Orange Sunshine: The Strange But True Story of the ‘Hippie Mafia’

An interview with Nicholas Schou, author of Orange Sunshine: The Brotherhood of Eternal Love and Its Quest to Spread Peace, Love, and Acid to the World. The inside story of the infamous gang of dope-dealing surfers who played a key role in the counterculture of the Sixties. It’s a mindblowing—and improbable—tale of drug smuggling, large scale marihuana farming and LSD distribution—basically, it’s the hidden history of how America got turned on. The story of the Brotherhood might’ve gone to the grave with the participants if not for Nicholas Schou’s intriguing history. Highly recommended.
 

All you need is love: E.T. and Yoda bromance
07.29.2010
03:21 pm

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Amusing
Art
Movies

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Star Wars
Yoda
E.T.

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All You Need Is Love from zed1.
 
(via Wooster Collective)

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Bunker Hill: The lost suburb of downtown Los Angeles
07.29.2010
12:49 pm

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History
Movies

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Bunker Hill
The Exiles
Kent Mackenzie

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Marc’s post about Times Square yesterday reminded me about Los Angeles’ equivalent: The once thriving downtown suburb of Bunker Hill. In the very spot where now sits the Disney concert hall and the 1960’s music center complex was once a thriving neighborhood packed with turn-of-the-century Victorian houses, theaters, bars, restaurants and a large population of retired old folks. By the mid 1950’s when Kent Mackenzie, future director of the acclaimed film The Exiles (which also takes place in Bunker Hill), made this short documentary film the neighborhood was already doomed. By the end of the 60’s, save for a few buildings it was all gone. In a city such as ours which perpetually tears down the past and re-invents itself there was no way a few rickety old buildings and poor people would ever get in the way of progress. Fortunately we have the below film and countless other movies and books to remind us of what once was.
 

 
On Bunker Hill (great resource for Bunker Hill in films and literature)

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Rare German Documentary On Hippies And Acid Rock : Trippy, Man

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Documentary with performances by The Dead, Mothers Of Invention, Big Brother, The Airplane, Quicksilver Messenger Service and lots of hippies dancing and getting stoned. It was directed by Stefan Morawietz for German TV. It’s in German, but you’ll get the idea.

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A must have 2011 calendar: Goats in Trees
07.29.2010
10:53 am

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Amusing

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calendars
Goats in Trees

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Goats in Trees
 
It’s goats in trees! Goats in trees! Goats in trees! Goats in trees!
 
(via Daily What)

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‘Who Killed Nancy?’ : New Documentary Claims Sid Vicious Did Not kill Nancy Spungen

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Who Killed Nancy opens today In New York City. The film makes a strong case that Sid Vicious did not kill Nancy Spungen. Read about it at the Daily Mail.

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Melvin Bliss, Singer of One Of The Most Sampled Songs Of All Time Has Died

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Melvin Bliss, singer of one the most sampled songs of all time, 1973’s “Synthetic Substitution,” has died. The list of artists who’ve borrowed from the track is long and overwhelming: Ultramagnetic MC’s, Public Enemy, De La Soul, Naughty By Nature, Gang Starr, Wu-Tang Clan; it goes on, pretty much forever.

Zach Baron of the Village Voice has put together a sweet video tribute to Melvin. Check it out at Village Voice

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‘Acid, Delirium Of The Senses’ : Obscure Italian Psychedelic Exploitation Flick

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Here’s a clip from Acid Delirio Dei Sensi (Acid, Delirium Of The Senses), a very obscure acid exploitation film directed by Giuseppe Maria Scotese. Italian language bootlegs on DVD are available of this over-the-top psychedelic mindbender. I’ve yet to find one with English subtitles. 

While few people have actually seen the film, poster art for Acid Delirio Dei Sensi is coveted among collectors. I own two, which I purchased back in the 80s before they became priceless. Lucky me.

 
See more lysergic imagery from Acid Delirio Dei Sensi after the jump…

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Mashup Of The Day :  Stuntin’ Like Mufasa - Lil Wayne
07.28.2010
09:22 pm

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Circle of life and Lil Wayne mash-up by DJ DoYou.

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Forget Hollywood & New York. The future of the music video is in Nairobi. Meet Jim Chuchu.

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You read right. Jim Chuchu is one-third of the excellent Kenyan beat-pop group Just A Band, and this April he released what became Kenya’s first viral video, for their song “Ha-He.” It features the Shaft-esque character Makmende, named after playground slang for a tough guy, which itself is derived from Clint Eastwood’s “make my day” line as Dirty Harry from Sudden Impact.
 

 
But Chuchu is hardly a one-trick-pony. He’s brought his simple, wry, off-beat style to a bunch of ingenious videos by Just A Band (including the astonishing “Usinibore”) and loads of other Nairobi acts. Plus he’s built his own lighting components, which is DIY as hell.

Check out a few of the videos after the jump and you’ll understand why Chuchu has become the master visual chronicler of the sound of digital East Africa.
 

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R.L. Burnside’s First Film Appearance : See My Jumper Hanging On the Line (1978)

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The magnificent R. L. Burnside in his first film appearance, performing See My Jumper Hanging On The Line. Filmed by Alan Lomax at Burnside’s home in Independence, Mississippi, August, 1978.

 

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Portraits in Licorice: New Work by Jason Mecier and Adam J. Ansell
07.28.2010
07:34 pm

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Art
Pop Culture
Television

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Adam J. Ansell
Jason Mecier

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New “eye candy” from Dangerous Minds fave Jason Mecier showing in San Francisco, with work from his partner, Adam J. Ansell, in an exhibit called We Like to Watch TV, opening August 1 and running through September 30.

I just love this portrait of “Dexter” done in licorice!

Celebrity mosaic portrait artist Jason Mecier and longtime partner, painter Adam J. Ansell, have teamed up to create a new body of work inspired by their favorite pastime… watching TV! Expect to see many faces from TV, movies, reality shows, sitcoms, documentaries, music videos and even commercials.

Adam’s edgy, high fashion, expressionistic paintings, ironically capture eccentric television personalities from The Real Housewives, Tabatha’s Salon Takeover, True Blood, and The Wendy Williams Show, to Millionaire Matchmaker, Larry King and many others.

Jason’s new works are striking and delicious, made entirely out of licorice! Thousands of fat free red and black licorice vines have been carefully glued into the likenesses of Mo’Nique, Judge Judy, Dexter, Freddy Krueger, Nomi Malone, Taylor Lautner, and others.

GLAMA - RAMA, 304 Valencia Street, San Francisco 415.861.4526
Opening Reception Sunday August 1, 6-9pm

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Rare Color Photographs of Small Town America During The Depression, 1939-1943
07.28.2010
07:00 pm

Topics:
Art
Economy
History

Tags:
Great Depression

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These photographs taken for the US Farm Security Administration in the late 30s/early 40s are among the only color photographs taken during the Great Depression. They document the impact of the depression on small town and rural America. Each tells a story, each one a work of art.
 
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See more of these stunning photos after the jump…

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William S. Burroughs and Magick: An Interview with James Grauerholz
07.28.2010
06:06 pm

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Books
Heroes

Tags:
William S. Burroughs
James Grauerholz

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Enjoyable interview with the literary executor for the William S. Burroughs estate, James Grauerholz, who worked closely with the author for 23 years, conducted by Stephen Foland. It’s a discussion specifically about Burrough’s interest in magick—something that interests me greatly to read about, I can assure you—but what’s fun about the interview is reading between the lines as Grauerholz gently manages to provide a more, how shall I put it, secular viewpoint on the matter.

SF: William’s magickal experimentation, the aspects of recording what he called “Danger Sounds” and replaying them in proximity to his target, or using collage to hit a specific target has become the stuff of legend. Some attribute the closing of one particular establishment to William’s hexes. Is there another specific instance which you can recall that is as dramatic and apparently self-evident?

JG: Nope, not really. You are likely referring to the Moka Bar in London, where William said he received snide, snotty service and lousy, weak tea — and his tape-recorders-and-cameras mock-surveillance routine, back and forth on the sidewalk of Frith Street, and how the Moka Bar failed and was shuttered not too long after that.

Forgive me please, but my cast of mind leads me to suspect the Moka Bar, if it really did sell lousy tea with terrible service, might have been headed out of business, with or without the sound-text-tape-film sidewalk-pacing routine…

Below, Burroughs reads from Nova Express on Saturday Night Live in 1981. I remember seeing this the night it aired live and being totally flabbergasted to actually see William Burroughs on television. Something like that seemed impossible at the time!
 

 
Taking the broooooaaaaad view of things: A Conversation with James Grauerholz on William S. Burroughs and Magick (Pop Damage)

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Short Film Of Times Square In 1980 B.D. (Before Disney)
07.28.2010
03:34 pm

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This evocative video of a long gone Times Square directed by Steve Siegel documents a…

[...] pre-Disneyfied Times Square at night—as it existed in the 1980s. As seen from a teenager’s point of view. Includes voice-over interviews of teenagers.

This brings back memories for me of Showworld, grindhouse double features, adult bookstores stuffed with 20 year old copies of Danish nudie magazines, head shops, hookers, pimps, drug dealers and pickpockets…all the stuff that gave 42nd street character. Yes, it could be spooky. But, it was teeming with a down and dirty humanity that was exhilarating. Today, Times Square could be anywhere USA, with its Applebees, Disney Store, Loews megaplex, Chevys, 7/11 convenience stores,...

Travis Bickle’s vision of a force that would cleanse 42nd street came, not as rain, but in the form of Giuliani and Bloomberg.

All the animals come out at night - whores, skunk pussies, buggers, queens, fairies, dopers, junkies, sick, venal. Someday a real rain will come and wash all this scum off the streets.

 
thanks to artblognyc

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? And The Mysterians:  ‘Sally Go Round The Roses’
07.28.2010
02:26 pm

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Dangerous Mind’s Brad Laner did a terrific piece on The Jaynetts and their song Sally Go Round The Roses, A Tournament Of Sally Go Round The Roses.

I thought I’d add ? And The Mysterians’ groovy version to the mix. Question Mark is one smooth motherfucker.

 
thanks to the hound

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Intricately carved shellac records
07.28.2010
01:58 pm

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Art
Music

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Carved shellac 78 records

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Australian artist Scott Marr beautifully repurposed these fragile old shellac 78rpm discs with a small electric drill and a tiny bit of paint. By the way, did you know that shellac is a resin secreted by the female lac bug on trees in the forests of India and Thailand?
 
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Thanks Shannon Fields !

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Heavy Metal Gift Ideas
07.28.2010
01:14 pm

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Heavy metal gift ideas, including limited edition Manowar Christmas Balls.

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Angry Angus Burger : ‘It’s Not Just Angry, It’s Fucking Furious’
07.28.2010
12:12 pm

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from The Chaser.

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The Fall: Totally Wired
07.28.2010
12:01 pm

Topics:
Drugs
Heroes
Music
Punk

Tags:
The Fall
Totally Wired

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Because putting together the Phew/Aunt Sally post made me think of them and because I need a unicorn chaser after that cheesy thing I posted just now (ironically from the same time period as this), Here’s The Fall, live in Leeds, doing one of the best odes to speed that I know of, aside from this one or (duh!) this one. I drunk a jar of coffee and then I took some of these !

 
Alternate version after the jump…

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Andromeda: space disco of the 25th century

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Something deeply silly from Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, which ran on U.S. TV from 1979-1981. Evidently the disco music of 400 years from now will be a sort of fusion of The Residents and Weather Report. I never would have guessed !

 
Thanks Ned Raggett !

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