Brass Tacks Press

$5

Austrian television documentary film about the last years of the Lower Topanga Canyon community with Baretta, Herb Bermann, Pablo Capra, James Mathers, Coliene Rentmeester, Carole Winter, Norton Wisdom, and others.

(67 minutes)

Part of:

The Lower Topanga Package


Malibu Song
by Natalie Lettner & Werner Hanak (2006)

 

$10

A documentary film about the Lower Topanga Canyon artists community with James Mathers, Carole Winter, John Judge, and John Clemens.

(25 minutes)

Part of:

The Lower Topanga Package

 


Last Bastion
by Anastasia Fite
(2009)

Click here to watch the FULL movie online!

 

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...if you enjoy these pictures and want to see more. The archive is updated whenever funds, time, and new opportunities allow.

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For more info about Lower Topanga Canyon, check out:

The Lower Topanga Package

 

 

Lower Topanga Photo Archive
Edited by Pablo Capra
(2005-present)

 

1890s-1950s

 

1960s

 

1970s

 

1980s

 

1990s

 

2000s

OUT OF PRINT!

With 12 pictures selected from the Lower Topanga Photo Archive.

Lower Topanga Calendar
Edited by Pablo Capra
(2005)

 

 

$5

Gruesome tales of an old surfer and the rat problem in his shed by the beach. Baretta reads his book and plays trumpet.

See the book:

Rat Tales
by Baretta

 

Rat Tales: The Audio Book
by Baretta
(2007)

$5

9 songs. The recording is raw and live. Band:
Pablo Capra
(v), Scotty Dittrich (g), Nick Wise (b), Aaron Friscia (d) (The Mormons, The Sharp Ease).

Lyrics published in:

Pyramids without Points
by Pablo Capra

 

Pyramids without Points: The Album
by Pyramids without Points
(2005)

 

$50

A complete library of Brass Tacks Press's stories about Lower Topanga, told in prose, poetry, comics, and film:

Idlers of the Bamboo Grove
by Pablo Capra (ed.)

Rat Tales
by Baretta

The Snake Pit
by Baretta

Tool's Snake Pit
by Tool

Rohloff's Snake Pit
by Chris Rohloff

Topanga Beach Experience
by Paul Lovas

PACPF 1: Voyage of the Timeship Medusa
by Toylit

Malibu Song
by Natalie Lettner & Werner Hanak

Last Bastion
by Anastasia Fite

_____________

See also these 2 works, published online only:

Lower Topanga: Past and Future
by James Mathers

Lower Topanga Photo Archive
by Pablo Capra (ed.)

The Lower Topanga Package
Various Authors
(2002-11)

Includes 9 titles...

 

Introduction to Idlers of the Bamboo Grove:

"The Lower Topanga Community"

by Pablo Capra

Lower Topanga is home to a rural community of artists and surfers that begins at Topanga State Beach and includes the first mile of Topanga Canyon. It lies on the border of the city of Malibu. Approximately 120 residents rent low-cost houses near, or in, the flood plain of the Topanga Creek. They maintain these houses without assistance: sometimes digging them out of the mud after floods, or setting backfires to prevent a spreading wildfire from burning down their neighborhood. The roads are unpaved and must be repaired annually.

Fires, floods, and good times too have helped make the Lower Topanga community close-knit. Poets, painters, and filmmakers share and collaborate with each other. Neighbors are best friends.

The Chumash considered Lower Topanga a sacred, economic, and cultural meeting place for tribes all along the coast. One of the main areas, the "Rodeo Grounds," takes its name from an actual rodeo arena that existed there on a Mexican Ranch in the 1800s. In the early 1900s, Lower Topanga was a Japanese fishing village, and artifacts from that time can still be seen.

For the last 50 years Lower Topanga was owned by the Los Angeles Athletic Club, and has remained virtually unchanged because the flooding creek makes the land undevelopable. There are actually fewer houses in Lower Topanga today than there were 50 years ago. Most of the houses were built as weekend beach shacks. Famous actors such as Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre, Charlie Chaplin, Carole Lombard, and Ida Lupino spent time there.

Today Lower Topanga is unique as one of the last outposts of the classic Topanga Canyon bohemian hippie lifestyle where the village raises the child while promoting anti-materialist attitudes, freedom of expression, and living in harmony with nature. Also, the Lower Topanga 24-hour architectural style (built quickly because illegally) of creative add-ons to the beach shacks has high aesthetic value.

In 2001, Lower Topanga was sold to State Parks. Even though the Lower Topanga community occupies less than 2% of the total purchased land, State Parks has an aggressive policy to relocate everyone, and bulldoze all of the houses. Arundo, a type of bamboo that characterizes the Lower Topanga landscape, has become a totemic plant for the residents because it is first on a long list of "non-native" plants that State Parks has also condemned to be uprooted (and even poisoned!) in an attempt to restore the land to its "natural" state.

Many Upper Topanga residents (including the local Native American population) realize that the destruction of the Lower Topanga community will be a terrible cultural loss. Most Lower Topanga residents have lived there for over 20 years - some for 40 and 50 years! But the relocation process has already begun.

Lower Topanga residents are currently fighting forced relocation in court, but their community is vanishing quickly.

Pablo Capra, Editor
October 2002

[Note: The last holdouts of the Lower Topanga community were relocated in March 2006.]


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