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SWOON & Tod Seelie |
Cultural Stimuli in NYC
Issue 269: bird's-eye flavor

Despite the fact that many an NYC dweller is about to go M.I.A. for an August vacation, we're keeping our eyes trained on what's available to those of us who hold steady in the city. It's a great week for those who like to watch, with plenty of summer film fare, from the new documentary Darwin's Nightmare and the Southern comfort-crashin' feature Junebug to a look at Harlem's swingin' drag queens and the self-explanatory Found Footage Festival. If you want something a little less fierce, there's a park-set Granta reading, the sweet ballads of Doveman, and an opportunity to debate the merits of being drunk vs being stoned. Before you fly away, be sure to 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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In 1884, a German brewer named Wilhelm Hasse emigrated from his homeland and established the Modezuma brewery in Veracruz, Mexico. In 1897, Hasse blended his brewing heritage with the spirit of Mexican tradition to create Dos Equis. Carrying the distinctive "XX", Dos Equis symbolizes a celebration of the last century and its revolutionary vision, while honoring the new millennium. |
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| MUSIC: Uzbekistani |
Uzbek Musicians Play with the Bang on a Can All-Stars
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Uzbekistan has a rich classical-music tradition that blends the sounds of northern China with the modal systems and Sufi poetry of central Asia. Tonight, some of Uzbekistan's finest musicians and composers join downtown's avant impresarios Bang on a Can All Stars for a one-time performance. Three young Uzbek composers reinterpret northern Silk Road music, blending modern and traditional sounds and utilizing Eastern and Western instrumentation. Expect an unusual evening of music — composed and improvised, acoustic and electric — all created fresh for the group's first New York audience. (AD)
Besides Uzbekistan, which is the only other country in the world
considered to be doubly landlocked? The third correct response wins a pair
of tickets to this show.
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| ALSO ON TUE |
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COMEDY
The 42nd Underground Tue 8.2 (9pm) Laurie Beechman Theatre at West Bank Cafe (407 W 42nd St, 212.695.6909) map $10
Event Info |
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42nd Underground's weekly shows mix sketch comedy, standup, and improv. Todd Barry and Lewis Black are their biggest names thus far, but tonight's queue of comics, including the Royal We troupe, boasts much potential. (JKG)
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| FILM |
Darwin's Nightmare
| when: |
Opens Wed 8.3 (schedule) |
| where: |
IFC Center (323 6th Ave, 212.924.7771) map |
| price: |
$10.75 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Darwin's Nightmare really portrays just that. In director Hubert Sauper's wildly harrowing documentary, a non-native fish destroys everything else in Tanzania's Lake Victoria; foreign capitalists farm the fish to feed Europeans even as Africans starve; and the ensuing Tanzanian dog-eat-dog culture of extreme poverty, disease, prostitution, and war ensures only the wiliest and strongest can survive. By the film's end, words like "new world order" and "consumer democracy" have taken on a nefariousness that even the most hard-nosed capitalist can scarcely ignore. Only the film's own undiagnosed imperialism (such as subtitles accompanying slightly accented English) occasionally hampers its impact. (LR)
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| ALSO ON WED |
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MUSIC: Funk 'n Soul
Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings Wed 8.3 (7pm) Madison Square Park (btwn 5th & Madison Aves and 23rd & 26th Sts, 212.538.5058) map FREE
Event Info |
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Classic R&B torchbearer Sharon Jones performed with the Four Tops back in the day, but her live Motown sound is really all about garage-band energy, Jbs-style breakdowns, and treacle-rich, yearning vocals. (TW)
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FILM
Junebug Opens Wed 8.3 Angelika Film Center (18 W Houston St, 212.995.2000) map $10.75
Event Info |
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A money man's exodus back to his modest Southern family home offers a lush, hushed, and darkly comic examination of the improbabilities of shedding one's class, background, and religious faith. (LR)
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| ART: Opening |
Drunk vs Stoned 2
| when: |
Thur 8.4 (6-8pm) |
| where: |
Gavin Brown's Enterprise (436 W 15th St, 212.627.5258) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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The painterly Reeder brothers revive their ongoing investigation of intoxicating states of mind with Drunk vs Stoned 2. More psychological study than hedonistic manifesto, this year's installment surveys intensive ganja ruminations and impulsive booze-propelled outbursts through a multigenerational roundup of artists including Dearraindrop, Elizabeth Peyton, and Yayoi Kusama. Works run the sobriety gamut from Edgar Bryan's sloshed sentimentality in his pastel painting Touched, to Evan Holloway's blotto assemblage of steel, plaster, paper, paint, string, and currency. A good ol' time takes over GBE's main space with a beer-serving saloon and jug band at the opening, while wild card Mike Kelley shows new work at Chelsea watering hole, Passerby. (CEK)
Note: The exhibit continues through Wed 9.7 (Mon-Fri: 12-6pm). Events include a screening of Kenneth Anger films, a stoned drawing party, a 24-hour musical superjam, and a Drunk vs Stoned soccer match.
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| READING |
Park Lit: Granta
| when: |
Thur 8.4 (6:30pm) |
| where: |
Madison Square Park (btwn 23rd & 26th Sts and 5th & Madison Aves) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info | Granta |
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Grab a blanket and cozy up next to a tree for a reading series that would surely warm the cockles of Thoreau's heart. Each week this summer, a different literary magazine, website, or press invites a selection of its writers to do a reading in New York's answer to nature — a city park. This week, Granta — the magazine and book publisher known for championing excellent fiction and non-fiction stories that range from intimate human experiences to political events — features Luc Sante, author of Low Life, Moscow-based writer Mary Gessen, and James Lasdun, a chronicler of everyday life. (MB)
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| MUSIC: Insomnia Pop |
Doveman
| when: |
Thur 8.4 (7:30pm) |
| where: |
Joe's Pub (425 Lafayette St, 212.539.8778) map |
| price: |
$12 |
| links: |
Event Info | Doveman |
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Often lit only by a single floor lamp, balladeer Thomas Bartlett leads the minor keys and careful arrangements of Doveman's self-styled "insomnia pop." Delicate melodies, muffled percussion, dissonant piano, and tentative banjo plucks echo the subdued laments of Bartlett's hedging vocals. Punctuated by the occasional coronet and violin, the frontman's breathy whispers and forlorn verses divulge intimate burdens, without resorting to histrionics to decry his angst. Like those of Jeff Buckley, and Nick Drake before him, Doveman's songs are tragic serenades to isolation. (IB)
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| MUSIC: Avant-Jazz |
Archie Shepp/Roswell Rudd Quartet
| when: |
Thur 8.4 - Sun 8.7 (Thur & Sun: 8 & 10pm / Fri & Sat: 8, 10 & 11:30pm) |
| where: |
Iridium Jazz Club (1650 Broadway, 212.582.2121) map |
| price: |
$27.50-30 |
| links: |
Event Info | Archie Shepp | Roswell Rudd |
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Trombonist Roswell Rudd plays out regularly; it's tenor sax legend Archie Shepp who makes this such a special bill. Shepp did for the sax what Cecil Taylor did for the piano — he employs a multiphonic vocabulary that pushes the limits of both his instrument and his listeners' conceptions of what jazz can be. His sound links the furious musicality of John Coltrane to the far-out cacophony of free jazzers like Albert Ayler: harmony meets skronk, as it were. You may hear a Coltrane tune or two tonight, as Shepp's classic 1964 album Four For Trane featured both Rudd and the quartet's bassist, the masterful Reggie Workman. (CL)
Where was Coltrane stationed during World War II? The third and
fourth responses that correctly name the state each win a pair of tickets to
this show.
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| DJ |
Konrad Black w/ Marcos Cabral and Bruce Tantum
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While his Wagon Repair labelmate Matthew Jonson might be more widely known, Konrad Black has been steadily churning out a series of top-tier 12-inches, characterized by their slightly warped, almost goth approach to minimal techno. The productions are already standard issue for forward-thinking jocks from Swayzak to Ivan Smagghe (who licensed a track for his forthcoming Fabric mix). Tonight, Black is joined by Marcos Cabral, who records for Triple R's sublime Trapez imprint, and electronic-music veteran (and Time Out NY clubs editor) Bruce Tantum. Brace yourself for seductively gloomy yet highly danceable tracks that are bound to become part of the NYC night creature's repertoire. (CJN)
Note: Open bar from 10-11pm.
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| ALSO ON THUR |
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THEATRE
Scapin Thur 8.4 - Sun 8.28 (Thur-Sun: 7pm) Central Park (103rd St & Central Park West, 212.252.4531) map FREE
Event Info |
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Moliere's father-son feud as slapstick comedy is quite moving, literally: Scapin's actors travel 50 feet every ten minutes, incorporating audience members and the Central Park locale into the plot. (SP)
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| MUSIC: Jazz |
Pianos in the Park: Brad Mehldau, Jason Moran and the Bandwagon, and Eric Lewis
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Three master jazz pianists take the stage to honor Thelonious Monk — a father of modern jazz and a true legend. Brad Mehldau recently began touring solo after years in a quartet, and his latest one-man show is influenced by musicians ranging from Nick Drake to Radiohead; Jason Moran's original compositions are as engaging as his progressive interpretations of Björk and Afrika Bamabaataa; and Thelonious Monk International Competition champ Eric Lewis has toured with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra. (MV)
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| FILM |
Found Footage Festival
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Picking up where the Trachtenburg Family Slideshow Players left off, the Found Footage Festival, in association with Rooftop Films, offers 90 minutes of entertainment via lost relics of VHS. After raiding dumpsters and garage sales coast to coast, MCs Geoff Haas, Joe Pickett, and Nick Prueher piece together comedic clips and commentaries ranging from a Wendy's training video hosted by a long-lost member of Run-DMC, and a redneck biking enthusiast's birthday, to a vintage "you just can't script this" infomercial, complete with foul-mouthed outtakes. Just pray they didn't come across that footage from the junior high school talent show you threw out years ago. (LT)
What did Joseph "Run" Simmons (of Run-DMC) study at LaGuardia Community College? The first two correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this festival.
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| ALSO ON FRI |
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MUSIC: Indie Bar Rock
The Hold Steady Fri 8.5 & Sat 8.6 (9pm) Bowery Ballroom (6 Delancey St, 212.533.2111) map $15
Event Info |
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His career validated by rock critic ink, Craig Finn,
the Hold Steady's arrhythmic shouter, is Springsteen
for nerds and malcontents, and Separation Sunday is his Born to Run. (YS)
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MUSIC: Garage Psych
Weird War Fri 8.5 (11:30pm) Mercury Lounge (217 E Houston St, 212.260.4700) map $10
Event Info |
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Former Make-Up/Nation of Ulysses main man Ian Svenonious has spirit like he's got chest hair (don't ask). Weird War's Illuminated by Light continues his gospel-punk obsession. (YS)
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| FILM |
Paris is Burning (1991) and Who's the Top? (2005)
| when: |
Sat 8.6 (6:30pm & 9:15pm) |
| where: |
Walter Reade Theater (70 Lincoln Center Plaza, 212.496.3809) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info | Paris is Burning |
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Paris is Burning represents the best of the last decade's short-lived New Queer Cinema movement with its portrayal of Harlem's fantabulous drag balls of days gone by, where black and Hispanic trannies and queens vogued and sashayed competitively. Jennie Livingston's tender documentary celebrates the lives of these stronger-than-they-seem performers, while pointedly commenting on the harsh reality of their everyday lives. The filmmaker is present for a post-film discussion, as well as to introduce her newest work, Who's the Top?, a short film about sexuality as an unexpected discovery, replete with fantasy musical numbers. (SP)
What are the three main styles of voguing? The fourth and fifth
correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this screening.
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| MUSIC: Anglo Folkapella |
John Wesley Harding's Love Hall Tryst
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On impulse, John Wesley Harding spawned Love Hall Tryst, the four-part a capella group comprised of himself, Kelly Hogan, Nora O'Connor, and Brian Lohmann. The British expat — who stole his stage name from a Bob Dylan album — skipped out early from Cambridge and trailblazed folk noir in the '80s. After publishing Misfortune, a stylistically 18th-century novel featuring 13 traditional folk tunes from the UK, Harding called upon his friends to set word to song. The result? A titillating mélange of sublime harmony and wickedly dark humor. (FAY)
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| ALSO ON SAT |
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DJ
The Realest Killaz: Party for the NYC Underground Sat 8.6 (12-8pm) The Frying Pan (23rd St and the West Side Highway, 212.989.6363) map FREE
Event Info |
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One of New York's premiere underground crews organizes this daylong celebration of non-mainstream beats, featuring the city's best in lyrical hip-hop, deep house, and experimental. (BB)
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DJ
Warm Up feat. Josh Wink w/ Stacey Pullen Sat 8.6 (3-9pm) P.S.1 (22-25 Jackson Ave, LIC, 718.784.2084) map $8
Event Info |
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Philly's trans-genre mixmaster Josh Wink braves the heat, spinning midtempo techno and acid house at P.S.1's summer shindig. Stacey Pullen starts the party with exotic tribal and smooth, jazzy house. (IB)
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| MUSIC: Shanty Pop |
M.I.A. w/ Diplo and DJ Rekha
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Now comes the hard part. Her star sufficiently risen within the industry, M.I.A.'s next challenge is to get
regular folks to pay her heed. If anyone could change magazine profiles (water) into actual sales (wine),
it's the Sri Lankan singer/rapper, whose debut, Arular, has already garnered Hot 97 play and won her a guest spot on the new Missy Elliott album. The burden rests on label Interscope's marketing department — is M.I.A. gangsta lean, dance hall queen, or world music 'tween? So long as boyfriend DJ Diplo is in tow, there's room for all three. Showing support is DJ Rekha, a world-renowned bhangra spinner. (YS)
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| FILM |
Don't Look Back (1967) and The Last Waltz (1978)
| when: |
Mon 8.8 (7-10pm) |
| where: |
Center for Jewish History (15 W 16th St, 917.606.8200) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Though poets Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti make cameos, more than Beats connect these documentaries turned all-star concerts. Both films show blues-rock Americana in fine form: Don't Look Back finds D.A. Pennebaker tailing a young, brash Bob Dylan on tour in England and at a musical crossroads; The Last Waltz's Martin Scorsese films the Band's "farewell" gig and its pantheon of music greats — Muddy Waters, Joni Mitchell, the Staples, Neil Young, and Dylan in a crossover appearance. Both include interviews that yield nuggets of brilliance, including Robbie Robertson deadpanning on the Band's controversial breakup: "Twenty years on tour? I wouldn't even begin to discuss it." (DO)
Which music critic discovered Dylan in Greenwich Village's Gerde's Folk
City Club? The first correct response wins a pair of tickets to this
screening.
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| ART |
There are no more Allan Kaprows in the art world
| when: |
Now through Sun 8.14 (Wed-Sun: 12-6pm) |
| where: |
Silo (1 Freeman Alley, entrance on Rivington St, btwn Bowery & Chrystie St, 212.505.9156) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info | Allan Kaprow |
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Tucked away in the Manhattan oasis Freeman Alley, Silo celebrates its one-year anniversary with homage to legendary "happenings" pioneer Allan Kaprow. Following his lead, the artists here eschew formal convention in search of liminal spaces between art and everyday life. Stephan Pascher's after-hours intervention at a Swedish co-op investigates the intersection between shoppers' inner thoughts and the anonymous eye of the security camera. Elke Lehmann unravels the symbols of American post-9/11 patriotism through found fashion, and Douglas Boatwright reinterprets the Beach Boys in a deadpan, self-produced videogram. Patrick Grenier's slide presentation Invisible History of Chelsea is perhaps best representative of the ideas driving this show in its unrelenting circumvention of the gallery scene. (AM)
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| THEATRE |
Manuscript
| when: |
Now through Sun 8.21 (Mon & Wed-Fri: 8pm / Sat: 3 & 8pm / Sun: 3 & 7pm) |
| where: |
Daryl Roth Theatre (101 E 15th St, 212.375.1110) map |
| price: |
$35 / $65 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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In Paul Grellong's engaging drama — much like in Whit Stillman's films — young urban types exchange witty banter, use pop-literary allusions ("Randy Cohen!"), and passionately discuss how wrestling became one of modern dance's last innovative forms. Beyond the droll dialogue lies a mystery plot involving three ambitious Ivy League college kids who must decide what to do with a well-known dead author's abandoned manuscript. This knotty plot device deepens the play's impact, by exposing the way ambition can become naked greed. (SP)
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| PHOTOGRAPHY |
Geert Goiris
| when: |
Now through Tue 8.23 (Tue-Sat: 10am-6pm) |
| where: |
Zach Feuer Gallery (530 W 24th St, 212.989.7700) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info | Geert Goiris |
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The mesmerizing landscapes, beguiling interiors, and subdued individuals in Geert Goiris' large, crisp Lambda prints constitute a dramatic interplay between remorseless reality and the realm of fantasy that hides within. A somber, Lego-like construction towering over a hillside path in Ministry of Transportation is a sad monument to modernity; the long exposure of a pyrotechnic explosion creates a fire-and-brimstone vision of ethereal light flashing suddenly in a bucolic pasture in Blast #3; while Albino features a listless white wallabee sitting on perfectly green grass. Together, these photographs question the authoritative view of the camera and its ability to distinguish between the real and the imaginary. (JF)
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| THEATRE |
The Strawberry One-Act Festival
| when: |
Fri 8.5 - Sun 8.14 (Mon-Fri: 7 & 9pm / Sat-Sun: 3, 5, 7 & 9pm) |
| where: |
Producers Club II (616 9th Ave, 646.623.3488) map |
| price: |
$15 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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The Strawberry One-Act Festival could easily be regarded as an
American Idol knockoff: a theatre competition in which audiences and
judges cast votes to declare a winning play. But the annual event has
been around for ten years — long before Mr. Cowell and company interrupted our lives. Forty playwrights compete for the chance to have a full-length play produced, and in the process, theatre lovers get to discover fresh talent — and the occasional rotten tomato — from all over the country. Title simplicity prevails in A Play About a Guitar and A Play About a Mouse, while Post Inferno and Hell for Dummies are set for a Dante-themed showdown. (SP)
Note: Semi-finals and related performances continue through Thur 8.21. Check the schedule for details.
What was the name of Dante's wife? The second and third correct
responses each win a pair of tickets to this festival.
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NEWS FROM THE HOMEFRONT: Apartment Therapy |
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New Yorkers are in a weird bind when it comes to apartments: we often spend up to half our income on them, leaving little left for interior decoration. Yet, with space at such a premium, even if we could afford furniture aplenty, where would we put it? Apartment Therapy offers fresh and furious NYC-specific content (nearly every hour) focusing on how to spruce up your place, from the chic to the just plain cheap. It's not just about finding a great closet organizer in the East Village or green furniture shop-hopping in Brooklyn, either, as discussions arise around all things "home." Recent posts have included a heated debate surrounding Fresh Direct's service and a cozy one about the best flowerboxes in the city. (JKG)
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DVD REVIEW: The Nomi Song |
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Palm Pictures
Released June 2005
$15.98 (Amazon)
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Of the many talented artists to flood downtown in the '70s, there was no more unique or transcendent figure than Berlin émigré Klaus Nomi. Equally inspired by Maria Callas and Elvis Presley, Nomi's flawless, crystalline falsetto could pierce even the most jaded poseur's heart. By out-spacing Bowie in his creation of an authentic alien persona, Nomi burst out as a new-wave legend and passed on as one of the first recognizable artists to die of AIDS. Director Andrew Horn's film smartly balances insider interviews with live performance footage, revealing the truly operatic tale of a strange, sweet, and lonely man whose confluent pop-opera passions and sophisticated stage intensity placed him in a category all his own. A soundtrack, photo gallery, director commentary, and uncut Nomi performances are among the DVD extras. (JCJ)
Andrew Horn traveled to Berlin in 1989 to study with what fellowship? The second correct response wins a Nomi Song DVD.
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STREAMS: DIRTY |
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Mining the web for the dirty diamonds of digital culture, the Paris-based Dirty collective once again serves up some of the best content around, ranging from videos and interviews to oddball links (home videos from Slayer on tour, anyone?). This week, check a photo montage of All Tomorrow's Parties in Camber Sands, England (curated by Vincent Gallo) as well as an, um, shall we say "out-there" video from Ariel Pink. Finally, for the headphones, check Ammon Contact with the experimental breaks, a videotaped Out Hud performance at Pianos, and Trevor Jackson's cut-and-paste megamix — a perfect soundtrack for Last Night's Party. (CJN)
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Ammon Contact: Dirty mix (Beats 'n breaks)
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Out Hud (video): "Dear Mr. Bush..." (Disco-punk)
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Trevor Jackson: Dirty mix (Electro/hip-hop)
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| Header Design: |
| Hyssop | SWOON & Tod Seelie |
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| Editors: |
| Jalapeno | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Quinoa | Jake Lancaster | | Pomegranate | Doug Levy | | Coriander | Sascha Lewis | | Acacia | Andrew Maerkle | | Celery | Mark Mangan | | Gingko | Colin J. Nagy | | Carob | Stephan Paschalides | | Lupin | Kristin Savarese |
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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: |
| Tomato | Brian Blessinger | | Chamomile | Mindy Bond | | Mustard | Irene Bradish | | Poppy | Adam Davids | | Ginseng | Julie Fishkin | | Mint | Joe C. Jarrell | | Kiwi | Catherine E. Krudy | | Fennel | Chris Lamb | | Milk thistle | Chris MacLeod | | Marigold | Lisa Rosman | | Nettle | Yancey Strickler | | Wild oat | Toby Warner | | Dandelion | Faith-Ann Young |
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Production: |
| Monkey puzzle | Anjuli Ayer | | Pine | Jessica Bauer-Greene | | Raspberry | Sander-Martijn Milks | | Cumin | David Morrow | | Coconut | Dayo Olopade | | Apple | Melissa Phruksachart | | Sesame | Leah Taylor | | Bad | Marcella Veneziale | | Strawberry | Judah Wiedre |
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