Cory Doctorow is podcasting the lectures from the course he is teaching at USC.
Net @ Nite interviewed the founder of Twitter this week. More on Twitter in a post coming soon.
Cory Doctorow is podcasting the lectures from the course he is teaching at USC.
Net @ Nite interviewed the founder of Twitter this week. More on Twitter in a post coming soon.
She has only updated it three times in eight months, but why didn’t anyone tell me Marjane Satrapi had a blog!?
My friend Sean Duncan has restarted his blog and it looks great. So far he has a post up about “The Politics Of Griefing” (in relation to the recent vandalism of John Edwards’ Second Life headquarters) and there is more to come I am sure.
The Future Of Electronic Literature conference in May looks very promising. I am hoping to make an attempt at attending at least the second day. Via Grand Text Auto, here is more information:
MITH and the Electronic Literature Organization are pleased to announce a public symposium on the Future of Electronic Literature, May 2 and 3 at the University of Maryland, College Park, with co-sponsorship from the University Libraries and Department of English. The keynote speakers will be Kate Hayles (John Charles Hillis Professor of Literature at UCLA) and Kenneth Thibodeau (Director of Electronic Records Archives Program, National Archives and Records Administration).
I am going to try out a new feature. Lately, I have been listening to a lot of podcasts. Each week I will post a “best of” from what I have checked out the previous week, similar to my weekend reading posts.
So, week one:
Net At Nite interviews Jimmy Wales from Wikipedia.
Something I Learned Today just started podcasting. Their first podcast focused on Boston hardcore. A second podcast is also online.
All Go No Slow! recently did a full set of anti Ronald Reagan songs. It is quite refreshing, in the age of “conservative punks” and the rightward dive a lot of the hardcore scene seems to be heading towards, to see someone do a great set like this. Sadly, I bet the current generation of ragers don’t even know about a lot of the fucked up shit that went on in the eighties. If you asked them what Oi Polloi’s Hands Off Nicaragua was about, they’d probably have no idea.
To celebrate Henry Rollins’ birthday (46!), Harmony In My Head did a set filled with a lot of old hardcore songs and other cool stuff.
The other day, I caught up on the HIMH broadcast from early August also. Henry spends the first hour playing and discussing the music of Miles Davis. An hour of Miles Davis: it doesn’t get much better than that.
I spent some time tonight moving things around. I think things look a lot better now. I got a new, nicer looking, Creative Commons license and also added a tag cloud. I seem to have broken my Flickr link however; I will take a look again tomorrow and see if I can fix it.
With the end of my online fanzine and podcast, Signifying Nothing, a few months I wasn’t sure if I would ever do anything like this involving hardcore ever again. I am happy to be here, it is an honor to be asked to contribute to something from someone who did Hardware Fanzine! My main focus is probably going to be not only on hardcore, but DIY culture in general. Right now, to be honest, I am much more interested in New Media and how DIY is incorporated into that than discussing the latest band’s seven inch. Hardcore is great but it is a means to an end, not an end.
Consider this column a rough draft of what I will be doing each month here. At the bottom of this column is my contact information.
Reviews
V/A
Public Safety Compilation
Maximum Rock N Roll Records
For a substantial period of time this record has been hyped to death. At one point there seemed to be some mystery about who exactly was even going to be on the compilation. The long wait wasn’t really worth it for me. This isn’t a bad compilation necessarily; there are some great bands like Direct Control, Nightmare, and Signal Lost. Most of the bands don’t really seem to bring their A-Game however. Beyond that, even the bands I don’t enjoy are so unpleasant that I find myself jumping around. The best songs on here are easily Career Suicide and Signal Lost’s contributions, but even those songs feel like leftover “b-sides.” The rest of the good band’s (Limp Wrist, Nightmare, Direct Control, etc) efforts I could take or leave honestly. Still, an average Direct Control song is pretty good; but being the worst Direct Control song isn’t exactly the same as being the worst Krakdown song. If you know what I mean. In the future, I am sure these songs will be collected on various bands discographies, so I don’t foresee a desire to listen to this again. That said, Public Safety, for the rager in training, could be a useful introduction to what is going on in the hardcore scene right now. If being used for that very practical purpose however, I think Public Safety could have used a more diverse sampling of bands from outside of North America also. Perhaps when you dub this compilation for Rager Junior you should also include a CDR of the P.E.A.C.E compilation?
Life’s A Rape Fanzine #1 & #2
If you’re scratching your head about the name, so was I until I realized it from an M.D.C. song. Life’s A Rape is a promising new fanzine from the San Diego area. A lot of the things that make a great fanzine are here: cut and paste, DIY styled layouts, a lot of photos, and interesting writing. Between the two issues there are interviews with Hatred Surge, Life Crisis, Fucked Up, Hard Skin and (ugh) P. C. Death Squad. There are also some cool Cleveland hardcore stories and a reprint of an old Integrity promo picture from the mid-nineties that brought back some memories. I see a lot of potential here for a great fanzine. My only compliant is the white backgrounds-more fanzines need to have black backgrounds ala the mighty Hardware.
Colin Tappe
POB 278
Carlsbad CA 92018
Slug & Lettuce Fanzine #86
Slug & Lettuce has been a mainstay in hardcore for years. #86 is no exception to the excellent quality of work this fanzine has done over the years. A lot of interesting commentary (especially about the correlation between women’s and animal rights-I want to read more about that in the future), reviews, and pictures. Tons of pictures! Pick this up and subscribe!
Slug & Lettuce
P.O. Box 26632
Richmond VA 23261-6632
Wait In Vain
Demo 2005
This is a new band for members of Champion and Trial that does not deviate too far from those bands. Energetic, slightly metallic, hardcore with way too much chugga chug and scratchy New Age Records, circa 1994, style vocals. The stop and go parts remind me of, of all bands, Sparkmarker. If you like Trial or Champion you will like this probably. I will pass on this one. This is the kind of stuff I thought bands like Devoid Of Faith and Floorpunch pushed to the side when they came along.
The promo sheet that comes with this is hilarious: among the ridiculous statements made on it include a note about selling one thousand demos “in a market that usually supports 1/10th of that.” How are they doing in the males 18-49 demograph? Do soccer moms 35-50 enjoy it? I love the proclamation that Wait In Vain are “a return of hardcore that feels dangerous and potentially lethal to the status quo.” Yeah, sure it is. I can just hear the status quo trembling in fear. Maybe you will poll better with the “tween” market.
My favorite though is the comparisons to Burn and the Cro-Mags. Uh, no, not even close. 10/10 bands that are said to sound like either of those bands don’t.
Please send stuff for review to the address at the end of this column. I am happy to review vinyl, CD, DVD, or book/fanzine as long as your band or label is not associated with the RIAA. Please send the “final product”-I will not review advanced versions or promotional material with DRM on it. I have little interest in promo sheets and reserve the right to ridicule them.
Check Out
Zone Of Influence
One of my favorite bloggers, Matthew Kirschenbaum, has a new game studies blog called Zone Of Influence. ZOI specifically deals with board games and even more specifically war games. I am very interested in gaming studies, but don’t really know that much about board games so I am going to read this one daily.
Top Five’s For 2006
2006 was a decent year for records. There were a lot of records that sounded great at the time, but by the end of the year were pretty clunky sounding. Oh well. I didn’t really post my “top five” anywhere online this year, so here they are by format:
LP
EP
Things I Am Looking Forward To
Finally, Top 10 For January
Contact Info
William P. Wend
289 Bulkhead Ave.
Manahawkin NJ 08050
william at wpwend dot com
www.wpwend.com