Top Ten.The work of Los Angeles--based artist Sam Durant is on view in solo exhibitions at LA MOCA MOCA Museum of Contemporary Art MOCA Multimedia over Coax MoCA Museum of Chinese in the Americas MOCA Minnesota Ovarian Cancer Alliance MOCA Montezuma Castle National Monument (US National Park Service) through January and at the Kunstverein Dusseldorf from January through March 2003. 1 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 short·wave adj. 1. Having a wavelength of approximately 10 to 200 meters. 2. Capable of receiving or transmitting at wavelengths of approximately 10 to 200 meters: a shortwave radio. (find your station on www.democracynow.org). Tune in for a meaningfully patriotic alternative to the mainstream morning news. 2 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. 3 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 muck·rake intr.v. muck·raked, muck·rak·ing, muck·rakes To search for and expose misconduct in public life. [From the man with the muckrake, 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 The bin Laden family (Arabic: بن لادن), also spelled bin Ladin, is a rather wealthy family intimately connected with the innermost circles of the Saudi royal family. and the Saudi royals, and initiatives like the IMF IMF See: International Monetary Fund IMF See International Monetary Fund (IMF). and World Bank's pernicious Country Assistance Strategies and the ruthless "logic" of the NAFTA NAFTA in full North American Free Trade Agreement Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's and GATT See General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. GATT See General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). trade agreements. As the dust-jacket blurb says, the information contained within is "a hand grenade." 4 FELA KUTI Fela FELA Federal Employer's Liability Act of 1908 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. 5 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 interlocking /in·ter·lock·ing/ (-lok´ing) closely joined, as by hooks or dovetails; locking into one another. interlocking Obstetrics A rare complication of vaginal delivery of twins; the 1st 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. 6 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 MTV in full Music Television U.S. cable television network, established in 1980 to present videos of musicians and singers performing new rock music. MTV won a wide following among rock-music fans worldwide and greatly affected the popular-music business. plantation of hip-hop pabulum pabulum food or aliment. . 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 (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. " 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. 7 THE DR. HUEY P. NEWTON Huey Percy Newton (February 17, 1942 – August 22, 1989), was co-founder and leader of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense, a black internationalist/racial equality organization that began in October 1966. FOUNDATION David Hilliard, former chief of staff of the Black Panther Party Black Panther Party (for Self-Defense) U.S. African American revolutionary party founded in 1966 by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale (b. 1936) in Oakland, Calif. Its original purpose was to protect African Americans from acts of police brutality. , is cofounder co·found tr.v. co·found·ed, co·found·ing, co·founds To establish or found in concert with another or others. co·found 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. 8 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. 9 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?" Helene 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. 10 KILLDOZER, UNCOMPROMISING WAR ON ART UNDER THE DICTATORSHIP OF THE PROLETARIAT The "dictatorship of the proletariat" is a term employed by Marxists that refers to a temporary state between the capitalist society and the classless and stateless communist society; during this transition period, "the state can be nothing but the revolutionary dictatorship of the 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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