Showing posts with label ACBA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ACBA. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Dave Dyment | My Friend Goo






Dave Dyment
My Friend Goo
Toronto, Canada: Paul + Wendy Projects, 2025
38 pp., 25 x 17 cm. staple bound
Edition of 200


Astutely recognizing that the subject matter touched on a number of my interests1, Paul Van Kooy commissioned me to write a text about Raymond Pettibon’s cover for Sonic Youth’s Goo LP and the subsequent hundreds of memes it has inspired. We amassed over a hundred of them, most of which appear in this little publication, and I wrote a text that attempts to make sense of them. 

It traces the way a Moors Murders paparazzi photo became a Raymond Pettibon drawing, then a cover for Sonic Youth’s major label debut and then a template for people to address subjects as varied as companionship, fandom, escape, corruption, trans rights, police killings, threats to democracy around the world, Covid19, and countless other contemporary concerns. 

The book is designed by Emma Wright (who designed Roula’s fantastic Index), features a cover illustration by Leanne Shapton2 and comes with a bookmark by Jonathan Monk3.

Thanks, of course, to Paul, Wendy, Emma, Leanne, Jonathan, Lee, and Roula. And special thanks to Annie Koyama for making this (and so many other things) possible.

The book is available from the publisher, here

1. Sonic Youth, Raymond Pettibon, album covers by artists, the ways that culture takes shape, etc.
2. Leanne Shapton is an artist, art director and publisher. She has designed lettering for the covers of two  Chuck Palahniuk novels and the credits of Noah Baumbach’s The Squid and the Whale. She also created the "armpit sex drawing" for Spike Jonze's 2013 film Her.
3. The first hundred copies include a bookmark made from a receipt drawing with an illustration of another SY album cover, Daydream Nation (see next post). 


"A wonderful look into not just our mashup but the whole history of them. I loved the historical antecedents - and the footnotes are as good a read as the text! Really wonderful to have this text about (or, in reference to) our album cover and Ray’s drawing.”
- Lee Ranaldo




Monday, September 30, 2024

Liquid Liquid | Optima




Liquid Liquid 
Optimo
San Francisco, USA: Superior Viaduct, 2015
12” EP, 45 rpm
Edition size unknown


The third and final EP by Liquid Liquid with Richard McGuire was released in 1983, by the label 99 Records, whose small but mighty roster of artists included Glenn Branca, Bush Tetras, ESG, Congo, and Vivien Goldman (though they famously passed on signing Sonic Youth). 

Despite selling upwards of 30,000 copies when it was released, Optima was fetching as much as three hundred dollars on Discogs, so this 2015 reissue by Superior Viaduct1 was warmly received by record collectors, and soon became out-of-print itself. 

The dance-punk classic features only four songs, with one of them being the band’s most widely recognized song, or at least most widely recognized bass line. 

Grandmaster Melle Mel used Richard McGuire’s infectious bass part from Liquid Liquid's “Cavern” to drive his anti-drug anthem "White Lines (Don't Do It)”. The song was released a few months after “Cavern”, and quickly overshadowed it. 

I always assumed it was a sample, but the Sugarhill Records house band performed a cover of the Liquid Liquid track, which formed the basis of “White Lines”. 

Bass Player Doug Wimbish told Bass Guitar Magazine in 2009 that “A lot of Sugar Hill records that we recorded were clichéd riffs that DJs would spin in the club. We would record those riffs, and that particular song, the main part was by a band called Liquid Liquid.”

Stylus Magazine ranked "Cavern" #49 on its list of the "Top Basslines of All Time”. Guitar World ranked it at #32.2

99 Records sued Sugar Hill for copyright infringement - not just the recognizable bass line, but other rhythmic and melodic elements were used. Even some vocal phrasing and lyrics from “Cavern” appeared in “White Lines”. 

McGuire recalls label founder Ed Bahlman being asked by Sugar Hill to “take a ride” to sort out the publishing dispute. Bahlman reportedly feared for his life, and - after being told “We know where you live” - moved back home with his parents. Some of the (possibly apocryphal and certainly impossible to corroborate) scare tactic stories involve bricks through the company’s store windows and customers frightened by machete-wielding lunatics. 

Sugar Hill was ordered to pay $660,000 but instead declared bankruptcy. Bahlman shut down 99 Records, because of the case's legal costs, which apparently were around $60,000 (or $181,787.87 accounting for inflation). 

McGuire left the band to pursue his burgeoning visual arts career. 

In addition to performing the class bass line, he also designed the cover artwork for Optima (as he had for the previous EPs). He hoped to capture the songs' rhythms, which he described as "like standing in the middle of four tornados all swirling around”. The band’s name is spelled out in stacked letters, beside the doubled word on a vertical baseline. McGuire wanted it to be readable in two directions so "that you had to move it to read it." 

In 2017, Pitchfork awarded the EP (which clocks in at under fourteen minutes) a rare 10/10 score. The other two records that preceded it were rated 9.1 and 9.2



1. The Superior Viaduct label has reissued classic rarities from many artists and musicians relevant here, including: Suicide, David Cunningham, Gavin Bryars, William S Burroughs, Tony Conrad, Pascal Comelade, The Residents, Sun Ra, Steve Reich’s Four Organs, Jean Dubuffet, Laraaji, and Fluxus artists Yoshi Wada, Henry Flynt, Takehisa Kosugi, La Monte Young and Marian Zazeela. 

2. It’s rare a song would be recognizable to the average music listener by a bar or two of its bass part. Only a few immediately come to mind: "Walk on the Wild Side" by Lou Reed, "Cannonball "by the Breeders, "Come Together" by the Beatles, "Stand by Me" by Ben E. King, and "Under Pressure" by David Bowie and Queen (another bass hook made more famous through Hip-Hop appropriation). 




"The big beat becomes itself on their third EP, Optimo, recorded at Radio City Music Hall Studios. (This was not as spacious as the name suggests.) Of the four immaculate songs, one secured Liquid Liquid a permanent place in the pop songbook. “Cavern” is rooted to McGuire toggling between the notes A and C on his bass, playing the kind of hitched, self-fading line that no trained player would ever be able to write. It is as much the sound of being unable to play as it is some kind of clever phrasing. It is beyond clever when paired with the drumming, percussion, and vocals. “Cavern” is always there, already rotating and coming at you from behind the sun and under the earth."
- Sasha Frere-Jones, Pitchfork 










Thursday, August 15, 2024

ACBA: Marian Zazeela for Pandit Pran Nath’s Ragas








Pandit Pran Nath [Marian Zazeela]
Ragas
Paris, France: Shandar, 1971
12” vinyl record
Edition size unknown


A year prior to the release of this record, Pandit Pran Nath travelled from India (where he taught at the University of Delhi) to visit New York City, at the urging of composer La Monte Young and his visual artist partner Marian Zazeela. He lived the rest of his life in the city. 

Young and Zazeela became disciples, and the three played together often. On this recording, released on the short-lived but influential Shandar label, Young provides liner notes and Zazeela’s distinctive calligraphy and mark-making serve as the album cover’s design. 

Pran Nath passed in 1996 and Zazeela died on March 28th of this year, at the age of 83. 




Monday, February 12, 2024

Barbara Kruger/Consolidated | Business of Punishment






Barbara Kruger/Consolidated
Business of Punishment
New York City, USA: London Records, 1994
2 LP set, 70:24
Edition size unknown


Other than an obscure 7” single released in 1992 in an edition of 500 numbered copies, Consolidated’s fourth full length LP is the only album cover to feature a design by Barbara Kruger. 

The work is included in the collection of the MoMA library, here





Thursday, November 30, 2023

Minutemen/Raymond Pettibon | Bean-Spill



Minutemen 
Bean-Spill 
Los Angeles, USA: Thermidor Records, 1982
7” vinyl
Edition size unknown


I’ve been doing research for a text about Raymond Pettibon and discovered this obscurity in the MoMA library collection. It’s the third EP and fourth release overall by American hardcore punk band Minutemen. 

Early pressings featured a B-side label reproduction of a Raymond Pettibon drawing of a naked man with an erect penis, the spindle hole of the seven inch becoming his asshole. The parenthetical caption below reads “(We need the money).”

Minutemen were the second release on SST records, the label formed to release Black Flag records. It also featured a cover graphic by Pettibon. 

When Henry Rollins joined Black Flag as front person in 1981, he requested a "fuck you" middle finger illustration from Pettibon, for the song "My Rules." The artist’s response was to produce a drawing of a lackadaisical and effete finger (see below). 

“Don’t tell Ray what to do,” Rollins realized, "You'll notice there's a solid year of Black Flag flyers where it's nothing but erect penises."

Pettibon told Time Out in 2017:  “My brother was in Black Flag, and they were very good at self-promotion. I actually used my existing drawings for the posters and other stuff I did for them and eventually for Sonic Youth. I always drew what I wanted; I never listened to any bright ideas coming from punk rockers.”







Tuesday, June 6, 2023

Yoko Ono | Season of Glass album cover





"Yoko called me. She wanted me to help her take a picture of the glasses that John was wearing on the night that he was shot. She took out John's glasses and the glasses are broken and bloody. We were both crying and it was really horrible to see them. It's not just a picture of some bloody glasses, it's a horrible moment brought out in public and stated publicly. Why shouldn't she shared that? What can't she share that? That's what she saw. 
- Bob Gruen, photographer


"I used a photo I took of John’s blood-stained glasses on the record cover. The record company called me and said the record shops would not stock the record unless I changed the cover. I didn't understand it. Why? They said it was in bad taste. I felt like a person soaked in blood coming into a living room full of people and reporting that my husband was dead, his body was taken away, and the pair of glasses were the only thing I had managed to salvage – and people looking at me saying it was in bad taste to show the glasses to them. "I'm not changing the cover. This is what John is now," I said."
— Yoko Ono




Saturday, June 18, 2022

ACBA: The Alps/Tauba Auerbach Easy Action LP









The Alps/Tauba Auerbach
Easy Action LP
Brooklyn, USA: Mexican Summer, 2011
31 × 31 cm.
Edition of 1000 copies





Wednesday, November 4, 2020

ACBA: Lawrence Weiner for Thick Pigeon








[Lawrence Weiner] Thick Pigeon
Too Crazy Cowboys
Manchester, UK: Factory Records, 1984
12" vinyl LP
Edition size unknown


The 1984 debut from the New York Art Rock duo of Miranda Stanton and Carter Burwell.

Burwell would later find success as a soundtrack composer, scoring three films by Todd Haynes, three for Spike Jonze, almost every movie by the Coen Brothers, and every film by Martin McDonagh. He received Oscar nominations for his scores to Haynes' Carol and McDonagh's Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.

Miranda Stanton played bass in a band with Kim Gordon called CKM, which was formed in order to participate in a festival organized by Dan Graham. It was their first and final performance, but Stanton introduced Gordon to Lee Ranaldo and Thurston Moore, who and they soon after formed Sonic Youth together. (Moore also appears on the Thick Pigeon song "Pope", which is available on the 2003 reissue of Too Crazy Cowboys). 

Stanton's other Factory Records connections include the single "Wheels Over Indian Trails" (produced by Stephen Morris and Gillian Gilbert from New Order),  a cover of Joy Division's "Love Will Tear Us Apart", and guest vocals on recordings by the Durutti Column. 

She also had an acting career, appearing in three films by Jonathan Demme: Something Wild, Married to the Mob, and Silence of the Lambs. She played the lead role in the small art-house film Souvenir, directed by Michael H. Shamberg of Factory Records US. 

Shamberg invited Lawrence Weiner to design the album cover, which features a die-cut jacket. 

In a 2003 review for Pitchfork, William Bowers gave the record a 2.1 out of 10, noting "don't buy this Thick Pigeon reissue unless you love post-Warhol sub-glam absurdist-meets-infantile eighties-underground New York-ness, or atrocious-Tony-Wilson hair-era Factory."

Saturday, May 18, 2019

Album Covers by Artists: Peter Liversidge for Low













Low/ Peter Liversidge
Double Negative 
Seattle, USA: Sub Pop, 2018
12" vinyl LP
Edition size unknown

Double Negative is Low's 12th album, which Pitchfork describes (in a 8.7 out of 10 review) as an "album with noise coming out of its wounds."

The record features "Artwork and Photography" credited to London-based artist Peter Liversidge. Pictured above is the "Loser Edition", the first run of colored vinyl. The LP also included a card-stock mask insert.

The imagery is based on the pareidolia-type faces that have long-appeared in Liversidge's work (see below). His relationship with the band dates back to the stage design and projection backdrop he created for their Royal Festival Hall performance in 2012. They worked together again a year later, for their performance at London's Barbican Centre in April 2013. Liversidge also designed the cover for their 2015 LP Ones and Sixes, which featured images of an owl photographed in British Columbia.


"25 years later, [Low] are completely reinventing themselves via deconstruction and manipulation. These are soundscapes and collages as much as traditional songs, yet they engage in the same way Low always has, and the sounds that are not there remain as important as the ones that you hear. Having worked with celebrated artist Peter Liversidge previously, it makes sense then that they would be drawn to a photo of one of his simple mask sculptures. Liversidge is an artist I tend to enjoy in ways that I may not always be able to explain (“I know it when I see it”) and often his executions leave me wanting a little. Not so with these masks, which boil things down in such a manner that I find them irresistible. Just two eye holes in this case to let you know what you are dealing with. In the end, it’s the perfect pairing, as Low does exactly the same thing with their music."






Sunday, July 15, 2018

ACBA: Raymond Pettibon for Sonic Youth





Sonic Youth [Raymond Pettibon]
(Over) Kill Yr Idols
Newtonville, USA: Forced Exposure, 1985
17.8 × 18.4 cm.
Edition of 1246

Early 7" single recorded live in Berlin in 1983 and released alongside Forced Exposure magazine #7/8, and made available to Forced Exposure subscribers. Between ten and twenty test pressing copies have covers fully hand-coloured by Thurston Moore and a significant proportion of all copies feature some hand colouring.


Sunday, October 15, 2017

ACBA: Banksy for the Capoeira Twins




BANKSY/Capoeira Twins
Blowpop Records
Bristol, UK: Blowpop Records, 1999
30.48 x 30.48 cm.
Edition of [approx.] 100


Banksy was reportedly friends with the owner of the the short-lived Bristol record label Blowpop Records and designed and executed this cover free of charge. The disk is a 12" single by the Capoeira Twins (Ian Stratford, Tim Hancock) and features the songs 4X3 and Truth Will Out.

A plain white cardboard sleeve features a spray-painted stencil depicting a matador shaking a cape at a muscle car with bull horns mounted to its roof. With fewer than 100 copies known to have been created, the disc is valued at around $4000 US.

4x3 can be heard on Youtube, here.


Tuesday, May 24, 2016

This week on Tumblr: Andy Warhol Album Covers




This week on Tumblr: album covers designed by Andy Warhol (The Rolling Stones, The Velvet Underground, John Cale, John Lennon, Aretha Franklin, Moondog, Count Basie, etc.) and album covers that incorporated Warhol's graphics (The Smiths, Debbie Harry).

Saturday, November 7, 2015

ACBA: Raymond Pettibon for the Charms





The Charms
Fertility

Brujo Records, Portland, USA: Brujo Records, 1993

7" vinyl record
Edition size unknown

45 rpm vinyl single featuring the songs "Fertility" and "Bessie Brings the Ribbon Home." Cover and verso art by Raymond Pettibon.

Friday, October 30, 2015

Album Covers by Artists: Roman Signer for Elliott Sharp, Melvin Gibbs and Lucas Niggli



Elliott Sharp, Melvin Gibbs, Lucas Niggli
Crossing The Waters
Zurich, Switzerland: Intakt Records, 2013
Audio CD
Edition size unknown

This seven-track CD features a cover photograph by Roman Signer.

Monday, October 19, 2015

ACBA: Robert Longo for Dominic Woosey






Dominic
 Woosey
Straylight

Offenbach a.M., Germany: Recycle or Die Records, 1992

Audio CD, digipack

Edition size unknown

The inaugural release from Recycle or Die Records is Berlin-school trance electronica with a cover that reproduces a painting by Robert Longo. Trib, from 1991, is 78cm x 58cm., and made with gesso and acrylic on newspaper.

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

ACBA: Albert Oehlen for Child Abuse








Child Abuse
Child Abuse
New York City, USA: Lovepump United, 2007
Audio CD
Edition size unknown


The nine-song debut album by Child Abuse features the 2005 painting Chucky by Albert Oehlen (acrylic, oil and paper on canvas, 290 x 230 cm; private collection). Seven years later the group's Trouble in Paradise LP also featured a cover by Oehlen.

Saturday, July 25, 2015

ACBA: Lawrence Weiner for Of Factory New York










[Various artists]
Of Factory New York
Brussels, Belgium: Factory Benelux, 2014
double 12" vinyl LP
Edition size unknown


Michael H. Shamberg has collaborated with a variety of artists and filmmakers including Robert Frank, Robert Longo, William Wegman and Chris Marker, but remains best known for his longterm work with the band New Order. He was the founder and former head of Factory Records U.S., and produced some of the group's best known videos, including "Blue Monday" and "True Faith". Shamberg was diagnosed with a progressive neurological disease in the early 2000s and died on November 1st of last year. New Order released a statement on their website that read:

"We are very sad to learn that our friend and colleague Michael H. Shamberg passed away on Saturday 1st November after a long illness...Michael was the founder of Factory US and New Order’s video producer, alongside his own work as film maker, teacher and director of Turtle Salon...His video production of "True Faith" earned "Best Music Video" at the Brit Awards 1988. We will miss him dearly and send our condolences to all his family and friends." Former bassist Peter Hook told the Manchester Evening News, "His work on our videos, so important at the time, defined our image and an era. He was a true revolutionary."

In 2011, New Order performed several benefit concerts for Shamberg and this double LP was released six month before his death, with the proceeds going towards the costs of his medical treatment. Put out by the Belgian counterpart of Factory Records, the disk features tracks by A Certain Ratio (who Shamberg made the short film Tribeca about), Cabaret Voltaire, Section 25, Quando Quango and others. It also features a live New Order song unavailable elsewhere.

The cover design is based on a New Order concert poster from 1983, designed by Lawrence Weiner, as seen below in Weiner's Posters: November 1965 - April 1986.