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flavourpill LONDON
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February 15 - 21, 2005 |
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Cultural Stimuli in LONDON
Issue 69: fallout flavour
While there's lots of love to go round with the reborn, redesigned flavourpill, there's also plenty of post-Valentine fallout this week, from an ex-Sleazenation writer's love/hate paintings to a brutal Happy Violentine party with minimal house king Michael Mayer. Things take an even bloodier turn with the ER-fuelled performance Schlock. But if you really want to be part of the show, check the theatrics of the Firebird Ball, where audience participation forms an integral part of the proceedings. The surrealism quotient is pushed even higher at the Curzon Soho, as Brit-lit bad boy Will Self navigates the dystopic curves of David Lynch's Mulholland Dr. Buckle up, and spread it.
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flavourpill is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.

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They say you only live once. Fools. We can start life anew whenever we choose. This time around, let's not suffer fools gladly. Let's make new friends, find new flavours and drink to the miracle of rebirth with ABSOLUT RASPBERRI. |
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| ART |
The Kiss
| when: |
Tue 15 Feb - Tue 8 Mar (Mon-Fri: 10am-6pm / Sat: 11am-4pm) |
| where: |
Spectrum Fine Art (77 Great Titchfield Street, W1, 020.7637.7778) Tube: Great Portland Street map |
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Event Info | Rosemary Masson |
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The kiss, that physical embodiment of affection, can be visually magical and provocative, as this exhibition — now in its 15th year — amply proves. Highlights range from Helmut Newton's sensual photos and Rosemary Masson's charcoal representations of the mother's, the lover's and the sibling's kiss to the sheer narcissism portrayed in Ian Brice's subversion of the "partnership" kiss. There's nothing sickly sweet about these images; far from the sentimentality of your average Valentine's card, the exhibition delves into exactly where this act of intimacy sits in our subconscious. (JO)
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| DESIGN |
SIT? A Show of Contemporary Seating
| when: |
Tue 15 Feb - Sun 12 Jun (Tue-Sat: 10am-5pm / Sun: 12-5pm) |
| where: |
Geffrye Museum (136 Kingsland Road, E2, 020.7739.9893) Tube: Old Street, Liverpool Street map |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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The Geffrye Museum, complete with almshouses and gardens, is a quirky place devoted to displaying middle-class living rooms and urban interiors, and for this exhibition, it showcases the best contemporary chairs to park your arse in. An obvious highlight is Claire Matthews' utterly charming Me and Auntie Nan, 1954 chair, which perfectly represents a child sitting on the lap of an elder relative. But there's stiff competition from John Angelo Benson's Naked Comfort chair, which looks like a Le Corbusier sofa that's been over-wintered on a farm, and Alma Home's chimera creation: a half Afghan hound, half salon chair called Rupert. (SR)
NB: SIT? is showing alongside the English Regional Chair exhibition, which looks at traditional chairs produced during the 18th and 19th centuries.
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| MUSIC: Soul / Trip-Hop |
Nicolette
| when: |
Tue 15 Feb (7pm) |
| where: |
Jazz Café (5 Parkway, NW1, 020.7916.6060) Tube: Camden Town map |
| price: |
£12.50 advance |
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Event Info | Early Records |
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The name might not be familiar, but you undoubtedly know the voice; Nicolette was the husky-voiced chanteuse on Massive Attack's 1994 album Protection and its standout single, the dreamy "Sly". Her new album Life Loves Us (Early Records) combines her hypnotic, semi-mystic vocals with a soundtrack taking its cues from quirky electronica, sideways funk and shifty pop. Open your ears for a burst of the sensual, seductive and experimental, all in one package. (KW)
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| PERFORMANCE |
Uninvited Guests: Schlock
| when: |
Tue 15 - Sun 20 Feb (Tue-Sat: 8:30pm / Sun: 6:30pm) |
| where: |
Battersea Arts Centre (Lavender Hill, SW11, 020.7223.2223) Tube: Clapham Junction map |
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£10.75 / £5.50 concessions |
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Event Info | Uninvited Guests |
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Can you hear the beeps of a heart monitor without thinking of ER? What is it about an accident that makes us both want to look and look away? Uninvited Guests address these questions in a visceral and darkly comic show — a gore fest, in fact. Pints of fake blood accompany an unusual, gurgling soundtrack formed by the internal noises emanating from the performers' bodies. The protective Perspex screen certainly makes its purpose known as the audience cowers and the revelations (and guts) spill out. (KMH)
NB: Tue 15 Feb show is pay-what-you-can.
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| ART |
Love You: The Hateful Love Paintings of Alexander de Cadanet
| when: |
Wed 16 Feb - Sat 19 Mar (Mon-Sat: 11am-6pm) |
| where: |
Aquarium Gallery (10 Woburn Walk, WC1, 020.7387.8417) Tube: Euston map |
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Event Info | Alexander de Cadenet |
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Alexander de Cadenet's "hateful" love paintings are vicious and emotive outpourings of paint and beatings on metal — proof that the artist has moved beyond his defining, painful teen moment (appearing on sister Amanda's TV show The Word). After a slot as a rather good art critic in the early days of Sleazenation magazine, de Cadenet has spent the past few years trying to find his feet in the art world; his last project was an exhibition of skull X-rays of the fascinating and famous. A brilliant antidote to the commodified nonsense of Feb 14. (FG)
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| PERFORMANCE |
Punchdrunk: The Firebird Ball
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Wed 16 Feb - Sun 27 Mar (Wed-Sun: entrance from 7-9pm) |
| where: |
Offley Works (Offley Road, SW9, 020.7708.1844) Tube: Oval map |
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£15 / £12 concessions |
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Punchdrunk |
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A rash of companies have played with the idea of promenade theatre — where audience members walk about the performance space — with varying degrees of success. Punchdrunk, however, have a track record of offering atmospheric experiences that impart new life to familiar texts. Here, they meld Romeo and Juliet with Stravinsky's The Firebird into a sultry alternative for your Valentine. Decadence, intrigue and mysterious revels are the order of the day, for those that dare to get off their seat and explore. (KMH)
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| ART |
August Strindberg
| when: |
Thur 17 Feb - Sun 15 May (Sun-Thur: 10am-6pm, Fri-Sat: 10am-10pm) |
| where: |
Tate Modern (Bankside, SE1, 020.7887.8000) Tube: Southwark, BlackfriarsNational Theatre (South Bank, SE1, 020.7452.3000) Tube: Waterloo, Embankment map |
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Tate: £7 (£5.50 concessions) |
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Tate Modern | National Theatre |
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August Strindberg emerged at the turn of the last century from the same explosion of sexy, modern Scandinavian creativity that spawned Henrik Ibsen and Edvard Münch. Strindberg is best known for plays such as the proto-feminist gem Miss Julie; lesser known are his paintings. This retrospective of his artworks, assembled by the Tate Modern, dovetails nicely with the National Theatre's concurrent production of Strindberg's A Dream Play. A fascinating chance to compare and contrast the mediums explored by a brilliant jack-of-all-trades, and proof that "old" doesn't have to mean fusty. (FG)
NB: £30 joint tickets are available when you book the play and exhibition at the same time. A Dream Play runs until Wed 11 May (schedule).
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| FASHION |
London Fashion Week-End
| when: |
Thur 17 - Sun 20 Feb (Thur: 6-9pm / Fri & Sat: 10am-6pm / Sun: 10am-5pm) |
| where: |
Battersea Park, Chelsea Bridge Entrance (Queenstown Road, SW11) Tube: Sloane Square map |
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£15 opening night / £10 |
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London Fashion Week-End |
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If you didn't get a ticket for the front row of Giles Deacon's show, don't despair. We mere mortals can have a taste of catwalk glamour — hot on the Louboutin-shod heels of the fashion cognoscenti — at London Fashion Week-End. More than 100 designers offer pieces at massively discounted prices, including Temperley's beaded frocks, Orca's to-die-for metallic bags and Mawi's talking-point jewellery. You can also watch footage of LFW shows, pamper yourself at Elizabeth Arden and Crabtree & Evelyn or just grab lunch at the mini Le Caprice on site and pretend you're Liz Hurley. (LCD)
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| PERFORMANCE |
Jeff Mills
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Thur 17 & Sat 19 Feb (6pm) |
| where: |
Eukatech Records (49 Endell Street, WC2, 020.7240.8060) Tube: Covent Garden map |
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Event Info | Eukatech Records |
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If God really were a DJ, many would swear he's already come to this Earth in the guise of Jeff Mills. The Detroit techno legend — both a whirlwind behind the decks and a mighty force in the studio — attracts legions of obsessive fans, many of whom will cram into Covent Garden's Eukatech Records: the best place to buy techno in England. Mills makes two in-store appearances, and his excellent Axis record label will have plenty of rare and unique items for sale. Dust down your 1210s — vinyl is far from dead. (KW)
NB: Mills DJs at the End on Sat 19 Feb (10pm-6:30am). Click here for event info.
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| FILM |
Electric Edwardians: The Films of Mitchell & Kenyon
| when: |
Thur 17 Feb (6:30pm) |
| where: |
National Film Theatre (Belvedere Road, South Bank, SE1, 020.7928.3232) Tube: Waterloo, Embankment map |
| price: |
£7.90 / £6 concessions |
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Event Info | Mitchell & Kenyon |
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British screen history was rewritten in the 1990s, when 800 rolls of film were discovered in the basement of a shop in Blackburn, Lancashire. They turned out to be a series of shorts reflecting the lives of ordinary British people, at work and play, filmed at the start of the 20th century. Tonight's selection of restored footage kicks off a programme of events celebrating Mitchell & Kenyon, the company behind these fascinating vignettes. Providing the soundtrack to these century-old documents of huge social and political changes are Sheffield's In the Nursery. (LCD)
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| DJ |
Happy Violentine w/ Miss Kittin, Michael Mayer and Mad Professor
| when: |
Thur 17 Feb (9pm-2am) |
| where: |
Plastic People (147-149 Curtain Road, EC2, 020.7739.6471) Tube: Liverpool Street map |
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£6 |
| links: |
Event Info | Miss Kittin |
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If you've managed to decipher the hieroglyphics of the Plastic People website (ancient Egyptians would have bestowed great honour on whomever built it), you may have a ticket for this special 'ickle session. Miss Kittin's new single, "Happy Violentine", is a thing of rare wonder fully deserving of a knees-up, shindig, or other leg-related tomfoolery — and there's no one better at shifting joints than King Kompakt, Michael Mayer. And no Plastics listing is complete without mention of a sound system so enviably cool it has its own guest list. There are tickets on the door, but not many. Be quick. (ND)
NB: Dub star Mad Professor and DJ Hell prodigy Miss Kittin round out the bill.
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| ART |
An Aside selected by Tacita Dean
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Fri 18 Feb - Sun 1 May (Tue-Sun: 10am-6pm) |
| where: |
Camden Arts Centre (Arkwright Road, NW3, 020.7472.5500) Tube: Finchley Road, Hampstead map |
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| links: |
Camden Arts Centre |
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When Tacita Dean makes art, she never knows how it's going to turn out before she starts. And in curating this show for the Camden Arts Centre, she didn't start off with a concept. Instead, she employed the principle of objective chance, taking a journey in order to see where she would end up. The surrealists used this process to answer questions they weren't even aware of wanting to ask. With any luck, this show will do that for you. If not, it's still worth taking the trip for the chance to view important and rarely-seen works by Gerhard Richter, Paul Nash, Joseph Beuys and many others. (KVH)
NB: The Arts Centre holds extended hours on Wednesdays (10am-9pm).
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| FILM |
Head On (Gegen die Wand)
| when: |
Fri 18 - Thur 24 Feb (12pm, 2:10pm, 7pm & 9:20pm) |
| where: |
Curzon Soho (99 Shaftesbury Avenue, W1, 020.7734.2255) Tube: Leicester Square map |
| price: |
£8.50/ £5.50 concessions |
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Event Info |
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When Cahit tries to end his life by driving into a brick wall at full-tilt, instead of meeting his maker, he meets Sibel: a fellow second-generation Turkish-German recovering from her own suicide attempt. But in contrast to Cahit, who just wants to die, Sibel wants to be fully alive. Convinced that marriage will free her from her oppressive family, Sibel convinces Cahit to marry her for convenience, and unwittingly knocks down the first of a series of violent, shocking dominoes in their lives. With incendiary leads Birol Ünel and Sibel Kekilli, and visceral, uncompromising direction from Fatih Akin, Head On depicts love at its most tender and brutal. (CA)
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| MUSIC: Indie Rock |
Low
| when: |
Fri 18 Feb (7:30pm) |
| where: |
Royal Festival Hall (Belvedere Road, SE1, 020.7960.4242) Tube: Waterloo map |
| price: |
£12.50-20 |
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Event Info | Low |
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For a band operating primarily on celestial harmonies and hushed dynamics for nigh on 12 years, Low have caused ripples of worriment with a new-found desire to turn shit up. But let's not deny the band a potentially beneficial shot of distortion and pop catharsis; they shall be released, rather than reborn. Consider that Alan and Mimi's vocal infusions and Zak's thunderous bass are unremitting. Then consider that they're one of the most unique and single-minded bands of our time, and "new" and "direction" are insignificant labels that don't mean too much. Lasting humility and intuitive melodies have greater worth, and Low are short of neither. (RW)
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| FILM: Preview |
Life is a Miracle (Zivot je Cudo)
| when: |
Fri 18 Feb (7:30pm) |
| where: |
L'Institut Français-Ciné Lumière (17 Queensberry Place, SW7, 020.7073.1350) Tube: South Kensington map |
| price: |
£7 / £5 concessions |
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Ciné Lumière | Emir Kusturica |
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Emir Kusturica's quirky Shakespearean parable is full of suicidal donkeys, greedy fat cats and marauding bears. When war erupts in the Balkans, Luka is too busy laying railway tracks to notice batty wife Jadranka running off with a Hungarian percussionist. Soldier son Milos is soon captured by the enemy, and Luka is assigned guard over beautiful Muslim prisoner Sabaha. But when the time comes to exchange her for Milos' freedom, love rears its stubborn head. Touching and hilarious in equal measure, Life is a Miracle is a non-stop train, Destination: Madness. (CH)
NB: The film's release date is Fri 11 Mar.
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| MUSIC: Trash / Electro |
Chicks On Speed presented by Popstarz
| when: |
Fri 18 Feb (10pm-5am) |
| where: |
Scala (275 Pentonville Road, N1, 020.7833.2022) Tube: King's Cross map |
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£8 / £5 concessions / Free before 11pm |
| links: |
Event Info | Chicks On Speed |
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Everyone's favourite art-school electro popsters Chicks On Speed stop by to play an exclusive live PA for the popular gay night Popstarz. Though based in Münich, the Chicks actually consist of American Melissa Logan, Australian Alex Murray-Leslie and German Kiki Moorse, who all share — among other anti-establishment postures — a fashionable contempt for commercialism. Though the message is sometimes trite, the music's deceivingly minimalist production, relying on lo-fi synths and beat machines, makes for a danceable and surprisingly diverse pop sound that complements their lively performances. (KH)
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What are we doing? What’s happening to us? What needs to be done? I prefer not to.
| when: |
Sat 19 Feb - Sun 6 Mar (Sat & Sun: 12-6pm) |
| where: |
Elastic Residence (22 Parfett Street, E1, 020.7247.1375) Tube: Whitechapel map |
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msdm | Elastic Residence |
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Part installation, part soundscape and part berserk audio experiment, msdm have set out to collect, curate and rework original audio material into a score that's anything but easy listening. Taking place over three weeks, the piece invites visitors to donate to the audio bank on the first weekend, participate in the live performance and radio broadcast of the finished work on the second, and check out the props and score in a final exhibition on the third. It's all sure to thrill Bruce Nauman acolytes, those interested in creating "tactical audio material" or anyone who just fancies making a din. (CA)
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Roy Davis Jr, Kenny Hawkes and Luke Solomon
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Tired of boshing trance? Bored by extended glitch house workouts? Think electro is played out? Then a night of the deepest, most soulful, groovy house is what you need. Hawkes and Solomon — the brains behind the long-running, but now sadly-defunct Space midweeker — are past masters at this deep game; heavy on the dub and delay yet always ensuring enough oomph for the dance floor. Roy Davis Jr's "Gabriel" kickstarted the UK garage movement; now he keeps things equally smooth with a touch of Afro magic in his house sets. (KW)
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| FILM |
My Favourite Film: Will Self introduces Mulholland Dr. (2001)
| when: |
Sun 20 Feb (1pm) |
| where: |
Curzon Soho (99 Shaftesbury Avenue, W1, 020.7734.2255) Tube: Leicester Square map |
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£6 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Few figures in popular culture thwart convention as compellingly as filmmaker David Lynch and Brit-lit bad boy Will Self. The former, whose work has been nominated for multiple Academy Awards, revived his career in 2001 with the dystopic meditation on the Hollywood dream, Mulholland Dr. The narrative skips a beat mid-way through the pic, dragging willful audience members further down into Lynch's sticky miasma of sex, betrayal, doppelgängers and Billy Ray Cyrus cameos. Self, who you might recall gained notoriety after admitting to snorting heroin in John Major's election campaign jet, introduces the film. His latest, Dr Mukti and Other Tales of Woe (Penguin), comprises a novella and four short stories. (JS)
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| FILM |
Darwin's Nightmare
| when: |
Mon 21 Feb (6:30pm) |
| where: |
ICA (The Mall, SW1, 020.7930.3647) Tube: Charing Cross, Piccadilly Circus map |
| price: |
£6.50 / £5.50 concessions |
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Event Info | Darwin's Nightmare |
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Fancy some starvation with your perch, sir? This cautionary tale should incite guilt in those of us who've ever gorged on the cheap cuisine of a distant country. A fascinating exploration into the shady side of globalisation, Darwin's Nightmare reveals the horror beneath a seemingly simple trade deal. An unlikely story of the world's largest tropical lake, a voracious fish, and European gun-runners, this cataloguing of a community descending into poverty, prostitution and chaos is sobering and also essential viewing. (KMH)
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| ART |
Laura White: New Work
| when: |
Now until Sun 13 Mar (Fri-Sun: 12-6pm) |
| where: |
Alma Enterprises Gallery (1 Vyner Street, E2, 020.7277.4076) Tube: Bethnal Green map |
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Alma |
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Step out of the cold into one of Bethnal Green's newest galleries this weekend for a sneak preview of spring, courtesy of this equinox-centric exhibition of new works by Laura White. The pieces Daffodil Time and Pink Predator project wild flowers and animals onto stark man-made structures that blur the lines between nature and art. Alma Enterprises is the new permanent exhibition space produced by LAND, a collective that curates shows in the UK and US. (JD)
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| FILM: Ongoing |
The Yes Men
| when: |
Sundays (12pm) |
| where: |
Ritzy Cinema (Coldharbour Lane, SW2, 020.7733.2229) Tube: Brixton map |
| price: |
Various |
| links: |
The Yes Men |
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The titular Yes Men are two American guerrilla activists who use cunning, pretence and poker-faced humour to gain media attention for their causes. The film charts their increasingly over-the-top impersonations of WTO representatives at events all around the world over the course of one year, ultimately projecting an engaging, witty and very sobering perspective on international trade that puts to shame Michael Moore's often boorish approach to similar issues. Current spoofs have included an "apology" for the Bhopal tragedy, which caused problems for the BBC. (NT)
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| FILM |
Antenna
| when: |
Thur 24 Mar (8:45pm) |
| where: |
NFT1, National Film Theatre (Belvedere Road, South Bank, SE1, 020.7928.3232) Tube: Waterloo, Embankment map |
| price: |
£7.90 / £6 concessions |
| links: |
Event Info | Antenna |
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Since September 2003, the organisers of Antenna have invited guests to present the most progressive pop videos of the moment, emphasising the fact that this is a highly creative medium — albeit one largely populated by ponces working for the Man. The exact lineup for this 12th edition is unconfirmed at press time, but the rate at which tickets usually fly tells us that if you like indie film, it's definitely going to tickle your pickles. That a leading director designs each instalment's corresponding poster is an additional nicety. (ND)
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MUSIC SHOP: Gemm.com |
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Gemm is a Kohinoor of a website — huge and brilliant. Need the ace William Orbit remix of Prince's "The Future" in your collection? Fancy a platinum disc of Appetite for Destruction? Have to replace your Japanese-import vinyl copy of Blue Lines that your ex "borrowed"? Look no further, as this is the ultimate record store — a database of worldwide and UK independent record shops cataloguing their entire stock. (That's more than 16 million seven-inches, CDs, LPs, 8-tracks and attendant merchandise, if you're counting.) Moreover, browsing and buying's a cinch, and as Rolling Stone magazine wrote, "if you can't find it here, fuhgeddaboutit!" (SR)
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CD REVIEW: Various Artists, Simple One |
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Simple Records
Released Feb 2005
$13.92 (PayPal)
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Over the past two years, London's Simple Records have been patiently constructing a catalogue of assured electronic grooves. As this wondrous first compilation testifies, everything they offer — from straight-ahead dance floor beats to slower-pitched melodic trips — is steeped in love, care and diligence; it's how you'd do it if you had a label. Using Abelton software, Will Saul has created a mix that glides over different tempos, hovering above breakbeat, house, techno and more. Standout tracks include Mathew Jonson's sleek remix of Sideshow's "Slide", Saul's own key "Digital Watch" and Precision Cuts' heavy-hitting "Royal Flush". And quite how Robbie Williams' "Angels" won the Brits' Best Song of the Last 25 Years Prize ahead of Fink's "Sound of Today" is anyone's guess. (ND)
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STREAM: Fabric |
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If the world had more people like Keith Reilly, the state of clubbing (and arguably, electronic music in general) would be much better. The owner of Fabric, Reilly started the club to support scenes that he felt weren't getting the support they needed. As his collection of around 300,000 records attests to, Reilly's passion for music knows no bounds, and starting a venue of his own — complete with custom-tailored sound systems — was the logical step. Five years on, the club's made an undisputable impact on our city's nightlife by providing a showcase for forward-thinking electronic music in all its forms and shapes. Here, indulge in some exclusive mixes from the club's residents. (CJN)
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Adam Freeland: Exclusive radio mix (Breakbeat)
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Michael Mayer: Exclusive radio mix (Minimal techno / house)
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Fabio: Exclusive radio mix (Drum 'n bass)
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| Header Design: |
| Jared Tarbell | | |
| Editors: |
| Amy Clarke | | Lucy C. Davies | | Nick Doherty | | Francesca Gavin | | Jane Lerner | | Sascha Lewis | | Mark Mangan | | Colin J. Nagy | | Shiraz Randeria | | Jonathan Schultz | | Philip Sherburne | | Kieran Wyatt | | |
| ABOUT US |
| flavourpill LONDON is a free weekly mailer covering music, arts, and cultural events in LONDON. All listings are pure editorial, never paid advertisements. No money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us, and spread it... |
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| To let us know about an upcoming event that you think belongs here, please email us at events. |
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| Contributors: |
| Clare Aitken | | Jonas Altman | | Nick Clarke | | Annabel Crerar | | Jason Doyle | | Seb Emina | | Rebecca Givan | | Chris Harris | | Katharine V. Hibbert | | Kate M. Houlden | | Kai Hsing | | Anna Jones | | Rachel Midwood | | Joanne Oatts | | Ruth Saxelby | | Tara Spinks | | Naomi Tarszisz | | Robbie Wolstenholme | | Alex Zamora | | |
Production: |
| Anjuli Ayer | | David Morrow | | Briana P. Mowrey | | |
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