• Archive: counterculture

How The Pandrogyne Confounds Hir DNA: Interview with Genesis Breyer P-Orridge

Nov 13

Acceler8or, June 2011;  NeoFiles, 2003

“People will say, “I feel like a woman trapped in a man’s body’… And I say, ‘I feel like I’m trapped in a body.’

While he’s best known as the musician who helped start both the industrial music and the acid house music subcultures, Genesis P-Orridge is foremost a hero of the post-punk counterculture, a true mutant, an experimental artist, and an androgyne (“I prefer pandrogyne where ‘p’ is for positive/power/potent/precious.”) If you don’t know about Mr P-Orridge’s oevre, you haven’t just missed a career, you’ve missed an entire dimension of hyperreality.

Counterculture & the Tech Revolution: an Interview with Fred Turner

Oct 21

10 Zen Monkeys, November 2006

Back in the day, when people were still asking me to explain “Mondo 2000,” I used to tell them that we were doing this psychedelic counterculture magazine called “High Frontiers” in the mid-1980s and we were shocked — just shocked — when we were befriended by the Silicon Valley elite. Suddenly, we found ourselves at parties where some of the major software and hardware designers of those early days were hanging out with NASA scientists, quantum physicists, hippies and lefty radicals, artists, libertarians, and your general motley assortment of smart types.

I was being a bit disingenuous when I made these comments. “High Frontiers” already had a tech/science bias, largely because we’d been influenced by the “Leary-Wilson paradigm.” So we were technologically progressive tripsters. I’d also followed Stewart Brand’s work with interest through the years.

The connection between the creators of the driving engine of the contemporary global economy, and the countercultural attitudes that were popular among young people during the 1960s and 70s was sort of a given within the cultural milieu we (“High Frontiers/Mondo 2000”) found ourselves immersed in as the 1980s spilled into the 90s. Everybody was “experienced.” Everybody was suspicious of state and corporate authority — even those who owned corporations. People casually recalled hanging out with Leary, or The Grateful Dead, or Ken Kesey, or Abbie Hoffman. You get the picture.