Come Listen to Me Rock
Verbally, that is. There's a group reading at Book Soup on the fabulous Sunset Strip in Los Angeles tomorrow (Tuesday) night, Nov. 30, for a new edited collection I contributed to you. It's not about Burning Man, but it should be loads of fun. Here's the facts, Jack:
Book Soup,
8818 Sunset Blvd. W. Hollywood CA 90069, at 7 p.m. Tuesday, a reading for the wonderful new book Lost in the Grooves: Scram's Capricious Guide to the Music You Missed, an encyclopedic listing of brilliant but non-canonical records, from decades past to the present.
I wrote, I think, around 19 entries, and will be reading three or four of them. Also reading will be editors Kim Cooper and David Smay and contributors Brooke Alberts, Tosh Berman, Sean Carrillo, David Cotner, Becky Ebenkamp, Ron Garmon, Max Hechter, P. Edwin Lechter, Domeic Priore, Ken Rudman and Gene Sculatti.
If you have any interest in obscure but wonderful musics, do please come.
Also, I'm informed an old interview I did for THIS IS BURNING MAN is now available online. See my chat on Austin's LIBERATED SPACE with Angela Keaton here (see the right-hand column for recently archived shows, look for my name and the date 7/29/04).
I don't do this too often from the blog, but remember: you are invited to buy THIS IS BURNING MAN.
There is some interesting action going on in the world of Burning Man art and artists, with some bold new proposals for widening and bringing more community involvement into the funding of art at Burning Man. See this petition, which I should have more public thoughts on soon. Two of the principles behind it, Jim Mason and Chicken John, are major characters in my book.
Book Soup,
8818 Sunset Blvd. W. Hollywood CA 90069, at 7 p.m. Tuesday, a reading for the wonderful new book Lost in the Grooves: Scram's Capricious Guide to the Music You Missed, an encyclopedic listing of brilliant but non-canonical records, from decades past to the present.
I wrote, I think, around 19 entries, and will be reading three or four of them. Also reading will be editors Kim Cooper and David Smay and contributors Brooke Alberts, Tosh Berman, Sean Carrillo, David Cotner, Becky Ebenkamp, Ron Garmon, Max Hechter, P. Edwin Lechter, Domeic Priore, Ken Rudman and Gene Sculatti.
If you have any interest in obscure but wonderful musics, do please come.
Also, I'm informed an old interview I did for THIS IS BURNING MAN is now available online. See my chat on Austin's LIBERATED SPACE with Angela Keaton here (see the right-hand column for recently archived shows, look for my name and the date 7/29/04).
I don't do this too often from the blog, but remember: you are invited to buy THIS IS BURNING MAN.
There is some interesting action going on in the world of Burning Man art and artists, with some bold new proposals for widening and bringing more community involvement into the funding of art at Burning Man. See this petition, which I should have more public thoughts on soon. Two of the principles behind it, Jim Mason and Chicken John, are major characters in my book.

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