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  • A situationist statement designed to destroy the other records around it

    The Durutti Column’s 1980 debut album — confusingly titled The Return of the Durutti Column—originally came packaged in a sandpaper sleeve, a detail that couldn’t have been more at odds with the music inside. The sandpaper was a Situationist prank dreamed up in part by Factory Records boss Tony Wilson

    Time Was Gigantic… When We Were Kids | Pitchfork

    Under Tony Wilson’s command, Joy Division and A Certain Ratio assembled at Alan Erasmus' flat in Manchester. They were reportedly paid £15 each and given a pile of 4,000 sheets of sandpaper, with Ian Curtis taking on the bulk of the work while his bandmates watched a porn film in another room. Despite Curtis’s efforts, Factory creative director Peter Saville was underwhelmed: “To me, it looked like a DIY thing that was, really, the antithesis of what I was trying to do. It looked a bit homemade.”

    The Return Of The Durutti Column – The Story Behind The Sleeve – Long Live Vinyl

    The album sleeve is a very rare collector’s items as there were only 2000 made, and there are 3 different variations of spray-paint on the sleeve. … The sleeve design was inspired by a 1959 book called Mémoires by Guy Debord, a Marxist theorist, writer and filmmaker.

    Durutti Column: The most punk album cover ever. - Audio and Sound

    → 1:14 PM, Nov 1
  • livin' like a bad lieutenant

    Danceteria flyers and Zoë Tamerlis shrine at lundissimo.info.

    originally posted by xowie

    → 9:02 AM, Dec 31
  • Kimya Dawson

    Kimya Dawson rocked the 930 Club last night. Don’t miss her MP3s – “this one is about Pee Wee Herman and Michael Jackson.”

    → 12:54 AM, Mar 2
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