Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
Fiction
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts115/v4/13/d1/8d/13d18d91-33e0-e339-b104-d532b7ebab1c/mza_7536674742712597860.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Bureau of Lost Culture
Stephen Coates
150 episodes
1 day ago
*Bureau of Lost Culture collect curious, rare, and half forgotten countercultural stories and oral testimonies.. *Join host Stephen Coates and guests for tales from The Underground + beyond. *www.bureauofostculture.com
Show more...
History
Arts,
Society & Culture
RSS
All content for Bureau of Lost Culture is the property of Stephen Coates and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
*Bureau of Lost Culture collect curious, rare, and half forgotten countercultural stories and oral testimonies.. *Join host Stephen Coates and guests for tales from The Underground + beyond. *www.bureauofostculture.com
Show more...
History
Arts,
Society & Culture
https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog9616016/Screenshot_2025-10-29_at_125924b2x2z.png
This is Penny Rimbaud - Part One
Bureau of Lost Culture
1 hour
2 weeks ago
This is Penny Rimbaud - Part One
Penny Rimbaud , who has spent more than half a century living the ideals that most of us only talk about, has been described as an activist philosopher, an anarchist, a Zen Buddhist. Though he would likely not recognise those descriptions, he is certainly a poet, a musician, an artist. Born Jeremy John Ratter in 1943, in the late 1960s, together with artist Gee Vaucher, he founded Dial House, an open community and creative refuge in rural Essex. It became both a home and a hub — a living experiment in anarchism, art, and radical living, from which emerged Crass, a band that tore apart punk’s nihilism and replaced it with a fierce moral energy: anti-war, anti-sexism, anti-consumerism — but pro-peace, pro-freedom, and defiantly DIY. Their black-and-white graphics, polemical lyrics, and uncompromising stance made them one of the most influential and challenging acts of their time. When Crass disbanded in 1984, Penny kept on creating, often with Gee. He became a prolific poet, writer, and spoken-word performer, continuing to explore themes of love, pacifism, and spiritual autonomy. Now in his eighties, he still lives and works at Dial House — still questioning authority, still seeking truth through art and language. We range back and forth across Penny's personal history and his thoughts on culture, capitalism, art and the very notion of the self.   In his own words:  “There is no authority but yourself.”   ---- During this conversation, we hear: 'Dulce et Decorum Est’ - from What Passing Bells (The War Poems of Wilfred Owen) ‘How?’ - from How? ‘Of Summer's Passing' - with Peter Vukomirovic - from Of Summer's Passing 'Oh America'  - with Youth - from Oh America #counterculture #crass #pennyrimbaud #anarchism #capitalism #dialhouse #artschool #  
Bureau of Lost Culture
*Bureau of Lost Culture collect curious, rare, and half forgotten countercultural stories and oral testimonies.. *Join host Stephen Coates and guests for tales from The Underground + beyond. *www.bureauofostculture.com