Category Archives: Gallery Tesseract

99% Persipiration, 1% expectoration

Oct 10, 2010

October!  The month of farm-oriented activities like hayrides and bobbing for apples. October, the month of Halloween horror!

Occasionally, the two merge to form horrified apples.

Apple Horror

Rain is casting shadows over Los Angeles October.  Amidst the humidity and random piercings of sun, Gallery Tesseract has undergone some serious transformations.

See the lobby.

DSCF5865

The abandoned, grungy, Brad Pitt’s-house-in-Fight-Club thing was improved with minty vintage milkshake walls, modern door decor, and a bucket of candy.

Lobby-view

The hallway of trash and broken walls looks much better as Brian Jones’ bedroom.

Hallway room

Boudoir_1

Hobbit hole to girlbomb guestroom:

Room of junk1

DSCF6151

And Gallery Tesseract keeps going…

What could it be1

Tesseract1

Capitol Studios: Rarities and Wonders

Jul 7, 2010

Capitol-Studios

Capitol Studios, the building housing the Tesseract gallery, has a madly interesting history. Groundbreaking records have been made within these walls.  Engines that traveled millions of miles were machined and tested in our building.  Men learned, men produced, and now, 90 years old, it houses young people making art and music for the future.

We also have a tranny bar next door.

TrannyBar

The equipment used to manufacture these records were extremely well made, a signature of Capitol Records:  sophisticated perfection in every detail.

Here’s a story:  A stash of pricelessly rare Beatles records was uncovered from a private collection a few years ago.  It seems a worker at a pressing plant was a major Beatles fan, with after-hours access to the equipment.  So he got a little crazy with the colored vinyl, mixed and matched some of his favorite Beatles tunes, hopefully while tripping balls, and inadvertently created one of the most coveted, unique pieces of fan art in the world.

I don’t have proof that this happened in our building… but I can imagine a young man, with hair a bit too long and unwashed.  He’s hanging out on San Fernando, the sun’s setting, and he’s down the road smoking a joint, watching and waving as his coworkers straggle out and head to their shiny, bulbous 50’s cars.  The sun’s glinting over the LA river.  Some Beatles tune flashes through this fan’s head, and he tosses his joint into the dirt.  He wipes his hands.  And goes inside to mix some vinyl.

I won’t claim this story is completely real.  But I will claim that a different type of Beatles rarity came out of our building:  the Butcher record cover.

Butcher Cover

A photo by Robert Whitaker, supported by Lennon “as relevant as Vietnam,” derided by Harrison, “Sometimes we all did stupid things thinking it was cool and hip when it was naïve and dumb; and that was one of them,” the picture referred to the butchering of previous Beatles recordings and a commentary on the Vietnam war, was chosen as the cover of their 1966 release.   You can find much more about how this cover came to be at the blog of Charlie Essmeier, RareRecords.net.

Scandal erupted!  Such a vile image could never be distributed by a record label—the last vestige of propriety and America’s self –censoring standard implementer.  Complaints came quickly.  Some records made it to Hollywood Sears stores, but the majority were sent back to be pasted over with a pasty looking, dour replacement.

Yesterday and Today

The mono copies of this record are rarer—the ones that came out of our building.  Copies of the censored gaffe are still circulating.

But if you want to get your hands on the biggest score ever, get rich quick.  Capitol Records also printed a super-rare edition, about 100 copies, of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band in 1967.  For sales reps and Capitol Records execs only, it featured cheesy black and white, cut-and-pasted pictures of studio people on the cover.

REALLY REALLY REALLY RARE

Most of them were likely chucked, but at least 3 or 4 still exist.  Did they come out of our building?  Hmm, the record execs lived in LA… the other plant was in Pennsylvania… would a silly last minute one-off record cover be created and printed on a whim anywhere that WASN’T homebase of Capitol Records?  Just asking…

From Sinatra to Bing to Beatles rarites to L. Ron Hubbard.  America’s history recorded and pressed with gigantic machines, in our space.  Much more exciting than a tract house in Vegas.

We’re still stripping layers of paint down to the original 20’s rosy wood and uncovering building relics in attics and behind walls.  We’re looking for information, too, welcoming all bits of knowledge, so LA natives, speak up if you know more!

Capitol Studios: A short intro

Jun 6, 2010

I love my space at Capitol Studios.

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There’s a lot of history buried in the details of this building.  The frieze, the floors, the walled-over bones of the original structure.  Originally erected in 1923 along the Los Angeles river, the name of the architect has apparently been lost.

It operated as a diesel school for a time, then became the pressing plant for Capitol Studios.  Exactly when is unclear, but it was sometime between the years of 1942 and 1946.

OUR HOSUE

1956 was the year Capitol Records centralized their operations, combining a New York office, the Hollywood data processing office, and other distribution offices into the famous Capitol Records Tower in downtown Los Angeles.

CAPITOL OLD

This is a promotional booklet for the new and innovative Capitol Records building.

CAPITOL IX2

The pressing plant is featured, but at this point in time there were two active US plants, the Scranton Pennsylvania plant mentioned above, and the California plant on the border of Glendale and Los Angeles.  We can’t really tell if that’s our building or the Pennsylvania plant from the photos above.

So what records came out of our building?  Lots of Sinatra.  Lots of Bing Crosby.  And lots of Beatles.  This is an image of a pristine, sealed Beatles record, certified to have come from the Glendale plant.

BEATLES STORY2

How do you know?  There’s a symbol every pressing plant marks its product with. This is the Glendale mark, a starbust, repping Hollywood:

     \  |  /

      \ | /

   —-   —-  Los Angeles, CA

      / | \

     /  |  \

Compare it to the Scranton mark:

       / \   

      / I \     Scranton, PA

     / A M \

     ——- 

The I A M is not an illuminati hippie doo-dah transcendent moment… it stands for the International Association of Machinists, the union working in Scranton’s pressing plant.

They all had to find new jobs when Scranton closed in 1973, leaving our plant and one in Jacksonville, Illinois to press Capitol’s vinyl.

The equipment used to manufacture these records were extremely well made.  A signature of Capitol Records:  sophisticated perfection in every detail.

CAPITOL PIX

The Los Angeles plant closed sometime around 1986.  The equipment was sold to RTI, a company who specialized in custom records for organizations with enough money to immortalize their thoughts, songs, recordings, teachings, thetan warnings… wait, what?

BattlefieldEarthAlbumCover

And there’s more to discover about the Capitol Studios building.  We’re still stripping layers of paint down to the original 20’s rosy wood and uncovering building relics in attics and behind walls…

Capitollogo1969