This Friday (23
October) I will be saying a few words at the launch of the new Datacide book,
Everything Else is Even More Ridiculous, which brings together the first 10
issues of the noise and politics zine published between 1997 and 2008. It takes
place at Housmans bookshop, 5 Caledonian Road, London N1 (round the corner from
Kings Cross station).

Full details:
Datacide - the Magazine for Noise & Politics -
presents the release of two new books with short talks by Datacide writers
Stewart Home, Neil Transpontine and Christoph Fringeli
EVERYTHING ELSE IS EVEN MORE RIDICULOUS
a decade of noise & politics – datacide issues
1-10
A major project in the works for quite some time, this is
a complete reprint of the issues 1-10 of datacide, which originally appeared
from 1997-2008. Titled “EVERYTHING ELSE IS EVEN MORE RIDICULOUS”, the 364 page
volume collects unique material, most of which has been out of print for many
years, charting a one-of-a-kind history of the counter-cultures associated with
electronic music and free festivals.
“The free space of the party met the free space of the
page and then you got a dynamism that encouraged expression and perversions and
tangents because the covers held it together as a nomadic movement and you were
convinced that music had catalysed it all and that music was somehow inherently
political as it sidestepped rhetoric and dogma, and absented us from control
addicts and the free space of the page was a kind of historic party, a kind of
invisible college, a launching pad for driftage.” Flint Michigan
AND:
Almanac for Noise & Politics 2015
If you’re already familiar with datacide magazine and our
related record label for extreme electronic music – Praxis – then you’re
familiar with the efforts we’ve made over the last two decades to continually
explore the intersections of radical politics and underground rave culture,
experimental and extreme electronic music, moments of free spaces and momentary
freak-outs and how these can be represented on the page and through the
speakers. If not, this may be a good place to start. Either way, the Almanac for
noise & politics 2015 contains a selection of articles and excerpts from
various issues of datacide, as well as a peek into the activities of the Praxis
label and its offshoots.
This first edition is meant to be a brief introduction to
the wide range of topics covered in datacide.
Articles include: Post-Media Operators by Howard
Slater/Eddie Miller/Flint Michigan, No Stars here (track -1) by TechNET, A Loop
Da Loop Era – Towards an (Anti-)history of Rave by Neil Transpontine, Radical
Intersections by Christoph Fringeli, Vinyl Meltdown by Alexis Wolton, Plague in
this Town by Matthew Hyland, Just Say Non – Nazism, Narcissism and Boyd Rice by
whomakesthenazis.com, Interview with Christoph Fringeli/Praxis Records from
Objection to Procedure, a new short story by Dan Hekate, as well as a commented
catalogue. This is interspersed by new visual work by Matthieu Bourel, Lynx,
Sansculotte, Tóng Zhi, and Zombieflesheater!
Full colour cover and 104 inside pages in A6
format!
Starts at 7.30 (till 9-ish) - Entry is £3 (redeemable
towards any purchase in the bookshop)
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