Saturday, June 16, 2012

A Punk Tale of Two Cities


Tune in to BBC Radio 6 on Sunday for Vivien Goldman's big Punk London/New York doc, 'A Punk Tale of Two Cities' 3-5 p.m. in NY, 8-10p.m. in the UK!

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN LIVE
You can download the whole show from Monday, for a week!

These days, Vivien Goldman teaches about Punk at New York University and they call her The Punk Professor. But back in the times we're speaking about, from about 1976 to 1982, when she was one of approximately two female punk rock journalists in the UK, the whole idea of teaching Punk in a university would have been laughable. Writing for what was then a thriving weekly throng of music papers, Vivien found herself embedded in the Punk community, sharing a flat with Chrissie Hynde, forming the Flying Lizards, being produced by John Lydon. She is an absolute authority on the musical, social & political impact of punk.

She has also written extensively on reggae and its relationship with Punk. As a popular anti-authoritarian mass youth uprising, Punk, was one of the most significant social movements of the late twentieth century, and now kids round the world, from Bahrain to Indonesia to Russia, still naturally turn to the punk genre almost automatically, to express their rage. The yell of our first sort, sharp punk shock is still echoing and at this rate, will never die.

A Punk Tale of Two Cities answers a question that Punk people love to debate - where did punk begin? London or New York? Other cities try to stake a claim - Paris, for example, or Los Angeles. But everyone knows they're non-starters, really. The tension, the energy of punk, crackled between London and New York.

In this show, we'll rip the duality apart and see where punk really started. Or not. After all, Punk was never supposed to be an easy answer.

Along the way there are new insights from those who shaped Punk on both sides of the Atlantc - John Lydon, Talking Heads, Neneh Cherry, The Slits, Don Letts, Chrissie Hynde, Public Enemy, Lenny Kaye, Dennis Bovell and Patti Smith.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b010xy0m

Today is the 30th Anniversary of Bob's passing... but just as he wrote about Haile Selassie, BOB LIVES!
People still want to listen to and reflect on him. I am doing two radio pieces today, one for Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and this one for BBC Radio2, an actual documentary on BOB IN EXILE - the London years that I cover in The Book of Exodus - presented by Original I 3, Marcia Griffiths.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Village Voice. Poly Styrene and the Grown Women of Punk

http://www.villagevoice.com/2011-05-04/music/poly-styrene-lost-found/


Very happy indeed to do this article for the Village Voice on a generation of Grown Women Punks, spiraling from the loss of Poly Styrene of X Ray Spex and the Slits' Ari Up within six months.

Friday, April 29, 2011

David Byrne article FADER

http://www.thefader.com/2011/04/29/feature-david-byrne-the-artist-on-an-adventure-he-knows-will-last-forever/


Curiously this article I wrote ages ago seems to have just manifested online, according to Google Alerts anyway. One of two I did on David Byrne last year. Go figure.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Village Voice, Washington Square News & more on SUMMER NYU PUNK COURSE

http://blogs.villagevoice.com/music/2011/04/nyu_punk_class_vivien_goldman.php


This is one of the lovely articles that came out re this exciting experimental SUMMER PUNK COURSE that I am teaching at NYU. For the first time, it is open to non-NYU students.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Gary Lucas's Beefheart bash at Knitting Factory, Brooklyn Friday April 8

Some Came Running - http://somecamerunning.typepad.com/some_came_running/

A blog about the Beefheart soiree virtuoso guitarist and Beefheart maven GARY LUCAS is hosting at the Knitting Factory in Brooklyn on April 8. The lovely Hal Willner and another Goldman fave, Felice Rosser, are among the worthies gathered by Lucas for the event. I will be reading a Beefheart lyric, which will be fun! As it is very free-associative and percussive, there's a chance for drama...

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uveBfb7tI4Y

I was amazed to come across this footage of the mid-80s series I used to have with the late lamented music maven Charlie Gillett on UK Channel 4, The Late Shift. We were like a musical Siskel & Ebert, and showed some fantastic music docs -- and the somewhat dodgy flick of the Pink Floyd's The Wall, too...

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Interview w me on Revenge of the 80s radio

http://www.revengeofthe80sradio.com/?tag=vivien-goldman

Chris Cordani's interview with me on his Revenge of the 80s Radio show, celebrates the re-issue of the first Flying Lizards LP, on which I co-wrote and sang two songs I frankly still adore, THE WINDOW & HERSTORY

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Myself and key spar Isaac Fergusson feature alongside fellow reggae specialists on this Peter Tosh documentary for BBC Radio 4

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00w1yzy/Arise_Black_Man_The_Peter_Tosh_Story/

.... here is a Guardian review of the show....

...http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2010/nov/24/arise-black-man-peter-tosh-review
See More

BBC iPlayer - Arise Black Man: The Peter Tosh Story
www.bbc.co.uk
Grammy Award winning film maker Don Letts explores the life of reggae singer Peter Tosh.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

The Slits' Ari Up flies away home....


The loss of Ari-Up of the Slits is devastating not only for those like me who got to frolic and skank with her for three decades plus, but for music. A genuinely original free spirit, Arri at 14 showed us how to be a punk. In many ways, she was the soul of the movement, specially the Punky Reggae Party people. An incredible songwriter, lyricist, style innovator and a conscious hurricane onstage.

The footage of me singing Dennis Brown's Revolution onstage with Ari and the Slits in Williamsburg four years ago (approx!) is here on the site -- thanks to Joly of punkcast.com for shooting it. I've also added a shot by Janette Beckman of when Ari came in to my punk class at NYU, five years ago. I look pretty different now, thinner and with red hair -- but Arri just kept looking like this, amazingly lithe and limber throughout her life's journey... Actually, this shot was staged for a story, hence the lack of students! But she enthralled those we coralled for the pic. I LIVICATED my last Punk class to her... so many students were excited about her, and clearly felt the loss of an inspirational punk icon.
Miss you, sister.

I was privileged to honour her in quote form in the New York Times and Daily Telegraph UK

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/22/arts/music/22ariup.html?src=twrhp

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/culture-obituaries/music-obituaries/8081556/Ari-Up.html

....and to talk about her on BBC Radio's Woman's Hour (this link doesn't last forever so contact me if you really want to hear it and it's vanished...)

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00vcqw5#p00br0mg


As one mutual sistr'en observed -- Life's going to be much more boring now.