DESOLATION
CENTER (Film
Review)
Featuring
Stuart Swezey, Perry Farrell, Mark Pauline, members of Minutemen,
Meat Puppets, Sonic Youth, Redd Kross, Einstűrzende
Neubauten. Directed by Stuart Swezey. (2018/93 min)
ON
DIGITAL FROM MU PRODUCTIONS
Review
by Fluffy the Fearless😸
Fed
up with the local mainstream's overall contempt for the L.A. Punk
scene, super fan Stuart Swezey took it onto himself to organize a
series of shows – collectively dubbed Desolation Center - that
would take place far away from media and police scrutiny.
Assembled
on-the-fly with few resources and nearly no promotion, these
grassroots gigs were mostly held in the remote desert. Ticket buyers,
trucked to the locations in old school buses, literally had no idea
where they were going on the day of the show (which was part of the
experience). The shows themselves featured such underground
antiheroes as Minutemen & Sonic Youth, as well as performance
artists like Mark Pauline (who blows shit up) and the avant garde
German group, Einstűrzende
Neubauten (who sound like they’re blowing shit up).
This place rocks. |
Though
pretty self-impressed with my own offbeat musical interests back
then, I was today-years-old
when I first learned of these shows. And I'd be willing to wager most
folks who earned their hipster degrees from Lollapalooza and
Coachella have never heard of Desolation Center, either. But none
other than Perry Farrell himself shows up in this movie to give props
to the little festival that inspired his own.
The Bruce Campbell Diet. |
Desolation
Center
is a fascinating film that documents the state of L.A. punk circa
1983 and how it inspired Swezey put together these four
irregularly-scheduled shows. Given the passage of time since then,
the vintage footage is murky at best. But at the same time, the
scarcity of quality footage sort-of adds to the mystique of the
events. Interspersed are retrospective interviews with dozens of
artists who participated and fans who attended. Their stories are
engaging enough that the film might even appeal to those who hate the
music itself (it is
an acquired taste). In fact, my wife – who was weened on Duran Duran – found the film very entertaining, and not at the
participants' expense.
If
your knowledge of the underground LA punk scene ends with Black Flag,
Desolation Center
is a must-see. Filled with vintage footage and interesting interviews
– including a few cult legends – it's an affectionate and
nostalgic look at a music festival that would be hugely influential,
but few ever knew about.
KITTY CONSENSUS:
MEE-OW! LIKE BEING TURNED LOOSE IN A BIRD SANCTUARY.
No comments:
Post a Comment