Thursday, 19 January 2012

In pictures: Sopa and Pipa protests see the web go dark

:)

Image

Tuesday, 17 January 2012


Stop Online Piracy Act

LV 
Yeah let's all buy the queen a new boat! As long as Francesco Schettino gets to captain it!

Telecomix Documentary - The Rise of Cipherspace Computing

Telecomix Logo

Telecomix

Happy Birthday Muhammad Ali

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zansky: Cinema de Bordas - 2011

zansky

Forest swastika

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Bedouin leaders threaten armed rebellion against Egyptian government

Ain't that the truth #2...

Via

William S. Burroughs with a Hermes Baby

@'Typewriterspotting'

araabMUZIK - Rubberband Stacks

Hmmm...


The Return of the Monster

Nick Tosches: A baby wolf with neon bones (Patti Smith interview 'Penthouse' April 1976)


Patricia Lee Smith hit the linen on December 30, 1946, in Chicago, and was raised, the eldest of four children, in Deptford Township, New Jersey. She had been slapped about by tuberculosis; she was a frail-seeming punkling, skinny and daydreamy. She attended Glassboro State College, briefly, and tried doing piecework at a toy factory. Both made her carsick. In 1967 she came to New York. From there she went to Paris with her sister Linda. She wanted to be an artist, but her drawing became poems. She returned to New Jersey, then to New York, where she slowly but steadily became arch moll of rhythm'd word.
Patti coauthored a book with playwright Sam Shepard, Mad Dog Blues & Other Plays. She appeared in a film, Robert Mapplethorpe Gets His Nipple Pierced. Late in 1971, Telegraph Books published her first volume of poems, Seventh Heaven, which she dedicated to Mickey Spillane and Anita Pallenberg. She began to publish prose-poem essays about rock 'n' roll in such magazines as Rolling Stone and CREEM. A second book of poems, Kodak, appeared in 1972. By the time Gotham Book Mart published her Witt in 1973, Patti had become a legend on the New York poetry circuit. She was feared, revered, and her public readings elicited the sort of gut response that had been alien to poetry for more than a few decades. Word spread, and people who avoided poetry as the stuff of four-eyed pedants found themselves oohing and howling at what came out of Patti's mouth. Established poets feared for their credence. Many well-known poets refused to go on after Patti at a reading, she was that awesome.
The music, too. It had started with just Lenny Kaye on guitar, intuitively the two reinvented melic poetry. The band grew; piano, another guitar, then later drums. Finally, after all those years, rock 'n' roll had a poet.
In early spring on 1974, financed by her friend, artist Robert Mapplethorpe, Patti issued two thousand copies of a record, "Piss Factory" coupled with "Hey, Joe," on the Mer label. The rhythmics were coarse and truculent, the images were alternately raw and aflash with hallucination. In "Hey, Joe" she transmuted a sixties rock classic into an Iliad of subliminal violence that culminated with a fantasy image of Patty Hearst worshipping black revolutionaries in a world ruled by phantom guitars and confused girl-things.
Poetry readings became concerts, audiences grew. Patti spewed forth a mix of sheer rock 'n' roll power and delicately wrought poetry. She sang a Marvelettes song, "The Hunter Gets Captured by the Game," or sometimes Van Morrison's "Gloria," and then, somehow, she was in some ineffable dream-closet:
yum yum the stars are out. I'll never forget you how you smelled that night. like cheddar cheese melting under fluorescent light. like a day old rainbow fish. what a dish. gotta lick my lips. gotta dream I daydream. thorozine brain cloud. rain rain comes coming down.
The music ebbed to feedback sounds and low piano:
I'm gonna peep in bo's bodice. lay down darling don't be modest let me slip my hand in. ohhh that's soft that's nice that's not used up. ohh don't cry. wet whats wet? oh that. heh heh. that's just the rain lambie pie. now don't squirm. let me put my rubber on . . .
The record companies came to sniff and hedge. Finally, she signed with Arista, and her debut album, Horses, was released late in 1975. Everyone from Rolling Stone to the New York Times showered it with petals. Still, some said, Patti was too weird to sweep the masses. The ever underestimated masses, however, proved otherwise, and Patti and her album rose to the top of the national charts.
This interview was conducted by Nick Tosches in New York City. It begins with the one question with which all interviews should begin...
HERE
(Thanx Stan!)

David Hockney at the RA

Woldgate Woods, East Yorkshire, 2006
Under the Trees, Bigger, 2010-11
A Closer Winter Tunnel, Feb-Mar, 2006
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The first science artist to draw accurate pictures of Mars and the Moon

Shigeru Mizuki: Yokai Monsters



Yokai are a class of supernatural monsters in Japanese folklore. If you’ve ever wondered about their anatomy, Shigeru Mizuki made some illustrations to show you.
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PIPA is the new SOPA

Wikipedia to go dark to protest web piracy drafts

Predictions of what 2011 would be like in a 1911 newspaper

(Larger version here)

Australian Govt censors secret anti-piracy meeting notes

Ork Loft Rehearsal 1974

HA!

(Click to enlarge)
Not a driver so I would have missed this otherwise...
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Really???

Just say 'savent'

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The Ramones - CBGB's 1974

Monday, 16 January 2012

Please don't bother reading if you still haven't worked out where the external one is...

The Internal Clitoris

Fuck off...

If you are looking for solutions/answers...

We’re all guilty of dehumanizing the enemy


The Most Misunderstood Songs in Rock ‘N’ Roll History

How the fuck can you survive on less than £20 a week in this day and age? Answer goes without saying that you can't!!!

Funny that...

Linwood wins 'dismal' town award

As a kid going past the tower of 'dead' Hillman Imps...Linwood has a place in my heart forever!
I'm kidding - of course it doesn't...

REpost: The Life and Crimes of Lenny Bruce

A jewel from the archives. My friend Steve Shepherd used to be a radio producer - producing Jez Nelson's Jazz on 3 for years. His first programme, though, made in 1996, was this documentary about Lenny Bruce, made for the Sunday Feature slot - also on Radio - 3 in 1996. It's narrated by rock critic legend Charles Shaar Murray and The Guardian, at the time, said
"You almost hear the smoke above the jazz and the jokes. Sad and very funny. And proof that it can be cool to listen to Radio 3?"
So here is Steve's show (MP3).
Via the late, lamented

I was there too...

...but at my usual spot right in front of the left hand PA. Which will explain my tinnitus no doubt...

Carbon Dioxide Affecting Fish Brains

Nothing to add... *sigh*

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beq: Houseleek


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Houseleek

The Flaming Lips + Bon Iver = ???

A likely recipe for whatever The Flaming Lips and Bon Iver have in the works:
- one cabin in the wilderness of Wisconsin
- enough confetti to thoroughly pollute the atmosphere
- all stars that have fallen to the ground
- four CD players
- five skulls
- a pinch or two of Autotune
- jagged vacance, thick with ice
- one giant plastic bubble
- snow
- swarm (herd? pack? gaggle?) of pink robots
Directions:
Stuff all ingredients into the cabin and see what happens. Gather other Lips’ concoctions (with Death Cab For Cutie, Nick Cave, Ghostland Observatory, Yoko Ono, Neon Indian, and maybe with Lykke Li, Erykah Badu, and Ke$ha as well). Let simmer until April (Record Store Day-ish).
Enjoy!

• The Flaming Lips: http://www.flaminglips.com
• Bon Iver: http://boniver.org
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♪♫ Michael Kiwanuka - Tell Me A Tale (Later with Jools Holland)

Can Ecstasy Combat Autism?

Twat!!!

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HA!

Holy Dildo Batman!!!

(Thanx Walter!)

♪♫ John Foxx - Crash and Burn

(For Kaggsy!)

Scotland Yard Report Finds British Citizen Was Tortured in Secret CIA Site

UK Finds That Detainee Was Tortured As Part Of American Interrogation . . . Obama Administration Threatens To Cut Off Intelligence

Baring the soul: Paul Bindrim, Abraham Maslow and 'Nude Psychotherapy'

Soul Coughing's Mike Doughty on sobriety and life as a solo artist

'...I don’t really know any addicts that don’t have trauma in their backgrounds. I think, to activate this thing, there is generally pain that needs to be numbed, or trauma that needs to be gotten away from. One of the things about the disease model is that so many people of the non-alky variety are just so indignant about it. I think we should just give it up. It’s maybe not worth the fight over the semantics of it. It’s like, addicts are killing themselves, they’re unable to stop using drugs, I would think that would be more important than what to call it."
MORE
(Thanx Dirk!)