Los Angeles 1982 (11:32)
FREE PREVIEW
Several artists reflect on the city's music scene and relationships between the punk music culture, the media, and the LAPD. Stuart Swezey decides to promote shows as a form of artistic expression and utilizes empty warehouses and remote spaces.
Mojave Exodus: April 24, 1983 (10:35)
Swezey works with musicians to create a concert in the desert; they provide attendee transportation to better control logistics. Bruce Licher creates the tickets and Mariska Leyssius is the bus monitor. Attendees and performers reflect on the experience.
Berlin: 1983 (06:37)
Swezey recalls arriving in Berlin with his notebook of contacts and the Cold War atmosphere; he attends a Collapsing New Buildings concert. Six months later, the band agrees to perform in the Mojave Desert near Mecca and Swezey makes plans.
Mojave Auszug: March 4, 1984 (18:01)
Concertgoers board buses to the desert concert. Performers include Collapsing New Buildings, Mark Pauline and Survival Research Laboratories, Boyd Rice, and Djemaa-El-fna. Attendees and performers reflect on the experience and its impact.
Joy at Sea: June 15, 1984 (11:23)
Swezey decides to hold a concert on a boat in the San Pedro harbor. Performers include Minutemen, Meat Puppets, Points of Friction, and Lawndale. Attendees and performers reflect on the experience and "Double Nickels on the Dime."
Gila Monster Jamboree: January 5, 1985 (18:48)
Swezey recalls hearing Sonic Youth perform in Berlin and the “Death Valley 69” album. Desolation Center allows concert goers to drive themselves to the desert gig. Performers include Sonic Youth, Meat Puppets, Redd Kross, and Psi-Com. Attendees and performers reflect on the experience.
Solstice: December 21, 1985 (05:25)
The Bureau of Land Management fines Swezey for trespassing. Swezey promotes the warehouse concert that features Swans, Sonic Youth, Saccharine Trust, and Debt of Nature. Attendees and performers reflect on the experience and the sudden death of D. Boon.
Music Festivals (06:41)
Swezey and others establish Amok Books. Lollapalooza tours North America from 1991 to 1997 and reemerges in 2005. Gary Tovar co-founds Coachcella and John Law co-founds the Burning Man Festival. Experts reflect on the uniqueness of the Desolation Center shows.
Credits: Desolation Center (04:01)
Credits: Desolation Center
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