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DEAR READER

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Misplaced Lens Cap
Three Goblin Art
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祝日 / Permanent Vacation

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oozey mess

pixel skylines
trying on a metaphor
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@sugarcavestudio
#wegotgif XX-tra special preview of The Digital Divide Season 1 has dropped on #RuleNo6Records. Guerrilla marketing commences in 3... 2... wait... #dreamygif
What do you do with your wednesday nights? We get down on some sax/guitar/bass/drums/percussion stoner metal. Jealous much? One track album, recorded live, with no rehearsal; the way metal should be.
We recorded this across a couple weeks in january, & finally mastered by Grayson Elliott-Taylor. Psychedelic/blowout/noise duo with SUPER FUCKING CATCHY vocals. Sadly, this drummer is no longer with the band; not-so-sadly, I hear the new guy is actually way better.... We'll keep you posted.
All Extinct Animals is Anna Gregoline Recorded here during 2012-13 by Ezra, mixed here in the summer of 2013 by Ezra & Anna Gregoline.
Recorded here in January 2014, mixed (here) in February, mastered elsewhere & released in March. This is how music should be made!
Check out the 2 prior La Cosa albums on bandcamp! All 3 were recorded & mixed at the Sugar Cave.
I'm reblogging this because Malachi Ritscher was (& always will be) an inspiration to me. -ez
Via publiccollectors:
Public Collectors at the 2014 Whitney Biennial and a few words about Malachi Ritscher
By Marc Fischer
Big announcements make me uncomfortable. I like to view all opportunities and invitations as meaningful and important, no matter how large or small the audience or venue.
Public Collectors has been invited to participate in the 2014 Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. The show runs from March 7 until May 25, 2014
The Biennial is an unusual invitation for Public Collectors as I am normally uninterested in working with museums for this initiative. Public Collectors is concerned with pulling things from the margins and giving them a thoughtful context and public presentation. For me to participate in the Whitney Biennial, I want that participation to give focus to someone who would have never been asked, and who has never been collected or exhibited by the Whitney Museum of American Art. I want to share something that the public may not know exists and to see the museum lend authority and importance to a life and a creative practice that probably would not receive museum consideration under normal circumstances. I want my participation to draw on a network of individuals or smaller institutions to show the kind of extraordinary things that museums often don’t care about. I want to consider what happens to the creative work of people who are not collected by museums when they are gone—people whose life’s work has not been accorded the same desirability as collectible art or all of the resources that are often expended for valuable art objects.
Public Collectors’ participation in the Whitney Biennial will focus on the life and work of Malachi Ritscher.
If you attended a free jazz, experimental, or improvised music concert in Chicago from the early-1990s until October of 2006, at some point you were probably in the room with Malachi Ritscher and he was making an audio recording of the event. Ritscher recorded several thousand concerts in Chicago from the 1980s until 2006.
Malachi Ritscher was a Chicago-based documentarian, activist, artist, musician, photographer, hot-pepper-sauce maker, and supporter of experimental and improvised music. In a self-authored obituary on his website titled “Out of Time”, Ritscher described himself as “the modern day version of a ‘renaissance man,’ except instead of attaining success in several fields, he consistently failed, and didn’t really worry too much about it.” His creativity was not easy to categorize neatly and could be found as much in the placement of a microphone used to record a concert as in the combination of ingredients in a recipe or the design of a skateboard deck. From 2003 to 2006, Ritscher maintained the website Chicago Rash Audio Potential (www.savagesound.com), which shared extensive show listings interspersed with his concert and street photography, written insights about the music scene, and political agit-prop.
Ritscher came to international attention when, during morning rush-hour traffic on November 3, 2006, he poured gasoline over his body and immolated himself in front of Leonardo Nierman’s “Flame of the Millennium” sculpture at the Ohio feeder ramp along Chicago’s John F. Kennedy Expressway. A sign reading “Thou Shalt Not Kill. As Ye Sow So Shall Ye Reap. Your Taxes Buy Bombs and Bullets” was displayed during the action. Ritscher’s suicide was an explicit protest against the war in Iraq but was not reported as such until the alternative press, independent media journalists, and others forced the issue.
On the front page of his website, Ritscher wrote: “art and music can express outrage, inspire action, or soothe and distract; please think about priorities and be involved in things that matter.”
I hope that some of you will be able to see this exhibition. There will be a different version of this presentation at Experimental Sound Studio in Chicago in July and August, 2014. A PDF of the lengthy essay I am writing about Malachi Ritscher will be available for free download once it has been completed.
This project has been one of the most challenging and emotionally demanding things I have ever worked on. I’m happy to say that it is not something I am doing alone. The following people are lending objects or sharing their words and directly contributing to this presentation:
Dick and Betty Ann Ritscher, Ellen Sackett, Carol Wahl, Allison Schein and Lou Mallozzi of Creative Audio Archive at Experimental Sound Studio, Angeline and Mark Evans, John Corbett, Joeff Davis, Michael Zerang, Ken Vandermark, David Lester and Jean Smith of Mecca Normal, Fred Lonberg-Holm, Brent Gutzeit, Jason Guthartz, Metal Rouge (Helga Fassonaki and Andrew Scott), Agnieszka Czeblakow, Mark Solotroff, Lampo (Alisa Wolfson and Andrew Fenchel), Bill Meyer, David Grant, Thymme Jones, and Reuben Moore.
Above photo by Angeline Evans: Malachi at the Empty Bottle (Pool Table Series), 2003.
The RAD new set-up of our A studio; courtesy Aaron "Dr. Bracebeats" Brace.
AS PROMISED! This track by Bad Mashadi (Eshan Goresh from Black Bear Combo) was recorded by us & mixed by Eshan on his own. If you like it, buy it! Nemisheh (mori séj) نمیشه by BadMashadi
As promised! Recorded/mixed 20/21Aug13 in the Cave. Enjoy!
So, this vid is from the outro jam happening on this song: http://youtu.be/pMD_IR1s0BI Featured are David Greenberg [drums], Leon Nguyen [bass], Devin Braggula [SG/rhythm guitar], & Jon Extract [tele/lead guitar]; who are currently known as Electric Sheep (it seems). We'll post the rest of the 3-song EP after it's released.
Jamie Gallagher recording drums for Bad Mashadi. We'll post the track when it's complete [of course].
Welcome to the Sugar Cave.