Beau
Article
Beau is a recurring music project in the Collected Agenda archive, appearing 3 times across 3 issues between July 08, 2024 and January 23, 2025. The archive places it in contexts such as “Live performances by Beau, The Kindergarten, and The Lovinas”; “Lucky Henry, Beau, Dogwood Hill, and Boston Flowers preform”; “at Nublu — Lucky Henry, Beau, Dogwood Hill, and Boston Flowers preform”. It most often appears alongside KGB, Natasha Stagg, Peter Vack.
Metadata
- Category: Music
- Mention count: 3
- Issue count: 3
- First seen: July 08, 2024
- Last seen: January 23, 2025
Appears In
- [[issues/2024-07-08_collected-agenda-5_full|COLLECTED AGENDA #5]]
- January continues
- Burn my diaries
Related Pages
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- KGB (3 shared issues)
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- Natasha Stagg (3 shared issues)
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- Peter Vack (3 shared issues)
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- Ada Antoinette (2 shared issues)
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- Alex Auder (2 shared issues)
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- Alex Zhang Hungtai (2 shared issues)
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- Alice Aster (2 shared issues)
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- Ama Kwarteng (2 shared issues)
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- Amalia Ulman (2 shared issues)
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- Arden Wohl (2 shared issues)
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- BCTR (2 shared issues)
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- Ben Lipkin (2 shared issues)
External Links
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- Instagram: https://instagram.com/nicellebeauchene
Source Context
Recovered passages from the original issue text. When the raw archive preserved outbound links inside the source passage, they are listed directly under the quote.
The children’s book I buy my mom has a hard teal blue cover and a gold feather inside and an inscription and half the writing in English and then, if read from back to front, half the writing in French. I buy it because the illustrations remind me of my favorite book The Wind Boy which is the most beautiful book in the world, and also because fairytales are a more beautiful thing to collect than coffee table books in general.
Inline links: The Wind Boy
Also Wednesday, July 10 from 9pm to late - Devil's Workshop brings rock and roll to the club at Jean's. Live performances by Beau, The Kindergarten, and The Lovinas.
Inline links: Devil's Workshop, rock and roll to the club, Jean's, Beau, The Kindergarten, The Lovinas
David and I go to Estela for dinner. It’s our anniversary. He tells me not to say anything online about it. Private life should stay private, he says, but I’m writing it anyway. Estela is nice. It’s the sister restaurant of Altro Paradiso. My friend, Madelyn works there. Estela is smaller, cozier, you have to buzz to get into the building and then it’s up some steps, it feels like you’re in an apartment, it feels like you’re in Berlin. I’ve never been to Copenhagen, but I imagine it feels a bit like Copenhagen, too. “I like more old timey restaurants,” David says. “Me too,” I say. “But sometimes isn’t it nice to be in a restaurant that feels like Copenhagen? David agrees. He’s never been to Copenhagen either. Altro Paradiso is brightly lit, whereas Estela is dim. Stella - Latin for Star. Etc. The distinction feels a little obvious, but then, I’m being a little particular. Estela is small plates. Romantic. You can tell because you have to buzz the door to get in, and because the lighting is really dark. They put us in a little alcove by the shelves and shelves of wine. We order iberico ham, bread and butter, endive salad, crab with celery root (the best dish), squid ink fried rice with little bits of squid, steak with elderberry sauce. I order a Tito's martini, but I’m told they don’t serve Titos here. I’m told they have one martini with vodka that “tastes like smirnoff” ($22) and another with vodka that’s way better and far preferable (paraphrased) ($30). Our waitress is peppy. “We’ll take the Smirnoff,” David says. “She’s nice,” I say, later. “Domineering,” David says. Later, the waitress rolls her eyes a little when she asks me how my martini is. She smiles when I say good. I believe she is sincere in her hope that I’m happy as I guzzle up the fruits of my lowbrow taste. It really is a lovely meal. I don’t mean to be cynical. I tell David he should tell them it’s our anniversary so we can have something free, and he tells them “it’s our anniversary, can we have dessert on the house.” Then, I’m embarrassed, but they bring us dessert (with a price) and champagne (on the house). Tuesday, January 14 I’ve been working on maintaining constant motion. “An object in motion will stay in motion,” I’ve been telling anyone that will listen. I walk in place all day, and then I walk through Washington Square Park at night, freezing. I make sure to do an extra lap to circle under the arch, all sparkling and illuminated and icy. I’m thirty minutes late to the Post-Doomerism talk at Gonzo’s, and this feels like an important one to me because I used to base my entire framework of thought around mitigating dread through a surrender to the inevitability of fates worse than death. It’s a terrible way to view the world - juvenile if nothing else, but also aesthetically and morally barren, limiting, a nihilistic obsession with the present does lead to destruction (yourself and others), no matter how many delusions you harbor about enlightenment, and about time and therefore preservation as false constructs. You can’t be nihilistic if you believe in good and evil, and I do believe in good and evil, so it was never going to hold up. Post Doomerism The lecture is just starting when I exit the elevator. The talk is between Chris Small (founder of Amazon Labor Union), PradaHorseShoe (founder of Russian Cosmism Circle NYC), Joshua Citarella (Doomscroll Podcast), and Geo Yankey (Comedian) “Russian Cosmists think that Marx doesn't take it far enough,” Amana explains. “Marxism wants to abolish capitalism, religion, the family…. but what about abolishing the OG bummer - death.” The point of the talk seems to be to present a sort of leftist vision of tech accelerationism. Capitalist Realism, the parts of the industrial revolution deemed actually good, nuclear fusion (clean and limitless energy which imitates the sun) instead of nuclear fission, fossil fuels , etc etc etc. The audience, on the other hand, is mostly composed of people I recognize from other downtown events - this one taking on an uncharacteristic and somewhat academic sincerity. “Hypothetically, heat death could occur before we run out of fuel,” a girl sitting next to me murmurs at one point, evidently at least somewhat convinced by technology’s capacity for limitless good. I try to conjure a sense of what she’s imagining in my mind's eye - create enough clean energy, and you could be driving your car one day when the whole universe just implodes. This isn’t aspirational to me. Longevity even, has never been particularly aspirational to me, although increasingly moreso, I’m increasingly less cynical. I appreciate the sincerity of the lecture. I appreciate some of the ideas they put forward, too. It’s an irony-pilled audience and they're sitting in a deeply earnest room. I slip out during the Q&A - overwhelmed, honestly, and I’m late to another function. I’m handed a gin and tonic in the Lower East Side. I’m talking about the Russian Cosmism lecture. “Lenin tried that and 20 million people died,” I am told. “I don’t really know enough,” I say. I’m sent a documentary about The Tyranny of Scientism. I order some things like the books by Nick Zurnig and Mark Fisher. It’s good to be objective. The night slips onward. It’s rude to talk about accelerationism at a party. Wednesday, January 16 It's slightly warmer in New York today. It's still cold, but it's less frigid, I'm walking through Soho typing, I'm walking to Equinox, I'll finish writing this on the treadmill, I had such a fun night last night although I do feel terribly guilty about squandering my health and my beauty and my soul every time I get drunk. I was such a good drunk, though. I adore my friends so deeply. I adore my new friends. I think they are my best friends. I’m trying not to quantify everything. There are names of people I love spinning through my mind, now. Why order things. Some people exhaust me, and then there are other people who don’t. I’ve found new friends who live artfully while occupying a natural state that is absorbed with the physical world, recently. How lucky for me. I don’t want to use my volatility as a bludgeon with which to bend people to my whims. Good thing I don’t feel particularly volatile this week. It’s best to consider these while outside of them. Objective introspection: am I doing a good job? WHAT YOU SHOULD DO Gofundme + LA Fire Resources here. Sunday, January 19 From 6pm - midnight at EARTH — Jordan Castro and Cluny present SILENCE. An evening of silence. No speaking, no phones.
Inline links: https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!XxFb!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F59a8c887-c1bc-4090-9568-92185cc4e0c1_1412x1420.png, Amazon Labor Union, PradaHorseShoe, Russian Cosmism Circle NYC, Doomscroll Podcast, Geo Yankey, Capitalist Realism, https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!kDE6!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fd7220533-39ee-4944-a185-b7983b1500e9_1600x1066.jpeg, https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!abSY!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fcb12cd88-f058-4032-ba7f-a91514034d33_1600x1066.jpeg, here, EARTH, Jordan Castro, Cluny
From 6pm at Hill Art Foundation — Hilton Als and David Leeming will be in conversation for the launch of Leeming’s new edition of 1998 biography Amazing Grace: A Life of Beauford Delaney.
From 7pm - 10pm at Nublu — Lucky Henry, Beau, Dogwood Hill, and Boston Flowers preform
From 7pm - 10pm at Nublu — Lucky Henry, Beau, Dogwood Hill, and Boston Flowers preform
Backlinks
- 442 Broadway
- 7-Eleven
- Ada Antoinette
- Alex Zhang Hungtai
- Ama Kwarteng
- Amalia Ulman
- Amant
- Annabella Sciorra
- Ben Lipkin
- Berlin
- Blade Study
- Board of Ethics
- Boston Flowers
- Burn my diaries
- Burns Night
- Chinatown Records
- [[issues/2024-07-08_collected-agenda-5_full|COLLECTED AGENDA #5]]
- Devil’s Workshop
- Diamond Stingily
- Dienst & Dotter
- Dogwood Hill
- Dunkensthalle
- Editions Lutanie
- Em Aull
- Extreme Animals
- Goodnight Sweet Thing
- Hannah Baer
- Heavy Traffic Reading
- HOT TICKET
- Issue Fourteen Launch Party
- Iva Dixit
- Jamison
- January continues
- Jeremy Gordon
- Jordan Codley
- Kembra Pfahler
- Kim Uong
- Knickerbocker Bar & Grill
- Lafayette Bakery
- Left Bank Books
- Lizzi Bougatsos
- Love Poems
- Lucky Henry
- Lunar New Year Party
- Manon Lutanie
- MoodRing
- Music
- Myth Lab
- Nate Silver
- Never Too Much
- NEW YORK IS
- Noelle Franco
- PETIT MORT
- Rachel Valinsky
- Raymond Foye
- Rene Ricard
- Robert Lund
- SARA’S
- Sheila Heti
- Should I Delete My Channel?
- Simone Films
- Skinos
- Slurpee
- spectacularity
- Sultry Summer Soirée
- The Back Room
- The Kindergarten
- The Lovinas
- The Sitting Room
- Will August Park
- Year of the Snake
- Zoë Lund