changing the world « thefmly – those who were strangers have turned into friends

Archive for the 'changing the world' Category

a right to exist

Many Mansions – Spirit Song

In November of last year, just after coming across A Declaration of Separation, I had the opportunity to submit a short film into a festival. Now I’m not a filmmaker by any means, but the process of putting these images together felt so uniquely cathartic that I just couldn’t help but upload this to share. Not that any medium is ever comfortable, but props to everyone out there that gives new forms of expression a shot… it feels really great to be in unfamiliar territory.

This film is a nod to the realities we can create by addressing activities outside of our prescribed paradigm, which Freire calls “background consciousness“. United, becoming a movement beyond oppressive empires, we can share meaning and participate in the development of a sincere humanity. This is the sole principle of our Writing Home project, and considering the value that Paulo Freire has amongst our FMLY [if you didn't see his image and texts painted on the walls of our most recent fest] we will definitely make a point of providing further insight into his writings and doings in the coming months. Thanks for making our creative dissent feel less crazy. And special thanks to Emily Reo for starring and narration, plus Many Mansions for the tunage and letting me get some minor manipulation on.

endless bummer


Welcome to Total Bummer, the alternate universe that is Spirit Cat where by wake you shred with quiet giants and by slumber your favorite bands lay cuddle puddled on your new best friends’ floor. Where Mutual Benefit, Little Spoon, Dark Sea of Awareness, and Teengirl Fantasy aren’t only the names of artists in attendance but a total part of the actual experience… okay, maybe not the teengirl fantasy part. A festival planned in bedrooms, for music recorded in bedrooms, to be performed at future house shows… how much realer does a fest get?

We’ve had the honor of performing, think tanking, and being overly enthusiastic about everything for the fest’s previous two years, and this cinco de mayo weekend is no different other than the exponential growth that this fest has taken on in Orlando. In collaboration with Tiny Waves, who presented us with an underwater miracle for Orange You Glad Fest, there’s no doubts this is going to be a holy healer for 2012. However, it takes insane investment and commitment of all kinds to keep these kinds of not-for-profit festivals afloat so we’re here to pass around the Indiegogo hat to ensure that all artistic enterprises can be achieved and all touring bands are reimbursed. Donations go towards sweet rewards like illustrations of Pauly Shore or the first release of weekend passes! Peep more of the lineup and rsvp here, and very soon we’ll be announcing a FMLY tour en route to the fest that will sweep down the east coast in case you’d like to caravan.

tune of the night

Ernesto Djedje – Pieli

Life is purposeless. Don’t be shocked. The whole idea of purpose is wrong — it comes out of greed. Life is a sheer joy, a playfulness, a fun, a laughter, to no purpose at all. Life is its own end, it has no other end. The moment you understand it you have understood what meditation is all about. It is living your life joyously, playfully, totally, and with no purpose at the end, with no purpose in view, no purpose there at all. Just like small children playing on the sea beach, collecting seashells and coloured stones. -Osho

live your dream :: shape your passion

The Spookfish – Where I Should Go

Tonight’s shareable comes from the oh so feel good Holstee Manifesto, a solid resource to share that anything can become possible with genuine, positive intention. Originally written in 2009 after the company’s three founders left their jobs, these words have risen to communicate a level of collective consciousness… not depicting how life or work should be, but documenting what to appreciate in life in order to go forward and breathe passion into our shared everyday. This morning Emily Reo emailed me an article from the Wire sharing a familiar sentiment orbiting the perspective of musician John Richards [of Dirty Electronics] and his desire to step away from the static process of recording to allow his sound making process to become indistinct as a social practice.

Art and music as a social practice is something I have become increasingly drawn to. Constructivists Naum Gabo and Antoine Pevsner, in their 1920 “Realistic Manifesto”, argued: “Art should attend us everywhere that life flows and acts… at the bench, at the table, at work, at rest, at play.” Similar themes are continued in the work of Joseph Beuys and the idea of social sculpture, where art is directly linked to and influential upon society. [via]

With many thanks to the open source movement of the last two decades, coupled with the popularity of all-pervasive digital networks, decentralizing “art” to the point of total dilution is shifting back into our nature. Group bike rides, sharing sounds, and living a passionate, collaborative life are no longer romantic ideas in the reflection of a post-Industrial era, but becoming the norm for successful terms of engagement. Life is about the people you meet and the things you create with them. So go out and start creating. Long live the new flesh.

hello neighbor

Lucky Dragons – New Homes

“If the structure does not permit dialogue the structure must be changed.”
-Paulo Freire

Walking down Manhattan’s 6th Avenue I was turned onto a community chalkboard sprouting into a welcome embrace, this initial inspiration bearing the question “What’s Your Obsession“. Before adding my own input I stood and watched a crowd of strangers share chalk and room on the board that served as scaffolding to shield a newly abandoned storefront. This interaction, this peek into the sweetheart of New York City, has become a total highlight of recent memory. My ensuing internet search party brought me to Candy Chang‘s interactive public art project entitled “Before I Die“. The fundamental notion explored in Candy’s project, more-than-likely responsible for “What’s Your Obsession”, is that public space should inherently be designed to facilitate community engagement and collaboration. Not surprising, these themes find appreciated evolution and intersection in her Columbia University graduate thesis [highly recommended]. In collaboration with Civic Center, “Before I Die” saw its first site installation across the side of an abandoned house in New Orleans… and within the last year has collected over 25,000 responses in 7 countries from 12 walls. Go team.

Continue reading ‘hello neighbor’

fight for the feeling

I am Genko – The Right Path
I Am Genko – It’s All Yours (Yohuna cover)

There’s no one in the world like Ricardo Gutierrez, his spirit drips in monome sequence with blinks I’m sure must cue up some incomprehensible beat patterns. For Ricardo’s alter ego, and Lima, Peru’s resident sonic-magician I Am Genko 2012 is a new year with new gear. Last time we checked in with Ricardo we were devastated to hear that his home had been broken into and instruments stolen, he had launched an indiegogo fundraiser along with a sweet video [watch], and we kept our fingers crossed for the best. A few months later, and he’s back!

Now something that we need to understand about Ricardo is that, yes, he is a super rad musician, but even more important, he has a philosophy that anchors his music so that he can take it anywhere he can imagine. I’m sure that philosophy is different for each person with every listen, and that’s one of the sweet joys of listening, but I’d like to take this opportunity to highlight two recently produced videos. This is the first we’ve heard musically from Ricardo in some time, and it’s really incredible to acknowledge his direct attitude with bringing music to the streets, without amplification, interacting directly with his city. Call it a non-instrusive dance party, call it a sweetheart seducing his city streets with sound, call it a group hug… we love everything we see and want [to be doing] more of it. Peek at a second video after the jump, and download I Am Genko’s cover of Yohuna‘s “It’s All Yours” above for the rare opportunity of hearing the man sing. Let this be a lesson: take your music out of the bedroom and into the streets!

Continue reading ‘fight for the feeling’

we are fmly

Set FMLY Fest on Random from Mick LeGrande on Vimeo.


Over the past 8 months a beautiful man named Mick LeGrande has been documenting FMLY in Los Angeles with the intention of producing a full length called We Are FMLY. We have talked for a while about the importance of seeing what FMLY looks like across the world since it just wouldn’t feel right unless you were in this too. So Mick has thought of a solution. We are going to open source the doc. If you are someone that can or wants to document the happenings where you are to add to the documentary, email Mick to coordinate. We want every local community involved in this so please, don’t be shy. Either way, I will be coming across the US with Mick to Florida and then up to New York for FMLY FEST Brooklyn, and we would love to see you along the way. If you want to hang out, play a show with us, or eat burritos, email me!

::bonus::
Here are a couple other videos that Mick made from FMLY FEST LA 2011

EMILY REO @ FMLY FEST from Mick LeGrande on Vimeo.


This Machine Kills Zombies from Mick LeGrande on Vimeo.

exploring g chording

It’s obvious that more is better than less in some cases. Sometimes all it takes is one person or entity to make something amazing and it always makes me ecstatic to just talk about out of “the norm” ideas. My friend Geoff Morgan used to fling his paint brush at a blank piece of sheet music and speckle the thing with water color. He would then proceed to write that music into an electronic music program on his computer as if he were that up and comer shredder Jason Becker, who lost feeling in his lower limbs only to lose all ability to play his guitar and friends had to create elaborate eye systems for which Jason could still construct his music. In Geoff’s case he had written a piece of music that merely had the DNA of what a wrist flinging paint sounds like, or what a good blood spatter detective might recover if he ran the information he’d gathered through a music making program in the future. Then there’s always word play and how it takes you down a loophole and back. You lose your mind for a second in the silliness of our language and find an unexplained meaning in the game. I have many a friend who are endowed with this through older generations of friends long gone and so on. Silliness needs a history. The idea to get 100 people together to create a large ambient “G” hum is on the same level as making an iPhone app that lets you discover hidden treasure buried by complete strangers in your local area or cutting vinyl records in half and gluing them back together to hear what they sound like [coughcough]. The idea is almost as elusive when thought up as when it’s finally undertaken. The “G” Hum parade went off without a hitch. I remember initially walking out of Bows & Arrows thinking, “This is too small…” and then two trumpets fired off triumphantly only to be followed by 5 little melodicas and the faint sound of little battery operated keyboards. We had created a Tibetan Buddhist buzz. All this said, people need to engage silly ideas more often. Make some history out of those ideas. If the guys at NASA knew it was this easy to reach outer space they wouldn’t have spent those billions of dollars, they would have accessed the moon via different crafts.

<3,
Daniel Trudeau [aka Pregnant], via Impose

fmly fest :: brooklyn

dear summer of 2k12,

on june 22 & 23 we invite you to participate in our open gathering: a two day celebration of fmly and frnds representing a global community of makers, prosumers, visual/auditory/spatial artists, activists/hacktivists, theorists, writers, cyclists, environmentally conscious foodies, and like minded social do-gooders. over the last three years our festival has carried on a winter fling with california, but as saucy as the relationship is going you can’t imagine how excited we are to spend some quality time with you heartthrobs on the east coast.

fmly fest is a d.i.t. (do it together) music and arts festival, as in we accomplish nothing if we do not take strides for positive transformation together. this is an open call for all zinesters, screen printers, wall doodlers, public space connoisseurs, pillow fort enthusiasts, bedroom recorders, scenic appreciators, urban dissenters, airwave hackers, subway singers, angsty latte flippers, kids who dance their heart out at every show, rap battles, round robins, aerialists, and new friends to come together and create this gorgeous reflection of our community we’ve all been feeling.

to get involved, contact :: fmlyfest@thefmly.com // to keep updated, bookmark // to visualize, watch // to rsvp and invite your friends, check out

first public meeting is on wednesday, february 1. learn more & rsvp here.

♥,
fmly

ps. ahhhh, can’t wait!!!!

“action is the product of the qualities inherent in nature. it is only the ignorant man or woman who, misled by personal egotism, says: ‘i am the doer.’”

“do trust in the things you love”

dustin wong – sweetest pleasures while we live

Back in April of last year I posted about the Do Lectures that take place annually in Wales, and recently I became pretty infatuated with one of their talks from photographer, musician, surfer Mickey Smith. With great humility Mickey presents his zest for life that too often goes unacknowledged, and around 10:40 he shows his short film, Dark Side of the Lens. I hesitate to tell ya any more because his words are too precious to summarize – carrying these in my heart pocket forever, “If I only scrape a living at least it will be a living worth scraping. If there’s no future in it at least it’s a present worth remembering.”

Make sure to check out more Do Lecture videos like Indy Johar’s “do it for (y)ourself,” about building communities around things, and Zach Smith [founder of MakerBot] speaking on “the joy of making something.”

“photography never interested me”

Magical Mistakes – Fetishization

Jacob Holdt externalizes a bold gift of sincerity, and his approach to photography offers the most genuine and diverse portrayal of American life that I have ever witnessed. Beginning in Denmark in 1970, Holdt – 23 years old, fueled by idealism, and fed up with Danish support for US foreign policy in Southeast Asia – “immigrated” to Canada after receiving an invitation to work on a farm. His intent was to hitchhike from Canada, through America and Mexico, in order to arrive in Chile to support Marxist politician Salvador Allende and his contention for social justice. Famously, Holdt never made it to South America that year or anytime soon thereafter. He was robbed at gunpoint and aside from the $40 in his pocket was left with a fascination for the contradictions of American society. Over the next five years Holdt hitchhiked back and forth across the country, totaling more than 100,000 miles, living primarily in slums with prostitutes, addicts, murderers, members of the KKK, and members of society who are often too taboo for public eye. However, his project found interest in the upper class and Holdt directly experienced the paradox of living with the Rockefellers’ and a variety of America’s wealthiest families.

Cough Cool – I Don’t Get It (Hate)

Though his pioneering work American Pictures has been known internationally for the last thirty-five years, his message is still one that is equally pressing today; we perpetuate a society which imposes blatant class divisions and if we came to know one another outside of these superficial roles we have the chance to recognize our communal honesty and strength for positive change. By constructing our reality, together, no one is excluded. Holdt’s photographs examine a diverse panorama of modern social conditions, and it has become a recent hobby of mine to study his personal political and social beliefs to understand how he reads his own work. It’s super important to understand our passion for positive transformation within a historical context, and after witnessing the energy that has poured into our WRITING HOME project I know that Jacob’s work is one of many predecessors to this concept that is the utopic panorama – a participatory conversation which speaks towards humanity as a whole rather than as a social or political empire. That to positively progress we must know one another, live with one another, and truly become united. As an article this is merely a brief introduction to Jacob Holdt – if you want to dive in further we love a good conversation! More of his photographs after the jump.

Continue reading ‘“photography never interested me”’

writing our way home

every important social movement reconfigures the world in the imagination. what was obscure comes forward, lies are revealed, memory shaken, new delineations drawn over the old maps: it is from this new way of seeing the present that hope emerges for the future… let us begin to imagine the worlds we would like to inhabit, the long lives we will share, and the many futures in our hands. -susan griffin

for a long time i’ve felt that the friends i have made as a part of fmly are something closer to kindred spirits than like-minded activists, and taking the last five years to document these relationships in theory, concept, method, and result has only encouraged this loving delusion. so if you’ll allow me to keep rolling with this immersive imagination that i’ve become completely smitten by then i’d love to take this opportunity to introduce you to our collaborative project that has been a long time coming. writing our way home is the first in a series of participatory projects that emphasize our notion of the spiritual diaspora, that is, the discovery of one’s own critical consciousness and the development of this awareness as a tool for collaboration. and please don’t worry if that last sentence didn’t quite make sense, because sense is yours to make and we’re just so ecstatic to have the chance to share it with ya! but i’ll put a hold on my personal sentiments for now, and get to who, what, where, why, and hows of it all ::

writing home is a multilogue that projects your voice into a global quilt of conversation. the discussion: what kind of positive transformation do you imagine for your own environment and the world at large? together we will reveal the transparency of universal myths while celebrating our own individuality. the first collection of postcards will be presented at fmly fest, and in the new year we’ll scan & post all postcards to this tab for referral.

instructions: imagine an improvement within your community. what must we do, together and individually, to see this change happen? you’re encouraged to express your thoughts in the form of a short manifesto, collage, drawing, poem, story, or any other representation of your inspiration. these ideas will be shared throughout the world and you can smile heavy knowing that you are giving a piece of unique knowledge and imagination to a new friend & pen pal. when you feel like you’ve completed your postcard take another peek with your decorative eye. if you’re ready for your thoughts to see mail, read on.

global buds: please get in touch to let us know about your participation and to discuss how and to whom you would like to send your card. we have a giant list of friends from all over the world who would love to write back! plus if you have a great time doing this and would like to participate even further we’d love to help you facilitate this project in your community. if you are mailing your own card we ask that you please send us a clear photo of your cutie face next to your postcard and either attach a scanned copy so that we can appreciate your wisdom or type it out for us if you’re sharing words. these contributions will become part of our physical quilt providing a participatory map to document and archive the idealism shared at this very moment in time.

coming up: we’re hosting workshops to decorate and create postcards in addition to delightful conversation, food, music, and rad times. we’re also speaking with local community spaces in a few cities to set up permanent stations for you to comfortably share and deposit your card for a later pickup. though this project has just begun we have already created a thread across the american coasts reaching into norway, let’s play together to reimagine the world!