“Always the eyes watching you and the voice enveloping you. Asleep or awake, working or eating, indoors or out of doors, in the bath or in bed — no escape. Nothing was your own except the few cubic centimetres inside your skull.” — George Orwell. 1984
100% vinyl records.
playlist:
1. The Nomads – Move It On Over
2. D.C.3 – Home Is Where you Bang Your Head
3. Minutemen – No One
4. Ramones – Commando
5. Snakefinger – Trashing All The Loves Of History
6. Jello Biafra with D.O.A. – We Gotta Get Out Of This Place
7. Primus – Hamburger Train
8. Judas Priest – Starbreaker
9. Bad Brains – Big Takeover
10. Public Image Limited – Religion
11. Herbie Hancock – Hardrock
12. Debbie Harry – Military Rap
13. Beastie Boys – Sabotage
ore 20.30 apericena
ore 21.30 presentazione del video “Tomorrow’s land” con gli autori
ore 23.30 concerto
At-Tuwani, villaggio palestinese minacciato di evacuazione e costantemente attaccato dai coloni israeliani del vicino insediamento di Ma’on. Da dieci anni, un Comitato di Resistenza popolare difende il villaggio, attraverso una complessa strategia nonviolenta e l’aiuto di attivisti israeliani e internazionali: un esperimento che può indicare la strada verso un nuovo futuro per la Palestina. Il documentario che presentiamo raccoglie le storie degli abitanti di At-Tuwani, e ha visto la luce grazie a una campagna di autofinaziamento che ha coinvolto diverse realtà associative tra Brescia e Bologna.
“Where I grew up in Brooklyn, man, a punk was like a wuss, the guy who ran away from the fight. “You’re a punk. You’re a weasel. You’re nothing”. Now it has this connotation of being the tough-guy thing. The revolution, are you kidding? So I liked the word and used the term “punk music mass”, maybe inadvertently trying to turn it into something else. One day I wake up and there’s the word punk all over the place. That’s when it became meaningless to me. Somebody said that Suicide had to be the ultimate punk band because even the punks hated us.”
Alan Vega (2008)