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APAK |
Cultural Stimuli in NYC Issue 323: fine-aged flavor
It's no secret that New York's cultural landscape is dominated by the young — or young wannabes. Most of the attention paid to music artists, in particular, tends to focus on mercurial scenes and bands; but this week, we're inundated with legends who've been around many a block, and still manage to leave most of the whippersnappers in the dust. Witness two grandfathers of glammy punk rock: LA's X and our very own New York Dolls. Sixties gospel, R&B, soul, and funk are served up by Archie Bell and Mighty Hannibal at McCarren Park Pool, Sharon Jones at Jackie Robinson Park, and Mavis Staples, who opens for country-music vet Marty Stuart. The icing on the cake? Ultimate rap supergroup the Wu-Tang Clan — no kids themselves — make a triumphant return to the stage. Celebrate your artistic elders, and spread it.
- Jake Lancaster, Managing Editor
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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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A dynamic new collaboration between Budweiser Select and Flavorpill, Select Flavor harnesses the talents of up-and-coming artists and designers to interpret Select — a premier hand-crafted beer — and its iconic crown through original artwork. Expect a new kind of creativity. Expect everything. |
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The Prodigal Clan
While Old Dirty dodges the po-po in the sky, the rest of his mighty, vital Wu-Tang brothers swarm on Webster Hall for two nights.
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| ART |
Bring the War Home
| when: |
Now through Sat 8.19 (Tue-Sat: 11am-6pm) |
| where: |
Elizabeth Dee Gallery (545 W 20th St, 212.924.7545) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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This bicoastal group show challenges contemporary art-world conventions right at a
symbolic epicenter: the gallery. Wielding pamphlets, zines, and other media of mass
communication, the artists and collectives in Bring the War Home transform the
commercial space into a venue for open dialogue, expression, and broad institutional
critique. Fia Backstrom's posters promoting gallery shows are superimposed with SDS
slogans like "You Can't Jail the Revolution," while the Bank collective scatters
viciously edited press releases throughout, ridiculing the
art market's attempts to mask its advertising techniques in intellectual jargon. The success of the show is its deft negotiation between biting the hand that feeds and celebrating
artistic freedom. (JCC)
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| ALSO ON TUE |
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DANCE
Smuin Ballet Now through Sat 8.19 (Tue: 8pm / Wed: 2 & 8pm / Thur & Fri: 8pm / Sat: 2 & 8pm) The Joyce Theater (175 8th Ave, 212.242.0800) map $42
Event Info |
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Smuin Ballet's versatility is most evident in its choice of music. For his latest
foray to New York, choreographer Michael Smuin sets his pieces to Stravinsky, Frank
Sinatra, and bluegrass masters Edgar Meyer and Bela Fleck. (SP)
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| MUSIC: Classic LA Punk |
X w/ Rollins Band and Riverboat Gamblers
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Back when punk was more of an attitude than a music genre, X stitched rockabilly and
country together with Bukowskian poetry and the snotty sneer of their contemporaries.
From the same LA underground rose the mighty Black Flag, for whom Henry Rollins became
the fourth and most recognizable frontman. But whereas X still retain a modicum of punk
credibility in their middle age, the Starbucks-embracing Rollins has come to epitomize
the flock to the status quo that so many once-vitriolic social critics eventually
succumb to. Tonight's your chance to pay homage to a legendary band, as well as heckle (from the safety of the crowd) the wince-inducing spoken word/aggro-rock from the muscle-bound host of Henry's Film Corner. (GM)
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| ALSO ON WED |
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MUSIC: Retro Soul
Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings Wed 8.16 (7pm) Jackie Robinson Park (145th St & Bradhurst Ave) map 
Event Info |
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The brilliant eight-man house band for Brooklyn's Daptone Records serves up righteous funk and R&B tonight for the powerful (though tiny) soul sister Sharon Jones. (JL)
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MUSIC: Patton Goes Pop
Peeping Tom w/ Dub Trio Wed 8.16 (8pm) Warsaw (261 Driggs Ave, Greenpoint, 718.387.0505) map $22.50
Event Info | Tickets |
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Mike Patton's Peeping Tom project features numerous collaborators on disc, so it's
anyone's guess who will show up onstage tonight. What we do know is that Dub Trio will
be both opening the show and playing as Patton's backing band. (DL)
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| ART |
The Social History of Objects
| when: |
Now through Sun 8.20 (Thur-Sun: 12-5pm) |
| where: |
Triple Candie (461 W 126th St, 212.865.0783) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Trinkets, collectables, finds, freebies, and stuff generally deemed useless take on
makeshift-museum authority in The Social History of Objects. To find out how
such things attain meaning, each participant submitted an object
"not used for its original purpose but not discarded." The two dozen results set atop zig-zagging, untreated wooden tables supported by plastic A-frame traffic barriers vary: a pink plastic flying pig with white wings; an altar featuring a pyx surrounded by corn and buckeyes
made by a local reverend; two rocks taken as mementos of now-forgotten origin; an
ashtray nabbed by a mother for her daughter to remember New York City. In sum they
begin to reveal objects as delightful emissaries for thought, games, and memory. (MC)
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| MUSIC: Folk Pop |
Iron & Wine w/ Low and Califone
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Tim Rutili and Ben Massarella's forthcoming album as Califone, Roots & Crowns, furthers the duo's crackling, rickety vision of Americana as a staging ground for reinvention. Like a latter day Wilco stripped to their basic elements (worn folk songs, noise, simple percussion), Califone excavate the spaces between country, electronic, and avant-garde. Each new album further melds the traditional and the experimental, treating them as the same beast, with Rutili's duct-tape baritone keeping the whole jalopy in one piece. The band rounds out an outstanding bill of hazy-summer melancholia at McCarren Park Pool, opening for slowcore despots Low (fingers crossed for some Solo Guitar workouts) and the reigning King of the Sad & Beautiful, Mr. Sam Beam of Iron & Wine. (TG)
Note: Doors for this show are at 5pm.
Reversing Sam Beam's formula, create a band name that combines a precious metal with a cheap drink. Our favorite response wins a pair of tickets to this show.
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| MUSIC: Hip-Hop |
Wu-Tang Clan
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Ghostface's Fishscale is 2006's best hip-hop album yet, Masta Killa's new Made in Brooklyn is one of indie rap's finest, and Raekwon is soon to drop Cuban Linx II. With all their solo and side projects, the opportunity to see the remaining eight original Wu-Tang Clan members together onstage, performing a mix of new cuts and classics, is indeed a rare one. Despite ODB's passing, this tour finds the Wu at their strongest in a decade. No true New York hip-hop head would be caught dead missing it. (JRC)
Note: Rhymefest opens tonight and Brand Nubian's Lord Jamar opens Fri 8.18.
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| FILM |
Factotum
| when: |
Opens Fri 8.18 |
| where: |
IFC Center (323 6th Ave, 212.924.7771) map |
| price: |
$10.75 |
| links: |
IFC Center | Factotum |
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Maybe it's those dark eyes brooding beneath his Cro-Magnon brow, but Matt Dillon just
can't pull off a straight-man role to save his life (Oscar nomination be hanged). It's
only as a derelict like Drugstore Cowboy's superstitious addict or, now,
as the boozehound writer Henry Chinaski — Charles Bukowski's alter ego — that the actor's
hammy beleaguerment truly snaps into focus. Fortunately, when Dillon is on, he's really on, for — like all Bukowski adaptations — Factotum never evolves beyond a series of whiskey-drenched character studies. Fortunately too, he and the
always-game Lili Taylor and Marisa Tomei sink their fangs into such a strong script
that the film catapults right over its limitations. (LR)
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| PARTY |
Beautiful/Decay Issue P Release Party & Second Annual Video Festival feat. Rob Swift
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Highbrow low-art culture zine Beautiful/Decay fetes the release of Issue P at
its second annual Video Festival. Music videos from vanguard labels like Ninja Tune,
Warp, and Quannum Projects are shown in two plush screening rooms, along with Palm
Pictures' no-wave rock doc Kill Your Idols (2004) and the new War Games —
a visual companion to former X-Ecutioner Rob Swift's hip-hop ponderings on 9/11. Swift
also turns tricks on the decks tonight, following performances from Brazilian
baile-synth DJs Sujinho and Cassiano, bouncy crunk-pop crew Plastic Little, and the
soiree's emcee, ragga-rapper Jah Dan. (IB)
Note: Open bar from 9-11pm.
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| MUSIC: Punk-Funk Mash-Up |
Girl Talk w/ Cx Kidtronik & Deuce Gangsta and Professor Murder
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The funk tornado, that most kinetic of all musical phenomena, is distinguished by its unpredictability, elasticity, and sheer spectacle — and two are touching down at Mercury Lounge. Local four-piece Professor Murder carry the Liquid Liquid/ESG punk-funk torch, yet pepper their deceptively simple bass lines with melodica, dubby toasting, and stupid-fresh non sequiturs ("Fifty-dollar check / KRS-One"). Their rabid following includes the blokes from Hot Chip, who made a point of catching their EP release party at Cake Shop two weeks ago. Headliner Girl Talk is Pittsburgh's Gregg Gillis, a laptopper given to disrobing onstage and mashing up Better Than Ezra with T.I. — and making you ache for more. (JAS)
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| ALSO ON FRI |
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MUSIC: Glam
River to River presents the New York Dolls Fri 8.18 (7pm) South Street Seaport (Pier 17, 212.732.7678) map 
Event Info |
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They may be oldsters — hell, only two of them are actually alive — but the
New York Dolls are still very much kicking. Tonight, Johansen and Sylvain recruit
rocking support to show the kids why they're punk-glam legends. (LT)
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FILM
The Huston Family: 75 Years on Film Fri 8.18 - Fri 9.22 (Wed-Mon) MoMA (11 W 53rd St, 212.708.9400) map $10 / Free on Fridays after 4pm
Event Info |
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To grasp Hollywoodland, you must familiarize thee with the noble works (and noses)
of the Hustons, its ruling royalty: character actor Walter (1884-1950); his son,
director/actor/writer John (1906-1987); and his grandchildren, actress/director Anjelica and actor
Danny. (LR)
Note: Anjelica Huston presents the opening day screening of The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (5:45pm) and the Sat 8.19 screening of Bastard out of Carolina (8pm).
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READING
The Middle East, In Pieces Fri 8.18 (8pm) Cherry Lane Theatre (38 Commerce St, 212.989.2020) map $10 suggested donation
Event Info |
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Six politically involved playwrights, including Israel Horovitz, Heather Raffo, and
Betty Shamieh, offer short theatrical pieces as their response to the latest Middle
East developments. (SP)
Note: The Thur 8.17 show is already sold out, so to ensure tickets for this performance, reservations are recommended.
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| DISCUSSION |
Strange Powers Artist Talk: Peter Coffin and Anne Collier
| when: |
Sat 8.19 (1pm) |
| where: |
Strange Powers Exhibition Space (64 E 4th St, 212.206.6674) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Creative Time curator Peter Eleey plumbs the relationship between art and the
supernatural in a pair of interviews with artists from Strange Powers. Anne
Collier talks about her Polaroids of artists' auras taken at a psychic store in San
Francisco, while Peter Coffin explains his new wall drawing, a mass of circles based on
a form known as the Egyptian Flower of Life. At some point during the discussions,
expect otherworldly guests to appear as Coffin summons attendants with chalk circles.
After the artist talk, the Center for Tactical Magic leads an ESP Plant Workshop on
human/plant communication, followed an opportunity to harness your own ESP potential.
(HGM)
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| MUSIC: Impossible Film Scores |
East River Music Project presents Clogs w/ Excepter, Fern Knight, and Blues Control
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Taking to the East River's edge tonight, Aussie-American quartet Clogs mash the tenuous
tonality of post-rock with elements of folk and classical composition, creating thick
ambient textures that court avant-garde ears. Renowned for its live improvisation,
the band's off-book excursions are the stuff of jazz juggernauts — with bassoons,
violins, and ukuleles flying in all directions. Brooklyn-based experimentalists Excepter,
meanwhile, hone the eclectic sense of sound championed by older acts like Nurse with
Wound and the No Neck Blues Band. At times beat driven and at others noisy and free-form, the group's electro excursions are quick to turn on themselves, morphing into a muddy series of deliciously dissonant blips and bleeps. (AP)
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| DJ |
Warm Up feat. Mathew Jonson w/ Beppe Loda, Lee Douglas, and Jeremy Campbell
| when: |
Sat 8.19 (3-9pm) |
| where: |
P.S.1 (22-25 Jackson Ave, LIC, 718.784.2084) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info | Tickets |
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While lesser producers fuss and fiddle with the latest plug-in or some autopilot
composition software, Canada's Mathew Jonson stands as arguably one of the finest
classically trained musicians in electronic music today. Having studied percussion from
a young age, and also skilled at piano and clarinet, Jonson blurs the lines between
house, electro, and techno to make distinctive music imbued with depth and complexity —
while still retaining the heft necessary for the dance floor. He plays live in support
of his forthcoming Cobblestone Jazz 12-inch, "India in Me," and is joined by Afro-disco
don Beppe Loda, Rong Music's Lee Douglas, and SubTonic's Jeremy Campbell. (CJN)
Note: After Warm Up, head to Water Taxi Beach for Rebound, and catch sets from Adultnapper and Plexus. Or, check out another Jonson set over at the Sullivan Room.
As the resident DJ at Typhoon during the '80s, what type of turntables did Beppe Loda use? The fourth correct response wins a pair of tickets to this event.
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| ALSO ON SAT |
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PARTY
Rubulad presents Delirium Summer: A Fever Dream feat. Extra Action Marching Band and DJ $mall ¢hange Sat 8.19 (10:30pm) 3rd Ward (195 Morgan Ave, Bklyn, 718.715.4961) map $10
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Rubulad aims for a "surfer circus" vibe with a night of disparate freaky performers, DJs, video, and food in Bushwick's expansive indoor/outdoor 3rd Ward. (JL)
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| MUSIC: R&B/Soul |
Archie Bell w/ Mighty Hannibal, the Fabulous Soul Shakers, and DJs Phast Phreddie and Cosmo Baker
| when: |
Sun 8.20 (3-8pm) |
| where: |
McCarren Park Pool (Lorimer St btwn Driggs Ave & Bayard St, Wburg) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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"Hi everybody, I'm Archie Bell and the Drells, from Houston, Texas." That famous intro
is tweaked today, as Bell receives support instead from the band behind those funky local soulstresses the Dansettes. But
look for plenty of classic tunes from the Drells' catalog, including hits "Tighten Up!"
and "I Can't Stop Dancing." R&B and drug-reform legend the Mighty Hannibal gets support
from the 'settes as well, for a set sure to include his heartbreaking
Vietnam War ballad, "Hymn No. 5." Harlem's Fabulous Soul Shakers ("this ain't no oldies
group!") open with perfect harmonies, matching suits and dance moves, and rousing
covers of more '50s and '60s soul smashes. (LT)
Note: Cosmo Baker takes a break from the Rub to split decks and spin tracks with Subway
Soul Club's Phast Phreddie in between sets.
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| MUSIC: Country Soul |
23rd Annual Roots of American Music Festival feat. Marty Stuart and his Fabulous Superlatives w/ Mavis Staples and Rosie Flores
| when: |
Sun 8.20 (7pm) |
| where: |
Lincoln Center (W 65th St & Broadway, 212.870.5630) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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First singing with her family in the early '60s as the Staple Singers, Mavis Staples quickly established herself as one of the premier gospel belters. Through the decade and into the '70s, the group grew increasingly secular and funky, recording for the revered Stax/Volt label and eventually for Curtis Mayfield. Mavis has continued to record and perform over the decades, recently returning to her impassioned gospel roots. One of the great survivors of the original soul era, she has lost none of her vocal power — enabling her to effortlessly fill a room or, in this case, an amphitheater. Staples opens tonight along with with country and surfabilly singer/guitarist Rosie Flores; country legend Marty Stuart headlines. (JK)
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| MUSIC: Avant-Everything |
Matthew De Gennaro w/ David Grubbs and Alog
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Matthew De Gennaro, best known in experimental music circles for his expert wire
playing (yup), brings obscurantist folk accompanied by hand-manipulated Super 8
footage. After breaking with '90s Chicago avant-rock group Gastr Del Sol, David Grubbs
lapsed into obtuse, stark piano ballads with electronic flourishes — tough stuff
to love, but not without its rewards. Most interesting on the bill is Alog, a Norwegian
electronic duo that works in detail-rich puzzles of samples, field-recording snippets,
and live instrumentation. The artists tread different creative paths, but they're
united by their attempts to reconcile the beauty of weird noises with plain old music
— just another night at Tonic. (MP)
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Want to plan further ahead? Check out our weekly updated list of upcoming events!
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| ART |
Yamini Nayar and Sreshta Premnath
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Shifting its focus from mid-career South Asian artists, Bose Pacia Gallery presents Yamini Nayar and Sreshta Premnath, two young artists fresh from school. Nayar arranges trinkets and tchotchkes within miniature dioramas, then photographs the
scenes in disorienting close-up. Looking at her prints is like peering into a dollhouse
furnished by Barbie's Indian girl friend; a filigreed sconce in Being There
connotes nostalgia, while the bare mattress in Note to Self suggests the Spartan
decor of an émigré in transit. Perhaps as a metaphor for the immigrant's
sense of loss, Premnath's work addresses the amputated leg of 17th-century anatomist Philip Verheyen. In a series of collages, the artist slices and dices Verheyen's scientific drawings into delicate yet monstrous mutants. (TDC)
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| THEATRE |
Amajuba: Like Doves We Rise
| when: |
Now through Sun 8.20 (Tue-Fri: 8pm / Sat: 3 & 8pm / Sun: 3pm) |
| where: |
The Culture Project @ 45 Bleecker (45 Bleecker St, 212.253.9983) map |
| price: |
$56 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Amajuba appeals to both the physical and emotional senses through five true stories about hunger, identity, abandonment, death, and fear in the days of South Africa's Apartheid. These narratives are the memories of a generation crushed beneath the weight of oppression — a lost generation in which "everyone has a story that they'd rather forget." And yet, it is through these poignant retellings — interspersed with gorgeous a cappella singing and traditional dance — that the pain of the past is transformed into the hope of the future. (CB)
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| PHOTOGRAPHY |
Stuart Hawkins: Customs
| when: |
Now through Sat 9.23 (Tue-Sat: 10am-6pm) |
| where: |
Zach Feuer Gallery (530 W 24th St, 212.989.7700) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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American artist Stuart Hawkins, who shuttles between New York and Nepal, earned acclaim for
earlier works investigating the tensions between global pop culture and lived local
reality. In Customs, she presents a video and complementary photographs
documenting her search for the "perfect native," lampooning expats, eco-tourists, and
cultural commodification. In the video Souvenir, the "native" turns out to be a
lumbering b-boy ensconced in a hooded tracksuit and gold medallions, magical hair
trailing from his sneakers. Background footage reveals the arid Himalayan landscape or
the bustle of a marketplace. With characters named The Assistant and The Leader,
Souvenir winks at the spectacular ritualism of Matthew Barney's Cremaster
Cycle, reinvented through a homey, DIY aesthetic. (AM)
Note: An exhibition reception takes place on Thur 9.7 (6-9pm).
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MODERN HOSPITALITY: CouchSurfing.com |
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Almost two months ago, would-be globetrotters collectively gasped when travel
networking site CouchSurfing.com accidentally deleted its own database. With the help
of MySQL administrators and thousands of vigilant members, however, the site was recovered,
rebuilt, and relaunched on July 7th. Originally founded by Casey Fenton in 2004 after email exchanges and a long weekend with students in Rekyjavik, CouchSurfing was created to raise
cultural awareness and tolerance, one sofa at a time. Now with more than 100,000
members, users can avoid tourist traps and hostel horror stories by searching for digs
with willing hosts in 206 countries — and, unlike other meet-and-greet organizations,
CouchSurfing offers three levels of verification to assure legitimate addresses and
safety. Visitors with other accommodations can also use the site in place of travel
guides to inquire about customs and transportation, and to arrange for tours of local
haunts even Lonely Planet wouldn't know about. (IB)
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CD REVIEW: Aloe Blacc, Shine Through |
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Stones Throw
Released July 2006
$15.98 (Amazon)
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Nathaniel Dawkins' debut album as Aloe Blacc doesn't stand out as an obvious must-have. The Panamanian-via-SoCal MC's previous effort, which cast him as Emanon and featured DJ Exile, brimmed with solid backpacker rap, but Dawkins now finds himself the odd neo-soul/R&B man out on cratedigger label Stones Throw — which cites a reviewer's estimation of him as an "indie R. Kelly." Though he doesn't command the powerful, dynamic voice or bizarro lyrical daring of Mr. Show Biz, singer/songwriter Blacc spreads his talents around on Shine Through, gliding between bluesy a cappella busking, Latin music, hip-hop, and soul — both acoustic and digital. Dawkins' natural, earnest charisma shields such stylistic diversity from charges of overreaching, and his keen melodicism and restrained arrangements and production (from Dawkins himself, with contributions from Madlib and Oh No) make Shine Through a breezy summer classic, like an extended response to Mos Def's mellow masterpiece "Umi Says." (JL)
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STREAMS: Viva-Radio |
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Since its recent inception, Viva-Radio has worked to build a schedule of streaming radio shows that run the musical gamut and act as a forum for contributors to, as Viva puts it, "confess their listening habits." For an initial taste of the quality represented on the site, check out archived individual shows from NYC-based DJ James F!@#$% Friedman, fashion impresario Max Wowch, and the folks at online culture and style publication the Pop Manifesto. Collectively, the shows trawl through everything from the pink-tinted shoegaze of My Bloody Valentine and the psych-disco of Chicken Lips to the slinky dub reggae of Prince Buster. (CJN)
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| Header Design: |
| Gripes | APAK |
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| Editors: |
| Political power | Irene Bradish | | Droopy pantyhose | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Guilt | Jake Lancaster | | Respect | Doug Levy | | Cocoon | Sascha Lewis | | Candy for grandkids | Andrew Maerkle | | Hair curlers | Mark Mangan | | The Rascal | Colin J. Nagy | | Med-alert bracelet | Stephan Paschalides | | Posturepedic bed | Lisa Rosman | | The Clapper | Jon A. Schultz | | Arthritis | Leah Taylor |
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| ABOUT US |
| Flavorpill NYC is a free weekly email magazine covering cultural happenings across art, music, film, theatre, dance, literature, and DJ events. All content is produced by a local team of writers in NYC. We don't include sold out events, and all listings are pure editorial — no money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us. |
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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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| Contributors: |
| Suspenders | Chelsea Bauch | | Moth balls | T. Dawn Chan | | Fiber | Justin R. Charles | | Wisdom | Justin C. Connor | | Ear hair trimmers | Morgan Croney | | Monacle | Todd Goldstein | | Saltines | Jonathan Knapps | | Hush Puppies | Gerry Mak | | Sense of entitlement | Henry-Gordon Masters | | Funny odor | Andrew Phillips | | Forgotten memories | Mike Powell | | Violet rinse | Claire Smith |
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Production: |
| Younger lovers | Anjuli Ayer | | Walker | Jessica Bauer-Greene | | Cardigan | Myla Dalbesio | | Depends | Josh Deeden | | Great Depression hyperbole | Jasmine Loignon | | Battle scars | David Morrow | | Sagginess | Judah Wiedre |
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| Every week, Flavorpill NYC presents one exclusive media partner. Click for more information about advertising opportunities on all Flavorpill publications. |
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