Archive for January, 2008

Nazi Anarchists fuck off

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

I have just deleted the following comment from greengalloway.

The “counterculture” was acted out by bourgeois individuals in a bourgeois way. The “action” you speak of, flyers, zines, and magazines, is not action but mediation, the mediation between their inner anguish of being bourgeois that mostly attempted to express that anguish to shock or devalue the existing social arrangements. Far from being original the counterculture was the latest in a long line of Euro-American nihilists who took their cue from fools of no integral consequence other than making themselves look important when they were not. The march of the decades proceeding from that time and the dissolution of all previous modes of social existence in Western countries qualifies the claim that the baby boomer generation has been the most destructive people the planet has ever seen. This is especially true for people that actually give a damn about that which is not ephemeral.

For revolution,
BANA

At first I thought it was from a new situationist group, since it was on a situ-related post. But BANA turns out to stand for “ Bay Area National Anarchist” and ‘National Anarchist’ = anarcho-Nazi. There is a wikipaedia entry on National Anarchism which gives background if you really want to know more.

Bit of a back-handed compliment – if it means our (somewhat aging now) counterculture remains offensive to today’s neo-Nazis.

Black Sheep Co-Op: The Book

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

 53 Cross Street
53 Cross Street: Biography of a House

By Mary Coshj, Martin King, Pauline Lord , ISBN: 9780954849009
Published in 2007, 72 pages, price £21

Calling all Black Sheep…check this out…

In 2003, Islington Council put 53 Cross Street (former Black Sheep Co-op house)
up for sale. “ It was sold to a developer for £600,000 who sold it on to a businessman, presumably at a huge profit.”

Taken from a following book review. Edited version, for full text see… here

Or on my site Green Galloway

Peter Gruner on how a punk squatter peeled back the years of his 18th-century home and helped ­compile a fascinating history of a North London houseFORGET your castles and palaces full of antiquities – when it comes to finding out how people really lived, you can’t beat looking over an old house. So when art lecturer and punk squatter Martin King moved into 53 Cross Street, Islington, in 1989, he realised that this was a house full of ghosts from the past.
He began peering into the pitch black coal- strewn cellar, under filthy floorboards, and peeled away layers of dusty faded wallpaper. He discovered that the five-storey Georgian property, a stone’s throw from busy Upper Street, was built in 1785.
He thought that one day he’d love to write a book about the place.
Today, 18 years later, and thanks to collaboration with Islington historian Mary Cosh and architectural photographer Pauline Lord, his remarkable project is finally complete. 53, Cross Street: Biography of a House, is published this month with a brief history by Ms Cosh and more than 40 colourful photographs by Ms Lord.
In 1978 Islington council compulsorily purchased the property, but were unable to afford restoration. So for the next half dozen years the house, one in a row of four, remained empty, occasionally squatted.Then “cowboy developers” moved in, writes Mary, and converted the whole row into bed sits, by the “simple expedient of covering up old features, nailing up of shutters and boarding over the cellar walls with wood chip.” In 1983 the council handed 53 over to the Blacksheep Housing Co-op – a bunch of “punk anarchists” who set about much needed repairs. Martin, who became a member of the co-op, moved in nine years later. In between delving into the house’s history, and lecturing at Central St Martin’s College of Art and Design, Martin launched a campaign to give the squatters permanent tenancy. He organised impromptu tours of the house to show how the squatters had made it habitable and enlisted the help of former local MP and then Minister for Culture Chris Smith, now Lord Smith of Finsbury.But Islington council decided to put the house up for sale in 2003. It was sold to a developer for £600,000 who sold it on to a businessman, presumably at a huge profit.As for all the artefacts discovered at Cross Street, they will all be donated to Islington Museum when it officially re-opens at its new centre at the Finsbury Library in March next year.

Meanwhile the book will be an essential purchase for anyone planning to investigate the history of their home.

If there is a criticism, it is that although an interesting and colourful read, there is insufficient detail about the people and personalities who lived at 53 Cross Street over the years. Perhaps that’s the subject of another book.

I have ordered a copy of the book  – will review here when I get it.

AL Puppy

Newtown Neurotics – Pissed As A Newt – No Wonder Tapes 1982

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Intro / Mindless Violence / When I Need You / When The Oil Runs Out / Bored Policeman / Oh No!

You Said No / Licensing Hours / Hypocrite / I Get On Your Nerves

From around my old stomping ground, Harlow, home of Stortbeat Records, Urban Decay, The Square, and The Playhouse on a Saturday for a swift pre-gig drink. Also dead near to Stevenage, Welwyn and Bishops Stortford…and all the wonders of those places!

Also, I regret to inform, Harlow was also home to members of Combat 84 and the Jean Harlow pub / club, where the BBC cameras were poised just in time for a bit of the old ultra-violence between the boneheads. Nice bit of footage if you like boneheads cracking bonehead’s heads…! Plenty stocked up of the first couple of 7″ singles by Combat 84 in the punk record shop in Post Office Walk near the market, strangely enough I never did pick those up…perhaps the vibe between the grooves wasn’t quite right, eh!

Countering those naughty people were The Newtown Neurotics, who’s members when this tape was recorded at Harlow and London gigs included Tig, the hippy drummer, Steve Drewitt (who also had hair down to his arse, Joey Ramone style) and the lean punker Colin. Around late 1981, Tig had left to be replaced by Simon, and Steve had a haircut, making the band look a little more clean cut and sharp! They went on to record some great political and personal material, including the tracks on there only LP ‘Beggars Can Be Choosers’, which simply must be heard. This one’s for Nuzz…

Mouse – Renaissance Woman

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Mouse

I / we (Kill Your Pet Puppy Collective) first met Mouse in 1981 at the Wapping Autonomy / Anarchy Centre. Mouse was with Alex and both were dramatically dressed all in black with totally white faces – the first Goths? I am not quite sure how, but strong connections developed and Mouse [aka Sharon Beaumont] became part of the KYPP Collective.

Photo is by Val and in Photos section

Rather than waffle on, here are some words in praise of Mouse. Many thanks to Gavin Semple of  fulgur.co.uk – inspired by Austin Osman Spare – for passing on the link – but note that main part of Lashtal discussion is about David Tibet. Here 

It’s a bit unfortunate that Mouse is remembered largely as a bass player in other peoples’ bands, as she was something of a Renaissance woman in what is now generally termed “magical artistry” – an intense and often catalytic personality who wrote poetry and prose, drew, played and wrote music and songs, and took photos – all in concert with her magical preoccupations and all of them rather well. She was one of those people who formed a link between the musical and occult “scenes” and apart from her own accomplishments was something of an “invisible influence”, responsible for many an introduction between people which would bear fruit elsewhere, later down the line.

Her bass-playing was fluid and serpentine, sadly constrained in the PTV recordings by the demands of musical director Alex Fergusson, but heard to better advantage in the recordings of her own band Feast of Hunger in the late 80s – concurrent with and post-PTV. After that she recorded and played live with her first husband Matthew Stevens (ex-Act of Faith) and Liverpool’s Royal Family & the Poor. ‘Blood on the Snow’ mentioned above was one of her compositions, recorded during her stint in Fire & Ice. Mouse also played a mean free-jazz clarinet, as heard on her piece with Monte Cazazza when he supported PTV at their Xmas do in Heaven (December ’84 if I’m not wrong, and probably on the live vinyl from the event).

Mouse was a prolific poet and published work in Joel Biroco’s Kaos and Stephen Sennitt’s Nox, and her ‘Ciphers in Flesh’, complete with introduction and Eliot-style notes of commentary appeared in Starfire – either issue 4 or 5, the one with the grey cover anyway.

It was through Mouse’s friendship with Jan Fries that the latter’s Visual Magic came to be typed (by Mouse) and brought to the attention of Mogg Morgan at Mandrake, thereby gaining Fries a publisher and his readers years of entertainment, challenge and insight. Both Mouse and Fries participated in the European Maat Network along with Tanith and Alistair Livingstone (the latter keeps the banner of dissent flying gallantly, btw, through his blog at http://greengalloway.blogspot.com)

Mouse also gave a talk on magical creativity at the 1992 Chaos Magic Symposium in London, which was admired by, amongst others, Andrew Chumbley. She left London in around 1995 to live in the country with husband and cats, and appears not to have been publicly active in the arts of late. Last public sighting was her photo of Letchford in Fulgur’s Study for a Portrait of Frank Letchford (2003), credited under her real name, Sharon Beaumont.

As for OTO involvement, that was evidently limited to a few personal friendships, and late-night sessions in the Bloomsbury pubs used by various luminaries of the London occult scene during the 80s/90s, where meetings such as The Forum and Talking Stick were held. Oh, happy long-gone days – when “refurbishment” at the Bloomsbury Tavern meant new strips of gaffer tape on the bar stools!

Various – Spirit Of An Old Age Anthem – Anthem Muzik Tapes 1981

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Guernica – Guernica / Radical Alternatives – Missionary / The Snipers – H Bomb / Falling Paracutes- The Good Old Days / Guernica – No More War / The Snipers – Scale / Guernica – Your Choice

Radical Alternative – Inspiration / The Snipers – I Know / Guernica – Soldier Boy / Falling Paracutes – Trident / Radical Alternatives – Waiting Room / Falling Parachutes – Walk From A Building

A cassette released by The Snipers, who I know next to nothing about except that they were on ‘Bullshit Detector’, and had one 7″ single entitled ‘Three Piece Suite’, both released on Crass Records, which I liked and all my mates hated!

I know even less about the other bands, assume they are Oxford area bands or something? Cheers to Chris Low for the lend of this cassette.

Singalongasnipers, all together now:

‘Enjoy what you’ve got while you can, it’s all sewn up say’s the Media Man, its all sewn up…yeah!’

Incidently anyone thinking where are all those Crass label singles and LP tracks?

Well I have all the releases, by all the bands, ever released on the label except ‘Who Dunnit’ by Crass (obviously, cos it’s arse…).

These tracks will not be uploaded, Penny told me he had no problem with me uploading the Crass practise tapes and interviews I had (use search function to find these), but I told him I would not put the label stuff up at this point until it all becomes unavailable. Although I was allowed to put up ‘Reality Asylum’, but that’s all. So from Annie A to Zounds, studio releases on Crass you will not find here on this site, I am afraid. Live stuff is a different matter though, watch this space.   

The Fits – You Named Us Tape – Beat The System Tapes 1980

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Straps / Nothing To Prove / You Named Us / Man At Dawn / Cat’s Dinner

Listen To Me / I Hate / Crawlers / Lights / Plastic Town / Interview / Straps 2

From Blackpool, The Fits first demo tape. Decent stuff on here…went on to Rondelet Records for a couple of singles and an LP, but the high point for the band is the ‘Tears Of A Nation’ single on Corpus Christi Records released in 1983. After this high point they went downwards somewhat…

The Apostles – Centro Iberico, Westbourne Park, London, W11- 13/08/82

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Burn The Witch / Proletarian Autonomy / Fucking Queer / Hello Black Flag / Alien Asian / 1985

Rough snippets of this gig by the Apostles. This gig also featured Conflict (recorded the live 7″ on Xntrix Records at this gig), The Omega Tribe, Riot Clone, and Icons Of Filth. The Apostles actually had three different drummers this gig (not playing at the same time!), Martin Smith, Kev Bass and Dan Colley. The rest of the line up was Andy Martin, Dave Fanning and John Soares. This recording is pretty rough and cut up, but thanks to Chris Low for the lend of it anyway and for the photograph of Andy Martin performing at the gig.

Official Apostles Site

Eratics / Sinyx – Live At Focus Southend – August 1981

Monday, January 28th, 2008

The EraticsBig Boss Big Toss / You Shame Me / Russia / Kamikaze / God Save Our Gracious Queen / Taking Tablets / Free Hour Spirit / National Service / Parasite

The SinyxAnimal / Britain Is A Mausoleum / Zulu / Therapy Through Violence / 9 To 5 Auchwitz / Nausia / Fight / Ex Communication

Two bands that seemed to always be in fanzines and on the bill at gigs in and around London.

For all the correspondence, reviews, and live gigs, the two bands (under these names) only managed one 7″ single between them. That particular victory goes to Sinyx. Both bands had one track each on the original ‘Bullshit Detector’ LP on Crass Records. That round ends in a draw. The Eratics were mainstays of the St James Church squat gigs in Pentonville Road, Kings Cross, N1. I think they organised a lot of the nights there. Victory to The Eratics in that round. That makes, over three rounds, one victory and one draw each. Well done both the bands!

The Eratics from Waltham Cross, just outside North London were pretty ropey music wise though, but they did have a big input into the scene. During this gig they give their special salute to the happy couple, Chas and Di who got hitched a week or so before this gig (not in or around Southend it must be stressed!). The band metamorphised eventually into Look Mummy Clowns but called it a day in 1985. Search for the Look Mummy Clowns only 7″ single somewhere else on this site.

The Sinyx were from Southend and also shared members with Kronstadt Uprising, also from this town. Thanks to Chris Low for the lend of the tape.

Ring – Oh De Dun Dun cassette – Ring Mission Control Cassettes – 1986

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Operation Apricot / I’m Not Mad / The Book Of Rem / The Unadvoidable Non Event / Walls Walled Waltz Pikiano / The Day Of The Dun / Tin Masked Years / Regeneration Is Our Chant

Bright Carvings / A Cat A Dog And Some Plants / Magenta / D.A.R.G. / I Would If I Could / Rubber Feet / Hot Dooolers

Ring emerged around the same time as Webcore and Another Green World (search for material by these bands on this site), and became firm Club Dog favorites with their Hawkwind / Cardiacs like material. The band got to headline the first night at a new venue for Club Dog, The Sir George Robey in Finsbury Park, London, N4.

Ring also played plenty of times at the old Club Dog venue in Wood Green, London, N22.

Note our very own Tony D on the lineup for October 9th!

The first demo was released in 1984 via Gogg’s B.B.P. cassette label, this cassette label dealt mainly with Anarcho Punk releases by bands like The Apostles, check out the B.B.P. site in links.  It was a pleasant surprise to see the first demo released but I feel that this second cassette release is the superior of the two.

Part 1 – Autonomy Centre, Wapping, London, E1 – 03/01/82

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Graveyard Song / Tomb / Death Is In The Eye Of The Beholder / Black Mass / Pictures Of Pain / Ghost / Incest / Claws / The Corpse / Possessed

Salem

The ghouls from Milton Keynes, playing their first London date with Blood And Roses, The Witches and The Apostles.

Indebted to Chris Low for the cassette, which is a very good quality ‘crowd’ recording. Part 1 were linked to Rudimentary Peni, and indeed the two bands played together on a few occasions. Both bands were interested in the macabre and were also quite near to each other geographically. Both bands would become far more popular several years later, guess they were ahead of their time! The Part 1 E.P. is uploaded onto this site somewhere and is well worth searching out.

Photos from a different Autonomy Centre performance courtesy of Jon From Bromley.


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