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flavorpill LONDON | NYC | SF | LA | CHI 31 October-6 November, 2006

 
 Yuko Shimizu   
Cultural Stimuli in LONDON
Issue 158: roundtrip flavour

London is often described as a whole world in one city, and this week handily corroborates the claim. Welcome some Central American grim reapers at a Día de Muertos bash on Halloween; elude the Italian mafia in Michele Placido's stylish thriller Romanzo Criminale; sharpen your eye for Hanzo steel at the NFT's Wild Japan series; get your Afrobeat groove on at the Spitz's Out of Africa club night; and enjoy an alternative Bonfire Night with Bengali-spiced production The Emperor & The Tiger. Elsewhere, American Southwest folkist Zach Condon, as incongruous a musical success story as any this year, weaves his sorrowful, Balkan-tinged ditties under his Beirut monicker at the Roundhouse. Yet for some good old-fashioned, traditional Blighty fayre, there's Shakespeare in a nightclub, psychogeographer Iain Sinclair at the Tate and cockney motormouth Janet Street-Porter holding forth in Highgate. Open your gob, unleash babel — and spread it.

- Kieran Wyatt, Managing Editor

 
 

flavorpill LONDON is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.







Scouring the world for discount flights, chic hotels — and pretty people. Gridskipper, the decadent travel guide.
 Table of Contents TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT
art Late at Tate Britain; Alicia Dubnyckyj; Ellie Doney
clubDía de Muertos; Scary Mary!
dj Underground Sound; Jazzie B
film Romanzo Criminale; Wild Japan: Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film; loudQUIETloud
multimedia Game On
music Calexico w/ Beirut; Out of Africa; Imogen Heap; Max Sedgley; Spank Rock
performance Janet Street-Porter
poetry Howl: A 50th Birthday Celebration
reading George Monbiot
spectacle Blackout London; Battersea Park Fireworks
theatre The Emperor & the Tiger; Measure for Measure
FEAT eating & drinking Les Trois Garçons; cd review Various Artists, Live at Electroacoustic Club Volume 2; streams XLR8R Incite




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Art extracted from Matei Apostolescu


Tuesday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


MUSIC: Alt Pop
Imogen Heap

when: Tue 31 Oct (7pm)
where: Roundhouse (Chalk Farm Road, NW1, 0870.389.1846) Tube: Chalk Farm map
price: £17
links: Event info | Imogen Heap

Essex-born singer/songwriter Imogen Heap hasn't had it easy. She got dropped by her label and had to remortgage her gaff to pay the session bills for laying down her second album — appropriately entitled Speak for Yourself. It must have done her a world of good, mind you, because since the record's release last year, two of its singles have resurfaced on The OC. With Sony BMG now throwing money at her, Heap's latest wheeze is a MySpace competition to be her support act. Forget the hype, though — this is a live story worth experiencing, voiced with shimmering beauty over an army of retro synth twirls and bass twangs. (JR)



ALSO ON TUE

CLUB
Día de Muertos
Tue 31 Oct (7pm) Mestizo (103 Hampstead Road, NW1, 020.7387.4064) Tube: Euston Square map £4

Venue info
 
Mexican DJ Daisy Heartbreaker — renowned for both parties in Ibiza and Sunday Best — throws a Day of the Dead bash at Mestizo, the baroque-style centre of London's Mexican community. Also check the Dead Gallery, showcasing plenty of skull-flavoured art. (KW)



CLUB
Scary Mary!
Tue 31 Oct (7pm-2am) The Good Ship (289 Kilburn High Road, NW6, 07949.008.253) Tube: Kilburn map £2

Event info
 
Plenty of nightmarish goings-on at the Good Ship: a clutch of short scary movies, bands that sound like death (Electric Assembly's special Halloween set) and suitably gothic décor. (KW)



Wednesday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


POETRY
Howl: A 50th Birthday Celebration

when: Wed 1 Nov (6-10pm)
where: The Art Workers Guild (6 Queen Square, WC1, 020.7278.3009) Tube: Holborn, Russell Square map
price: £10
links: Event info

On this day 50 years ago, City Lights Books in San Francisco published Allen Ginsberg's jaw-dropping, eye-popping, radical poem Howl. It immediately grabbed headlines, finding almost instant notoriety by way of an obscenity trial in 1957. Live readings of this iconic beat poem are a feat not to be underestimated (gasping from the onset, major saliva deficit), but it's a mere morsel in tonight's proceedings. There's also footage of Ginsberg's last UK appearance (in 1995) and a screening of Peter Whitehead's seminal documentary Wholly Communion (1965), featuring Ginsberg, Ferlinghetti, Corso and others of Beat fame. (JY)

  Ginsberg was deported from which two countries during the '70s? The first three correct responses each win a special edition DVD.



THEATRE
Measure for Measure

when: Wed 1 - Thur 9 Nov (Wed: 7:30pm / Thur: 9:30pm)
where: SIN (144 Charing Cross Road, WC2, 020.7240.1900) Tube: Charing Cross map
price: £10
links: Event info

Although it's now usually seen in the rarefied environs of stately theatres, bawdy, booze-sodden Elizabethans preferred their Shakespeare rough-and-readier — like this. One of the bard's lesser-known works, Measure for Measure readily lends itself to performance in a nightclub called SIN. This tale of a novice nun forced to choose between her chastity and her brother's life gets a ribald makeover, with burlesque dancers, fluffy handcuffs and an original score from Valentin Hoffman. The performance sticks to the original text, but the dancing girls atop bars and undercurrents of S&M distinguish it from anything you'll ever see at the Globe. (CA)

NB: Ticket price includes admission to the Jamie Reid art exhibition and SIN nightclub at the same venue.

  What's the funniest choice that you've ever been faced with? The most Bard-worthy response in 50 words or less wins a pair of tickets to the winner's choice of performance night.



ALSO ON WED

FILM: Launch
loudQUIETloud
Wed 1 Nov (7:30pm) ICA (The Mall, SW1, 020.7930.3647) Tube: Charing Cross, Piccadilly Circus map £9 / £8 concessions

Event info
 
The Pixies reformed in 2004 after a 12-year absence; this enthralling documentary (DVD release: 6 Nov) captures the underlying tensions at the heart of the revival, but also showcases the primal live power of what is arguably America's greatest guitar band. (KW)

NB: Director Steven Cantor takes part in a Q&A after the screening — plus there's Pixies-themed DJing in the bar.

  Which Pixies music video depicts the band members riding motorcycles? The first correct response wins a pair of tickets to this screening. The subsequent three correct responses each receive a DVD of the documentary.



Thursday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


ART
Ellie Doney: New Works

when: Thur 2 Nov - Fri 16 Feb, 2007
where: Camden People's Theatre (58-60 Hampstead Road, NW1, 020.7419.4841) Tube: Mornington Crescent map
price:
links: Event info | Ellie Doney

Ellie Doney's sculptures are like the dark creatures you catch from the corner of your eye, scuttling just out of sight before you can properly gauge their hideousness. Cast in metal, ceramic and plaster, their menacing forms seem to be crawling from some primeval soup. Sometimes amphibian, sometimes reptilian and sometimes almost humanoid, they manage to be repulsively alien and fascinatingly familiar at the same time. According to the artist, it's because these are the stealthy critters that inhabit our subconscious — so actually, you have every reason to be afraid. (CA)



ALSO ON THUR

DJ
Jazzie B presents his Sweet 45s
Thur 2 Nov (9pm) Herbal (10-14 Kingsland Road, E2, 020.7613.4462) Tube: Liverpool Street, Old Street map

Event info
 
Soul II Soul's Jazzie B is a London clubland legend. Tonight sees him digging into his crates for soundsystem gems, dancehall faves and hip-hop classics. (KW)

  Jazzie B is the youngest of how many children? The first correct response wins an assortment of signed Jazzie B vinyl.



Friday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


ART
Alicia Dubnyckyj

when: Fri 3 - Sat 25 Nov (Mon-Fri: 10am-6pm / Sat: 12-3pm)
where: Sarah Myerscough Fine Art (15-16 Brooks Mews, W1, 020.7495.0069) Tube: Bond Street map
price:
links: Event info

Alicia Dubnyckyj's fourth solo exhibition showcases iconic cities modified by virtual jet lag. Living in the age of television means that we all think we know what world cities look like, but when we get there, we usually discover a gap between the image in our head and the image taken through our retinas. Dubnyckyj examines this mental journey, taking these preformed images and layering them with her own city experiences, then blurring the difference. Confident blocks of colour compliment her trademark high-rises, while her use of light produces a digital flat-pack assembly effect reminiscent of overlapping sheets on a projector. (JY)



FILM
Romanzo Criminale

when: Opening Fri 3 Nov
where: Various London cinemas
price: Various
links: Romanzo Criminale

With a morally dubious investigator hot on their tails, three friends rise to the top of the Roman mafia against the backdrop of turf wars, terrorism and political corruption that was the hallmark of '70s and '80s Italy. Literally translated as Crime Novel, this film is the sort of gangster movie Hollywood used to churn out constantly and successfully: one in which men are taciturn, morose and honourable, women are blips on the radar (although the face of Chanel, Anna Mouglalis, as the tough, independent gangster's moll does her best) and smug celebrities with ready quips are nonexistent. Brown houndstooth bomber jackets, flares and open-necked shirts have never looked so stylish. (AT)



ART
Late at Tate Britain

when: Fri 3 Nov (6-10pm)
where: Tate Britain (Millbank, SW1, 020.7887.8000) Tube: Pimlico, Westminster map
price:
links: Event info

London has played muse to many down the years, heaped as it is with tributes courtesy of everyone from Wordsworth to the Clash to Lily Allen. Tonight, Tate Britain joins in, turning over its monthly Late event to a host of London luminaries. The man who knows more about this city than almost any other, Iain Sinclair, launches his new book, Disappearing London, and, along with artist Grayson Perry, reveals which works in the Tate's mighty collection warm his cockles. Also hear Turner Prize nominee Mark Titchner talking grindcore with Napalm Death; explore the city sonically through DJ sets; or see London at its finest — from the top deck of a Routemaster. (CA)



FILM
Wild Japan: Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film

when: Fri 3 - Thur 30 Nov (schedule)
where: National Film Theatre (Belvedere Road, South Bank, SE1, 020.7928.3232) Tube: Embankment , Waterloo map
price: £8.60 / £6.25 concessions
links: Event info

The Magnificant Seven, Star Wars, Kill Bill: three Western films out of hundreds owing their origins to Japanese cinema. Long a fertile plundering ground for Western auteurs, Japanese film was particularly innovative and prolific during the '60s and '70s, a reaction to the regressive policies of the time. The British Film Institute looks back at this period, showing such cult classics as 1972's Female Convict Scorpion, in which a wrongly imprisoned woman goes on a vengeful rampage against the men who persecuted her. Funeral Parade of Roses (1969), supposedly Kubrick's inspiration for A Clockwork Orange, should also be a highlight. (AT)

  A symbolic giant in Japanese cinema, how tall was Akira Kurosawa in real life? The fourth and fifth correct responses each win a pair of tickets to a screening in this series.



PERFORMANCE
Janet Street-Porter

when: Fri 3 Nov (8pm)
where: Jacksons Lane Community Theatre (269a Archway Road, N6, 020.8341.4421) Tube: Highgate map
price: £14.50 / £12.50 concessions
links: Event info

She may have one of the most grating voices in the history of British television, but Ms Street-Porter is one pretty clever woman and certainly no stranger to controversy. A prolific columnist and broadcaster, she also rather famously and vociferously popped up on 2004's I'm a Celebrity, Get Me out of Here. This, her only London date, is a chance to hear her outré and entertaining comments straight from the horse's mouth as she showcases her latest book of memoirs, Fallout. (AB)

NB: There is a Q&A and signing session at the end of the evening.



DJ
Underground Sound

when: Fri 3 Nov (8pm)
where: Three Blind Mice (5 Ravey Street, EC2) Tube: Old Street, Shoreditch map
price:
links: Event info

Buried in a Shoreditch basement, there was once an iron-curtain bar called Smersh. But like the Berlin Wall, the bar that served the most lethal vodka in the West is gone, and the venue renamed Three Blind Mice — perhaps because that was about the only trio of anything you could fit in. The bar still manages to cram in a monthly night called Underground Sound, though, with hosts Gavin Fraser of Chillifunk and Dave Jarvis from Faith Fanzine both boasting previous pedigrees in party creation. With these two mining a rich vein of beats through funk, dub, disco and house, you can concentrate on some serious — albeit stationary — boogie action. (JR)



Saturday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


SPECTACLE
Blackout London

when: Sat 4 Nov (4:30-7:30pm)
where: Everywhere
price:
links: Event info

The good news: the UK is top of the table! The bad news: we're first for wasting energy. By leaving appliances on standby and forgetting to switch off lights, us Brits are set to throw away £11bn worth of energy by 2010 — that's equal to 43m tonnes of carbon-dioxide emissions. All of which makes Blackout London very timely indeed. Organisers the Workface Network are calling on everyone to switch off their lights at sunset and turn off any non-essential electrical gadgets in an effort to reduce our carbon footprint. If it's as successful as they hope, the effect will be visible from outer space. (KW)

NB: Stop Climate Chaos are holding a rally in Trafalgar Square earlier in the day (1-3pm) to protest about government inaction on climate change.



MUSIC: Afrobeat / Funk
Out of Africa feat. Wunmi

when: Sat 4 Nov (8pm-1am)
where: The Spitz (109 Commercial Street, Old Spitalfields Market, E1, 020.7392.9032) Tube: Aldgate East, Liverpool Street map
price: £10 / £7 concessions
links: Event info | Wunmi

Out of Africa is a one-of-a-kind club night preserving the exuberance of African music, adding innovative twists and prioritising fun led tonight by Wunmi. Although the artist's collaborations with Bugz in the Attic, Masters at Work and others were solid high scorers, we're especially loving her breakaway solo debut, A.L.A. (Africans Living Abroad). This gig is a tantalising live preview (with full band) of the album, bolstered by Wunmi's irresistible Afro groove. She's also a true clubber at heart, so expect a buoyantly explosive set — and an outfit to match. (JY)



ALSO ON SAT

SPECTACLE
Battersea Park Fireworks 2006
Sat 4 Nov (6:30pm) Battersea Park (Albert Bridge, SW11) BR: Battersea Park, Queenstown Battersea map £5

Event info
 
London's biggest firework display arrives complete with plenty of global cuisine, mulled wine and music. What Mr Fawkes would have made of the "spaceships and aliens" theme, however, is anyone's guess. (KW)

NB: The firework show starts at 8pm.



Sunday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


MUSIC: Balkan Folk / Alt-Country
Calexico w/ Beirut

when: Sun 5 Nov (7pm)
where: Roundhouse (Chalk Farm Road, NW1, 0870.389.1846) Tube: Chalk Farm map
price: £17.50
links: Venue info | Calexico | Beirut

Zach Condon is a shy 20-year-old from Santa Fe, New Mexico. In September, indie label 4AD — home of M. Ward, for one — signed Condon under his Beirut band name, and they're offering up an expanded version of his debut album, The Gulag Orkestar, as an official UK release tomorrow. Moving on from comparisons to the Arcade Fire, Gogol Bordello or Rufus Wainwright, imagine a brand of Eastern European gypsy folk played on accordion, ukulele and euphonium, with a sole lonely voice over the top. Expect a very special night from this prodigious and unique talent. American Southwest indie stalwarts Calexico headline tonight's show, so be sure to stick around. (JR)



THEATRE
The Emperor & the Tiger

when: Sun 5 Nov (7:30pm)
where: Victoria Park (Grove Road, E3) Tube: Mile End map
price:
links: Event info

You'll have no trouble remembering what you did on the fifth of November this year if you ditch the gunpowder plot for a Bengali folk story. This large-scale outdoor theatre event does exactly that, by relocating its tale from the Houses of Parliament to Tower Hamlets and replacing Guy Fawkes with a 6m-long, 3m-high, animated, roaring, pyrotechnic tiger. Special effects are paramount, but the aerial firework-display finale is the pièce de résistance. Featuring Tiger East Team up front, the not-so-behind-the-scenes crew are Walk the Plank (striking matches) and Kinetika (pulling the magic strings). Ignition please. (JY)

NB: An audience of 15,000 is expected, so get there in good time if you want to be close to the action.



Monday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


MUSIC: Pop
Max Sedgley & the Shoots w/ Bussetti

when: Mon 6 Nov (7:30pm)
where: The Luminaire (311 High Road, NW6, 020.7372.7123) Tube: Kilburn map
price: £12 / £10 adv
links: Event info | Max Sedgley | Bussetti

Max Sedgley plays festival music to ease your post-festival season blues: laidback grooves to drift along to on sunny, green-grass afternoons and filthily electro funk for when the sun goes down. Having killed on the dance floors this summer with the bottom-heavy catchiness of "Happy", he's now taking his new album to the masses. Live, the driving rhythms and molasses-thick vocals of backing band the Shoots will have you wearing the soles of your shoes thin from dancing with joyful abandon. This is a great chance to catch the jazzy, ska-inflected mischievousness of support act Bussetti, too. (CA)

  What album best eases your post-festival season blues? The two most comforting responses in 50 words or less each win a pair of tickets to this show.



Ongoing / Upcoming TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


MULTIMEDIA
Game On

when: Now until Sat 25 Feb, 2007 (daily: 10am-6pm)
where: The Science Museum (Exhibition Road, SW7, 0807.870.4868) Tube: South Kensington map
price: £8.50 / £6.50 concessions
links: Event info

Game On explores the history, technology and culture of computer gaming over the last 40 years, from early arcade games such as 1962's Spacewar to new innovations including Eyetoy, along with everything Atari, Sega or Nintendo-esque in between. For those fancying a time-warp trip back to their teenage years (or those who are still kind of stuck in that period, gaming-wise), the exhibition also features more than 100 games to play on site, including classics such as Space Invaders, Super Mario Bros., Tomb Raider and Sing Star Party. (SNR)



READING: Upcoming
George Monbiot: Heat

when: Tue 7 Nov (6:30pm)
where: Bookmarks (1 Bloomsbury Street, WC1, 020.7637.1848) Tube: Holborn, Tottenham Court Road map
price: £3
links: Event info | George Monbiot

Columnist, campaigner and writer George Monbiot's new book, Heat, tackles the biggest current threat to humanity: climate change. Importantly, it offers hope, spelling out how developed countries can achieve the 90% cut in carbon emissions needed to avoid global catastrophe. He takes on obvious targets — the nuclear industry, big business, politicians — but also microgeneration of energy (inefficient), carbon offsetting (false accounting) and land-based windfarms (offshoring much better). Even green campaigners such as David Bellamy and Coldplay's Chris Martin come in for some stick. Meticulously referenced and impassionedly written, if this was Spinal Tap, Heat would be a gas-mark 11 wake-up call. (KW)



MUSIC: Upcoming
Spank Rock

when: Thur 16 Nov (7:30pm-midnight)
where: Scala (275 Pentonville Road, N1, 020.7833.2022) Tube: King's Cross map
price: £10.50 advance
links: Event info

Spank Rock are just one of those bands who critics unabashedly love yet the music-buying public at large can't seem to assimilate into their narrow definition of hip-hop. This is a pity, as the Baltimore-based crew's debut album, Yo Yo Yo Yo Yo, could in time become a genuine hip-hop classic. Old-school beats underpin bleeping electro and some of the filthiest rhymes ("Backyard Betty" and "Touch Me", especially) ever put down on vinyl. Live, it's very much a case of booty-shaking and — as evidenced by their opening slot on Beck's recent US tour — booming djembe drumming. If N*E*R*D, Roots Manuva or just down 'n dirty beats are your thing, give Spank Rock a try. (NC)



Features TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


  EATING & DRINKING: Les Trois Garçons  

when: Mon-Sat: 7pm-midnight
where: Les Trois Garçons (1 Club Row, E1, 020.7613.1924)
tube: Shoreditch
price: Mains roughly £20

Les Trois Garçons is easily recognisable from the two flaming torches by its entrance in the heart of East London. The former Edwardian pub, converted into a very unconventional restaurant, offers a unique gastronomic experience. The décor resembles a surreal painting, with dim lights building a romantic ambience that soon clashes with bizarre taxidermy, handbags hanging from the ceiling and crystal chandeliers. With bric-a-brac, gadgets and antiques all around, it's difficult to discern whether you're at a museum or a restaurant, but once you've been amazed by the sights, you'll next be amazed by the tastes on offer. The menu covers a range of exquisite and innovative dishes, the very French wine list is extensive and the service always impeccable and friendly. (GP)


 


  CD REVIEW: Various Artists, Live at Electroacoustic Club Volume 2  

Running Jump
Available 13 Nov
£4.99 (Amazon)

There's this pub called the Slaughtered Lamb in Farringdon where, every Thursday in the basement, Running Jump Records invite various acts to play their own interpretations of "electro-acoustic" music. Sometimes it's jazzy, folksy or loud, funny or rude; sometimes it's sad or busy, quiet or political, often eliciting responses of, "Yeah, that was strange", or "Hire this band for my wedding reception!" Once a year, however, the best of the acts play some special shows, and the sounds go down a wire and onto a tape. This, the second collection commemorating these performances, already feels like a classic. You don't need artist's notes to appreciate Stephen Junior's unplugged rock epic "Some Snakes Are Handbags" or to fall in love with the silk-spun, folky jazz vocals of Miss Jo Williams on "Call Me". (JR)


 


  STREAMS: XLR8R Incite  

For some time now, our good friends at the electronic music/culture/style magazine XLR8R have been cranking out some formidable free podcast material every week via their Incite page. SF-based DJ and regular XLR8R columnist Kid Kameleon recently threw down a nice mix documenting the red-hot dubstep scene, which finally — after years percolating in the UK — is making stateside waves. In a separate 'cast, Berlin-based breakcore producers Society Suckers wax poetic about their rave/punk/noise sound in an exclusive interview. And next time you're visiting the news agent, be sure to pick up the XLR8R Berlin special, which digs deep for the restaurants, clubs, museums and bars worth a visit after passing through customs at Tegel. (CJN)



 


Flavorinfo TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


 
 
Header Design:
Yuko Shimizu
 
Editors:
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Jennifer Chen
Lucy C. Davies
Jocelyn K. Glei
Doug Levy
Sascha Lewis
Mark Mangan
Colin J. Nagy
Joe Rudkin
Jonathan Schultz
Kieran Wyatt
Julie Yau
 
ABOUT US
Flavorpill LDN is a free weekly email magazine covering cultural happenings across art, music, film, theatre, dance, literature and DJ events. You may have noticed we recently dropped the "u" from Flavourpill, but never fear: despite our American roots, all content continues to be produced by a local team of writers in London. We don't include sold-out events, and all listings are pure editorial — no money is accepted from venues, artists or promoters. Read more about us.
 
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