Blog — Page 52 of 275

The infrequently-updated site blog, featuring a range of content including show reviews, musical musings and off-color ramblings on other varied topics.

The Formative Years – Slime

Posted by T • November 24, 2021

The Formative Years

Slime 

When it comes to quintessential German punk bands, no list would be complete without Slime from Hamburg.

Founded in 1979, they evolved from playing rudimentarily structured and simplistic songs modelled after late-seventies British punk rock a la Clash and The Damned to a band that carved their own lane centred around dedicated more complex song structures with layered, less one-dimensional and politically relevant lyrical content with a deeply embedded anti-fascist message at its core. 

Slime’s oeuvre not only left a massive imprint on the Deutschpunk scene at large for generations to come but also created an idiosyncratic range of emblematic “call to action” anti-authoritarian  sloganeering that not only has become integral part of the vocabulary of the German leftist autonomist scene. but also resulted in tangible actions at protests and rallies.

As a teenager, the fact that quite a few of Slime's early and controversial songs were censored and the band subject to being prosecuted by the official censoring body in Germany, i.e. Federal Review Board for Media Harmful to Minors, exerted a magnetic pull and set me on a mission to secure the original releases, learn the lyrics by heart and let them infuse the shaping of my worldview.

During the early days of the punk movement where messaging and positioning was still very diffuse and vague, Slime was one of the pivotal politically radical bands that grew from simple riffing, punk anthems and stereotypical clichéd content to rising above the sea of their epigones by evolving to writing more musically demanding and complex songs and the inclusion of more sophisticated metaphorical  lyrics courtesy of Slime’s drummer, i.e. Stephan Maler, dealing with governmental repression, xenophobia and anti-war sentiments. 

The first three albums remain timeless classics and cement Slime’s legacy:

T • November 24, 2021

Arthur Jafa - Magnumb book review

Posted by T • November 23, 2021

Arthur Jafa - MAGNUMB

Louisiana Publications

Arthur Jafa has made a name for himself as an American video artist with themes like Black American culture, slavery and the opposition Black Americans face to this very day being at centre of his artistic explorations.

The release of the book MAGNUMB followed an Arthur Jafa exhibition at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, which is not only known in terms of modern Danish architecture for its synthesisizing landscape, architecture and art but also for harbouring an extensive permanent collection of modern art spanning the last hundred years along with its comprehensive programme of special exhibitions. 

Given the aforementioned, it is not for nothing included in Patricia Schultz’s book “One thousand Places to See Before You Die”, ranking within the first one hundred in the realm of art museums.

Louisisana’s book on Jafa accompanied and contextualised his exhibition with an overview of his often confronting video depictions of Black American life, which are informed by his lifelong fascination with imagery, photographs and cinematography and which have been catapulted to the forefront once Black Lives Matter became a global movement that found its way into prime-time media, thereby entering every facet of mainstream culture.

It is interesting to see Jafa’s cinematography within an art context, as it conveys both the beauty and power as well as the alienation the broad scope of Black culture has been experiencing. What I like about Jafa’s approach is that tackles American realities from different angles and thereby conveys a comprehensive multi-dimensional prism, through which the recipient is enabled to actively participate with his own interpretations.

The narrative of Jafa’s work is guided by stark contrasts, juxtapositions and an ubiquitous ambivalent openness, which invites to think beyond simple dichotomies of good and evil.

Apart from the political component, Jafa’s virtuosic technical skills enable him to masterfully compose new realities by creating a patchwork of nuances, the sum of which create a significant and visually coherent powerful whole that is much more than the mere sum of its components would have one think, with pain and suffering being a recurring motif and common denominator.

It is interesting to see Arthur Jafa incarnate at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art as the aestheticization of the traumas of white violence against Black people would have most likely been viewed by an exclusively privileged audience, thereby subversively raising deeper going questions about Denmark’s widely suppressed colonial history.

In essence, an ode in book form to an essential artist whose oeuvre engages the recipient in questioning the status quo and the role one plays in the maintenance of it.

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image from publisher website

T • November 23, 2021

The Formative Years - The Accüsed

Posted by T • November 22, 2021

The Formative Years

The Accüsed

Founded in 1981, The Accüsed instanenously became a pioneering underground band in that they merged the best bits of thrash metal, hardcore punk and grindcore to create their very own mélange, i.e. what they referred to as splattercore, and thereby helped to give birth to what ultimately became known as crossover trash.

With the first three years being spent on refining their sound and experimenting with different line-ups, 1984 saw the vocalist of The Fartz (Duff McKagan’s first band) join the band and added his idiosyncratic choking-sound vocal delivery to their hybrid equation, which musically had evolved to constitute the musical equivalent to a splatter movie courtesy of a tight unit with metallic buzz-saw guitars and rapid-fire drumming. 

Add a mascot with striking features and recurring b-movie themed lyrical content revolving around Martha Splatterhead and you got a band that was bound to create their own lane.

Having fallen in love with their debut The Return of Martha Splatterhead, I could not wait to see them incarnate in a live environment and what I experienced in the early 1990s blew my mind as the maniacal music was matched by the band’s infectious on-stage demeanour with Blaine leaping around the stage like a man possessed. They were exactly as frantic, chaotic and furious as I hoped for, set the bar high and established themselves as one of my favourite live bands.

A band that defined crossover by merging thrash a la early Slayer, mixed it with crust and early hardcore punk and thereby created fertile ground for a myriad of bands to blossom and bloom, including the more prominent ones still riding the recent wave of the resurgence of thrash.

If you like bands like Municipal Waste, do yourself a favour and treat yourself to the masterpiece that is The Accüsed’s debut full-length:

T • November 22, 2021

Doug Aitken: New Era @ MCA

Posted by T • November 18, 2021

Doug Aitken: New Era

Museum of Contemporary Art Australia

Exhibition: 20 October 2021 – 06 February 2022

Occupying prime real estate at Circular Quay vis-à-vis from the Opera House, Sydney’s home of contemporary art has after a profound overhaul in 2011 redefined itself not only via an aesthetically and architecturally pleasing exterior, which marries the original sandstone building with contemporary features, but as a haven championing new age and forward-thinking art with its circulation system based gallery, a formidable rooftop café, sculpture terrace, high-tech education centre, and a 120-seat lecture theatrette.

Given the implications of the recent pandemic induced lockdowns on terra australis, it was fantastic to see after many delays the American artist Doug Aitken incarnate with his first major solo exhibition in the Southern hemisphere, comprised of key works of his oeuvre spanning close to three decades.

Heralded for his idiosyncratic approach to channelling installations, sculptures, photographs and constantly shifting multi-screen environments into an immersive, mesmerising and prismatic other world that culminates in a conceptually fluid display of moving imagery and sound, the exhibition invites one to become actively involved and get lost in Aitken’s multi-sensory ambience. 

My personal highlight of the exhibition is the large-scale poetic sound installation Sonic Fountain II: Built into a bouldered wasteland-esque lunar scenery, drops of water are unleashed from a suspended multi-valve apparatus into a milky pond, with the sound being amplified by an algorithm which ebbs and flows the recordings captured by microphones within and outside the pond, resulting in sounds pieces reminiscent of John Cage.

Inspired by mobile phone technology and its impact on our social behaviours, the exhibit NEW ERA not only informed the title of the exhibition but conveys the marriage of seemingly antagonistic concepts of union and dislocation through a mirrored fragmented structure that serves as a gate to a screen filled tunnel that viewers are invited to wander through and being wrapped up by.

The way the exhibition has been designed and orchestrated is devoid of an imposed narrative – au contraire, the viewer is enabled to author and determine an individual perspective through the carving of their own lens with Aitken providing food-for-though via real and imagined landscapes of ideas, using mirrors to reel the viewer into his cosmos and place him at the centre.

The result is a carefully calibrated and boundary-pushing composition of ideas for which the MCA becomes the conduit to a ruminative and multi-directional wider world – one that is transitional, dynamic and hidden in plain sight.

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image courtesy of MCA

T • November 18, 2021

(Un-)Becoming Who You Are?

Posted by T • November 17, 2021

(Un-)Becoming Who You Are? Self-optimisation Kiwi-style.

In an age of self-optimisation and an endless strain to get out of one’s own way, supplements that promise to improve your mood, creativity, memory and cognitive ability not unlike the nootropic NZT-48 in The Dark Fields by Alan Glynn are ubiquitious and proffered everywhere. 

In most jurisdictions, nootropics are classified as as dietary supplements, which allows grey areas for  manufacturers’ statements about benefits often being vague and/or supported by less-than-compelling scientific evidence as they do not require double-blind, placebo-controlled, pharmaceutical-style human studies before going to market.

The upside is that one does not need a prescription to acquire them and knowing quite a few people who swear by the mind stimulating, blood flow increasing and adrenalin raising effects of some nootropics, I delved deeper into the matter.

Intrigued by the hype, I set out to try some nootropics to see if there was something worthwhile to join my beloved coffee as a performance- and cognitive enhancing and energy boosting drug, knowing well that many nootropics are supposed to take time to build up in the body before one can actually feel their impact , the fact that they of course do not make one more intelligent as well as other contributing individual factors, e.g. how demanding the task at hand is and the susceptibility of human nature to placebo effects.

Ārepa is a 100% natural and caffeine-free nootropic from New Zealand, the primary benefits of which are to result in promoting mental clarity and calm, the improvement of focus under mental fatigue and the support of normal neurological function along with supporting physical performance / recovery and supplying a full-serve of vitamin C.

Ingredients-wise, Ārepa focusses on drawing benefits from the natural side of things, i.e. the antioxidant and polyphenol qualities of Blackcurrants; amino-acids like L-theanine, which is found in green tea and lauded for its stress and anxiety reducing qualities while avoiding drowsiness, and an idiosyncratic ingredient that pays homage to Ārepa’s home country:  Extracted from the bark of New Zealand grown pine trees, the broad-spectrum polyphenol Enzogenol meant to support and enhance cognitive functions.

Ārepa Performance comes in liquid (300ml) as well as in powder form, both of which are devoid of sugar, caffeine or other nasties and flavour-wise, I find it to be quite an enjoyable potion due to the tart flavour courtesy of the pectin and acid of the Blackcurrant. 

Now, what are the effects?

I found it interesting that the effects are not dissimilar from what I would gain from an efficient energy drink in terms of experiencing a jolt 20-30 minutes after ingestion with the benefits that it feels like a more sustained and slowly building mental clarify, which the added benefit that there are neither sugar crashes, energy slumps nor caffeine withdrawal.

With a natural range that provides products not merely for one-off consumption to assist with a key moment, but also daily consumption to assist with a deeper lying cognitive concern, paired with a rather moderate price compared to other nootropics, Ārepa is worth checking out when you are looking for a natural pick-me up, especially if you harbour a preference for slightly astringent berry flavours.

Let’s stay in New Zealand, shan’t we?

No Ugly is the telling and metaphorical name of another Kiwi brand, whose credo is based on opposing the endlessly tiresome competitive mentality of our day and age along with its dismal implications, i.e. ugly, non-ethical practises and ugly, non-nourishing ingredients finding their way into our food.

In essence, No Ugly offers health and wellness tonics that are filled to the brim with antioxidents like a New Zealand-native pine bark extract, vitamins, proteins, electrolytes and minerals.   

Vegan and low sugar in nature, No Ugly is the brainchild of creative heads who emerged in the world of advertising and who eventually saw the ligh, i.e. became aware of the importance of good nutrition and overall wellness as a concept to explore the creation of a brand that was the equivalent of a clarion call for people ready to wage a war on all things ugly and appreciated products with substance and purpose.

So far, so good, but does it work?

A tangible benefit is that each bottle of No Ugly is a good source of potassium, calcium, phosphorus, vitamins B1/B2/B3/B5/B6/B12, vitamin C, and vitamin E. Given the aforementioned, I find that especially after long and big nights,  it aids in the reduction of tiredness and fatigue and electrolyte balance. 

No Ugly comes in different variants, named after their purpose and focus ranging from telling names like collagen-ladden “Skin”, nap-inducing “Sleep”, green-coffee extract and L-theanine stacked “Focus”, probiotics centered “Gut” and one zeroing in on enhacing to evicting all nasties that do not pay rent, i.e. “Detox”.

What I like about No Ugly is that it ranges at the affordable end of the spectrum and aspires to be a visionary brand with a higher purpose as apart from well-being, focus is set on sustainability, a recycling program and care about the environment.

While it would be quite a task to keep the whole range on one’s disposal, picking up a No Ugly depending on what I am trying to accomplish has become a trusted go-to.

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images from company websites

T • November 17, 2021

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