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Feric |
Cultural Stimuli in SF Issue 228: oddball flavor
For anyone who's ever felt like a square peg shoved into a round hole, this week in SF culture accepts all shapes and sizes. Anti-social quirks are badges of honor as we celebrate the 13th birthday of misanthropic goth teen Emily the Strange, the cross-cultural appeal of Sesame Street (including our favorite grouch, Oscar), and the fanatic underground culture of art-car drivers. Around town, you'll find MadCats, Tortured Souls, and outcast punk rockers gallivanting about — undoubtedly with upturned sneers on proud display. Whether you're taking in a wildly diverse, all-female film festival, learning how to make paper airplanes, or listening to the wistful strains of indie folk, stop to appreciate how the individualists among us make the world go round. Hold on tight to your idiosyncrasies, and spread it...
- Lisa Hix, Managing Editor
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flavorpill SF is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.


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Weirdos on Wheels
Here in the Bay Area, some take pimping their rides to a whole new level, affixing their wildest dreams, political tirades, and toy collections to their cars. At ArtCar Fest, See what happens when you let your obsessions explode all over your hood.
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| FILM |
The World According to Sesame Street
| when: |
Tue 9.12 (6-8pm) |
| where: |
Koret Auditorium, Main Library (100 Larkin St, 415.557.4400) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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If Big Bird, Cookie Monster, and Aloysius Snuffleupagus call up any nostalgic images from childhood, then The World According to Sesame Street — a distinguished documentary that commences the ITVS monthly Community Film series — could be just as educational to you as an adult. The film tracks producers from the Sesame Street Workshop in New York City, Bangladesh, Kosovo, and South Africa, where they integrate the world's most-watched children's television program into societies ravaged by AIDS, ethnic cleansing, and poverty. The cultural and production obstacles the producers face represent the political conflicts of each country, making this film a must-see for viewers fascinated with intercultural dialogue. (CS)
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| ART |
Emily the Strange Turns 13
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You might know Emily the Strange and her kitties from the punk-inspired clothing line, stickers, comic books, and four graphic novels that feature the fictional counterculture teen. The brainchild of skateboarder Rob Reger and illustrator Buzz Parker, Emily, who has become an icon on the graphic design scene since her creation, turns 13 today. Her black bangs make her hard to miss, and her quirky and brooding cheekiness — with slogans like "Wish you weren't here" and "Get lost!" — have won her legions of adoring fans. Come celebrate Emily's birthday with her creators at tonight's bash featuring live performances by the Husbands and This Isn't It, and a sample sale of the latest Emily merchandise. (BMS)
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| FILM |
MadCat Film Festival
| when: |
Tue 9.12 - Wed 9.27 (schedule) |
| where: |
Various locations |
| price: |
$7-20 sliding scale |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Though certainly not the only film festival to champion the cultural and artistic explorations of women, MadCat International, now in its tenth year, is likely the most diverse. Rather than, say, devoting an entire evening to experimental shorts about burgeoning female sexuality, the festival opts for a much looser approach. It begins tonight with a program entitled The Dwellers that explores various conceptions of home and place. The diverse results include a colorful evocation of life along Mission Street, images of a Nevada desert ravaged by nuclear tests, and a piece outlining the connection between miners and Bill Gates. (JK)
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| MUSIC: Café Pop |
Laura Veirs and the Tortured Souls w/ Karl Blau and Your Heart Breaks
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Listening to Laura Veirs is like flipping through the poetry-filled pages of a dog-eared notebook belonging to an introspective young woman. All the longing, hope, intelligence, and sadness come through in bittersweet folk songs, embellished with old-timey strings and Elephant 6-ish quirks. But the bespectacled singer/guitarist transcends the freak-folk trend when she croons, "I've learned that love is scared of light." Her Tortured Souls collaborator Karl Blau opens with a set of quirky, off-kilter roots music of his own. (LH)
Note: Your Heart Breaks also open.
Which profession did Veirs once say she would be interested in had she not become a musician? The first correct response wins a pair of tickets to this event.
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| PARTY |
ArtCar Fest
| when: |
Thur 9.14 - Sun 9.17 (schedule) |
| where: |
Various locations |
| price: |
Varies |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Whether plastered with seashells or adorned with smiley-face gewgaws, encrusted with Catholic kitsch or simply covered in flea market flotsam and spray paint, art cars have long thrived as a folk art form — a DIY/fringe counterpart to the glossy customization of the Pimp My Ride aesthetic. Vehicles fresh from the Black Rock playa will have another opportunity to showboat, as this year's tenth annual art-car summit features a caravan from the Haight Street Amoeba to the store's Berkeley branch. (MS)
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| ART: Opening |
Hot Sty
| when: |
Thur 9.14 (7-9pm) |
| where: |
TART (47 Lusk St, 415.203.5865) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Hipsters just can't get enough of the early '80s zeitgeist of locales such as NY and London, where uptown socialites and downtown artists hobnobbed with urban street culture. Such was the vibe at London club Hot Sty, where painter Lucien Freud held court and b-boys popped to PiL and Ramelzee tracks spun by Freud's daughter Rose Boyt. TART presents signifiers of the club (Freud paintings, breakin' videos, Boyt's novels) alongside period artifacts; the hip cache of a lesser King Tut's tomb. LCD Soundsystem's zinger about "borrowed nostalgia for the unremembered '80s" couldn't be a more apposite descriptor here. (MS)
Note: This exhibition runs through Sat 10.14 (Sat: 1-6pm / by appointment).
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| THEATRE |
Happy Days
| when: |
Thur 9.14 - Thur 9.28 (Thur: 8pm) |
| where: |
Shelton Theater (533 Sutter St, 415.433.1227) map |
| price: |
$20 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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This being a Beckett play, we cannot really take its title's promise of cheeriness in good faith. The daily rituals that provide contentment for Winnie — married to the play's other character, the largely offstage Willy — form a fragile psychic shield against the literal and existential earth pile that steadily threatens to engulf her over the course of the play. As the current administration hypocritically defends "the sanctity of marriage" while reality TV shows transform it into a capitalist blood sport, Beckett's absurdly comic treatment of wedded bliss starts to become less seemingly absurd and more frighteningly prescient. (MS)
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| THEATRE |
Travesties
| when: |
Thur 9.14 - Sat 10.14 (schedule) |
| where: |
American Conservatory Theater (415 Geary Blvd, 415.749.2228) map |
| price: |
$12-80 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Vladimir Lenin, James Joyce, and Tristan Tzara walk into a bar — OK, really, they walk into a library in Zurich, Switzerland, in 1917. In Travesties, Tom Stoppard depicts a fictional meeting between three of the 20th century's most influential thinkers with irony, humor, and Wildean wit. Through the imperfect recollections of Henry Carr, an actual historical figure who briefly crossed paths (not amicably) with Joyce, we see the encounter between Soviet communism's poster boy, modernism's scribe, and Dada's founder — and Stoppard's unique perspective on where the arts and philosophy intersect and what it means to be a revolutionary, an artist, or perhaps both. (BMS)
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| ALSO ON THUR |
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MUSIC: Post-Rock
Tortoise Thur 9.14 (8pm) Great American Music Hall (859 O'Farrell St, 415.885.0750) map $21
Event Info |
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Now over a decade into its career, the instrumental quintet Tortoise have honed its slow-burning live shows, mixing marimbas and laptops, jazz and rock, post-rock and dub into a sound that exists blissfully outside of genre. (TG)
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MUSIC: Industrial
Nitzer Ebb Thur 9.14 (9pm) Slim's (333 11th St, 415.255.0333) map $25
Event Info |
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Boot-stomp with baited breath as industrial-dance innovators Nitzer Ebb grace SF for the first time in a decade. Tonight, the city celebrates the late '80s industrial icons' return to the militaristic beats and impassioned chant-alongs that made them goth-club mainstays. (LLT)
Note: Motore and Babyland open.
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| FILM |
This Film Is Not Yet Rated
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Nothing seems less punk rock — and more abjectly self-referential — than the movie industry crying unfair about its own rating system. But the always avant-garde Kirby Dick makes a fair case here about why the MPAA board's wild secrecy and biases are not only irrational but downright corrupt — and corrupting. Through interviews with such filmmakers as Kevin Smith, Matt Stone, Kimberly Peirce, and John Waters (who proves characteristically, devastatingly wry), and such Michael Moore doc standards as animation and director-as-gumshoe protagonist, Dick lays out, reel by reel, how those pesky ratings reinforce the very corporate and social structures that the films themselves often seek to topple. (LR)
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| DANCE |
Company Mécanique presents Take Me with You
| when: |
Fri 9.15 - Sun 9.17 (Fri & Sat: 8pm / Sun: 7pm) |
| where: |
Dance Mission (3316 24th St, 415.273.4633) map |
| price: |
$18 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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The seven dancers of Company Mécanique are anything but mechanical — these heirs to modern dance innovators Martha Graham and Alvin Ailey bring unbridled emotion to their every movement. The group presents its latest experiment in innovative choreography at the Dance Mission Theater this weekend. The new show, Take Me with You, features three original pieces that meditate on human interactions. As athletic as they are lyrical, the dances by ballet master and filmmaker Yannis Adoniou, Finnish ballerina Raisa Punkki, and 30-year dance veteran Sara Shelton-Mann range from reflections on intimacy to an examination of the larger world of politics. (RM)
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| MUSIC: Electroclash |
Soulwax w/ 2 Many DJs
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Belgian electro-fiends Soulwax have launched into club stardom via their bombastic singles "E Talking" (aided by an equally stunning video) and "NY Excuse." Their remixes of tracks by like-minded disco rockers LCD Soundsystem and Daft Punk have also garnered them some approving nods, and they're currently collaborating with Tiga on a new album. Nite Versions is the band's own remix of its 2005 release, Any Minute Now; tonight's show features the songs in exactly the same order as on the disc. The band's core, David and Stephen Dewaele, flex their turntable muscles as 2 Many DJs, who chuck a little Salt-N-Pepa, Röyksopp, and Dolly Parton into the mix. (CH/GM)
What can there never be too many of? The most compelling response in 50 words or less wins a pair of tickets to this event.
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| ALSO ON FRI |
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CONFERENCE
Dwell on Design Conference + Exhibition Fri 9.15 - Sun 9.17 (schedule) Concourse Exhibition Center (620 7th St, 619.414.1020) $20-700
Event Info |
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Ever wished you could step into a Dwell magazine spread and live the rest of your life in sleek, urban sophistication? This conference could be the place to start. The experts — architects, designers, critics — tell you how it's done. (LH)
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| ART |
Firings: Ceramic Sculpture
| when: |
Sat 9.16 - Sat 12.2 (Tue & Wed: 10am-6pm / Thur: 10am-8pm / Fri & Sat: 10am-6pm) |
| where: |
Sculpturesite Gallery (201 3rd St, Suite 102, 415.495.6400) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Clay as a medium brings to mind divine and artistic creation, as well as archeological discovery and scientific study. The artists in this show mould this mystical yet basic substance into ancient landscapes, fossils, life-size figurative pieces, abstract works that play with pattern and shadow, and organic vessels, all with a reverence for the sacred bond between body and earth. Sculpturesite's simple and spare environs, equally breathtaking in their design, are perfect for these contemporary reinterpretations of the ancient by Lu Bin, Susannah Israel, Alfred McCloud, Cybele Rowe, and Kathy Venter. (BMS/GM)
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| MUSIC: Hometown Hip-Hop |
Zion-I w/ the Team, Gift of Gab, and Turf Talk
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Everyone's favorite yellow-bus rider, Mistah F.A.B., hosts a wildly diverse bill of Bay Area hip-hop heavyweights. On one conscious side of the spectrum you have Zion-I, who pair sleek, sophisticated beats with thoughtful lyrics, and Gift of Gab, the rapid-fire thinker who fronts Blackalicious. But before things get too academic, there's the other side: Turf Talk and the Team let you go dumb to their raunchy hyphy beats. Tonight's show is a chance to wild out while keeping your head. (LH)
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Alex Smoke
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Scottish DJ Alex Smoke is a rapidly rising star thanks to his fusion of European minimal techno with a more glitchy and playful strain of electronica. His latest album on Soma, Paradolia, is a largely introspective affair, tricking out clicky rhythms with the kind of warm and quirky harmonies that wouldn't have been out of place on the Morr label. He doesn't neglect the dance floor, however, as the centerpiece of the album, "Meany," is a stomper of hefty bass and arpeggiated synth. After burnishing his remixing credentials cutting up Mylo and the Junior Boys, the Glaswegian DJ has been honing a terrific live set that works in the almighty Ableton Live. (TW)
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| ALSO ON SAT |
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MUSIC: Glam Rawk
The Starlite Desperation Sat 9.16 (9:30pm) Hemlock Tavern (1131 Polk St, 415.923.0923) map $7
Event Info |
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In the fine tradition of expansive '70s guitar rock, Starlite's spooky, bluesy songs evoke the more mystical elements of Zep and the disarming earnestness of the Animals, with the occasional Stooges scream for good measure. (CH)
Note: Bella Vista open.
The frontman of which '80s glam band produced Starlight Desperation's LP Go Kill Mice? The first correct response wins a pair of tickets to this event.
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| READING |
John Collins: The Gliding Flight
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Unless you teach at an elementary school with a particularly laissez-faire attitude toward discipline, making paper airplanes probably no longer constitutes a part of your day-to-day life. But, if Marin-based writer and paper airplane specialist John Collins had any say, it would. His book The Gliding Flight, which features foldout illustrations, explains how to create 20 different types of paper airplanes using the most basic materials: only paper and the ability to fold are necessary. This morning he holds a training session at the new store opened by the people who brought you A Clean Well-Lighted Place for Books. (JK)
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| MUSIC: Pop Punk |
The Queers w/ Hard-Ons and Groovie Ghoulies
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Lookout! seems to be back from the dead. In the tradition of a Heide Sez sampler, Du Nord is partying like it's Bottom of the Hill circa 1996. Surf pranksters the Groovie Ghoulies howl about zombie love and the ants in their pants, while New Hampshire surf-punk legends the Queers serve up heaping helpings of their sophomoric three-chord gems that have long been a guilty pleasure for the Ramones set. Aussie punk pioneers Hard-Ons also channel Joey and crew, but with Lemmy-inspired crunch. Time to drag out your high school combat boots and get your pogo on. (CH)
Which un-PC topics would your punk band sing about? The most amusing response in 50 words or less wins a pair of tickets to this event.
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| MUSIC: Hip-Hop/Funk |
Breakestra
| when: |
Sun 9.17 (9pm) |
| where: |
The Independent (628 Divisadero St, 415.771.1421) map |
| price: |
$15 |
| links: |
Event info | Breakestra |
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Los Angeles-based Breakestra fill all the translucent lines in the relationships between hip-hop, funk, and soul, reproducing those lineages in an all-encompassing, free-form opus. Originally conceived of as a way to continue the rarefied traditions of true funk in a new hip-hop context, Breakestra are as sprawling and diverse as the area from which they originate, as expressed with high-flying horns, drop-down bass, and crashing rhythms. Much like the funk orchestras and stage bands of old, Breakestra feature a revolving door of members who expand on the collective's mixtape continuity. (KH)
Note: Panacea open.
What was the '80s song that first turned Breakestra member Miles Tackett on to hip-hop? The first correct response wins a pair of tickets to this event.
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| MUSIC: Arena Electronics |
Ratatat
| when: |
Mon 9.18 (8pm) |
| where: |
Great American Music Hall (859 O'Farrell St, 415.885.0750) map |
| price: |
$15 / $13 advance |
| links: |
Event Info | Ratatat |
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Brooklyn duo Ratatat garnered well-deserved hype for their eponymous debut album, but no one was sure how they would top those soaring tracks. People started to get downright nervous when word started trickling out that their sophomore LP would be titled Classics and would feature (shudder) guitars. Fortunately, the boys hitched up their pants and turned the dial to "epic": their latest is a hazy mirage of unabashedly anthemic tunes, with acoustic and slide guitar, cello, and what we swear are harmonizing buzz saws swimming amid dizzying, layered atmospherics. Occasionally, the polished productions come close to sounding like a cosmic glockenspiel, but even the noise-addicted are sure to be washed away by the onslaught of their live set. (TW)
Note: Envelopes and Panther open.
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| FILM |
Edmond
| when: |
Fri 9.15 - Thur 9.21 (6:15, 8 & 9:40pm) |
| where: |
Roxie Cinema (3117 16th St, 415.863.1087) map |
| price: |
$4-8 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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William H. Macy gets under your skin as the titular white-collar sad sack who's possessed by his misogynist and racist demons and willing to let them drag him down to the lowest depths in this adaptation of David Mamet's grim 1982 play. Cult horror film director Stuart Gordon (Re-Animator) softens his Grand Guignol aesthetic, focusing instead on the specters of urban blight — hack fortune tellers, hoods, prostitutes — that Edmond encounters on his bender from hell. But when the blood starts to be shed, it's on everyone's hands. (MS)
Note: There are additional matinee screenings Wed, Sat & Sun (2 & 4:30pm).
Actor William H. Macy is married to which Emmy-winning actress? The first five correct responses win a pair of tickets to this event.
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| THEATRE |
Suitcase
| when: |
Now through Sun 9.24 (Thur-Sat: 8pm / Sun: 7pm) |
| where: |
Intersection for the Arts, Mancuso Theatre (446 Valencia St, 415.626.2787) map |
| price: |
$15-20 sliding scale |
| links: |
Event Info | Intersection for the Arts |
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Initially written in Farsi 20 years ago, this absurdist play about the weight people carry when they flee a country finds unexpected resonance today. Billed as "an Iranian tragicomedy with global reverberations," the play, newly translated into English, exists in a phantom time and place that is nonetheless meant to speak to the Iranian exile community. At points bitingly funny and at others uncomfortable and startling, Suitcase makes great use of its fine ensemble cast and expert, economical staging, effectively communicating the confusion, fear, and wonder experienced by displaced peoples. (JK)
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ART QUEST: SFMOMA Scavenger Hunt |
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Scavenger hunts never get old, which is why SFMOMA is organizing its own on Saturday, September 30th. Out of the many teams of four applying (all are welcome, but applications are due Friday, September 15th), 50 are chosen to receive a list of 100 clues. After interpreting this list, the teams fan out across San Francisco to find the items the clues refer to — some of which pertain to the art in the museum — earning points in the process. The team with the most points at the end of the day wins a cash prize of $4,000, and all the collected items will be shown in a short exhibition that runs from Sunday, October 1st through Tuesday, October 3rd. Get your gumshoe skills up to snuff, put a team together, and spend a Saturday scouring the streets for strange, obscure, and arty objects. (GM)
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CD REVIEW: Arthur Russell, Another Thought |
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Orange Mountain Music
Released August 2006
$17.99 (Amazon)
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When Arthur Russell tragically died of AIDS in 1992 at the age of 40, he left behind a body of work split between arty, idiosyncratic disco and eerie solo cello-and-voice compositions. Another Thought, the latest in a series of remastered posthumous releases, lifts the crystalline gauze from Russell's haunting, effects-laden World of Echo. Sharpening the focus, the record reveals a suite of exquisite pop songs featuring the artist's lightly bowed cello and throaty, otherworldly mumble. "Keeping Up" operates according to a boomerang-like internal logic, returning to one heartbreaking hook, while "Home Away from Home" gilds sad-eyed melodies with a childlike glint. Other tracks hint at Russell's disco-fried alter ego, adding horns and charmingly cheapo drum machines; but Another Thought's best moments are its simplest, ones that conjure images of the gentle Russell, alone in his room, whispering sweet, watery nothings into a tape machine. (TG)
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MULTIMEDIA: BBC Collective |
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This week, we check in with our cultural cohorts at the BBC Collective to absorb some new sounds, emerging visual art, and exclusive, interactive multimedia sessions. Check a live set and in-depth interview with up-and-coming UK artist Plan B, who's recently worked with esteemed indie producer Paul Epworth (aka Phones). Next, sample a few full tracks from Erlend Øye — he of Kings of Convenience fame — on new project the Whitest Boy Alive. Finally, don't miss the Collective's playlist, consisting of new music from the likes of Headman, Yo La Tengo, Padded Cell, and others. (CJN)
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Plan B: Live In-Session (Hip-hop)
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The Whitest Boy Alive: Dream (Ambient rock)
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Various Artists: The Collective Playlist (Eclectic)
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| Doughy Joey | Feric |
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| Jocelyn Lantern | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Lisa Loser | Lisa Hix | | Connie Sewer | Connie Hwong | | Jon Pond | Jonathan Knapp | | Baked Jake | Jake Lancaster | | Doug Plug | Doug Levy | | Virus Iris | Sascha Lewis | | Mad Mak | Gerry Mak | | Skid Mark | Mark Mangan | | Colon Powell | Colin J. Nagy | | Sailin' Waylon | Brianna M. Smith | | Crusty Chris | Chris Gage | | Matt Ratt | Matt Sussman | | Lickin' Leah | Leah M. Taylor | | Tongue-Tied Toby | Toby Warner |
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| ABOUT US |
| Flavorpill SF 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 SF. 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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| As always, feel free to send in any and all feedback — comments, questions, ideas, or rants. |
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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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| Sidra Rella | Sidra Durst | | Todd Stool | Todd Goldstein | | Fistin' Kristin | Kristin Gifford | | Germy Jennie | Jennie Gruber | | Flamey Aimee | Aimee Hartley | | Kai T. Tongs | Kai Hsing | | Fanny Annie | Annie Lo | | Toothie Ruthie | Ruth Marcus | | Moan A. Lisa | Lisa Rosman | | Beaky Becky | Rebecca Rubin | | Gory Laura | Laura L. Tiffany | | Jolly Roger | Roger Thomasson | | Annie Innards | Annie Wilner |
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| Production: |
| Scarin' Aaron | Anjuli Ayer | | Juicy Jessica | Jessica Bauer-Greene | | Cheesy Chelsea | Chelsea Bauch | | Morgan Organ | Morgan Croney | | Squashed Josh | Josh Deeden | | Zeke Freak | Myla Dalbesio | | Has-Been Jasmine | Jasmine Loignon | | Deflated David | David Morrow | | Russ Pus | Judah Wiedre |
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