Deviation Street Issue 3

Page 1

ARCHIVE

LIQUID LIQUID

DAVID BYRNE BACK PAGE |

GEOFF DUNLOP

RICHARD McGUIRE

PURYEAR AND BASQUAT PAGE 10 |

PAGE 8 |

DEVIATION STREET THIRD ISSUE | FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2019

RICHARD MCGUIRE INTERVIEW Things are great. The book was launched at the NY Art Book Fair along with an exhibition. First at MoMA/PS1, out in Queens, and then an expanded version of the show at Alden Projects in Manhattan. The exhibitions and book all center around the years 1979-1982. At that time I was designing the posters and records sleeves for my band (Liquid Liquid) and I was also making “street art”. The band posters were usually printed (offset or silkscreened) in editions of around 100. The street art were hand made originals , part stencil / part drawing, and always made in an edition of two, I would paste one on the street and keep the other copy for my archives. The band posters use a lot of collage elements and are often playing around with type, the street art has a rougher look, I made the stencils by ripping newspaper and painting them with spray paint and drawing text with a crayon. The show and book also include photographs taken in 1979 of my work in the streets of lower Manhattan. It’s been fun for me

to see all this work again, I’ve never seen it all together at the same time before! I moved to NYC (from New Jersey) on July 3, 1979. I know the exact date because I kept a journal. Two days after I arrived I was out pasting up drawings in the street at night, I did this regularly for the next few years. One of the first people I met was Keith Haring, it was at a party at the loft of the artist Jenny Holzer. Keith started to curate shows in clubs, he always invited me to be part of what he was doing. I met Jean Michel Basquiat at a loft party too, we were both playing on the same bill. That night his band was called Test Pattern (later the band was called Gray). I was a fan of his SAMO graffiti, so to me he was already a star when we met. He was also familiar with my street drawings so we bonded over that. We showed in a few group shows together as well. Al Diaz, Jean-Michel’s SAMO graffiti partner was a good friend as well, he also played percussion on a few of the Liquid Liquid records. MCGUIRE, PAGE | 8

“I’ve always had a lot of different interests, and one project always led to the next. After I finish something I feel it’s best to switch it up to remain fresh. I can equate it to being a farmer and rotating crops.” MCGUIRE

SNAPPED ANKLES ALBUM REVIEW BY JON GORDON Snapped Ankles ‘Stunning Luxury’

YONIC ALBUM REVIEW

Yonic: pertaining to a form that resembles female genitalia; a lady-version of ‘phallic’, if you will. Didn’t know that? You’re not alone. If you’re still reading after the words ‘female genitalia’, then welcome aboard. PAGE |13

TED MILTON INTERVIEW

Is there such a creature as ‘the sound of 2019’? Music writers are always looking for hooks to hang things onto, inventing scenes and genres where none previously existed and of course musicians are also prone to doing this, although more often than not it’s about the Right Noise, something that has changed little since 1979 and the first Cabaret Voltaire EP. Today, things are different; striving for pure originality is widely recognised as an exercise in futility as the perceived limits of what the basic band format can achieve is recognised to have been fully achieved, mostly by very obscure Californian indie bands of the latter part of the preceding decade. This doesn’t mean that no one should stop making an effort, it’s just that nowadays fewer people care about ‘originality’ than

JOHNY BROWN INTERVIEW

The fact that I’ve written about Band of Holy Joy more than any other band, says a lot about their power to continually, provoke, inspire, move and create beauty in times of darkness. Ridiculously consistent in their abilities: no matter the shifts and changes in personnel and approach, this is not a smooth ride and nor should it be. BoHJ respect their listeners and know our time is precious so should not be wasted. But this is never some po faced experiment in boundary breaking. It’s a living, breathing account of the terrors, and yes, joys of life, with Mr Johny Brown as your guide, PAGE | 12

Andreas Dorau ‘Das Wesentliche’ (Tapete Records) Unlike practically every other German electronic musician you ever heard of, Andreas Dorau has had a certain ambition throughout his now approaching four decade career. Releasing experimental music of a kind that requires an element of commitment on the part of the listener just hasn’t ever really been for him. While his contemporaries went for hard edged

previously. So if you’re going to make an enervating, agitational and virulent electropunk album, it’s maybe slightly easier today than in the mythical heyday of the early 80s, a time before polyphonic synths and when releases on the Rough Trade label were numbered in double figures. What’s really good about Snapped Ankles is that they already know all this and aren’t averse to signposting their influences to those that are ‘in the know’, elitist pranksters that they indisputably are. The Residents, Devo, the Membranes, actually Cabaret Voltaire and other lesser known although no less well regarded electronic pioneers are all getting a mention in here somewhere. Fast forward a bit and the late 90s also had its share of experimentalists in the likes of Add N To X, Atari Teenage Riot, Miss Kittin and others. The spirit of the sequential anodisers of two

techno and lengthy improvisations, Dorau remained true to his own single minded indie visions, and has never hidden his desire for mainstream success, albeit on his own artistic terms. Beginning with 1982’s ‘Fred Vom Jupiter (released in the UK on Mute records), Dorau has consistently presented himself as an entertainer rather than a creature of the indie electronic underworld, with a persona that’s nearer to that of Sasha Distel than of Blixa Bargeld. Formerly signed to the hugely influential Bureau B label, Dorau’s newest album is released on the slightly more indie friendly Tapete records, where you can also find releases by the Monochrome Set, Lloyd Cole and Comet Gain, amongst others, artiste whose musical preferences have perhaps also led to their pursuing artistic satisfaction regardless of consequence. ‘Das Wesentliche’ translates as ‘The Essentials’, and isn’t as the title might suggest a com-

decades ago can also be heard on ‘Stunning Luxury’, an album of barely hidden depths designed to entrap the wary.

kles own imaginations, a cryptic response to the bleary cynicism of 2019 itself.

Essentially, Snapped Ankles have got a stonking great PA through which to broadcast their thrumming, churning synth drum and bass overload, and touching on everything from soft jazz to hardcore club techno in the process. This would make for a decidedly better than average instrumental album in itself but what seals it for Snapped Ankles is their wordage. Taking a cue perhaps once wielded by Captain Beefheart, the lyrics that accompany the music of ‘Stunning Luxury’ are a collection of randomised statements and garbled expressions of urban squalor, with titles like ‘Delivery Van’, ‘Drink And Glide’ and ‘Dial The Rings On A Tree’, words whose syllables develop associations and invent a landscape that belongs entirely to Snapped An-

If you’re up for this sort of thing, you might wish that more albums were this good at what Snapped Ankles are choosing to do. It sounds loud enough to rock the speakers without being overwhelmingly crazed, the rhythms are skewed in a way that could provoke actual dancing, and if you can prevent yourself from playing ‘spot the arpeggio’ or making detailed comparisons with Edgar Varese, Delia Derbyshire and Brian Eno, you might actually enjoy listening to ‘Stunning Luxury’, an album that succeeds both despite and because of itself. It’s even a bit ‘original’.

pilation of some of Dorau’s career highlights. There does seem to be a concept of some kind at work here though.

similarly repetitive ‘Instant Magic’ whose lyric consists of the phrase ‘you think you’re instant magic’ provide some insight regarding the German lyrics, songs whose words subtly undermine the summery pop vibes of the music.

‘Dinge Konnen Sich Andern’ opens the album and lasts all of one minute and fifteen seconds, and like just about every other song on the album it sounds like a demo track for a future Eurovision entry, whether sung by Dorau or not. Unashamed pop melodies are the order of the day round at chez Dorau, taking in doo-wop, surf pop, schlager and actual disco. Now, my spoken German isn’t fantastic, to the point where, while visiting Dusseldorf in 2007 I went into a chemists to buy some shaving equipment and had to be told by the shopkeeper that I was in fact asking for a pencil - so I won’t attempt to translate any of Dorau’s lyrics, although fortunately for your reviewer at least two of the songs are sung in English. Firstly, ‘Hey Tonight’ and its ‘tonight ain’t the night’ refrain and then the

‘Stunning Luxury’ can be found on all the usual music streaming services.

It seems as if the idea behind ‘Das Wesentliche’ is Dorau’s own reimagining of some decades old ‘greatest hits’ compilation album, and his way with a pop tune is a skilfully adept one, whatever it is he’s actually singing about. Krautrock enthusiasts may choose to demur when presented with his reconstructions of 60s,70s and 80s chart hits but it’s difficult to deny his songwriting abilities and intrinsic feel for what makes a great pop song. And what I know about ‘Das Wesentliche’ is only half of the story as it is available as a double vinyl release with twice as many tracks as my review copy. The hits just won’t stop coming for Andreas Dorau.

JIMMY GALVIN INTERVIEW

“Abso”fucking”lutely !! I’m an army of one the system hates real individuals”

It wasn’t that long ago that Sarah Harrington reviewed the release of Jimmy Galvins’s solo piano CD A Million Seconds Makes 11 Days . A beautiful album of warmth and tranquillity that flows seamlessly and leaves you wanting more at the end. If the music of Ryuichi Sakamoto, Eric Satie, and the piano tracks from the Diva film soundtrack float your boat then your in for a treat with his album. Deviation Street was fortunate to catch up with Jimmy a man of passions and integrity who is not only a musician but also a visual artist over a soya chai latte and cappuccino in some cafe somewhere to ask him.. . PAGE | 6

DMITRY SOKOLENKO RUPERT/ HENRY X

DIANE ARBUS

Copyright © The Estate of Diane Arbus, LLC.

EXHIBITION REVIEW

PAGE | 4


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Deviation Street Issue 3 by deviationstreet101 - Issuu