Posts tagged with punk

In All Our Decadence People Die

In All Our Decadence People Die

Attention New York readers:

“IN ALL OUR DECADENCE PEOPLE DIE”
AN EXHIBITION OF FANZINES PRESENTED
TO CRASS BETWEEN 1976 AND 1984
PLUS ORIGINAL CRASS-ERA ARTWORKS BY GEE VAUCHER
AND A NEW AUDIO INSTALLATION BY PENNY RIMBAUD.

AT Boo-Hooray Sept 30th - Oct 20th, 2011

The Boo-Hooray exhibit space is happy to present an exhibition of fanzines and ephemera collected at Dial House, home to the English anarchist punk band Crass, active from 1977-1984. The public and private political stance of Crass was without peer or compromise. Their influence on the lives of misfits, belongers, winners, losers, straights and visionaries across the globe reverberates to this day.
Dial House has been running as a creative centre since the late 1960’s and was instigated by the poet, philosopher and Crass drummer/lyricist, Penny Rimbaud. The Crass/Dial House fanzine archive, saved by Gee Vaucher, consists of approximately 3000 fanzines, broadsides, pamphlets and flyers, as well as posters, manuscript and original artwork. The materials were sent or given to the anarcho-punk group Crass during the years 1977 to 1984 from all over the world. The archive also includes later publications mailed to Dial House during the 1980’s and 1990’s. The show illustrates and demonstrates the immediacy and potency of these grassroots activist punk artworks from an era which was pre-computer and, in some cases, pre-xerox. In addition, related original artworks by Gee from her ground-breaking “nihilist newspaper for the living,” International Anthem, are also included.

I think its a bit presumptuous on the part of this poster to assume that I am not part of the elite. Speak for yourself, 90s econochrist poster.

Lotsa Girls and You Know How Rare That Is

Lotsa Girls and You Know How Rare That Is

Found at Oxide Flake, a blog with a wealth of 80’s punk live sets recorded by the author.

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Long overdue reissue is out now on Mississippi Records. Much better than their first LP, but comes in a step behind the final record, In a Desperate Red, which is still out of print (but definitely worth tracking down).

Glad this is available for a reasonable price, but based on the sales of past Mississippi releases you had better act quick.

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Rawk-era Destroy All Monsters with Asheton and Niagara (post Mike Kelley).

(Unfortunately embedding is disabled.)

  • “Romeo” from Romeo/No Solution by The Wipers (1981)
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Following up on my Ego Summit post, here’s Ron House’s other outfit, Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments, doing a number from their final, CD-only album.

An anthem for the web 2.0 generation.