Friday, 26 December 2008

International Situationniste # 5 (December 1960)

Resolution of the Fourth Conference of the Situationist International Concerning the Imprisonment of Alexander Trocchi

THE DELEGATES to the fourth conference of the Situationist International, being informed of the arrest in the United States of their friend Alexander Trocchi, and of his charge of use of, and traffic in drugs, declare that the Situationist International retains full confidence in Alexander Trocchi.

The conference DECLARES that Trocchi could not have, in any case, traffic in drugs; this is clearly a police provocation by which the situationists will not allow themselves to be intimidated;

AFFIRMS that drug taking is without importance;

APPOINTS Asger Jorn, Jacqueline de Jong and Guy Debord to take immediate action on behalf of Alexander Trocchi and to report upon such action to the Situationist International at the earliest moment;

CALLS in particular upon the cultural authorities of Britain and on all British intellectuals who value liberty to demand the setting free of Alexander Trocchi, who is beyond all doubt England's most intelligent creative artist today.

London, 27th September 1960


Hands off Alexander Trocchi!

By Guy Debord, Jacqueline de Jong and Asger Jorn

7 October 1960, Paris, France

For several months, the British writer Alexander Trocchi has been kept in prison in New York.

He is the former director of the revue Merlin, and now he participates in experimental art research in collaboration with artists from several countries, who were regrouped on 28 September [1960] in London in the Institute of Contemporary Arts (17 Dover Street). On that occasion, they unanimously expressed in public their solidarity with Alexander Trocchi, and their absolute certainty in the value of his comportment.

Alexander Trocchi, whose case is due to be tried in October, is -- in effect -- accused of having experimented with drugs.

Quite apart from any attitude on the use of drugs and its repression on the scale of society, we recall that it is notorious that a very great many doctors, psychologists and also artists have studied the effects of drugs without anyone thinking of imprisoning them. The poet Henri Michaux has hardly been spoken of in recent years on the successive publication of his books announced everywhere as written under the influence of mescalin.

Indeed, we consider that the British intellectuals and artists should be the first to join with us in denouncing this menacing lack of culture on the part of the American police, and to demand the liberation and immediate repatriation of Alexander Trocchi.

Since it is generally recognized that the work of a scientist or an artist implies certain small rights, even in the USA, the main question is to bear witness to the fact that Alexander Trocchi is effectively an artist of the first order. This could be basely contested for the sole reason that he is a new type of artist; pioneer of a new culture and a new comportment (the question of drugs being in his own eyes minor and negligible).

All the artists and intellectuals who knew Alexander Trocchi in Paris or London ought to bear witness without fail to his authentic artistic status, to enable the authorities in Great Britain to take the necessary steps in the USA in favour of a British subject. Those who would refuse to do this now will be judged guilty themselves when the judgment of the history of ideas will no longer allow one to question the importance of the artistic innovation of which Trocchi has been to a great extent responsible.

We ask everyone of good faith whom this appeal reaches, to sign it, and make it known as widely as possible.

Stewart Home on Alex Trocchi


More on Trocchi by Stewart Home here.

Davy Graham - RIP

(22 November 1940 - December 15 2008.)
Taken from 'Cain's Film'.


'Cry Me A River'
From a 1959 documentary by Ken Russell on the popularity of the guitar.

Thursday, 25 December 2008

PS


Psychic TV: White Nights

"Santa Claus is checking his list
he's going over it twice
to find out who's been naughty
and who's been nice."

Wednesday, 24 December 2008

Psychic TV - 'A Pagan Day (Pages From A Notebook)'

(Original picture disc.)

Get it (original picture disc version) here.

"This recording was released by Temple Records (TOPY 003) on thee 23rd December 1984 as a Picture Disc Limited Edition ov 999 copies. The cover was a full colour photograph ov Caresse P-Orridge . It was only available to shops and distributors between 11am and 12am on that actual day! Rough Trade co-ordinated this through their telex lines for us. All thee music was recorded on a 4 Track Cassette machine under thee guidance of Alex Fergusson, thee original co-founder and partner, with Genesis P-Orridge, ov Psychic TV. "Pagan Day" was subtitled "Pages From A Notebook" because that is precisely what it was. Thee revealing ov thee process itself. Most PTV songs in their earliest era began life as these kinds ov cassette sketches often recorded in Alex's room at thee YMCA over coffee. "Pagan Day" is not therefore a "finished" recording in thee commonly accepted sense, it is an intimate glimpse into a place where "Source Are Rare". However, thee simplicity and privacy of it's evolution onto a record makes it appealing in quite a special way. Some songs were never intended to be heard outside our own living rooms but to conceal thee frailties would we felt, compromise thee integrity and honesty ov this chronicle. Due to popular interest, and extremely high "collector" prices being paid for thee original Picture Disc, "Pagan Day" was re-issued on normal vinyl, in a card sleeve as part ov Temple Records Library Series (TOPY 017) with one extra song, as a matter ov completeness, and as a matter ov fact."

Tracklist:
1. Cadaques
2. We Kiss
3. Opium
4. Cold Steel
5. L.A.
6. Iceland
7. Translucent Carriages
8. Paris
9. Baby's Gone Away
10. Alice
11. New Sexuality

(Another record that has been around the globe, originally bought at 'Beaudisqes' in Amsterdam.)

Throbbing Gristle - Live at Butler's Wharf London 23rd December 1979


Throbbing Gristle - Butler's Wharf, London (23/12/79)
Get it here.

(Set includes:'Gloria Leonard' - 'Six Six Sixties' - 'An Old Man Smiled' - 'Anal Sex' & 'Chariot and Galley'.)

"A grey winter's afternoon amongst the towering and decaying Thameside wharves seems a fitting venue for Throbbing Gristle to play. They chose Butler's Wharf on the south side of the river for their recent concert, playing on a low stage on the third floor using two simple fluorescent lights for illumination.
The concert opened with a tape of the archetypal funk/disco muzak over which an echoed female voice went explicitly through the tract covered by the Donna Summer - 'Love To Love You' corpus of recordings. As the tape reached its conclusion Cosey Fanni Tutti and Peter Christopherson picked up electric cornets and sent long, ringing notes out into the room, echoed and delayed to build up into broad streaks of sound. Throbbing Gristle's use of brass in this way is interesting in that it adds a contrasting element to their instrumental armoury. It has a bright, clear quality which they exploit to the full in sharp contrast to the dense, muddy frequently disturbing textures which they more habitually work. It was these latter qualities which supplanted those of the brass work.
As Cosey switched to guitar and Peter to his custom-made multi-cassette player and keyboard, Genesis P-Orridge added bass and Chris Carter synthesiser to create a murky abrasive music that jarred and provoked. The individual constituents become subordinate to the whole: distorted and treated vocals (live, delayed and - I believe - taped) blurred into stabbed keyboard rhythms or wedges of bass and guitar colour driven deep into the heart of the sound. Most of the traditional assumptions of the rock 'n' roll format are discarded (overt rhythm and melody, the voice mixed to the fore, for example) but that is not to say that the final results are formless or unfocussed.
After a brief interlude composed solely of voices, a synthesiser rhythm was set up and Cosey returned to the cornet. Her soaring notes cut across the top of the rhythm (which was doubly reinforced by Genesis' bass work) to establish a good humoured and bouncing soundscape through which dark clouds of tapes, bass and more synthesiser swept. They were only really able to impose their character on Genesis' bass postscript after he concert playing had stuttered to a halt. Through all this the benign voice of a hypnotist was heard gradually awakening us from our trance, telling us that we could learn to relax in this way and - by now the musicians had finished and the tape of the voice was working solo - that we'd enjoyed the experience.
Taken individually, the elements from which Throbbing Gristle construct their music are often surprisingly simple. Yet through the skillful deployment of these elements and the technology available to them they are able to create a unique music. Their willful dismissal of traditional musical rules no doubt alienates a large number of people. However, for those prepared to listen, they are capable - as this concert clearly demonstrated - of producing a strong and powerful music."

Ken Ansell
(@ Brainwashed)

(Originally released on cassette by Industrial Records - IRC 24.
Now part of 'TG24'.
Was also released on vinyl (bootleg?) as 'Wet, Weird & Smeared'.)


I was actually at this gig and above is the diary that we were all given on entrance, which unbelievably I still have!
We were also given a lolly as well. Now some people will probably think that they were laced with something but...TG were (in)famous for fucking around with the 'atmosphere' at their gigs whether by the use of positive ionizers or sub-sonic sounds (etc.) All in all every gig that you saw (and I was lucky to have caught a fair few) had their own 'in-di-vid-ual' character.
My friends Angie and Laurie who accompanied me to this particular bash were feeling suitably strange when the alloted hour (always an hour) of live performance was over.

TG - Live at Butler's Wharf London 23rd December 1979 & PTV - 'A Pagan Day' (initially available only on the 23rd December 1984)

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Throbbing Gristle: Live at Butler's Wharf London (23/12/79) here.
Psychic TV: 'A Pagan Day' here.

Seasons Greetings To You All

Grateful Dead - 'Run Rudolph Run' here.
(Live Fox Theatre St. Louis 10th December 1971.)

Tuesday, 23 December 2008

Mongezi 'Kid' Feza 1945 - 1975

Blue Notes for Mongezi (Fourth Movement) - December 23 1975


(Recorded spontaneously 23 Dec 1975 after Mongezi Feza's memorial service in London.)

Recently reissued as part of the 5 CD The Blue Notes boxed set.
An interview with the only surviving member Louis Moholo here.

The Dick Cheney IProd

T.I. - Paper Trail (cover) by Ian Wright



Mr. Ian Wright (artist extraordinaire)

Art Ensemble of Chicago

More from Ian Wright here.

Dog (tags) by Ian Wright


Ian Wright
(Absolute genius.)
Ian Wright first came to my attention through the pages of UK music mags. (NME/THE FACE/ARENA etc) & various record sleeves back in I suppose the early 80's.
What can I say?
Actually nothing apart from apologising that my self portait on this page was done using my name-stamp and was inspired by an illustration that Ian did of Matt Johnson for the NME.