Archive for June, 2007

Learning to be Human, Films by Bert Salzman

Me and You KangarooGeronimo JonesThe Archive is now the online home to nine films by Bert Salzman. These 20-minute educational films were made in the early 70’s and shown in classrooms throughout the country. Their gentle and idealistic sensibility serves as contrast to the educational films from the 40’s, 50’s and 60’s found in the Prelinger Archives. Gone are the all-knowing narrators of the past: Each film features a child or teen learning to negotiate difficult circumstances on their own and from those around them. All of these films won awards, notably “Angel and Big Joe” won an Academy Award for best Live Action Short.

Angel and Big Joe (1975)
Felipa: North of the Border (1971)
Geronimo Jones (1970)
Joshua, Black Boy Of Harlem (1969)
Lee Suzuki – Home in Hawaii 1975
Matthew Aliuk: Eskimo in Two Worlds (1973)
Me and You, Kangaroo (1974)
Miguel: Up From Puerto Rico (1970)
The Shopping Bag Lady (1975)

– Renata

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Pound & Friends

Ezra Pound (1885-1972) may be better known for his fascist political leanings than for his poetry. Yet, his greatest influence was probably that of patron: He spent his long life befriending, publishing, and supporting fellow poets and writers. His friendships cast a wide net and include many of the best-known poets and writers of the 20th Century. Many works by Pound and his literary friends are available on the Archive.

Ezra Pound:

William Carlos Williams

William Butler Yeats

T.S. Eliot

Marianne Moore

  • Poems (1921)
  • The Dial: The Archive contains 53 volumes of this literary magazine, many of them edited by Moore.

James Joyce (These books are text-only):

D.H. Lawrence


Robert Frost

– Renata

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It’s the End of the World As We Know It

End of the World“It’s the End of the World As We Know It, and I Feel Fine – the most depressing show on the planet!” is how episode 10 of this series of videos begins.

Addressing issues of global warming and energy conservation, this… um… “irreverent” show is a funny, foul-mouthed, and yes, depressing, look at world leaders, local movements, and big corporations.

Check out one of the 13 episodes currently available on the Archive. And beware, if you don’t like the F-word, you won’t like these shows.

– Alexis

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Guest Blogger: Stephen Upjohn, Librarian for Other Minds

http://radiom.org/The Other Minds Archive*, which is hosted by the Internet Archive, represents the organization’s efforts to digitally preserve and make freely available, hundreds of hours of interviews, lectures, poetry readings, and musical performances featuring avant-garde composers, musicians, artists, and authors. Many of these programs were originally broadcast on Berkeley California’s KPFA-FM during the later half of the 20th century, while others are taken from the Other Minds Festivals and various private collections. The Other Minds Archive is a veritable treasure trove, with something for everyone’s tastes, be it jazz, classical, rock, poetry, radio dramas, soundscapes, text-sound compositions, or just downright bizarre, unclassifiable auditory content.

As the main cataloger of the Other Minds Archive I have had the singular pleasure of listening to these programs and have come up with a brief list of some of my favorite ones. These include an interview with John Cage from 1963, conducted by a young critic who peppers the composer with a series of antagonistic questions. With the deft skill of a Zen master, Cage manages to deflect the aggressive tone of his interviewer, while answering his inquiries, and even making a few gentle yet pointed comments of his own.

Another classic example of verbal dexterity is found in a press conference given by William S. Burroughs in 1974. In a relatively short amount of time Burroughs manages to offer his opinions on a wide variety of subjects, including the women’s movement, Richard Nixon and Watergate, governmental methods of civilian control, the possibilities of revolution and rebellion in the contemporary era, as well as a discussion of his cut-up writing technique, all presented in the deadpan, guttural style that is uniquely his own. The poor reporters are torn between their need to obtain information for their respective publications and their desire to genuflect before the master of conspiratorial commentary.

Matching both Cage and Burroughs in oratorical finesse but perhaps less well known to the average listener is pianist, conductor, composer, musicologist and raconteur extraordinaire, Nicolas Slonimsky, who is featured in a number of programs in the Archive. Perhaps the best of these is a recording of a lecture and musical demonstration given by Slonimsky at the Berkeley Piano Club in 1971. In a two hour tour-de-force Slonimsky covers such topics as atonality, the Grandmother chord, and harsh musical reviews that proved to be vastly inaccurate. Slonimsky also describes the dangers he faced when trying to introduce to a Classical musical audience the adventurous new music of Edgard Varèse and Charles Ives during a 1933 concert at the Hollywood Bowl, as well as his critical opinion of Post-modern Performance Art. As with all his talks this one is delivered at break-neck speed that clearly belied his age of 80 years.

For those listeners interested in more contemporary, non-Classical-oriented composers, the Archive has a number of interviews with popular artists including David Byrne, Brian Eno, and Laurie Anderson. While each of these is featured in their own 2-hour interview with musical interludes, in which they discuss their art, it is the recording made at Laurie Anderson’s record release party for her “O Superman” 7-inch record that I like the best. Made by the then KPFA Music Director and current Other Minds Artistic Director, Charles Amirkhanian, it is a rare opportunity to eavesdrop as he wanders through the noisy crowd at The Kitchen nightclub in New York City, meeting and chatting with Anderson and other old friends from the East Coast avant-garde scene.

Amirkhanian who hosts the majority of the programs in the Other Minds Archive, is also a composer in his own right, and there are several programs in the Archive devoted to one of his favorite art forms, text-sound compositions or sound poetry. These include a one-hour history of sound poetry replete with examples by Amirkhanian, Gertrude Stein, Dadaist Kurt Schwitters, and others. For those unfamiliar with text-sound compositions this program serves as an excellent tutorial and will likely encourage any budding artists and poets to go to their computers and start creating their own works. However for pure humor, nothing compares to the in-studio shenanigans of Amirkhanian and Anthony Gnazzo, another Bay Area sound poet, composer, and general electronic music studio wizard. The program “Collected Audiophonies” which combines elements of sound poetry and an aleatoric audio montage is a classic example of the semi-improvised hilarity that ensues when these two friends get together in a music studio.

Also not to be missed are the KPFA Radio Events, one-of-a-kind radio programming in which local artists were given a couple of hours on-air to create a unique interactive experience for the listening audience. These include Anna Halprin’s “Furniture Mix” in which the audience was encouraged to re-arrange their furniture at home while listening to the music, and then to fantasize about the possibilities such an experience engendered. The audience was then requested to call into the station and share their fantasies with others. What follows is one of the most entertaining hours of radio programming ever heard, as listener’s testimonials run the gambit from inspirational soliloquies about how their lives had been changed by the experience, to angry complaints about broken furniture. Long before reality TV became popular, KPFA was breaking down the barriers separating the listeners from the content producers.

And finally, in addition to these historical radio programs the Other Minds Archive also contains many high quality, digital recordings of musical performances culled from over a decade of the Other Minds Festivals of New Music. These are works by some of the best contemporary composers of avant-garde and new music, performed by some of the most talented musicians from around the world. Many of these performances represent the world premiere of the works, and indeed for some, the Other Minds Archive is the only place one can hear a recording of these remarkable pieces. For anybody interested in contemporary music in all its forms the Other Minds Archive is an extremely valuable resource that offers not only superb performances but also provides the essential background information and context to truly appreciate the work of these great composers and artists.

-Stephen Upjohn and the Staff of Other Minds

*Other Minds is a San Francisco based non-profit devoted to presenting, recording, commissioning, and preserving innovative new, avant-garde, and experimental music in all it forms. Other Minds produces an annual three-day Festival of New Music featuring the most original, eccentric, and underrepresented creative voices in contemporary music from around the globe, as well as a number of smaller concerts and recitals throughout the year. Other Minds also produces a select number of CDs by notable avant-garde composers, which are available at our website www.otherminds.org.

Additional details on all the programs in the Other Minds Archive, is available at www.radiom.org.

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Math Class Then and Now

Bikini Calculus

  • Maintaining Classroom Discipline (1947): Mr. Grimes is the math teacher from hell: watch him berate his students and their small rebellions. Happily, the wise fatherly narrator suggests a better teaching mode and Mr. Grimes magically transforms.
  • Inertia (2004): This math teacher may be more nightmarish than Mr. Grimes but his students’ challenge (and magically transform!) him through dance.
  • Cheating (1952) John gets his friend Mary to help him cheat to pass an algebra test. Soon he’s a cheating addict and poor Mary is his accomplice.
  • Bikini Calculus (2004) This bikini-clad woman won’t help you cheat, but she might help you learn some calculus. In this short teaser for the How-to-Do Girls’ commercial videos, the teacher claims, This isn’t mindless misogynistic fun! Hmmm…
  • If you’re serious about learning math, check out the Archive’s Advanced Placement Calculus courses (levels AB & BC), or video lectures from MIT’s popular course on Differential Equations, or any of the college-level math video lectures from MSRI (Mathematical Sciences Research Institute).

Inertia

– Renata

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