Monday, September 15, 2008

New York Homies


Hit me up for guest list. Gonna be good times.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

RE:UP 16 on Newsstands Now


In this issue, RE:UP goes inside the mind of the late journalist Hunter S. Thompson by way of an exclusive interview with Alex Gibney—who directed this year’s Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson—and a humorous Q&A with infamous Gonzo illustrator Ralph Steadman. Street art philanthropist Aaron Rose looks back on his Beautiful Losers art project—a gallery showcase featuring Shepard Fairey, Thomas Campbell, Stephen Powers (a.k.a. Espo), Margaret Killigan, Barry McGee (a.k.a. Twist), and Harmony Korine (screenwriter of Kids, director of Gummo)—as it was realized into an award winning documentary. Closing out the D.I.Y. film trinity for this issue are striking images of booming sound systems perched atop BMX bikes made by dudes from Trinidad from the movie Made In Queens.

The music coverage in #16 has profiles on the most relevant artists killing it in the genres of: bass-heavy beats (Warp’s Flying Lotus), Swedish hip-hop and sequel to Santogold (Mapei), electrohouse (Germany’s Booka Shade), basement 8-bit thrash (Crystal Castles), and casio Afrobeat (Antibalas guitarist Chico Mann).

Delving into travel, RE:UP takes a summer mecca to the Middle East told by a collage of iconic Polaroids, and takes you in for an overnight stay at Portland, Orgeon’s Bohemia-tique Ace Hotel. RE:UP’s unique fashion spread “For the Ages” proves that it doesn’t matter when you’re from, just where you’re at.

Since its first publication, the Middle Signature design section—featuring original pieces of work from the most beloved contemporary artists—has become a staple of RE:UP. This issue marks the first induction into RE:UP’s Middle Signature Hall of Fame, with designers Parra, FriendsWithYou, Huntergatherer, Kelsey Brookes and more getting the nod. And when they weren’t screenprinting concert poster art for Gang of Four, VHS or Beta, Guided By Voices, or Cat Power, the couple from Milwaukee known as The Little Friends of Printmaking designed the cover of this issue, complete with an accompanying foldout poster.

DJ Small Change’s Big Cover-Up column features Sharpshooter cratedigger extraordinaire DJ Sureshot as he gives us a glimpse of his secret vinyl nuggets. Plus more Baby’s First Thrash Bands (Kim Ann from Hercules & Love Affair, and singer-songwriter José González), the Manual #12 Rewwwind (with a hilarious retrospective of The White Rapper Show by ego trip’s Sacha Jenkins and Brent Rollins), peculiar vinyl album cover art collected by Biggabush, and reviews on all the music, movies, gear, video games and books that you need to know about.

Go buy the issue before they're gone, or download the issue for free here.