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Oksana Badrak courtesy of Start Mobile |
Cultural Stimuli in NYC Issue 297: crush-worthy flavor
This past weekend's record snowfall might have slowed our fair city down a notch, but the blanketing isn't likely to dampen Valentine's flames. Even in Turin, the Olympics' opening ceremonies were devoted to passion, showing that spandex-clad jocks can get downright kinky. And because not everyone believes V-Day is an excuse for Kama Sutra-style eroticism or unbridled mushiness, we offer a Dumpster and an angst-ravaganza as alternatives. Aside from cupids and black hearts, this week holds a performance from post-rock originator Dave Pajo, a raunchy glam reunion with the New York Dolls, analysis of contemporary realpolitiking via Bush's Brain, and a clear-eyed portrayal of a painful, yet enduring, marriage in Norman & Beatrice. You don't have to be down with the love-is-all crowd to crush out on culture, so spread it...
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flavorpill NYC is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.

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Unpretentious and ready to drink, Beaujolais might be the most approachable wine on the market today. Rich in quality and flavor, Beaujolais is the perfect wine for casual entertaining on a budget. Why be intimidated by wine? Focus instead on enjoying the party and savoring your Beaujolais. |
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| ART |
Nicola Durvasula, Chitra Ganesh, and Tejal Shah
| when: |
Now through Sat 2.18 (Tue-Sat: 10am-6pm) |
| where: |
Thomas Erben Gallery (526 W 26th St, 4th Fl, 212.645.8701) map |
| price: |
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Event Info |
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Thomas Erben brings together three contemporary female artists whose sensually charged work is heavily influenced by Indian pop culture, from Kama Sutra illustrations to Bollywood film tropes. Tejal Shah's video Chingari Chumma/Stinging Kiss splices action-movie sequences of a villainous abduction into a lighthearted S&M scenario. This unexpected narrative twist reflects the strange identity reversals present in the other artists' works. Chitra Ganesh re-photographs collages of Hindu comics, whose disembodied deities and feminine undercurrents mirror themes expressed in her own mixed-media drawings. Nicola Durvasula paints small-scale works on paper whose fine lines and dreamy shading update the Asian tradition of miniature painting. (CEK)
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| DJ |
Love Off feat. DJs Maxxbass and Pappawheelie
| when: |
Tue 2.14 (9pm) |
| where: |
Cake Shop (152 Ludlow St, 212.253.0036) map |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Sure, a reservation at Per Se might impress some girls, but if you want to score with a really hip chick, take her to the Cake Shop this V-Day. Start with some vegan cookies, buy her a rare record, then sweep her downstairs to sway to DJs Maxxbass and Pappawheelie. Since relocating to New York from Portland last year, Maxxbass has been getting dance floors hot and bothered with sassy slowjams, while Florida transplant Pappawheelie spins bass, electro, and baile funk. Finish off the night by enjoying the sounds of the excellently monikered Soiled Mattress and the Springs and Seriously Sensual Seduxxion, a one-off band featuring members of This Invitation, Bloodmobiles, the Cause Co-motion, and Dancin' Dogs. (CLH)
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| MULTIMEDIA: Opening |
Douglas Boatwright
| when: |
Wed 2.15 (6-8pm) |
| where: |
Silo (1 Freeman Alley, 212.505.9156) map |
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Event Info |
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Incorporating linguistic- and body-performance art, Douglas Boatwright's work reconsiders identity by examining ideas of perception, experience, and learned social acumen. His exhibition comprises photographs, wall drawings, and an installation of projected works. With the gallery windows blackened for a piece that involves exposing photo emulsion, the lighting is primarily provided by works within the show. In one video, Boatwright synchronizes his mother's empty childhood home with the rhythm of a heartbeat, in another he creates a personalized translation of the Louis Malle film Murmur of the Heart (1971). Interested in the effects of media contagion and the seductive qualities of light and aesthetics, Boatwright demonstrates the profound connections between the two. (PJ)
Note: This exhibition continues through Wed 3.15 (Wed-Sun: 12-6pm).
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| DJ |
Recall Lab #1 feat. DJ Cam w/ Grand National
| when: |
Wed 2.15 (9pm-4am) |
| where: |
Hiro Ballroom, The Maritime Hotel (366 W 17th St, 212.242.4300) map |
| price: |
$20 / $13 advance |
| links: |
Event Info | DJ Cam | Grand National |
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Eclectic French label Recall Records celebrates its first American releases at the opening night of its monthly Recall Lab party. DJ Cam's blunted hip-hop, cut with subtle scratches and noodling jazz samples, has long been fodder for the remix. His first disc for Recall, DJ Cam revisited by..., sees his take on soul music suitably reworked. Tonight, however, Cam returns to the decks, spinning his refined
take on dub. Meanwhile, British duo Grand National pare down the layered synth melodies and choppy rhythm guitars of their sunny groove rock songs for an acoustic set supporting the domestic release of their own Kicking the National Habit. Beat Radio and DJs Alex English and Chris Annibell round out the bill. (IB)
Which is the only horse to have won the prestigious Grand National steeplechase three times? The third correct response wins a pair of tickets to this show.
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| FILM |
Film Comment Selects
| when: |
Wed 2.15 - Tue 2.28 |
| where: |
Walter Reade Theater (70 Lincoln Center Plaza, 212.496.3809) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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It's time again for Film Comment's cinephiles to divine a two-week program that mirrors their magazine's eclecticism. For its sixth series, the staff salutes three filmmakers, Elaine May, William Eggleston, and Raul Ruiz, in addition to cherry-picking its usual eccentric assortment of international feature and short New York premieres. Included in this year's mix is Carlos Reygadas' Battle in Heaven, Wang Xiaoshuai's Cannes Jury Prize winner, Shanghai Dreams, a finespun story about the trials of a teen girl and her family in 1980s rural China, and Ernest Abdyshaparov's Saratan, a light-hearted tale of a quirky Kyrgyzstan village in the post-Soviet era. (MB)
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| ALSO ON WED |
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READING
Mortified NYC Wed 2.15 (8pm) The Tank (279 Church St, 212.563.6269) map $15
Event Info |
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Get down with the Droopy Dog set for this post-V-Day angst-ravaganza where a bunch of poor saps read authentic lovelorn diary entries, letters, and poetry. Bleeding-heart performers include the Rejection Show's Jon Friedman. (JKG)
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DANCE
The Money Conversation Wed 2.15 - Sun 2.19 (Wed-Fri: 8:30pm / Sat: 4:30 & 8:30pm / Sun: 4:30pm) P.S. 122 (150 1st Ave, 212.477.5829) map $20
Event Info |
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This show is so money — literally. Sara Juli attempts to deal with her currency issues through a dance and live-art experiment that puts $5,000 into the hands of (perplexed) audience members across five nights. (SP)
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| MULTIMEDIA |
Ikue Mori's Bhima Swarga
| when: |
Thur 2.16 (8pm) |
| where: |
The Stone (NW corner of 2nd St & Ave C) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info | Ikue Mori |
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The toughest part about being avant-garde — besides dealing with all those philistines who don't understand you — is staying fresh. Ikue Mori has spent 25 years at the forefront of New York's downtown scene without either regurgitating her work or retreating into the comfort of, say, bittersweet reflections on childhood — an admirable feat. Mori's latest project, Bhima Swarga, uses electronic percussion signals to trigger processed projections of traditional Balinese paintings depicting the journey through hell to heaven. (MP)
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| MUSIC: Chamber Pop |
The Autumn Defense
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The Autumn Defense is a collaboration between Wilco and Uncle Tupelo bassist John Stirratt, and multi-instrumentalist and producer Pat Sansone. As filmed in I Am Trying to Break Your Heart (2002), Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy can simultaneously craft brilliant tunes and be a pugnacious control-freak in the studio; Stirratt has remained in Wilco since its inception because he does not threaten Tweedy's artistic control. The Autumn Defense is Stirratt's creative outlet — lush country-tinged pop reminiscent of the late-'60s/early '70s California of Stephen Stills, Brian Wilson, and Neil Young. Arrive early tonight: Wilco fans are a devout bunch known to crowd anything associated with the band. (BC)
Note: The Autumn Defense also perform at the Living Room on Wed 2.15 (10pm).
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| ART: Discussion |
Artists on Art: Julian LaVerdiere and Sanford Biggers
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Known for his hybridizations of African American and Asian culture, Sanford Biggers turns up at the Rubin Museum to rap about the Buddha, colorful Tibetan gods, and other characters encountered in this renowned collection of Himalayan religious art. Sculptor and installation artist Julian LaVerdiere, whose work on the Twin Towers, Tribute in Light, left us all misty-eyed and awestruck, is also set for tonight's double bill of informal artists' talks organized in collaboration with Art AsiaPacific magazine. With a focus on open minds and enlightenment, this unique series continues through spring with artists such as Kent Henricksen, who creates immersive, full-room installations, and Andrew Guenther, whose voodoo-styled mise-en-scènes glow with occult energy. (JK)
Note: Artists on Art programming continues every Friday night at the Rubin Museum through May.
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| FILM |
Battle in Heaven
| when: |
Opens Fri 2.17 |
| where: |
Angelika Film Center (18 W Houston St, 212.995.2000) map |
| price: |
$10.75 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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If one quality defines Mexican cinema's renaissance, it's a highly charged class consciousness that pulls no punches. From Battle in Heaven's controversial opening scene, in which a wealthy family's daughter gives her much older chauffer fellatio, it's clear director Carlos Reygadas (Japón) has evolved this consciousness into an aesthetic of true contrasts drawing on the jumble of its Mexico City backdrop. It's also stamped by an elemental gravitas that matches the big question Battle's Greek tragedy of a kidnapping storyline delivers: What happens when a city's ethics fall so short of true human morality? (LR)
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| ALSO ON FRI |
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MUSIC: Cerebral Rock
Wilderness Fri 2.17 (9:30pm) Cake Shop (152 Ludlow St, 212.253.0036) map $8
Event Info |
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Even in its newly-renovated (read: not eensy-weensy) form, Cake Shop's stage may have a hard time accommodating Wilderness "singer" James Johnson's amelodic bellowing and whooping, but the band's guitar work is so pretty you won't even notice. (TG)
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DJ
Night Time feat. Optimo Fri 2.17 (10pm-4am) Don Hill's (511 Greenwich St, 212.219.2850) map $10
Event Info |
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The duo of JD Twitch and JG Wilkes, aka Optimo, brings its genre-bending ethic all the way from Scotland to mix music you're unlikely to hear in a club context elsewhere, from soul and psych rock to minimal techno and acid house. (CJN)
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| MULTIMEDIA: Opening |
Scott Treleaven
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Scott Treleaven burst onto the scene with his hard-hitting gay punk manifesto SALiVATION ARMY, which earned Best Of honors from the Village Voice in 2002. Now, he has his first New York exhibition at John Connelly Presents, including collage works, photographs, sculpture, and a new film. Collages such as Hive and Desire Armed combine sinister, hand-worked details with ornamental flourishes of Japanese chiyogami paper and iconic images of young boys naked, while photographic portraits explore similar themes through stripped-down noir-ish settings and obscured features. Transforming the gallery into a makeshift temple, Treleaven posits his sculptures as otherworldly altars, with animal skulls and talismans suggesting leftovers from grand, hedonic exertions. (AM)
Note: This exhibition continues through Sat 3.25. On Thur 2.16 (5-7pm), Printed Matter hosts a book launch for Scott Treleaven's SALiVATION ARMY BLACK BOOK.
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| MUSIC: Punk |
Be Your Own PET w/ the Dirtbombs and Les Sans Culottes
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Remember that garage band from your high school that you were stoked on and were completely convinced would bust out of the suburbs and onto the stage at CBGB's? Well, tonight renounce your indie-yuppie music and revel in the youthful punk of Be Your Own PET. With all members years below the legal drinking age, and frontwoman Jemima Pearl channeling Poly Styrene with all her little might, their two-minute songs about vacation sex and "stealing virginity" have a gleefully edgy sincerity. Having already scored fans and press in the UK, the band is back in the States with tenacious Detroit soul-rockers the Dirtbombs and cheeky faux-Frenchies Les Sans Culottes. (LT)
Note: Be Your Own PET also play the Knitting Factory on Wed 2.15 (8pm).
There's nothing like teenage musicians to make you feel like you've wasted your life. What were you doing with your free time, just out of high school? The most amusing response of 50 words or less wins a pair of tickets to this show.
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| ALSO ON SAT |
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MUSIC: Fusion Hip-Hop
Opus Akoben Sat 2.18 (3pm) Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola (Broadway at W 60th St, 5th Fl, 212.258.9595) map 
Event Info |
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DC-based hip-hop collective, Opus Akoben, explores hip-hop as an extendable art form. Featuring rappers Kokayi and Sub-Z, their percussive, jazzy freestyles elevate rhyme with inventiveness, freedom, and deep-rooted soul. (JM)
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THEATRE
Death Might Be Your Santa Claus Sat 2.18 - Mon 2.20 (schedule) 15 Nassau (15 Nassau St, 212.352.3101) map $15
Event Info |
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Ho-ho-hold it! Inspired by a New Yorker article, Lear deBessonet's site-specific experimental production centers around a group of former homeless people and addicts participating in an undercover operation to expose televangelist fraud. (SP)
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| MUSIC: Post-Rock |
David Pajo w/ Tara Jane O'Neil
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David Pajo's restless innovation saw him through positions in post-rock luminaries Slint and Tortoise before he went on to record meditative, folk-tinged electronica as both Aerial M and Papa M. Pajo later entered more Will Oldman-esque territory with stripped-down, jangle-folk, and a humorous and heartbreaking lyricism. A stint with a certain post-Smashing Pumpkins band was forgettable, but '05 brought the quietly brilliant Pajo,
which united the musician's various styles, while sounding wholly fresh and invigorated. Sometime collaborator and fellow sonic traveler Tara Jane O'Neil is also featured on tonight's bill; her tense avant-Americana can be heard to great effect on 2004's You Sound, Reflect. (BC/JL)
In which disturbing Dogma 95 film did Pajo have an uncredited cameo? The second, third, and fourth correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this show.
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MUSIC: Glamtastic
Motherf*cker: Presidents' Day Freakout feat. the New York Dolls w/ Optimo Sun 2.19 (10pm) Avalon (662 6th Ave, 212.807.7780) map $30 / $25 with flyer before 1am
Event Info |
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The MF crew serves up an all-out Prez Day throwdown with two floors of DJs and a live performance by glam's bedazzled grandmofos, the New York Dolls. (ÇK)
Note: Admission is $20 / $15 with flyer after 1am. There is an open vodka/Red Bull bar from 10-11pm.
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| FILM |
Bush's Brain (2004)
| when: |
Mon 2.20 (7pm) |
| where: |
Pioneer Theater (155 E 3rd St, 212.591.0434) map |
| price: |
$9 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Those expecting to see a deteriorating tangle of neurons housed in a jar of formaldehyde might be surprised at this examination of Dubya's real gray matter. As far as the directors of Bush's Brain are concerned, it's actually about 5' 9", balding, and packing a few extra pounds along with that shadowy insight. This documentary sheds disturbing light on what many have long suspected:
that Karl Rove's ties — and not just the stately, Windsor-knotted red ones — are lashed tight to the Bush regime and extend far beyond his official title of Senior Advisor. Be shocked, be awed, and take this admittedly overt stab at the White House with a grain of Michael Moore-sized salt. (LT)
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| PHOTOGRAPHY |
Heather Cantrell: The Extended Family
| when: |
Now through Sat 3.4 (Tue-Sat: 11am-6pm) |
| where: |
Newman Popiashvili Gallery (504 W 22nd St, 212.274.9166) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Heather Cantrell's ten-photograph suite casts LA thirtysomethings as bogus Manson-family spawn, instigating a confrontation between the sinister and playful, fact and fiction, identity and genealogy. Evoking the twilight of the '60s — Altamont, the Weathermen, and hippie cults — these tender, quirky pictures are suspended in a nostalgic haze between snapshot and choreographed tableau. Against the intimacy of the images, the titles read like surveillance captions, with Lori daughter of Leslie Van Houton―a.k.a. LuLu, featuring its eponymous subject topless, divining with tarot cards. The multivalent terror of Goya's sueño — sleep and dream — haunts these modestly sized, black-and-white prints, accompanied by an album of counterfeit birth certificates. (GKH)
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| THEATRE |
Norman & Beatrice: A Marriage in Two Acts
| when: |
Now through Sat 3.4 (Wed-Sat: 8pm / Sun: 3pm) |
| where: |
Connelly Theater (220 E 4th St, 212.868.4444) map |
| price: |
$19 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Barbara Hammond's elegantly powerful new work spans 50 years as it offers two bittersweet servings from a loving couple's life together. The playwright introduces the couple in their old age, as Beatrice struggles to cope with Norman's Alzheimer's. Her patience is moving and heartbreaking, as Hammond allows for humor to interchange with the more poignant moments. The second act transports the audience to the first few months of the couple's life together, when without the burden of disease, patience runs thin and the relationship's future seems doubtful. Flawless acting and an astoundingly realistic set further the play's emotional appeal beyond a simple slice of life and into the intricate depths of human relationships. (SP)
Note: There is an additional 3pm performance on Sat 3.4.
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| THEATRE |
The Seven
| when: |
Now through Sun 3.12 (Tue: 7pm / Wed-Fri: 8pm / Sat: 3 & 8pm / Sun: 2 & 7pm) |
| where: |
New York Theatre Workshop (79 E 4th St, 212.460.5475) map |
| price: |
$60 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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A sassy onstage DJ mixes R&B, funk, and blues, while a rapping Greek chorus waxes and wanes — whilst occasionally breaking into karate moves — about the perils awaiting the two sons of Oedipus, a pimped-out mack daddy with the moves of James Brown and the rancor of Lorena Bobbit. This is, of course, a modern adaptation of Aeschylus' Seven Against Thebes by Will Power (Flow). A fantastically far-fetched and ultimately successful retelling of the classic tale of predestination versus free will, Seven updates the original with contemporary themes and scathing commentary in a rhyming urban idiom. In the hands of director Jo Bonney and choreographer Bill T. Jones, Power's work offers traditional audiences an effortless introduction to the theatre of hip-hop. (SP)
Note: Tickets for Sunday evening performances are $20.
What were the unusual circumstances of Aeschylus' death? The fifth and sixth correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this show.
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| ART: Web |
Whitney's Artport and the Tate Online present Three Online Projects
| when: |
Launches Tue 2.14 |
| where: |
Online |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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In 2001, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's 010101: Art in Technological Times gave digital art its institutional due, including online projects launched through the exhibition website. The Whitney Museum's Artport and the Tate Online have also played pioneering roles in incorporating online material into regular programming. The two have now teamed up to commission three new web projects. Appropriately launching on Valentine's Day, The Dumpster sources material from dating blogs to examine online breakups. The Battle of Algiers recomposes Gillo Pontecorvo's 1965 agit-classic through cell-structures based on the Algerian independence movement's underground organization, and Screening Circle reinvents quilting traditions for computer culture. (AM)
Note: The Battle of Algiers launches Wed 3.1 and Screening Circle launches Wed 3.22.
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FLASH FOR ROCK: GBH Music Video Festival |
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It's no secret that the music-television purveyors in Times Square have lost the
plot. Actual music videos that see the light of day are usually little more than
teeny-pop commercials for mall-punk boutiques. Enter GBH's Music Video Festival: the
first of its kind, the online event aims to provide us with an underground
alternative. Starting February 15th, the 15-week-long festival groups videos by genre, then
presents them in Flash format to minimize time spent updating software and
downloading files. Viewers can vote for their favorite picks, with winners announced
at the end of May. Gathered over the bulk of 2005, the 44 offerings include a few
RESFEST picks, Miss Kittin's twisted version of Dancing with the Stars, and
an electro-pop cabaret of human-animal hybrids starring Alison Goldfrapp. (IB)
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CD REVIEW: Love Is All, Nine Times That Same Song |
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What's Your Rupture?
Released January 2006
$9.99 (Insound)
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Birthed from the recently prolific Gothenburg scene, Sweden's Love Is All deliver an idiosyncratic blend of saxophone-heavy indie pop with a carefree post-punk zeal on their debut full-length release for New York-based label What's Your Rupture? A former member of the musical confectionary pop treat Girlfrendo, Josephine Olausson belts her often hard-to-discern lyrics with a vocal prowess that may warrant comparisons to Karen O, but ultimately finds a better home amongst the likes of Bow Wow Wow's Annabella Lwin. Much like the recurring lyric in "Aging Had Never Been His Friend," Love Is All keep things fresh and young, from the lo-fi production quality to the playful kitsch of the xylophone on some of their more upbeat, soul-punk-flavored floorshakers. (MAS)
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MULTIMEDIA: BBC Collective |
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This week we tap BBC Collective to sate our hunger for new album reviews, exclusive live sessions, and other tantalizing multimedia content. Check out an interview with electro producer Tiga discussing his new album and a potential future dancehall direction! Also included are two full tracks and a video for candy-booty single "You Gonna Want Me." Next, witness a live Mogwai session, recorded at the ICA in London during their curatorial residency, as well as an interview which elucidates the Glaswegians' thoughts on live performance. Finally, get a taste of ex-Belle & Sebastian member Isobel Campbell's alt-blues album with Mark Lanegan, Ballad of the Broken Seas. It's featured with a review and streaming tracks — notably "Mountain" and "Saturday's Gone." (CJN)
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Tiga: Collective Feature (Interview/tracks/video)
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Mogwai: Live at the ICA (Session/interview)
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Isobel Campbell and Mark Lanegan: Ballad of the Broken Seas (Alt-blues)
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| Header Design: |
| Marc Bolan | Oksana Badrak courtesy of Start Mobile |
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| Editors: |
| Harold | Jocelyn K. Glei | | What's-her-name | Jake Lancaster | | Keira Knightley | Doug Levy | | Uffie | Sascha Lewis | | Paula Abdul | Andrew Maerkle | | Homeroom teacher | Mark Mangan | | Nick Diamonds | Kristin Miller | | Anderson Cooper | Colin J. Nagy | | My boyfriend | Stephan Paschalides | | Noel Fielding | Leah Taylor |
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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 & DESIGN 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.
To find out more about submitting cover art to run at the top of Flavorpill publications, go to flavorpill.net/design. |
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MEDIA PARTNERSHIPS |
| Every week, flavorpill NYC presents one exclusive media partner. Click for more information about advertising opportunities on all Flavorpill publications. |
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| Contributors: |
| Kelly Clarkson | Derek Beres | | Mark Wahlberg | Mindy Bond | | Justin Theroux | Irene Bradish | | Mary Poppins | Justin Carter | | Sarah Silverman | Brett Castle | | Robin Hood | Lori Cole | | Alex Mack | Todd Goldstein | | Wonkette | Carl E. Hagen | | Doogie Howser | Cortney L. Harding | | David Bowie | Gin K. Hsu | | David E. Brown | Paddy Johnson | | Arthur Kane | Çemile Kavountzis | | Coach K. | Jessica Kraft | | James Burns | Catherine E. Krudy | | Tutu | Gerry Mak | | Betty | John McCormick | | Veronica | Mike Powell | | Batman | Lisa Rosman | | Bobby Budnick | Mary Ann Speteris |
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Production: |
| T.S. Eliot | Casey Acierno | | Prince | Anjuli Ayer | | Will Young | Jessica Bauer-Greene | | Madonna | Morgan Croney | | Goran Visnjic | Kate Estwing | | Professor Crone | Jules Gaffney | | Gisele Bundchen | Sander-Martijn Milks | | Gadget | David Morrow | | Clarissa Darling | Judah Wiedre |
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MORE FILTERED CULTURE |
Hi-fidelity updates
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Global fashion trends
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