- Intellect
Transcription
- Intellect
06 BOOKS MUSIC FILMS... decode magazine 21 / 2005 DECODE RECOMMENDS Above Super Furry Animals Right Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy DRAMA CITY GEORGE PELECANOS 'Lorenzo Brown opens his eyes'. So George Pelecanos introduces us to his new central character in the opening line of his 13th novel,'Drama City' (www.orionbooks.co.uk). Like his other books it's set in Pelecanos' native Washington DC. But this is not the Washington of policy wonks and the West Wing; this is largely working class Washington with its poverty,racial conflict,guns and drugs. It's a territory the author can convincingly transfer to the page given his own upbringing,and an earlier career that saw him employed as a bartender,line cook,dishwasher,shoe salesman (''Hey,I can still size a woman's feet with just a glance''), builder and shop manager. All this before working with the Coen Brothers on their first three films; writing scripts for TV, and working as a popular culture essayist. Indeed, Pelecanos' crime novels pages 6-9.indd 1 pulsate to the soundtrack of urban America,the music seemingly deployed as a sort of cultural signifier for the times and storylines. Check out the writer's own website (www.GeorgePelecanos.com) for his knowledge of, and passion for, the music that informs and runs through his work. Pelecanos' central characters - the hard drinking, weed smoking Greek/American PI Nick Stefanos ('A Firing Offense' onwards), upright black former cop Derek Strange and his uptight white partner, Terry Quinn ('Right as Rain'etc), for all their human flaws and frailties are just trying to do the right thing in a society gone wrong. And, George Pelecanos, via the terse,seering, naturalistic lines delivered by Stefanos, Strange, Quinn (and now Lorenzo Brown) can burn with his contempt for the inactions of the American political class in that other DC. Hard boiled, Right On and Highly Recommended. ● ‘PELECANOS’ CRIME NOVELS PULSATE TOTHE SOUNDTRACK OF URBAN AMERICA’ Summer’s here and the time is right… for making lists! Our find of the year are Lucky Luke, and their ‘Fear Eats The Soul’ is our so-far single of the year, a blissful and breathless folk whirl, flutes and strings unravelling like ribbons round a maypole. More of our 2005 first-half favourites seem to share this refusal to wear skinny ties. Sons and Daughters raid a whole library of old music- Celtic folk, country, rockabilly, blues- and put them through a filthy punk filter. ‘The Repulsion Box’ serves up a whole hoedown of these gleeful, blackhearted hollerings. The Duke Spirit’s whiff of pagan is explicit but tangible nonetheless, with their wood-carving record sleeves and air of sexual decadence. They add dashes of 1890’s Victoriana and 1980’s indie scuzz and their first record ‘Cuts Across the Land’ is dark fun indeed. We and everyone else have already sung hosannah for The Arcade Fire: they have a sort of spinoff record, Final Fantasy, or one Owen Pallett, who worked on ‘Funeral’ and supported them during their spring tour. His record ‘Has A Good Home’ is spellbinding: a long, eccentric diary made mostly with violin and voice. On a lighter note, we liked Annie’s wintry disco ‘Heartbeat’, and The Fog Band finally got round to putting out a single: ‘The Law of the Sea’ is live and loud on the Purr label. There were fine jobs from vintage acts: Teenage Fanclub’s ‘Manmade’ is reliably tasty, Bonnie ‘Prince’ 2005 MUSIC SO FAR BY JAKE WEBB Billy’s ‘Superwolf’ reliably dry and doomed, and there was a nice little curio from Gruff Rhys (‘Yr Atal Genhedlaeth’), singer with friendly pop dudes Super Furry Animals- their seventh lp is out later in the summer and will no doubt be top. Still mining for gold, we love Cajun Hart’s melancholy soul stomper ‘Got To Find A Way’ from the peerless ‘After Hours’ series, and Dottie & Millie’s ska-flecked ‘Talkin’ About My Baby’ from Andy Smith’s ‘Northern Soul’ compilation. Also on the classics bent, wait for the sun to get to work on our pasty British asses and dig out 13th Floor Elevators’ second ‘Easter Everywhere’: these Texan psychos’ sun-and-drugs fried psychedelia will really bake your goose. Finally, a heads-up. Out in the US last year, Espers’ self titled debut is getting a UK release in August. Their bewitched and barmy acid-folk is beautiful stuff, played on a dozen exotically named instruments, whose cumulative effect is overwhelming. Now we have run out of room, and still more music to listen to: all you need is music, sweet music! ● - MIKE HODGES Clockwise from above Owen Pallette /Espers / The Duke Spirit 9/7/05 3:55:29 pm 07 EVENTS EXHIBITIONS... ‘MAKE YOUR OWN 15 SECOND FILMIC MASTERPIECE: NOKIA SHORTS 2005 (BELOW) ‘SOME ARTISTS MAKE WORKING CAMERAS OUT OF BISCUIT TINS, CANVAS OR EVEN THEIR OWN MOUTHS’ HERE THERE BUT SOMEWHERE 20JUNE TO 31 OCTOBER THE EXPLORER’S CAFÉ BAR, CHEDDAR CAVES & GORGE Jeremy Creighton Herbert is a creative director & composer. ‘Here There but Somewhere’, already his second solo exhibition this year, covers the period between summer 2002 to the present and records time spent in California, Gibraltar, The Faroe Islands, Devon, Herefordshire & New York City, where he was either researching new artistic projects or directing, as was the case with the Faroe Islands where he had taken musicians & dancers to perform and lead educational workshops. A CD ‘here there but somewhere’ accompanies the show and is due for commercial release in mid August. The framed photographs are on sale at the Explorer’s Café-Bar Cheddar until October 31st. Open each day from 10- 5. Admission is free. Times: 10am-5pm Admission fee is Free FFI: 01934 742343 photos@cheddarcaves.co.uk pages 6-9.indd 2 Above Empire at night Below Port of San Francisco TIME OF LIGHT: AN EXHIBITION OF CONTEMPORARY PINHOLE PHOTOGRAPHY ALE AND PORTER ARTS, BRADFORD ON AVON JULY 16 TO AUGUST 20 Pinhole photography may not be the most glamourous or widely talked about form of picture-making but it draws a vast amount of interest from artists and photographers alike, inspired by the often unusual and unexpected results that can occur from the process. Time of Light, funded by Arts Council England, features the work of 15 artists using pinhole photography as their medium. No manipulations of a glass lens can achieve the same effect as a pinhole camera, where extreme depth of focus combined with a haunting unsharpness of a special kind, are the desired outcomes. Pinhole photography enables a range of expression and emotional subjectivity which more sophisticated cameras—with their emphasis on specific kinds of measurable sharpness, colour accuracy and information content— sometimes cannot convey. Some of the artists taking part in the exhibition make functional cameras out of biscuit tins, canvas or even their own mouths. Others experimentally subvert the latest technology by removing expensive lenses from digital cameras and piercing simple pinholes in the cameras’ body caps instead. Various pinhole cameras used by a broad range of artists including famed ‘time-splice’ creator Tim Macmillan, event organiser Fiona Haser and creative workhorse Justin Quinnell. ● For more information and to find out more about Pinhole Photography contact Fiona Haser: Tel: 01225 868919 / Email: info@aleandporter.org PHOTO CREDIT: BREAKER BY GINA GLOVER NOKIA SHORTS 2005 15 seconds. Long enough to roll up your sleeves or put your shoes on but surely not long enough to make a film? Well, Nokia seem to think so. Now in its third year, Nokia Shorts, is a unique competition which encourages the development of short films designed specifically to be played on mobile devices. This year's scheme is being championed by director Shane Meadows (Dead Man's Shoes) who will be inspiring potential entrants with his own 15 second film made using the Nokia N90 (plug, plug). To find out how to submit your 15 second film visit the Nokia Shorts website. Deadline for entries is Monday 15th August. ● www.nokiashorts.co.uk 9/7/05 3:56:34 pm 08 GIGS ART CAMPAIGN decode magazine 21 / 2005 DECODE RECOMMENDS Above Jonathan S. Foer Below Curb Your Enthusiasm ‘WATCHING BEN STILLER AND LARRY DAVID ARGUE IS SO FUNNY THIS VIEWER ALMOST WEED HIS PANTS’ CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM BOOK EXTREMELY LOUD & INCREDIBLY CLOSE JONATHAN SAFRAN FOER Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close: A Novel, by Jonathan Safran Foer Reviews have been mixed for Foer’s second novel, the story of a precocious nine year olds journey through the five boroughs of a post 9/11 New York to discover the secret of a key bequeathed to him by his father. It may not better Everything Is Illuminated, but then, what on earth could? DVD CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM SERIES 4 DVD, RELEASED 26 SEPTEMBER 2005 If you haven’t yet tuned in to see Larry David get himself into all sorts of awkward situations for our amusement then this would be a great place to start. It’s like One Foot In The Grave meets Seinfeld and is quite simply the greatest American comedy series ever made. Guest stars in series 4 include Ben Stiller and Mel Brooks. Watching Stiller and David argue is so funny this viewer almost weed his pants. MUSIC NIZLOPI JCB SONG This two piece band from the Midlands have hit the mother-load with this sweet ditty about a five year old hitching a ride on his Dad’s JCB. On it’s own its magnificent, it’s the honesty of the Streets to a folk melody and works extraordinarily well. But, put it together with cutest and coolest video in the world, and you have something truly special. See it at www. jcbsong.co.uk/jcbvideo GIG TOM BAXTER THE FLEECE, BRISTOL 10 OCTOBER 2005 Book early for one of the UK’s finest singer-songwriters in concert in October. Baxter is bound to hit the big-time and he’s renowned for putting everything – and we mean everything – into his gigs. ● EXHIBITION BRUCE BERNARD: ARTISTS AND THEIR STUDIOS ROOK LANE CHAPEL, FROME 17 SEPT. – 16 OCTOBER Bruce Bernard (1928-2000) is probably best known as a Picture Editor and curator of photography. A voracious socialite, he frequented the pubs and clubs of bohemian Soho, where he met many of the artists who were to become his lifelong friends, and subsequent subjects for his portraiture work. His acutely critical but sensitive eye was legendary and his massive anthology of photographs recording the twentieth century, Century, (published 1999) has been a runaway best-seller .This show, which comes to Rook Lane Chapel in Frome as part of a Hayward Gallery touring exhibition, features 24 photographs that include six unforgettable studies of Francis Bacon in 1984 (one of which appears above), and an equally powerful series of portraits of Lucian Freud from the 1990s. ● Telephone: 01373 468030 Hayward Gallery online: www. hayward.org.uk CAMPAIGN FRANK WATER ETHICAL BOTTLED WATER Run by a small group of volunteers who rely solely on public support, FRANK is a non-profit company, selling quality Devonshire spring water in Bristol and the South West, donating all the net profits to support clean water projects in India and Africa. By attending numerous events in the Bristol area to find support and interest, the company has been given permission to supply the Ashton Court Festival, Bristol Harbour Festival, the Balloon Fiesta, the Big Green Gathering and be the main water provider at the Greenbelt Festival. With no marketing or PR budget, FRANK are always on the lookout for people or organisations that can help get the word out (hence you reading this piece!). if you like their story, and are interested in helping them to help developing countries have access to clean water, then contact Katie Harrison, the project director: katie@frankwater.com www.frankwater.com ● ‘HIS ACUTELY CRITICAL BUT SENSITIVE EYE WAS LEGENDARY’ FILM EVENT SUPER8STATION 2 PHOENIX WHARF, BRISTOL 24, 25, 30, 31 JULY Fed up of your local multiplex showing the same old dross? An endless array of shootem-up, blow-em-up, no-brain, plot contrived drivel slowly sapping your faith in the medium? Well, have no fear, The Super 8 Film Festival is back for a second year with a stellar programme that you, yes you, can have an input on. Audiences can choose over 200 submitted works from a catalogue that include art, travel, documentary, family, holiday, found, commercial, animated or conceptual films. Entry is free and refreshments are on hand so what are you waiting for? ● BRUCE BERNARD Tom Baxter pages 6-9.indd 3 9/7/05 3:57:47 pm YES, I WOULD LIKE TO RECEIVE BACK ISSUE(S) OF DECODE MAGAZINE BACK ISSUES ORDER FORM ISSUE NUMBER(S): NAME: ADDRESS: FEEL LIKE YOU'VE MISSED OUT? DECODE BACK ISSUES CAN HELP. 20 ISSUES, SPANNING 3 YEARS AND COVERING A WORLD OF INSPIRATIONAL CONTENT FROM LOCAL, NATIONAL & INTERNATIONAL CREATIVES. VISIT: WWW.DECODEMEDIA.COM POSTCODE: TELEPHONE: E-MAIL: THE COST: £2.95 PER ISSUE: PLEASE RETURN THIS FORM WITH PAYMENT MADE OUT TO INTELLECT LTD. PO BOX 862, BRISTOL BS99 1DE. PLEASE INDICATE HERE IF YOU DO NOT WANT TO RECEIVE DETAILS ABOUT FORTHCOMING DECODE NEWS & EVENTS pages 6-9.indd 4 9/7/05 3:58:44 pm