Tracking album art in New York City.

Tracking album art in New York City.

(Source: nevver)

Reblogged from nevver with 448 notes / Art Music New York 

Shepard Fairey & Glen. E. Friedman

Shepard Fairey & Glen. E. Friedman

(Source: nevver)

Reblogged from nevver with 394 notes / Art Music Beastie Boys Obit 

Lay It Down, Clowns!

longformorg:

The Beastie Boys on tour in Los Angeles shortly after the release of their debut album, Licensed to Ill.

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Classic piece I actually chose and transcribed for the CREEM anthology published by HarperCollins:

Earlier that evening, after Pee-Wee Herman had visited their dressing room and before they appeared on Joan Rivers’ show, the Beasties were tossing parsley at me, dropping ice cubes in my hair, and “dissin’” (graffiti-artist lingo for “saying bad things about”) my brown socks and flannel shirt. I interpreted all of this to mean that they did not like me.


But I don’t feel alone. Just days before, they’d been evicted from the Sunset Marquis for throwing chairs out their window into the swimming pool. And that week, they’d also become the first group ever to be censored on American Bandstand—Dick Clark, who’d put up with Johnnies Rotten and Lydon in past episodes, apparently determined Adrock’s mid-song crotch-grab was just too much. The Beasties had previously been banned from the Holiday Inn chain after they’d cut a hole in the floor of one suite to serve as a passageway to the one directly below; they’d been banned from CBS Records headquarters after allegedly ripping off a camera at a label party. And MCA brags that he punched aBay Area Music interviewer in the face not too long ago. These guys are total jerks, and they’ve got the fastest-selling debut album in CBS history.

(Source: longform)

There was nothing cooler to me in ‘92 than wearing t-shirts and winter hats and jumping around in the woods in slow motion.

Beasties not even bothering to pretend they aren’t lip syncing on American Bandstand, 1987.

(Source: lookoutkeanu)

Reblogged from lizmcdaniel with 25 notes / Michigan Music Sufjan Stevens 

pitchfork:

Legendary BBC DJ John Peel’s extensive record collection— “over 26,000 LPs, 40,000 singles and many thousands of CDs”— is now making its way onto the internet.

pitchfork:

Legendary BBC DJ John Peel’s extensive record collection— “over 26,000 LPs, 40,000 singles and many thousands of CDs”— is now making its way onto the internet.

Reblogged from pitchfork with 1,584 notes / John Peel Music News