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DEMOCRACY NOW! With the major news
media functioning as infotainment divisions for their corporate
ownership and NPR's wholesale submission to its underwriters, Democracy Now!
may well be one of the last "free" news programs left in the country.
Host Amy Goodman's show is broadcast daily on Pacifica Network and its
affiliates nationally, and worldwide on shortwave (find your station on
www.democracynow.org). Tune in for a meaningfully patriotic alternative
to the mainstream morning news.
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SOCIETY FOR THE ACTIVATION OF SOCIAL SPACE THROUGH ART AND SOUND (SASSAS)
Artist Cindy Bernard has been programming sound performances around LA
for the past several years. She's presented an amazing variety of
musicians, composers, and improvisers—Solid Eye, Glenn Branca, Pauline
Oliveros, and Stephen Prina, to name a few. Her "Sound" series at the
Schindler House invites audiences to hear serious sonic intensity in
LA's greatest modernist house. SASSAS, which Bernard founded this year,
has just released soundCD no.1, a compilation of recordings from these and other Bernard-produced concerts.
 | | Stephen Prina performing "Sonic Dan" for the "Sound" series at the Schindler House, Los Angeles, August 25, 2001. | |
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THE BEST DEMOCRACY MONEY CAN BUY
(Pluto Press, 2002) Greg Palast's book collects stories he broke for
European newspapers and news outlets, many of them suppressed or
ignored by US media. The muckraking journalist thoroughly documents our
presidential coup (the fraudulent "scrubbing" of Florida's voter
rolls), the Bush and Clinton administrations' ties to the bin Laden
family and the Saudi royals, and initiatives like the IMF and World
Bank's pernicious Country Assistance Strategies and the ruthless
"logic" of the NAFTA and GATT trade agreements. As the dust-jacket
blurb says, the information contained within is "a hand grenade."
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FELA KUTI Fela had to establish his own
country—the Kalakuta Republic in Lagos—just to play funk. Imprisoned
and beaten nearly to death repeatedly throughout his life by Nigeria's
despot rulers, he still managed to start his own political party and
run for president (twice). More than a million people attended his
funeral in 1997. Open & Close, Expensive Shit, Zombie, Everything Scatter, and Opposite People are among the dozens of incredible records he made—and they've all been recently reissued.
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TO REPEL GHOSTS (Zoland Books,
2001) Taking Jean-Michel Basquiat's paintings (and their masses of
musical/cultural/political/historical references) as a starting point,
poet Kevin Young has constructed an incredibly rich series of
interlocking texts that flow across and through modernist
lineages—Satchmo, Bird, Ellison, Warhol, Elvis, Baldwin, Miles, Robert
Johnson, Jack Johnson, Ali—and back around again. Densely
sophisticated, rigorously composed, full of uncomfortable knowledge and
scathing humor, this book is building the future of poetry.
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THE COUP and DEAD PREZ The Coup
are Oakland-based radicals politically rooted in Public Enemy and
KRS-One but with a new sound that's supported by a full backup band.
Boots (lyricist) and Pam (turntablist) are burning down the MTV
plantation of hip-hop pabulum. Their first record, Kill My Landlord (1993), is legendary. Their latest, Party Music
(2001), belies its title, offering sobering critiques in tunes like "5
Million Ways to Kill a CEO" as well as Boots's sweet song for his
daughter, "Wear Clean Draws," which combines fatherly advice with acid
social commentary: "My boogie baby, / Now the world ain't no fairy
tale, / And it's ran by some rich, white, scary males." Dead Prez is
holding down the East Coast political vibe. Let's Get Free (2000) is a blistering masterpiece that fuses genuine fury and clear-eyed optimism with monster beats.
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THE DR. HUEY P. NEWTON FOUNDATION David
Hilliard, former chief of staff of the Black Panther Party, is
cofounder of the foundation (www.blackpanther.org), which publishes
books and music, runs educational programs, and strives to pass the
Panthers' history to the next generation. Hilliard runs tours of sites
around Oakland where the shit went down. Seeing where he and Eldridge
Cleaver were ambushed by the Oakland PD and where Newton was gunned
down is both terrifying and riveting. If you're ever in the Bay Area,
take the tour. For BPP history check out Hilliard's autobiography, This Side of Glory, and Elaine Brown's memoir, A Taste of Power: A Black Woman's Story, two of the most cogent accounts of Newton's party and the times.
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DONALD JUDD'S WRITING On a recent visit to
the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas, I reread Judd's 1984 article "A
long discussion not about masterpieces but why there are so few of
them." While sometimes tending toward the polemical, most of his
writing is astute and often sounds as if it were about today's art
world. I had forgotten how radical Judd was with regard to the politics
of art and culture, the incestuous and often opaque relationships
between institutions, curators, critics, magazines, and the market.
With forceful will and fierce commitment to his own work and that of
his peers, he wrote about the conditions in which he felt artwork
should be viewed and experienced; then he went out and made it happen.
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HATRED OF CAPITALISM: A SEMIOTEXT(E) READER
Best title yet (thanks to Jack Smith, who came up with it) and with
anti-intellectualism so rampant these days, I can't help myself. Eileen
Myles opens the book with "An American Poem," a blast from
Massachusetts—"I am a Kennedy. / Shouldn't we all be Kennedys?" Hélène
Cixous's essay "The Writing, Always the Writing" is a great parallel to
Myles's poem. The two works confront alienation and the sense that
you're not at home in your own home. Slyly compiled, this anthology
brings together fiction, narrative, philosophy, and critical theory
without imposing a hierarchy among genres.
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KILLDOZER, UNCOMPROMISING WAR ON ART UNDER THE DICTATORSHIP OF THE PROLETARIAT
A brilliant, hilarious "concept" album with footnoted liner notes that
needle academic Marxism while cunningly introducing Simone Weil, Ramsey
Clark, and Eugene V. Debs to disenfranchised working-class kids. Though
released in 1994, songs like "Enemy of the People" (about Wal-Mart's
happy-faced ruthlessness) and "Turkey Shoot" (about the press's slavish
complicity with Bush Sr.'s Gulf War) remain, unfortunately, entirely
relevant.
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