hesitate to add them to the list.

1) Barrett: "They're my particular idea of a record. It's very together. There's a lot of speaking on it, but there's not a very recognizable mood. It's mainly acoustic guitar and there are no instruments at all."
(Jan 1970 interview published in Terrapin no. 17, 1975)

2) (Q: "Are you trying to create a mood in your songs, rather than tell a story?")

Barrett: "Yes, very much. It would be terrific to do much more mood stuff. They're very pure, you know, the words...
(Melody Maker, March 27, 1971)

3) (Q: "Were you satisfied with "Madcap Laughs"?)

Barrett: "Yes, I liked what came out, only it was released far too long after it was done. I wanted it to be a whole thing that people would listen to all the way through with everything related and balanced, the tempos and moods offsetting each other, and I hope that's what it sounds like. I've got it at home but I don't listen to it much now.
(Interview with Syd Barrett c.1971 by Giovanni Dadomo, unpublished until printed in Terrapin no. 9/10)

4) (Q: "In 'No Man's Land' on 'Madcap' there's a long spoken part which is barely audible, like the faded lyrics of "Astronomy Domine", was the intention to abstract the words into just background noise?")

Barrett: "Originally the words were meant to be heard clearly, but we went and actually did it, that's how it came out, which wasn't really how I'd planned it."
(Interview with Syd Barrett c.1971 by Giovanni Dadomo, unpublished until printed in Terrapin no. 9/10)

The Yardbirds-Evil Hearted You-Still I'm Sad-Shapes of Things-You’re A Better Man Than I

The Sweetest Psychopath blog recently ran a bunch of Yardbirds' posts. Here are both sides of 2 downloadable singles w/sleeves from the Yardbirds' "golden era" of 1965-6.

http://thesweetestpsychopath.tumblr.com/post/177383245/the-yardbirds-jim-mccarty-paul-samwell-smith

The Yardbirds - Jim McCarty, Paul Samwell-Smith, Chris Dreja, Keith Relf, Eric Clapton (1965)


http://thesweetestpsychopath.tumblr.com/post/177240413/the-yardbirds-evil-hearted-you-still-im-sad

The Yardbirds - Evil Hearted You/Still I’m Sad 45rpm (1965)

Listen & download at:
http://thesweetestpsychopath.tumblr.com/post/177246438/the-yardbirds-still-im-sad-1965
http://thesweetestpsychopath.tumblr.com/post/177245673/the-yardbirds-evil-hearted-you-1965-one-of-my
One of my all-time favorites from the Jeff Beck era Yardbirds, but then again the Jeff Beck era was THE BEST era.


http://thesweetestpsychopath.tumblr.com/post/177068274/theswingingsixties-the-yardbirds-shapes-of

The Yardbirds - Shapes of Things/You’re A Better Man Than I (1966)

Listen & download at:
http://thesweetestpsychopath.tumblr.com/post/177069316/theswingingsixties-the-yardbirds-shapes-of
http://thesweetestpsychopath.tumblr.com/post/177070014/the-yardbirds-youre-a-better-man-than-i-1966

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Jonathan Silvertown- An Orchard Invisible: A Natural History of Seeds.

Welcome to Texas Gardener’s Seeds, the weekly newsletter for Texas gardeners.
September 2, 2009

The garden reader:
Looking into the seeds of time
By William Scheick
University of Texas at Austin
Jonathan Silvertown. An Orchard Invisible: A Natural History of Seeds. University of Chicago Press, 2009. 216 pp. $25.00.

When observing plants, it's sometimes easy to leap to faulty conclusions. For instance, it's easy to surmise, on the basis of their sheer number, that seed-producing flora must have always dominated the plant kingdom.
Or, on the flipside of this mistaken impression, it's easy to think of the non-seeders, including ferns and mosses, as odd deviations from the norm. In fact, though, seedless plants once ruled our planet's oceans and lands, and the "magic trick" of encapsulating sea-like nutrients inside a seed emerged at some later point in time.
When impression-nurtured beliefs are unchecked by bedrock science, mischief can ensue. Consider the sixteenth-century belief that ferns produce seeds because all plants must grow from seeds.
Never mind that no one could see any fern seed.
There were answers for that, including a legend about what happened to fern flowers. According to this ancient legend, ferns did not contribute any blooms to the Christ child's manger. As a punishment for such "bad-seed" irreverence, ferns were deprived of their flowers and their seed became invisible.
This curse notwithstanding, ferns were still thought long ago to be valuable for various medicinal remedies, and their now-invisible seed was especially prized by the gullible. Some even believed that fern seed could make a person undetectable.
Of course, collecting the invisible fern seed was deucedly difficult.
In An Orchard Invisible Jonathan Silvertown doesn't mention the fern flower legend, but he succinctly explains how invisible fern seed was harvested: "Fern seed could be collected on the stroke of midnight on Midsummer Night's eve, but only by catching it as it fell from the plant onto a stack of twelve pewter plates. It would pass through the first eleven, but be trapped by the twelfth."
A quaint belief, indeed! But I've been around awhile and seen too much, and so I can't help but wonder whether, even today, empty seed packets labeled "Rare Invisible Fern Seed" might sell pretty well.
As the Jack-and-the-beanstalk story highlights, seeds do seem to be magical. Seeds, though, are actually down-to-earth devices far more complex and ingenious than represented in any fairytale.
In An Orchard Invisible Silvertown explores the history and science of this complexity. He ponders various seed-mysteries, such as nature's always unsuccessful repeated "attempts to break the habit of sex in plants." Cross-fertilization, it turns out, is inextricably interwoven with genetic variation, random adaptability, inherited mutation and chance survival.
Why, Silvertown also wonders, is the nutrient-thick coco de mer so large — the biggest known seed, in fact? It's easy but mistaken to believe that, as its popular name suggests, this "bizarre and wonderful monstrosity" floats to and germinates on distant beaches.
A Maldive coconut is not the only strange fruit feature. Silvertown finds even fruit coloration to be more mysterious than meets the eye. And he examines, as well, why seeds that fly awkwardly on single, unilateral wings vastly outnumber those that glide.
Silvertown suggests, too, that caffeine in a coffee bean possibly functions like a poison deterring the encroachment of nearby plants. But, he adds, if it's obvious why some seeds are poisonous, why are so many not?
The notorious suicide tree (Cerbera odollam) bears fibrous-shelled fruits, each with two lethal seeds. (Photo by William Scheick)

Silvertown doesn't mention it, but the world's most infamous, if understudied, poisonous seeds are found in the four-inch, fibrous-shelled fruits of the suicide tree (Cerbera odollam). The alkaloid toxin in the seeds of this tropical oleander relative has been implicated in numerous deaths — most of them decidedly not suicides.
Silvertown examines the place of unseen cheaters in our gardens. For example, while hardworking female yucca moths diligently collect pollen to fertilize the plant that will host their eggs, cheater moths skip pollen-collection and simply deposit eggs in fruit previously pollinated by the diligent moths. By colonizing already developed fruit unlikely to be aborted by a plant, these cheaters potentially jeopardize the entire symbiotic moth-yucca relationship — yet they somehow don't.
There aren't only selfish moths and wasps. Silvertown also puzzles over "selfish DNA" — free-agent "genes that jump around the chromosomes, sometimes playing havoc with the genome." Corn, for instance, is botanically notorious for its thousands of selfish DNA.
In An Orchard Invisible Silvertown "look[s] into the seeds of time," but unlike Banquo in Shakespeare's Macbeth, he is willing to speculate on the patterns behind "which grain will grow and which will not." The result is ample food for thought.