Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Resort to Cannibalism Mix Three
















Resort to Cannibalism Mix Three:

1 . The Ex - Bouquet of Barbed Wire
2 . John Cale - Fear Is A Man's Best Friend
3 . Factory Floor - Lying (Chris Carter Mix)
4 . Valis - Black Carbon
5 . Total Control - Paranoid Video
6 . Killing Joke - Requiem
7 . The Royal Family And The Poor - Art On 45
8 . Public Image Limited - Death Disco
9 . New Order - Doubts Even Here
10.Einsturzende Neubauten - Die Wellen
11.Alternative TV - The Radio Story
12.Minutemen - Joe McCarthy's Ghost
13.Jaako Eino Kalevi - Macho
14.Sort Sol - Off Morning
15.Automelodi - Buanderie Jazz
16.Bikini - I'll Never Be
17.The Sound - Words Fail Me
18.UV Pop - No Songs Tomorrow
19.LRF - Yes, We Are The Finalists

Enjoy.



sweet jams for mellow dudes...

Monday, May 16, 2011

Black Flag : Reality 86'd

"Reality 86'd" A film by David Markey from David Markey on Vimeo.


http://vimeo.com/23499919
(vimeo won't allow me to embed it and I would have given a clickable link but for some reason blogger will not recognize it, so it's best to just copy and paste.)
enjoy.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Tesla Boy

It's been a while since I've posted anything up here and I guess mostly because I couldn't think of anything "important" enough to post... But you know what? Importance is all relative and the internet is full of garbage anyway, so if I have anything to show the world that isn't garbage I might as well get on with it...

Anyways, with that in mind I'd like to share with you a group from Russia called Tesla Boy. I first heard their song "spirit of the night" on the Valerie blog a few years back...  and it kindof blew my mind...


tesla boy - spirit of the night



Spirit of the night is one of those songs that just keeps getting better as it goes on... Every different part adds something that's... to me at least, undeniably great... It feels like some lost treasure from the airwaves that I might have heard before school in the second grade or something... Kindof reminds me of the police... which was something I heard a lot of when I was young.

"Synchronizing" from their "Modern Thrills" record also reminds me of the police pretty heavily and is totally fucking awesome...

I've listened to this record pretty consistently over the past year and overall it might be my favorite thing that came out in 2010... It's pretty much the purest '80s music I've ever heard that's not actually from the '80s... It doesn't seem ironic or jokey to me... it's just... really good... It makes me wonder if maybe the radios where they're from are still receiving signal from 1986 or something...

Tesla Boy - Liberating Soul


So yeah... It's certainly not punk, it's not hardcore in any sense of the word, it's not severe at all and not of any particular relevance to any of the socio/political situations our horribly fucked up world is facing at the moment... but what it IS is brilliantly executed and timeless synthpop that almost never fails in making me smile... And that's got to be worth something...

Tesla Boy live in the studio.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Can I Live ? - The Sour Interview








The Skate Documentary "Sour: 4 Peace In The Middle East" brings together 9 skaters from Israel and Jordan, to try and answer the question: "what does an instrument of peace look like?" Filmed throughout the Middle East during the Israeli/Lebanon war of 2006, the doc brings together skate-rats from backgrounds divided by conflict and identities defined by enemies; ultimately demonstrating that the potential for peace is enormous but it requires a deeper connection and understanding. Skaters share a bond that transcends ideology, religion, phobias, and 'isms' you see and respect the person in front of you that shares your addiction. Skating is a common language that touches something deeper than all the fear and bullshit present in the world today. The site sums it up best,"In essence, 'Sour' is a film about doing the things you love with the people your not supposed to like." Recenently the Director/Producer of Sour, Nathan Gray, was gracious enough to give an Interview to Resort. Nathan is also the Executive Director of "The Bedouins.org" a non-profit working for the proliferation of peace and currently planning a 2011 tour of the US and beyond with some of the Skaters from the movie.
Thanks to Nathan, the Sour crew, and the Bedouins crew for the interview and the awesome photos.


R2C: Where did the idea for the Sour doc/project come from, and why useskateboarding as opposed to some other athletic/artistic medium? What did skating offer in connecting Israeli and Arab youth that other, more popular activities didn’t ?

For starters my roots are in Saudi Arabia because this is where I grew up and I first learned to skate. In the 5th grade the first Gulf War broke out and missiles were flying over our houses. We had to carry a gas mask to school and there were times in the beginning when explosions were going off and we had to wear them because we didn't know if Saddam had chemical weapons or not. At that age it was terrifying and it's hard to breath out of those masks.

Later in 2006 while studying Arabic in Jordan I met many talented and positive skaters from Amman. I started hanging out with them and we became very close friends, skating together almost every day at the Street of Cultures, a marble plaza that is a perfect spot. I also had the opportunity to travel West to TelAviv and Jerusalem where I met many talented Israeli skaters. I realized that these groups were less than 100 miles apart, shared the same passions, and yet because of the political situation had never met. My goal was to change this and to see if skateboarding could be used to start a relationship between these two groups.

R2C: What were the logistical difficulties in making this documentary?

It is easy for an Israeli to get a visa to Jordan. It is issued at the border and was free the first time because the Jordanian guards said they really liked the tricks we were doing. Actually the visa is free for everyone at this southern crossing but they were just being nice and we didn't know this so it all seemed a very good start to our trip. Unfortunately it is not possible for Jordanians to get a visa to skate in Israel.

R2C: Did you or the skaters involved ever face any hostility or resistance from people in either the Jordanian or Israeli community.

Well when we went to Hebron, Khalid took us to the best Kanafe place in all of Palestine. We were outside the cafe' waiting for Khalid and 2 local teenagers saw us. We obviously looked out of place and they asked Mohammed where he was from. He said Jaffa and the teenager immediately changed his expression, spit on the ground, and said that he would see us in hell. They kept staring at us menacingly but fortunately Khalid came out, we went to his car, and nothing came of it. Of course it sucks to realize that these teenagers wanted to start shit just cause of the city Mohammed was born in but that is the reality. This is what we are hoping to change.

A lighter story was when we got in a street fight in Tel Aviv because some kids called Tzahi a girl and they started making fun of him. We all went back to stick up for him, a punch was thrown and then a brawl started. I got punched in the jaw, Mohammed got his board taken but he got it back once he found a big stick and threatened to wack the kid in the head if he didn't give back the board. When the fight broke out Tzahi ran like a girl and didn't get involved so that was the funniest part about it. This shows that a lot of fights are random and usually start over stupid shit to begin with. Another time in Jerusalem I got a taxi with an American friend and I said Salam Al-Akum and then the taxi told us he doesn't take Arabs. It was bullshit and he started yelling at us to get out of his taxi so we found another one.

R2C: What are the skater’s views of the whole Israel/Arab conflict situation and do you think skating and the “Sour” experience helped in shaping those views?

Well this might be difficult to answer as there are many different views. I will say this though, while I am an optimist, I’d be lying if it was as simple or as easy as skating. Many of the skaters are reluctant to consider these cross-cultural skate sessions as “making peace” because they do not want to be viewed as ignoring the atrocities being committed by the other side. Likewise, some of the skaters view peace activism as contradictory to loyalty to their homeland. But they continue to skate.

R2C: I’ve always believed that skating is one of those activities that helps foster a fierce independent spirit in the participant, and encourages the development of a healthy amount of skepticism Do you see skating as a tool for change?

Skateboarding in its essence is about abolishing rules, flipping the script, and transforming something wasted and desolate like islands of concrete or road barriers into something positive. In this vein, skating is about transforming entrenched prejudices and misunderstandings.


R2C: How has the documentary been received in the Middle East region?

It has screened in Eilat, Israel as part of their film festival and many different people and cultures our excited about the premise of this film. However, at the same time it is hard to have a peace film that attempts to be unbiased and accepting of both sides without upsetting some people. There are those that are not ready to start a relationship with the other and so they are not supportive of the mission of this film. They are against it in principle and feel that peace translates into complacency. But this is not my intention as I have always felt that instead of sitting back and complaining we have to do something positive even if gets misinterpreted by others. After 9/11 I felt utterly sad and confused. One of the reasons was that my countrymen were both the attackers and the attacked. At a loss as to how to reconcile this internal conflict, in 2002, I set off alone on a dirt bike from Saudi Arabia to Greece. This trip was an eye opener for me and changed my life. It gave me hope that there are peaceful and generous people everywhere and that we don't have to feed into the cycle of violence if we don't want to.

R2C: Where do the Palestinians hail from in the region?

Because there are so many Palestinians in Jordan many of the skaters involved are Palestinian but not living in Palestine, essentially refugees. When we do the US tour I would like to include at least one Palestinian living in the West Bank so as to broaden our group's perspective. Obviously it is very different living in Occupied Palestine than living outside it. In 2009 one of the Israeli skaters asked me if we could go to Ramallah because he knew that I went into Palestine often and that I had friends there who could take care of us even though he is Jewish. I made some calls and we ended up going into Palestine with 2 of the Israeli skaters. It was the wildest trip I have been on and I wished that I filmed more of it but we were so excited and nervous that filming was not at the front of our mind. In the village of Beit Omar we saw an Israeli soldier yelling at some people with a grenade in his hand while we drove past in the taxi. We got to skate outside the church in Bethleham where Tzahi did a rock and roll on an old roman pillar and Mohammed did a boardslide on it.

R2C: Are the Occupied Territories skateable?

Yes – see the attached photos.

R2C: I’ve read on the Bedouins site that there are plans for an Arab/Israeli skate tour in 2011, what information can you give me about that?

We are officially launching theBedouins.org with an event called “Yallah! Artivism for Peace”, a collaboration of skate art, video, photo and music. The Seattle show was the first of a series of events meant to raise money to bring the Muslim and Jewish skaters to the United States next summer for a national skate tour intended to share alternative perspectives of the Middle East using a grassroots approach. If you would like to be involved in this tour in any way please email us at peace@thebedouins.org

R2C: How can those interested see the documentary?

The easiest way to get a copy of Sour is to visit reframecollection.org

R2C: How can interested folks lend a hand and get involved with the organization and the documentary project?

As we are fairly new and very grassroots we welcome all the help we can get at this stage. Our big needs are artists willing to collaborate with us because art shows and artistic expression go hand in hand with what our project is about. We are also looking for people that have the connections to organize these shows or host them, as this helps us get the word out.

* Next Week We'll Have More From Nathan About Taking The Skate Trip Into The Occupied Territories. -Stay Tuned Channel 7 Plan 9........................

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

son of sweet punk videos...



Dunno if I'd posted this one before, but yeah... the saints were something else.



crucifix from the target video.



Born Against Live set. awesome.
enjoy.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Long Live The Old Man...

Yes, yes, yes- there's something to be said for the woods and for beauty and peace and accepting one's place in the world around... but there are other forces at work in the world of man. This is what happens when you look into the palantir.



Hassan I Sabbah.


Burroughs Documentary from 1984.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

FROST


Robert Frost is an easy dude to right off when you're young and hungry for experience, smirking at the books on your parent's shelf. As time goes by however, you catch up, suddenly all the poems about scoring heroin and being wasted and lonely seem kind of empty. Frost is a guy you gotta right off in order to eventually understand, you gotta see the emptiness and arbitrary experience in suffering for sufferings sake. It's really only then you can start to appreciate the folks who sought peace with themselves and the world around them. In the tradition of all the ancient Japanese and Chinese poets, he sees how much is reflected internally through an experience with the natural world, he gets past the duality until it's all one body, one memory. So in honor of all that and the approach of Autumn, here' my favorite Poem by Frost.


Birches

When I see birches bend to left and right
Across the lines of straighter darker trees,
I like to think some boy's been swinging them.
But swinging doesn't bend them down to stay.
Ice-storms do that. Often you must have seen them
Loaded with ice a sunny winter morning
After a rain. They click upon themselves
As the breeze rises, and turn many-coloured
As the stir cracks and crazes their enamel.
Soon the sun's warmth makes them shed crystal shells
Shattering and avalanching on the snow-crust
Such heaps of broken glass to sweep away
You'd think the inner dome of heaven had fallen.
They are dragged to the withered bracken by the load,
And they seem not to break; though once they are bowed
So low for long, they never right themselves:
You may see their trunks arching in the woods
Years afterwards, trailing their leaves on the ground,
Like girls on hands and knees that throw their hair
Before them over their heads to dry in the sun.
But I was going to say when Truth broke in
With all her matter-of-fact about the ice-storm,
I should prefer to have some boy bend them
As he went out and in to fetch the cows--
Some boy too far from town to learn baseball,
Whose only play was what he found himself,
Summer or winter, and could play alone.
One by one he subdued his father's trees
By riding them down over and over again
Until he took the stiffness out of them,
And not one but hung limp, not one was left
For him to conquer. He learned all there was
To learn about not launching out too soon
And so not carrying the tree away
Clear to the ground. He always kept his poise
To the top branches, climbing carefully
With the same pains you use to fill a cup
Up to the brim, and even above the brim.
Then he flung outward, feet first, with a swish,
Kicking his way down through the air to the ground.
So was I once myself a swinger of birches.
And so I dream of going back to be.
It's when I'm weary of considerations,
And life is too much like a pathless wood
Where your face burns and tickles with the cobwebs
Broken across it, and one eye is weeping
From a twig's having lashed across it open.
I'd like to get away from earth awhile
And then come back to it and begin over.
May no fate wilfully misunderstand me
And half grant what I wish and snatch me away
Not to return. Earth's the right place for love:
I don't know where it's likely to go better.
I'd like to go by climbing a birch tree~
And climb black branches up a snow-white trunk
Toward heaven, till the tree could bear no more,
But dipped its top and set me down again.
That would be good both going and coming back.
One could do worse than be a swinger of birches.

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Saturday, September 11, 2010

Can I Live. Pt. 2 "Proliferation"

Like hippies seeking vibes, Christians seeking the souls of godless natives, or buccaneers seeking plunder, since the early days of "plan on wheels" skaters have roamed the lord's green pastures and Lucifer's dark alleys in search of skateable spots. Back in the days of "Red Dawn", fear of the communist hordes did not keep American skaters from slipping behind the iron curtain and shredding Latvian hillsides. Most recently a group of skaters snuck under the radar into Cuba and gave away 200+ boards to folks there who, were definitely suffering from a lack of equipment and on top of that, harassment by Cuban cops for engaging in an "activity of the enemy" (Mission Skatepossible) . And there it is, no room for skating either way, the gov frowns on it, the Superpower restricts the resources necessary to engage in it, but kids have been and still are skating anyway, just like everywhere in the world. Skating like great art, changes the perception of the observer and when perception is altered an internal shift often occurs as well. Skating (again like good art) can lead to the development of a fierce independent streak, a healthy disregard for authority, and a fine tuned bullshit detector.
There are fierce and ruthless forces currently at work to keep people separated and dependent on the minority that hold all the money and power. The tools of separation at their disposal are endless, ethnicity, religion, culture, history, all these can be exploited to keep people fighting and divided. Skating can lead not only to the questioning of this propaganda but also to the outright rejection of it by direct experience. Getting together and skating with others or just observation through mags and media, allows people to connect on a level deeper and more subjective then social and cultural prejudices and grievences.
The Dali Lama was onece asked what advice he could give on how to resolve the Israeli/Arab conflict. He responded "Throw more parties." Let people get together, relate to eachother as individuals hanging out, and peace will prosper. So, in honor of throwing more parties, and sessioning around the worlf, here are a number of links to groups using skateboarding to help impoverished youth, bring kids from conflict zones together, and just info on skate scenes all over this bouncing blue marble.

SKATEISTAN - Skateistan is one of the dopest nonprofits since Medecins San Fronteirs. The organization got its start when some Aussies working for a development organization in Kabul Afghanistan brought their boards. Skating around the abandoned Olympic pool (which under the Taliban had been a site for executions) they soon attracted large groups of Afghan kids, who in the world's second poorest country, broken from 30+ years of war, had little opportunity to play and be kids. What started as just getting kids together to skate, have fun and build confidence, has lead to the construction of the first Kabul skate park as well as an attached school. In order to earn skate time kids gotta attend the school. They bring together kids from all different ethnicity's (all of which have a shared history of conflict against each other) and teach both genders. This gives kids the opportunity to connect and play without all the baggage of cultural and social identities. Their site has tons of examples of all the awesome shit going on including a soon to be released documentary.

The Uganda Skateboard Union - There is a skate park in Uganda and a scene of inspired skaters surrounding it and this is their website. Currently I think their repairing and adding to the park while continuing to shred East Africa. Tons of photos and great posts available on the website.

Skate Arabia - A skater run blog breaking down the skate scene throughout the Middle East and North Africa. A wealth of information and cool photos/articles. This is a really well organized and run page and incredibly interesting. So here's what I propose, we fly into Rabat and work our way across North Africa by land skating everything until we hit Muscat, that my friends would be a real war on terrorism.

Skatenacion - Well run, slick page dealing with all things skating in Colombia (where I was told that if I rode my board down the street I'd immediately get it stolen). In Spanish but can be translated.

Skate Malaysia - All the things going down with Skating in Malaysia as well as info and links to skating in other countries in the region.

Sour (a documentary) "Sour" is a skate documentary about "nine skaters from Israel and Jordan jumping borders and cultural barriers to share a united passion for skating and life." It has been making the film circuit both in the states and abroad and is an incredible testament to the power of skating and its possibility as a tool for change. The creators of Sour were gracious enough to sit down for an interview with Resort to Cannibalism that will be posted soon. Till then check out this site.

The Bedouins.org The Bedouins is a site dedicated to using art and skateboarding to advocate for peace. It is run by the creators of "Sour" and gives updates and information on various events related to the documentary or put on by the organization. They are looking for galleries, etc, interested in participating. Check em out.

Bridge To Skate - Like Skateistan "Bridge to Skate is a humanitarian organization that uses skateboarding and play to aid in the creation of life skills, promotion of health, fostering of peace, and the education of cultural differences internationally." It is currently operating in Honduras with hopes to spread to other countries

All these sites have links to a ton of other awesome information and are worth exploring if your interested. Also check out The Gaza Surf Club for a group doing similar things but with surfing in the fucking Gaza strip. Also stay tuned to R2C for an interview I did with the makers of the Sour documentary.