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		<title>PETER HOLSAPPLE AND CHRIS STAMEY: CRAZY IN RETROSPECT</title>
		<link>http://larecord.com/interviews/2009/07/17/peter-holsapple-and-chris-stamey-interview-crazy-in-retrospect</link>
		<comments>http://larecord.com/interviews/2009/07/17/peter-holsapple-and-chris-stamey-interview-crazy-in-retrospect#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2009 19:51:16 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://larecord.com/?p=32944</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Chris Stamey and Peter Holsapple were (legendarily) the only people in North Carolina who bought Big Star albums the very first time around, and they’d team up most famously for the power-pop band the dB’s. (Stamey would also release Chris Bell’s 45 and Holsapple would go on to play with Hootie and the Blowfish!) They are now teamed up as a band with no official name. This interview by Dan Collins.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="/blog/wp-content/themes/Enjoy LA Record/images/features/0709holsapplestamey_lg.jpg" alt="" width="488" /><br />
<em><a href="http://www.deadsparrow.com">nathan morse</a></em></p>
<p><strong>Stream: Peter Holsapple and Chris Stamey &#8220;Here And Now&#8221;</strong></p>
<p><strong></p>
<p></strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.bar-none.com/">(from <em>hERE aND nOW </em>out now on Bar/None)</a></strong></p>
<p><em>Chris Stamey and Peter Holsapple were (legendarily) the only people in North Carolina who bought Big Star albums the very first time around, and they’d team up most famously for the power-pop band the dB’s. (Stamey would also release Chris Bell’s ‘I Am The Cosmos’ 45 and Holsapple would go on to play with R.E.M. and Hootie and the Blowfish!) They are now teamed up and touring as a band with no official name. This interview by Dan Collins.</em></p>
<p><strong>Peter, you joined a band when you were eight?</strong><br />
<em>Peter Holsapple (guitar/vocals): </em>What?<br />
<strong>Admittedly, this is from Wikipedia. But it says you were born in &#8217;56 and joined a band in 1964.</strong><br />
<em>Peter: </em>That is true. I played in combos. But they weren’t professional. The first professional band I played in was when I was 12—when I earned money. We lived in a city with a lot of very active places for young people to play.  They were the assembly halls for churches. On the weekends they’d get a PA and bands would play. That was kind of fun.<br />
<strong>Did you ever cut a single?</strong><br />
<em>Peter:</em> No. Chris and Mitch [Easter] and I had a band that had an album in 1973 called Rittenhouse Square. It was not very good! It was what you’d expect out of 14- or 15-year-olds. We certainly listened to a lot of Yes, a lot of the Move. Things were funny and grind-y, but in retrospect it’s pretty naïve stuff.<br />
<strong>Sounds like you met each other early in life.</strong><br />
<em>Peter: </em>Chris and Mitch were ahead of me in school. I do remember him standing in the parking lot of the school with an instrument case waiting for his parents to pick him up. His dad was a pediatrician in town—a lot of people went to Dr. Stamey! I saw him as a sort of inroads in a lot of ways. When I met him, he wasn’t playing music at all. He was learning to record, which I thought was very cool.<br />
<strong>Yeah! And Chris, you produced Peter’s band Little Diesel in ’74.</strong><br />
<em>Chris Stamey (guitar/vocals):</em> We made it in an afternoon in my bedroom at my parents’ house. I’d moved the bed a little bit, and I had little tweed Fender amps nailed up to the wall and we made it on a four-track tape recorder. At the time I think they made 10 copies. They recorded it on an eight-track recorder, and by that I mean a little recorder that made 8-track cartridges. There were only literally a few copies made.<br />
<strong>Do you have an 8-track you can send to me in the mail?</strong><br />
<em>Peter:</em> No! But a vinyl edition did come out a few years ago. It came out on Telstar records.<br />
<em>Chris:</em> I was talking to Mitch about how we should find that, and he was like, ‘Oh, I’ve got the master tape still!’ So we dug it out and I mixed it up a little better than I had back then, and it’s a really cool energetic record! Anybody who’s heard it loves it.<br />
<em>Peter:</em> There were a breadth of covers that we were trying to tackle. We were doing Free and Spirit and Status Quo. We didn’t really ascribe to the Allman Brothers/Marshall Tucker stuff that was popular there at the time. We sort of rooted for the underdog. That’s probably why we were such huge Move fans. That’s probably why the first song off our new album is by a band called ‘Family,’ who we love very dearly. That’s a band that had really meant an awful lot to us.<br />
<em>Chris: </em>The MC5 had just come to town and just really transformed the Winston rock scene.<br />
<em>Peter:</em> I was in school in New Hampshire at prep school for a year, during which time I did get to play in bands with Bob Tench, who went on to be Tom Petty’s keyboard player. He was one of those guys who was very deeply into the MC5 and the Stooges. The first Mott the Hoople album came out, and we really absorbed that.<br />
<strong>Did you see the revival tour the MC5 did a few years ago? Evan Dando and Mark Arm from <a href="http://larecord.com/interviews/2007/09/13/mudhoney-this-thing-called-creeping-normalcy/">Mudhoney</a> were singing with them.</strong><br />
<em>Chris:</em> And Marshall Crenshaw playing with them too—I have to say, the night I saw them in Chapel Hill, it was not a huge success, but it was only one night on a tour. It was kind of dark, I guess you’d say—the energy. The singers were reading all the lyrics—it wasn’t totally all together.<br />
<strong>Well, enough about the past—tell me about the sound on your new album. </strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>Well, what’s refreshing about talking with you is that it does remind me of a sixties interview. It’s not the usual questions. But Peter and I think about this as a band that we have together that has its own identity, and we just don’t have a band name for it. We recorded <em>Mavericks</em> in 1992, and in some ways we see this as a continuation of that.<br />
<strong>Why is that?</strong><br />
<strong>Chris:</strong> It makes a connection to I guess what used to be called ‘good guy’ radio, almost like sixties AM radio. My experience with Big Star, for example, was hearing them—they were a hit band in Winston/Salem, and they were on the radio with bands like the Grass Roots and the Seeds. It’s just that they weren’t anywhere else but my hometown. It just isn’t a Porsche—more of a Woody! A family station wagon.<br />
<strong>If somebody was a dB’s fan who had never heard this album, what differences would they see between this album and your old stuff? </strong><br />
<em>Peter: </em>dB’s records and the duet records are such that they both have as their main contributors myself and Chris. But if they’re dB’s records, they’ve got Will on drums and Gene on bass and it’s a harder rocking and slightly more frenzied thing.<br />
<em>Chris: </em>The way the dB’s bass player and drummer play together is kind of like you drop an electric blender in a bathtub, and yet it keeps running. It’s a very explosive combustible combination. And we use really good players and we have more drums on this record than we thought we would, but this is more about our guitars and our voices.<br />
<em>Peter:</em> It is two different voices! Even though Chris and I are the main guys writing for both groups. You know, there’s only been one saxophone on a dB’s record—on a single maybe. And here we’ve got Branford Marsalis who played on a couple cuts on this album.<br />
<strong>That’s a score!</strong><br />
<em>Peter: </em>Yeah, Bran is a great guy. For years I was the keyboard guy and utility guy for Hootie and the Blowfish, and Branford always came down for their charity golf tournament every year and played. A couple years ago I said, ‘Well, I’ve got these songs that would be really well served if you could find some time to come and play on it. It’s about New Orleans.’ He was like, ‘I’m busy, but let me know! We’ll make it happen.’ Both tracks were lifted incredibly by his presence.<br />
<strong>Lou Reed, before he was in the Velvet Underground, cut a single with King Curtis as the session horn guy! But I think you just beat that. Do you want to gloat at Lou Reed for besting him?</strong><br />
<em>Peter:</em> Lou’s contribution is sacred! Even his bad records aren’t that bad. I have no opportunity to diss him, frankly.<br />
<strong>A few years back you recorded an album called <em>A Question of Temperature</em>.</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>Peter and I just came up with that title, I recall. On a record with a lot of covers, to name it after a cover that we weren’t doing seemed, you know… it was originally called <em>Vote</em>, and it was done as an EP. We did too many things… it became the world’s longest EP! We put it out right before the election that John Kerry lost to try to encourage people to vote. It seems crazy in retrospect. It was then released as a regular record in January. It was never intended to be an <em>album</em>-album.<br />
<strong>What songs did you cover?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>We covered a song of mine called ‘Summer Sun.’ The Yardbirds, we did. We covered ‘Venus’ by Television.<br />
<strong>Can I get a statement from you about the death of Sky Saxon?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>He was a friend of Chilton’s. I never really met him. When I played with Alex, we used to do ‘I Can’t Seem to Make You Mine’ almost every night. Alex was a really big fan.<br />
<strong>How did you meet Alex Chilton?</strong><br />
<em>Chris:</em> I was making a record with Terry Ork. He’d put out the first Television 45, and I’d just moved to New York. And he said that they were putting out a record by Alex Chilton, and he needed a band because he was going to come up for one day—to play Valentine’s Day in New York. And Alex called me up, and we talked, and he asked me what my sign was, and everything seemed to be okay. I was playing bass—I think Tina Weymouth almost got the call, but I ended up getting it. And Alex stayed for over a year, and we kept playing. He’d stay on my couch a lot, and we went up and recorded a lot, most of which never came out.<br />
<strong>There was another celebrity death this month as well. You guys once had a song called ‘Neverland.’ Do you think Michael Jackson named his ranch after you?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>I think that would be a stretch.<br />
<strong>The dance music movement that came along in the mid-early eighties, with Michael and Prince and Sheila E.—did that eclipse the fame that bands like the dB’s might have earned?</strong><br />
<em>Peter:</em> It certainly didn’t help it get on the radio! But&#8230; the music was great. All the music was great. We felt that we weren’t particularly in competition with that.<br />
<em>Chris: </em>I think that for most bands, the whole idea of making it big wasn’t around. Once MTV came along, and it went out into the world, people got the idea, ‘Yeah, let’s make it big!’ But that wasn’t why we were making music. We weren’t trying to win the lottery.<br />
<em>Peter:</em> Even as well known as we are for our contributions to sort of ‘new wave’ with the dB’s, we had already been writing and recording well before that. We just happened to come along at the time. The dB’s didn’t even have an American label for many years.<br />
<strong>Of the people who were your contemporaries, who would you say sounded like you?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>I think the Soft Boys! I clearly thought Television had the right idea, but I think the Soft Boys would be the closest.<br />
<em>Peter:</em> Without meaning to be left of center, it appears that we were left of center. My dear friend Mark Brian from Hootie &amp; the Blowfish says things to me like, ‘You’re my favorite eccentric weird songwriter.’ And I listen to my songs, and I don’t think they’re all that eccentric and weird. They’re simple, they’re rock ‘n’ roll, they have verses, they have choruses and bridges. What’s so different? Same thing with a Michael Jackson record. They’re still set up approximately the same way. Yet there’s a world of difference between them. The thing that we’ve all had to learn over the years is that this is not about huge success. That would be wonderful! I’d love it if a song got used in a commercial that would take the load off of being an unemployed musician. If I could ever get my publishing straightened out, maybe I could do something! The great thing is that I’ve got a job that I love. I love to be a musician. I love the reaction of people when they like my songs. Maybe I’m just a ham, but I really do dig it a lot. It feels really good. I’m not really comfortable in the rest of the world. I am on stage, though. Music was just about the most important thing to me until my kids came along.<br />
<strong>Can you get your kids involved in music?</strong><br />
<em>Peter:</em> I play at my son’s school. I was the kids’ entertainer at Borders in New Orleans for about five years. I started working on a kids record, but then I realized that practically every old semi-failed new waver had done a kids record! I don’t want to be in that number until I can do something really good.  Dan Zanes does a great job! Robert Warren is great! Disney’s got the Imagination Movers—that’s just the shit! I love it! The kids love it! You want to make kids music so that parents don’t jump out the window.<br />
<strong>Chris, you haven’t released any kids albums to my knowledge—but you released Chris Bell’s first single on your label, right?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>Right! Again, that was through Alex. Alex told me about it. I was very proud to have done that, but it wasn’t anything very creative except to the extent that A&amp;R is creative. He’d made it a while back. He’d done in a guy’s garage, in a shoe box in Memphis, and then moved to London and mixed it with Geoff Emerick at George Martin’s Air studios.<br />
<strong>In the last couple decades, we haven’t heard a whole lot from you! Have you been recording and producing bands or selling crystal meth, or what?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>I do an album or two a month—some mixing, some producing. I probably work on about fifteen records a year. I just did a band called Megafaun. I did Rosebuds, on Merge. The Old Ceremony. Luego, which hasn’t come out yet…<br />
<strong>How about some L.A. bands?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>I did a whole bunch of recordings with Patrick Park! I don’t think he qualifies as a ‘band,’ but if anybody qualifies as a one-man band, he can really do it. That would be the most recent thing. I lived there, working there with Scott Litt on a Flat Duo Jets record for a while at Ocean Way, which became Cello. I definitely put in time in California. In a lot of ways, I consider the span I spent with Peter Holsapple to be a California band. We really started in L.A. We live in North Carolina, but the spirit of our birth was really in the Santa Monica kind of thing.<br />
<strong>I have the <em>Sharp Cuts</em> compilation you came out on in 1980 on Planet Records with ‘Soul Kiss.’ You’re on there with a lot of other L.A. bands. Did that record come about because of your association with people out here?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>No, I think that would be prior to it. I think we just got a call about it. I do remember they accidentally put the wrong tape on there, which always bugged me. That was a joke mix! It never was supposed to be out like that.<br />
<strong>If it makes you feel better, on the album sticker, they list Suburban Lawns twice and forgot to list the Alleycats.</strong><br />
<em>Chris:</em> It figures.<br />
<strong>Besides just songs, did people constantly misspell the ‘dB’s’ name on albums and flyers and such?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>I think we knew we were in for trouble. It was interesting to see how things change in translation. I kind of liked that it did change all the time, but I guess it was an uphill struggle.<br />
<strong>Did people ever spell it ‘D-e-e-B-e-e-s’ like the Bee Gees?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>I think we’ve had every kind of possible ramification. The embarrassing thing is that we never should have put the apostrophe in there to begin with. It was archaic even then. It’s pretty incorrect.<br />
<strong>I was listening to your early discography, Chris, and I feel like you were playing a brand of power-pop that even now sounds a bit more youthful. I feel like other power-pop sounded a bit mannish, and yours sounds more teenaged—even maybe had a bit of a bubblegum feel. </strong><br />
<em>Peter:</em>We listened to everything—depending on what you feel is bubblegum. I was married to Susan Cowsill of the Cowsills, so I love the Partridge Family. I love the stuff that was on Buddah, the Kasenetz-Katz Orchestra and things like that. But I don’t love it anymore than I love Otis Redding or the Dave Clark Five or Big Star. I will admit to having listened to more than the lion’s share of AM radio. Anything that goes from about 1964-1974.<br />
<strong>Did you have a hard time convincing your peers to appreciate something more gentle and delicate? </strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>I always played with good musicians, and we just talk about how to play music. You know on iTunes, they have a little pull-down things for genre when you want to make an MP3? I actually think I do more ‘folk rock’ over ‘power pop.’<br />
<strong>What folk rock bands inspired you?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>I would say the Byrds would be the biggest.<br />
<strong>Speaking of 8-tracks, you guys did a lot of cassette releases as the dB’s. You did one that came in an actual can! Wasn’t that expensive?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>We didn’t get the bill, but I don’t think it was that expensive. Probably a big waste of chow mein noodles or something! Cans can’t really cost that much—otherwise, they wouldn’t put cheap food in them.<br />
<strong>Did the people who bought them actually have to use a can opener to get the tape out?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>Oh yeah!<br />
<strong>Why did things end? Why did you shelve the dB’s?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>I think it’s more of a mystery why things continue. I look at bands I like like Blind Faith where they last for five months and a few gigs. It seemed like it went on a long time.<br />
<strong>And you guys are still working together as a duo, so it’s like this working relationship that was in the dB’s is still going.</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>It had started 11 years before that, really. It’s just that the dB’s got more press because there were press agents involved.<br />
<strong>Peter, you had a huge bunch of press when you played with R.E.M.</strong><br />
<em>Peter: </em>I did play with R.E.M. We did a tour for <em>Green</em>, the first album they did on Warner Brothers, and we recorded <em>Out of Time</em>—I played the acoustic guitar on ‘Losing My Religion.’ And then we went to England, and we reached a point where it was ‘untenable’ to work together. Much as I love those guys and respect what they’ve done, it was time for me to move on. I joined the Continental Drifters for ten years, and was serving in the same capacity I had with R.E.M. in Hootie &amp; the Blowfish, which was a great gig I had for thirteen years.<br />
<strong>You were saying that the dude from the Blowfish thinks you write weird songs. For our readership the weirdest thing you’ve EVER done is play in Hootie &amp; the Blowfish! </strong><br />
<em>Peter:</em> The guys in the band are remarkable people. They truly are! They worked very, very hard for their success. They did some things that were probably ill-advised—they rushed out a second record out because they were afraid their fans were sick of the first record! They were thinking of their fans, which I thought was really cool.<br />
<strong>Yeah, but… Hootie and the Blowfish! Chris, were ever moments where you were like, ‘Peter is killing the brand?’</strong><br />
<em>Chris:</em> I can’t even think in that way!  He had been doing flower deliveries in New Orleans before that happened. I can’t think of how many times he went to Vietnam with them. I think it was kind of fun!<br />
<em>Peter:</em> I would certainly rather do this than not work! That’s probably the best job I ever had. I enjoyed playing the music—it was really comfortable music, and really comforting music. It was not like playing with Yes. But to get to back up a world-class singer like Darius Rucker for 13 years was a serious honor. I was able to rope him into a tribute to Sandy Denny—I was the music director for a show that was celebrating the work of Sandy Denny, in Brooklyn, and I asked him to sing ‘Black Waterside,’ and he just tore it up! We got him on the R.E.M. tribute show at Carnegie Hall, and he did ‘I Believe’ with Calexico. People are more inclined to hate Hootie &amp; the Blowfish because they think they’ve heard Hootie &amp; the Blowfish.  But Hootie did five really good studio records. Every one of those records had songs that could have been hits on them. The shape of radio changed, and the band stuck with their style. It was tough to go from being nobody, to being a huge hit, to being a punch line. People just think it’s ‘Hold My Hand’ and Darius in a cowboy hat hawking Burger King.<br />
<strong>What’s the weirdest place you’ve ever played? </strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>They all seem so normal! With the Golden Palominos, we played the Montrose Jazz Festival. We were playing after the Herbie Hancock Quartet, with Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock. I think we played after Miles Davis, too.<br />
<strong>Have you had any crazy stories recently where you two put out an album or did a show, and some rabid fans did something&#8230; rabid?</strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>I usually hide after shows! You seem to be looking for fun, tabloid stuff, and you’re probably looking in the wrong direction. We come from a very Southern, polite tradition.<br />
<strong>I was actually at the 99 Cent Store on York in Highland Park, and ran across the Chris Stamey and Friends&#8217; Christmas album— for a buck! It wasn’t bad! Can you tell me how that came about?</strong><br />
<em>Peter:</em> I did ‘O Holy Night’ on the very first version of the Christmas album years ago. I love that stuff! I grew up in the Episcopal Church, singing in the choir. I love the popular stuff! The Beach Boys’ Christmas record, the Ventures Christmas record, the Phil Spector Christmas Gift for You, the Beatles 45. Love ‘em, love ‘em, love ‘em! And the best part of Christmas albums is that they sell every year.<br />
<em>Chris: </em>Gene Holder, who plays bass in the dB’s, always wanted to make a Christmas record, always thought that would be a fun thing to do. We were so impressed that even after I was no longer playing with the band, I wrote a song called ‘Christmas Time’ kinda with him in mind and got the other guys who had been in the dB’s to record it with me. And we put together other tracks based around that one song.<br />
<strong>Who sings ‘Silver Bells?’ That was my favorite tune off the album.</strong><br />
That was Kirsten Lambert. She’s a friend of ours who lives here. That may be her only recorded effort, as far as I know.<br />
<strong>That’s a tragedy! Tell her! If she ever goes on tour, I’ll give her an interview. </strong><br />
<em>Chris: </em>Okay—haha!</p>
<p><strong>PETER HOLSAPPLE AND CHRIS STAMEY ON FRI., JULY 17, AT McCABE’S GUITAR SHOP, 3101 PICO BLVD., SANTA MONICA. 8 PM / $20 / ALL AGES. <a href="http://www.MCCABES.COM">MCCABES.COM</a> PETER HOLSAPPLE AND CHRIS STAMEY’S <em>hEAR aND nOW</em> IS OUT NOW ON BAR/NONE. VISIT PETER HOLSAPPLE AND CHRIS STAMEY AT <a href="http://www.HOLSAPPLESTAMEY.COM">HOLSAPPLESTAMEY.COM</a> OR <a href="http://www.MYSPACE.COM/HEREANDNOWPETERANDCHRIS">MYSPACE.COM/HEREANDNOWPETERANDCHRIS</a>.</strong></p>
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		<title>YA HO WHA 13: A SPACE AND TIME OUT OF THIS REALITY</title>
		<link>http://larecord.com/interviews/2009/06/22/ya-ho-wha-13-interview-a-space-and-time-out-of-this-reality</link>
		<comments>http://larecord.com/interviews/2009/06/22/ya-ho-wha-13-interview-a-space-and-time-out-of-this-reality#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2009 22:39:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>lar_import</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Features]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[ya ho wha 13]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Ya Ho Wha 13 were the band formed out of the pre-dawn practice sessions that served also as morning meditation for the Source Family, the L.A.-area religious sect that ran their own health food restaurant during the ‘70s. Drag City has collected nine unreleased songs for this month’s <em>Magnificence in the Memory</em>. This interview by Dan Collins.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="/blog/wp-content/themes/Enjoy LA Record/images/features/0609yahowha13_lg.jpg" alt="" width="488" /><br />
champoyhate</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://larecord.com/audio/yahowha13-treatyousoright.mp3">Download: Ya Ho Wha 13 &#8220;Treat You So Right&#8221;</a></strong></p>
<p><strong></p>
<p></strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://dragcity.com/catalog/records/dc393.html">(from <em>Magnificence in the Memory</em> out June 23 on Drag City)</a></strong></p>
<p><em>Ya Ho Wha 13 were the band formed out of the pre-dawn practice sessions that served also as morning meditation for the Source Family, the L.A.-area religious sect that ran their own health food restaurant during the ‘70s. They released nine albums but recorded hours of material. Drag City has collected nine unreleased songs for this month’s </em>Magnificence in the Memory<em>. This interview by Dan Collins.</em><br />
<strong><br />
How did you get your name, Isis?</strong><br />
<em>Isis Aquarian (Source Family historian):</em> It was the family name given to me. Father said that the names we were given were for several reasons—either because that’s the name that we needed to learn from, or that’s the name of who we were, or that’s the name we needed to get qualities from. In other words, whatever name we had, nobody could go on an ego trip about because you never knew why you had that name.<br />
<strong>You never had an ego trip about being named after an Egyptian goddess?</strong><br />
No, not really! I always related to her, though. Manly P. Hall from the Philosophical Research Society—who did <em>Secret Teachings of All Ages</em>—was a mentor to Father when he was Jim Baker, before he became Father and started the Source. And we had gone over to see Manly P. Hall in the early days, and he handed Father a list of names, and he said ‘These names are the names to give the people in the Family.’ And we went back and people either picked what name they liked, or Father gave them a name. And somebody gave me the name Isis, and I didn’t relate to it. I said, ‘No, I’m not going to take that name!’ And Father was standing there and he said, ‘No, that’s your name.’<br />
<strong>What was your original role in the Family and in the Source?</strong><br />
I had known Father as Jim Baker, when he had his other restaurant called the Old World. He had three restaurants—the Aware Inn, the Old World, and he opened up the Source. And they were all within, I would say, four or five blocks of each other on Sunset Boulevard. And they were all very famous. And he had his first two as Jim Baker. I met him, he had the Old World, and he was living with his wife of the time, Dora, a French girl. And I became friends with Dora, and I hung out at the Old World. And I knew Jim, but we never seemed to really connect, which was very strange, because he was very good looking, and he was the kind that would flirt with everybody. But there just seemed to be a hold on us at the time. But then I went my way, and he went his way, and I ended up living with Ron Raffaelli. He was a famous rock photographer—he was known as Jimi Hendrix’s photographer. That’s how I met him. I was asked to go on a shoot with Jimi Hendrix, and we became engaged. And I had my life at the studio with him for a couple years. And I had heard that Jim had opened up the Source, and was being known as Father, and was starting a spiritual family. We were looking for a group of people with long hair that looked like Jesus, because we were doing a poster for <em>Jesus Christ Superstar</em>. And I said to Ron, ‘I know where there’s a bunch of people running around looking like Jesus. They’re at this place called the Source! I’m going to go down there—I’ll get us some models.’ So I drove down to the Source, and oh my god, the place was incredible. As soon as you stepped near it, you knew something was happening. And I stepped onto the patio, and I asked for Jim Baker and somebody said ‘Oh, you mean Father.’ And he came walking out, and he was like 6’3’, and he looked like Moses. He had long hair and a beard, and he was no longer the Jim Baker I knew. And I was immediately smitten, as they say, and he just embraced me and said ‘I was wondering how long it was going to take you to come home—to come back.’ And I basically forgot what I was even doing there. And he invited me to come to morning meditation the next day, and then I basically never left. So I just walked out of my home life and became a full time part of the Source family.<br />
<strong>How old were you?</strong><br />
I was in my late twenties. A lot of the kids were sixteen, seventeen, and in their early twenties. I’m not saying I was the oldest one there, but I had also known Jim Baker so I wasn’t intimidated by him. Most people were finding their guru and their masters, and I found him as my earthly spiritual father, for sure. But I knew that I had a destiny with him. I basically became his right hand—that’s what he called me. The Family had other names for me. ‘Bulldog’—you know there’s a bulldog in every family. And ‘hatchet lady,’ ‘dragon lady’&#8230;<br />
<strong>Did you like those nicknames?</strong><br />
It didn’t bother me, no. In fact, ‘Dragon Lady’ was kind of endearing! You had your role, and you played it out, and Father always had my back.<br />
<strong>When did the band Ya Ho Wa 13 start?</strong><br />
We had musicians in the Family that would always gather and play. We weren’t doing anything ‘musically,’ but we did realize we had some very talented musicians. Music seemed to be playing all around the house. And that was the thing to do back then. Everybody carried a guitar. It was like music was the new language. And one day I think Octavius came in and was talking about being a drummer, and a lot of people had been musicians, and just gave it up when they came in—whatever any of us were, we gave up when we came in. It was of no necessity at that point. And I just remember Father one day saying, ‘Wait a minute. I have a drummer. I have a guitar player. I have a bass player. We have singers. We have a band. Let’s do some music!’ So, bands started being formed to see what we wanted to do with them. And at this point, Father wasn’t really in them—he was just having fun seeing what we could do. And because we were very famous, and everybody came to the Source, all the movie producers, directors, musicians—John Lennon was there all the time—they all came there. So we figured, ‘Well jeez, we can just start letting people hear it and see if we can do something with it.’<br />
<strong>I heard you would play every day from 3 to 6 in the morning! When did you sleep?</strong><br />
Right! That was when we gathered for morning meditation. Father would be so full of energy and so excited, and he would say, ‘Let’s go to the band room!’ And the band room was just a converted garage off the meditation room, and speakers had been hooked up, so no matter what was happening, we could all hear it. Because we all couldn’t fit in the band room.<br />
<strong>A lot of your movement’s spiritual beginnings and influences have been chronicled. But what seem less well known are the specifics of the musical side of things. </strong><br />
He formed Ya Ho Wa 13 and started playing with it, and that was like his signature when he started playing with the Family. It’s not like he could play or sing. It was another way of morning meditation. It was another way of his talking about the wisdom teachings. He often said, ‘Long after I’m gone, my teachings will continue because of the music we’re doing now. Music has no barriers. Everyone understands music because it’s a soul thing.’<br />
<strong>One of the interesting things about your band is that, given your spiritual and cosmological underpinnings and your emphasis on improvisation and spontaneity, I was expecting you to sound like Sun Ra or something jazzy. But you guys are a rock ‘n’ roll combo.</strong><br />
Very much so. When the band first now started getting back together, I was wondering how it was going to work. Because when you have the head guy no longer there, how does that work? And I know the public’s been going on the albums that had Father in it, like <em>Penetration</em>. So when the three Brothers got together and decided to continue playing as Ya Ho Wa 13, it was interesting to see how that was going to play out: Octavius, drummer, Djin, guitar, and Sunflower, bass.<br />
<strong>Was there ever fighting about the music?</strong><br />
There were disagreements, but we never got into bickering or arguing. The short time we lived together was so incredible because we lived in a space and time out of this reality. Certain things didn’t exist that exist for us now that we’re back. We lived in a kind of free zone where certain rules and regulations didn’t exist. We related to people’s souls, not their personalities. When the Family dispersed—and now we’re trying to deal with each other again thirty years later—we’re just starting to relearn those techniques. In 2001, we had our first big reunion, and the last ten years we’ve just been dealing on a social level with each other and trying to be nice. A lot of stuff has come up that we never got to work on, because we all just left. It was like <em>The Day the Earth Stood Still</em>. We looked around and nobody was there.<br />
<strong>I remember reading that the Beatles were a big influence on the band.</strong><br />
I think definitely because that’s what the band grew up with. The Beatles were very cosmic. They had stepped over into spirituality, and they were given incredible messages.<br />
<strong>Were there specific Beatles songs that you wanted to emulate?</strong><br />
No, once the Family was formed we didn’t listen to other people’s music.<br />
<strong>You never stepped into a discotheque or club and heard another band?</strong><br />
The only time that happened was in the early days when we did try stuff like that. We got booked at the Whisky a Go Go, and we walked into the Whisky a Go Go in our robes and our long hair—and we did get laughed at! But when they got up on the stage, everybody was quiet because they could sing. They had some good music happening.<br />
<strong>But you must have noticed that at the same time you were making this music, bands such as Pink Floyd, they were doing the same&#8230;</strong><br />
Oh, yes, absolutely! I do know that we opened the Crater Festival in 1976, sunrise, here in Hawaii for the 200th anniversary of America, and we opened for Sly and the Family Stone. We asked for that slot, and we led the thousands of people in Diamondhead Crater in star exercise, and we got them chanting.<br />
<strong>Do you think if any band forms, even if it’s just four or five people, that something spiritual forms?</strong><br />
Music seems to touch the largest amount of people at one time than anything I know about all over the world. It has no barriers, it has no race, it doesn’t distinguish between color, religion, and nationality. You can put a song on and put it out over the airwaves, and thousands of people, their soul can get out of it whatever it gets out of it.<br />
<strong>Contemporaries of yours in the avant-garde, such as La Monte Young and Angus Maclise, have kind of said that there is a spiritual plane you can achieve with pure musical tones. Was there a certain way of playing for you that was more in tune with your spiritual quest?</strong><br />
We were into frequencies. Like—the F note is the sound of nature. And the fact that vibration, if you tune into like a F note and another F note comes before, then you vibrate. Like a tuning fork. He tried that with the gong and the kettle drum. We had the gong from <em>Dr. Zhivago</em>—the movie! He bought it and we still have it, and it’s huge! Often in morning meditation, when we weren’t even doing anything with the music, he would have us all go into meditation, and he would do the gong throughout chakras because the gong had the frequencies—all the frequencies of the chakras.<br />
<strong>There was kind of a no-drug policy, wasn’t there? Despite your band being considered psychedelic?</strong><br />
I think marijuana, since we don’t consider it a drug—that is probably being used.<br />
<strong>But psychedelics like mushrooms or LSD? </strong><br />
No, no, we didn’t do it in the Family, and as far as I know, it’s not being done now. The family dispersed and we all went our ways and created a new life with new members, and so some thirty years later, we all are not on the same page and we are not responsible for what anyone does or does not. As human beings now out here on our own, it has made it somewhat harder to ‘ante up’ as they say.<br />
<strong><a href="http://larecord.com/interviews/2007/11/15/sky-saxon-minds-were-all-blown/">Sky Saxon, who joined the band later</a>, has been known to have some drug issues. Did he have those when he was in the band?</strong><br />
Sky Saxon was an entity unto himself. He does his thing. <em>I’m</em> talking about Ya Ho Wa 13.<br />
<strong>Whoa! Are you saying the album he recorded with Ya Ho Wa 13 was outside the realm of what you consider their music?</strong><br />
Um&#8230; well, during the Family days, after Father left and said he was no longer going to be in the band, he invited Sky—‘Arelick’ was his family name—into the band. And they renamed the band Fire Water Air. And it either didn’t do anything, or we moved. We didn’t accomplish or finish a lot of what we did because we would move and go on to something else, and it was disruptive of what we were doing.<br />
<strong>Was Sky part of the Source?</strong><br />
He was. He would kind of come and go, though. Father loved him, but he was always just Sky! The way he is now is the way he was back then. And I think Sky does a lot of things that the rest of us don’t do.<br />
<strong>Was there a conscious decision about which instruments to use in the band?</strong><br />
No, that’s just the instrumentation that the band played. And I think it’s the basic formation of a band that you have drum, guitar, and bass, right?<br />
<strong>Definitely in rock ‘n’ roll. But did you ever introduce any other instruments?</strong><br />
I think they brought in Pythias for a while on guitar, and Lovely with a violin. Lovely was Andre Previn’s daughter. That was one of the forms of Ya Ho Wa 13 that Father was trying to put together. And they brought in a couple other brothers—Home, who sang and played guitar, and Rhythm, who played piano. After we left L.A., we tried different forms of the band, when we moved to San Francisco and moved to Hawaii.<br />
<strong>Brian Wilson considered himself a very spiritual songwriter, and made many songs about Hawaii. You still live there now! Is there a spiritual purity there?</strong><br />
There was to us. Hawaii is very clean. The air is clean. We don’t have pollution. We have nice weather all year. It’s called paradise for a reason!<br />
<strong>Were you happy with the Obama presidency being that he was a resident of Hawaii?</strong><br />
I don’t really ‘do’ politics, but as far as being a local Hawaii boy, he’s right here where I live—Kahlua. When he stayed here, he was just like three blocks down the street. We saw him on the beach all the time.<br />
<strong>Did he go surfing?</strong><br />
He tried to, but the Secret Service wouldn’t let him surf anymore!</p>
<p><strong>YA HO WHA 13’S <em>MAGNIFICENCE IN THE MEMORY</em> RELEASES TUE., JUNE 23, ON <a href="http://dragcity.com/catalog/records/dc393.html">DRAG CITY</a>. VISIT YA HO WHA 13 AT <a href="http://www.YAHOWHA13.COM">YAHOWHA13.COM</a>. FOR MORE INFORMATION ON YA HO WHA 13 AND THE SOURCE FAMILY, SEE <em>THE SOURCE: THE UNTOLD STORY OF FATHER YOD, YA HO WHA 13 AND THE SOURCE FAMILY</em> BY ISIS AND ELECTRICITY AQUARIAN AVAILABLE NOW FROM PROCESS MEDIA. <a href="http://www.PROCESSMEDIAINC.COM">PROCESSMEDIAINC.COM</a>.</strong></p>
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		<title>MIKE MILLS: DO IT FOR THE HEALTH INSURANCE</title>
		<link>http://larecord.com/interviews/2009/02/08/mike-mills-do-it-for-the-health-insurance</link>
		<comments>http://larecord.com/interviews/2009/02/08/mike-mills-do-it-for-the-health-insurance#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Feb 2009 00:24:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>lar_import</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Features]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[claire cronin Documentarian-filmmaker-videographer-designer and pizza-lover Mike Mills will host the first of Family’s Sunday cinema sit-downs this month, where he will present the deeply affecting Lovefilm. He speaks now to Nolan Knight about his wildlife book and his psychotherapy and he leaves details of his extensive resume (Marc Jacobs, Yoko Ono, Sonic Youth, Ed Templeton) [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.larecord.com/artwork/web/cronin-mikemills.jpg"><img src="http://www.larecord.com/artwork/web/cronin-mikemills.jpg" alt="" width="266" /></a><br />
<em>claire cronin</em><br />
<span id="more-4523"></span><br />
<em>Documentarian-filmmaker-videographer-designer and pizza-lover Mike Mills will host the first of Family’s Sunday cinema sit-downs this month, where he will present the deeply affecting </em>Lovefilm<em>. He speaks now to Nolan Knight about his wildlife book and his psychotherapy and he leaves details of his extensive resume (Marc Jacobs, Yoko Ono, Sonic Youth, Ed Templeton) to research elsewhere.</em></p>
<p><strong>For your upcoming Cinefamily event you’re screening István Szabó’s <em>Lovefilm</em>, a lesser-known Czech New Wave masterpiece. When did you see this for the first time and what aspects of it impacted you?</strong><br />
It’s actually Hungarian. Hungarians rock—such a beautiful language. I saw this maybe five or six years ago. I think it’s my favorite film. It has a beautiful structure—I won’t give it away—and it’s such a hard-to-pull of blend of totally personal autobiographical details and slivers of memories that have no apparent meaning—besides being undeniably true—and all set against the history of Hungary during the Second World War as it’s becoming part of the Soviet Union. Such a personal film—emotional and historical, the history of emotions maybe? And so quietly progressive in its filmmaking. The other great Hungarian that I frequent is Milos Foreman. Kind of a similar vibe—<em>Loves Of A Blonde</em> and <em>Fireman’s Ball</em>.<br />
<strong>And you’re in Berlin right now—what’s that like?</strong><br />
It’s pretty amazingly grey. And so hard to figure out the history here. You feel it everywhere, but so much has been erased. Bombed. I love all things Weimar Germany, and I’m trying to see it in the older buildings and famous platzes, but it’s kind of hard to get at.<br />
<strong>What does a normal Mike Mills day consist of?</strong><br />
Psychotherapy til noon, then a full day of calisthenics.<br />
<strong>How did you come across the novel <em>Thumbsucker</em> and what made you want to bring it to the big screen?</strong><br />
My friend Bob Stephenson literally read the back—or a review—and thought it sounded like me. And he was right. Walter Kirn taught me a lot about my family—put things into words in a way I couldn’t and with a humor that made all the discomfort actually appealing. I wanted to make a film for a long time—because I felt so close to the main character, I felt like I had permission to try and direct this. It was something I knew about. And no, I don’t suck my thumb—but yes, maybe I should have.<br />
<strong>What was the experience like filming in Japan for <em>Does Your Soul Have A Cold</em>? Is filmmaking abroad more strenuous?</strong><br />
Filming low budget in Tokyo is a little bonkers. I had a great time, but we had many two-hour packed subway rides while carrying all our stuff. I have a lot of friends in Tokyo, so it wasn’t as foreign as it should have been. The biggest thing to swallow was caring for and getting close with all these people struggling with depression. They were quite heroic in what they gave to the film—each one really wanted to help others like themselves—but as a director, that’s a heavy load to carry—all that responsibility. A little self promotion—that film really didn’t get it’s fair shake, but if you want to see it you can download it on iTunes! That’s the only way right now.<br />
<strong>Where do you find the most creative freedom—music videos or feature films?</strong><br />
Each video and each film is it’s own beast. That’s part of what makes it so fun and so hard. It’s like living with someone that forgets who you are every morning and you have to start over. But don’t trust anyone who uses the term ‘independent film’—that’s largely a brand name propulgated by people trying to make money via  ‘authenticity.’ On one level, a film is really just a bank loan, and the bank wants their money back. On the other hand, you don’t have to sell tickets to see videos or ads even, so weirdly, there can be a lot of freedom there. Ads are selling things, but making films is like trying to start Nike itself.<br />
<strong>Your resume transcends many mediums. When an idea or concept strikes you, do you automatically assign it a medium or let it evolve into its own self?</strong><br />
Things are always evolving and overlapping. It’s really all the same concerns and issues coming out in different contexts. When I was a kid, a favorite TV show would also have a lunch box, a song, clothes, stickers, books—the same story and identification with a character spread across a small world of goods. I think I’m just replicating that.<br />
<strong>Who are a few artists who currently inspire you and why?</strong><br />
Jeremy Deller—especially his folk archive thing. It’s so accessible and such a relief.<br />
<strong>Having done graphic design for Subliminal and Stereo decks—along with Deformer featuring Ed Templeton—are you still active within the skateboard community?</strong><br />
I go to the monthly community meetings and I make sure to vote whenever an important issue comes up. To be honest, all the union rules are a drag, but you do it for the health insurance.<br />
<strong>I read that you have a book on wildlife photography in Los Angeles underway—true or false? If true, how did this come about?</strong><br />
Yes—yes, it’s called <em>Together</em> and its about how we in L.A. live with the most wild of animals—mountain lions. It’s really about wildlife corridors. Places like bridges and horse tunnels where animals such as mountain lions can travel across freeways and around developments to re-connect different pieces of their increasingly fragmented habitat. It’s a very key issue right now—there are about ten lions in the Santa Monica mountains, but they are trapped by the 101 and 405. Unless something happens, and they can get access to more habitat to hunt and breed in a more diverse gene pool, they will become extinct in this area. While mountain lions scare us, they actually don’t want anything to do with humans. You’re more likely to die from lightning, bees or dogs than a lion in California. They are amazingly stealth, making their way around very populated areas—Brentwood, Tarzana, or the Getty—in the middle of the day while never being seen. If you want to learn more, the best meeting point for this issue is the South Coast Wildlands Project. I’ve been doing the book for years now with the photographer Takashi Homma. We trudge around in the bushes finding GPS points where collared mountain lions have been and taking pictures.<br />
<strong>What is the current state of your graphic line Humans?</strong><br />
I’m super happy to say you can get a lot of it at Family now. I’m working on my fifth year-slash-line of posters and fabrics and stuff now. It’s been a dream come true for me.<br />
<strong>What’s in store for you next?</strong><br />
If the gods are willing, I’d really like to make my next film.</p>
<p><strong>FAMILY PRESENTS AN EVENING WITH MIKE MILLS AND LOVEFILM ON SUN., FEB. 8, AT CINEFAMILY AT THE SILENT MOVIE THEATRE, 611 N. FAIRFAX AVE., LOS ANGELES. 8 PM / $12 / ALL AGES. <a href="http://CINEFAMILY.ORG">CINEFAMILY.ORG</a>. VISIT MIKE MILLS AT <a href="http://www.MIKEMILLSWEB.com">MIKEMILLSWEB.COM</a>.</strong></p>
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		<title>MIKE BONES @ FAMILY 2 PM TOMORROW FREE!</title>
		<link>http://larecord.com/news/2008/10/03/mike-bones-family-2-pm-tomorrow-free</link>
		<comments>http://larecord.com/news/2008/10/03/mike-bones-family-2-pm-tomorrow-free#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Oct 2008 22:53:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>lar_import</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[a place to bury strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[download]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fairfax]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[family]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free promotions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[l.a. record]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[LARECORD]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[los angeles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mike bones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mp3]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[secret show]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sian alice group]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[troubadour]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://larecord.com/news/2008/10/03/mike-bones-family-2-pm-tomorrow-free/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[carla brookoff Download: Mike Bones &#8220;Pope John Paul&#8221; (from The Sky Behind The Sea on Social Registry) Thanks to Nate for the set-up: New York guitarist extraordinaire Mike Bones (Vice calls him New York City&#8217;s best guitarist) will be performing a free last-minute solo show at Family on Fairfax at 2 PM tomorrow—that&#8217;s Saturday, Oct. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://a235.ac-images.myspacecdn.com/images01/57/l_e85b233ba59c715c6d02454828c2adea.jpg" width="425"><br />
<em>carla brookoff</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.larecord.com/audio/mikebones-popejohnpaul.mp3">Download: Mike Bones &#8220;Pope John Paul&#8221;</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.thesocialregistry.com/releases/tsr046.html">(from <em>The Sky Behind The Sea</em> on Social Registry)</a></p>
<p>Thanks to Nate for the set-up: New York guitarist extraordinaire <a href="www.myspace.com/littlemikebones">Mike Bones</a> (<em>Vice</em> calls him New York City&#8217;s best guitarist) will be performing a free last-minute solo show at <a href="http://www.familylosangeles.com">Family</a> on Fairfax at 2 PM tomorrow—that&#8217;s Saturday, Oct. 4—which leaves you plenty of time to come stop by the <a href="http://www.myspace.com/eaglerockmusicfest">Eagle Rock Music Fest</a> later (also free) and maybe even go see <a href="http://www.myspace.com/sianalicegroup">Sian Alice Group</a> and <a href="http://www.myspace.com/aplacetoburystrangers">A Place To Bury Strangers</a> at the <a href="http://www.troubadour.com">Troubadour</a> that night! All info: 2 PM, free, all ages, 436 N. Fairfax Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90036!<br />
<span id="more-3039"></span><br />
<a href="http://www.familylosangeles.com/blog/2008/10/mike-bones-super-last-minute-instore.html">Via the Family blog:</a></p>
<blockquote><p> Yes there is the Sunday instore with Joseph Mattson &amp; Six Organs Of Admittance but before that Please if you can come by family this saturday, october fourth, at 2pm for a very special instore with NY musician Mike Bones. Bones is currently touring as part of the very awesome Sian Alice Group but in addition to that he also writes his own beautiful songs. I am horrible at descriptions but Mike is an amazing guitarist and lyricist and all around sweetheart. Here&#8217;s the VBS tv practice space on him from a while back.</p>
<p><embed src="http://services.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f8/452319916" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" flashvars="videoId=1428675790&amp;playerId=452319916&amp;viewerSecureGatewayURL=https://services.brightcove.com/services/amfgateway&amp;servicesURL=http://services.brightcove.com/services&amp;cdnURL=http://admin.brightcove.com&amp;domain=embed&amp;autoStart=false&amp;" base="http://admin.brightcove.com" name="flashObj" seamlesstabbing="false" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" swliveconnect="true" pluginspage="http://www.macromedia.com/shockwave/download/index.cgi?P1_Prod_Version=ShockwaveFlash" height="270" width="392"></embed></p></blockquote>
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<enclosure url="http://www.larecord.com/audio/mikebones-popejohnpaul.mp3" length="5610114" type="audio/mpeg" />
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		<title>KRAMER: KEEPING IT REAL!</title>
		<link>http://larecord.com/news/2008/09/29/kramer-keeping-it-real</link>
		<comments>http://larecord.com/news/2008/09/29/kramer-keeping-it-real#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Sep 2008 15:18:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>lar_import</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[family]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[godzilla]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kramer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[movie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wu tang cream]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://larecord.com/news/2008/09/29/kramer-keeping-it-real/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Funkadelic &#8220;Funky Dollar Bill&#8221; Family&#8217;s David Kramer (who is also sometimes an L.A. RECORD writer) takes realness to the Godzilla level by appearing in this ad on the side of a giant building! Congratulations to Kramer! We can&#8217;t wait for this movie to come out!]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.familylosangeles.com/blog/uploaded_images/IMG_0209-750231.jpg" width="425" /><br />
<span id="more-3007"></span><br />
<a href="http://www.snuhfiles.com/sound/funkadelic-funky_dollar_bill.mp3">Funkadelic &#8220;Funky Dollar Bill&#8221;</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.familylosangeles.com/blog/2008/09/our-tower-of-power.html">Family&#8217;s David Kramer (who is also sometimes an <em>L.A. RECORD</em> writer) takes realness to the Godzilla level by appearing in this ad on the side of a giant building</a>! Congratulations to Kramer! We can&#8217;t wait for this movie to come out!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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<enclosure url="http://www.snuhfiles.com/sound/funkadelic-funky_dollar_bill.mp3" length="5333120" type="audio/mpeg" />
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		<title>SUN., JULY 20: TODAY&#039;S PICKS</title>
		<link>http://larecord.com/uncategorized/2008/07/20/sun-july-20-todays-picks</link>
		<comments>http://larecord.com/uncategorized/2008/07/20/sun-july-20-todays-picks#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 20 Jul 2008 16:00:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>lar_import</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[family]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[feist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[jesus and mary chain]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[los angeles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[previews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the echo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[white rainbow]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://larecord.com/prevs/2008/07/20/sun-july-20-todays-picks/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Blasters / David Serby @ Safari Sam&#8217;s Download Fest w/Jesus and Mary Chain / Gang of Four / M83 + More @ Gibson Amphitheatre Pierced Arrows @ Spaceland Feist @ Hollywood Bowl Eleni Mandell @ Silverlake Lounge White Rainbow / White Fang @ Family Hawk and Hacksaw @ The Echo]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.zigzaglive.com/live/wp-content/uploads/2007/08/jesus.jpg" width="191" /></p>
<p><span id="more-2576"></span>The Blasters / David Serby @ Safari Sam&#8217;s<br />
<strong>Download Fest w/Jesus and Mary Chain / Gang of Four / M83 + More @ Gibson Amphitheatre</strong><br />
Pierced Arrows @ Spaceland<br />
Feist @ Hollywood Bowl<br />
Eleni Mandell @ Silverlake Lounge<br />
White Rainbow / White Fang @ Family<br />
Hawk and Hacksaw @ The Echo</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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