#1989

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

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Originally posted by the Voice of America.
Voice of America content is produced by the Voice of America,
a United States federal government-sponsored entity, and is in
the public domain.

Germany marks 1989 Berlin Wall fall with 'Preserve Freedom' party

by Agence France-Presse

BERLIN --

Germany marks 35 years since the Berlin Wall fell with festivities
beginning Saturday under the theme "Preserve Freedom!" as Russia's war
rages in Ukraine and many fear democracy is under attack.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz -- whose governing coalition dramatically
collapsed this week -- said in a message to the nation that the liberal
ideals of 1989 "are not something we can take for granted."

"A look at our history and at the world around us shows this," said
Scholz, whose three-party ruling alliance imploded on the day Donald
Trump was elected president in the United States, plunging Germany into
political turmoil and toward new elections.

November 9, 1989, is celebrated as the day East Germany's dictatorship
opened the borders to the West after months of peaceful mass protests,
paving the way for German reunification and the collapse of Soviet
communism.

One Berliner who remembers those momentous events, retiree Jutta
Krueger, 75, said about the political crisis hitting just ahead of the
anniversary weekend: "It's a shame that it's coinciding like this now."

"But we should still really celebrate the fall of the Wall," she said,
hailing it as the moment East Germans could travel and "freedom had
arrived throughout Germany."

President Frank-Walter Steinmeier will kick off events on Saturday at
the Berlin Wall Memorial, honoring the at least 140 people killed
trying to flee the Moscow-backed German Democratic Republic during the
Cold War.

In the evening, a "freedom party" with a music and light show will be
held at Berlin's iconic Brandenburg Gate, on the former path of the
concrete barrier that had cut the city in two beginning in 1961.

On Sunday, the Russian protest punk band Pussy Riot will perform in
front of the former headquarters of the Stasi, former East Germany's
feared secret police.

Pro-democracy activists from around the world have been invited for the
commemorations -- among them Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana
Tikhanovskaya and Iranian dissident Masih Alinejad.

Talks, performances and a large-scale open-air art exhibition will also
mark what Culture Minister Claudia Roth called "one of the most joyous
moments in world history."

Replica placards from the 1989 protests will be on display along 4
kilometers of the wall's route, past the historic Reichstag building
and the famous Checkpoint Charlie.

Among the art installations will be thousands of images created by
citizens on the theme of "freedom," to drive home the enduring
relevance of the historical event.

## Populism and division

Berlin's top cultural affairs official Joe Chialo said the theme was
crucial "at a time when we are confronted by rising populism,
disinformation and social division."

Axel Klausmeier, head of the Berlin Wall foundation, said the values of
the 1989 protests "are the power-bank for the defense of our democracy,
which today is being gnawed at from the left and the right."

Most East Germans are grateful the East German regime ended, but many
also have unhappy memories of the perceived arrogance of West Germans,
and resentment lingers about a remaining gap in incomes and pensions.

These sentiments have been cited to explain the strong support for the
far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD, in eastern Germany, as well
as for the Russia-friendly and anti-capitalist BSW.

Strong gains for both at three state elections in the east in September
highlighted the enduring political divisions between eastern and
western Germany over three decades since reunification.

While the troubled government led by Scholz's Social Democrats and the
opposition CDU strongly supports Ukraine's defense against Russia, the
antiestablishment AfD and BSW oppose it.

The AfD, which rails against immigration, was embarrassed this week
when several of its members were arrested as suspected members of a
racist paramilitary group that had practiced urban warfare drills.

On the eve of the anniversary of the Berlin Wall's fall, government
spokesperson Christiane Hoffmann recalled that the weekend will also
mark another, far darker chapter in German history.

During the Nazis' Kristallnacht or Night of Broken Glass pogrom of
November 9-10, 1938, at least 90 Jews were murdered, countless
properties destroyed, and 1,400 synagogues torched in Germany and
Austria.

Hoffmann said, "It is very important for our society to remember the
victims ... and learn the correct lessons from those events for our
conduct today."

#germany #deutschland #west-germany #east-germany #berlin #berlin-wall #german-reunification #celebration #1989

gehrke_test@libranet.de

Soeben konnte ich die Card shliessen. Dahinter stehen 10 Jahre für die #Finanzierung der energetischen Kernsanierung des Hauses inklusive #Fußbodenheizung, #Wärmepumpe mit #Geothermie, alle #Fenster dreifach verglast und #Photovoltaik sowie Durchbruch tragender Wände und neue #Küche. Einmal auf links gezogen also...

Heute kommen wir auf Gesamtenergiekosten für #Heizung, #Warmwasser und #Haushaltsstrom zusammen von 41€ im Monat für ein EFH aus #1989. Das #Haus ist jetzt eine #Sparbüchse.

Nächstes Jahr noch mal kleiner investieren in noch mehr #Photovoltaik...

#Wärmewende

Kanban-View aus Nextcloud - Card 'Ablösung Immobilienkredite' in Bucket 'Erledigt'

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

Ave Maria

Nina Hagen (1989)

This is the last track on Nina Hagen's album Nina Hagen. This is after NunSexMonkRock and Nina Hagen in Ekstasy. This is still one of my favorite Hagen tracks. This melody is Schubert's, I believe, from "Ellen's Third Song," (much better known simply as "Ave Maria"). These lyrics are not Schubert's. I've heard Latin lyrics for "Ave Maria" with this same melody. So did Hagen write these lyrics? Here they are.

Ave Maria
Maria, mein Gesang
Erbittet Dich um Gnade
Für Menschen, die schon solang
Ganz und gar ohne Hoffnung sind
Ganz ohne Hoffnung sind

Siehe dort ihr traurig Dasein
Der Hunger tiefst, der Angst vor dem Tod
Millionen leben hier auf Erden
Immer noch, in allergrößter Not
Ave Maria

Ave Maria
Santa Maria
Erhöre mein Gebet, Maria
So vieles Leid, das schon geschah
Warum kommt immer neues Leid?
Nur neues Leid?

Lass nun die Menschen wieder glauben
Lass sie verstehen und verzeih′n
Dann könnten alle Völker Freunde
Und alle Rassen Brüder sein
Ave Maria

Lass nun die Menschen wieder glauben
Lass sie verstehen und verzeih'n
Dann könnten alle Völker Freunde
Und alle Rassen Brüder sein

Ave Maria

Here's a machine translation into English.

Ave Maria
Mary, my song
Asks you for mercy
For people who have been
Completely without hope for so long
Completely without hope

See their sad existence there
The deepest hunger, the fear of death
Millions live here on earth
Still, in the greatest need
Ave Maria

Ave Maria
Santa Maria
Hear my prayer, Mary
So much suffering that has already happened
Why does new suffering always come?
Just new suffering?

Now let people believe again
Let them understand and forgive
Then all peoples could be friends
And all races could be brothers
Ave Maria

Now let people believe again
Let them understand and forgive
Then all peoples could be friends
And all races could be brothers

Ave Maria

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-0s4I2OnAo

#music #pop #rock #punk #romantic-era-music #christian-music #schubert #ave-maria #nina-hagen #german #1989

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

The original content of Democracy Now! Headlines appears under the Creative
Commons BY-NC-ND 3.0 License (United States). For more, including their other
shows and media, visit www.democracynow.org.
June 4, 2024

Hong Kong Activists Risk Arrest to Mark 35th Anniversary of Tiananmen Square Massacre


In Hong Kong, some activists are marking the 35th anniversary of the
Tiananmen Square massacre despite a ban on protests and a heightened
crackdown by authorities. On Monday, police arrested artist Sanmu Chen
as he engaged in a protest performance. In the middle of a busy street,
Chen appeared to mimic pouring himself a drink and toasting, followed by
drawing the numbers "8964" in the air with his fingers - the date of the
massacre. On June 4, 1989, the Chinese military attacked a student-led
pro-democracy protest in Beijing, killing hundreds, if not thousands, of
people.

#VIIV #eight-squared #六四鎮壓 #六四屠殺 #may-35th #8964 #tiananmen-square #tiananmen-square-massacre #june-fourth-incident #自由 #中国 #beijing #china #北京 #freedom #liberty #democracy #民主 #1989 #massacre

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

Children honor parents' legacies as victims of 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown

by Joyce Huang

Taipei, Taiwan --

[gopher://gopher.floodgap.com/0/feeds/voaheadlines/2024/Jun/04/https---www.voanews.com-a-children-honor-parents-legacies-as-victims-of-1989-tiananmen-square-crackdown-7642001.html](gopher://gopher.floodgap.com/0/feeds/voaheadlines/2024/Jun/04/https---www.voanews.com-a-children-honor-parents-legacies-as-victims-of-1989-tiananmen-square-crackdown-7642001.html)

Originally posted by the Voice of America.
Voice of America content is produced by the Voice of America,
a United States federal government-sponsored entity, and is in
the public domain.

Thirty-five years after the Tiananmen Square protests and massacre
captured the attention of a shocked world, the children of two victims
of China's 1989 violent crackdown against democracy honor their
parents' legacies.\
\
Zhang Hongyuan, 25, is currently in the Netherlands seeking political
asylum. He fled there in April 2023, after authorities in Wuhan of
China's Hubei province, threatened to arrest him for his
public-interest activism. His advocacy followed the footsteps of his
father, Zhang Yi, who was arrested 35 years ago when Chinese
authorities put an end to public democratic rallies in Tiananmen Square
and in many cities on June 4, 1989. He was then jailed for two years.\
\
Zhang Hongyuan had started a career as a field engineer at the Dapu
Power Plant in Meizhou city in Guangdong province. But he found himself
on a different path in 2020, when he helped his father spread the word
in Wuhan about the outbreak of COVID-19.\
\
Later that year, he worked as a translator for a documentary by
dissident visual artist Ai Weiwei. In 2022, Zhang Hongyuan recorded
video footage in China of public protests against strict
pandemic-related mass civilian lockdowns. His involvement in the White
Paper Movement, as the citizens' public expressions against the
lockdowns became known, and another dissident, Yang Min's, act of
seeking asylum abroad prompted him to flee China on short notice 15
months ago.\
\
Grace Fang, now 23, immigrated to the U.S. at age eight. She did not
learn until she turned 11 or 12 that her father, Zheng Fang, had his
legs crushed by a Chinese military tank during the Tiananmen Square
violence.\
\
Grace Fang graduated in 2023 from Wellesley College in Massachusetts.
Last June, she helped host a San Francisco Bay area event remembering
the crackdown.\
\
The Chinese government refers to the events at Tiananmen Square in June
1989 as a "counterrevolutionary riot" and downplays its severity. In
China, discussion of the event in media or textbooks of the event is
largely forbidden. The authorities regularly harass those at home or
overseas who seek to keep the memory of the events alive.\
\
Zhang Hongyuan told VOA he was raised in China by his father and forced
to mature early, especially after Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader
Xi Jinping came to power in 2012. Zhang Hongyuan said authorities began
to tighten control over the dissidents of the "1989 generation," which
included his father, Zhang Yi.\
\
Frequent police surveillance, house searches and detention had an
effect on Zhang Yi, which in turn had an effect on his son.\
\
"When I was a minor, other people's fathers went to the police station
to pick up their sons, but I was a son who went to pick up my father. I
did this a lot," Zhang Hongyuan said.\
\
"It was precisely these things that prompted me to realize the inhuman
side of totalitarian rule at a young age," he said, adding that it gave
him the courage to echo the boy on bike during the Tiananmen movement,
whose words became famous, and say, "It's my duty and I have to do
something."\
\
Zhang Yi was in Wuhan in 1989 and was attending public rallies in
support of students nationwide when he was arrested on June 4. Zhang Yi
spent two years in prison, convicted of assembling a crowd to disrupt
traffic during that mid-1989 period of democratic expression.\
\
"There was a big black spot on my father's back,'' Zhang Hongyuan said.
"He showed it to me when I was in junior high school and said it was
caused by the beating by the guards, as well as the humid environment
in the detention center. From that time on, I really began to
understand June 4."\
\
About 15 years ago, Zheng Fang and his daughter, Grace Fang immigrated
to the U.S. He is now the president of the China Democracy Education
Foundation in San Francisco.\
\
Zheng Fang said he is proud that all his three daughters, including
Grace who studied American environmental politics and earned a college
degree, have a clear understanding of the Chinese Communist government.
He told VOA that while Grace Fang has grown up to be an American, she
understands the June 4 massacre first-hand and how China's repression
had impacted the Chinese people including her family.\
\
Grace Fang told VOA that she admires her father, who is a ''hero'' for
standing publicly with the democratic movement in China in June 1989.
But as someone who has fewer ties with China now, she can only help
translate for her father during talks and presentations at which he
shares his experience in China opposing state intimidation.\
\
She said that while she is angered by what happened to her father, she
has hope for the Chinese to have a better future.\
\
"Although this historical event [June 4] was very cruel and the
government was wrong in many ways, and the human rights situation [in
China] was definitely not good, I no longer have hatred, and I just
feel sad [about the truth] because I still hope that the Chinese people
can have a better future," Grace Fang told VOA.\
\
She said it is important that young Chinese are aware of recent history
in China, especially about the Tiananmen Square period, because they
have the right to know the truth about their country and government.\
\
With hope, she said, that young Chinese in the future should have the
opportunity to participate in their country's social and political
affairs and promote a more open and free China.\
\
Adrianna Zhang from VOA's Mandarin Service contributed to this story.

#VIIV #eight-squared #六四鎮壓 #六四屠殺 #may-35th #8964 #tiananmen-square #tiananmen-square-massacre #june-fourth-incident #自由 #中国 #beijing #china #北京 #freedom #liberty #democracy #民主 #1989 #massacre

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

Diaspora community holds Tiananmen commemorations despite crackdowns in Hong Kong, China

by William Yang

Taipei, Taiwan --

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Originally posted by the Voice of America.
Voice of America content is produced by the Voice of America,
a United States federal government-sponsored entity, and is in
the public domain.

Authorities in China and Hong Kong are tightening control over civil
society as people in more than a dozen cities around the world
commemorate the 35th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre on
Tuesday.\
\
Ahead of the anniversary, Hong Kong authorities arrested eight people
over social media posts commemorating June Fourth, which the police
claim were aimed at using "an upcoming sensitive date" to incite hatred
against the Hong Kong government and contained seditious intentions.\
\
Most prominent among those arrested is human rights lawyer Chow
Hang-tung, who has been detained since 2021 for organizing an annual
Tiananmen Vigil in Hong Kong's Victoria Park, which has been banned
since Beijing imposed the controversial National Security Law on the
former British colony in 2020.\
\
Other individuals arrested by Hong Kong police include Chow's mother
and uncle and former members of the now-disbanded Hong Kong Alliance,
which used to organize the annual vigil and in which Chow served as
vice chairwoman before its dissolution.\
\
In addition to the eight people arrested for social media posts
commemorating June Fourth, Hong Kong police detained performance artist
Sanmu Chen Monday in the busy shopping district Causeway Bay, which was
near Victoria Park.\
\
Local media reports said Chen pretended to drink in front of a police
van and write or draw in the air. This is the second year that Chen was
detained by police on the eve of the Tiananmen Square massacre.\
\
Instead of the now-prohibited Tiananmen vigil, several pro-Beijing
community organizations are holding a "food carnival" from June 1 to
June 5 at Victoria Park, a move that some activists characterized as
ironic.\
\
In China, authorities sentenced former Tiananmen Student leader Xu
Guang to four years in jail on April 3 for demanding that the Chinese
government acknowledge the massacre and for holding a sign calling for
government compensation in front of a local police station in May 2022.\
\
Apart from Xu's jail sentences, some family members of Tiananmen
victims or former Tiananmen student leaders have also been put under
strict police surveillance ahead of Tuesday's anniversary, according to
Human Rights Watch.\
\
Chinese authorities have also censored a wide range of words, phrases,
and even emojis due to their connection to the Tiananmen Square
Massacre.\
\
Chinese activist Li Ying, who became a prominent source of news during
China's "white paper movement" in 2022, disclosed that Chinese
authorities have banned the use of the candle emoji in China, which was
commonly used for posts related to the Tiananmen Massacre.\
\
Some analysts say the increased crackdown on civil society initiated by
Hong Kong and Chinese authorities ahead of the Tiananmen anniversary
reflects their attempt to remove memories related to the tragic event.\
\
"The Hong Kong government is sending a message that June Fourth is a
clear national security red line for Hong Kong and they want to make
sure there is no commemoration or no memory of June Fourth in public,"
Maya Wang, the interim China director at Human Rights Watch, told VOA
by phone.\
\
While the two national security laws that the Hong Kong government has
implemented since 2020 have essentially outlawed public commemoration
of June Fourth, Wang said some people in the city are still using
veiled references to commemorate the event.\
\
"June Fourth continues to be a collective memory among people in Hong
Kong and you do see some of them make veiled references to the date by
wearing black or through other gestures," she said, adding that the
effect of the authorities' attempts to remove memories associated with
June Fourth remains unclear.\
\
A Christian newspaper in Hong Kong that used to release information
about the Tiananmen vigils published an almost blank front page on
Sunday as their response to the upcoming anniversary. Hong Kong's Roman
Catholic Cardinal Stephen Chow called for forgiveness and vaguely
referenced the Tiananmen anniversary in an article he published.\
\
Despite the lack of public commemoration in China and Hong Kong,
several cities around the world, including Tokyo, Paris, London, New
York, Boston, and Taipei, have each organized events to commemorate the
event, which occurred when government troops fired on student-led
pro-democracy protestors on June 4, causing what are thought to be
thousands of deaths.\
\
Zhou Fengsuo, a former Tiananmen student leader, told VOA that the
dozens of commemorative events abroad play an important role in pushing
back against the Chinese government's efforts to erase memories related
to the Tiananmen Square Massacre.\
\
"When the Chinese government tries to intensify crackdowns on the
commemoration of June Fourth, more people in the diaspora community
feel compelled to help organize or participate in commemorations of the
tragic event around the world," he said in a phone interview.\
\
Zhou has attended more than 20 Tiananmen commemorative events around
the world this year and he said many events are organized or attended
by young people or new immigrants from China.\
\
"I met a lot of Chinese people at the June Fourth Memorial Museum in
New York, and they are all actively participating in this year's
commemorative events," he said.\
\
As people around the world take part in commemorations of the Tiananmen
Massacre, some activists say they remain hopeful that this decades-long
tradition will be passed down to the next generation.\
\
"I was encouraged to see a lot of young people, including Japanese
people, take part in the June Fourth commemoration in Tokyo," said
Patrick Poon, a visiting researcher at the University of Tokyo, adding
that young people's involvement in the event made him believe the
tradition will be continued.\
\
Through the efforts to organize commemorations of the Tiananmen Square
Massacre around the world, Wang at Human Rights Watch said the
Tiananmen anniversary is helping to strengthen linkages among different
groups in the diaspora community that focus on pushing back against the
Chinese government's crackdown on civil society.\
\
"Through these linkages, there is a growing solidarity of resistance on
the state," she told VOA.

#VIIV #eight-squared #六四鎮壓 #六四屠殺 #may-35th #8964 #tiananmen-square #tiananmen-square-massacre #june-fourth-incident #自由 #中国 #beijing #china #北京 #freedom #liberty #democracy #民主 #1989 #massacre

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre

六四屠殺

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989_Tiananmen_Square_protests_and_massacre

The Tiananmen Square protests, known in China as the June Fourth Incident, were student-led demonstrations held in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China, lasting from 15 April to 4 June 1989. After weeks of unsuccessful attempts between the demonstrators and the Chinese government to find a peaceful resolution, the Chinese government declared martial law on the night of 3 June and deployed troops to occupy the square in what is referred to as the Tiananmen Square massacre. The events are sometimes called the '89 Democracy Movement, the Tiananmen Square Incident, or the Tiananmen uprising.

Tiananmen Square

#VIIV #eight-squared #六四鎮壓 #六四屠殺 #may-35th #8964 #tiananmen-square #tiananmen-square-massacre #june-fourth-incident #自由 #中国 #beijing #china #北京 #freedom #liberty #democracy #民主 #1989 #massacre

deutschlandfunk@squeet.me

Paragraf 218: Urteil im Memminger Abtreibungsprozess im Mai 1989

Paragraf 218 - Der Memminger „Hexenprozess“

Beobachter sprachen vom „Hexenprozess“: Ein Frauenarzt musste sich in den 1980er-Jahren in Bayern wegen vorgenommener Abtreibungen vor Gericht verantworten.#Paragraf218 #Abtreibung #Memmingen #PROZESS #1989 #URTEIL
Paragraf 218: Urteil im Memminger Abtreibungsprozess im Mai 1989

ramnath@nerdpol.ch

#quote from #pa "The band is #Nirvana and they are playing at Maxwell’s in Hobokon just over the river from Manhattan. There is a handful of people watching this most amazing band- a typical night on the rock n roll circuit where genius doesn’t always mean popularity. They may gatecrash the mainstream a couple of years later but at this point of time Nirvana are just another bunch of mad eyed hopefuls crammed into the back of a van looking for escape from their dull lives.

Nirvana #Live at Maxwell's, Hoboken #1989

Source: https://youtube.com/watch?v=_CV1-BaoBD4

The listless audience are far from captivated. Just me and Ian Tilton- the photographer and Anton Brookes the band’s press agent stay for the whole set along with a woman from a French record label who is raving about the band. The rest of the audience, all ten of them are half interested in these amazing cacophony.

You can feel the frustration leaking from the band’s pores when suddenly the set ends and they start to push the ante up a few notches past where any other band dares to tread.

The bass player shoves his bass guitar through the venue’s roof, the vocalist dives backwards through the drums, the kit collapses and the drummer looks nervous. The amps get pushed over and the guitars are mashed into the floor. It’s either a thrilling moment of pop art auto destruction or the instinctive act of a band that is genuinely walking along the edge.

Nirvana had just released their debut #album, #Bleach, that June and were touring it. The Maxwell’s show was on July 13th 1989 and had seen the album garnering some press attention and a few people in the know were starting to get very excited by the group. They were in that curious place where they were press hip but the people haven’t come yet. A year before I had conducted the very first interview ever with the band by phone for the now sadly defunct UK rock weekly Sounds. It was a routine chat with a hopeful singer from a band that I was obsessing about. Typical of the endless new bands that I would write about for the ever generous music paper who indulged in my enthusiasm. I had no clue they would be enormous, I was just thrilled at this track, Love Buzz that I had heard and had to communicate this to the world.

Fast forward several months and we were in new York City watching the band live. The gig’s cataclysmic gig ending would captivate even the most hard hearted cynic because this was no big band pretending to trash its gear but a small town group with no money crackling full of frustration and instinctive raw power brimming close to a self destructive orgy of musical violence that had finally exploded. This was one of the things that made Nirvana so damn attractive and it’s one of the reason that I was there in New York City all those years ago.

The preceding year I had picked up the band’s debut Love Buzz single up in a record shop a couple of weeks before release- and made the November 1988 released Subpop singles club, seven inch, single of the week for Sounds. At that time nobody was interested in the band and it was felt that Sub Pop had gone perhaps one band too far in its cool collection of groups that included Mudhoney and Tad, bands that were playing a raw and powerful music labelled grunge.

But there was something captivating about Love Buzz, I’d always loved the song anyway, a cover of Dutch band Shocking Blue’s 1969 song. From this first remote release Curt had one of those voices that was so full of emotion and power that it went straight to your soul. That coarse edge reminded me of John Lennon in the way you could almost hear the flesh ripping in his throat as he gouged out the raw emotion.

I followed up the single of the week with that phone interview with a tired sounding Curt Cobain at his home in Aberdeen in Washington state. I still have the number somewhere. It’s not a very in depth interview and was an intro piece on a new band that at the time I felt only a handful of people would ever like. It’s only become important now because it’s the first one with a band who have ended up huge, altering the state of rock music forever. Partly because the music was rock at its purest and most emotive and partly because they also featured a singer who has become one of the ten most iconic figures in musical history and whose face still stares out from a million t shirts with those kholed up eyes, a portrait of terrible beauty, part puppy dog, part nervous breakdown.

A few months later I got a trip out to New York for the New Music Seminar to write a double headed feature on Tad and Nirvana who where touring together. Being Sounds we didn’t have the cache of the NME so it was no five star hotels for me and photographer Ian Tilton.

We were to be staying in the tiny Avenue B in Alphabet City flat of Janet Billig who went on to work closely with Curt and his future wife Courtney Love. The flat was the on the road crash pad for Tad and Nirvana. It was sweltering hot and we slept on the floor with no bedding, using our rucksacks as pillows. Being big fellas Tad took up most of the space and snored like wounded bears whilst, the 4 piece at the time, Nirvana were squashed up at the other end of the room. Curt was curled up in a ball in the corner most of the time and seemed worn out by something which we guessed was tour fatigue at the time.

They were three dates into the jaunt and they had driven across the USA for the gig, enough to wear anyone out. They were staying in NYC for a week leaving on the 15th to drive up the road to a gig at Green Street Station in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts which I had played the year before in my band the Membranes, so I filled them in on some local knowledge, before returning for one more Big Apple gig at the even tinier Pyramid club on the Lower East Side.

I spent most of the nights at the music conference running around gigs or sitting on the steps of the Lower East Side apartment, hanging out with a crack dealer who was selling his wares to huge limos that would turn up every hour or so looking for some powder excitement for their bosses. He had a gun shoved down his sock but was quite cheerful and kept asking about the Queen and if I knew her before going down to the window of the next limo and doing his business.

It was a long and wild trip that ended up with photographer Ian Tilton getting run over by a bus in one of those neo- tropical rain storms that New York seems to have from time to time. The bus missed me by an inch and I can remember Tilton flying through the air clutching his camera bag like it was the most important thing in the world before being carted off to hospital with a broken leg. The doctor patched him up and called us a cab because there were no spare beds and we had to lay him out on the floor of the tiny flat and ferry in sarnies from the Puerto Rican corner shop.

Tad were an uproarious laugh and a damn fine band and should be checked out by anyone reading this piece who wants to explore this music further than Nirvana. They were the headline band but it was their young support that everyone was fascinated by. Nirvana were a band in a state of flux. Instinct was telling them to change and you could tell that something was happening here. The band was weary of the road and each other and the two extra members, guitarist Jason Everman and drummer Chad Channing got kicked out within weeks of this trip.

At Maxwell’s I did the interview, firstly with the Sub Pop label head honchos Jonathan Poneman and Bruce Pavitt who were convinced that Nirvana were going to be the biggest band in the world. It sounded like the usual label hokum but these were cool guys and they knew what they were talking about and were convincing in their enthusiasm. We sat at the table of the coffee bar section of Maxwell’s as they explained earnestly how this band that was drawing a handful of people to this show were going to take the world. I figured they meant as big as Sonic Youth because that was about as big as alternative bands got in those days and by alternative I mean howling guitar, slavering dog alternative and not the nicer stuff like REM.

Bassist Krist (As he was calling himself at the time) sat down for a chat and seemed to care more about the state of the world than the usual rock n roll hokum. He talked at length about his background in the Balkans and the situation there as well as him and Curt growing up in the redneck town of Aberdeen in Washington state and the mad **** they would get up to defying their straight laced fellow citizen loggers.

Curt himself was quieter and less forthcoming. Intense and artistic with a croaking voice that sounded ancient and out of context coming from such a young man, he had piercing eyes and a quiet determination.

Myself? I was thrilled by the band’s innate power and brilliant song writing skills that their press officer Anton Brookes would endlessly talk about in way that I had never heard anyone else ever do about a noisy band.

The Sounds front cover feature that came out later that October thrilled with the band’s potential and was still rushing from the excitement of the gig. Printed below in full it gives a sense of a young band with an awesome potential that no-one at the time could possibly ever grasp. Whilst I was in love with the band I never guessed the sheer scale of their soon to come success and neither could they. They were like any other young band full of dreams and small scale ambition. It was only when you heard the songs that you realised that there was something really special happening.

It’s also interesting to note that the band was fully a four piece at the time and that Curt was spelling his name in a weird way. A year later the band would suddenly become the biggest group in the world, change rock history for ever and put a whole heap of pressure and dark matter on the young singer’s shoulders.

Their later records still sound genius now from Nevermind’s stunning ability to combine Beatle-oid melodies with the crushing power of Black Sabbath and the ferocity of Black Flag and the American hardcore underground. The follow up Albini recorded In Utero flailed against the stadium success and the macho male dominated locker room mentality of rock n roll with a darker, more introspective sound that just couldn’t help fill up more stadiums. Meanwhile the increasingly contrary Cobain bigged up non-macho underground indie like the Vaselines and post punk outfits like the Raincoats while being caught in a spiral of contradictory expectations and lifestyles before his shocking suicide in 1994.

This interview caught the band when they were fresh, young and naive and still craving the addictive Love Buzz of rock n roll.

Nirvana interview 1989 (with original name spellings”)

Nirvana are the natural descendants of Mudhoney and Dinosaur Jr. Their debut album, Bleach, which scorched the tail end of the summer has collected some salivating press commentary. And now they’re on tour with a helluva chance of making up some spectacular ground. The band have the teen beat at their feet, their overt pop ethic is married to mad dog guitar antics; a rowdy burn-out that’s featured on the band’s new four-track 12-inch, Blew, released in the UK on the Tupelo label. The three, formerly four, piece literally explode onstage, their enthusiastic energy burns, resulting in a trail of smashed gear and highly charged anthems.

Offstage, the small town band are quiet and affable, with only seven-foot bass pulper, Chris Novoselic, and former guitar vandal Jason Everman chewing the social cud with any vengeance whilst the other two members opt for the Lennon/Ono approved, ‘bed in’ method. Nirvana did their teenage thing in the wilds of smalltown USA in the Washington state backwater town of Aberdeen. Kurdt Kobain, the band’s songwriter, vocalist and guitar player, scratches the mouldy bumfluff on his pixie skull and picks up the tale. “Chris and me are from Aberdeen, which is a really dead logging town on the shores of the Pacific Ocean. The nearest town was Olympia, about 50 miles away, which is where we’ve moved to.”

Chris, the bass beanpole, cuts in. “It’s a logging town – they want to cut all the trees down that are left in the state, you know. You could say that they are at loggerheads with the environmentalists…” Touring has provided Nirvana with a welcome escape from the smalltown hell. Kurdt is animated with road fever. “I’m seeing America for, like, free and only having to work for two hours a day. It’s weird though, I’m not homesick yet.
If we hadn’t done this band thing, we would have been doing what everyone else does back home, which is chopping down trees, drinking, having sex and drinking, talking about sex and drinking some more…”

Which is a lifestyle not totally at odds with the band’s slogan, “Fudge Packing, crack smoking, satan worshipping, mother ****ers”, which is sprawled rather rudely across their t-shirts. This small town suffocation inspired the first bunch of songs Kobain ever came up with and still fires the mood.

“The early songs were really angry,” explains Kobain. “But as time goes on the songs are getting poppier and poppier as I get happier and happier. The songs are now about conflicts in relationships, emotional things with other human beings. When I write a song the lyrics are the least important subject. I can go through two or three different subjects in a song and the title can mean absolutely nothing at all.” Kurdt’s still not totally comfortable with his new upbeat mood though. “Sometimes I try to make things harder for myself, just to try to make myself a bit more angry. I try out a few subconscious things I suppose, like conflicts with other people. But most of the lyrics on the ‘Bleach’ album are about life in Aberdeen.”

Kurdt had been writing songs in his bedroom for years until finally deciding to lay down some demos with the help of Novoselic, a first generation Yugoslav. The drummer on these sessions was Del Crover, who’s also played for the only other band in town, The Melvins, a seminal outfit on the development of Nirvana. The demo was laid down in a studio belonging to Jack Endino, an old chum of the dudes at Sub Pop Records and a guitar player with the crucial Skinyard outfit. Endino tipped off Sub Pop about this amazing band he was working with and the connection was made.

One phone call later and Sub Pop were marvelling at what they call the “beautiful yet horrifying voice” of the kid that looked like a garage attendant: Kurdt Kobain. The final connection with the rest of the world must have been a relief. “We’d been revolving around in bands for years,” explains Kurdt. “I’d been writing songs since I was about 13. I’d never heard of Sub Pop before, although I suppose we didn’t exist in a total backwater, we had the Melvins in our town and we used to go and listen to them rehearse all the time.”

The resulting debut single was a classic 7-inch; the seesaw-riff, garage punk cover of the Screaming Blues’ late ’60s slice of psychodrama, ‘Love Buzz’. The future now looked promising and was fulfilled by the Bleach album, a 12-inch platter which saw Nirvana taking the opportunity to cover several bases at once.

From the lighter pop dynamics of ‘About A Girl’, an uptempo melodic rush – and an indication of the band’s future development – through to the heavier post-Killing Joke grind of the intense Paper Guts, the album thrives on gristly hooks onto which Kobain grapples his scarred, world weary howl, sounding like a thousand years of life trapped in his young larynx. The live destruct and the album’s full bodied sound was enhanced by the heroic, hair-throwing antics of the band’s fourth member, Jason Everman. Having seemingly been ditched by the remaining three, he’s now taken up the bass in the gloriously ascendant Seattle rockers, Soundgarden.

Even at the time of the interview, Jason seemed to be orbiting on the outside, a key yet somehow peripheral component. It would be interesting to see how they fare as a three-piece, although label boss Jonathan claims that the already gigged trio are rocking harder then ever and with Cobain’s voice and song writing skill they have a good chance.
Nirvana’s live action is a dangerous burn out. At one of the gigs in New York, Novoselic, in a rush of Balkan blood, threw himself into the ground, seconds later the whole band hit auto destruct and emulated The Who’s early ’60s guitar antics.

Bit of a Townshend vibe going on here, Chris? “Yeah, it’s a nice feeling, it’s something that needs to be done at least twice a week. It seems to becoming more common at our gigs. The more people screaming at you the more you are into smashing everything up. It’s definitely not a contrived thing . We don’t smash the gear up on purpose, we’re not trying to impress or anything.”

Scrawny bar-chord operatives, Nirvana are the small town kids let loose in the middle-aged music biz grind. Their onstage, guerrilla insurrections and scuzzed pop punk anthems are just about heroic enough to push through the Nirvana-as-Sub-Pop’s-trump card prediction made by some old fool a couple months back."

ramnath@nerdpol.ch

#Huna #Kupua

by Serge Kahili King

Huna is a Hawaiian word meaning " #secret," but it also refers to the #esoteric #wisdom of #Polynesia. Kupua is another Hawaiian word and it refers to a specialized #healer who works with the powers of the #mind and the forces of #nature. In that respect it is very similar to the #Siberian #Tungusic word "shaman."

The understanding of Huna described here comes from the kupua tradition of the Kahili family from the #island of #Kauai, through Serge Kahili King, who was adopted as the grandson of Joseph Kahili and trained in his tradition.

The #Seven #Principles
The basic assumptions of Huna are these:

  1. The World Is What You Think It Is.

  2. There are no limits.

  3. Energy Flows Where Attention Goes.

  4. Now Is The Moment Of Power.

  5. To Love Is To Be Happy With (someone or
    something).

  6. All Power Comes From Within.

  7. Effectiveness Is The Measure Of Truth.

The Three Selves (or Four)
Another set of assumptions used in Huna is that #human #behavior and experience can be explained and changed through the interaction of three (sometimes four) selves, aspects or functions:

  1. The High Self (Kane, Aumakua), inspires.
  2. The Conscious Self (Lono) imagines.
  3. The Subconscious Self (Ku) remembers.
  4. The Core Self (Kanaloa) wills. The Four Levels of Reality

A third set of assumptions coming from the kupua tradition divides all experience into four levels or frameworks of beliefs about reality which can be summarized as follows:

  1. Everything is objective (Scientific reality).
  2. Everything is subjective (Psychic reality).
  3. Everything is symbolic (Shamanic reality).
  4. Everything is holistic (Mystical reality). The #kupua ( #Hawaiian #shaman) learns to move in and out of these realities in order to change experience more effectively.

#Theosophical Classic #1989, 28:00 minutes.
#shamanic #healing
Source: https://youtube.com/watch?v=e4Z9SRzgVQQ

magdoz@diaspora.psyco.fr

Puzzle Women : ces #femmes qui reconstituent les #archives déchirées de la #Stasi

https://www.france24.com/fr/%C3%A9missions/reporters/20240112-puzzle-women-ces-femmes-qui-reconstituent-les-archives-d%C3%A9chir%C3%A9es-de-la-stasi

#Reportage Vidéo par Piped/invidious (33min) : https://piped.adminforge.de/watch?v=svngKF8gZK8 (choisir résolution 720p) ou https://yt.artemislena.eu/watch?v=svngKF8gZK8

In Deutsch :

-- Rekonstruktion der Stasi-Akten Das gescheiterte "Stasi-Puzzle": Rekonstruktion der Akten landet vor Gericht
-- Stasi-Unterlagen: Ein Puzzle mit Abermillionen Teilen

...
Comment ne pas faire le lien avec :
L'image en tête de ce post N'EST PAS issue du reportage de France 24, mais est un montage des images d'une conférence de Julien Vaubourg «Je n'ai rien à cacher». (2015) (vidéo dans l'article) : elle montre la surface de documents collectés par la Stasi, v/s ce que la #surveillance actuelle a accumulé comme #données sur la #population !! Et ça fait froid dans le dos ? Oui..
La conférence est courte, elle dure 30 minutes, elle est à destination des lycéens, donc c'est de la #pédagogie et c'est compréhensible par toutes et tous.

#Frauen #PuzzleWomen #Puzzle-Frauen #PuzzleFrauen #Stasi-Puzzle #StasiPuzzle #Stasi-Unterlagen-Archiv #Espionnage #Berlin #Dresden #Leipzig #Frankfurt-Oder #Histoire #1989 #RFA #RDA #DDR #Überwachung #Politique #NSA #GAFAM #Facebook #Google #ViePrivée #Privacy #JulienVaubourg #Traqueur #Internet