Rumore / Musica : presse di vinile
I seguenti video mostrano il funzionamento di alcune macchine per il pressaggio dei dischi in vinile.
Filmed at Disco-Press, Belgium. September 25 2002
Fabricação de discos de vinil na Polysom, a última e única do Brasil, em Belford Roxo.
This promotional short for Irving Mills' short-lived Master
and Variety labels not only gives us a glimpse of Ellington and his
band in the actual Master/Variety studios (as opposed to a soundstage
set), but is one of the very few film accounts of how records were
recorded, plated and pressed in the long-ago age of analog, shellac and
78 rpm. Narration is provided by pioneer radio announcer Alois Havrilla.
Video for Dutch artist Floris, shot on location in Europe's biggest vinyl factory in Haarlem.
Noise music
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Noise( music ) is music composed of non-traditional musical elements, and lacks the structure associated with Western Music. A noise musician may incorporate, for example; manipulated recordings, static, feedback, live machine sounds, circuit bent instruments, non-musical vocal elements, or anything that makes a sound, etc.
Practitioners themselves do not generally refer to it as "Noise Music"; they just call it "Noise", tacking the term "music" on the end is generally only done when talking to those unfamiliar with the genre
|
Contents [hide] |
[edit] History
[edit] Luigi Russolo
Luigi Russolo, a Futurist painter of the very early 20th century, was perhaps the first Noise artist. His 1913 manifesto L'Arte de Rumori, translated as The Art of Noises, stated that the industrial revolution had given modern men a greater capacity to appreciate more complex sounds. Russolo found traditional melodic music confining and envisioned noise music as its future replacement. He designed and constructed a number of noise-generating devices called Intonarumori and assembled a noise orchestra to perform with them. A performance of his Gran Concerto Futuristico (1917) was met with strong disapproval and violence from the audience, as Russolo himself had predicted. None of his intoning devices have survived, though recently some have been reconstructed and used in performances. Although Russolo's works bear little resemblance to modern noise music, his pioneering creations cannot be overlooked as an essential stage in the evolution of this genre, and many artists are now familiar with his manifesto.
Other early composers
Composer Arnold Schoenberg's proclaimed "Emancipation of the dissonance" (the idea that music could just as well be based upon dissonance as consonance) in the early 20th century was probably the origin of noise music. By the 1920s, composers (in particular Edgard Varèse and George Antheil) began to use early mechanical musical instruments--such as the player piano and the siren--to create music that referenced the noise of the modern world. In the 1930s, under the influence of Henry Cowell in San Francisco, Lou Harrison and John Cage began composing music for "junk" percussion ensembles — scouring junkyards and Chinatown antique shops for appropriately tuned brake drums, flower pots, gongs, and more. Cage started his Imaginary Landscape series in 1939, which combined elements like recorded sound, percussion, and (in the case of Imaginary Landscape #4) twelve radios. After the second world war, other composers (including G.M. Koenig, Iannis Xenakis, and Karlheinz Stockhausen) started to experiment with sound synthesis, tape machines and radio equipment to produce electronic music, often with very noisy sounds. Much of this music has proven influential on the creators of noise music.
With the advent of the radio, Pierre Schaeffer coined the term musique concrete to refer to the peculiar nature of sounds on tape, separated from the source that generated them initially. His ideas about non-referential sounds take their most extreme form in noise music, which often blurs or obscures the actions which produced the sounds while also suggesting the physicality of sound itself.
The sudden affordability of home recording technology in the 1970s with the simultaneous influence of punk rock established a new aesthetic and instigated what is commonly referred to as noise music today. When anyone could produce noise, and anyone could record and distribute it, then noise music provided a way for any person (artist or non-artist) to experiment with sound as a painter might with visual material.
[edit] Boyd Rice
American archivist and writer Boyd Rice has been a seminal influence on Noise music. Starting in 1975, Rice began experimenting with the possibilities of pure sound. In his live performances, he attached an electric fan to an electric guitar and also used an electric shoe polisher as an instrument. He created extremely loud, cascading walls of noise and played pieces of recorded conversations, news reports, and music just beneath the threshold of comprehensibility. Rice has created works that combine brutal soundscapes with various poetics. He has also structured noise elements into harmonious, rhythmic pieces that defy easy categorization.
[edit] Japan
Originally influenced by the sounds of European bands like Whitehouse and the Italian non-musician Maurizio Bianchi/M. B., Japanese noise artists pushed this approach to an extreme of loudness and density, which in turn became a major influence on western noise bands. Sometimes known as "Japanoise" (a pun not just in English, but even in Japanese: ジャパノイズ ), it is usually associated with "harsh" characteristics including walls of white noise, non-linear pulses, arrhythmic beats, distorted sound loops, unintelligible dialogue, and sirens.
Since the late 1980s this Japanese style has been probably the most prolific and noticeable part of the Noise Music scene. Likewise the popularity and prolific output of musicians such as the aforementioned Noise Music figurehead/posterboy Merzbow, C.C.C.C. and other names like KK Null, Masonna, The Gerogerigegege and Hanatarash (founded by Boredoms frontman, Yamatsuka Eye) have made Japan something of a Mecca for many noise fans. In terms of sales, Noise music is not particularly more popular in Japan than in Europe or America. However, there is perhaps a higher level of recognition from crossover with mainstream genres and events, such as fashion shows or dance performances with music by noise artists, and a comparatively large number of live noise performances are held in Tokyo.
Recently the noise scene has given birth to a form of freely improvised electronic music known by the press as onkyo-kei, with leading lights including the aforementioned Sachiko M.
[edit] Albums and non-noise influences
Lou Reed's double-LP album Metal Machine Music released in 1975 is an early, well-known example of noise music.
It is very likely that Reed was aware of the electronic drone music produced in the mid-60s by his Velvet Underground cohort John Cale with artists such as Tony Conrad and LaMonte Young (see the CD release of Inside the Dream Syndicate Volume 1: Day of Niagara).
In 1988, RRRecords released a series of anti-records in which ordinary vinyl LPs and, in some cases, flexidiscs were physically transformed into noise records.
[edit] Mixing of forms
In Canada, the Nihilist Spasm Band has been performing acoustic-based noise music since 1965. The aptly named noise rock fuses rock to noise, usually with recognisable "rock" instrumentation, but with greater use of distortion and electronic effects, varying degrees of atonalism, improvisation and white noise. One of the best-known bands of this genre is Boredoms. This style is more like a "traditional" band compared to abstract or electronic noise and sometimes bears a similarity to grindcore. The name noisecore is also used to refer to noise-influenced hardcore techno or rock.
Fans of the genre sometimes distinguish between "harsh noise", the more well-known super-dense and abrasive sounds of Merzbow, Masonna and similar artists, and other loose sub-genres like "rhythmic noise", "power electronics", "free noise" and so on. Confusingly, some industrial techno sub-genres have very similar names, i.e. power noise. Power noise is comparatively conventionally musical, and is not to be confused with power electronics, the synthesizer based subgenre of abstract and experimental noise performed by Whitehouse. Free noise came equally out of the free jazz traditions, or at least its outer boundaries such as Albert Ayler and John Zorn, as its harsh noise influences and closely aligns itself with similar methods of long, interactive improvisations between players; examples include Borbetomagus and WRONG.
One possible influence of noise music has been to change the way of thinking about what is "musical" or "unmusical" noise, and recently many different genres, such as techno and hip-hop, include some kinds of sounds that could be viewed as "noise".
[edit] Methods and Inspirations
In much the same way the early modernists were inspired by primitive art, some contemporary noisicians are excited by the archaic audio technologies, such as wire-recorders, the 8-track cartridge, and vinyl records. For instance, some still choose to release their work on vinyl. Many artists not only build their own noise-generating devices, but even their own specialized recording equipment[citation needed].
Many performances by noise artists are extremely loud and can be near-deafening. The frequencies used by many are both shrieking and overpowering.
David Jackman said his first noise performance, albeit unintentional, was when he was 14 years old. He and his father demolished an old piano using an axe and hammer. Jackman called it "a huge racket".[citation needed]
An outburst of emotion is the effect given by the performances of the group C.C.C.C., headed by former Japanese porn-star Mayuko Hino. One senses a socio-political fetishism with the work of Con-Dom, formed by Mike Dando to explore the many sides of personal faith. In a sensuous merging of body and machine, the French sound-composer Manon Anne Gillis gives birth to her noise. Intimately demonstrated by a 1995 performance, in which she kept pulling out, from under her dress, strands of audio tape accompanied by the sound of recorded material being yanked over the playback heads of a tape-deck.
Many noise artists are fixated on either one sound, or one type of sound. A.M.K. uses, as his only sound source, the montage. His montages are flexi-discs that he cuts up and recombines and then plays on regular turntables. Even his CD releases sound just like broken records. A.M.K. started to cut up readymade flexi-discs in 1986. Eleven years later he would start to record and release his own limited-edition flexi-discs for the sole purpose of montaging them.
Zipper Spy is an avid collector of zippers. She also loves the sound zippers make. Amplified zippers may not be the only sound source she plays with, but zippers are nearly always the dominant ingredient in her compositions. When asked why she loves zippers so much, she simply replied; "I hear zippers in everything."[citation needed]
Others base their sound on the type of audio equipment they build for themselves. Both Chop Shop and Speculum Fight are examples of this approach. Chop Shop was formed by Scott Konzelmann. Konzelmann builds speakers. Since '87 he's been developing his speaker constructions to focus the listener into linking physical sounds through visible sources[1]. Konzelmann thinks of it as a kind of ventriloquism.[citation needed]
Speculum Fight, otherwise known as Damion Romero, presumes to deal with tones and frequencies that are intended to be seductive to the listener. To achieve these soundscapes, Romero uses custom-made microphones, and antique audio test-equipment re-wired as feedback generators.
The noise-poet blackhumour, who has been active since the mid-80's[citation needed], uses only recordings of human voice. Some noise critics[citation needed] have described blackhumour's work as a hybrid of noise and literature. However, blackhumour has stated on many occasions that he sees his noise as an extension of literature. Godzilla, not literature, is the inspiration for Daniel Menche's recent interest in human voice. Since 1988 Menche has carefully crafted noise from sound sources like his heart, lungs, chest, and fist.
Kimihide Kusafuka, better known as K2[citation needed], originally came onto the scene in 1984, just to disappear from it a few years later. He returned in 1993 after graduated as a pathologist. K2 sees no difference between the act of making noise and the act of science. K2 says he practices a kind of alchemy through his noise. He aims to metamorphosize himself with both the insight he gets from his scientific experiments, and the emotional strength he gains from performing and listening to noise. "Noise..", as K2 puts it, "can not be refused by either ears and heads!"[citation needed]
GX Jupitter-Larsen enjoyed listening to the scratches etched across the grooves of a record much more than the recorded material stamped onto it. Thus the self-titled, silent vinyl record "The Haters", which he released in 1983, comes with instructions that informs the holder that they must first complete the record by scratching it before it can be listened to.
[edit] References
- ^ Chop Shop (23five.org). Retrieved on 2008-01-14.
[edit] See also
- Harsh noise
- List of noise musicians
- Japanoise
- List of Japanoise artists
- Free improvisation
- Sonic artifact
- Made one shot
[edit] External links
- alphamanbeast's noise directory An information base with links to artists and labels of the broader noise music genre, as well as miscellaneous related resources.
- Full With Noise: Theory and Japanese Noise Music Essay about Japanese noise and the theory behind noise.
- Torben Sangild: "The Aesthetics of Noise"
- Noiseweb
- Alternate list of noise bands created by noise artists for noise artists
- Russolo's Intonarumori
| [hide]
|
|---|
| Musique concrète - Noise |
Categories: Articles that may contain original research since September 2007 | Articles lacking sources from August 2007 | All articles lacking sources | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since June 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements since January 2008 | Industrial music | Japanese music | Noise music
da http://gpinformation.blogspot.com/2007/10/book-paul-hegarty-noise-music-history.html
Paul Hegarty: “Noise/Music: A History”
Paul Hegarty is a philosophy lecturer at University College Cork, with an interest in what he wouldn't call the genre of noise (“music”). A book either giving a history of noise's development, or an exegesis of its socio-philosophical implications would have been interesting. Unfortunately, this is neither.
The opening chapter sets off at a fine intellectual gallop "for Kant ... for Russolo. for Cage... Attali too. As... Ardono" – this is from a single page! Elsewhere, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Bataille, Hegel et al. All appear… a little too like the first attempt at a doctorial thesis, then in later chapters citation either runs out completely or revolves around another of Hegarty's interests – Adorno on Jazz, but not the Jazz here, (and why Jazz?). Bataille on Sade. There are inclusions – too many: Improv, Punk, The Grateful Dead, Prog Rock! and self confessed notable exclusions – and others not Reich's pendulum music Lou Reed's “Metal Machine”, The Gamelan, Harry Partch. The whole New Zealand phenomenon.
How Hegarty gets away with this derives from two of his arguments, first that anything can potentially be called "noise", as in his long example of Yes's Tales of Topographic Oceans – well yes! –, but no mention then of Abba or Mantovarni. And secondly, that the avant-garde in music has often been described pejoratively in its beginnings as “noise”, or, as in the famous case of Sir Thomas Beecham, as shit – but this is beside the point. The point being "noise" applies to a particular phenomenon in music as an identifier and not a critique (Pop Art is not Pop Art because it is or was “popular”).
We know, and Hegarty certainly does, that such games can be played with definitions – this is Wittgenstein's famous “game”. To conflate the genre of noise, the “thing” with the same word applied as an attribute or subjective opinion of any music or sound is something of what I would call an ontological mistake of the first order. Or is it a strategy because it allows Hegarty to discuss any artist he wants to.
For instance, the space given to Cage and his silences – relevant by being irrelevant to the point of being a binary opposite – he might say? When after several chapters we get to actual Japnoise, and a further chapter on Merzbow, the irrelevance of much what went before becomes obvious. But here Hegarty fails to deliver what the patient reader might want – might expect, a detailed account – it’s all apologies. «This chapter will not so much deal with the specificity of noise music from Japan».
He then goes on to a consideration of McLuchan on globalization, to raise the question: «what kind of world is in or behind world music». «World music»? I'm confused? This is a very confused history, and one which fails to pick up on the development of noise from Japan back to the USA and Europe, where it has been taken up as a definite genre, having its own festivals, labels, retail outlets both on and off-line, and even now its own proto-industry of designed and manufactured devices marketed by such as noisefx.com.
Widespread broadcasting on US University campus's and across Europe as radio and webcasts, of dedicated websites to the promotion of noise labels such as PacRec, artists like Wiesse and The Rita.
As a history the book this is chronology flawed, as a serious study the attempt to buttress certain artists (irrelevant to the genre in many cases) by relationships to certain philosophers seems strained. The book lacks structure and appears more like a set of articles, some written in an academic style, others not.
A detailed chronology, discology would have been useful. Works are referred to where perhaps a copy of the score might have been illuminating, even some pictures would help what is aesthetically a remarkably dull book. An accompanying CD or at least pointers to MP3s on an associated site would also have helped. I think that there is a sufficient body of material, artists, events, labels, online and actual retail outlets, manufacturers, chronologies and general dissemination of what can be called noise to warrant a study which does not piggy back on to it philosophical critiques of Cage, Jazz, Prog Rock, Punk and Rap, amongst others. Unfortunately, that's what Hegarty appears to do.
Maybe we can justify such irrelevance in this communication (of a history of noise music) as being itself yet another example of “noise”, but the genre of noise music is nothing to do with the unwarranted junk found in communication, or if it is, how is it, and why is it?
[Book by Continuum > hagshadow@hotmail.com]
Your friendly neighborhood THX 1138
xxx
Pecore Elettriche - Tributo a Philip K. Dick (1982-2002)
Da un comunicato di Mondi'd'oro Productions dell'anno 2003:
***FOR DICKHEADS ONLY!!!***
DEDICATO A PHIL DICK
Circa un anno fa Murad Reis ha avuto l'idea di pubblicare un CD dedicato a Phil Dick (chi non lo conoscesse può trovare un intero database sul sito http://www.philipkdick.com) intitolato PECORE ELETTRICHE.
Il cd è stato presentato a Firenze il 2 settembre 2002 in piazza dei Ciompi.
english text:
From a press release of Mondi'd'oro Productions of 2003:
*** DICKHEADS FOR ONLY !!!***
DEDICATED TO PHIL DICK
About a year ago Murad Reis had the idea of publishing a CD dedicated to Phil Dick (who do not know his work can find an entire database on the site http://www.philipkdick.com) entitled PECORE ELETTRICHE (ELECTRIC SHEEP).
The CD was presented in Florence on September 2, 2002 in Piazza de' Ciompi.
LIVE SET PERSONNEL:
Murad Reis - 10 watt punk synth, electro snare, drum machine
Syd MigX - vocals, 10 watt punk synth
THX - giradischi, cd
W J Meatball - giradischi, cd
Vortex - giradischi, cd
Miki Semascus - giradischi, cd
DJ Coupe - giradischi, cd
"Space Is All A Church And Stars Are Windows" Genesis P-Orridge
artwork and packaging by Serena Gnapgirl
track 01 takepkd - t..> 20-Jan-2008 21:24 3.2M
track 02 blueboyesca..> 20-Jan-2008 21:22 421K
track 03 picscic - c..> 20-Jan-2008 21:21 2.1M
track 04 1982-2002 -..> 20-Jan-2008 21:20 3.3M
track 05 flow my tea..> 20-Jan-2008 21:17 4.8M
track 06 martian tim..> 20-Jan-2008 21:13 3.9M
track 07 dickoder - ..> 20-Jan-2008 21:10 2.0M
track 08 pkd10 - edo..> 20-Jan-2008 21:08 7.4M
track 09 half of the..> 20-Jan-2008 21:02 1.7M
track 10 benzedrin -..> 20-Jan-2008 21:01 3.3M
track 11 android's d..> 20-Jan-2008 20:58 3.2M
track 12 beepbopaloo..> 20-Jan-2008 20:55 704K
track 13 grain delay..> 20-Jan-2008 20:55 5.2M
track 14 simulacra -..> 20-Jan-2008 20:51 5.9M
track 15 nobody know..> 20-Jan-2008 20:46 3.0M
track 16 son'o'morni..> 20-Jan-2008 20:43 1.3M
track 17 lincoln - c..> 20-Jan-2008 20:42 2.5M
track 18 dickoderina..> 20-Jan-2008 20:40 857K
track 19 autofac - m..> 20-Jan-2008 20:40 2.8M
track 20 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:37 145K
track 21 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:37 123K
track 22 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:37 119K
track 23 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:37 167K
track 24 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:37 119K
track 25 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:37 153K
track 26 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:36 170K
track 27 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:36 337K
track 28 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:36 44K
track 29 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:36 264K
track 30 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:36 223K
track 31 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:30 298K
track 32 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:30 305K
track 33 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:29 178K
track 34 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:29 277K
track 35 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:29 330K
track 36 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:29 218K
track 37 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:28 158K
track 38 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:28 269K
track 39 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:28 196K
track 40 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:28 349K
track 41 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:27 323K
track 42 scanner dar..> 20-Jan-2008 20:27 285K
uranus f.jpg 20-Jan-2008 20:26 101K
uranus i.jpg 20-Jan-2008 20:27 239K
uranus r.jpg 20-Jan-2008 20:27 147K
2000 maniax ftp site:
info:
http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_K._Dick
http://www.geocities.com/snoyd2001/anti2.html
http://www.devo.com/bladerunner/
http://gadir2k4.tripod.com/dickcionario.html
http://www.intercom.publinet.it/dick.htm
http://www.geocities.com/snoyd2001/panico1.html
http://www.philipkdickfans.com/weirdo.htm
your friendly neighborhood THX 1138
xxx
qui sotto c'e' una storia disegnata da R. Crumb: "The religious experience of Philip K.Dick" (clicca sull'immagine qui sotto per leggere il fumetto)
blade runner - the replicant site - http://www.blade-runner.it/
cyfi - http://www.personal.psu.edu/dept/scifi/core.shtml
Dome La Muerte & The Diggers + The Headbangers live photos
DOME & THE DIGGERS live al CPA Firenze sud (12 gennaio 2008)
foto e video: Kate e THX (2008)
foto:
ssl21225.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:06 2.9M
ssl21226.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:08 2.8M
ssl21227.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:10 2.9M
ssl21228.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:11 2.7M
ssl21229.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:13 2.9M
ssl21230.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:15 2.6M
ssl21231.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:16 2.9M
ssl21232.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:18 2.6M
ssl21235.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:20 2.7M
ssl21236.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:21 2.6M
ssl21237.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:23 2.6M
ssl21238.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:24 2.7M
ssl21243.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:26 2.9M
ssl21244.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:28 2.9M
ssl21246.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:29 2.7M
ssl21247.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:31 2.7M
ssl21248.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:33 2.6M
ssl21250.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:34 2.5M
ssl21251.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:36 2.6M
ssl21252.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:37 2.7M
video:
ssl21234.avi 18-Jan-2008 20:38 101M
ssl21239.avi 18-Jan-2008 20:55 27M
ssl21240.avi 18-Jan-2008 21:34 68M
ssl21241.avi 18-Jan-2008 22:24 85M
ssl21242.avi 18-Jan-2008 22:44 33M
ssl21249.avi 18-Jan-2008 23:40 97M
THE HEADBANGERS live al CPA Firenze sud (12 gennaio 2008)
foto: Kate (2008)
ssl21216.jpg 18-Jan-2008 18:52 2.9M
ssl21217.jpg 18-Jan-2008 18:53 2.9M
ssl21218.jpg 18-Jan-2008 18:55 2.7M
ssl21219.jpg 18-Jan-2008 18:57 2.6M
ssl21220.jpg 18-Jan-2008 18:58 2.5M
ssl21221.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:00 2.7M
ssl21222.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:01 2.7M
ssl21223.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:03 2.7M
ssl21224.jpg 18-Jan-2008 19:05 2.7M
2000 maniax ftp site: http://www.autistici.org/2000-maniax/
abandonware/ 14-Jan-2008 01:05 -
foto 2008/ 18-Jan-2008 18:50 -
frigidaire scans/ 15-Jan-2008 20:20 -
images/ 14-Jan-2008 00:50 -
music/ 31-Dec-2007 15:57 -
php-fastcgi/ 26-Dec-2007 15:44 -
texts/ 14-Jan-2008 02:58 -
video/ 18-Jan-2008 18:16 -
2: Dome & the Diggers, Fase 4, Aquila, the Ravings, Syd, Tetano, JP
xxx
Un rocker europeo a New York
"Un rocker europeo a New York" Articolo di Patrick Eudeline. Pubblicato da Actuel (in Italia su Frigidaire n° 37).
L'autore parla dell'invasione di dischi inglesi nelle classifiche americane (Police, Culture Club, Eurythmics), della comercializzazione del rock'n'roll, della diffusione del rap e del writing in Europa, Johnny Thunders (R.I.P.), ex chitarrista dei New York Dolls, parla del suo soggiorno a Parigi dei rockers francesi e delle sue relazioni con loro...
Le foto di Lorenzo Taiuti ritaggono i magazzini abbandonati del molo 34 a Manhattan (Tribeca Village) decorati dai graffiti.
link
Actuel et la presse underground http://paris70.free.fr/actuel.htm
Actuel su Wikipedia http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Actuel
Your friendly neighborhood THX 1138
xxx
BURP NIGHT venerdi' 18 gen @ CPA Fi-sud
Venerdi' 18 gennaio 2008 BURP ENTERPRISE presenta:

(comix by Matpogo & Nicotina)
menu:
Nicotina King Of Casual
Jealousy Party Queens Of Punca
Pangolinorchestra' Ambassadors Of Dada
live @ CPA Firenze Sud; via Villamagna 27a, bus 3, 8, 23, 31, 32, 33
zona acquedotto Gavinana
bonus comix: Big Dogga
(comix by Matpogo)
Your friendly neighborhood THX 1138
xxx
Soft Focus: Genesis P-Orridge Part 1, 2, 3, 4

Genesis P-Orridge photographed by Dan Mandell
Genesis P-Orridge, lead singer of TG, PTV and Thee Majesty, speaks of the broke up of TG in San Francisco, his old friend Ian Curtis, Psychic TV, Manchester, and other things...
Aggiunto: 1 mese faVisualizzazioni: 1123 Aggiunto: 1 mese fa
Visualizzazioni: 816 Aggiunto: 1 mese fa
Visualizzazioni: 616 Aggiunto: 1 mese fa
Visualizzazioni: 568
for more info on Gen:
Genesis P-Orridge - Esoterrorist.txt
http://www.genesisp-orridge.com/
http://fusionanomaly.net/genesisporridge.html
http://www.disinfo.com/archive/pages/dossier/id220/pg1/index.html
http://www.losingtoday.com/it/features.php?review_id=386&band_alpha=g
xxx
The Last Days Of Jesus + Scarlet And The Spookie Spiders live

The Last Days Of Jesus in concerto a Firenze sabato 5 gennaio 2008
tutte le foto: THX e Kate (2008); clikka sui link per visualizzare le foto
The Last Days Of Jesus:
01010001.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:28 35K
01010002.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:28 50K
01010003.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:28 46K
01010004.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:28 28K
01010005.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:28 40K
01010006.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:28 40K
01010007.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:28 46K
01010008.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:29 51K
01010009.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:29 53K
01010010.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:29 48K
01010011.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:29 24K
01010012.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:29 47K
01010013.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:29 43K
01010014.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:29 52K
01010015.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:29 51K
01010016.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:30 50K
01010017.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:30 51K
01010018.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:30 50K
01010019.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:30 51K
01010020.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:30 51K
01010021.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:30 49K
01010022.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:30 54K
01010023.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:30 52K
01010024.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:30 49K
01010025.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:31 39K
01010026.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:31 45K
01010027.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:31 20K
01060028.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:31 17K
01060029.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:31 17K
01060030.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:31 183K
01060031.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:32 176K
01060032.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:32 48K
01060033.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:32 54K
01060034.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:32 58K
Scarlet And The Spookie Spiders:
01060035.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:32 50K
01060036.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:32 48K
01060037.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:32 55K
01060038.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:32 42K
01060039.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:32 36K
01060040.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:32 51K
01060041.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:33 50K
01060042.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:33 47K
01060043.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:33 46K
01060044.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:33 53K
01060045.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:33 55K
01060046.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:33 54K
01060047.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:33 53K
01060048.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:33 52K
01060049.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:33 52K
01060050.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:33 57K
01060051.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:34 57K
01060052.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:34 56K
01060053.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:34 56K
01060054.jpg 07-Jan-2008 14:34 50K
dedicato a Sandro Vichi a.k.a. Aquila
200 maniax ftp:
http://www.autistici.org/2000-maniax/
abandonware/ 07-Feb-2008 16:31 -
foto 2008/ 04-Feb-2008 10:19 -
frigidaire scans/ 05-Feb-2008 15:14 -
images/ 05-Feb-2008 13:32 -
music/ 20-Jan-2008 20:25 -
php-fastcgi/ 26-Dec-2007 15:44 -
texts/ 06-Feb-2008 23:03 -
video/ 07-Feb-2008 12:31 -
xxx
2000 maniax ftp site
2000 maniax ftp web site url:
http://www.autistici.org/2000-maniax/
2000 maniax mp3 (http://www.autistici.org/2000-maniax/music/)
1997.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:31 2.7M
2000 mnx cpa 11 6 20..> 27-Dec-2007 21:48 8.1M
Bosconian2bis.mp3 31-Dec-2007 15:56 1.1M
arcad1.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:31 261K
artificial.mp3 29-Dec-2007 20:56 5.9M
astral_drumz.mp3 31-Dec-2007 15:54 247K
bali.mp3 31-Dec-2007 15:55 787K
cabby.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:51 865K
chorus2.mp3 29-Dec-2007 17:38 486K
controlz.mp3 31-Dec-2007 15:56 1.1M
datatrash 1.mp3 29-Dec-2007 20:59 5.4M
device.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:49 7.2M
dickoder.mp3 29-Dec-2007 17:38 467K
different shox.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:03 6.6M
direct source.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:04 1.0M
duke t2.mp3 29-Dec-2007 17:42 6.0M
dusted.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:26 2.3M
ekzistans.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:22 1.1M
electronic resistanc..> 29-Dec-2007 17:48 9.6M
gaz.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:15 709K
hal_again.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:33 867K
heavy mental.mp3 29-Dec-2007 17:53 8.0M
invaders.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:55 765K
lofi rave.mp3 27-Dec-2007 22:23 9.3M
longinottik.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:57 4.2M
magnetosphere.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:06 865K
noiser.mp3 31-Dec-2007 15:57 889K
noise suite 1.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:21 25M
noise suite 2.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:31 18M
nora 1-20 mp3/ 27-Dec-2007 22:42 -
prob.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:20 252K
progetto rumore 1.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:34 4.5M
progetto rumore 2.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:35 1.8M
progetto rumore 3.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:37 3.2M
progetto rumore 4.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:41 6.2M
progetto rumore 5.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:42 2.0M
progetto rumore 6.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:44 1.9M
progetto rumore 7.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:45 3.3M
progetto rumore 8.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:47 2.4M
psyche.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:14 2.6M
renegade voyager.mp3 29-Dec-2007 17:55 2.5M
rhytmus 21.mp3 29-Dec-2007 17:57 4.0M
rumore.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:12 889K
runner droid.mp3 29-Dec-2007 17:58 1.5M
scissors.mp3 31-Dec-2007 15:58 1.3M
smanoletorz.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:19 2.2M
splash.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:53 263K
stand by_thx game so..> 27-Dec-2007 22:26 1.5M
stroz mix 1.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:52 8.6M
synth2.mp3 29-Dec-2007 21:52 252K
sys.mp3 29-Dec-2007 18:02 5.0M
teknique.mp3 29-Dec-2007 18:06 6.3M
teknoset.mp3 27-Dec-2007 22:13 5.4M
ubique_mix1.mp3 27-Dec-2007 22:44 15M
ubique_mix2.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:36 14M
zookeeper_blues#2.mp3 27-Dec-2007 21:52 882K
abandonware/ 07-Feb-2008 16:31 -
foto 2008/ 04-Feb-2008 10:19 -
frigidaire scans/ 05-Feb-2008 15:14 -
images/ 05-Feb-2008 13:32 -
music/ 20-Jan-2008 20:25 -
php-fastcgi/ 26-Dec-2007 15:44 -
texts/ 06-Feb-2008 23:03 -
video/ 07-Feb-2008 12:31 -
xxx
Un ringraziamento particolare al collettivo Autistici/Inventati per aver fornito gratuitamente
lo spazio su cui e' ospitato il sito ftp http://www.autistici.org/2000-maniax/ contenente i file.














