Reverbrations Paris-New York Saturday, 15 March – 8 p.m. Studio Campus, 12bis rue Froment - 75011 Paris 01 43 55 44 03 M° Bastille, Bréguet-Sabin PAF 6 euros Seating is limited, reservations absolutely necessary. Contact: prosaic@orange.frENGLISH version:::::::::::::::::: [French follows..........] A transatlantic reunion concert with David Linton, Rhys Chatham and Jean-François Pauvros... also featuring David Watson, Angie Eng, & JJ Palix At the start of the 80s, The American Center and the Autumn Festival presented a duo comprised of Rhys Chatham on electric guitar and David Linton on drums. Since then, the two New Yorkers have continued with their respective musical explorations on either side of the Atlantic. David Linton jettisoned his drum kit for various electronic devices and was instrumental in the emergence of a new generation of New York experimenters in sound and image, which later became known as the Ilbient School.
The post-minimalist composer Rhys Chatham, who has been living in Paris for nearly 20 years, has traveled since then around the world with Les 100 guitares his orchestra of electric guitars, which first appeared in France in 1989. For this evening's presentation with David Linton and Jean-François Pauvros, he will do a recreation of the original version of his seminal composition Guitar Trio in a version for 6 electric guitars, el. bass and drums, along with the series of pictures originally shown with it, made by the NY visual artist Robert Longo, entitled, Pictures for Music.
Jean-François Pauvros, master guitarist who embarked on his long affair with Les 100 guitares right from the start, came across David Linton for the first time in Marseille last year during an improvisation between David and himself, Ernie Brooks (bassist of les 100 guitares, Modern Lovers) and the guitarist Jean-Marc Montera. David took his place once again, after such a long respite, behind the drums for a special rendition of a Modern Lover's song. Jean-François and David later found themselves together with Palix when David did his first presentation in Paris of his sound/image solo, The Bicameral Research Sound & Projection System. For tonight's performance, this solo will be transformed into a trio, with the addition of the New Zealand improviser David Watson on bagpipes, and Angie Eng, a New York artist currently residing in Paris and who will complete the trio with live video image. Palix will smooth the transitions between sets with cool music from his laptop. And to close this exceptional evening, Jean-François Pauvros will reunite the principle protagonists of the evening with an improvisatory quartet.
- Bicameral Trio David Linton : sound and analogue video David Watson : Highland bagpipes Angie Eng : digital video - Rhys Chatham's Guitar Trio (G3) accompanied by Robert Longo's Pictures for Music. Nina Canal, Rhys Chatham, David Linton, Jean-François Pauvros, Martin Wheeler : electric guitars Francis Pierot : electric bass
Pascal Bence : drums
- Jean-François Pauvros Quartet Jean-François Pauvros : guitars Rhys Chatham : trumpet David Watson : highland bagpipes David Linton : decolletage mecanique - Palix Laptop Interludes David Watson arrived in New York in the mid 1980’s and established himself as a staple on the avant scene. Since the early 1990’s he has worked to redefine the Highland bagpipe, an instrument we thought we knew. “Few bagpipers have made so convincing a case for the instrument’s potential for subtlety and revelation in new music as Watson, who conjures teeming worlds of microtonal event, free of folklorish cliché.” -(Time Out, New York, 2/18/08) His groundbreaking work on Highland bagpipes has been featured in Matthew Barney’s “Cremaster 3” and he is part of the trio“Glacial” with Lee Ranaldo. Critics have described his work as “psychedelic bagpipe minimalism” and “brain-rearranging massive walls of constantly shifting drone” … “different lines pile up like an old Terry Riley piece, hypnotically repeating.” He has performed in virtually every venue for new music, recording and performing with downtown’s best : Ikue Mori, Kato Hideki, Andrea Parkins, Shelley Hirsch, Chris Mann, Christian Marclay, Tony Buck, William Hooker, Alex Watermna, Zeena Parkins, Eugene Chadbourne and John Zorn, amongst many others. His current interests include using parades and marching bands as a reference point for a variety of group projects, and creating outdoor contexts for the performance of experimental music. In 2007 he released two well received projects, “Throats” (on Thurston Moore’s Ecstatic Peace ) and Fingering an Idea (on Phill Niblock’s XI ). Angie Eng is a media artist who works in video, installation and time-based performance. Her current work draws from inspiration from nomadic cultures. Since 1993 she became involved in New York downtown electronic arts scene (SoundLab, Fakeshop, Unity Gain,Pseudo Projects, Clocktower) and has collaborated on numerous video performance projects. She co-founded The Poool a live video performance group with Nancy Meli Walker and Benton Bainbridge in 1996-1999. She has worked with musicians and artists including: Ron Anderson, Yuko Fujiyama, Jon Giles, Andy Grayton, Jason Kao Hwang, Simon Hostettler, Jessica Higgins, Hoppy Kamiyama, Gabriel Latessa, Zach Layton, Jarryd Lowder, Zeena Parkins, Liminal Projects, Kyoko Kitamura, David Linton, Geoff Matters, Ikue Mori,Jane Scarpantoni, Peter Scherer, Jim Staley, Yumiko Tanaka, Keiko Uenishi, Nancy Meli Walker, David Weinstein and more. She has received numerous grants and commissions and her work has been performed and exhibited at museums and galeries in the US (Whitney Museum, Lincoln Center Video Festival, The Kitchen, New Museum of Contemporary Art, etc) and abroad. She recently completed a project on Privacy in Public space in East/West cities with an Eyebeam Art Residency and received a NYSCA grant to develop a video installation on the socio-historical aspects of the water well/fountain. http://www.angieeng.com/ David Linton entered the downtown NY experimental music scene through the art-punk-garage door at the tail end of the 1970's. Initially - on drums - he performed and recorded with Rhys Chatham, Glen Branca, Lee Ranaldo, Elliott Sharp, as well as his own collaborative band Interference - among others... From here he moved - on one hand - to electro-acoustic improvisation and live solo performance on his own customized proto electronic drum kit...and - on the other - into sound score design for dance and theater - producing dozens of works in this vein between the mid 80's & mid 90's. Notable among these - his scores for The Wooster Group & for choreographers Karole Armitage & Stephen Petronio. By the early 1990's, David was drawn to embrace Techno and the emergent 'Immersive' movement in electronic music and digital media. This in turn led to a focus on venue/audience development & 'event design' in the course of advocating the new popular modes of realtime audio and visual performance demonstrated in catalytic events like SoundLab (host), Unitygain (organizer/curator), & Unitygain Television (producer/director). Linton's most recent solo audio-visual performance work with The Bicameral Research Sound and Projection System brings things full circle drawing on his over 25 years of experience in the multi media arts to mark the reaffirmation of the pre-eminent organic values embodied in realtime analog processes in the worlds of sound and visual media. With his Bicameral Research Sound & Projection System David aims to make vibrational wave induced perceptual energy states manifest by deploying interconnected measures of electric sound & light in live action with hand manipulated objects in physical (live camera) space. He employs an integrated recursive audio & video feedback system of his own perversely simple design modulated by freehand intervention to deliver vigorous eye, ear, and - sometimes - body shaking realtime audio visual performances from which a kind of retro-tech animistic ritual "medicine show" emerges where subject and object blur. http://bicameral.multiply.com/
Avant-noise guitar player Jean-François Pauvros was one of the first in France in a 70s context to follow in the footsteps of free jazz musician Sonny Sharrock to develop a unique voice that was free and intuitive. Rigorously unclassifiable, uncompromising, irretrievable, Pauvros is a passionately singular creative force on the French alternative music scene. His recordings, both solo and created in collaboration with artists such as Arto Lindsay, Jac Berrocal, Rhys Chatham, Siegfried Kessler, Keiji Heino, are just as legendery as his live performances. He's worked with dancers, poets, painters, musicians Tony Hymas, Elliott Sharp, Evan Parker, Sonic Youth, Jonathan Kane, Ernie Brooks. His current projects include his band the trio Marteau Rouge and a long term involvement with Rhys Chatham's big ensemble of electric guitars, Les Cent Guitares. http://jf.pauvros.free.fr/ Rhys Chatham is a composer from New York who plays guitar and trumpet. He is currently touring in a configuration called "Guitar Trio Is My Life", the name of a 3-CD boxed set, which has just been released by Radium Records. http://www.rhyschatham.net/
Composer/arranger of film music and choreography, sound designs for installations, collector and archivist of rare music, Jean Jacques Palix is always concerned with experiementation. After his time as a radio producer at Radio France and later at Radio Nova, which he co-founded in 1981, he founded in 1985 Tapage Atypique, and then in 1991 the Song Active record label, to respond to a need for a studio open to artistic musical encounters defying boundaries and classification. His diverse experience, which has always been in the world of visual art, sound and music as well as communication and broadcast, has permitted him to conceive and create the idea of "courrier sonore", le Plisonor, a composition focused on the sounds of a city. Parisian above all, also in New Zealand on the free-noise scene, Hong Kong, Cairo in connection with the shooting of a film:, New York in response to musical encounters. http://jjpalix.free.fr/
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FRENCH VERSION:::::::::::
Reverberations Paris-New York le 15 mars à partir de 20h Studio Campus, 12bis rue Froment - 75011 Paris 01 43 55 44 03 M° Bastille, Bréguet-Sabin PAF 6 euros nombre de places limitées, réservations indispensables à l'adresse suivante : prosaic@orange.fr Une longue soirée de retrouvailles transocéaniques entre David Linton, Rhys Chatham et Jean-François Pauvros entourés de leurs invités. Au début des années 80, le Centre Americain et le Festival d'Automne révèlent un fulgurant duo composé de Rhys Chatham à la guitare et de David Linton à la batterie. Depuis, les deux new yorkais ont poursuivi leurs explorations chacun sur un bord de l'Atlantique. David Linton a laissé la batterie pour les outils électroniques et fédéré l'émergence d'une nouvelle génération newyorkaise d'expérimentateurs du son et de l'image. Le compositeur post-minimaliste Rhys Chatham, expatrié à Paris depuis vingt ans, a voyagé autour du monde avec les Cent Guitares, spectaculaire ensemble de guitares électriques. Ce soir, il reprend l'une de ses compositions devenue un classique, le légendaire Guitar Trio (G3) avec une pléthore d'interprètes... Jean-François Pauvros, guitar-maestro impliqué depuis l'origine dans l'aventure des Cent Guitares, a croisé David Linton pour la première fois à Marseille l'an passé : à l'occasion d'une rencontre improvisée entre Jean-François, Ernie Brooks (bassiste des Cent Guitares, Modern Lovers...) et le guitariste Jean-Marc Montera, David reprend exceptionellement les baguettes sur une chanson des Modern Lovers... Jean-François et David se retrouveront plutard aux côtés de Palix lors de la première présentation à Paris de la performance solo audiovisuelle de David, The Bicameral Sound & Projection System. Ce soir, le solo devient trio, avec la participation de l'improvisateur neo-zélandais David Watson à la cornemuse, et celle de Angie Eng, artiste new yorkaise en résidence à Paris, dont nous découvrirons le travail video. Palix avec son laptop prendra possession du temps nécessaire aux changements techniques entre chaque set. Et pour clore cette exceptionnelle réunion de fortes têtes, Jean-François Pauvros réunira en quartet improvisé les principaux protagonistes de cette mémorable soirée... - Bicameral Trio David Linton : son et video analogique David Watson : cornemuse écossaise Angie Eng : video numérique - Rhys Chatham's Guitar Trio (G3) accompagné de la projection du film de Robert Longo Pictures for Music. Nina Canal, Rhys Chatham, David Linton, Jean-François Pauvros, Martin Wheeler : guitares électriques Francis Pierot : basse électrique Pascal Bence : batterie - Jean-François Pauvros Quartet Jean-François Pauvros : guitares Rhys Chatham : trompette David Watson : cornemuse David Linton : décolletage mécanique - Palix Intermèdes D'origine néo-zélandaise, David Watson est une figure majeure de l'avant-garde musicale "downtown" à New York. Depuis bientôt vingt ans, il travaille à redéfinir la cornemuse écossaise, un instrument chargé de clichés folkloristes. Ses premiers essais apparaissent dans le film de Matthew Barney’s “Cremaster 3” et il fait partie du trio Glacial avec Lee Ranaldo (guitariste de Sonic Youth). Minimaliste, psychédélique, hypnotique, répétitive, sa musique est comparée par la critique à celle de Terry Riley et autres formes basées sur la transformation progressive d'un son continu. Il a joué et enregistré avec : Ikue Mori, Kato Hideki, Andrea Parkins, Shelley Hirsch, Chris Mann, Christian Marclay, Tony Buck, William Hooker, Alex Watermna, Zeena Parkins, Eugene Chadbourne et John Zorn, parmi beaucoup d'autres. S'inspirant des musiques pour fanfares et défilés militaires, il développe des projets de groupe destinés à jouer de la musique expérimentale en extérieur. En 2007, il a publié “Throats” (pour le label de Thurston Moore "Ecstatic Peace" ) et "Fingering an Idea" (pour celui de Phill Niblock "XI" ). Angie Eng (Windup Media) coordonne et met en place projets d'art electronique et videos experimentales. Présente depuis quinze ans sur la scène new yorkaise, elle expose dans des lieux de réputation internationale (Lincoln Center Video Festival, Whitney Museum of American Art, New Museum of Contemporary Art, The Kitchen, Eyebeam Art and Technology Center, Anthology Film Archives). Elle a fondé ‘The Poool’ un groupe de vidéo en temps réel avec les artistes Nancy Meli Walker et Benton Bainbridge (1996-1999). Collaborations: Ron Anderson, Yuko Fujiyama, Jon Giles, Andy Grayton, Jason Kao Hwang, Simon Hostettler, Jessica Higgins, Hoppy Kamiyama, Zach Layton, Liminal Projects, Kyoko Kitamura, David Linton, Geoff Matters, Ikue Mori, Matt Ostrowski, Zeena Parkins, Jane Scarpantoni, Peter Scherer, Jim Staley, Yumiko Tanaka, Keiko Uenishi (Oblaat), Nancy Meli Walker, David Weinstein etc. De nombreuses bourses lui ont été attribuées pour développer des projets sur la notion de nomadisme. Ancien élève du cinéaste Ken Jacobs, David Linton fait son entrée sur la scène musicale "downtown" expérimentale newyorkaise par la porte art-punk-garage de la fin des années 70. Il accompagne à la batterie les ensembles de guitares électriques des compositeurs Rhys Chatham et Glen Branca, se produit et enregistre avec le guitariste Lee Ranaldo, le multi-instrumentiste Elliott Sharp, et avec son propre groupe à géométrie variable, Interference. Bientôt il s'oriente vers l’improvisation électroacoustique en solo avec un prototype de batterie électronique conçu par lui. Rythmicien recherché, il compose des environnements sonores pour la danse et le théâtre - The Wooster Group, les chorégraphes Karole Armitage, Stephen Petronio, Meg Stuart, le videaste Charles Atlas. Au début des années 90, David Linton est attiré par la techno et la tendance "immersive" qui apparaît dans la musique électronique et l’usage des outils numériques. Il se concentre alors sur l’organisation d’évènements favorisant de nouvelles formes de performances audiovisuelles "live". Les soirées SoundLab et Unitygain qui fédèrent l’émergence d’une jeune génération d’expérimentateurs du son et de l’image, sont à l'origine de la production pour le câble de Manhattan du programme Unitygain Television. Son travail le plus récent, The Bicameral Research Sound & Projection System, performance visuelle et musicale, referme un cycle de 25 ans d'expérimentation multimedia. Le dispositif comprend une caméra video, un moniteur de télévision à tube cathodique, des oscillateurs sonores, divers effets et feedbacks. La manipulation des signaux vidéo analogiques produit des sons qui se transforment en images projetées en temps réel sur un écran… Une sorte de cinéma primitif psychédélique, entre théâtre d’illusion électro-mécanique et installation-projection… David Linton exalte les valeurs organiques des procédés anologiques en temps réel à l'ère post-numérique. Jean-François Pauvros est l'un des premiers en France dès le milieu des années 70 à emboîter le pas au guitariste de free jazz américain Sonny Sharrock et à développer un jeu libre et intuitif. Sa pratique oblique de la guitare privilégie le corps à cœur et la recherche tactile d'une nouvelle musicalité. Son acharnement à extirper toutes sortes de sons inouïs de ses cordes attaquées à l'archet comme Jimmy Page de Led Zeppelin ou livrées à une saturation méticuleuse, lui forge un instrument hybride à mi-chemin entre le violoncelle et la cithare ethnique électrifiée, propice à toutes les aventures sonores. Rhys Chatham, né à Greenwich Village à Manhattana a été formé à la musique classique. Après le conservatoire, il est responsable plusieures années durant de la programmation de The Kitchen, haut lieu de l'avant-garde musicale : il invite Maryanne Amacher, Robert Ashley, Gavin Bryars, Philip Glass, Meredith Monk, Micheal Nyman, Pauline Olivernos, Steve Reich, mais aussi Brian Eno, Robert Fripp, Fred Frith... Il découvre la musique électronique à la fin des années 60, étudie la composition au début des années 70 avec La Monte Young et se produit dans le premier groupe de Tony Conrad. En pleine explosion du mouvement punk new yorkais, après un concert des Ramones, il décide d'appliquer les techniques d'écriture du minimalisme à l'instrumentation du rock. En 1983, il s'intéresse au jazz et se met à la trompette. En 1989, il s'instale en France et compose An Angel Moves Too Fast To See pour 100 guitares électriques, produit dans le monde entier. En 2005 pour la Nuit Blanche, la Ville de Paris lui commande une oeuvre pour 400 guitares : A Crimson Grail Moves Too Fast To See donnera lieu à un concert de 10 heures, joué sur les marches et à l'intérieur de la basilique du Sacré-Coeur de Montmartre. Son projet le plus récent, Essentialist, est un groupe formé de 3 guitares, basse et batterie. Les principaux enregistrements de Rhys Chatham sont disponibles sous label table of Elements Records. Compositeur et arrangeur de musiques de films et de chorégraphies, scénographe sonore pour des installations, collecteur et archiviste de musiques rares, chasseur de sons, Jean Jacques Palix est toujours attentif aux expérimentations. À la suite de ses années de productions et de réalisations de programmes radiophoniques à Radio France puis à Radio Nova dont il fut un des fondateurs en 81, il crée en 1985 sa structure indépendante Tapage Atypique, puis, en 1991, le label de disques Song Active, pour répondre à son désir d'un studio ouvert aux rencontres artistiques, musicales et sonores, libre de classifications de genre. Ses diverses expériences, qui allient toujours le monde du visuel, du son et de la musique à celui de la communication et de la transmission, lui permettent de concevoir et de créer l'idée du "courrier sonore", le Plisonor, composition autour des sons d'une ville. Paris tout d'abord, en Nouvelle Zélande autour de la scène " free noise ", Hong-Kong, Le Caire en parallèle au tournage d'un film, New York en réponse à des artistes musiciens rencontrés.
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 Longue Duree is a Site Specific Audio Visual Installation realized in collaboration between veteran New York multi-media artists Angie Eng & David Linton on this happily coincident occasion that finds them both in Paris... Utilizing simple architectural means in camera, optics, light, sound, & digital processes to explore human movement through time and space in the investigation of very long cycles... Longue durée du 22 février au 21 mars 2008 par Angie Eng et David Linton on view daily until 9pm - preferable viewing after 6pm Une caméra numérique, un ordinateur et une émouvante boule de verre sollicitent nos interactions devant l’image projetée. Chacun d’entre nous devient alors témoin d’un processus de refonte de la lumière et de l’objet en mouvement. Issus de la scène new yorkaise des arts électroniques et tout récemment établis à Paris, les travaux d’Angie Eng et de David Linton explorent les images et les sons expérimentaux. Ces deux artistes, réunis pour la première fois, ont consacré leurs recherches à l’observation, la manipulation, repoussant les limites de la vision et de l’écoute. Ici, à la Maison populaire, ils ont combiné leurs idées du mouvement nomade (Angie Eng) avec la notion de spirales optiques continues (David Linton). Changements issus de la mise en perspective d’un personnage, d’une fenêtre, d’une réflexion de lumière, d’une distance sont rendus visibles, images et sons s’affectant alors l’un l’autre. Une interactivité entre les substances. Longue durée, séance de travail Angie Eng - La majeure partie du travail d’Angie Eng émerge à partir de concepts de mobilité dans les cultures contemporaines et traditionnelles, travail inspiré de ses voyages personnels à travers le monde. Artiste reconnue de la scène new-yorkaise des arts électroniques, elle a exposé son travail d’installations vidéo, de performance vidéo et de projections vidéo pendant ces dix dernières années à l’international. David Linton - Depuis plus de 25 ans, David Linton œuvre dans le champs des arts multimédia. Fondateur du projet The Bicameral Research Sound and Projection system, ses propositions sonores travaillent sur l’intégration de procédés analogiques dans le monde des médias visuels et sonores numériques et en temps réel. Maison Populaire: http://www.maisonpop.net/ Accès depuis Paris - À pied M° Mairie de Montreuil rue Walwein rue de Rosny à droite du lycée Jean-Jaurès rue Dombasle
 Since January 11th we've been here: on a residency program sponsored by the Cite of Paris Dept. of International Affaires.... http://www.centre-les-recollets.com/After living in a windowless cube on the Northside of Williamsburg Brooklyn for the last 4 months of '07 this has certainly been an upbeat alternative for kicking 2008 off to a better start... We get to stay here till the end of March and time is already flying by... Anyone coming through Paris shouldn't hesitate to get in touch: Either at : linton5.0@gmail.com or landline: 01 53 26 21 48 There is already a lot going on during the period of our stay: First: there is a collaborative projection installation with the recently relocated (NY to Paris) Angie Eng... this will be opening around Feb 20th at a place called Maison Populaire in the Parisian 'suburb' of Montreuil: http://www.maisonpop.net/spip.php?article740 and will run through March 21st.... Next: we will be throwing a self produced concert in a little hall called 'Campus' in the center of Paris (near Bastille) with a first time ever Bicameral Research Collaborative Trio comprised of myself doing the 'usual' analog Audio-Video Feedback System, David Watson on Bagpipe, and Angie Eng reprocessing and augmenting the live video chain... etc... This trio will appear on a shared evening with Rhys Chatham's G3 group accompanied by the (in)famous Robert Longo slideshow 'Pictures for Music'. And also possibly a group lead by French godfather of abstract guitar JF Pauvros... AND: the first weekend of April - Saturday the 5th - we will bring UNITYGAIN to Paris! (well another 'suburb' - actually Pont de Sevres) for a daylong into evening affaire at 'la General' an Artist's squat relocated recently from their former home in Belleville in the 20th arrondissement... So if you know of audio visual performers in Paris or nearby who might enjoy participating please send them our way... Likewise any UG regulars who feel like taking a little vacation in France should consider themselves invited to drop in and perform... etc... So that's the high points so far... we will update these events with more specific information as each approaches via the "Events" section of the http://bicameral.multiply.com page...
A "useful" reference frame in spite or because of it's age? Jack Burnham Systems EstheticsReprinted from Artforum (September, 1968). Copyright 1968 by Jack Burnham. A polarity is presently developing between the finite, unique work of high art, that is, painting or sculpture, and conceptions that can loosely be termed unobjects, these being either environments or artifacts that resist prevailing critical analysis. This includes works by some primary sculptors (though some may reject the charge of creating environments), some gallery kinetic and luminous art, some outdoor works, happenings, and mixed media presentations. Looming below the surface of this dichotomy is a sense of radical evolution that seems to run counter to the waning revolution of abstract and nonobjective art. The evolution embraces a series of absolutely logical and incremental changes, wholly devoid of the fevered iconoclasm that accompanied the heroic period from 1907 to 1925. As yet the evolving esthetic has no critical vocabulary so necessary for its defense, nor for that matter a name or explicit cause. In a way this situation might be likened to the "morphological development" of a prime scientific concept-as described by Thomas Kuhn in The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962). Kuhn sees science at any given period dominated by a single "major paradigm"; that is, a scientific conception of the natural order so pervasive and intellectually powerful that it dominates all ensuing scientific discovery. Inconsistent facts arising through experimentation are invariably labeled as bogus or trivial-until the emergence of a new and more encompassing general theory. Transition between major paradigms may best express the state of present art. Reasons for it lie in the nature of current technological shifts. The economist, J. K. Galbraith, has rightly insisted that until recently the needs of the modern industrial state were never served by complete expression of the esthetic impulse. Power and expansion were its primary aims. Special attention should be paid to Galbraith's observation. As an arbiter of impending socio-technical changes his position is pivotal. For the Left he represents America's most articulate apologist for Monopoly Capitalism; for the Right he is the socialist eminence grise of the Democratic Party. In The New Industrial State (1967) he challenges both Marxist orthodoxies and American mythologies premised upon laissez-faire capitalism. For them he substitutes an incipient technocracy shaped by the evolving technostructure. Such a drift away from ideology has been anticipated for at least fifty years. Already in California think-tanks and in the central planning committees of each soviet, futurologists are concentrating on the role of the technocracy, that is, its decision-making autonomy, how it handles the central storage of information, and the techniques used for smoothly implementing social change. In the automated state power resides less in the control of the traditional symbols of wealth than in information. In the emergent "superscientific culture" long-range decision-making and its implementation become more difficult and more necessary. Judgment demands precise socio-technical models. Earlier the industrial state evolved by filling consumer needs on a piecemeal basis. The kind of product design that once produced "better living" precipitates vast crises in human ecology In the 1960s. A striking parallel exists between the "new" car of the automobile stylist and the syndrome of formalist invention in art, where "discoveries" are made through visual manipulation. Increasingly "products"-either in art or life-become irrelevant and a different set of needs arise: these t revolve around such concerns as maintaining the biological livability of the earth, producing more accurate models of social interaction, understanding [ the growing symbiosis in man-machine relationships, establishing priorities for the usage and conservation of natural resources, and defining alternate patterns of education, productivity, and leisure. In the past our technologically-conceived artifacts structured living patterns. We are now in transition M from an object-oriented to a systems-oriented culture. Here change emanates, not from things, but from the way things are done. The priorities of the present age revolve around the problems of organization. A systems viewpoint is focused on the creation of stable, on-going relationships between organic and nonorganic systems, be these neighbor hoods, industrial complexes, farms, transportation systems, information 0 centers, recreation centers, or any of the other matrices of human activity. All living situations must be treated in the context of a systems hierarchy of values. Intuitively many artists have already grasped these relatively recent distinctions, and if their "environments" are on the unsophisticated side, this will change with time and experience. The major tool for professionally defining these concerns is systems analysis. This is best known through its usage by the Pentagon and has more to do with the expense and complexity of modern warfare, than with any innate relation between the two. Systems analysts are not cold-blooded logicians; the best have an ever-expanding grasp of human needs and limitations. One of the pioneers of systems applications, E. S. Quade, has stated that "Systems analysis, particularly the type required for military decisions, is still largely a form of art. Art can be taught in part, but not by the means of fixed rules.... " ' Thus "The Further Dimensions" elaborated upon by Galbraith in his book are esthetic criteria. Where for some these become the means for tidying up a derelict technology, for Galbraith esthetic decision-making becomes an integral part of any future technocracy. As yet few governments fully appreciate that the alternative is biological self-destruction. Situated between aggressive electronic media and two hundred years of industrial vandalism, the long held idea that a tiny output of art objects could somehow "beautify" or even significantly modify the environment was naive. A parallel illusion existed in that artistic influence prevails by a psychic osmosis given off by such objects. Accordingly lip service to public beauty remains the province of well-guarded museums. Through the early stages of industrialism it remained possible for decorative media, including painting and sculpture, to embody the esthetic impulse; but as technology progresses this impulse must identify itself with the means of research and production. Obviously nothing could be less true for the present situation. In a society thus estranged only the didactic function of art continues to have meaning. The artist operates as a quasipolitical provocateur, though in no concrete sense is he an ideologist or a moralist. L'art pour l'art and a century's resistance to the vulgarities of moral uplift have insured that. The specific function of modern didactic art has been to show that art does not reside in material entities, but in relations between people and between people and the components of their environment. This accounts for the radicality of Duchamp and his enduring influence. It throws light on Picasso's lesser position as a seminal force. As with all succeeding formalist art, cubism followed the tradition of circumscribing art value wholly within finite objects. In an advanced technological culture the most important artist best succeeds by liquidating his position as artist vis-a-vis society. Artistic nihilism established itself through this condition. At the outset the artist refused to participate in idealism through craft. "Craft-fetishism," as termed by the critic Christopher Caudwell, remains the basis of modern formalism. Instead the significant artist strives to reduce the technical and psychical distance between his artistic output and the productive means of society. Duchamp, Warhol, and Robert Morris are similarly directed in this respect. Gradually this strategy transforms artistic and technological decision-making into a single activity-at least it presents that alternative in inescapable terms. Scientists and technicians are not converted into "artists," rather the artist becomes a symptom of the schism between art and technics. Progressively the need to make ultrasensitive judgments as to the uses of technology and scientific information becomes "art" in the most literal sense. As yet the implication that art contains survival value is nearly as suspect as attaching any moral significance to it. Though with the demise of literary content, the theory that art is a form of psychic preparedness has gained articulate supporters. Art, as an adaptive mechanism, is reinforcement of the ability to be aware of the disparity between behavioral pattern and the demands consequent upon the interaction with the environment. Art is rehearsal for those real situations in which it is vital for our survival to endure cognitive tension, to refuse the comforts of validation by affective congruence when such validation Is inappropriate because too vital interests are at stake.... The post-formalist sensibility naturally responds to stimuli both within and outside the proposed art format. To this extent some of it does begin to resemble "theater," as imputed by Michael Fried. More likely though, the label of theatricality is a red herring disguising the real nature of the shift in priorities. In respect to Mr. Fried's argument, the theater was never a purist medium, but a conglomerate of arts. In itself this never prevented the theater from achieving "high art." For clearer reading, rather than maintaining Mr. Fried's adjectives, theatrical or literalist art, or the phrase used until now in this essay, post-formalist esthetic, the term systems esthetic seems to encompass the present situation more fully. The systems approach goes beyond a concern with staged environments and happenings; it deals in a revolutionary fashion with the larger problem of boundary concepts. In systems perspective there are no contrived confines such as the theater proscenium or picture frame. Conceptual focus rather than material limits define the system. Thus any situation, either in or outside the context of art, may be designed and judged as a system. Inasmuch as a system may contain people, ideas, messages, atmospheric conditions, power sources, and so on, a system is, to quote the systems biologist, Ludwig von Bertalanffy, a "complex of components in interaction," comprised of material, energy, and information in various degrees of organization. In evaluating systems the artist is a perspectivist considering goals, boundaries, structure, input, output, and related activity inside and outside the system. Where the object almost always has a fixed shape and boundaries, the consistency of a system may be altered in time and space, its behavior determined both by external conditions and its mechanisms of control. In his book, The New Vision, Moholy-Nagy described fabricating a set of enamel on metal paintings. These were executed by telephoning precise: instructions to a manufacturer. An elaboration of this was projected recently by the director of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, Jan van der Marck, in a tentative exhibition, "Art by Telephone." In this instance the recorded conversation between artist and manufacturer was to become part of the displayed work of art. For systems, information, in whatever form conveyed, becomes a viable esthetic consideration. Fifteen years ago Victor Vasarely suggested mass art as a legitimate function of industrial society. For angry critics there existed the fear of undermining art's fetish aura, of shattering the mystique of craft and private creation. If some forays have been made into serially produced art, these remain on the periphery of the industrial system. Yet the entire phenomenon of reproducing an art object ad infinitum is absurd; rather than making quality available to a large number of people, it signals the end of concrete objects embodying visual metaphor. Such demythification is the Kantian Imperative applied esthetically. On the other hand, a system esthetic is literal in that all phases of the life cycle of a system are relevant. There is no end product that is primarily visual, nor does such an esthetic rely on a "visual" syntax. It resists functioning as an applied esthetic, but is revealed in the principles underlying the progressive reorganization of the natural environment. Various postures implicit in formalist art were consistently attacked in the later writings of Ad Reinhardt. His black paintings were hardly rhetorical devices (nor were his writings) masking Zen obscurities; rather they were the means of discarding formalist mannerism and all the latent illusionism connected with postrealistic art. His own contribution he described as: The one work for the fine artist, tile one painting, is the painting of the onesized canvas... The single theme, one formal device, one color-monochrome one linear division in each direction, one symmetry, one texture, one free-hand brushing, one rhythm, one working everything into dissolution and one indivisibility, each painting into one overall uniformity and nonirregularity. Even before the emergence of the anti-formalist "specific object" there appeared an oblique type of criticism, resisting emotive and literary associations. Pioneered between 1962 and 1965 in the writings of Donald Judd, it resembles what a computer programmer would call an entity's list structure, or all the enumerated properties needed to physically rebuild an object. Earlier the phenomenologist, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, asserted the impossibility of conceptually reconstructing an object from such a procedure. Modified to include a number of perceptual insights not included in a "list structure," such a technique has been used to real advantage by the antinovelist, Alain Robbe-Crillet. A web of sensorial descriptions is spun around the central images of a plot. The point is not to internalize scrutiny in the Freudian sense, but to infer the essence of a situation through detailed examination of surface effects. Similar attitudes were adopted by Judd for the purpose of critical examination. More than simply an art object's list structure, Judd included phenomenal qualities which would have never shown up in a fabricator's plans, but which proved necessary for the "seeing" of the object. This cleared the air of much criticism centered around meaning and private intention. It would be misleading to interpret Judd's concept of "specific objects" as the embodiment of a systems esthetic. Rather object art has become a stage towards further rationalization of the esthetic process in general-both by reducing the iconic content of art objects and by Judd's candidness about their conceptual origins. However, even in 1965 he gave indications of looking beyond these finite limits. A few of the more general aspects may persist, such as the work's being like an object or even being specific, but other characteristics are bound to develop. Since its range is wide, three-dimensional work will probably divide into a number of forms. At any rate, it will be larger than painting and much larger than sculpture, which, compared to painting, is fairly particular.... Because the nature of three dimension isn't set, given beforehand, something credible can be made, almost anything. In the 1966 "68th American Show" at the Chicago Art Institute, the sculptor, Robert Morris, was represented by two large, L-shaped forms which were shown the previous year in New York. Morris sent plans of the pieces to the carpenters at the Chicago museum where they were assembled for less than the cost of shipping the originals from New York. In the context of a systems esthetic, possession of a privately fabricated work is no longer important. Accurate information takes priority over history and geographical location. Morris was the first essayist to precisely describe the relation between sculpture style and the progressively more sophisticated use of industry by artists. He has lately focused upon material-forming techniques and me arrangement of these results so that they no longer form specific objects but remain uncomposed. In such handling of materials the idea of process takes precedence over end results: "Disengagement with preconceived enduring forms and orders of things is a positive assertion." Such loose assemblies of materials encompass concerns that resemble the cycles of industrial processing. Here the traditional priority of end results over technique breaks down; in a systems context both may share equal importance, remaining essential parts of the esthetic. Already Morris has proposed systems that move beyond the confines of the minimal object. One work proposed to the City of New York last fall was later included in Willoughby Sharp's "Air Art" show in a YMHA gallery in Philadelphia. In its first state Morris's piece involved capturing steam from the pipes in the city streets, projecting this from nozzles on a platform. In Philadelphia such a system took its energy from the steam-bath room. Since 1966 Morris's interests have included designs for low relief earth sculptures consisting of abutments, hedges, and sodded mounds, visible from the air and not unlike Indian burial mounds. "Transporting" one of these would be a matter of cutting and filling earth and resodding. Morris is presently at work on one such project and unlike past sculptural concerns, it involves precise information from surveyors, landscape gardeners, civil engineering contractors, and geologists. In the older context, such as Isamu Noguchi's sunken garden at Yale University's Rare Book Library, sculpture defined the environment; with Morris's approach the environment defines what is sculptural. More radical for the gallery are the constructions of Carl Andre. His assemblies of modular, unattached forms stand out from the works of artists who have comprised unit assembly with the totality of fixed objects. The mundane origins of Andre's units are not "hidden" within the art work as in he technique of collage. Andre's floor reliefs are architectural modifications -though they are not subliminal since they visually disengage from their surroundings. One of Andre's subtler shows took place in New York last year. 8 The viewer was encouraged to walk stocking-footed across three areas. each 12 by 12 feet and composed by 144 one-foot-square metal plates. One was not only invited to see each of these "rugs" as a grid arrangement in various | metals, but each metal grid's thermal conductivity was registered through the [ soles of the feet. Sight analysis diminishes in importance for some of the best new work; the other senses and especially kinesthesis makes "viewing" a more integrated experience. The scope of a systems esthetic presumes that problems cannot be solved by a single technical solution, but must be attacked on a multileveled, interdisciplinary basis. Consequently some of the more aware sculptors no longer think like sculptors, but they assume a span of problems more natural to architects, urban planners, civil engineers, electronic technicians, and cultural anthropologists. This is not as pretentious as some critics have insisted. It is a legitimate extension of McLuhan's remark about Pop Art when he said that it was an announcement that the entire environment was ready to become a work of art. As a direct descendant of the "found object," Robert Smithson's identifying mammoth engineering projects as works of art ("Site-Selections") makes eminent sense. Refocusing the esthetic away from the preciousness of the work of art is in the present age no less than a survival mechanism. If Smithson's "Site-Selections" are didactic exercises, they show ; a desperate need for environmental sensibility on a larger than room scale. Sigfried Giedion pointed to specific engineering feats as objets d'art thirty years ago. Smithson has transcended this by putting engineering works into their natural settings and treating the whole as a time-bound web of man nature interactions. Methodologically Les Levine is possibly the most consistent exponent of a systems esthetic. His environments of vacuum-formed, modular plastic units are never static; by means of experiencing ambulation through them, they consistently alter their own degree of space-surface penetrability. Levine's Clean Machine has no ideal vantage points, no "pieces" to recognize, as are implicit in formalist art. One is processed as in driving through the Holland Tunnel. Certainly this echoes Michael Fried's reference to Tony Smith's night time drive along the uncompleted New Jersey Turnpike" Yet if this is theater, as Fried insists, it is not the stage concerned with focused upon events. That has more to do with the boundary definitions that have traditionally circumscribed classical and post-classical art. In a recent environment by Levine rows of live electric wires emitted small shocks to passersby. Here behavior is controlled in an esthetic situation with no primary reference to visual circumstances. As Levine insists, "What I am after here is physical reaction, not visual concern." This brings to mind some of the original intentions of the "Group de Recherches d'Art Visuel" in the early 1960s. The Paris-based group had sought to engage viewers kinesthetically, triggering involuntary responses through ambient-propelled "surprises." Levine's emphasis on visual disengagement is much more assured and iconoclastic; unlike the labyrinths of the GRAV, his possesses no individual work of art deflecting attention from the environment as a concerted experience. Questions have been raised concerning the implicit anti-art position connected with Levine's disposable and infinite series. These hardly qualify as anti-art as John Perreault has pointed out. Besides emphasizing that the context of art is fluid, they are a reductio ad absurdum of the entire market mechanism that controls art through the fiction of "high art." They do not deny art, they deny scarcity as a legitimate correlative of art. The components of systems-whether these are artistic or functional- have no higher meaning or value. Systems components derive their value solely through their assigned context. Therefore it would be impossible to regard a fragment of an art system as a work of art in itself-as say, one might treasure a fragment of one of the Parthenon friezes. This became evident in j December 1967 when Dan Flavin designed six walls with the same alternate pattern of "rose" and "gold" eight-foot fluorescent lamps. This "Broad Bright Gaudy Vulgar System," as Flavin called it, was installed in the new ; Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. The catalog accompanying the exhibition scrupulously resolves some of the important esthetic implications for modular systems The components of a particular exhibition upon its termination are replaced in another situation. Perhaps put into non-art as part of a different whole in a different future. Individual units possess no intrinsic significance beyond their concrete utility. It is difficult either to project into them extraneous qualities, a spurious insight, or for them to be appropriated for fulfillment or personal inner needs. The lights are untransformed. There are no symbolic transcendental redeeming or monetary added values present. . Flavin's work has progressed in the past six years from light sources mounted on flat reliefs, to compositions in fluorescent fixtures mounted directly on walls and floors, and recently to totalities such as his Chicago "walk-in" environment. While the majority of other light artists have continued to fabricate "light sculpture"-as if sculpture were the primary concern-Flavin has pioneered articulated illumination systems for given spaces. By the fact that most systems move or are in some way dynamic, kinetic art should be one of the more radical alternatives to the prevailing formalist esthetic. Yet this has hardly been the case. The best publicized kinetic sculpture is mainly a modification of static formalist sculpture composition. In most instances these have only the added bonus of motion, as in the case of Tinguely, Calder, Bury, and Rickey. Only Duchamp's kinetic output managed to reach beyond formalism. Rather than visual appearance there is an entirely different concern which makes kinetic art unique. This is the peripheral perception of sound and movement in space filled with activity. All too often gallery kinetic art has trivialized the more graspable aspect of motion: - this is motion internalized and experienced kinesthetically. There are a few important exceptions to the above. These include Otto Piene's early "Light Ballets" (1958-1962), the early (1956) water hammocks and informal on-going environments of Japan's Gutai group, some works by Len Lye, Bob Breer's first show of "Floats" (1965), Robert Whitman's laser show of "Dark" (1967), and most recently, Boyd Mefferd's "Strobe-Light Floor" (1968). Formalist art embodies the idea of deterministic relations between a composition's visible elements. But since the early 1960s Hans Haacke has depended upon the invisible components of systems. In a systems context, invisibility, or invisible parts, share equal importance with things seen. Thus air, water, steam, and ice have become major elements in his work. On both coasts this has precipitated interest in "invisible art" among a number of young artists. Some of the best of Haacke's efforts are shown outside the gallery. These include his Rain Tree, a tree dripping patterns of water; Sky Line, a nylon line kept aloft by hundreds of helium-filled white balloons; a weather balloon balanced over a jet of air; and a large-scale nylon tent with air pockets designed to remain in balance one foot off the ground. Haacke's systems have a limited life as an art experience, though some are quite durable. He insists that the need for empathy does not make his work function as with older art. Systems exist as on-going independent entities away from the viewer. In the systems hierarchy of control, interaction and autonomy become desirable values. In this respect Haacke's Photo-Electric Viewer Programmed Coordinate System is probably one of the most elegant, responsive environments made to date by an artist (certainly more sophisticated ones have been conceived for scientific and technical purposes). Boundary situations are central to his thinking. A "sculpture" that physically reacts to its environment is no longer to be regarded as an object. The range of outside factors affecting it, as well as its own radius of action, reach beyond the space it materially occupies. It thus merges with the environment in a relationship that is better understood as a "system" of interdependent processes. These processes evolve without the viewer's empathy. He becomes a witness. A system is not imagined, it is real. Tangential to this systems approach is Allan Kaprow's very unique ,concept of the Happening. In the past ten years Kaprow has moved the Happening from a rather self-conscious and stagy event to a strict and elegant procedure. The Happening now has a sense of internal logic which was lacking before. It seems to arise naturally from those same considerations that have crystallized the systems approach to environmental situations. As described by their chief inventor, the Happenings establish an indivisibility between themselves and everyday affairs; they consciously avoid materials and procedures identified with art; they allow for geographical expansiveness and mobility; they include experience and duration as part of their esthetic format; and they emphasize practical activities as the most meangingful mode of procedure. . . As structured events the Happenings are usually reversible. Alterations in the environment may be "erased" after the Happening, or as a part of the Happening's conclusion. While they may involve large areas of place, the format of the Happening is kept relatively simple, with the emphasis on establishing a participatory esthetic. The emergence of a "post-formalist esthetic" may seem to some to embody a kind of absolute philosophy, something which, through the nature of concerns cannot be transcended. Yet it is more likely that a "systems esthetic" will become the dominant approach to a maze of socio-technical conditions rooted only in the present. New circumstances will with time generate other major paradigms for the arts. For some readers these pages will echo feelings of the past. It may be remembered that in the fall of 1920 an ideological schism ruptured two factions of the Moscow Constructivists. The radical Marxists, led by Vladimir Tatlin, proclaimed their rejection of art's false idealisms. Establishing ourselves as "Productivists," one of their slogans became: "Down with guarding the traditions of art. Long live the constructivist technician." As a group dedicated to historical materialism and the scientific ethos, most of its members were quickly subsumed by the technological needs of Soviet Russia. As artists they ceased to exist. While the program might have d some basis as a utilitarian esthetic, it was crushed amid the Stalinist anti-intellectualism that followed. The reasons are almost self-apparent. Industrially underdeveloped, food and heavy industry remained the prime needs of the Soviet Union for the next forty years. Conditions and structural interdependencies that naturally develop in an advanced industrial state were then only latent. In retrospect it is doubtful if any group of artists had either the knowledge or political strength to meaningfully affect Soviet industrial policies. What emerged was another vein of formalist innovation based on scientific idealism; this manifested itself in the West under the leadership of the Constructivist emigres, Gabo and Pevsner. But for our time the emerging major paradigm in art is neither an ism nor a collection of styles. Rather than a novel way of rearranging surfaces and spaces, it is fundamentally concerned with the implementation of the art impulse in an advanced technological society. As a culture producer, man has traditionally claimed the title, Homo Faber: man the maker (of tools and images). With continued advances in the industrial revolution, he assumes a new and more critical function. As Homo Arbiter Formae his prime role becomes that of man the maker of esthetic decisions. These decisions- whether they are made concertedly or not-control the quality of all future life on the earth. Moreover these are value judgments dictating the direction of technological endeavor. Quite plainly such a vision extends beyond politlcal realities of the present. This cannot remain the case for long.
Ok - it's our turn at bat this Friday in the fabulous 2nd annual Issue Project Room "Points in a Circle" Festival... http://www.issueprojectroom.org/events.htmlWe've had a late breaking change in plan... new concept / new title... and a slightly different take on the 'Bicameral Research" approach to audio visual exploration. "Dream Baby Dream (Machine)" (premiere) will still involve 16 channels of sound and interactive stroboscopic light... however there will be a change in the basic configuration of information flow... The raw building material of the piece will be comprised from two primary analog sources: one sound - the other light: 1. Sound generated from the combination and difference of two room tuned analog sine wave oscillators variously filtered, delayed, and in this case digitally processed as well...  2. A video camera will be trained upon a "Dream Machine" (a type of 'analog' rotating lamp producing stroboscopic "flicker" originally designed and promoted by beat era artist Brion Gysin back in the early 60's) occupying a central position in the circular Issue Project Room... The unaltered video signal of the Dream Machine's oscillations will then be projected and also routed via MXP to provide a control signal to move individual sound elements around the 16 channel loud speaker matrix which will itself be divided into two 8 channel hemispheres to process stereo input sources... What results should be a multi-sensorial 'harmonic" meeting of oscillating waves of sound and light... The audience will be encouraged to experience the piece from floor level with eyes either open or closed... First on the program - starting @ 8:30 or 9:00 pm - will be a new piece by Stephan Moore the creator of IPR's 16 channel hemispherical system... The estimated start time of 'Dream Baby Dream (Machine)' will be in the 9:30 -10:00 pm range with an estimated duration of 50 to 60 minutes (so feel free to come by "late" if you need to be somewhere else earlier...) Friday June 22nd 8:30 PM ISSUE Project Room - 400 Carroll Street - Brooklyn, NY 11231 Telephone: 718-330-0313 $10 Brooklyn-bound F / G trains to Carroll St. 2.5 blocks from stop (between Bond & Nevins) 15 minutes from 2nd Ave. F stop 10 minutes from Metropolitan Ave. G stop Brooklyn-bound R train to Union St. Walk 3 blocks west; left onto Nevins; right onto Carroll
DAVID LINTON est de retour sous nos latitudes… Il sera l'invité d'honneur du festival FILMER LA MUSIQUE qui aura lieu du 5 au 9 juin prochain au Point Ephémère à Paris. Son solo multimedia, "The Bicameral Research Sound and Projection System", que certains d'entre nous ont eu le privilège d'apprécier au cours d'une soirée privée en mars dernier, fera l'ouverture dufestival le 5 juin à 20h (entrée libre). Le programme de Filmer la Musique est disponible à l'adresse suivante :http://www.pointephemere.org/activites/inclassables/cpFLM.pdfRendez-vous le 5 juin à 20h au Point Ephémère, 200 Quai de Valmy, 75010 Paris M°Jaurès. Contact : Anaïs Prosaïc <prosaic@wanadoo.fr> DAVID LINTON est l’un des parrains les plus respectés de la scène électronique new yorkaise. Depuis deux ans, il fait évoluer un spectacle audio-visuel solo, "The Bicameral Research Sound and Projection System", dont on peut voir des extraits sur son site internet. Entièrement généré par des procédés analogiques, une sorte de cinéma primitif psychédélique,entre théâtre d'illusion électro-mécanique et installation-projection où le signal video produit des sons qui produisent des images... Le tout en temps réel, live...Ce solo multimédia a été présenté de nombreuses fois à New York, mais aussi à Brème enAllemagne et à Marseille (Montévideo) en décembre 2006, à Amsterdam et à Paris (concert privé) en mars 2007. Le percussioniste Z’ev, le guitariste Jean-François Pauvros, le sound designer Palix, ont participé occasionnellement à la performance de David Linton. Des extraits deThe Bicameral Research Sound & Projection System sont disponibles sur le sites : http://bicameral.multiply.comhttp://youtube.com/bicameralresearch Attachment: resumecomDavid.pdf
On May 2, 2007, at 1:07 PM, s6k Entertainment wrote:
Hi All, s6k Media, Cynthia McKinney & All Things Cynthia McKinney came together to create Good Hair Gone Bad; The Roots of the Politics of Hair.
www.s6k.com/goodhair
This webpage is dedicated to the appreciation of natural Black American hair styles, braids as well as naturally curly hairstyles of ethnicities everywhere. We felt it was important to address this head-on...all pun intended!
Make no mistake, the politics of hair and ethnicity is no light topic................... etc
dL's response to s6k's darryl hell:
cool hey your highness here's 2 cents from the 'wigga' contingent..
in the summer of '67 everybody wanted to go 'natural'

don't remember that this pissed anyone off all that much really.... (well other than - 'those white dudes can't really play' - but that was later on)
anyway musta been the drugs *~)
on some live recordings you can hear jimi taunting noel between songs: like: "over there on the bass is bob dylan's grandmother" i believe there might've been some 'hair'y politics in that.... (or maybe it was just the 'granny' glasses?)
in later years poor loser noel would claim that it was his haircut that got him hired in the first place... but hey... at least he was alive long enough for the revelation... thou i dunno what's worse... 30 years of high 'process' maintenance.. or a natural headlong rush into the obligatory OD? either way it's a bad hair day kinda deal...
peeese n' £ø√E (english style) d
here's an occasion specific little ditty that i jotted out this morning.... hint* ( snap your fingers as you read this... in the same basic feel - although not the same line scheme as an old slack swing rhythm like in the tune "hey there little red riding hood") ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ i saw jeezus in the neighborhood down on the corner... he was lookin' good just playin' the pinball and drinkin' a coke and he looked right through you... before he spoke he said: "boy whatchu think you're doing here - ain't it clear by now that the end is near?" ' i didn't know what he meant so i didn't reply... but then he side slapped the table and let out a sigh and tossed back a swig from his bottle of coke 'n said: "life around here is just  one... big... joke..." then he popped the metal ball up against the glass 'n disappeared from this earth in a blinding flash...  well i got pretty scared - didn't know where to hide thought maybe he'd been called to his daddy's side cause something big was up - like our time had come in the snap between your index finger and thumb... but then i looked down upon the pinball table top the ball was rollin' still 'though the game had stopped 'n the flippers were 'flippin' with the ball in play... and i knew at this point that i'd have to stay just to finish this game now that jeezus was through... i had three balls left and nothing better...  to do.
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