Amadeus
Big up crew!

Gonna keep it short and sweet today :)

just wanted to hit you up and let you know that I completed a new  
mix. It is readily available for download here:

http://www.amadj.com/bridge.html

Check it and let me know what you think!

Also i will be back on tour in Europe in June, got  a bunch of dates  
filled already but always down for more, if you are interested or  
know someone who might be, any help would be greatly appreciated.

Check out the Tour website (link is kept in the spirit of the euro  
soccer cup goin down at the same time!):

http://www.amadj.com/euro2008.html

Hope all is well with ya!
All the best with your projects.

Peace n' Bless
-Amadeus

www.amadj.com
www.myspace.com/amadeus030
www.myspace.com/amadeustunes




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One Night of Fire: Write-ups & Photos

There are some boundaries you shouldn't believe in.  Last
Saturday more than three thousand of you stormed the city
streets, bridges and boardwalks with a style of wild-eyed
absurdism that lit this city from smiles to spirits to
fiery finale.

We started on the Brooklyn Bridge against a gorgeous
sunset and the most awe-inspiring backdrop in the world.
Then we took Manhattan.  The cops were at first baffled,
then simply amused at our surprise invasion of nymphs in
white and angels of red.  A march band, a splash in City
Hall Fountain and an intoxicating party ride through the
subways led us back to Coney Island - a fading memory of
the decrepit New York City we love.  Our finale was
fireworks and rockets, flares and performance but really
it was you.  The hundreds of you who swam naked, danced
through morning and smiled back at a city that, for one
night, let you live as you dare to dream.

For photos and future invites look to:
http://www.thedanger.com

See the Village Voice's photo report at:
http://www.villagevoice.com/gallery/0729,29firebeach,77230,30.html

And hundreds of more pictures at:
http://www.flickr.com/search/?z=t&w=all&q=%22one+night+of+fire%22&m=text

For future invites to events like this stay on our e-mail
list.  To unsubscribe, click the link at the bottom of
this and every message.

Also, we are going to start using the text message
list for rare invites to special events including some
that won't get posted to public e-mail lists.  At most
it will be two or three texts a month.  To subscribe to
or unsubscribe from the text message list head to:

http://www.thedanger.com

It is your brilliance and enthusiasm that keeps this city
alive.  We can't thank you enough.

 

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Blackkat's Mayday Indypendent Article


 


Party Politics: Out of the Clubs & Into the Streets

By Linnea Covington
From the April 26, 2007 issue

By Linnea Convington

Over a thousand people, bumping music, performances and public speakers in will gather Tompkins Square Park for the annual Blackkat May Day celebration on April 29. Geared towards bringing political awareness to the party crowd, this celebration started in 1986 and has been organized by the local group Blackkat for nine years.

Crafted by DJs Jason Blackkat (BK) and Arrow Chrome in 1996, Blackkat is a collective of artists, dancers and DJs who throw parties that embrace activism while being entertaining. “There is a subtle political idea in doing these events,” said BK. “It’s about music and art itself that is challenging and boundary pushing.”

While Blackkat does not push a particular agenda, the group’s goal is to promote political consciousness in the party scene. The May Day celebration is their best-attended and longest-running event. “There are multiple things we are trying to accomplish with May Day,” said Chrome. “One thing is to celebrate the radical and bohemian culture of the Lower East Side.”

The tradition of International Workers’ Day traces its roots to the original struggle to obtain an eight-hour workday in the late 1800s and commemorates the Haymarket labor strike in Chicago, that began May 1, 1886. According to BK, the Tompkins Square Park event was founded a hundred years later by the Lower East Side squatter community and originally overseen by Jerry the Peddler, a long-time squatter who still does all the legwork to obtain permits from the New York City Parks Committee. Though Jerry was unavailable for comment, according to the New York City government website, it can take up to a month for the application to go through. BK confirmed that the process to obtain park permits was long and uncertain. In the past, he said, the group has been hassled by undercover cops at their events in order to arrest people drinking alcohol or taking illegal substances.

Trying to introduce young people in a party scene to politics has roots in BK and Chrome’s own experiences in the punk rock scene during the 1980s. “It was my exposure to punk rock lyrics that opened me up to the concept of environmental and social justice philosophies,” said Chrome. “Punk rock did that for my generation and the new rave culture didn’t seem to have much of a political prospect — especially in America.”

Blackkat’s political activity is centered around repealing the city’s cabaret law and the federal Illicit Drug Anti-Proliferation Act, popularly known as the RAVE Act. “[We are] one of the only regular party throwing groups that focus on the non-corporatization of music and [the cabaret laws],” he said.

The New York City cabaret law, which prohibits entertainment in clubs and bars, was initially enacted in 1926 mainly to target the jazz scene. The law had been dormant for decades until 1997 when former Mayor Giuliani created the Nightclub Enforcement Task Force, which conducts sweeps of bars and clubs and fines venues where more than three people are found dancing (illegal under the cabaret law). Since then, fewer than 300 bars and clubs in the city have undergone the lengthy and expensive process to obtain a cabaret license.

The much more recent RAVE Act was signed into law April 30, 2003, purportedly to protect minors from illegal substances. Despite the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s claim that the act does not target dancing or music, there are many accounts of it being used to shut down parties, clubs and bars. One episode occurred May 30, 2003 when a venue in Billings, Montana canceled a benefit concert for the local chapter of Students for Sensible Drug Policy and the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws after it was threatened with a $250,000 fine if anyone was caught with, or thought to be using, illegal substances.

“We live in a city where money and getting your name out there is more important than actual content that’s provided,” said Amok, a musician and two year Blackkat collective member. “This is what makes Blackkat so very different, it puts content first always … which is something that other crews unfortunately forget to do.”

In the past, Blackkat has joined forces with other groups including Dance Parade New York, the Madagascar Institute, The Danger, DanceSafe, Renegade Virus and Havoc Sound. Events have included a fundraiser for the 2005 Biotour benefit, numerous festivals and parties in various warehouses such as 3rd Ward and the now closed Lunatarium and 38Nine (in Queens).

“The main point is that it is vital that people come together in a creative community and we hope that these events can be part of that community,” said Chrome. BK added, “They have to be fun to be effective.”

The May Day Celebration is Sunday, April 29 at Tompkins Square Park (2pm-6 pm) with an after party at The Delancey Bar & Nightclub, 168 Delancey (between Clinton & Attorney), 212-254-9920, blackkat.org.

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Blackkat's Mayday Metro Article

Dancing in the streets to highlight city’s law

by amy zimmer / metro new york

APR 30, 2007

UNION SQUARE. There are only 69 venues where you can dance legally in Manhattan.

That’s what organizers of the upcoming “Dance Parade” — a rhythmic, gyrating response to the city’s cabaret law that forbids dancing at unlicensed venues — recently discovered after using the Freedom of Information Act to obtain documents from the Department of Consumer Affairs.

Citywide, “there are 148 cabaret licenses and that includes adult entertainment, hotels and restaurants,” said Greg Miller, a spokesman for the parade, which is expected to draw more than 6,300 dancers — from ballerinas to B-boys to Turkish whirling dervishes — on May 19.

Miller, whose group had a table at yesterday’s annual May Day party organized by the Blackkat artist collective, said the parade is a chance to raise attention about the cabaret law before the state’s highest appellate court rules on February’s decision that dancing is not a protected form of expression.

The cabaret law, which was created in 1926 to curb public lewdness and interracial mixing, had, by the 1960s, limited cabaret licenses to establishments in manufacturing and commercial zones. Further zoning changes in the late ’80s made getting a license even more difficult.

“Three years ago, there were 300 cabaret licenses,” Miller said. “Every three months the number drops by 15. It’s so hard not only to get a new cabaret license, but to get one renewed because of building codes.”

He didn’t understand why the city needed a cabaret law since it has the noise code, which addresses problems with clubs.

Jason BK, a DJ and Blackkat co-founder, lamented the difficulty of getting permits to throw dance parties.

Yesterday’s party — which he had been throwing for nearly a decade in Tompkins Square Park — proved challenging because of a last-minute location change and the red tape.

“We applied for the permit in January, but we don’t get the permit until three days before,” he said. “It wasn’t easy, but part of the reason we do this is to show that it can be done.”

Europe, by contrast, has a thriving scene of outdoor techno dance parties and festivals — something Blackkat is trying to bring here.

“New York City is about creativity, people getting together. It’s never been a quiet place,” he said. “No one ever demonstrated why dancing is more dangerous than not dancing.”

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Femme Fatales
Saturday July 8th FEMMES FATALES rocked 49 Bogart Street.

A special thanks to the lovely ladies who provided tantalizing sounds.....

DJ GALA - Rock Paper Scissor, Rank – eclectic beats
KATALYST B – Independent, NY – mixed mashup drum n bass
KID.6STER – Peanutbutter – house
DJ STRIFE – SisterNYC ( dj-strife.com) – drum n bass
WINTER – SisterNYC (djwinternyc.com) – drum n bass

Our live vocalist....

RHIANNON – SisterNYC, The Shift, Subatomic Soundsystem ( myspace.com/rhiannonism)


AND fabulous politically minded art work by....

BETTY TAOPAT KAO (beatrixxx.deviantart.com/gallery )
Installation/Mixed Media

BRIT WEISS (trulikelove.com, bringthejam.com)
Graphic design

CAITLIN BURNS - Dysco Noir ( dysconoir.com)
Fashion Installation

CHARLOTTE GASPARD - C. Spot Designs (cspotdesigns.com
Fashion Art & Sculpture Installation

JESone aka JHEART (myspace.com/jheartss) & DAISY
Graffiti

SOPHIA DEL GIGANTE – (myspace.com/knowisdom )
Graphic Design/Mock-Propaganda Posters

Lastly, I would like to thank LOLA for her delicious treats

Our friends PERIPHERAL MEDIA for the silkscreening and use of 49 Bogart gallery!


FEMME FATALES was brought to you by DATA23 (data23.com) & KONCEPSHUN (koncepshun.org)
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