The DJ Premium for People Like Us’s radio show on WFMU for the 2004 WFMU Marathon.
Download here:
Track 1
Track 2
Track 3
Track 4
Track 5
Track 6
Track 7
Track 8
Track 9
Track 10
CD inlay / CD label / CD cover
WFMU website
Welcome to the only official site for People Like Us and Vicki Bennett
DO or DIY Xmas Special on WFMU with special guest Ergo Phizmiz
Tis the season not only of Good Will, but also of Irritainment Music – but we don’t agree that all Xmas music is bad! So just to illustrate the point, here is a chance to not only hear but download the Xmas edition of DO or DIY with People Like Us from 2003, with Special Guest and now WFMU DJ, Ergo Phizmiz! Pour yourself a nice drinky and careful you don’t crack your nuts. Wishing you a pleasant Xmess!
http://blogfiles.wfmu.org/KF/2006/12/DO_or_DIY_with_People_Like_Us_Xmas_Special.mp3
The Remote Controller (2003)
Using found footage sourced from educational films in the Prelinger Archives this work explores the subject of experimentation in human body and machine interfaces in the 20th century. The film edits together the different ways we have controlled our environment – through technology, magic and theatrical devices. As the world of communications brings people together, power still exists by pushing a button and pulling the puppet strings.
“The Remote Controller” won second prize in the Backup Festival in Weimar 2004
It has been screened at:
November 2006 – La Casa Encendida Madrid
April 2005 – Britspotting Berlin
April 2005 – Femme Totale, Dortmund
February 2005 – AHRB Centre for British Film and Television, London
January 2005 – Stuttgarter Filmwinter, Stuttgart
November 2004 – Rio de Janeiro International Short Film Festival
November 2004 – Tromsø Kunstforening
November 2004 – Festival International du Film Independant
November 2004 – INVIDEO, Milano
October 2004 – Leeds International Film Festival, Leeds
October 2004 – Backup Festival, Weimar
September 2004 – Seoul New and Film Festival – Seoul
August 2004 – Chicago Underground Film Festival
January 2004 – Hanger, Barcelona January 2004 – Rotterdam Film Festival
October 2003 – Oslo S-, Oslo
September 2003 – Kino Central, Berlin
July 2003 – The ICA, London – Radical Entertainment season
March 2011 – Ambulante Festival, Mexico
Download some People Like Us artwork, made from photooverlaying scenes from The Remote Controller. Good for fans of DO or DIY with People Like Us too! Click on the image below to download a larger image. There’s another on the right…
Here are the words to the film:
The Remote Controller
It’s in the hills and the bright blue sky
It’s in the quiet lakes with their soft horizons
It’s in the fields of ripened grain
It’s in the clear early morning
It’s in the late afternoon
It’s in unexpected places with sudden bright surprises
It’s found in new things
It is the harp string and beauty
The keyboard of mood
Through the dark ages
And now of course the problem is
How to create order out of confusion
How to achieve something harmonious, creatively and scientifically new
Mixing is so simple a child can do it
The result is breathtaking beauty and lasting good taste
In lovely homes and simple dwellings
Through the length and breadth of the land
The next step was to put it together
Take the proven quality
Strength and reliability of the prototype
And build them into each and every production line
Pretty little puppets
Dancing on their toes
What they’re really thinking of
Nobody knows
As a matter of a fact puppets don’t think at all
They don’t have to
They get everything they want by pulling strings
Or rather by having somebody else pull the strings for them
All of these motions are the work of the artist who manipulates the control stick
A twist of the wrist, tension on the string
A crook of the finger or gentle swerve of the arm
And our gay figures perform cleverly for the delight of beholders
The puppeteer can endow his character with surprisingly lifelike motions
Through the movement of his hands
He gives his wooden mannequins all the characteristics of living breathing persons
By remote control the puppeteer puts his characters through any desired action
There is of course the necessity for close study of action in real life
So that it can be truthfully interpreted
Then what seems to be a minimum of finger and arm movement
The control stick is twisted turned and bobbed
The strings actuate the puppets
And we see a remarkable natural portrayal of life
This is a form of remote control that brings much pleasure in the entertainment field
The hands of the puppeteer send signals of action to actors on the stage
And it’s strictly a one man show
Some of the most amazing theatrical effects brought about by remote control take place on stages in modern theatres
Audiences in these theatres witness instantaneous changes of elaborate spectacles
As huge stage settings rise or disappear at unpredictable moments
Actually the stage is a series of elevators that are controlled from the switchboard
Pushing one of these buttons is the only physical labour connected with moving the stage elevators
Then pressure goes to work, pushing up huge platforms which make up the stage
The control system is so elaborate yet functions so easily and swiftly that amazing scenic changes are possible during a very short blackout
Through the magic of remote control all things become possible to the men who plan and design spectacles for the modern theatre
Every form of showmanship is utilised on stages where the mere pushing of a button creates magical effects for an audience
Effects that add novelty and beauty to artistic settings
Even more dramatic in these days of increased production when our nation’s industrial centres must be tied even more closely together an unseen hand moves in a tower miles away
A switch clicks
A signal is displayed
No unnecessary stops
Operators sit in control rooms and watch illuminated diagrams
By pushing a button that sets switches a hundred miles away
Without leaving his position
Here is a world of communication
Tailored for your needs of today and tomorrow
Bringing together all people in a new era of understanding
Pick a city
Dial the area code
Presto, instant weather
Turning light into electricity to run this display
Solar batteries are used to convert sunlight into electrical power
And make our satellites talk back from outer space
Like the gentle twist of a puppet string or a push of a button that sets tons of stage into motion, with a slight slip of a finger on a lever
This work doesn’t even require separate motors
While the driver retains just enough of the control to be the real boss at all times
In no other application does the use of remote control benefit us so much
Ours is merely the light task of remote control
Remote control is a big factor in modern living
Yet, because it is a development intended to save us from unnecessary work
It is something we know very little about
In fact we do very little
Merely push a button
And let something else do the work for us
(credits)
You have been watching The Remote Controller by People Like Us
Thanks to Prelinger Archives and The Internet Archive for footage
Here’s an album by WFMU’s two terrible DJs, People Like Us, & Kenny G.
01. I’m From
02. Wake Up
03. Nothing
04. So Sorry
05. Close To Me
06. You’ll Be A
07. More Sorry
08. Counting Time
09. Give Up It’s Mine
10. Greatest Nobody
11. It Wouldn’t It Be Nice In Yr Face
12. Too Far
13. I’ve Got You
And here’s the full 3 hour WFMU show that this album was edited from – Nothing Special with Kenny G
Kenny G website
Mess Media through Soleilmoon website
Interview with People Like Us by Kenny G on WFMU, one week before this was recorded.
Here is a remix of Messer Chups by People Like Us on Solnze Records
Import-Export
Solnze Records website
Here’s some live video of a special concert People Like Us performed at the WFMU record fair. For those of you who have never been there, it’s the time of year, one of many that all DJs and volunteers do their best not only to raise money for the station but have a great time at the same time.
Live at the WFMU Record Fair (2003), shot by Corey Smith. The work has been carefully constructed using industrial and documentary film footage from 1940-1975.
The hour long performance on this disc was captured live on October 5th 2002 when Wobbly, People Like Us and Matmos circled their wagons in the lecture hall of the San Francisco Art Institute. Having mutually agreed upon a country and western theme, Vicki Bennett (PLU), Jon Leidecker (Wobbly), and Drew Daniel and M. C. Schmidt (Matmos) pored over their archives of honky tonk classics, chopping and dicing Nashville’s finest almost beyond recognition, and collectively restitching the mangled shreds in a kind of crazed digital quilting bee. Several tense rehearsals and strong pots of tea later, the foursome shuffled on stage and delivered the goods: from panoramic twangfests to offkilter waltzes to barn burning stompers. Flickering and tranquil one moment, and wildly slapstick the next, Wide Open Spaces hits the sweet spot between song forms and improvisation, and showcases the qualities that all three collaborating artists share: absurdist humor, baroque sample manipulation, and stuttering rhythmic frameworks that lurch and sway. While the presence of five samplers, four laptops, three CD players and a pedal steel guitar on one stage could have led to a tediously ego-driven “jam” or simply cacophany, the results feel lushly detailed but not cluttered, and swing naturally between structure and freedom. It’s an international media magpie summit where country’s chick-a-boom meets tech house’s boom-tschak, and tearjerking sentiment and patriotic hokum are subjected to a dense shower of coughs, sputters and rude noises. Listening back to the recorded results, all three musical units agreed that this concert was mighty fine, and worth sharing.
01. Morning
02. Dolly Pardon
03. Clawing Your Eyes Out Down To Your Throat
04. Shenandoah
05. Holler
06. Tremble Valley Peady
07. Chicken Legs
08. Cattle Call
09. Unshackled
10. Arkansas Explorer
11. Calling
12. I Must Die
13. Wide Open Spaces
Tigerbeat6 website
Mirrored here:
We were very lucky to do a session for the fantastic John Peel – here is the archive…
01. talk
02. talk
03. Abridged Too Far
04. talk
05. talk
06. Cattle Call
07. talk
08. talk
09. The Doody Waltz
10. talk
11. talk
12. talk
13. talk
14. Do or D.I.Y
15. talk
John Peel website
Mirrored here:
This was released on For Us Records, an offshot project of Rough Trade – 2002
01. When I Was Young
02. Downtown Once More
Mirrored here: