As it turns out, the
building is still standing. So below are two more shots of this ghost of cheap
Midwestern entertainment, retrofitted for commercial storage years ago.
Afterdays Media focuses on archaeological views of our contemporary culture. Artifacts, art, or cultural phenomena that picture us in the past tense.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Springfield Drive-In: A Study in Slow Decay
The Springfield Drive-In was the first outdoor theater
to open in that Midwestern city – sometime during the early 1950s, I believe.
It closed during the early 1980s, after 30 years of intermission jingles and
dubious picture and sound quality. The first image is of the concession stand
as it was about five years into its abandonment – around 1988.
Friday, June 29, 2012
Dead Places, Kept Clean
When they mow these dead places, what remains there looks like art or historical preservation. Lovely.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
The Postmodernism that is Zombie Holocaust
Even the opening titles of the film seem folky now. |
1979 Italian ad art, following a very 1970s aesthetic. |
Like many such films of the era, this is as close to
outsider art as professional motion picture production can get. The story
follows its own, internal logic; the make-up effects are wonderfully abstract,
imaginative, and entirely inept; and the general tone seems primitive and
obscure.
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Fossil Aerosol Mining Project Anniversary - Moog
Celebrating 25 years of obscure recordings of very
damaged things, here is a preview from
an upcoming Fossil Aerosol Mining Project release. Its actually older
than 25 years – recorded with a Moog Prodigy back in 1983, four years before
the naming of the band. Listen for the Zombi 2 relics, found at the abandoned drive-in. Click on the Moog to listen.
Enjoy, and please visit
iTunes for more songs about the decay of us.
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Dead Drive-In Artifacts
The objects found in dead drive-in theaters represent their
own class of artifacts. Fragments of marketing pitches for fake food, mixed
together with the debris of selling second-run cinematic fiction. All stirred
together in a post-apocalyptic, pop-culture, mildewed stew. We started
collecting such material during the early 1980s. One of the more surprising relics
- a cassette recording of the audio from Zombi 2 (evidently made by someone in
the projection booth), was used in some of the earliest Fossil Aerosol Mining Project recordings.
A cache of concession stand
packaging.
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A display counter acetate of
a zombie hot dog.
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A box for selling Sprite.
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A pleasantly decayed copy of ad mat for “Foolin
Around” and “Hot Stuff”. Poorly pasted-together mock-ups of ads, with notations and bird-dropping patina. Lovely. |
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Dead Drive-In Theaters 1
There is something about abandoned drive-in theaters. We always found them little epicenters of post-apocalyptic irony, as they provided a physical reality to the apocalyptic fantasies predicted across their very screens during the 1970s and 1980s. Life following art quite nicely.
Anyway, in celebration of summertime, I will post some dead drive-in images and relics, harvested a long time ago. First up is some footage that is probably some of the oldest drive-in abandonment video posted online at the moment. Shot way back in 1983, in a concession stand in central Illinois. Watch for the posters on the wall, and for a figure that appears in a shattered window- he wasn’t part of our film crew.
Next post, some drive-in
artifacts.
Sunday, April 1, 2012
New Fossil Aerosol Mining Project CD
We are pleased to announce
the release of the new Fossil Aerosol Mining Project album, Decades of Fake
Resurrection. Celebrating 25 long
years of making obscure electronica, this is a retrospective survey of material
dating from 1986 - 2011. Dead places re-imagined, and contaminated things
reactivated.
The Project began producing
audio recordings during the mid-1980s, using literal “found sounds” such as
fragments of open reel 1/4” tape and 35mm film recovered from burnt out
warehouses and abandoned drive-in theaters. The earliest compositions involved
physical tape loops and analog signal processes, which were gradually replaced
by digital delay treatments and multi-track manipulation. All of Fossil
Aerosol’s work is fashioned from multiple layers of audio artifacts, which are
both naturally and artificially decomposed.
The new compilation is
composed of unreleased or substantially remixed tracks. Included here are two
tracks from the If You Enjoyed the Dawn of the Dead sessions – one remixed and one unreleased. Also an
unreleased track composed for the 30th anniversary of the Three Mile
Island incident (Shango Over the Island) and for fans of Zoviet France, the tribute track Smuggled Through Zoviet France.
Find the new album on
iTunes or Amazon.
And find a freebie not
included on the new album here:
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