London agenda for Monday 21 May 2012
1. Hear the guy who does the theme song to The Bridge, Choir Of Young Believers [Le Cool]
2. Watch ‘a troupe of international actors, singers and muso’s recreate Themba’s hauntingly beautiful fable,’ The Suit [Run Riot]
3. Listen to former Arab Strap guitarist Malcolm Middleton at Cargo [Don’t Panic]
4. Quietly talk about The Scream [Ian Visits]
5. Visit Portsoken Street Garden [Tired of London]
21 May 2012
Brainlove Festival: Octagon Court
Octagon Court are an arty electronic duo from New Cross that sound like Bryan Ferry messing around with home-studio software. Live, however, they are more like Ferry having a seizure. And they’re a band that just have to be seen live – not only as much in a “one not to miss!” tipster sense but in the way that it’ll save me the challenge of having to describe them.
The band say their performances have been called “sermonic” (is that a word?), while they themselves say that they also “try to piss people off”. Either way, they’re as much a spectacle of theatrical uneasiness as they are a band. “The sounds and lyrics so each song becomes an aesthetic situation,” they say. And believe us, they really do.
We spoke to Octagon Court in advance of their performance at Brainlove Festival in Brixton on May 26th.
Could you introduce a little about yourself first and foremost?
We are Octagon Court, we are a musical duo, we were visual artists. We went all weird though.
For people who haven’t seen you live before, what can they expect?
People have commented on the excessive amount of energy involved in our live performance. There are also certain rituals and forms we have created to house the sounds and lyrics so each song becomes an aesthetic situation. My brother said there was something sermonic in the performance – that’s a combination of ritual and a real emphasis on the lyrics. I’m not a poet however.
Have you played or even been to the Brainlove Festival prior to this year?
Yes, in fact we opened last year.
How was it before? What do you think makes it unique?
We had just got off a three-hour coach journey from Norwich where we were living at the time. We remember trying to quaff as much whisky as we could before going on. Kreatiivmootor made it unique.
Looking at the line-up, who are you excited about seeing live?
It looks a really varied and exciting line up. I’m really interested to see Keel Her. And Mat Riviere is well good.
How do you find festivals in general? Do you prefer smaller venue shows?
We’ve not played that many festivals but smaller shows seem to complement the intensity of what we are trying to get across. Big stages are good but we usually employ other aesthetic elements – dancers or props to engage with the space.
Do you enjoy the prospect of people that necessarily aren’t that familiar with your music getting the chance to stumble upon you?
Yes very much so. I also like pissing the right people off.
Could you tell us a little bit about the track you chose to give away as a free download?
‘Bring Her In’ actually refers to the imagined idea that the Titanic had reached America and the Americans are bringing ‘her’ in. I wrote that song when I realised I loved nature more than my girlfriend at the time.
What do your band have going on at the moment? Anything you’re working on or forthcoming releases in the works?
We have just released a music video which is available to view on our website and this video streaming site called YouTube (or above). We are working on an EP with Ollie Horton, aka Dreamtrak, which we are releasing next month.
Tickets & Lineup Info for Brainlove 2012 at: www.brainloverecords.com/festival.
18 May 2012
Go to this: for the subversive gardener, there's a great-looking Chelsea Fringe
Starting tomorrow and continuing til 10th June. List of events here, map of events here, Twitter account @Chelseafringe, preview in the Independent here.
My favourite: Meadow up your Street
“Transforming urban spaces into bee-friendly urban meadows”
First image – The Pothole Gardener
Second image – Anne Carter, River of Flowers
18 May 2012
Timelapse video of the new Blackfriars station construction
Four years in four minutes.
(H/T David Wilson)
18 May 2012
London agenda for Friday 18 May 2012
1. Sit on a Dalston Rooftop and live like it is 1962 [Le Cool]
2. Sleep in the Old Vic tunnels and live rough for a night [Run Riot]
3. Experience ‘a proper house clubbing aesthetic’ in the Waiting Room with Patrice Scott at Thunder [Flavorpill]
4. Prove that Clerkenwell Green has been a pinko hotbed for 600 years at Radicals Rebels and Revolutionaries [Ian Visits]
5. Find the Robert Stephenson statue [Tired of London]
18 May 2012
Nobody makes horror films like the Canadian taxpayer
Canuxploitation fans rejoice! On Sunday, 20 May at the Roxy Bar and Screen, the newly-inaugurated Shivers Film Society launches its first in a screening series devoted to Canadian genre cinema, with an all-day marathon of indie films from the last decade and capped off with a screening of David Cronenberg’s seminal Videodrome (1983). Don’t consider yourself a Canadian B-film aficionado? You probably are more than you know.
“The mandate [of the organization] is to illicit an appreciation of Canadian films by audiences and a sense of national pride from contemporary indie Canadian filmmakers by revealing the strong influence, cultural relevance, and cinematic history in the story of Canadian cinema, and cinema production,” says Vince D’Amato of Vancouver’s Creepy Six Films, who first hatched the idea for Shivers when he was living in London last year. “London is a city rife with film societies and has a phenomenal cinema culture unlike anything I’ve experienced,” he continues, “and I was inspired to begin screening films from our own production catalogue there in the city.” Although he’s now back in Vancouver, his partners Justin Harries from Filmbar ’70 and Scala Forever, and Nadeem Ali from Videotape Swapshop will be running the London-based events, while D’Amato focuses on setting up similar screenings on Canadian soil.
With the event bearing the tagline ‘The Influence of the Canadian Tax Shelter Films’, it’s probably important to know what tax shelter films are. While the term has gained some cachet in recent years, many people are still foggy on the details, so simply put, the Tax Shelter Era refers to the period between 1974-1982 when the Canadian Film Development Corporation gave investors in Canadian filmmaking a 100% capital cost allowance, as a means of encouraging national production. The term sometimes extends to films made through the late 1980s, as there was still a 50% tax break, but by 1990 it had dropped back to roughly 30% and the tax shelter era was officially over.
But this period was about more than economics – many people think of the tax shelter as an ethos, a ‘golden era’ of unprecedented freedom from stifling nationalist mandates. It was, for better or for worse, a cinematic free-for-all. The founding of the Canadian Film Development Corporation (or CFDC) in 1967, a federal initiative to create a self-sufficient film industry outside of documentary and experimental animation (what Canada was primarily known for, via the NFB) was especially seized upon in Quiet Revolution-era Quebec, which was enjoying an exciting cultural and political overhaul. It was in this context that Canuxploitation pioneers Andre Link and (the late) John Dunning were able to turn their distribution company Cinepix into a production house, which ushered in Quebec’s wave of ‘maple syrup porn’ (a term coined by Variety but adopted into the Canadian vernacular) with Denis Héroux’ Valérie (1969) and L’Initiation (1970). Countercultural softcore films and sexy satires proliferated in their wake, from lowball sex comedies like Après Ski (1971) to campy spy capers like 1972’s IXE-13 (‘The French Canadian Dream!’). By the early 70s, Cinepix – like their counterparts Quadrant, Astral Bellevue Pathé and Cineplex – turned to horror as the next wave, which gave a start to directors like George Mihalka (My Bloody Valentine), William Fruet (Death Weekend), Bob Clark (Black Christmas) and David Cronenberg (Shivers), who all benefited from the tax breaks that were by then in place. While many of these directors didn’t necessarily see themselves as aligned with the genre per se (Fruet for example was best known for penning Don Shebib’s 1970 CanCon classic Goin’ Down the Road), the tax shelter program allowed them find a way to marry their more heady aspirations to the exploitation ethos.
During the tax shelter era, Canada was actually out-producing Hollywood, but that doesn’t mean the films were lapping up awards. The tendency of the tax shelter pictures toward exploitation fare elicited the ire of Robert Fulford of Canada’s Saturday Night magazine when he discovered that Canadian tax money went in to the creation of Cronenberg’s transgressive parasitic orgy, Shivers (1970). “You Should Know How Bad This Movie Is, You Paid For It,” admonished the headline of his review. Of course the fallout from this notorious editorial only stoked Cronenberg’s then-budding career.
Nearly 350 movies were made before the 100% capital cost allowance was abolished as a national embarrassment – an indignance helped along by the fact that the funders found out that many companies weren’t even bothering to release the films they made. But the influence of Canada’s notorious tax shelter era – from both the resourceful financial structuring of the productions to the anti-capitalist themes of the films themselves – is rife in the Canadian genre films that followed, which the Shivers Film Society hopes to illustrate through their series by pairing original tax shelter films with contemporary counterparts. “The addition of Videodrome to the program was to connect these films with one that was actually from the Tax Shelter era in Canadian history,” says D’Amato, who also says that their namesake film may be in the cards for a future screening. But he wanted to kick things off with Videodrome, which he cites as “one of my favourite films of all time”, along with The Brood (1979), Cannibal Girls (1973), Black Christmas (1974), Rituals (1977), and his “guilty pleasure”, Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night 2 (1987).
Cronenberg’s final tax shelter film comes in at the end of a colorful lineup that includes John Fallon’s bloody relationship-showdown short The Red Hours (2008), Christian Viel’s action-revenge picture Deaden (2006), Maurice Deveraux’ $lasher$ (2001), a gory real-time sendup of the Japanese game show phenom (prefiguring what would soon after become the North American obsession with reality TV), and Vince D’Amato’s own The Hard Cut Double/Feature (2011), a sort of film noir Rashomon full of gangsters and immortal femme fatales and where the focus of alternative recollection is a missing film print.
“The mandate is not meant to focus on the Tax Shelter era specifically in the long run,” D’Amato concedes. “We’re trying to build a palpable cinematic history of Canadian film. We’ll be showing more films directly from the Tax Shelter era in future screenings, too. Shivers won’t be a one-time event, we’ve got two more planned in London that will flesh out the cinematic structure of the Tax Shelter films and a monthly double-feature event in the works for Vancouver, which I hope will launch pretty quickly.”
The series is rather timely too – Jason Eisener’s Hobo With a Shotgun and Astron-6’s Father’s Day have gotten oodles of international press over the last year, all of which directly references the Canadian tax shelter era. Fangoria Magazine devoted a special issue to Maple Leaf Horror back in January, the Toronto Film Critics Association awarded Cinepix with the illustrious Clyde Gilmour Award (a bit of revenge considering Gilmour was among Cinepix’ loudest detractors in the 70s, when he was a critic for the Toronto Star) and American theatres from Austin to L.A. have hosted screening retrospectives, all aided in no small part by the wealth of information coming from Paul Corupe’s encyclopaedic Canuxploitation.com website and Caelum Vatnsdal’s pioneering tome They Came From Within: A History of Canadian Horror Cinema), the latter of which spearheaded probably the first serious retrospective of tax shelter films to tour across Canada. Canada’s capacity for exploitation gold is really being mined and reappraised of late, and Shivers promises to help that appreciation along in a major way.
Sunday 20 May
The Roxy Bar & Screen
128-132 Borough High Street, London SE1 1LB</i?
3:00 pm: The Red Hours / Deaden: £3 (both films)
5:00 pm: $lasher$: £3
7:00 pm: The Hard Cut Double/Feature: £3
9:30 pm: Videodrome: £3
ALL DAY PRICE: £8.00 – Tickets will also be available at the door or online at TheyCameFromWithin.com
17 May 2012
St Lucia at CAMP
Following a successful eighteen month stint in NYC, Popshop takes the leap across the Atlantic to putt on some shows in London and Paris this month. 17th May finds them at CAMP, with their very own synth poppers St Lucia as headliners. The Black Cab Sessions will chip in their ten cents, showcasing the primal pop of Hannah Yadi, followed by Savoir Adore and Foxes. Priced at £7, it’s a steal. Pop along!
17 May 2012
Brainlove Festival: Tall Stories
Close associates of the inner circle of Brainlove Records, Tall Stories are today’s featured band for this year’s festival – hoorah! Anyone who’s caught the London-based trio before will know what exciting antics to expect and won’t need much convincing to want more.
For newcomers, the group describe their live set-up as “a lot of energy and a lot of sarcasm”, and considering last time frontman Rob played the Brainlove Festival he drank a bottle of spirits before arrival, this time will surely equal these epic feats.
We had a quick word with the band before they head off to Liverpool Sound City, where they play tonight at Mello Mello.
Could you introduce a little about yourself first and foremost?
We are a three piece, north London based band who aim to make the biggest, catchiest racket we can possibly muster.
For people who haven’t seen you live before, what can they expect?
A lot of energy, and a lot of sarcasm.
Have you been to the Brainlove Festival prior to this year?
Yes actually, Rob played Brainlove fest last year as a drummer for the Ethical Debating Society.
And how was it?
It was great. I drank a bottle of Sailor Jerry in the car on the way there and they had a bubble machine.
Who are you excited about seeing live this time round?
Some of the bands that we met and played with at Tallinn Music Week, Estonia.
How do you find festivals in general? Do you prefer smaller venue shows?
We just prefer good shows! Festivals are great because none of the normal rules apply any more. You can embrace your inner lunatic.
Do you enjoy the prospect of people that necessarily aren’t that familiar with your music getting the chance to stumble upon you?
Yeah, that’s all we need really. A bunch of people in a room to rock out to.
Could you tell us a little bit about the track you chose to give away as a free download?
This was our first demo that we recorded and mixed entirely on our own, which was arduous to say the least! It has so far been played on XFM by John Kennedy and Huw Stephens on Radio 1.
What do your band have going on at the moment? Anything you’re working on or forthcoming releases in the works?
Our manager keeps bullying us into “generating content”. So we’re recording lots of stuff and making videos. That’s all progressing nicely. We’ve got quite a few gigs coming up, including a slot at Liverpool Sound City tonight.
Tickets & Lineup Info for Brainlove 2012 at: www.brainloverecords.com/festival.
17 May 2012
Väljasõit Rohelisse - Teine Vals
This lovely track is by Estonian dronegaze project Väljasõit Rohelisse (pronounced Val-Yah-Sweet Row-Hell-Ease, meaning “roadside picnic”). “Teine Valss” gives a good indication of their woozy, hypnotic sound, and we’ll be featuring an interview with them soon. The debut EP, “Külastus”, comes out this June 4th, on ltd. edition 10” vinyl – and if you like this track, you can order one here.
17 May 2012
Threats to kill allegedly enliven Tower Hamlets council meeting
The compulsively readable Ted Jeory has news of the Tower Hamlets councillor arrested last night over an alleged threat to kill. In the council chamber.
Read his post, for details. It contains the phrase “Sopranos but with curry.”
17 May 2012
Snipe Highlights
Some popular articles from past years
- Number of people using Thames cable car plunges
- Hope and despair in Woolwich town centre
- 9 poems about London: one for each of your moods
- The five best places in London to have an epiphany
- The best church names in London, and where they come from
- Nice Interactive timeline lets you follow Londoners' historic fight against racism
- Peter Bayley has worked for 50 years as a cinema projectionist in East Finchley
- Nice map of London's fruit trees shows you where to pick free food
- Summer Camp: Roll out those lazy, hazy, crazy days
- Random Interview: Eileen Conn, co-ordinator of Peckham Vision
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