kevin blechdom is returning to australia in august/september! highly recommended. unfortunately i’ll be o/s when she plays in sydney – maybe i’ll make it to the blue mountains show, or maybe there’ll be another sydney gig around then.
also, lieutenant colonel spastic howitzer is playing at hermann’s this friday! more info below:
5 years on since our last installment of the rebirth of fool compilation series we have made yet another abomination to wealth creation in volume 3. the worst one yet and also the most expensive, labour intensive item we’ve produced. for reasons i cant remember this cd comes packaged in a hand bound, gold blocked, 24 page book (thanks keggles) and is selling for the same amount as the rest of our cheaply produced and put together items!
so if you wanna dumb your ears down between bouts of xenakis and cage and hear the latest in retardation like 7u? channeling wesley willis in an ode to this very organization, testimonials from my miserablelife.com put to music by fool veterans new waver, unrequited love songs set in seedy adelaide establishments, instructional songwriting cassettes, gay audio porn spoken in thick australian accents, absurd police tapes and a whole lotta other stuff not worth listing then this is the album for you.
we’re launching the album in 4 sleeps time at our HAPPY NEW FINANCIAL YEAR PARTY being held this friday the 30th june at HERMANNS, cnr city and butlin streets, sydney university. artists from the album rank sinatra, lt colonel spastic howitzer and naked on the vague (hoppy has bad tables track on fool 3) will be performing as well as a host of others including curse ov dialect, toecutter, the warm feelings, rev kriss hades, bradbury and justice yeldham, plus taxation themed karaoke. all this and more for a poultry 8 bucks or 5 if your a bludger.
it’s also a celebration of 10 years as a label, yes this year marks 10 years since lucas first forked out the cash for his belated release ‘a kombi – music to drive by’ which subsequently brought dualpLOVER into the world. a partnership was formed soon after when friend and swerve joined the fold shortly before releasing ‘alternahunk’ the labels second offering which also made the house of plover not just a vanity label for lucas but a fully fledged concern.
since then, somehow, to our bewilderment we have been wrongly labeled as a novelty music label, by people unable to get a total grasp of the musical importance of releases like ’singing sadie’ or ‘deano merino’. so far this year our release schedule reflects our desire to shake this wrongly formed image with some hard hitting new titles filled with focused aggression fraught with ideology that will cause irreparable changes to a society that allows this type of unchecked DIY publishing to exist in the first place. just take a look at our first 3 explosive releases this year alone. toxic lipsticks’ ‘prisoner of hormones’ ep is an enraged expose on the current youth identity crisis that finds woman of apparent maturity singing at an emotional level of a 14 year old’s. new wavers – ‘neuters’ retrospective (released in collaboration with melbourne’s spill label) delves deep into the corporate world in the 90’s that led to current fascination with australian bands that sound like old bands form the past that where highly successful. and bradbury’s latest masterpiece ‘instant obvilian’ which unmasked the true horror of what homosexual electronic music can really be.
and it keeps on coming in the next few months expect new plover goodies from ‘naked on the vague’ whose debut 7 inch single is currently being pressed in nashville Tennessee and a new full length album ‘the timid mischief’ by old timing banjo legend ‘al duvall’.
also very fucking exciting news is the upcoming kevin blechdom tour we’re booking this august / september all over the country. she’s fucking tops and you’ld be considered a dickhead to miss this, more info soon.
http://www.dualplover.com/blechdom.html
other future news, dualplover plans to diversify into the film world and hold a drive-in short film festival. we are currently looking for a nice car park to hold this event in and have started the call out for films to show no deadline yet but if you have any short films, animations, music videos or found footage that’s not quite right please send it to us for consideration to dualplover drive-in film festival pobox 983 darlinghurst nsw 1300.
thankyou for your time
dualplover.com
Adrian and I will be DJing at this.
dis_or_ien_ta_tion
Friday 16th June
8pm – 12am
Hermann’s Bar
Cnr City Rd & Bultin Ave (opp. Sydney Uni Main entrance), Darlington
$7/$5 concession
feat:
TOYDEATH
RIK RUE and FOLD
LECTER MACABRE
KAMUSTA
FUNKMEISTER G AND THE JOHN RA BENDERS
+ WAKE UP AND LISTEN DJ’S
Presented by the UTS Sound Collective
www.disor.org
TOYDEATH
Formed in 1995 Sydney band Toydeath use children’s electronic toys to create music you have never heard before! That’s right we only use toys! We have collected an arsenal of toys to make any kindergarten green with envy.
You will hear talking Barbie Dolls, Speak and Spells, Rock Guitars, Sax-a-booms, Toy Telephones and lots of other fantastic Toys! Toydeath have also collected toys from their international tours and use Chinese, Dutch, German and Japanese language toys in our set. Many of the toys have electronic additions (circuit bending) to turn them into wild and unique instruments
We also assume toy like characters with colourful costumes as part of our stage show. On stage you will see GiJoe, L’Booby, Nursey and Trailer Trash Barbie!
www.toydeath.com
RIK RUE AND FOLD
RIK RUE
Throughout his 30 year career, Rik has been involved in many multi-faceted areas of audio works. He is a founding member of internationally renowned experimental improvisation group the Machine for Making Sense with whom he has performed extensively. He has constructed atmospheric soundscapes for dance/theatre groups such as Gravity Feed, and is a founding member of electronic trio Social Interiors.
Rik’s radiophonic compositions have been broadcast in Australia, Europe, UK, USA, Canada and Asia and he has regularly performed both solo and with other musicians locally and internationally, as well as releasing numerous recordings of his own works.
For this performance he will be collaborating with John Jacobs on Things Change, Things Remain the Same.
FOLD / JOHN JACOBS
John Jacobs has been making improvised collaborative electronic poems for about twenty five years. He’s a long time fan of Rik Rue’s associative collages.
John’s video work began with home brew RF oscillators, magnets and modified televisions. His work with video Subvertigo was characterised by unwieldy analogue mixer/VHS/camera feed back rigs at underground techno parties.
Currently he is in a ‘free-jazz’ laptop VJ mode, researching aleatoric modes of visual expression with Fold.
www.fold.chaos.org.au
LECTER MACABRE
Lecter Macabre are the music of the spheres, ambient astral reconnaissance, extreme noise terror, nocturnal emmissions from the heat death at the centre of the universe, psychic turmoil at the edge of sleep, unknowable and primal reaching into the reptilian brain buried deep within us all. Their live perfomances become cathartic experiments in high volume free form sonic mesmerism, not for the faint of heart or weak of bladder, become spherical nubile little minkies………become spherical.
Mark Selway (ex-Music For Big Game Hunting) – Theremin
Josh Shipton (TRIANGLE, Marquis De Sound) – Voice
KAMUSTA
Kamusta is a collaboration between Sydney based video artists Chris Caines and Jessica Tyrrell.
Jessica Tyrrell is an emerging experimental filmmaker, video artist and writer. Fusing a cinematic sensibilty with a love of poetic text, she creates elusive and abstract video pieces.
Chris Caines is a filmmaker working in shorts, documentary, locative & wireless media. His work has been commissioned, screened and broadcast internationally & includes screenings/exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, the Tate Gallery, the MCA, ACMI & the Cannes, Berlin & Venice film festivals.
Testing the filmic possibilities of VJ performance, Kamusta creates live visual and audio pieces that aspire to a kind of “live cinema”.
Disorientation will see the debut of, ‘A Place You Can Never Go To’, a “live cinema” experiment that creates a world of suggested narratives, fragmented characters, half-heard words and takes the audience on a haunting visual and sonic journey to a place they have never been before.
FUNKMEISTER G AND THE JOHN RA BENDERS
The John Ra Benders are a loose group of Funkmeister G’s mates, who when not playing music, like to do this.
No performance is rehearsed & instruments may be decided upon at the last minute. Funkmeister G acts as conductor for the John Ra Benders, as well as doing his own thing…however, some or all of the Benders may choose to ignore him [or maybe not even show up].
We love music/sound with passion, it’s our life & that’s why we feel it should never be left entirely in the hands of professionals.
After hearing about them everywhere in recent months I finally checked out the music of Death Cab for Cutie and The Postal Service, two projects of American indie singer/songwriter Ben Gibbard.
Both bands have similar songs, with a tendency for bittersweet lyrics and melodies, but whereas Death Cab is an indie rock band that has been active since the mid 90s, Postal is a more recent collaboration with electronic music producer Jimmy Tamborello aka Dntel.
I listened to nearly all of their recordings. They’re very enjoyable and catchy (especially the recent albums) albeit somewhat innocuous. And I watched their videos, including the Death Cab tour film Drive Well, Sleep Carefully which like most rockumentaries isn’t very good, but worth a look if you like the music.
Then a funny thing happened. For the next few days my mind started creating Gibbard-style tunes. There were several of them, a few of which I imagined being good enough to record. I soon forgot most of them but managed to record one using software. The results were disappointing, which reminded me that pop music is as much about the sound as the song, and I’m not setup for making pop sounds at the moment (although I’m well sorted for experimental music!).
One of the keys to Gibbard’s music is his voice, which really is the perfect American indiepop nerdboy voice, with a pure, vibratoless tone. (Although his singing is much less convincing live (on the videos I’ve seen) which is OK when he’s among fans, but really not very good on TV show appearances.)

Death Cab for Cutie – Ben Gibbard, second from left
I still don’t have the confidence to record my singing with any conviction (I’ll occasionally sing a part as a way of sketching it before replacing it with another sound). I really believe I could, but need to get over the fear – of my music snob friends laughing at me as much as of just not being very good. Maybe some lessons would help me get over that hurdle. Likewise with guitar.
Not that I want to emulate Gibbard’s music – that was just an exercise, as I wanted to do something with those tunes that were popping into my head. If I actually developed any of them I’m sure they’d mutate into something quite different. But the experience did reinforce my ongoing urge to do some sort of vocal/song project. I’m just not sure of the best way to approach it. I guess the easiest way would be to start as a solo electronic project, that way I wouldn’t have to show it to anyone until I was happy with it. But it would be nice to have collaborators…
The thing is that although I love a lot of indie music I’m not into the indie scene at all. The Broken Social Scene gig that I went to recently was great musically, but I found the majority of the audience incredibly annoying. I’m much more at home in my experimental music ghetto.
But I’ve been listening to so much indie lately (I blame Last.fm) that it’s beginning to affect me. The other day I found myself wearing a short sleeve t shirt over a long sleeve t shirt! And I even dug out my old Chuck Taylors which I hadn’t worn since the 80s, but the rubber had turned to chalk. I went online and discovered to my delight that Converse now make them in black monochrome! I almost bought them until I discovered that they charge about 50 bucks for postage, and they won’t deliver to P.O. boxes (what’s up with that?).
What’s happening to me?? I hope I’m not becoming a grup! Nah, it’s probably just a phase I’m going through…
Some interesting free talks coming up in Sydney:
1) Key Concepts lecture series at Sydney Uni. A follow-up to last year’s Key Thinkers series which I couldn’t make due to work commitments. I’m looking forward to attending some of these.
Wednesday 3 May ‘Terra Nullius’ Andrew Fitzmaurice
Wednesday 10 May ‘Nationalism’ Glenda Sluga
Wednesday 17 May ‘Freedom’ Duncan Ivison
Wednesday 24 May ‘Truth’ Huw Price
Wednesday 31 May ‘Racism’ Ghassan Hage
Wednesday 7 June ‘Death’ Jennann Ismael
Wednesday 14 June ‘Globalisation’ Raewyn Connell
Venue: NEW VENUE FOR 2006 Footbridge Theatre The University of Sydney
2) Cory Doctorow (of Boing Boing, Creative Commons, etc.) at Popcorn Taxi:
Outspoken novelist, commentator and new-tech guru CORY DOCTOROW debates the future for filmmakers and media artists in this special event presented by Popcorn Taxi and the Australian Film Commission. Doctorow asks where does Hollywood get off, “with its antiquated business model, in treating the media user as a criminal with their draconian copyright laws?…Such laws limit the creative possibilities for artists and users.”An innovativeand brilliant thinker Doctorow proposes a revolutionary new model for media artists that defies the Digital Rights Management: “Technologies that seek to restrict the copying and use of digital works are wrong and wrong-headed”, Cory says. “Wrong because they don’t work, because they suppress creativity, and because they treat honest users like crooks. Wrong-headed because they seek to make digital works act as much as possibly like analog works. No DVD owner wants a way to do less with her movies, and companies that try to sell her technologies to do this deserve to go broke.”This debate is essential for any filmmaker and media artist who wants to give serious consideration to the future of their Work. The evening will include an interview and audience Q&A conducted by MARCUS GILLEZEAU, filmmaker (Firelight) and a specialist in digital production technologies.
popcorn taxi
Rated: R18+ EXEMPT from CLASSIFICATION
Time: 7.00pmDate: Wednesday, April, 19th, 2006
Where: Greater Union Bondi Junction
Address: Level 6, 500 Oxford Street, Westfield Bondi Junction Entry: Free
Abandoning Copyright: A Blessing for Artists, Art, and Society
By Joost Smiers
de Volkskrant, 26 November 2005
http://www.culturelink.org/news/members/2005/members2005-011.html
(English translation of original article published in Dutch)
Several weeks ago, Carlos Guiterrez, the US Secretary of Commerce, announced a series of initiatives to stamp out the rampant piracy of, among other things, music. Damages resulting from counterfeiting and piracy is estimated to amount to 250 billion dollars annually, in the United States alone. In a press release, he stated, “The protection of intellectual property is vital to our economic growth and global competitiveness and it has major consequences in our ongoing effort to promote security and stability around the world,”
Now I must admit that it never occurred to me that copyright could contribute to global security and stability. This is quite an intriguing message ? and from a US Secretary, at that! Another aspect addressed by Carlos Guiterrez is, however, more obvious. Copyright has increasingly become an instrument for securing huge investments. In the past decade, it has become one of the major driving forces of western economy, and US economy in particular. This development, however, has a major downside: companies owning massive amounts of copyrighted works can, at their whim, ban weaker cultural activities ? not only from the marketplace, but also from the general audience’s attention. This is happening under our very eyes. It is nigh impossible to ignore the blockbuster movies, bestselling books and top-chart records presented to us by these cultural molochs, who, incidentally, own almost every imaginable right to these works. As a result, the most people are completely unaware of all those other, less commercialized activities taking place in music, literature, cinema, theater and other arts. This is a tremendous loss to society, because our democratic world can only truly thrive on a large diversity of freely expressed and discussed cultural expressions.
The common perception is that copyright first and foremost protects the well-being and interests of artists. However, history shows that the first political act somewhat resembling our modern copyright laws already had quite a different objective than safeguarding the artist’s income. The first initiative for protecting the intellectual property of artistic expression was made by Queen Anne in England, who, in 1557, granted the Stationer’s guild a monopoly on printing and publishing books; a monopoly which conveniently banned all competition from printers in other parts, such as other counties, or rival Scotland. In fact, the term “copyright” says it all: it is the exclusive right to copy any particular work; nowhere in early copyright was any mention made of the author or artist who produced the work. Queen Anne had her reasons for installing this copyright. She was not overly fond of the concept of “the free word”, and granting the Stationer’s guild the exclusive right to publishing books gave her full control over which books could be published and which were banned from the market. After all, those who can grant rights, can deny them as well.
This act by Queen Anne is the specter by which copyright is haunted up to this day, and perhaps even more than ever before. Ever smaller numbers of increasingly large and powerful entities own the exclusive rights to ever more works in the fields of literature, cinema, music and graphic arts. For example Bill Gates, widely known as the founder of Microsoft, also owns a rather less known company by the name of Corbis, which collects vast amounts of images from all over the world; together with Getty, Corbis is developing into an oligopolist in the field of photographs and reproductions of paintings ? in other words: an entity which has a large amount of control over the market, just as the Stationer’s guild had in the sixteenth century. The oligopolist has control over which artistic works we may use for which purposes, and under which conditions, in much the same way Queen Anne had control over printed works.
In most cultures around the world, this state of affairs was, and is, highly undesirable, even unthinkable. Artists have always used and built upon other artists’ work to create new works of art. It is hard to imagine indeed that the works of Shakespeare, Bach, and countless others cultural heavyweights could have come into existence without this principle of freely building on the work of predecessors. Yet what do we see happening now? Take, for example, documentary makers, who nowadays face almost insurmountable obstacles, as their work almost inevitably contains fragments of copyrighted pictorial or musical content, the use of which requires both consent from the copyright owner and a fee to be paid. The latter is almost always beyond the documentary maker’s means, and the former gives Bill Gates, or any other copyright owner, full rights to allow the use of “his” artistic content only in a way he deems appropriate. Now where in this scheme of things are our human rights? Human rights should guarantee freedom of communication, and a free exchange of ideas and cultural expressions is what greatly helped build our modern society. This human cultural development will, however, grind to a halt when a mere handful of persons or companies can call themselves “owners” of the majority of pictures and melodies our society has brought forth. This puts them in a position where they alone can dictate whether we can make use of a substantial part of our collective human cultural achievement, and on which terms and conditions. The consequences are detrimental: we are being made speechless; our cultural memory is taken from us and locked away; the development and spread of our cultural identity is stunted, and our imagination is laid in chains by law.
Contrary to what one might expect, the seemingly endless possibilities of copying and sampling using modern digital technologies have so far only aggravated the situation. Publicly offering even a mere second’s worth of copyrighted work will almost certainly attract attention from lawyers on behalf of the “owners” of said material. Sound artists, who used to freely sample work from others to build new musical creations, are now treated as pirates and criminals. Whole copyright enforcement industries have emerged, scouting the digital universe day and night for even the smallest snippet of copyrighted work used by others ? and those found out, often stand to lose literally everything they have.
Copyright has yet another intrinsic fault which makes it difficult to maintain in a democratic society. Copyright nowadays revolves almost exclusively around so-called intellectual property. This is a problem, since the traditional notion of property is largely irreconcilable with intangible concepts such as knowledge and creativity; a tune, an idea or an invention will not lose any of its value or usefulness when it is shared among any number of people. In contrast, a single physical object, such as a chair, quickly becomes less useful when more people want access to it; in this latter case, the term “property” has a clear meaning and purpose. Unfortunately, in the past decades the legal definition of property has been extended way beyond any physical constraints. These days, almost anything can be someone’s property, such as fragrances and colors; even the makeup of the proteins in our blood and the genes in our body cells are being claimed as the exclusive property of one company or another, which can subsequently bar anyone else from using it. It is therefore high time to reconsider the current concept of property.
With regard to artistic works, it is quite conceivable that no single person should have the right to claim exclusive ownership over, say, a particular tune. We all know that almost every work of art, and every invention, is based upon the work of predecessors. Now this doesn’t mean we should have less respect for artists creating new works of art based on the work of others, and we’re obliged to contribute to artists’ well-being and income in our society. Yet rewarding their every single achievement, or reproduction or even interpretation thereof, with a monopoly lasting many decades, is too much, because it leaves nothing for other artists to build on. In fact, even criticizing the artist’s work can become rather hazardous, as it “damages” his “property”. Unpleasant as this sounds, things get even worse when we consider that the vast majority of copyrighted works is owned by a relatively small group of large conglomerates. These mega-industries create, invent or produce nothing at all, yet demand that artists sign over all rights to their works to them, just for the privilege of having their works distributed.
From this point of view, there is ample reason to send our current system of copyright to the scrapheap. Artists will of course feel threatened by such a bold move. After all, without copyright, they will lose all means of existence, now won’t they? Well, not necessarily.
Let’s first look at some numbers. Research by economists shows that only 10 percent of artists collect 90 percent of copyright proceeds, and that the remaining 90 percent of artists must share the remaining 10 percent of proceeds. In other words: for the vast majority of artists, copyright has only marginal financial advantages. Then there’s another peculiar fact: most artists have entered into some sort of covenant with the cultural industry ? as if these two groups have even remotely similar interests! For example GEMA, the German copyright organization, sends approximately 70 percent of copyright proceeds abroad, mostly to the US, where several of the world’s biggest cultural conglomerates reside. In this process, the average artist is nowhere to be seen.
What is called for, is a way to ensure that artists can make a fair income from their work, without the risk of being pushed out of the market and the larger audience’s attention by the cultural industry’s marketing power. This may sound rather idealistic, and perhaps somewhat unrealistic, but society’s need for cultural diversity should not be underestimated.
The interesting thing is that it is quite feasible for artists to thrive without copyright. After all, copyright is simply a protective layer of armor around a work of art ? and the question is whether the benefits of this protection outweigh its drawbacks. Artists, and their agents and producers are entrepreneurs. What then justifies the fact that their work receives vastly more protection ? i.e. long-term monopolistic control over their work ? than the work of other entrepreneurs? Why can’t they simply offer their work on the free market, and try to attract buyers?
Let’s try to predict what would happen if copyright were abolished. One of the first effects would be intriguing: All of a sudden, it would be no longer interesting for large cultural industries to focus so heavily on bestselling books, blockbuster movies and superstars. If, in the absence of copyright and intellectual property, these works can be freely enjoyed and exchanged by anyone, the cultural industry giants lose their exclusive rights to works of art. As a result, they will also lose their dominating market position which keeps so many other artists out of sight. The market would become normalized, which would enable more artists to show their work, make themselves known, and make a fair income from what they produce. This income initially results from being the first in the market with a specific work. But there’s another factor contributing to the artists’ success. A more normalized cultural marketplace will offer more artists an opportunity to build a reputation, like a brand name, which can subsequently be exploited to sell more works at a higher price. Rapid and widespread copying of an artist’s work, only possible in this digital age, may indeed decrease its market value, but will only serve to increase the artist’s reputation. This gives more artists an opportunity to keep selling their works to a larger audience than the current, industry-controlled distribution model.
Obviously, abandoning copyright raises several important questions which need resolving, and three major adjustments in particular are called for. The first issue is that the production of an artistic work sometimes involves a significant investment in time and/or money. This would require legal protection for a short period of time, such as a year in the case of literature or cinema, during which the artist can exclusively reap the benefits from his work. This usufruct, however is different from current practice, as the work will automatically enter into the public domain after completion ? as was customary in nearly all cultures before our current intellectual property laws.
The question of course is, why specifically a year, and no longer? Experience shows that the economically viable life span of the majority of works is a year or less. After this period, producing and distributing the same work is no longer interesting for other parties anyhow, because lots of others could do the same, which makes the investment unprofitable. An obvious consequence of all this is that there can be no more illegal use of works of art ? at least outside the protection time span ? since the material in question is no longer owned by any one party. Piracy will mostly be a thing of the past, as will criminalizing and pursuing people who share and distribute works of art, e.g. those who share music via the Internet.
The second obvious problem is that many works of art may not yield any profit in a free market for some time, or at least not within the proposed protection time span of one year. This may happen when a particular work remains “undiscovered” by the major audience. Still, it is important for society that a large diversity of works of art is available for public enjoyment and discussion. Also, artists must have the opportunity to develop their work, even when these are not directly interesting to the market at large. The development of an artist’s skills and personal style often takes a lot of time, yet it is in the interest of society as a whole to invest in this development. For these and other reasons society has an obligation to support the creation of these works of art by means of subsidies or other support models.
The third issue concerns the whole of the cultural market place. Abandoning copyright would remove one major support from under the dominance of our current cultural industries, but this does not necessarily mean that their dominance would end. Established industries would still hold the means to large-scale production, distribution and marketing of cultural goods and services in a firm grip; this is one of the reasons for their current success: keeping total control over artistic works from the source to the end consumer, and this distribution model is what largely determines which films, books, theater productions and image materials we can enjoy.
This concentration of power is undesirable in every branch of industry, but it is particularly detrimental in the cultural field. We could therefore imagine that the cultural market be subjected to a kind of competitive law with a strong cultural bias. This relates among other things to ownership of means of production and distribution of cultural goods. Also, legislation may be called for to force large cultural enterprises to (re)present all of the actual cultural diversity being created by both local and foreign artists. This model would make a world without copyright not just perfectly imaginable, but also profitable for very many artists, and be a veritable blessing to cultural democracy.
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Joost Smiers is the author of Arts Under Pressure, Promoting Cultural Diversity in the Age of Globalization, and a professor of political science of the arts in the Art and Economics Research Group of the Utrecht School of Arts, in the Netherlands
via nettime
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