Craig Schuftan

transform the world

Culture Club 1

France, 1948. A recording studio somewhere in the bowels of Radio-Telediffusion Francais. Pierre Schaeffer is listening to a scratched record as it loops the same four seconds of  sound over and over again. He starts tapping his foot, grabs a microphone, and starts talking over the rhythm. “It goes un for the treble…” 

Concrete jungle by Schuftronics

France’s national radio station refused to play Antonin Artaud’s ground-breaking radio play ‘To Have Done With The Judgement of God’, and locked it in a cupboard for over a decade. Was Artaud’s work too far ahead of its time for France’s culture-boffins to get their heads around it? Or did they can it because it had too much screaming and too many annoying sound effects in it?

Artaud-detour by Schuftronics

A secret chapter in the history of rock and roll is brought to light. We begin at a plumbing store in New York in 1917, and end with a bald man taking a piss in an art gallery in the mid-90s. Somewhere in between, David Bowie’s ‘Heroes’ is recorded.

Do something boring by Schuftronics

In most vocations, behaving like a freak and saying stuff that doesn’t make sense is considered poor form. But if you’re a musician or an artist, it’s almost a job requirement. So what if you’re a really good singer who just happens to be very well adjusted and normal? “That’s ok”, said Salvador Dali in 1936, “you can fake it. I do”.

Does that make me crazy by Schuftronics

In 1964, a young composer named John Cale sat down at the piano and played a short piece of music called ‘Vexations’ for the 840th time that evening. The one guy who had stayed for the whole show abruptly woke up and started clapping. Meanwhile, in a bar somewhere, Lou Reed played the riff from ‘Louie Louie’ for the 840th time that evening. From the packed dancefloor came a request: “Louie Louie!” Music history was about to be re-written.

Vexations by Schuftronics

Malcolm McLaren famously defined the secret of the Sex Pistols’ success as ‘Cash From Chaos’. But in the beginning, there wasn’t a lot of cash – just chaos. Was the Sex Pistols’ apetite for destruction the legacy of a rich modernist tradition going back to Surrealist pin-up Jacques Vache and his acolyte, Andre Breton? Or did they just like getting into fights?

Destroy passers-by by Schuftronics

If you’re Ben Folds’ roadie, and he asks you to ‘prepare the piano’, he doesn’t mean brushing the lint off the stool and lifting the lid. You’re expected to produce a little briefcase full of screws, tacks, pencil erasers and aluminium pie plates and start shoving them in between the strings so that when Folds hits the keys, it goes ‘bink-bonk-blonk’, in the time-honoured tradition of avant-garde piano music.

Bring the noise by Schuftronics

The inspiration for the Breeders’ ‘Cannonball’ was the 18th century sex criminal, The Marquis DeSade. Why are people still writing songs about him? It’s not because of his books – which are terrible. It’s not because of the orgies either. It’s because of the philosophy he later developed in order to justify the orgies.

You know you're a real koo-koo by Schuftronics

“Ahead of your time”. It sounds grand doesn’t it? A pioneer, a lonely genius with a vision of the future, whose work will go on to inspire people for centuries to come. But being ahead of your time doesn’t feel grand at all. Just ask Futurist composer Luigi Russolo, who heard something like The Chemical Brothers’ ‘Dig Your Own Hole’ in his head in 1910, but had nothing to perform it with except a couple of big cardboard boxes and a rubber band. 

The art of noise by Schuftronics

Art Galleries are boring because there’s not much real life in them. Real life is boring because there’s not enough art in it. The solution, for George Brecht, Nam Jun Paik, Yoko Ono and Al Hansen was obvious – everyday life as art. Some years later, when Hansen met his grandson Beck for the first time, he gave the kid a machete.

Eat the record by Schuftronics

According to Guy Debord, leader of the Situationist International, late capitalism has replaced everyday life with an alienating mish-mash of money and desire called The Spectacle. What’s a modern artist to do? Refuse the spectacle? “That’s hot,” said Debord. Turn your refusal of the spectacle into a spectacle of refusal? “That’s not.”

New radicals by Schuftronics

This is the first series of The Culture Club, which went to air on triple j in 2007. It’s mostly based on the stories and ideas from the book of the same name, so if you want to know more about any of this stuff, that’s probably a good place to start. The random yelling at the start of the intro is from Artaud’s ‘To Have Done With the Judgement of god’

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25.05.13

Tiger's Leap

History is the subject of a structure whose site is not homogenous, empty time, but time filled by the presence of the now. [Jetztzeit]. Thus, to Robespierre ancient Rome was a past charged with the time of the now which he blasted out of the continuum of history. The French Revolution viewed itself as Rome incarnate. It evoked ancient Rome the way fashion evokes costumes of the past. Fashion has a flair for the topical, no matter where it stirs in the thickets of long ago; it is a tiger’s leap into the past. This jump, however, takes place in an arena where the ruling class give the commands. The same leap in the open air of history is the dialectical one, which is how Marx understood the revolution.

beyonce | mrs carter tour | walter benjamin | philosophy of history

gulf war 392 rtr8d7k
15.03.13

Resist Aggression

"We wanna be free! We wanna be free to do what we wanna do!"

1990 | 1991 | gulf war | wild angels | primal scream

kesha die young 1
26.02.13

Like we're gonna die young

"Churches once held sacred are now but heaps of dust and ashes; and yet we have our minds set on the desire of gain. We live as though we were going to die tomorrow; yet we build as though we were going to live always in this world. Our walls shine with gold, our celings also... yet Christ dies before our doors naked and hungry in the person of his poor."

ke$ha

Barry High Fidelity
24.02.13

A suitor for agreement

"Like the pleasure of friendship, the pleasure of beauty is curious. It aims to understand its object, and to value what it finds. Hence it tends toward a judgement of its own validity. And like every other rational judgement, this one makes implicit appeal to the community of rational beings. This is what Kant meant when he said that, in the judgement of taste, I am 'a suitor for agreement', expressing my judgement not as a private opinion but as a binding verdict that would be agreed upon by all."

roger scruton | immanuel kant | jack black | high fidelity

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22.02.13

Keep going

"Few people would fall in love had they never heard of love. Passion and expression are not really seperable. Passion comes to birth in that powerful impetus of the mind which also brings language into existence. So soon as passion goes beyond instinct and becomes truly itself, it tends toward self-description, either in order to justify or intensify its being, or else simply in order to keep going.

pre-raphaelites | denis de rougement | love | passion | beata beatrix

Sordide Sentimental 1981 2009 digital C print from original negative on fuji crystal archive paper 11179.5cm
20.02.13

How You Became What You Are

"When I want to make a statue of a beautiful woman, I have a great number of them undress; all offer both beautiful parts and badly shaped parts; I take from each what is beautiful."

linder | diderot | d'alambert | the ideal