The End of the LA Cacophony Society

Years ago (early 1990s) I was pretty well involved with the LA Cacophony Society – more or less a group of bohemian ne’re-do-wells who would take picnics to auto junkyards, visit UFO cults, have JFK assassination suspect costume parties, and just generally make a cheerful sport out of “freaking the mundanes”. Lots of dadaesque fun that made the big city a little more interesting.

I more or less retired from LA Cacophony in the late 1990s but hung around on the mailing list until the whole thing collapsed amidst death, a weird conversion into cultism, and subsequent Bad Vibes. It was all very strange from the outside – seeing folks I used to know through the group freak out. I hadn’t thought about it in a long time until I picked up the current issue (#6) of Arthur, which has a lengthy article on what happened. A PDF of the whole issue is available from their site.

Also in Arthur #6, check out the long interview with Iggy Pop and a fantastic interview with John Sinclair who’s packing up and leaving the country permanently.

One thought on “The End of the LA Cacophony Society”

  1. Gak Chris, you’re in my skull again. I just read that article. Actually, I keep reading that article– it’s an extraorinarily fine bit of, well, whatever it is. Also, I can’t quite stop tripping out on the fact that Reverend Al married Margaret Cho.

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