SUBCRIBE TO 01RANDOM

RECENT POSTS

A RECAP AND A REWIND
JUST LIKE THE OLDE TIMES
ENTERTAINMENT OF LATE
LOOPFAX REDUX
SCI-FI TO CHECK OUT "HARMONICA AND GIG"
ON THE TIPS OF TONGUES
TRASH TRASH TRASH
THEORETICAL CHAIN SMOKING
STRANGE DAY IN BRIXTON

ARCHIVES
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
November 2007
December 2007
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
August 2008
September 2008
October 2008
November 2008


 

A RECAP AND A REWIND
27 October 2008

DISCOVERING THINGS IN HINDSIGHT

This is what happens in a giant whirlwind. Running around frantically to find a new place to put your roots, little things left undone and then when you finally have the time to reflect you can enjoy things after they have happened. A weird phenomenon and interesting but something you don't want to continue for a long period of time.

Discovering things in hindsight. Unearthing packets of information on the www have let me to find that the emotive hardcore band, Portraits of Past, have reunited and been playing shows in support of a discography of sorts on Ebullition Records. Finding this out sort of rattled my brain, thinking a lost of music from that era would effected be blanketed in the smoky haze of history. After the demise of that project a majority of the members went on to play in The Audience who then turned into Vue; both of whom I've had the chance to see or share a stage with. I haven't run into them for a while as time and moving around does those sorts of things. It's an interesting statement, the action in itself; having the last 10 plus years of music see that era of hardcore/punk spawn the seeds for the post-punk/indie/dance-punk and have that whole movement co-opted into some sort of strange chariacture of hip mobile phone adverts and Indie MySpace blog of the week profiles. Oh, that's another tangent altogether...

Portraits of Past were a great band and out of that era makes for a group of records I still listen to that can still resonate after all the years. There's some spacial, ethereal quality to the recording of their final LP that was a lot different than the records their contemporaries were putting out (well - there was a sense of space on some of the Hoover and post-Hoover projects as well). The choice of chord structures and guitar interplay makes this record as well. Here's some footage of them at one of their recent "reunion" shows in Berkeley, CA:



Ah, a time when bands were named after American presidents or medical conditions, everyone had a zine, rows of 7"s and 12"s in cardboard boxes at shows in poorly lit community centers, and when HeartattaCk Magazine seemed like it was the most read publication in the underground....

divider line

JUST LIKE THE OLDE TIMES
11 October 2008

Every so often I'll have really involved, crazy dreams where waking up is like crossing out of one world into another; a one grounded in reality. This particular dream has it's "inspiration" rooted in the current global financial crisis; a crisis which to which some of it was sparked by the irresponisibility and astronomical greed of big city bankers. Imagine if you will: people these days actually getting upset about losing their life savings, pensions, security – getting upset about things like a peasant would in the middle ages if the lord took all of his/her sheep (or duckets or whatever the hell type money they were using back then...). That peasant would be heading for the nearest pitchfork for a good ol' fashioned lynching. I saw people rallying outside of pubs and parks and heading for the nearest banking headquarters in The City, finding all the bigwigs and tying them securely with industrial strength rope in cocoons to large wooden poles. These poles were then stacked on large logging trucks like matchsticks and hauled off to some field somewhere out of the city. This field was just a giant tinderbox of dead branches and across this plain were the poles erected like antennas. All of a sudden the field was in a blaze. The dream was a little over the tip and "biblical" in the over-drama but it probably reflects the moods and feelings of a lot of people out there right now who are really questioning what the fuck is happening to their livelihoods, savings, etc.

On a lighter note, here's an automated drawing Tanya and I did a number of weeks ago during an online chat to some friends back home:

divider line