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Cover art: https://www.beatbooks.com/pages/books/38912/comstock-lode-1-10-london-1977-1982-all-published
Cover art: https://www.beatbooks.com/pages/books/38912/comstock-lode-1-10-london-1977-1982-all-published


=== 1978-11-18 concert Acklam Hall, London: Red Crayola, Cabaret Voltaire, Scritti Politti, pragVEC
=== 1978-11-18 concert Acklam Hall, London: Red Crayola, Cabaret Voltaire, Scritti Politti, pragVEC ===


Poster: [https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-M2d2gsqf27Y/XSU86RWhckI/AAAAAAAANTY/zH47vonCqDY_C_GUb_EKmhN3lMYFLOAOwCLcBGAs/s1600/scritti%2Backlam%2Bhall%2Bred%2Bcrayola%2Bflyer.jpg Link]<ref>http://reynoldsretro.blogspot.com/2019/07/1979-in-2005-green-interviewed-about.html</ref>
Poster: [https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-M2d2gsqf27Y/XSU86RWhckI/AAAAAAAANTY/zH47vonCqDY_C_GUb_EKmhN3lMYFLOAOwCLcBGAs/s1600/scritti%2Backlam%2Bhall%2Bred%2Bcrayola%2Bflyer.jpg Link]<ref>http://reynoldsretro.blogspot.com/2019/07/1979-in-2005-green-interviewed-about.html</ref>

Revision as of 02:44, 2 October 2022

Temporary page containing links and sources.

Dates

1966

1966

1966-12-21 The Baytown Sun: Christmas Festivities in Full Swing on Lee College Campus

Reb Dance

The gymnasium was the scene for the Rho Epsilon Beta Christmas Dance which was held Friday. Three bands, The Jolly Itch, The Red Crayolas, and the Inmates provided music for the semi-formal dance. [1]

1967

1967

1967 The Red Crayola live photo

The Red Crayola live, 1967

Photo by Dr. James Cunningham

Mayo Thompson, Frederick Barthelme, and Steve Cunningham. [2]

1967 Les Blank Red Crayola photoshoot

Usage:

Note: This 1992 source says the photos were taken backstage at the Berkeley Folk Music festival, which seems impossible as they're used in the promotion for the festival: Sources#1992-11_Stereo_Review:_The_Parable_of_Arable_Land_reissue_review

1967-04 Houston Chronicle article

Note: not found

There was a Houston Chronicle from April, 1967 article mentioning that the "Red Crayolas" (sic) were playing a fashion show there, but they refer to it as "an old church" and not La Maison. [3]

1967-06-03 Red Crayola plays opening of Street Light Circus Feel Good Machine

[Photo of poster]

This is the grand opening poster for the Love Street Light Circus and Feel Good Machine in Houston, Texas on June 3rd 1967. The bands included the Red Crayola, the Starvation Army Band and Fever Tree. The reverse side of this handbill is autographed by members of Jefferson Airplane who visited Love Street after a performance in Houston. It is believed that this was the second version of the handbill that was printed and that it was more widely distributed than the first version. During conversations with the original owner, he indicated that no one could read the first version (see below!)

[Photo of poster]

This is probably the first version of the grand opening poster (or large handbill) for the Love Street Light Circus. It promotes the same bands and the same dates, but includes a lot of information in the psychedelic lettering [4]

Some more info on the venue[5]

1967-06: The Parable of Arable Land LP

Released by International Artists

1967 Berkeley Folk Music Festival promotional pamphlet

4 images: https://berkeleyfolk.blogspot.com/2011/08/berkeley-folk-festival-1966_12.html

1967-06-29: Angry Arts Festival Red Crayola performance

Live 1967:

  • Venice Pavillion Concert, Afternoon
  • Venice Motel, Evening, Piece One
  • Venice Motel, Evening, Piece Two

1967-06-30: The Berkeley Barb: Folk Scene

1967-06-30: Berkeley Folk Music Festival Red Crayola performances

1967-07-02 performance

Live 1967: 7/2, Evening: "Dust"

1967-07-03 performance

Live 1967: 7/3, Afternoon: Red Crayola with John Fahey

1967-07-04 performance

Live 1967: 7/4, Afternoon: Jubilee Concert

1967-07-17 The Rag: Berkeley Folk Festival review

pg. 12 & 11

1967-07-21 The Berkeley Barb: Berkeley Folk Festival review

pg. 8

1968

1968

1968 Mother: Houston's Rock Magazine interview

Band interview[6]

1968-07-01 The Chicago Seed

Reviews of Parable and God Bless[7]

1969

1969

1969-02-01 Cash Box: article on Lelan Fox's new label

Excerpt:

From the production end, Rogers has recorded such artists as the 13th Floor Elevators and the Red Crayola, and is currently taking the bows for sessions on the Children for Atco by producing their current "Rebirth" album and "I'll Be Your Sunshine" single.

Rogers added that his label's first release is scheduled for next week (31). [8]

1969-08-08 Cash Box: Metanomena

Article discussing the summer rock festivals of 1969

Excerpt:

At another level are the groups like Arther Brown, Bonzo Dog Doodah Band, Hapshash and the Coloured Coat (featuring the Human Host and the Heavy Metal Kids!) , the Mothers of Invention, Captain Beefheart and Red Crayola, the Texas group that, as Rolling Stone pointed out, are proud of the fact that they have never been invited to play anywhere twice. In an appearance at the Berkeley Folk Festival several years ago they utilized a galvanized drum with chicken wire stretched across the top supporting a chunk of ice which, as it melted and dripped, provided a kind of bottom to their sound which at the top consisted of electronic distortion at such a high level of intensity that when they per- formed, all of the street peoples' dogs fled howling from the scene. [9]

1970

1970

1970 Frederick Barthelme - Rangoon book

Note: not found

Front cover:

Text and photographs copyright by Frederick Barthelme

Illustrations copyright by Mayo Thompson

All rights reserved

Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 74-118570

Manufactured in the United States of America at Valley Offset

Winter House Ltd New York

1970 Mayo Thompson - Corky's Debt to His Father LP

Released by Texas Revolution

1970-08-30 Houston Chronicle: The Barthelmes, Houston's Own Hardy Boys

...

His brother, Frederick Barthelme, is 27, an artist and the author of a just-published book of short fiction pieces, "Rangoon." (Winter House $7.95). Another book will be published soon by Doubleday.

...

Frederick Barthelme went to St. Thomas High and the University of Houston. For a while, art was his major interest. He had a show in May 1967 at the Louisiana Gallery and he won the Oklahoma State Fair's purchase prize. His sculpture has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art.

Frederick Barthelme had shoulder-length hair as long ago as 1967, which indicates an independent spirit.

He played with a musical group, "The Red Crayola," and recorded "The Parable of Arable Land."

His first book, "Rangoon," is the first book to be published by Winter House, a publishing company formed by Laurence Dent and his wife. Dent says that "Rangoon" is a modernization of Joyce, Camus and Stein. According to Frederick Barthelme, its central thesis is "the thunderous acceptability of the human lack of condition."

1972

1972

1972 Mayo Thompson on community access television

Note: not digitized

Community access television / Ben Teague and Mayo Thompson; introduced by Tom Eaton

Discussion of the history and potential of community access television and also on starting a video theater.

1 reel (30 min.) : 7 1/2 ips, mono.[10]

1972-01 KPFT radio guide

Mayo Thompson listed as a volunteer for this Houston radio station[11]

1972-02-13 Houston Chronicle: Books: Fiction Explored From Frederick Barthelme...

Full text:[12]

1972-02-13 Houston Chronicle: Books: Fiction Explored From Frederick Barthelme...

By Ann Waldron, Book Editor

[Photo of Frederick Barthelme by Larry Evans, Chronicle Staff]

And now we have Frederick Barthelme, "experimental novelist."

Some people think he's better than his brother, Donald, whom the New York Times Magazine called "the most interesting writer in American today."

Other people think Frederick is a put-on, a dabbler too lazy to write so people can understand him.

He's had two novels published -- "Rangoon" and "War and War." An excerpt from a third "Ten Bears", appeared in Works in Progress, but was turned down for publication by the publisher who had contracted for it.

Frederick Barthelme is back in his native Houston, working occasionally at the Contract Graphics gallery, "relaxing," thinking about writing, talking about a new musical group, discussing his work.

"It's strange being out of New York," he said. "You lose contact. But I've stopped worrying about it. I decided to give up the posture of the famous New York writer down on his luck."

What posture has he assumed?

Well he's at work on a fourth novel, but hasn't written a line in three months.

"I wouldn't write anything until I could write something that would really knock me out," he said. "Most of the work I've done is limited, on the arcane side. There's some kind of truncation, the reader doesn't get involved in it. I'm trying to cross that boundary without becoming Jacqueline Susann. I don't mean telling a story. I'm not interested in a story. I'm more interested in saying that John killed Sally in one exquisite sentence than I am in the fact that he killed her.

"I don't know why that is. That's just the way I'm built, little lady."

Frederick Barthelme grew up in Houston, one of the five children of Donald Barthelme Sr. He went to Tulane and the University of Houston, amassing 212 hours, but no degree in seven years.

He painted and his work appeared in several group shows around town. "I was writing, too," he said. "I wrote some plays, very strange, only 1000 words, some only one sentence. They were a cross between painting and drama. In my brash youth, with my vast knowledge of painting, I decided painting was confining. I wrote short stories and never tried to publish them. All the characters were horses. They talked and went to communion."

He played drums in a three-man band, Red Krayola, which made two records and played concerts here and in California.

In 1967, he went to New York and worked for a while at the Kornblee Gallery. "I sat there and answered the phone and talked to people who came in."

Then he quit work to write fulltime. How did he live? "With a friend," he said, "and she had a good job."

Barthelme worked hard, and waded through a first novel, "Hof." "It's never been published," he said, "and I've robbed it for other books."

His brother, Donald Barthelme Jr., author of "Snow White" and "City Life," helped him find an agent. It had taken Frederick only three or four months to write "Hof," and although it didn't sell, several publishers asked "what Mr. Barthelme is writing now?" So Frederick obligingly sat down and wrote "War and War" in one month.

Doubleday bought "War and War" in 1968. It wasn't published until June, 1971, because the editor who bought it left, the second editor didn't get along with Frederick and the third editor didn't do anything. Finally the fourth editor was found.

Meanwhile, Barthelme put together another novel, "Rangoon," which he says is a "combination of stuff," presumably some of the bits and pieces of "Hof," and a new publisher, Winter House, brought it out in 1970. "Rangoon" is illustrated by Mayo Thompson, an old friend of Frederick's Red Krayola days.

"'War and War' is the leading edge of my development," Barthelme said with a straight face. "It's more serious."

Neither book got much critical attention. "War and War" was panned on Page 46 of the New York Times Book Review.

Barthelme started on "Ten Bears" and came back to Houston last summer to finish it. Doubleday decided not to publish it, and Barthelme say it's "in limbo."

Meanwhile, he says he's learning how to relax.

"I used to hate Houston," he said. "I used to think it was a real dump. Now it doesn't bother me, except that the air is rotten and the terrain is flat and the trees were all designed by Roy Hofheinz' engineers."

What does he read? He doesn't seem to be a great reader. "In 1967 I was very hot on John Barth," he said, "and Wilfrid Sheed and William Gass. I never could stand Tom Wolfe. When I was writing 'War and War' I was going through a mock-intellectual period and read a lot of philosophy. I'd read ten pages and be so bored I couldn't go on. I read the mystics, the Don Juan books -- that's sort of life-living made simple, 'Cliff's Notes' on living life. I used to read Simenon and Dick Francis. I liked Alfred Jarry's 'Ubu Roi.'"

What will become of Frederick Barthelme? Who knows?

An editor at Doubleday wrote a meme that said, "This guy is a genius and... in the long run he is better than his brother...he really plows new ground...it's frighteningly good."

"I do not believe that fiction is a microcosm. I do not believe that fiction is a "little world" which is in some vague way a reconstruction of a possible "real world." A fiction is autonomous, and while it is necessarily referential in character, it is ideally an addition to as against a reconstruction of a possible world.

"Lazlo says that fiction describes a process or method of working (specifically writing) which holds as its originary impulse the imagination, and which does not necessarily submit to any regulation other than that imagination. I find this definition satisfactory."

-- From "War and War," by Frederick Barthelme.

1972-spr Prairie Schooner: Rangoon review

Full text:

Rangoon, by Frederick Barthelme with illustrations by Mayo Thompson (Winter House Ltd.), is a relatively expensive ($7.95) put-on that, in its best moments, approaches Mad Magazine at its worst. The written text ranges from unentertaining short fictions to a half-page outline on logical and extralogical reasoning. Interspersed with the written text are three solid black leaves, a group of blurry photos of inconsequential scenes, and some popart drawings that are sometimes related to the text and sometimes interesting. I resent this book not because it is a put-on (to suggest that it is the author's best would be too insulting), but because it is not even a clever put-on. [13]

1973

1973

1974

1974

1974 Mayo Thompson as assistant of Robert Rauschenberg in Israel

3 photos[14]

Robert Rauschenberg in Israel art book (1975): https://archive.org/details/robertrauschenbe00raus_5

1975

1975

1976

1976

1976-spr Newsletter of the John Weber Gallery: 1976 Spring-Summer Schedule

Group Exhibition: June 19-July 14 [15]

1976 Unused labels for Music-Language: Corrected Slogans

Two sheets printed green on white – both 30 x 21cm, 1pp. These are two unused labels from the Art & Language/ Red Crayola LP. Some records were released without labels and these could easily be used on such records. Both fine. [16]

1976-06-18 Art & Language - Music-Language: Corrected Slogans LP

1976-06 Art-Language: Vol.3 No.3

Note: not found

One section[17]


1976-06 US Postcard: Art & Language exhibit at John Weber Gallery

June 18 - July 14, 1976

John Weber Gallery

420 West Broadway

New York, New York 10012


(Provisional) Art & Language

1- Corrected Slogans *

2- 9 Gross & Conspicuous Errors **

3- The Organization of Culture Under Monopoly Capitalism

4- The Organization of Culture Under Self-Management Socialism

5- The Intellectual Life of the Ruling-Class Gets Its Apotheosis in a World of Doris Days

6- What Would Canada Do Without a Flavin


  • Music-Language, Record, 46:51, 3PM
    • M-L, Video-Tape, 26:00, 1 & 5 PM

(Or by appointment) [18]

1976-06 Postcard: Art-Language: Vol.3 No.3 and Music-Language: Corrected Slogans

10.5 x 15cm, 1pp. Typographic postcard announcing the new volume of the journal and the famous LP (with Red Crayola). Also rubber stamped top left in red ink with the announcement that in Oct 1976 Volume 3 Nr 4 was also published. Fine. From Charles Harrison’s own archive. Unmailed example.

Oct. 76

Vol. 3 No. 4


Art-Language

Volume 3 Number 3

$4.00 £2.00 plus Postage


Music-Language

Corrected Slogans

12 inch L.P. 21 songs

$4.00 £2.00 plus Postage


Orders to Art & Language(P)

126 Broughton Road Bansbury Oxon, England

250 Bowery New York N.Y. 10012 U.S.A. [19]

1976-10 US Postcard: Art-Language Vol.3 No.4 and Music-Language: Corrected Slogans

Offset-printed, black-and-white, 10.7 x 15.7 cm. Single sided postcard issued to promote the publication of the periodical Art-Language, volume 3, issue number 4 (October 1976), and the vinyl LP record Music-Language: Collected Slogans, both offshoots of Art & Language. LP producer was Mayo Thompson with songs written and performed by Art & Language [20]

1977

1977

1978

1978

1978-05-09 Mayo Thompson meets Pere Ubu

At Pere Ubu & Nico concert at Marquee, London

Source: Keep All Your Friends zine

1978-10 ZigZag: Hurricane Fighter Plane flexidisc

Note: magazine not found

Cover: https://www.beatchapter.com/zigzag-magazine-no-88-october-1978-blondie-patti-smith-ramones-xtc-mick-farren-the-normal-14227-p.asp

1978-10-14 Music Week: Releases: Wives in Orbit

WIVES IN ORBIT, Yik Yak, RED CRAYOLA. Radar ADA 22 (W)

DISTRIBUTORS CODE: W -- WEA [21]

WEA = Warner-Elektra-Atlantic

1978-10-21 NME: concert review Hope & Anchor, London

Note: not found

Excerpt:

An early psychedelic legend came to roost unexpectedly last weekend in the none-too-appropriate environs of the Hope and Anchor. [22]

Total word count of piece: 324

1978-10 International Artists promo booklet: Howdy From Texas The Lonestar State

Note: partially found[23]

The "Howdy" 24-page booklet was compiled in 1978 as part of the promotion for Radar Records' IA reissue program. The booklet contains a Lelan Rogers interview, a reprint of a long 13th Floor Elevators interview from 1967, an Elevators discography, a Mayo Thompson piece on the Houston '60s scene, an interview with the revived Red Crayola, and a number of Elevators & Krayola photos. The booklet was given away at Radar's release party in London, October 1978, and is rarely seen today.[24]

Baghdad on the Bayous?

Mayo Thompson's piece on the Houston '60s scene[25]

1978 Comstode Lode zine: Red Crayola interview

Note: not found

Comstode Lode no. 4

International Artists label (LPs), Gary Snyder retrospective, Mayo Thompson/Red Crayola interview (some Elevators talk), Pete Brown pt 2, reviews[26]

This issue devoted to the band Red Crayola, with an interview with some band members, news on the band, and printing of some lyrics.[27]

Cover art: https://www.beatbooks.com/pages/books/38912/comstock-lode-1-10-london-1977-1982-all-published

1978-11-18 concert Acklam Hall, London: Red Crayola, Cabaret Voltaire, Scritti Politti, pragVEC

Poster: Link[28]

1978-12-02 Melody Maker: concert review Acklam Hall, London

Note: not found

Excerpt:

In the collapse of trends, movements — individuals: when they combine, all the stronger. Tonight four bands moving forward, confidently or haltingly, but all with a spark... all ripe to be scooped up, then pigeonholed in a new "trend", the very last thing any of them want. [29]

Total word count of piece: 527


1979

1979

Music Week: June Album Releases: God Bless reissue

GOD BLESS THE RED CRAYOLA AND ALL WHO SAIL IN IT

Red Crayola RAD 16 [30]

1980

1980

1981

1981

1982

1982

1983

1983

1984

1984

1984

1984

1985

1985

1986

1986

1987

1987

1988

1967

1989

1989

1990

1990

1991

1991

1992

1992

1992-11 Stereo Review: The Parable of Arable Land reissue review

Backbeat: Noise in the Attic[31]

Has some comments from Frederick Barthelme

1993

1993

1994

1994

1995

1995

1996

1996

1997

1997

1998

1998

1999

1999

2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

2004

2005

2005

2006

2006

2007

2007

2008

2008

2009

2009

2010

2010

2011

2011

2012

2012

2013

2013

2014

2014

2015

2015

2016

2016

2017

2017

2018

2018

2019

2019

2020

2020

2021

2021

2022

2022

References

  1. The Baytown Sun Vol. 44, No. 105 Ed. 1: 9. View online
  2. https://bombmagazine.org/articles/mayo-thompson/
  3. http://www.scarletdukes.com/st/tmhou_venues1.html
  4. https://people.missouristate.edu/dennishickey/lovestreet.htm
  5. http://www.scarletdukes.com/st/tmhou_venues2.html
  6. Mother: Houston's Rock Magazine Iss. 2: 22-26. View online
  7. The Chicago Seed Vol. 2, Iss. 11: 15. View on JSTOR
  8. https://archive.org/details/cashbox30unse_25/page/n21/mode/2up?q=%22Red+crayola%22
  9. https://worldradiohistory.com/hd2/IDX-Business/Music/Archive-Cash-Box-IDX/60s/1969/CB-1969-08-09-OCR-Page-0040.pdf
  10. https://www.pacificaradioarchives.org/recording/bc1310
  11. View on Internet Archive
  12. Houston Chronicle Sunday, February 13, 1972: 24. View scan
  13. Prairie Schooner, Vol. 46, No. 1 (Spring 1972), pp. 91-93
  14. https://www.rauschenbergfoundation.org/artist/oral-history/mayo-thompson
  15. https://gallery.98bowery.com/2018/john-weber-gallery-carl-andre-sol-lewitt-charles-ross-gallery-newsletter-1976/
  16. https://unoriginalsins.co.uk/product/unused-labels-for-music-language-corrected-slogans-record-1976/
  17. https://theoria.art-zoo.com/editorial-to-art-language/
  18. https://gallery.98bowery.com/2019/john-weber-gallery-provisional-art-language-card-1976/
  19. https://unoriginalsins.co.uk/product/art-language-volume-3-number-3-music-language-corrected-slogans-1976/
  20. https://specificobject.com/objects/info.cfm?inventory_id=23750&object_id=20255&page=0&options=
  21. pp 70. [1]
  22. https://www.rocksbackpages.com/Library/Article/red-crayola-hope--anchor-london
  23. View pages on Discogs
  24. http://lysergia_2.tripod.com/RenaissanceFair/RenaissanceFair_cat4sold.htm
  25. http://www.scarletdukes.com/st/tmhou_mayoart.html
  26. http://lysergia_2.tripod.com/LamaWorkshop/lamaZines.htm
  27. https://www.barnebys.com/auctions/lot/comstock-lode-platt-john-et-al-fanzines-music-punk-nh5wawwbm
  28. http://reynoldsretro.blogspot.com/2019/07/1979-in-2005-green-interviewed-about.html
  29. https://www.rocksbackpages.com/Library/Article/red-crayola-cabaret-voltaire-scritti-politti-pragvec-acklam-hall-london
  30. pp 46. [2]
  31. https://worldradiohistory.com/hd2/IDX-Audio/Archive-Stereo-Review-IDX/IDX/90s/Stereo-Review-1992-11-OCR-Page-0146.pdf