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J. Byrnes |
Cultural Stimuli in NYC
Issue 265: rough-hewn flavor
It's a jungle out there, and you know what that means: trees — or concrete, at least. City denizens talk a tough game as DJ Damian Lazarus stops by to say Suck My Deck, Salon darling Cintra Wilson takes our tabloid icons to task, and young actors battle with words in the Manhattan Monologue Slam. Forget dog-eat-dog, this week it's every man for himself: Murderball opens with a vengeance, skate punks take to the S.T.R.E.E.T.S., and SWOON tags up Deitch Projects with her urban art. Fortunately, safe harbor can be found by entering our prize-laden Flavorpack Contest — and slackers don't make winners, so we suggest you hop to it. Don't be afraid to cut against the grain, and spread it...
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flavorpill is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.
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Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn star with Christopher Walken in Wedding Crashers. Rolling Stone magazine calls it "Summer's one indisputable laugh riot." |
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| DANCE |
Ballet NY
| when: |
Tue 7.5 - Sat 7.9 (Tue: 7:30pm / Wed-Fri: 8pm / Sat: 2 & 7pm) |
| where: |
The Joyce Theater (175 8th Ave, 212.242.0800) map |
| price: |
$34 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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The dancers of Fugate/Bahiri Ballet NY are used to sharing the spotlight with live, original scores — the company is considered one of the area's most musical. This program of world premieres includes Hook-Up, the study of a couple coming together and pulling apart, and now and again, a semi-improvisational journey performed to Bach blended with a contemporary soundscape. Finally, Romeo and Juliet in Mantua infuses modern movement into classical ballet, as 13 dancers simultaneously condense and expand on Shakespeare's tragedy and, true to form, add a new twist to its ending. (SP)
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| PERFORMANCE |
Manhattan Monologue Slam
| when: |
Tue 7.5 (8-9:30pm) |
| where: |
The Bowery Poetry Club (308 Bowery, 212.614.0505) map |
| price: |
$6 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Competing neophyte actors practically sweat adrenaline onstage, and the energetic hosts drum up excitement from the audience: this winning combination makes the Manhattan Monologue Slam an engaging and unusual night out. The main slam consists of a series of pre-selected actors performing a theatrical monologue of their choosing, which is then judged by a panel of industry professionals for a cash prize and career counseling. The subsequent slam invites audience members and actors to perform a 30-second monologue, earning the winner an invitation to the next show's competition, and a pretty good chance at getting discovered. (SP)
What is the title of Bowery Poetry Club owner Bob Holman's fifth book? The third
correct answer wins a pair of tickets to this slam.
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| MUSIC: Algerian Punk |
Rachid Taha w/ the Exit
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Rachid Taha has been attracting serious attention lately. When Brian Eno heard the French-Algerian rocker's music, he was so intrigued that he joined the band. When the Rolling Stones and Robert Plant heard the new punk rock superstar, they invited him to play some shows — now Taha draws large audiences wherever he goes, on his own. His venomous live show has earned him comparisons to Johnny Cash and Shane MacGowan, while his punk take on Algerian raï music has helped spread the defiant genre worldwide. Local punks the Exit open. (KES)
What nation is raï considered to have originated in? The tenth correct answer wins a pair of tickets to this show.
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| FILM |
RiverFlicks feat. Slackers (2002)
| when: |
Wednesdays: 7.6 - 8.24 (sunset) |
| where: |
Pier 54 (W 14th St at W Side Hwy) map |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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When the sun goes down over Hudson River Park, a screen lights up against the backdrop of an illuminated Hoboken skyline and the RiverFlicks begin. This summer's Wednesday screenings boast a decidedly lowbrow sense of humor, including Kevin Smith's Clerks, a pre-Matrix Keanu Reeves in Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure, and stoner classics Up in Smoke and The Big Lebowski. Kicking off the eight-week series under the stars is the college-boy-blackmails-classmates-in-the-name-of-love feature Slackers (2002), starring everyone's favorite academic misfit, Jason Schwartzman, as our heroes' scheming nemesis. (IB)
Note: Arrive early, as seating and free popcorn are first come, first serve.
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| DJ |
Damian Lazarus
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Damian Lazarus has a sweet tooth for jet-set techno so naughty that it's just begging to be spanked. Taking over from Ivan Smagghe for the second installment of the Suck My Deck mix series (inspired by Manchester's Optimo-like Bugged Out! parties), the well-traveled DJ test spins an array of slick but eclectic cuts with a distinctly rock vibe (check Villalobos' sly update of Thomas Dolby, or Superpitcher's stomping remix of M83). Hitting the road in support of his new disk, the Crosstown Rebels label boss comes a-courtin' NYC tonight, with raunch-filled crates to spare. (TW/JL)
What did Lazarus do for Tiga? The first correct answer wins a pair of
tickets to this event.
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| ALSO ON WED |
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MUSIC: Neo Soul
Amp Fiddler w/ Fertile Ground Wed 7.6 (8pm) S.O.B.'s (204 Varick St, 212.243.4940) map $16 / $14 advance
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Amp Fiddler's distinctly Detroit sound squeezes a lot of digital soul from his broken beats. Sextet Fertile Ground provide a more organic complement with their live blend of jazzy funk, Latin grooves, and reggae. (MV)
Note: Amp Fiddler also performs at BAM MetroTech on Thur 7.7.
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| ART: Opening |
SWOON
| when: |
Thur 7.7 (6-9pm) |
| where: |
Deitch Projects — Grand (76 Grand St, 212.343.7300) map |
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| links: |
Event Info | SWOON |
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After defining the standard for New York street arts with her intricately detailed wheat-pastings, SWOON takes command of Deitch Projects for her debut solo show. Inspired by wide-ranging multicultural influences, including Indonesian wayang puppets and German expressionist prints, her installation transforms the gallery into an all-encompassing urban landscape, evocative of everything from shadowy Hong Kong back-alleys to local stoops, sidewalks, and elevated railways. This is a world that revels in the magical multiplicity of the city growing upon itself. Spaces reproduce within spaces, figures within figures, and stories within stories in a symbolic, experiential cycle of decay, regeneration, and unregulated creativity. (AM)
Note: This exhibit continues through Sat 8.13 (Tue-Sat: 12-6pm).
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| DANCE |
Ben Munisteri Dance Projects
| when: |
Thur 7.7 (8:30pm) |
| where: |
Central Park SummerStage (Rumsey Field at 72nd St, 212.360.2777) map |
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| links: |
Event Info | Ben Munisteri |
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SummerStage hosts two veteran performers in this stunning evening of modern dance, as Brooklyn-born choreographer Ben Munisteri returns to Central Park to perform his fantastical repertoire with associate artistic director Lisa Wheeler. Known for the untamed, kinetic pulse beneath his controlled articulation, Munisteri presents Retrospective Portfolio, a pastiche of older works, as well as the premiere of Not Human. Marta Renzi's site-specific expressionism, meanwhile, holds nothing back. Accompanied by funk musician Steve Elson, she and her award-winning troupe, the Project Company, kick off this summer weekend with sensual abandon. (CP)
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| MUSIC: Electro-Bossa |
Jazzinho
| when: |
Thur 7.7 (9:30pm) |
| where: |
Joe's Pub (425 Lafayette St, 212.539.8778) map |
| price: |
$20 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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London-based bossa-jazz ensemble Jazzinho is led by singer/songwriter Guida de Palma — a bossa nova veteran who has shared the stage with legends Jaco Pastorius, Cab Calloway, and Gilberto Gil, as well as collaborated with electronic jocks including DJ Dorfmeister and dZihan & Kamien. Portuguese for "sweet little jazz," Jazzinho is de Palma's pet project — a space for her to compose her own songs, rather than play Brazilian standards. Embraced by critics of jazz, bossa nova, electronica, and soul alike, Jazzinho wafts casually across musical borders. (KES)
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| ALSO ON THUR |
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MULTIMEDIA
IGNITE! Thur 7.7 (8pm-12am) Puck Building Ballroom (295 Lafayette St, 212.427.2818) map $35
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IGNITE!, Gen Art's annual multimedia extravaganza, showcases 12 emerging artists and 30 short films, as well as live burlesque, a fortune teller, a snake charmer, and the requisite open bar. (SP)
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| FILM |
Murderball
| when: |
Opens Fri 7.8 |
| where: |
Various locations |
| price: |
$10.50 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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About Olympic-level quadriplegic rugby players, Murderball is at once a backstage story, a reconciliation saga, a rehab drama, a classic sports documentary, and a crash course in how to convey a potentially maudlin topic with grace and humor. For the US team members, it's not as if just playing is winning, Special Olympics style. In their armored chairs, they are cyborg gladiators: part man, part machine, and completely out for blood. Each of them has already conquered so much internal strife in order to come to terms with his physical limitations that they radiate a Buddha-like equanimity, just below the surface of their boys-will-be-boys bluster. (LR)
How did the US team fare in last year's Paralympic games? The 12th correct answer wins a pair of tickets to this film.
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| MULTIMEDIA |
Hop-Fu: Prodigal Son w/ Illstyle & Peace Productions
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The East-West obsessions of the Wu-Tang Clan have new heirs — tonight, former GZA collaborator DJ IXL and his Kolabz crew partner DJ Excess trot out a fusion of their two loves: martial arts and good ol' hip-hop. Video Audio Remix Industries' "hop-fu" multimedia concept gives Sammo Hung's 1982 kung fu classic Prodigal Son a live, kickin'-and-scratchin' original score. Preshow, b-boys from Illstyle & Peace Productions showcase airborne kicks and athletics; don't be surprised if, Stephen Chow-style, gravity seems to take a pause. (DO)
Sammo Hung's movie titles are often loosely translated. In your estimation, which is the most comical? The two funniest responses each win a pair of tickets to this event.
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| MUSIC: Spazz Pop |
Constantines w/ Oxford Collapse and Get Him Eat Him
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Indie-pop is calcifying. Its once loose conventions are hardening into rules; its once charming quirks are becoming as flatly predictable as an O.C. script. Thank the Mercury for tonight's bands, all of which melt our frosty rock-snob hearts. The young Providence quintet Get Him Eat Him pile hook upon hook at a dizzying rate and volume — imagine if Chavez formed a New Pornographers cover band, added vocoders, and got their awkward little hearts broken. Plus, GHEH's pedigree is immaculate: singer/guitarist Matt Lemay's a former Pitchfork writer (nerds, attaaack!). Pop-punks Oxford Collapse follow, and the Constantines, whose honest brand of gutbucket punk hasn't been seen since Ian MacKaye hung up his Fugazi shoes, headline this super-special bill. (TG)
Which Constantine battled his rebellious brother Nicephorus? The sixth correct answer wins a pair of tickets to this show.
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| ALSO ON FRI |
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DJ
CUT feat. Nick Catchdubs and Dave P Fri 7.8 (10pm) Bar Eleven (152 Orchard St, 212.979.2240) map FREE
Event Info |
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Making Time and FIXED host Dave P brings the "cocainesexjams" to join mash-up maestro Nick Catchdubs and residents the Captain and Dack Attack for the biweekly hipster bump-and-grind that is CUT. (IB)
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Warm Up feat. Hans-Peter Lindstrom and Prins Thomas on Decks, EFX, and Keys
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Hans-Peter Lindstrom and remix wizard Prins Thomas are purveyors of a mutant strain of Nordic disco known for its highly psychedelic properties (Lindstrom's oddly-titled EP There's a Drink in My Bedroom and I Need a Hot Lady sounds like an undiscovered Can outtake). The two recently applied their wide-reaching backgrounds — touching on punk, gospel, folk, and psychedelia — to a series of productions for the likes of the Juan Maclean, LCD Soundsystem, and Brennan Green. Tonight's live set tweaks this colorful, kaleidoscopic range of references and wraps it together nicely atop a thick 4/4 groove. (CJN)
Note: After the sun sets on P.S.1, the party heads into the city for FIXED at Tribeca Grand.
Which Nordic mutant warms you up the most? The hottest answer wins a pair of tickets to this event.
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| FESTIVAL |
Brazilian Art & Film Festival feat. Nação Zumbi and The Owner of History
| when: |
Sat 7.9 (7pm) |
| where: |
Central Park SummerStage (Rumsey Field at 72nd St, 212.360.2777) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info | Nação Zumbi |
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The kitchen-sink approach of SummerStage veterans Nação Zumbi quickly puts paid to preconceptions that percussion-heavy samba and mellow bossa nova are all that Brazilian music has to offer. The Recife-based band interweaves traditional Northeastern rhythms — like maracatu and coco — with jazz, hip-hop, and rock to create a contagious mix known as "mangue beat." This music/film double feature also includes a screening of The Owner of the History (2004), a romantic comedy best described as "Peggy Sue goes bossa nova." The plot revolves around an unhappy middle-aged housewife, who gets a chance to relive her youth and change the story of her life in Rio's swinging '60s. (NM)
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| MUSIC: Gutter Rock |
The Peppermints w/ S.T.R.E.E.T.S. and Mob Stereo
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Saturday night at Summercamp features a transcontinental lineup of bands united by their love of noise. Vancouver's S.T.R.E.E.T.S. (Skating Totally Rules, Everything Else Totally Sucks) re-ignite the usefulness of long-forgotten adjectives like "rad" and "gnarly" with their fierce, cocky brand of skate-thrash. Songs like "Too Fast to Powerslide" and "Shred Back the Night" exemplify the band's shout-chorus vocals, monstrous guitar licks, and thrilling beats. San Diego's the Peppermints — recently signed to Animal Collective's Paw Tracks label — bring "experimental barfy trash-rock" to the mix, fashioning terse, spazzy songs about everything from grapefruit to conservative Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum. Shoegazer-pop Brooklynites Mob Stereo open. (MP)
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| MULTIMEDIA: Opening |
Tropic of Cancer feat. Toshio Matsuura and DJ Nickodemus
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Anyone who's waited on a subway platform in the humid heart of summer knows that you don't have to be south of the Tropic of Cancer for the environment to feel downright equatorial. Tonight, combining music with more art than you can shake a machete at, Busquelo Productions presents its sultry annual extravaganza. Urban artist Rostarr, Barnstormers David Ellis and Che Jen, and graffiti artist Doze Green, among others, transport you to the tropics via a custom-designed casita and sculptures that riff on ancient Aztec and Mayan iconography. Brazilian singer Carla Alexander and DJs Toshio Matsuura, Nickodemus, Busquelo, and Queen Majesty & Scratch Famous with Bobo Saw, meanwhile, turn an eye toward creating a soulful, steamy dance floor climate. (JKG)
Note: The art installation remains on view through Sat 7.23. All proceeds from tonight's event benefit the Small Planet Fund, which supports grassroots movements around the world by fighting the root causes of hunger and social injustice.
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| MUSIC: Gospel Blues |
The Blind Boys of Alabama w/ Citizen Cope
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The Blind Boys of Alabama love New York City. It was here, in The Gospel at Colonus, that their stirring Southern harmonies earned them mainstream attention. Since the group's genesis more than 60 years ago — before there was rock, rap, or the Rolling Stones — the Blind Boys have gathered no moss. They stay fresh and relevant through their affiliation with Peter Gabriel's Real World Records and their work with Gabriel, Ben Harper, and sacred steel giant Robert Randolph. The two remaining founding members bring a palpable fire to tunes both secular and sacred on this welcome return. Basehead and Lazy K cohort Clarence Greenwood, aka Citizen Cope, got help from Meshell Ndegeocello and Carlos Santana on the long-delayed The Clarence Greenwood Recordings today he holds forth with his band, conveniently called Citizen Cope. (PS)
A founding member of the Blind Boys of Alabama died earlier this year. What was his name, and where was he born? The first five correct answers each win a Blind Boys CD.
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| ALSO ON SUN |
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DJ
Soul Summit Music Festival Sun 7.10 (3-9pm) Fort Greene Park (Dekalb Ave and Washington Park, Bklyn) map FREE
Event Info |
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Multiculti vibes trump indie apathy at these stellar gatherings, as grandmas get down with Phat Farm-clad b-boys, fashionistas bump booties with awkward adolescents, and everybody brings a picnic and the party spirit. Trust us. (JKG)
Note: The Soul Summits continue every Sunday (save 8.14) through 9.21 (3-9pm).
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| READING |
Cintra Wilson and Friends
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Cintra Wilson is an editorial sharpshooter. Sure, even a blindfolded monkey could hit media trainwrecks as wide as TomKat, but it's the way in which Wilson takes the deconstruction of celebrity to artistic highs that makes her so notable. Those who adore the writer's Salon rants will be happy to know that, in her first stab at fiction, she hasn't strayed from her expertise — Colors Insulting to Nature tells the story of a young Hollywood ingenue enticed by fame and the promise of A-list parties. Tonight, Wilson gathers an A-list of another sort for this reading, soliciting the participation of friends such as Jonathan Ames, Charlotte Booker, Mike Albo, and others. For fans, it's an opportunity to see the author in the flesh; for all those tormented by a secret tabloid habit, a chance to indulge. (ELM)
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| MULTIMEDIA |
Momus and Mai Ueda: I'll Speak, You Sing
| when: |
Now through Fri 7.15 (1pm) |
| where: |
Zach Feuer Gallery (530 W 24th St, 212.989.7700) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info | Momus | Mai Ueda |
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Billed as a three-week experiment in "Platonic Love," Momus and Mai Ueda's collaborative, improvised five-hour performances create faraway sonic landscapes through outlandish spatial narratives. Eccentric Scottish singer/songwriter Momus — signature eye-patch concealed under an orange hood — sits on the bare gallery floor producing sounds from his laptop while speaking meditatively into a microphone. As the master storyteller performs in a trance-like state, the beautiful Mai Ueda — a Japanese performance artist and founding member of the Neen movement — slinks around, singing her odd, high-pitched songs in response, presenting an offbeat and welcome break from the Chelsea bustle. (KP)
Note: The Zach Feuer Gallery is open Tue-Fri (10am-6pm).
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| MULTIMEDIA |
5 X U
| when: |
Now through Fri 7.22 (Mon-Fri: 11am-6pm) |
| where: |
Team Gallery (527 W 26th St, 212.279.9219) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info | Slater Bradley |
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5 X U premieres the first print in artful deceiver Slater Bradley's latest series of photographs, shot while he and his doppelgänger attended a Star Wars convention. Filled edge-to-edge with fans in full regalia, Uncharted Settlements I is a complex, disorienting study of the psychological dimensions of costume play. Norwegian artist Torbjørn Rødland takes a different track in his lyrical video Heart All This & Dog, which juxtaposes nubile girls against idealized landscapes tinged with danger and sexual tension. David B. Sherry uses light distortion to create sensual visions of young boys, while both Sterling Ruby and David Ratcliff employ digital collage and vicious humor to subvert media. (AM)
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| PHOTOGRAPHY |
William Eggleston: The Nightclub Portraits 1973
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Known for his candid depiction of the everyday South, William Eggleston is often considered the father of contemporary photography. On exhibition for the first time, his 1973 black-and-white Nightclub Portraits, shot in Memphis with a customized infrared lens, capture a brutal grace. His unwitting subjects upend the sense of staging or confrontation that often informs such projects; stripped of ego and washed in stark lighting, they are uncanny — and at times absurd — monuments to themselves. It's fascinating work from an American icon, and a precious glimpse into the juke joints and watering holes of a bygone era. (AM)
Note: Paintings by Marvin Israel are on display in the front gallery.
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| THEATRE |
Ice Factory 2005
| when: |
Wed 7.6 - Sat 8.13 (Wed-Sat: 7pm) |
| where: |
Ohio Theatre (66 Wooster St, 212.802.8007) map |
| price: |
$15 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Theatergoers used to grumble about the dearth of summer season options, but the past few years have seen an explosion of festivals. Ice Factory, created by avid supporter of independent theatre SoHo Think Tank, presents recent works by emerging and established downtown companies. This year's selection includes the Riot Group's Switch Triptych, a tale of three switchboard operators (described as a peep show for the brain), and the Witness Relocation Company's In a Hall in the Palace of Pyrrhus, an expressionist take on a Racine play — itself an adaptation of a Greek tragedy — awash in Grand Guignol blood and, natch, Bowie songs. (SP)
Which Bowie song has the most Grand Guignol potential, and why? Our favorite answer wins a pair of tickets to an Ice Factory production.
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PAGE BURNER: Vibrö |
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With print magazines hobbling along, web publications have generally stolen their fire. But a few enterprising outfits are sticking with a brick 'n mortar model to extend the periodical to an audio format. A bit like New York's Relay Project, Paris' Vibrö is a quarterly journal of sound art released on CD, featuring a range of ambitious audio projects ranging from field recordings to grating noise. Each issue is loosely themed; the current edition addresses "Broken Tales" in the form of travel diaries, radio plays, and cyborg constructions from artists like Scanner, Alejandra & Aeron, and Ryoji Ikeda. Check Vibrö's site to order the magazine, and grab some free downloads while you're there. (PHS)
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CD REVIEW: Jamie Lidell, Multiply |
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Warp
Released June 2005
$13.99 (Amazon)
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If not for its subtle, tech-y undertones and Jamie Lidell's decidedly Caucasian face on the cover, you could be forgiven for assuming Multiply is a lost compilation mining Otis, Marvin, and Stevie. A far cry from Lidell's techno-crooner work with Cristian Vogel as Super_Collider and the psychotic avant-garde collage of his 2000 solo debut, Multiply's stirring soul maintains the vintage warmth of its predecessors while emphasizing Lidell's shockingly authentic, virtuosic vocals and deft melodicism. Rhythms are intricately nuanced and, despite occasional studio trickery — such as the DJ Screw-style effects on "A Little Bit More" — the tastefully uncluttered production here perfectly complements the advanced tunesmithing. Not just a glowing tribute to American soul and R&B, Multiply is an earnest move into the future: one hand on a Hammond, the other on a laptop. (JCF)
Which two instruments did Lidell first learn to play back in the day? The eighth correct answer wins a copy of this CD.
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DOWNLOADS: Gomma |
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In addition to ranking among the best labels in Germany (check out WhoMadeWho's new The Loop 12-inch and the 2004 Munk LP Aperitivo for proof), Gomma sports a website containing quite a bit of media for your viewing and listening pleasure. This week, there's the "Kick out the Chairs" video featuring LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy on vocals, as well as a series of brand new DJ mixes. Highlights include a springtime electro-pop Munk set from Berlin's F.U.N. club; a disco, dub, and funk affair from Hiltmeyer Inc.; and a mix from Gomma friend DJ Kaos. (CJN)
Note: To access the downloadable mixes from Gomma's homepage, click on "mixtapes/videos (games)" in the left-hand navigation, then on "dj-mix." The featured MP3 mixes will appear on the right side of your screen — click to download.
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Munk: Total XX (Electro-pop)
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Hiltmeyer Inc.: A Tape for my Girlfriends! (Dub/disco)
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DJ Kaos: A Livemix (Big beat/soul)
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| Header Design: |
| Ficus | J. Byrnes |
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| Editors: |
| Cork | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Dogwood | Jake Lancaster | | The larch | Doug Levy | | Quaking aspen | Sascha Lewis | | Chinkapin oak | Andrew Maerkle | | Rose of Sharon | Mark Mangan | | Weeping willow | Colin J. Nagy | | Hackberry | Stephan Paschalides | | Boxwood | Kristin Savarese | | Loblolly pine | Peter Stepek |
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| ABOUT US |
| flavorpill NYC is a free weekly email magazine covering music, arts, and cultural events in New York City. All listings are pure editorial, never paid advertisements — no money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us, and spread it... |
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| FEEDBACK |
| Please let us know what's on your mind, any and all feedback — comments, questions, ideas, or rants. |
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| EVENT SUBMISSIONS |
| To let us know about an upcoming event that you think belongs here, please email us at events at least two weeks prior to the date.
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| Contributors: |
| Butternut | Irene Bradish | | Thornless honeylocust | Josh C. Forbes | | Baobab | Todd Goldstein | | Flamboyant | Natasha Madov | | Sourwood | Elizabeth L. McDonald | | Ponderosa pine | Claudia Palmira | | Chinese pistache | Kristin Poor | | Magnolia | Lisa Rosman | | Kiefer pear | Philip H. Sherburne | | American sweetgum | Kate E. Simko | | Eastern redbud | Yancey Strickler | | Texas ebony | Toby Warner |
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Production: |
| Poplar | Anjuli Ayer | | Ginkgo | Sander-Martijn Milks | | Manuka | David Morrow | | Cinnamon | Dayo Olopade | | Japanese maple | Melissa Phruksachart | | Shoe | Leah Taylor | | Littleleaf linden | Marcella Veneziale |
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MORE FILTERED CULTURE |
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Global fashion trends
A twice-monthly, insider view on fashion trends breaking in Paris, London, New York, and around the world
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© 2005 Flavorpill Productions LLC. All rights reserved.
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