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Mine for yours: My favorite fiction, poetry, nonfiction, music, film, art & internet of 2013

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Books (fiction)
in no order

1. Eugene LimThe Strangers(Black Square Editions)


2. Rachel Levitsky The Story of My Accident Is Ours(Futurepoem)


3. Jeff Jackson Mira Corpora(Two Dollar Radio)


4. Tao Lin Taipei(Vintage)


5. Renee Gladman Ana Patova Crosses a Bridge(Dorothy)


6. (tie)Ken Baumann Solip(Tyrant), Say, Cut, Map(Black Square Editions)



7. (tie)Scott McClanahan Crapalachia(Two Dollar Radio), Hill William(Tyrant)



8. Joyelle McSweeney Salamandrine: 8 Gothics(Tarpaulin Sky)


9. Matthew Simmons Happy Rock(Dark Coast)


10. Travis Jeppesen The Suiciders(Semiotext(e))


11. Stephen Boyer Parasite(Publication Studio)


12. Cassandra Troyan Throne of Blood(Solar Luxuriance)


13. Heiko Julien I Am Ready to Die a Violent Death(Civil Coping Mechanisms)


14. Casey Hannan Mother Ghost(Tiny Hardcore)


15. Matt Bell In the House upon the Dirt between the Lake and the Woods(Soho Press)


16. Noah Cicero Go to Work and Do Your Job. Care for Your Children. Pay Your Bills. Obey the Law. Buy Products.(Lazy Fascist)


17. Johannes Goransson Haute Surveillance(Tarpaulin Sky)


18. Michael Seidlinger My Pet Serial Killer(Enigmatic Ink)


19. Marcus Speh Thank You for Your Sperm(MadHat Press)


20. Jarrett Kobek BTW(Penny-Ante Editions)


21. Joy Williams 99 Stories of God(Byliner Inc.)


22. Thomas Moore A Certain Kind of Light(Rebel Satori)


23. Sean Kilpatrick Gil the Nihilist(Lazy Fascist)


24. Lindsay Hunter Don't Kiss Me(FSG)


25. James Greer Everything Flows (Curbside Splendor)





Books (poetry)
in no order

1. Gabby Bess Alone with Other People(Civil Coping Mechanisms)


2. Dodie Bellamy Cunt Norton(Les Figues)


3. Luna Miguel Bluebird and other Tattoos(Scrambler Books)


4. John Ashbery Quick Question(Harper Collins)


4. Mira Gonzalez i will never be beautiful enough to make us beautiful together(Sorry House)


5. Steve Roggenbuck if you dont love the moon, your an asshole(lief)


6. Joseph Ceravolo Collected Poems(Wesleyan University Press)


7. Grant Maierhofer Ode to a Vincent Gallo Nightingale(Drunk Uncle/Black Coffee)


9. Walter Mackey i want to die peacefully in my sleep like that old lady from titanic but i want celine dion to sing my heart will go on after i die and not have some chick just hum it like in the movie or whatever because my life is already a big disappointment(plain wrap press)


10. Robert Siek Purpose & Devil Piss(Sibling Rivalry)


11. A Dark Dreambox of Another Kind: The Poems of Alfred Starr Hamilton(The Song Cave)


12. Moon Tzu autumn of my youth(self-published)


13. Ron Padgett Collected Poems(Coffee House)


14. Paul Celan Corona: Selected Poems(Station Hill)


15. Daniel Bailey Gather Me(Scrambler Books)


16. Daniel Toumine The Hack Scribbler(self-published)





Books (nonfiction)
in no order

Peter Sotos Mine(Nine-Banded Books), Wayne Koestenbaum My 1980s & Other Essays(FSG), Christopher Higgs Becoming Monster(Tape-bound), Jamie Iredell I was a Fat Drunk Catholic School Insomniac(Future Tense), Hilton Als White Girls(McSweeneys), Michael Salerno & Peter Sotos Home (Kiddiepunk), Debra Kelly & Madeleine Renouard Barbara Wright: Translation as Art(Dalkey Archive), Roger Clarke A Natural History of Ghosts(Penguin), Will Alexander Singing In Magnetic Hoofbeat (Essay Press), Stacey D'Erasmo The Art of Intimacy: The Space Between(Graywolf), Tosh Berman Sparks-Tastic: Twenty-One Nights with Sparks in London(Rare Bird Books),...




Music
in no order

1. Vår No One Dances Quite Like My Brothers(Sacred Bones)


2. Death Grips Government Plates(DG)


3. The Haxan Cloak Excavation(Tri Angle)


4. Oneohtrix Point Never R Plus Seven(Warp)


5. Julia Holter Loud City Song(Domino)


6. Moonface Julia with Blue Jeans On(Jagjaguwar)


7. Tim Hecker Virgins(Kranky)


8. Castavet Obsidian(Profound Lore)


9. Robert Pollard Honey Locust Honky Tonk(GbV)


10.Iceage You're Nothing(Matador)


11. Aki Onda Cassette Memories Vol. 3: South of the Border(Important)


12. Guided by Voices English Little League(Fire)


13. Laurel Halo Chance of Rain(Hyperdub)


14. Deerhunter Monomania(4AD)


15. Wire Change Becomes Us(Pink Flag)


16. My Bloody Valentine mbv(MBV)


17. ÄÄNIPÄÄ Through A Pre-Memory(Editions Mego)


18. Deafheaven Sunbather (Deathwish)


19. Pharmakon Abandon(Sacred Bones)


20. Burial Rival Dealer (Hyperdub)






Film
in no order

1. Terrence Malick To the Wonder


2. Shane Carruth Upstream Color


3. Carlos Reygadas Post Tenebras Lux


4. Harmony Korine Spring Breakers


5. Joshua Oppenheimer The Act of Killing


6. Michael Salerno Silence


7. Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Verena Paravel Leviathan


8. Jim Jarmusch Only Lovers Left Alive


9. Ryan Trecartin Center Jenny


10. Jean-Marie Straub Un Conte de Michel Montagne


11. James Batley Kneels Through the Dark


12. Bruno Dumont Camille Claudel 1915


13. Rachel Maclean Over the Rainbow 1915





Art
in no order

1. James Turrell Perceptual Cell(LACMA)


2. Nakaya Ukichiro Museum of Snow and Ice (Kagaonsen, Japan)


3. Mike Kelley @ Stedelijk Museum(Amsterdam)


4. Gretchen Bender Tracking the Thrill(The Kitchen)


5. Torbjorn Vejvi The object without is the object within(Glendale Community College Art Gallery)


6. Chichu Museum(Naoshima, Japan)


7. Pierre Huyghe(Centre Pompidou)


8. Richard Hawkins @ Richard Telles Fine Art(Los Angeles)


9. Fujiko Nakaya Permanent Clouds(Chateau Chaumont-sur-Loire)


10. Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster Promenade dans la salle des marquees(Palais de Tokyo)


11. Jason Meadows @ Marc Foxx Gallery(Los Angeles)


12. Scott Treleaven All-Nite Cinema(Invisible Exports, NYC)


13. Chris Marker Planète Marker (Centre Pompidou)


14. Philippe Parreno Anywhere, Anywhere Out of the World(Palais de Tokyo)


15. Keiichiro Shibuya/Hatsune Miku The End (Theatre du Chatelet)





Internet
in no order

espresso bongo
THE NEATO MOSQUITO SHOW
Cutty Spot
Harriet: The Blog
Fanzine
Unsaid
Alt Lit Gossip
i am alt lit
{ feuilleton }
Isola di Rifiuti
pantaloons
Beach Sloth
HTMLGIANT
Tiny Mix Tapes
UbuWeb
Bright Lights Film Journal
Other People with Brad Listi
Joe Brainard's Pajamas (The Sequel)
If we don't, remember me
Yuck 'n Yum
Locus Solus: The New York School of Poets
THEM, a trans* lit journal
giphy
prosthetic knowledge
The Quietus
The Wonderful World of TamTam Books
bright stupid confetti
weeatherhead
Illuminati Girl Gang
Shabby Doll House
mammal/habitat
Pop Serial
Grand Text Auto





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p.s. Hey. Just to add my pile of 2013 faves to all the other piles out there. And I'm sure I'm forgetting a bunch of things that would be listed if my memory had fully cooperated with me. And, most importantly, please, if you don't mind, tell me some of your favorite things of the year in return, please? Thank you. ** Scunnard, Ha ha, yes. I'm really good, thanks for asking. Oh, cool, a quick glance at that guy's linked work really intrigued me, so I'll go spend a bunch of time with it in a bit. Thank you yet again, sir. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, David. Oh, I keep forgetting to say that, first of all, immense thanks to you for sending along the 'RBH' excerpt. It's really beautiful, and I'll be be very proud to share it here on the blog on Saturday, the 28th! ** Bill, Hi. Okay, so Santacon is precisely what it sounded like it would be. Sort of a homebound, quirky, winter-bound Spring Break meets Burning Man without the spiritual overlay and sunburning and getting laid aspect or something? Kind of gross. Unlike Paul Reubens Day. That seems nice for the obvious reasons. Oh, how was Pere Ubu? What are they like/doing nowadays in their live incarnation? I was just thinking about Tim Wright from PU Mach One the other day. ** Steevee, Hey. Wow, a you-centric motherlode today. Great, okay, I will indulge in all of that shortly, and, for now ... Everyone, a bunch of great stuff for you to check out today from the mighty Steevee. First, here's his review of a film called 'Beatocello's Umbrella' from/in the Village Voice, and, secondly, here, most appropriately for today, is his 2013 film top 10 list, courtesy indieWIRE, and, finally, here's Steevee weighing in on Spike Jonze's new film 'Her'. ** _Black_Acrylic, Woo-hoo, Ben! I excitedly await my package! It might be my only Xmas gift this year, so it'll mean even more than it might. Thank you! And, oh, no, the day has come. What a simultaneously lovely and sombre day. Okay, ... Everyone, even the greatest things come to an end, they say, and today is the end of the wonderful Yuck 'n Yum zine, co-edited by _B_A, which has been kind of the DC's official adopted zine for many years, and, yeah, sad. But, on the other hand, there's the issue itself, which is no doubt packed with incredible must-see/read goodies, and it's here, right here. Go there and get an amazing rush while paying your respects. Thank you. ** Aaron Mirkin, Hi, Aaron! I look forward to my thoughts too. I'll be sure to share the info on the screenings here on the blog when the dates, etc. are announced because this place does have a fair amount of Parisian readers. Take care, sir. ** Toniok, Hey, man! Thank you so much again for yesterday. It was an awesome discovery. You rule. I did read 'The Wanderers' a long, long time ago, and I liked it a whole bunch. I haven't thought about that novel in years. I'm going to go look at it again. Thanks, buddy, and you have a truly splendid day! ** Martin Bladh, Hi, Martin! I sent you the two new answers this morning. Thank you, thank you. ** MyNeighbourJohnTurtorro, Hi, man. I gotcha. Sounds Paris-like, except I don't think they have carolers here, come to think of it. That's interesting. Yeah, the Pharmakon is great. Do you like Puce Mary? List time is right now. I know, we'll see about Vår. We also have a dream of either them or Iceage actually appearing/performing in the movie in this one scene that takes place at a gig, and Elias likes my books, so there's that 'in', but that's surely a dream too far. But we're going to try. ** Paul Curran, Cool, yes! ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Great popcorn + zoo story. I'm really glad I asked. Whoa. Nah, I haven't order the Wooster DVDs. It being Xmas, and me being focused on buying Xmas presents, it feels especially daunting to buy myself something at the moment. So let me know what they're like, please. Wow, that's amazing news about that Re:Voir Clementi DVD. Totally wow. I know of the film from scouring the more obscure corners of Clementi's CV, but I never thought I would get to see it. Now that's something I will buy for myself when it comes out, and giftees be damned. Very, very cool news. Thank you, man. ** Misanthrope, Doh! Ah, NYC in the rain. Uh, charming or its opposite. I think its opposite. Some cities are swell in the rain (Paris, LA) and some are just wet. 15 pounds? What've you been eating, buddy? It is winter. That does happen. There is a reason, biologists say. But 15 might be a pillow too many. Get that shit off yourself. NYC in the rain might start doing the trick. Yeah, I haven't seen LPS's videos yet because one of my brothers is visiting me, and yesterday was spent showing him Paris, but today I think I'm freer. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! Great to see you, my friend! Thank you so much for putting my poem in the MOSQUITO year-end thing. I was majorly honored. It was a great thing full of great things. I'm doing really well, thanks. The 'porn' film: Right now, we're finishing up the 'package', which is basically an illustrated pdf thing that states our intentions, casting and location plans, art direction ideas, etc. to present to the funders. And we're hoping we can nail down a production manager in the next couple of weeks to supervise the technical and casting stuff and oversee the shoot itself. So, we're in heavy prep mode in hopes of getting the advance stuff fairly in place before we go to Japan in early January. Dabs ... I've seen that term, but I wasn't completely sure what it referred to. That's interesting. Huh, cool. If imbibing THC didn't give me a mild nervous breakdown, I might try it. I agree with you totally about the impending legality thing. I think for sure. I understand the appeal of being sober since I've been basically sober for a long time and really, really digging it and really enjoying seeing writing and other people and life as the most exciting sensorial input. Dude, so good to see you! Do you have any 2013 favorite things you want to share? ** Okay. Please so spill on some of your 2013 faves, if you don't mind. That would be very cool. See both you and hopefully what things you liked tomorrow.

Chilly Jay Chill presents ... The Jonathan Franzen Paris Review interview with Megan McShea by Jeff Jackson

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John Ashbery says surprise is one of the key ingredients of great literature. He was specifically talking about Jane Bowles, but he might as well have meant Megan McShea. From sentence-to-sentence and often from phrase-to-phrase, the Baltimore-based writer is a virtuoso of astonishment. You're never quite sure what's around the next comma, but her short prose poems cohere with their own internal logic. They short circuit normal meaning while crucially also striving to connect. Her work is unfailingly warm, generous, and shot through with a questing spirit of unpredictable adventure.

Megan has published two chapbooks and appeared in the Topograph anthology. Earlier this year, Publishing Genius releasedA Mountain City of Toad Splendor, a beautiful collection that’s her most beguiling effort yet.

Because this sort of writing is difficult to classify, it’s often shunted to the margins. But McShea’s book is an important release that deserves to be treated with the same gravitas as blockbuster literary titles. To emphasize this point, I’ve conducted this interview using a selection of the exact same questions that The Paris Review asked Jonathan Franzen during his prestigious Art of Fiction interview. – Jeff Jackson







It sounds like fun was an important part of your early writing. Do you feel burdened by that obligation to entertain?

I spent the early years of language tinkering with word machines but they never did anything right. Seven years in I began leaving home whenever possible to bring back whatever I could, goodness-wise. My rooms had become dumb with trying, so influences were brought in like a sort of lecture series, parading around the hallways. The one that helped the most was quite tall, with a kind of robot eye in its belly. It asked me out into the systems of the neighborhood, within the confines of the day. All was revealed. But I wouldn’t call it “fun.”

What books were you reading in those years?

I tried to be methodical, but my attention span was challenged, to say the least. I began with the Personists, then drifted into the Grand Debilitators like some kind of angry teenager when everything heated up due to late capitalism and other insults. It was a self-destructive move, but if it hadn’t happened that way I never would have discovered the Elevators. I swam around in their rejuvenating waters for a long time: the Absurdists, the Miserablists, the Black Humorists (nothing to do with race, although some of the most skilled do happen to be persons of color). In tiny times of steep morning, I allowed myself a Gordon. Though seemingly lightweight, they are pretty intoxicating. It was only later I began reading my fellow living writers. These livers infuse me more often than not with a regular, rhythmic swell of hope and astonishment, certainly more than I had ever thought possible in the lime stew of middle-youth.

Your first publication was a collaborative play called The Fig Connection, which you wrote in high school. What interested you about drama?

The effects of stage lighting on my makeup were pretty severe. You try to wash, you use special cleansers with all their promises but after a few years of this face-melting I knew I had to get out or risk permanent damage. Now I can see in retrospect it was already too late.

The collaborations were the only thing that saved me, though. That much is clear. I don’t recall this “fig connection” in particular, but I do remember a child opera involving an entire junior swim team. We rehearsed at the high school but they couldn’t have been more than 10. Their inexperience was tempered by the use of professional stage animals. I will never forget that hilarious ox. What a cutup! Was that “the fig connection”? I thought it was called “Goat Rodeo.”

I should say at that point, though, like everyone else, I was just trying to make some friends.

When did you become interested in earthquakes?

I sang in a liturgical folk choir for a season back in the early ‘80s. We had just gotten a drummer with a full kit, I remember, and we were all pretty pleased with ourselves, when gradually we noticed the church basement becoming littered with the little prayers to Jude, you know, the patron saint of lost causes? It was right around then that I learned about Atlantis, and the Bering Strait. I started reading Revelations and, you know, connecting the dots. (Weighted pause as she lets this sink in for the knowing ones.) By my calculations, we had about 50 years, tops. Then. So I keep this in mind when I write. Maybe this is why it comes out a little disrupted, I don’t know. Something’s always showing up to buckle under even the best structures. I used to say we didn’t stand a chance, but now I’d say we’re surrounded by chances all the time (at least for the time we have, WAKE UP PEOPLE), ever dwindling time left but what’s there is full of promise and full of rupture. Not to mention rapture.

I’m struck by the number of dream sequences in The Twenty-Seventh City.

You know what I’m struck by? Those tiny frogs in the river. They are so small! It’s crazy!

Last night I dreamt I was in a witness relocation program, and I had to move to Moscow. I had to sell the old family homestead, and it was this huge beautiful urban villa with courtyards like you might find in Mexico. I was standing in the courtyard when all the sudden it hit me: I have to leave everything behind! Everything I’ve ever known! And I burst into tears, feeling the sudden burden of this complete and total loss. Soon I was in Moscow, but I kept forgetting what my name was supposed to be. I had assumed the identity of a woman with similar features to mine who had disappeared some years before. She had the same long giraffe neck and stained buck teeth–the resemblance was really pretty uncanny. Everyone in the program thought so. But the way I kept forgetting her name, I was sure I would screw it up and then I’d have to be someone else. A whole other someone else than this person I had barely gotten to know that I was going to be now that I was in Moscow. I guess you could just do that forever.

I think the dream had something to do with those tiny frogs. They’re, like, smaller than my pinky fingernail! It’s amazing!

You once described The Corrections as an attack on the novel’s enemies, as an argument for the novel.

Oh, I am in full-blown military operation mode with my writing at all times. I don’t know about the novel per se–not my idiom–but the way I see it is–and I am dead serious about this–killers of words never rest, so we can’t either. Language is literally under siege. We’ve got to continuously turn it around, wrap it around its own guts, and tie it to the nearest worm so it goes deep into the earth, sugar-coat it so children will gulp it down and spew it up all screwy. Break it apart, then break that part apart, then break all those tiny little bits apart so it stays alive.

David Foster Wallace wrote to you in the summer of 1988, after reading The Twenty-Seventh City. Was this your first friendship with another writer? And what difference did this make?

David Foster Wallace was a constant source of praise. I never met him, but I could read between the lines. Which sometimes made for a super-long read.

I graduated high school in 1988, and that summer I worked as a word processor at an environmental contracting firm. They mostly removed leaky underground gas tanks from old filler stations. I was just a temp, but it felt like I could easily just stay there forever in a haze of fluorescent lighting and already defunct word processing systems and dot matrix printers. My boss got promoted and then fired this one lady she didn’t like and I think the one that got fired slashed my boss’s tires. New Jersey in 1988 was a treacherous place, and I couldn’t get out soon enough. Not to trash the state. People give it a bad rap, but nothing is all bad, not even New Jersey.

Looking back, I never could have written a thing had it not been for the tepid sink hole of horrors and humiliations, culminating in that lousy temp job of 1988. That, and how my parents paid for college. And of course the between-the-lines encouragement of David Foster Wallace.

Actual friendships with writers came later. A little bit in the ‘90s, which showed it was possible, and then I really hit paydirt in the ‘00s when I moved to Baltimore. It’s like the church I never had, honestly. Writer friends are important to faith, which is necessary to writing.

What are people missing or overlooking in your work?

Hard to say. I think some people read for the light and miss the dark. Then other people are the opposite. Or they read for the sense and miss the nonsense, and vice versa there, too. You get the picture. I guess it’s all about what you bring to it. I can’t imagine getting through the book without kind of letting go, but I’m not trying to mess with people or anything. It’s mostly about freedom and play and the gifts of language reclaimed and owned by us on a small scale. (Like those tiny frogs!)

The hardest part with putting it in a book is deciding what genre to call it, which they make you do. Poetry? Fiction? There’s elements of both but it’s all neither at the same time. And that being the hardest part is as hilarious as a stage-trained ox.






More Megan McShea

Baltimore City Paper profile

Let Language Misbehave: Stephanie Barber Interviews Megan McShea

Review at Burning River

Read an excerpt

“McShea is one of the only writers I know whose dreams I remember as if they were my own. She makes intricate languagescapes out of the theater of daily emotion.” — Lucy Corin

“Put your brain in the glass domed beatbox of Megan McShea's brain and let her throw you both together against a hundred other kinds of surface. It feels good to be a lot of shattered good glass when the carrier is 700 kinds of music and McShea seems to have studied at the Harvard for Ooh. Full time demon voodoo!” – Blake Butler

Buy yourself some Toad Splendor!




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p.s. Hey. Today's very cool Day is courtesy of none other than Chilly Jay Chill, increasingly better known to all and sundry as the writer/novelist Jeff Jackson. Yeah, it's a real treat. Enjoy wholly and lustily, and say something to CJC, if you don't mind. Thanks a bunch. And thanks a gigantic bunch to Chilly Jeff. ** Josh fella, Hi, Josh! Really good to see you, man! Really big thanks for your music list. I don't know at least half of those, and I will right that wrong. Really intrigued to hear the preview of the Stefan Jaworzyn too. You good? Things awesome down there? What's going on with you and yours? ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. Such a solidly amazing list, wow. I was wondering if you knew the Celan book I listed. Granted, I'm not much of a French speaker, but I thought the translation was really sharp. Thank you a lot! ** Marcus Whale, Hi, Marcus! How did the Xmas event/gig/show go? I was daydreaming about it. And I did ever give you DC's equivalent of Best Supporting Actor award for your haunting turn in 'Silence'? If not, it's waiting for you in my consciousness. Great, thanks a lot for the tip on that EP. I'll give it my best later today. How is everything with you? Really, really nice to see you! ** Scunnard, Wait, I thought you did live under a rock. Oh, wait, on a rock, that's right. Your year sounds plenty swell to me. Yeah, I didn't get to look at the guy's work yesterday, but it's at the very tippy-top of my bookmarks to be clicked firmly today. Thanks, J! ** Martin Bladh, Thank you! ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, David. I've been meaning to see 'Hannah Arendt'. I'll get on that hunt in whatever way I can. ** Bill, Hi, Bill. Cool about the Pere Ubu show. I haven't seen them live, since, Jesus, at least the early 90s. In fact, the last show of theirs that I saw was the one from which an excerpt appeared in that music doc 'Urgh!' Noted and will seek out the books on your list that I don't know about and/or haven't read. Thanks, man. Leos Carax has become good buddies with Gisele, and, due to that connection, I know about the new movie he's working on, and I'm sworn to secrecy about it, but it's going to be really crazy great, I think. I've just started poring over your music, etc. lists since it's posting time, but I will continue my study once this post is in everyone's faces. ** Tosh Berman, No, thank you for making last year so incredible in so many fashions! ** Sypha, Hi, James. Thanks a lot for your lists. I need to read the new Pynchon. I keep forgetting. You have most eclectic music tastes ever, as I'm sure I've said to you before. Thank you for the holiday card. As soon as I get it, I will gingerly rip the envelope open and feast and let you know. ** The Man Who Couldn't Blog, Hi, Matthew! Oh, gee, supporting your work is like ... breathing? You know what I mean. Such a wonderful, wonderful book! Thanks for those three recommendations. Right, the Kevin Sampsell, which I'm reading right now, and which really should have been on my list, damn my memory. And I'll hit those art links asap, thanks so much! How is everything? What are you working on? Loads of respect to you, great sir! ** Ken Baumann, Kenster! Oh, yeah, shit, about the publisher typo. I caught your comment yesterday and fixed it immediately, oops. I also short-schrifted BSP because somehow their Darby Larson book, which was, I swear, on my fiction list when I hit publish, somehow vanished between my keyboard and you guys. Weird. Yay, your lists! 'The Rings of Saturn'! I've been really thinking about rereading that. Yeah, yeah, *reading your list*, excellent. I've never seen 'Shoah'. Weird. 'Sister Ray'! So great. And I don't know a huge amount of your internet choices, so I'll clicking and clicking. Thanks so much, Ken! ** Toniok, Hi, man! Thanks very much of your lists. I noted the things I don't know, and I will set to knowing them as soon as I can. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. The Ellen Joyce book was terrific. I completely spaced on it when making the list. Thanks for propping our 'Pyre', so nice of you. ** Mark Gluth, Hi, Mark! No, I don't think about the lists during the year, but I do have those '3 books I loved' posts and some of the current music gig posts and the mid-year favorites lists/post to look back on, and that definitely helps. Sweet list. I need to get that William Basinski. I keep forgetting to. I don't get the Vampire Weekend thing at all, it's weird. It was Pitchfork's #1 of 2013 even. Gotta keep trying, I guess. ** Dom Lyne, Hey, D! Excellence to see you, my friend! Cool, my email is dcooperweb@gmail.com. I look forward greatly to that, thanks! Sure, quoting me is cool. I guess just email me to run what you're using by me first, but, yeah, sure, honored! The structure of your book sounds really fascinating, no surprise. Very, very cool. Lots of love back from me! ** Steevee, Hi. The Burial EP is pretty spectacular, yeah. You probably saw this, but he did a rare little interview or statement thing and said the EP is about bullying. ** Bill Porter, Hi, Bill. Man, such a good reading list there. Early DeLillo a la the one you read is the only DeLillo I like very much. Yeah, thank muchly, Bill. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! Mm, good question on how the film will cost. The producer thinks we can make it for as little as 20-25,000 Euros, but I think that's dreaming. The filmmaker Christophe Honore, who is very kindly kind of mentoring the project, thinks more like 50,000 Euros. I guess we'll make it for as much as can manage to raise. Cool, yes, on the link to your year-end feast. Everyone, the great Chris Dankland put together this truly amazing grouping of 40 stories and poems that he particularly liked from this year and wanted to share/spotlight. It's a serious treasure trove that you really should spend some time reading. And he included a poem by me, which I'm very honored by. Anyway, click this link and go see Chris's amazing shebang post haste. I so want to see 'Only God Forgives'. I feel like it hasn't played here in Paris, but it must have, and I must have missed it. Very cool on the music choices. Yeah, thank you greatly, man. And for your kind words. I could and, wait, I will say the same thing about you. ** Bollo, Hi, J. You got some great stuff on your music list that should have been on mine like the Kevin Drumm, the Radigue, Nails, etc. Hm, I'm very disappointed and blah about that Xiu Xiu/Nina record so far, which surprises me, but I'm going to keep at it. Sweet books list. Jane DeLynn! Whoa. I used to know her really well back in my NC days. She is a trip, and that book is very good, yeah. Anyway, I'll use my fingertips to sort out the things you loved that I don't know yet. Very cool, man! ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff! Thank you again for making the great thing up there. I'm very grateful. The new Jarmusch has, yes, some of the departure elements you mentioned, but employed in a different way. I really quite liked it. It's odd and loose/stylish, and I thought it was one of the freshest of his more recent films. Great film list! I will let you know about the Clementi. I'm on the hunt for it right now. Best day to you, buddy! ** MANCY, Hi, S! Cool, cool, cool, i.e your list. Was the Raime this year? That should have been on my list, if so. The Field album was really good. How can I hear that Part Wolf demo? Exciting about the new video! Yes, a heads up, please, when it's ready. ** Robert-nyc, Hi, Robert! Well, proud as fuck to be able to have a great book by you to list! Thanks much for noting your year's faves. Best always to you too! ** MyNeighbourJohnTurtorro, Hi, man! Cool that our heads were in such alignment. Oh, yeah, the Fuck Buttons album, you're right. I spaced on that when making the list. Yeah, definitely, and no doubt on the B/H, which I still haven't listened to, weird. The ÄÄNIPÄÄ is great, right? Stephen and Mr. Vaino worked their brains and asses off on that, and it really shows. I really want to see 'Blackfish', and I'm a bit afraid to, but, yeah, seems important. Puce Mary opened for Iceage here too last year, but we got there too late and missed her, but her recordings/videos are really something. ** Statictick, Hi, N. Awesome list. Some expecteds, sure, but has there ever been a DC's list without at least two Pollard-made things? No, I don't think so. I'll go look at David's two sites once I get out of here. Looking forward to discovering him and his thing. ** Will C., Hey there, Will! Really, really good to see you, sir! Thanks a lot for your lists. Wow, the 'Thor' movie? That's a surprise. I should go see it then? I think it's playing here right now. Thanks about 'TMS'. Yeah, so cool to have you back, and, obviously, anytime you feel the DC's pull, do not resist, please. ** Brendan, Big B! I like that Carcass album. I don't know why I forget about it. And the Gorguts album too. Damn. And I'll listen to the others. You good to great? How so, if so? Tell me all about you. ** Rewritedept, Thanks for the list preview. It was a good one. A DUI? Yikes. Yeah, you know I'm kind of really into the high of a clear head. Sounds good to me: your cutting down. My Xmas will be a nonentity, I think. No plans at all for the day itself. Maybe a movie or something. ** Aaron Mirkin, Hi, Aaron! Thank you a lot for your lists. I've heard really good things about the Benoit Pioulard and the Clara Engel. I'm going to get those. I've missed all chances to see 'Stranger by the Lake' so far somehow, weird. And I'm most curious about the Sarah Polley, which I don't think has been over here. Take care, and gratitude! ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. Share your list when it's finished, if you don't mind, and head over heels in love is an unparalleled state of greatness, so good on you, and on him, and so deserved! ** End. Give CJC's post as much of your time here as you can, thank you, and you will thank him for the investment of your time, I assure you. See you tomorrow.

Santa Claus's House

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Generally

'In 1821, the book A New-year's present, to the little ones from five to twelve was published in New York. It contained "Old Santeclaus", an anonymous poem describing an old man on a reindeer sleigh, bringing presents to children.

'Many of Santa Claus's modern attributes are established in the 1823 poem "A Visit From St. Nicholas" (better known today as "The Night Before Christmas"), such as riding in a sleigh that lands on the roof, entering through the chimney, and having a bag full of toys. St. Nick is described as being "chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf" with "a little round belly", that "shook when he laughed like a bowlful of jelly", in spite of which the "miniature sleigh" and "tiny reindeer" still indicate that he is physically diminutive.

'As the years passed, Santa Claus evolved in popular culture into a large, heavyset person. One of the first artists to define Santa Claus's modern image was American cartoonist Thomas Nast, an American cartoonist who immortalized Santa Claus with an 1863 illustration for Harper's Weekly in which Santa is shown dressed in an American flag, and has a puppet with the name "Jeff" written on it.

The story that Santa Claus lives at the North Pole may also have been a Nast creation. His Christmas image in the Harper’s December, 1866 issue included the caption "Santa Claussville, N.P." In 1869, a poem appeared in Harper's titled "Santa Claus and His Works" by George P. Webster, which stated that Santa Claus’s home was "near the North Pole, in the ice and snow". The tale had become well known by the 1870s.

'The popular conception of Santa Claus's home traditionally includes a residence and a workshop where he creates — often with the aid of elves or other supernatural beings — the gifts he delivers to good children at Christmas. Some stories and legends include a village, inhabited by his helpers, surrounding his home and shop.

'By the end of the 20th century, the reality of mass mechanized production became more fully accepted by the Western public. That shift was reflected in the modern depiction of Santa's residence—now often portrayed as a fully mechanized production and distribution facility, equipped with the latest manufacturing technology, and overseen by the elves with Santa and Mrs. Claus as executives and/or managers.'-- collaged







Architecturally

'There's an old riddle that challenges children to draw a diagram of a house without lifting their pencil or repeating a line. The basic shape is composed of a square with diagonals running from corner to corner, topped with a triangular roof. In Germany, kids are taught to speak one syllable of the phrase, 'Das ist das Haus des Nikolaus,' for each line they draw. The game is known as 'The House of Santa Claus.' This simple line drawing represents some of the architectural imagery that forms the setting of the Santa Claus myth. His home, village and workshop, have transformed through the centuries in step with the evolution of the man himself.

'Scandinavian influence on the St. Nicholas myth formed the basis of the Santa Claus story and would be the first point of reference for his architectural traditions. Now living at the North Pole, his house was believed to be a traditional earth hut of northern Lapland. These circular homes were constructed of curving pine rafters that formed a dome shape, supported with sod and covered with reindeer skins. A hearth was placed at the centre of the room, vented through a smoke hole at the top of the structure. Village shaman would traditionally enter through these holes, thought to be the origin of Santa's ritual chimney descent. Children in Denmark and Greenland today believe that Santa Claus lives in one of these huts on the island of Uummannaq in western Greenland.

'As the legend of St. Nicholas continued to evolve, his home became associated with traditional Scandinavian log structures that combined the artistic skill and woodworking techniques of Viking ship building. Known as stave construction, unpainted vertical pine logs were set within a post and beam frame that supported a high pitch, wood shingle, pagoda style roof. Gables, doorways and structural supports were decorated with ornate wood carvings similar to the prow of a Viking ship. This timber frame, alpine image has prevailed through the centuries as a common representation of Santa's home in popular culture.

'Popular associations with the architecture that surrounded Santa changed in the late 1800s into the traditional half-timber buildings common in northern Europe. This construction style uses large oak timbers to create a structural frame that is filled with light coloured brick and plaster. The contrasting dark wood columns and angled bracing form a distinctive pattern that is expressed on the building's exterior. This construction method was widespread across northern Europe and has become the predominant architectural imagery related to Santa Claus, found in snow-globes, children's books and on Christmas decorations.

'The 20th Century did see periodic diversions from this traditional imagery. In England, the characterization of Santa as a "right jolly old elf" resulted in his home being represented at shopping malls and department stores as a grotto or magical cave, the mythical home of Scandinavian elves. Popular children's holiday cartoons such as Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and Santa Claus is Coming to Town, portrayed Santa living in a Romanesque style, Bavarian castle with towers, gables and ornamental turrets.

'Modern interpretations have generally returned to the image of European half-timber buildings, but with the introduction of Santa's workshop, the architecture of the North Pole has taken on a grander scale. Modern Hollywood movies describe Santa's home as a bustling European style, medieval village surrounding a monumental production and distribution facility, equipped with modern manufacturing technology, staffed by teams of tireless elves.

'As the depiction of Santa Claus has evolved through the centuries, so, too, has the architecture that provides a context to his myth. Santa's timeless image will likely remain consistent in the future, but his architecture will continue to evolve.'-- Brent Bellamy, Number Ten Architectural Group






_______
Interview




Do you have visitors at the North Pole?

Well it is a little difficult to give direction, because the North Pole is not stationary, the water above which is thick ice is constantly moving because of the ocean currents. If I were to give you directions on where we were by the time you got here we wouldn’t be here. If it were not for my reindeer’s keen sense of direction I might get lost too.

Do you live at your North Pole Village?

The North Pole is my permanent residence and the place I love the most. But, throughout the year I visit many cities and countries, where I stop and stay for a few days. Many of my favorite places to visit are a secret known only to Mrs. Claus and me.

What do you do when you're not making toys?

Santa relaxes by walking in our forest just outside North Pole Village and listening to the voices of the wilderness. I also spend time preparing for next Christmas delivery by reading children’s letter. You know children write me all year long and I so do look forward to hearing from each of them. My favorite pastime is reading books and listening to music.

Do you understand animal language?

Why yes, I understand a little animal language. But actually the animals are very smart and they totally understand everything that I say. Have you found that you do not always understand one of your pets, but they understand things that you say or tell them. It’s really remarkable.

Are all the gifts made at Santa’s North Pole Village?

Not all of them. Some are made at home, and they are especially precious. You’ve surely heard of homemade jelly or mustard or hand knit wool socks. In some places there are little workshops that also help Santa by making gifts.

How many elves are there living at North Pole Village?

That’s something no one knows exactly. Elves are such fast little people, and they are rarely ever all in the same place at the same time. But when the sun sets in the North Pole, there are probably as many little elf toes under the blankets as there are stars in the night sky, if not more.

Do you have swimming trunks?

Indeed I do, and I use them regularly. I like to swim best in the summer but I am known to jump into the icy cold water and play with Polar Bears, but I always make sure the Elf lifeguards are on duty.

What does your house look like?

That's a good question.



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*

p.s. Hey. ** Josh feola, Hi! Wow, Sintronics is a sweet discovery. I had no idea about it, so thank you for the alert. Incredible resource, and very welcome. I knew SmartBeijing just a little from my searches for post stuff, but I somehow hadn't focused on you being the music editor. Well, turbulent or not, it seems like you've had a momentous year. I would love to get clued in on your poetry book and music project when the time is apt. Great, Josh, take care! ** Scunnard, Normally I would say comfy is a dangerous thing, but if we're talking about a rock, there's a saving discrepancy there. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. Oh, no problem on the novels thing. I just like them and seem to be into making no bones about that here. 'Force fed', yeah, I get that. Most fiction, or at least fiction that comes with a standard approach and agenda for the reader, makes me feel that way. The stuff I like is more or almost like epic paragraphic poetry or something. Or that idea of it is my way in. ** MANCY, I had to fact check the date-related facts a bunch of times when making that list, so, yeah. Would be very cool to get that Part Wolf demo, if there's a way. And I'll go check out the Lié EP very, very shortly. Thanks a whole lot, S! ** David Ehrenstein, Morning. ** Steevee, Me too, about Carax. How long it will take him to get what he's planning to make actually made is the question, I guess. Ha ha, I'd like to hear Franzen's answers too, but I don't know if it would be worth giving that inflated mediocrity the additional column inches. ** Bill, Yeah, I know, early signage of a new Carax is delicious news indeed. I like crunchy abstraction. I really do. So your recs could end up being my recs a week or month or whenever from now so easily. Thanks, Bill. ** Tosh Berman, I don't think the Jarmusch has been released anywhere yet. It's on the festival circuit, or it was until recently. I just got an early look thanks to the generosity of someone in-the-know. Yes, Gisele tells me that Carax is an absolutely massive Sparks fan. Makes total sense somehow, doesn't it? ** Stopreading, Hi, Stopreading. Welcome to the blog. Thank you for being here. I started reading the interviews on your blog, and they are most interesting, and I will return there and proceed at the soonest opportunity. Please consider here a place to hang out if you like. ** The Man Who Couldn't Blog, Banish your self-doubt to some dark realm containing some kind of reverse magnetic energy or something that does a kyptonite-type number on your self doubt, I say. Cool, look forward both to your linked HTMLG posts and the opportunity to get far, far, far away from the kerfuffle. I have looking at the paintings on my today's agenda, and I'm sure I'll enjoy the time. Yeah, thank you, great Matthew! ** Dom Lyne, Saw the email as I was half-asleep this morning, and I'll open it when I'm fully awake, which feels like a state that's in the offing. Nice about the family Xmas, and, of course, that the meds thing got sorted without the veritable hitch. 2014 is going to the best year yet. I can feel it in my bones. ** Brendan, That's very true, i.e. the new Melt Banana is very wonderful. Hm, existential crisis, yeah, I see. How about ... okay, if I were you, or if I were myself with only very slight differences, maybe I would start building some sort of totally 'insane''outsider art'-like thing that presents your most unaltered and uncensored aesthetics and wishes and so on at a really big scale, maybe in or outside/near your house for convenience, or in the desert or something, you know, like Watts Towers or Grandma Prisbee's Bottle Village or something that'll take a bunch of your life to make, and that will make most people think you're bizarre, or ... I don't know. Maybe not. That was the first cure that sprang to mind, but I'm sans the second cup of coffee that lifts me each day into so-called full consciousness. I don't know. You sound like you're doing great to me. I'm doing really good, man. Just like you but slightly differently but not radically differently. ** Will C., I liked 'The Avengers', so, okay. Basically, I save blockbuster movies for the long plane flights I seem to take all the time, even though that context is so wrong for the intended gigantic-ness of blockbusters. But sometimes I try to decide if there's a blockbuster that I really need to see in the theater. And, so, maybe it'll be the new 'Thor'. It seems like it would warrant that treatment more than the new 'Hunger Games', which was the big movie I was half-thinking of seeing on the big screen until you brought up the Thor one. It's weird, but I was never a comic book guy ever. Not even the tiniest thing against them, I just somehow didn't end up reading them. Weird. Cool, really glad that you feel welcome, and please take as much advantage of that as you like/can. ** Mark Gluth, Hi, Mark. I'm FB friends with Basinski, and he seems like an incredibly nice, down to earth, approachable guy, so it seems he could totally into that. Great blurb idea! Well, yeah, on the Pitchfork thing re: Vampire Weekend. And Moonface. But, hey, Pollard put out three genius records this year, and about that many every year, and I don't think anything that he or GbV has made during Pitchfork's lifetime has ever gotten more than a begrudging 7 points from them in rare instances, much less made their hoity-toity year end list. ** Alistair McCartney, Hi, Alistair! Awesome to see you! Yeah, I think I noted on FB that you guys are going to Australia. Very sweet! Except for the plane trips to and fro, yikes. Very exciting news that there are only a couple of months' work left on your novel! Mine goes very well, but with many more months than that ahead of it, and yet so it goes, as you well know. If I don't get to interact with you again before, have a great, great Xmas! ** Misanthrope, Get those pounds off your ass, man, yeah, as soon as the dreaded Xmas + stomach codependence thing is history. Clear, much better! Too bad about LPS not going, but cool that you're free of all that driving, I guess. I was hoping Alan's quietude was novel-related, great! So, you're off already. Okay, I'll see you on Monday night-ish with blogging bells on. Have a blast! ** Rigby, Rigster! To what do I owe this so sadly rare occasion in which you plunge masterfully into my humble abode. Oh, it's love that brought you in! And my prettiness! And surely your prettiness had a thing to do with it too. What's up, lustrous one? Ha ha, holy fucking shit, on that Joseph Mills as singer for Divorce thing. I'm, as my mother used to say, 'in stitches' over here. ** Bill Porter, Hi, Bill. Yikes, I'll go check out that Franzen thing, thanks. The name Edmund Caldwell does ring a bell. You good? ** MyNeighbourJohnTurtorro, Hey! Aw, thanks, man. I'd be almost nowhere without The Wire. It's like my one IRL addiction almost. So that's a heavy compliment you gave me right there. 'Play', yeah, I still definitely intend to see that somehow. The Ensemble Pearl was terrific, for sure. You probably know that the music on that album was originally the rough draft score for one of Gisele's and my and Stephen's theater pieces. It was stuff that didn't end up on stage for reasons have nothing to with its excellence, obviously. I don't think I know Divorce, no. I'll use that link and get them known, thanks a lot! I just tried a few seconds of that youtube Divorce song, and it does sound great. I'll take it off pause as soon as I launch this. ** Rewritedept, Hi, Chris. You do the Xmas Eve thing. I guess a lot of people do. We always did the Xmas morning thing. My family, I mean. I think on Xmas Eve we ate cookies and milk or something. My Thursday ... saw my visiting bro, bought two Xmas presents, waited for and received a Fed Ex package, wrote, etc. My poetry book isn't officially out yet so, no, no press that I know of. Not sure if it'll get much. Poetry is sadly only poetry in the eyes of the press. I saw that about the 'Ladies and Gentlemen ... ' shows. I saw the original one, and it was pretty fucking good. IOW, sorry, man. ** Okay. Today is another Day when I try to find something interesting about Xmas and its back story. No clue as to whether it's of interest outside my head. There you go. See you tomorrow.

Le Petit MacMahon de David Ehrenstein presents ... L’Amour Fou, Le Pirate, It’s Not Just You Murray

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(Jean-Pierre Kalfon et Bulle Ogier dans L’Amour Fou)


Made in 1968 (one can smell May in the air) Jacques Rivette’s third feature like his first, Paris Nous Appartient, deals with the interplay between theater and life. Sebastien (Jean-Pierre Kalfon) is staging Racine’s classical tragedy Andromache. His wife Clare (Bulle Ogier) is supposed to play the leading female role. But no sooner have rehearsals started she balks and retreats into a world of her own, clearly clinging to the edge of sanity. Eventually Sebastien abandons the play and joins Clare. Together they destroy their apartment in a restaging of the tumultuous break-up of Jean-Luc Godard and Anna Karina.



(Jean-Pierre Kalfon et Bulle Ogier dans L’Amour Fou)


That’s the “plot.” The film is many other things. Rivette was very much influenced by Roland Barthes'...



(Roland Barthes)

... writings on Jean Racine. He also drew on Hitchcock’s Marnie and Rossen’s Lilith as models for Clare’s emotional collapse. And beside the Godard/Karina contretemps the climactic scene was clearly influenced by Vera Chytilova’s Daisies.





Rivette let Kalfon stage Andromache by himself – as if it were going to be performed. He also had Andre S. Labarthe film the rehearsals with a 16mm film crew. Hence L’Amour Fou is in 35mm and 16 I tandem.



(L’Amour Fou)





(Jane Birkin and Marushka Detmers)



(Jane Birkin and Marushka Detmers)


While there has been no end of blather about the alleged ‘daring of La vie d’Adele, if you’re looking for a real "envelope pushing" lesbian love story Jacques Doillon’s 1984 masterpiece, La Pirate starring Jane Birkin and Marushka Detmers is the one to see. Sorry about the subtitles. You’ll have to either learn French or Japanese. But the action is easy to follow.



(La Pirate)


Last but far from least there’s Martin Scorsese’s It’s Not Just You MurrayMade in 1963, it has been by and large remade by Marty as The Wolf of Wall Street.



(It’s Not Just You Murray)



(Leonardo DiCaprio)


See what I mean? Enjoy!



(It’s Not Just Your Murray 1)


(It’s Not Just You Murray 2)





*

p.s. Hey. Mr. David Ehrenstein brings his Petit MacMahon theater back into the fold this weekend to fill the local portion of your weekend with a superb triple-bill. Please treat yourselves, should you find the rewarding time, and, in any case, do treat our masterful curator with a comment-shaped treat, thank you! And, of course, supercharged thanks to Mr. E, without whom ... ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. No, I didn't write the questions and answers. They were magically out there and available. I'm happy that you found gorgeousness in the Gladman novel. Intentionality in fiction is tricky. Fiction is all intention all the time, so that's just second nature, but finding a way to either hide the intention or make the intention's availability part of the point is tricky. Mushroom soup with truffle, wow. I mean, yeah, I mean, yum. With eye candy! ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff, and thanks again so much for the awesome post, sir. Thanks about he Santa thing. Yeah, I just got to wondering one day. Grin, whoa, I haven't thought about them in ages. I did like them, yes. I was kind of fan of the young Nils Lofgren's stuff with Grin and his early solo things too before he got eaten up by his Neil Young band identity and duties. Yeah, they were curious. He did some nice things under the Crazy Horse guise back when they were a separate entity as well. My favorite song on the first Crazy Horse album is Lofgren's 'Beggar's Day', which retrains some of that Grin idiosyncrasy. ** Rigby, Morning or afternoon, Rigs. I forget where that igloo one is, shit. In Europe somewhere, I think. Uh, ... no, I can't remember. Am I cool with 'being' Monk? Who wouldn't be? Thanks, wow, thanks. A band ... ? Good thing you warned me about that 10 quid bet because ... well, never mind. So, if the band that shall not be named is taken out of the running, ... uh, that's hard. I'm going to do an eery-money-mo thing. Hold on. Okay, Pavement won. And what band are you and yours aligned with? ** Tosh Berman, If I know my Santa Claus, I think the most he would do is let Amazon buy some of his stock. Too late on the protectionist thing re: Santa. The Santa whom we know and look upon was essentially invented by the Coca Cola company. ** Steevee, I did read about that Fox News Santa/Jesus thing, yeah. And the Duck Dynasty thing. No, no one over here gives much of a fuck about all of that tiny, stupid celebrity stuff in the US that gets blown up into giant, stupid weeklong superficially political discussion stuff in the US. Those mini-crises-cum-phenomenons happen way too often and die out sans resonance too quickly to read as bastions of any meaningful meaning outside the hothouse, I think. ** Sypha, Hi. That is a nice depiction of Santa's abode. I wish I'd found it in my searches, and I don't why I didn't. Ha ha, well, obviously I need to find a fresh way to be polite. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. That community event type thing for young locals with MS sounds like a fantastic thing, obviously. She sounds very cool. As do you, always, obviously. A Leeds Xmas full of getting important things done sounds very nice. Cool light thing. ** Nicki, Wow, Nicki! Incredibleness to see you, my old and dear pal! Ha ha, oh, the blog has become a place of utter randomness since you left. It's just one random post after another. That one was pretty typical. How the heck are you? Am I going to get lucky enough to get some kind of catch-up from you? Would be awfully cool. In any case, tons of love to you! ** Wolf, Wolferino! Yay! I get to share Xmas with the Wolf! Yes, it's true, I am like you, and Xmas is a resplendent time, especially here in Paris, and, oh boy, is it prettiness incarnate here right now. You know. Ooh, gingerbread. With chocolate and orange peel? Let me dwell on that combo for a moment. Yes, my mouth responded in a highly positive fashion. I can only imagine that if you sent a letter to Santa c/o the Recollets, Chrystel would pop it in my mailbox without even thinking twice. New laptop! Sweet! Nothing like a new laptop five years later. I've been there, yep. I'm really good, pal, thank you. Life is good. Not a trace of snow yet. It's gotten cold enough here, but not when the sky wasn't empty. Oh, yes, please do try to be around for the holidays. Buches of love to you! ** David Ehrenstein, Thank you so very much for the enlightening weekend just ahead, my friend! ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! Ha ha, interesting about Australia. Kiddiepunk and Oscar B. are down there for Xmas right now, and maybe they'll chime in with local Xmas color. Oh, shit, yeah, the interview. No, it's good that you remind me. I'm really such a space case about things sometimes, I'm so sorry. I will set to finishing that this afternoon. Yeah, I'm really sorry to be so slow. I don't why I get so scattered. Yeah, the French, like, invented New Orleans or something, I think. You take care, too, man, and I'll get the interview finished and to you as soon as I can. ** Okay, that's it for Santa's comments. Commence with your time in Le Petit MacMahon now or at least sometime over the course of the two coming days, please. Have fine weekends with and without this blog's input, and I'll see you on Monday.

Galerie Dennis Cooper presents ... Snow Globe Show: Bounty, Anthony Gormley, Thomas Doyle, Neil Conley, Phillip Toledando, Orson Welles, Jean Paul Gaultier, Martin Margiela, We Love Cards Ltd., Louise Devin, Dorothy, Snoap Globes, JA-JA Architects, Hideyuki Nakayama, Louis Vuitton, Julia Landsiedl, The Mill, Karl Stiefvater, Nadine is Here, Tara Lapinski, Jason Huff, Walter Martin & Paloma Munoz, and a cast of Unknowns

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unknown






unknown






Bounty






Anthony Gormley






Thomas Doyle
























Neil Conley












Phillip Toledando






Orson Welles






Jean Paul Gaultier






Martin Margiela







We Love Cards Ltd.






Louise Devin

















unknown






unknown






Dorothy






unknown










Snoap Globes









JA-JA Architects
























Hideyuki Nakayama






Louis Vuitton







Julia Landsiedl










unknown









The Mill







Karl Stiefvater






Nadine is Here







unknown






Jason Huff







Tara Lapinski






Walter Martin & Paloma Munoz





































*

p.s. Hey. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. Oh, yes, I know what truffles are. There's a great, famous small shop here, La Maison de la Truffe, that sells nothing but truffles and truffle-based things, from truffle pasta to truffle-inflected cheese and candies, etc. So nice of you about that scarf. It's very handsome, but, yeah, I don't think I could wear it without turning beet red and getting a very bad headache 'cos of my allergies, unfortunately. And dark blue is a particularly toxic color/dye for me for some weird reason. Lighter colors are less bad, but I don't like lighter colors very much. I'm a mess. But it was so cool of you to think of me in its a regard. That's plenty. I love conceptual stuff the best. ** Wolf, Wolfy, duderina! Ha ha. There's a famous episode of the old 'Twilight Zone' TV series where a kid wishes it was Xmas every day and gets his wish, and his and his family's lives turned into a suicide-inspiring drudgery of routine and meaningless generosity, etc., so I've always had that episode censoring me when I think, 'Xmas every day, why not, perfect!' Grandma socks, nice. What are they like visually and texturally? We had one buche so far, the Pierre Herme one, uh, hold on, ... this one. There's another one imminent that I can't talk about today for reasons too complicated to explain, but I can tomorrow, and your mind will be blown. Probably gonna get a third one for Xmas day itself, not sure which yet. Oh, I have to admit that I like those over-familiar Xmas songs, I don't know why. Some boring reason no doubt. What would I change about Xmas ... ? Hm, okay, more decorations. Tons and tons more Xmas decorations. Every building and window and storefront and tree and etc., etc. in whatever city I was in would be jam-packed with Xmas decorations, so dense that you could hardly think straight, and they wouldn't have to cut down more trees to do that. Everything would just magically appear a week before Xmas and disappear the day after Xmas. Thanks about my ghost poem. Yeah, that one is kind of pretty good, I think. Blush. ** David Ehrenstein, Thank you mightily for the cinematic weekend! I watched the first two films while I was wrapping presents, and they were gorgeous. I'm going to try to get in the 'Murray' film today. ** Rigby, Hi, R! Nah, I love Slayer and Swans, but their palate is very narrow, which is a really good thing, mind you, but I think Pavement's thing was big enough that they could have gone outward into Slayer or Swans territory and maintained their thing, and Malkmus's lyrics are better, and I, you know, write words and all of that. The Fall is a superb choice. See, I could have gone for them. Happy Mondays ... interesting. Not for me, but interestingly revealing about you. Stay a good boy, Rigster, and ...gold in my eye, wow, that would be nice. Or not 'in' my eye 'cos that would hurt but maybe gold seeping up from my eye's depths like water from ice or something. Happy Xmas if I don't see you before, but I sure hope I will. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh. What are you guys doing for Xmas, if anything? ** Allesfliesst, Hey, Kai! Super really awesome to see you! I was in Berlin for two days a while back, but it was business-oriented for the most part, so I stuck to my guns while there. I have been a good boy this year, I'm pretty sure. No spanking required or warranted, I don't think. I'm not the best judge, though. Life in Paris is quite excellent, sir! Beauty and chill everywhere and on/in everything. I'm here for the duration. Aw, sad that that 'Snow Queen' production was sold out. Based on the HC Anderson thing? Wait, no, I think I'm wrong about that. You have my booklet without seeing 'The Pyre'. That's illegal, sir. Burn it henceforth. No, but I don't know what happens with or from that text if you haven't seen the show. They're kind of co-dependent unless you tell me otherwise. Warm hugs from the cold not-as-north! Stick around, buddy. ** Steevee, Hope the interview went really well. Oh, wait, it did go well enough. I jumped the gun before scrolling down. Good. That era of Cabaret Voltaire is quite odd. I need to revisit it. ** Keaton, Hi. Wait, that's your body and your tattoos? Those are something else. Like pop art-meets-disease looking things. I like them, in other words. Weird. Explain. Everyone, I think if you click this, you will get to see both the upper torso of Keaton and his new tattoos, although it is possible that said torso and tattoos are in fact things he is recommending that I/you look at and not in fact his. In any case, worth a look. Oh, and Keaton also has some other Xmas presents for us, I think. I.e., here's'When Christ was born', and here's'Such a beautiful baby', and here's'thank you based God'. My Xmas is made. Those could be the only Xmas presents I get this year. Thank you for potentially saving my Xmas from utter oblivion. How's it hanging, man? ** Chilly Jay Chill, Interesting if not revelatory, for sure. A curiously mapped out minor sideline spot, which is good enough. The Insect Trust, sure, wow, and, yeah, I def. get the point of comparison. Nice. Well, my final drafts are more like a hundred drafts rolled into one because it takes me so long to right my prose. So, yeah, I mean, if I worried about the slackness of my prose in the first draft, I wouldn't write. I try to write good sentences at first, but, if trying too hard slows me up, I just let myself write thoughtlessly because I know I'll be fiddling with the writing for ages afterwards. Sometimes writing a little slackly is very interesting, at least for me, because you relax and find rhythms in your language output that you would normally censor out because they seem lazy or undoable compared to the kinds of sentences you instinctively admire and aspire to, but sometimes you'll end up finding within that slackness a new kind of chassis to work with or something. All of which is to say, personally, I wouldn't worry about the slackness, assuming you're down for intensive editing later. ** Bill, Hi, Bill. My weekend was A-okay, thank you. 'In a Year of 13 Moons' would cleanse the Xmas out of Santa Claus himself. So, that should totally work. I was reading about 'Computer Chess' the other day. It was on some best of 2013 lists by some people I respect. Curious. Thanks, Bill. Enjoy the Xmas run up as best you can, please? ** End. I think today's post counts as a Xmas-related post if you like the idea of getting another Xmas-related post from me. Or, on the other hand, it could be taken as something that is as contextually free as a bird or whatever. See you tomorrow.

Gig #50: Requiem for and by the newly dead: Chris Austin, Shadow Morton, David Parland, Zbigniew Karkowski, Faye Hunter, Mick Farren, Scott Miller, Akifumi Nakajima/Aube, Tim Wright, Lindsay Cooper, Bernard Parmegiani, Mike Boone, Jason Molina, Dick Dodd, Albrecht/d., Reg Presley, Jeff Hanneman, Kevin Ayers, Sten Hanson

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Chris Austin(1975 - 2013) (Tape Error)Lesson a New Fear
'Chris Austin was 38 when he defied doctors last week and walked out of Medway Maritime Hospital. He died with his family by his side. His family had noticed he looked ill earlier this year, but thought he was overworked. Eventually he sought help and was diagnosed with late-stage liver cancer last Tuesday. Chris’s most recent band was acoustic group Tape Error, one of the biggest names on Medway’s indie scene. They had just signed to a label and released an EP. Someone once called Chris Austin’s songs “nightmare lullabies”… It's imagery that sat well with the band, themselves generally dysfunctional and often at odds with the world around them.'-- collaged










Shadow Morton(1941- 1913) (The Shangri-Las)Past, Present and Future
'George "Shadow" Morton was an American record producer and songwriter best known for his influential work in the 1960s. In particular, he was noted for writing and producing "Remember (Walking in the Sand)", "Leader of the Pack", and other hits for girl group The Shangri-Las. In 1967, his successes continued when his production of Janis Ian's "Society's Child", became a hit record. The same year, he discovered a group called the Pidgeons, who became Vanilla Fudge, and produced their first three albums, which included their hit version of "You Keep Me Hangin' On," followed by a foray into aural collage called The Beat Goes On. The experimentation was largely Morton's idea, resisted by the band, and poorly received by critics. He also produced all-girl group Isis, and worked with The New York Dolls, producing their second album Too Much Too Soon.'-- collaged










David Parland(1970 - 2013) (Dark Funeral)My Funeral
'In 1997 David Parland founded Infernal (also known as Infernal 666) and also joined fellow Swedish Black Metal band War (also known as Total War) during the same period. In War he played guitars on the band's only two releases, their Total War EP from 1997 and their only full length, We Are War, from 1999. War split up in 1999. In Infernal, he played guitars, bass, and performed vocals as well as writing lyrics. Infernal released three fantastic EPs (Infernal, 1999, Summon Forth the Beast, 2002, The Infernal Return, 2010), and also a split album with his other band Dark Funeral in 2002 titled Under Wings of Hell. Being the sole core member of the band, Infernal came to an end upon David Parland's death. At the time of his death, David Parland was also working on a solo project, titled Blackmoon's Darkwinds, although the only release was a split album with U.S. Black Metal band Nocturnal Abyss, titled Beyond the Nothingness.'-- bestblackmetalalbums.com










Zbigniew Karkowski(1958 - 2013)live @ nouveau casino in paris 16 05 2006
'Karkowki was regarded in experimental-music circles as one of noise music's most fearlessly extreme practitioners. Stories circulate that his music once cracked a toilet at San Francisco's Bloody Angle Compound studios; a 2001 performance at Montreal's FCMM, playing needle-nosed sine waves tuned to the resonant frequency of the room, sparked a fire in a speaker and sent chunks of the ceiling tumbling to the floor. But he was also known as one of noise music's most contemplative thinkers. (When a reporter asked him if he was afraid of damaging his hearing, following the FCMM performance, he replied, "Sound is like a wild animal; it will only hurt you if you are afraid of it.")'-- Spin










Faye Hunter(1954 - 2013) (Let's Active)Waters Part
'Faye Hunter, the founding bassist of the Mitch Easter-led jangle-pop outfit Let’s Active who played on the band’s 1983 debut EP Afoot and follow-up full-length Cypress in 1984, died Saturday night in Advance, N.C., of an apparent suicide. Hunter formed Let’s Active with Easter and drummer Sara Romweber in 1981, and the band signed to IRS Records that same year. The group was closely associated with and performed alongside R.E.M., and Easter rose to fame producing that band and others, including Pylon. A friend of Hunter’s said that she had “been talking about this for quite some time. The past three or so years were really bad,” as Hunter had “become physically worn down, very thin and having physical problems from the stress of working and caregiving.”'-- collaged










Mick Farren(1943 - 2013) (The Deviants)Billy the Monster
'Veteran musician Mick Farren has died after collapsing onstage while performing with his band the Deviants at a gig in London on Saturday. He was 69. Farren, a former journalist for music magazine NME, was onstage at the Borderline music venue as part of the Atomic Music Festival when he collapsed and lost consciousness. He was later pronounced dead but no further information was available. Born in Cheltenham, England, Farren formed the Deviants (originally Social Deviants) in 1967 in Ladbroke Grove in west London, and the band went on to release three albums between 1967 and 1969. Farren described their sound as "teeth-grinding, psychedelic rock" somewhere between The Stooges and The Mothers of Invention. The Deviants have been described as a transition between classic British psych and the punk/heavy metal aesthetic of the 1970s.'-- collaged










Scott Miller(1960 - 2013) (Game Theory)One More for St. Michael
'Scott Miller, a singer, songwriter and guitarist best known for his work in the bands Game Theory and the Loud Family, died on Monday. He was 53. Game Theory formed in 1981 in California, releasing four LPs and a smattering of singles and EPs with various lineups throughout the Eighties. The group, a college-rock favorite associated with L.A.'s "paisley underground" scene, developed a strong cult following before disbanding when their label, Enigma, folded. Miller went on to form Loud Family in San Francisco in 1991. The band released their last LP What If It Works in 2006.'-- Rolling Stone










Aube (Akifumi Nakajima)(1959 - 2013)Vent
'I have gotten the sad news that my old friend Akifumi Nakajima passed away in September. It seems the news is only just creeping out and took a while to reach everyone outside of Japan. Nakajima was probably best known for his work under the name Aube, which was one of the more prolific, and for me most interesting, noise acts from Japan in the 1990s. He had an impeccable sense of design and appreciation for the materials, taking packaging beyond just using regular old paper. His label G.R.O.S.S. presented an impressive selection of international artists and was an important part of the Anomalous Records catalog. I could really go on and on about his achievements and biography, but I think it is well documented online.'-- Eric Lanzillotta










Tim Wright(1950 - 2013) (Pere Ubu)Final Solution
'Tim Wright was a founding member of Pere Ubu in 1975 and played on the Cleveland group's early singles, including "30 Seconds Over Tokyo" and "Final Solution." He also appears on a pair of songs on Pere Ubu's 1978 debut LP, The Modern Dance, though he left the self-described avant-garage band that year and moved to New York, where he joined Arto Lindsay's no-wave group DNA. Wright was a member of DNA until the band broke up in 1982. He also worked with Eno and David Byrne on their 1981 album My Life in the Bush of Ghosts.'-- Rolling Stone










Lindsay Cooper(1951 - 2013) (Henry Cow)Beautiful as the Moon
'Lindsay Cooper was an English bassoon and oboe player, composer and political activist. Best known for her work with the band Henry Cow, she was also a member of Comus, National Health, News from Babel and David Thomas and the Pedestrians. She collaborated with a number of musicians, including Chris Cutler and Sally Potter, and co-founded the Feminist Improvising Group. She wrote scores for film and TV and a song cycle Oh Moscow which was performed live around the world in 1987. She also recorded a number of solo albums, including Rags (1980), The Gold Diggers (1983) and Music For Other Occasions (1986). Cooper was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in the late 1970s, but did not disclose it to the musical community until the late 1990s when her illness prevented her from performing live. In September 2013, Cooper died from the illness at the age of 62, 15 years after her retirement.'-- Wikipedia










Bernard Parmegiani(1927 - 2013)The Transparent Screen
'Alongside Luc Ferrari and François Bayle, Bernard Parmegiani was a key figure in the collective of musique concrete composers assembled around Pierre Schaeffer. Parmegiani's tape-splice wizardry helped set the stage for the future of sound recordings made up of other sound recordings, from the likes of Mike Patton and Autechre have cited him as an influence to the sample-crazy world of early hip-hop. Electronic musicians Laurel Halo, Keith Fullerton Whitman, and Drew Daniel (Matmos/Soft Pink Truth) were among those paying their respects upon hearing the news. Parmegiani came to to electronic music from a job as a tape operator for French TV. He joined Schaeffer's Groupe de Recherches Musicales (RGM) collective in 1959, and by the mid-'60s he was composing album-length pieces. The Paris native continued creating works across multiple media into the 2000s.'-- collaged










Mike Boone(1973 - 2013) (Sourvein)Witch Rides Out
'This week there seemed to be endless posts on Facebook from locals pouring out their thoughts and grief over the loss of bassist Mike Boone, a local musician who played in many bands over the years locally — Betrayer, Silver Judas, Notch, HarryBillyBooneband, Sourvein and S.O.L. After playing to a sold out show with Sourvein at Saint Vitus Bar in Brooklyn, N.Y., last Saturday night Boone passed away in his sleep. Sourvein was to play a show at Orton’s tonight with local acts to celebrate their 20-year anniversary as a band. The sludge and doom metal band that formed locally in 1993 released six albums and EPs over their career and were making a new album as of this summer.'-- Star News










Jason Molina(1973 - 2013) (Songs: Ohia)Blue Factory Flame
'On March 16, Songs: Ohia and Magnolia Electric Co.’s Jason Molina died of natural causes in his Indianapolis home. The 39-year-old songwriter’s organs gave out after a longstanding battle with alcoholism. His body crumbled under the physical and emotional toil that he faced in his treacherous road back to sobriety. Like many musicians, Molina didn’t have health insurance. His medical bills amassed as he checked in and out of rehab facilities and received medical treatment after cancelling his last scheduled tour in 2009. When Molina needed money to cover his costs, he pleaded for donations from fans and friends alike. “Jason never gave up,” Secretly Canadian’s publicist Lucy Robinson told me. “He made music until the last day of his life. He was in bad shape, but it was his body that gave out.”'-- Stereogum










Dick Dodd(1945 - 2013) (The Standells)Sometimes Good Guys Don't Wear White
'Lead singer and drummer for the ’60s garage rockers the Standells, has passed away. He was 68 years old. Though they only had one Top 40 hit, the Standells have long been considered gararge rock royalty among fans with countless classics like ‘Why Pick On Me?,’ ‘Try It,’ ‘Sometimes Good Guys Don’t Wear White’ and the theme song from the movie ‘Riot On Sunset Strip,’ in which the band appeared. Despite the ‘Boston, you’re my home’ lyrics in ‘Dirty Water,’ Dodd was California born-and-bred. He was an original member of surf rockers the Bel-Airs, and as a child, was a Mickey Mouse Club Mouseketeer.'-- collaged










Albrecht/d.(1944 - 2013)Endless Music
'There is not too much information on Albrecht/d. to be found on the net. When you google for him, you will mostly find Albrecht Dürer and of course there is a connection: as an instant performance and as a contribution to the Albrecht Dürer Jubilee in 1971, Dietrich Albrecht changed his real name officially to Albrecht/d. He worked and performed with Joseph Beuys, Throbbing Gristle, Wolf Vostell, Nam June Paik and many more. He invented permanent instant performance. He saved Raoul Hausmann from being forgotten. In 1979 he was part of the Stuttgart punk & art posse: the young common time punks hated him for being an artist, but he inspired a lot of the art core noise explorers.'-- last.fm










Reg Presley(1941 - 2013) (The Troggs)I Can't Control Myself
'Reg Presley, the lead singer of the 1960s rock band The Troggs, has died at the age of 71. Presley died at his home in Andover, Hampshire from cancer. Presley's swaggering vocals characterised a band that was credited with influencing generations of punk and garage musicians, including the likes of Iggy Pop and The Ramones. Jimi Hendrix famously covered the song "Wild Thing" at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival, when he spontaneously burned his guitar before smashing it on the stage. The Troggs had a string of other hits, such as "Love is All Around", "I Can't Control Myself" and "With a Girl Like You", which reached number one in the UK.'-- The Guardian










Jeff Hanneman(1964 - 2013) (Slayer)Raining Blood
'When news broke in the early evening of May 2, 2013, that longtime Slayer guitarist Jeff Hanneman had succumbed to liver failure at age 49, a shockwave of atomic force rippled its way across the metal community that left many stunned. As Facebook and Twitter became overrun with postings of shock, grief and recollections from fans who had spent the better part of their lives following Slayer like Rottweiler puppies, you could feel it—this one was different. This one hurt. To anyone who came of age in the mid Eighties wearing a denim jacket and studded wristband, Slayer was their introduction to aggressive speed metal, with riffs that cut like a buzzsaw blade and dark lyrical themes that often crossed into objectionable territory—and Hanneman was the primary force behind it.'-- Guitar World










Kevin Ayers(1944 - 2013)Oleh Oleh Bandu Bandong
'Kevin Ayers, who has been found dead at the age of 68 at his home in the medieval village of Montolieu in south-west France, was one of the great almost-stars of British rock. A founding member of Soft Machine, he was a key figure in the birth of British pastoral psychedelia, and then went on to enjoy cult status as a singer-songwriter in the late 1960s and early 70s. Among his champions were the late John Peel and the influential British rock journalist Nick Kent, who later wrote: "Kevin Ayers and Syd Barrett were the two most important people in British pop music. Everything that came after came from them."'-- The Guardian










Sten Hanson(1936 - 2013)Les Sabots Du Bouc
'Sten Hanson made his appearance in the early sixties as an experimental poet and composer. From an early stage he was aware of the importance of tape-recording techniques in the renewal and development of poetry’s resources. Text-sound-visual image, often combined with intensely personal 'live" performances, are vital ingredients in Sten Hanson's artistic workmanship and he is ore of the forerunners in the field of multi-media art. His works include electro-acoustic pieces as well as instrumental and vocal compositions. From the end of the sixties up to 1979, he worked essentially with electroacoustic music and created, with Lars-Gunnar Bodin, Åke Hodell, Bengt Emil Johnson, the theory and the practice of a new aesthetic field: "The electronic text-sound".'-- Ubuweb







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p.s. Hey. Even though Xmas morning looks like it's going to be pretty much the same as any other day for me, it will be Xmas nonetheless, and I reckon that a bunch of you will be doing the gift thing or sleeping off something, so I'm going to go blank tomorrow, blog-wise. I.e., there'll be no post/p.s. tomorrow, and I will see you again on Thursday. ** Gary gray, Hi there, Gary! Zoning, nice. Or it could be worse at least. I assume you're back in LA now? ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. What's kind of interesting about The Mill's snow globes, which I didn't note because I decided to go text-less, is that their snow globes are part of a charity thing. If you donate a certain amount of money, and I forget how much, to their cause, they will make a snow globe with your house in it. So, those were miniaturized donators' houses in those globes. I've had these allergies since 1991, so I'm pretty used to them, and they're just what they are, but thank you for your condolence. That's an interesting way to think about gift giving. Huh. I guess I think the opposite and more normalized way about gift giving, which is interesting. I mean it's interesting that I just think about gift giving traditionally or something. ** Scunnard, Howdy, Jared. That makes me a bit sad too. ** Wolf, Wolf King! Ooh, take pictures of the Xmas apocalypse junior that IKEA helped you create please. So, the mysterious buche. I put a couple of photos of it at the bottom on this p.s. It was designed by Gisele with some input from Stephen, and I had it fabricated at a local patisserie, and it was a Xmas gift from Gisele and me to Zac, who began chowing it down yesterday. Cool, right? And it's delish, too, since I got to try a slice. Sorry that it plays with the traditional model, but that was Gisele's pick, and hopefully it transcends snobbishness? Ha ha, yeah, I thought 'small potatoes' was a really commonly known homonym thing, but I'm constantly having to explain what that means, which kind of spoils the effect, obviously, and, oh boy, I'm sure you can imagine the hell that little phrase and its French translator went through when the poem was transformed for the French market. I can't remember what it became ultimately, but it had zero to do with potatoes. Its opposite, whoa. I think it has none, right? That's its, uh, beauty, right? When I was making the snow globe post, I did find two snow globes that were housed within robot figurines, but they looked stupid, and I don't think the robots functioned. Cool aside, though: Zac has a electric robot fan, i.e, a rotating robot with a fan as its upper torso. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, Doyle's are cool. ** Bollo, Hi, J! Yeah, I don't know. I love Xiu Xiu, but I just think his Nina interpretations sound shallow and sap the intricacy out of her versions or something by comparison. I don't know. Wait, you're in Norway? Of course you are. Man, it must be hella Xmas-y looking up there. I'm very envious. We're intensely without snow, but there's this crazy wind blowing through Paris today, and the sky is full of twirling dead leaves, and it's not too shabby, at least. Merry Big Day to you, buddy! ** Tosh Berman, I hear you about the dead Xmas spirit thing. Yours does sound like duty work, yes, sorry. But you and Lun*na: 25 years! That's wild, that's awesome! Happy Anniversary! Everyone, today is Tosh Berman and his brilliant other Lun*na's 25th wedding anniversary! Wish him a great one or at least think him a great one! **  Etc etc etc, Hey! Good to see you, man! You're in Orange County! Weird. Or not weird. Cool that you're reading. Yeah, Houllebecq, I like his books okay, but I've never gotten the genius claim stuff re: him. Same with Murakami. I don't know. Xmas in Paris is super beautiful to look at. Really, the city is in incredibly gorgeous mode. I'm not doing much of anything to mark Xmas Day itself, though. I didn't do any 'Weaklings' readings. I did a handful of interviews. I envy you getting to slip into LA. What did you do there? ** Sypha, Hi. Snow globes are good fodder for stories and poems and art and so on and so forth. They're a heavily untapped creative resource. So, I assume you get tomorrow off from work? And I assume today at work is going to be very hellish? ** Keaton, Hi. That's what those tattoos are? Interesting. I'll go back and click/enlarge the photo, if you haven't deleted it, and try to match what you say they are to how they look. What's the project with local artists? That's interesting. Yeah, what is it? A Xmas gift! You shouldn't have. Aw, that's so sweet of you, really, and it looks complex and great so far. I'll unwrap its internality in a minute. Everyone, Here's a really cool seeming, rich, insinuating, finessing Xmas gift from the one, the only Keaton for all of us! ** Torn porter, Hi, Torn! Welcome back! I still have the snow globe fascination thing. Whenever I go to any tourist attraction place or theme park or whatever, I always make a bee line for the gift shop to see what their souvenir snow globe looks like. And they suck 95% of the time. I got your email, yes! I haven't watched the thing yet because yesterday was sort of my heavy Xmas Day, but I will today. Thank you! And exciting that you're almost over here. You get over here-ish the day before I go over there-ish, i.e, to Japan. ** Rewritedept, Hey. Happy to have populated your alley. Well, your Xmas sounds okay and Xmas-y. More than mine. Although I'll figure something out. So, that's your final assessment on the post-SY members' efforts? We'll have to see what Steve Shelley comes up with. Maybe he'll surprise us all. My weekend was pretty superlative, you're right. I don't know what the 'Codex Seraphinianus' is unless I'm spacing. I'll check it out somehow. Google it, I guess, yeah. Hope your errand became an accomplishment, and enjoy whatever Xmas angles your way. ** Allesfliesst, Hi, Kai. That globe is just untraditional enough. In fact, it's downright odd. Weird that it lost so much water without the water turning tobacco yellow. The water must be really high quality or contain the best chemicals. Everyone, here's Allesfliesst's 'rather traditional', 'one third vaporized' snow globe. My text has a surreptitious dad's porn kind of quality about it maybe. What are you doing on the big contextual day or, I guess, tonight if, like most Europeans I know, you're into the 'jumping the gun' way of celebrating Xmas? ** Bill, Hi, Bill. The Halloween globe seems to have been the hit. I don't know why I didn't expect that. That globe by JD Beltran and Scott Minneman looks really cool, and I haven't even watched the video yet. Thanks! Everyone, courtesy of Bill, here's the "Golden Gate Bridge" Cinema Snowglobe by artists JD Beltran and Scott Minneman. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! Thank you for asking me the questions. That publishing possibility for the interview is a really cool one. Fingers crossed. I wish you a very merry Xmas too, my friend. And enjoy your IRL festivities very much! Love and hugs in major return! ** White tiger, Whoa, hi, pal! What a cool Xmas gift! You're being here, I mean. Wait, and not only that, you also brought along an actual gift for us! Let me see what it is. Hold on. A new Blank Frank sonic/visual masterstroke! Very cool! I'll imbibe that really shortly. Everyone, more Xmas gifts! This time from the very legendary d.l. and multi-talented artist White tiger also known as the well known, godlike Math Tinder! It's here, and it's visual and musical at the same time, and, yeah, go see/watch it, you guys! So good to see you, pal. An infinity of love from a moist, windy location in the 10th arr. of Paris! ** Steevee, Hi. Yeah, I can see that about CV's major label phase, although it does have many fans out there. I liked the first major label stuff, but not so much the last two or three releases where it seemed like there was a bit of kowtowing to what else was going on in electronic dance at the time. Did you see the big overview of CV's work in The Wire a few issues ago? It was pretty thorough and interesting whether its assessment was totally agreeable or not. ** Statictick, Hi, N. Glad you liked the globes. Listen, I'm nothing but way thrilled about your love and its spillage here. Love is the great motherfucker, and enjoy every detail. I would be pleased as punch if you want to do an Odd Hours post, of course. That would be really great! Thanks for wanting to do that. Yeah, you just sound so great, my pal! Have an awesome Xmas, and I have a feeling that you will. ** Kyler, Hi, Kyler. Thank you for thanking me for my clockwork like dedication to here. My pleasure. Good news that everything has gone smoothly with the parental types so far. You saw George? And he's surviving the weirdly warm NYC jaunt? Cool. Oh, that's why my ears were burning. So, I guess I should send you and G. the medical bills from my stay in the local ER's burn unit? Consider it done. ** Right. So, I seem to have given all of you blog readers and participants a very melancholy music gig for Xmas. You have two days to get what you will from it, and then the blog and I will be back to push forward in time again starting on Thursday. Happy Xmas to everyone whether you celebrate the thing or not!



Buche design: Gisele Vienne (w. Stephen O'Malley). Fabricator: DC. Carver: Zac.

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p.s. Hey. Apologies for what I imagine was a very slow page loading time today. ** Allesfliesst, Hi, Kai. I thought he also looked befuddled or defeated or something. His stance or lack thereof or something. If your Xmas panned out as planned, it seems like it would have filled the bill. My Xmas just kind of didn't exist. Other than a phone conversation with my sister and nephew, it was only demarked by the severe quiet coming through the window. Which was fine. Did you get any cool loot? Merry post-Xmas, man. ** David Ehrenstein, 'P, P, & F' is also probably in my all-time top ten favorite songs. Nice add re: the Lindsay Cooper score. Everyone, Mr. E added to yesterday's requiem gig by pointing us to a vid featuring the late, great Lindsay Cooper's score for the fascinating early '80s film 'The Gold Diggers', created by Sally Potter a.o., and well worth a watch and listen. It's here. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. Thanks. A blog day would be a most awesome gift, thank you muchly. I lacked a party or any other Xmas duty/event too. The most Xmas-y thing yesterday was watching my FB Wall flood with holiday shout outs. There was a Celan thing in a book about Kiefer? I really don't like Kiefer's work, but that's not Celan's fault, god knows. Wow, those snow pix are amazing! That's, like, serious, hardcore, delicious looking snow. Thank you. And for the link to the Mot music. I'll go listen to that today. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh. I hope you guys celebrated the big 25 in accordance with the event's noteworthiness. The way deaths around one speed up and accumulate as one gets older is definitely one of the biggest downsides. Really, really not into death. ** Keaton, Hi. Is that your actual Twitter feed? It's good, whatever it is. Everyone, I don't know if I would know a real Twitter feed from a Woofer's vibrations, or something, but I think this is Keaton's Twitter feed transposed onto his always key blog, and it's sharply nuanced and very him, whatever it is. Thanks re: the buche. I think it's dead and buried in a bunch of Zac's relatives stomachs now, RIP. Snowblower snow globe? Refresh me. Cool about your friend. Is he still in Japan? Wait, probably not. Those are two good books you got. That's a good avatar you got too. ** Bill, Hi. Oh, how was ... wait, it's today or tonight, right? Kevin's b'day shebang? Unless he did it early? Or unless I'm just plain wrong. How was it? ** Heliotrope, Hi, Mark! Merry merry Xmas a day afterwards! I'm good, I'm well, and my goodness/wellness seems to be futuristic too. A lodger? Who is this presumably paying, invited interloper? That's interesting. And super awesome about Jules' better and better work and consequent happiness! Give her a Cooperian hug. I thought of you when I saw that Jim Hall had died. I have such resonant, fond memories of seeing him play at some venue in the Valley with you and, I think, Kirk? A tree? I had none, but the Recollets had one kind of hidden away in a weird room. My heart contains you always too, my pal, and my head too, come to think of it. I love you too, Mark. ** Sypha, Did Colin Wilson and Gandolfini make music? The graveyard visiting sounds gloomy but really nice. Horses are spooky. Yes, I got your card! Sorry for spacing out re: mentioning that. It was and is and will forever be amazing, thank you, James! ** Misanthrope, You're back, cool! Hi, G! Glad that your NYC trip went so splendidly. Kyler mentioned that he saw you, but he skipped the chicken guy's participation. That is a mental image Ah, so Alan's onto finishing Sujatha's book. Nice. I hope that isn't eating too greatly into his novel work. I didn't see the 'hate mom' thing on FB. Ugh. Poor little or kind of little guy. I'm really glad he has the boon of you guys coming up so quick. How was Xmas itself? ** Nicki, A late but very, very merry Xmas to you, Nicki, with tons of love! ** Josh fella, Hi, Josh! I never got to see Zbigniew. Missed my two chances by a hair. Glad you did, and a belated Xmas greeting to you, my friend. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben! Sounds like a Xmas-y Xmas. I don't think I've ever even seen one full Muppets Show episode much less the movies. I was always a wee bit too old for them, or I thought I was. Nice haul. And a retroactive Merry Xmas to you, buddy! ** Rudyd, Right back at you with the Xmas best wishes, Rudy. I like bread made from frozen dough, yum. It's like the Cool Whip of the bread world or something. Yum. My only Xmas present was a box of American Macaroni & Cheese fixings. ** Steevee, 'Anchorman 2', wow. I didn't see #1. Makes sense in theory as a Xmas movie. Sorry it didn't cheer up your folks. I was going to go see the Scorcese as my Xmas movie, but ... I can't remember why I didn't. Maybe sold out? ** MANCY, Thanks a bunch for the link to the Part Wolf demo! Oh, I really liked Lié. It sounded kind of perfect or something. Yeah, thank you for that. I'm now peeled for them at every given opportunity. ** Right. If your system managed to load all those gifs, I hope you thought whatever lag that ensued was worth it. If not, and you ended up with mostly frozen stills, I take no responsibility for the post other than for its annoyance factor, I guess. I don't know what I'm saying. See you tomorrow.

Spotlight on ... THEM, a trans* lit journal

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About

'THEM is a body.


'THEM is a body of writers, of writing that does not conform.

'Whether we lie outside, between, reject, or move freely between gender identities, our bodies are a site of disruption, confusion, and instability for those around us.


'THEM is disassembly.


'Like gender, writing has failed us. Gender has never been simple because our bodies have never been simple. Caught in an assembling of violences distributed by race, ability, capital, our genders bare mistrust unequally.

'THEM is unashamed to speak “I” or to address “you” in all it's multiplicity; THEM is unashamed to bare an “us” in all it’s difference. We accept we have been constructed as many, so we reject the fiction we share a common identity to call home; we come from below. We admit we were never singular.


'WE ARE THEM.


--Editors:Jos Charles, Jae Cornick, Emerson Whitney, Rebecca Overkill



______
Extras 1


Codi Suzanne Oliver 'Re: Hannah, Theo, Paul, Walter, Jellyfish, SMM, IAA, Unworshipediety, Mothbits, Moon Temple'


Boston Davis Bostian 'Genderpedia How to Edit'


Brody Wood and Bethany Louisos 'I HAD A NIGHTMARE'


Willow Healey 'a friend's smile looped into a 6-minute tape that you listen to whenever you miss them'


H. Melt 'Fear of a Gay Planet'


Janani Balasubramanian 'Because You're Brown Honey Gurl'



______________________
Finally! The Nation's First Trans* Literary Journal Debuts
by Arielle Yarwood, Bitch Magazine




The literary world gained a valuable new addition last week with the launch of new literary journal THEM, which focuses on the work of transgender writers.

Debuting on December 13, THEM proclaims itself to be the nation's first literary journal to specifically focus on trans* voices. While there are numerous literary journals that highlight LGBT issues and writers, and a couple trans*-focused anthologies, THEM is the first American journal that publishes only the work of people who identify as "within the trans* umbrella" (using the term "trans*" with the asterisk to include who have non-binary transgender identities). The volunteer-run biannual journal features writers from around the country, seeking to create a space that amplifies trans* voices.

Founding editor Jos Charles sees the magazine as a form of resistance, with its publication aiming to create a space where trans* folks can interact and speak their minds—even when what they have to say is complicated and controversial. "Television, porn, literary journals, personal blogs, all propagate narratives and symbols about who trans* folks are," says Charles. "Typically, folks like to conflate our differences and squeeze us all into one discernible narrative... Cis readers seem to really like seeing us [either] happy or dead. I would like THEM to be a place where that narrative can be upset—whether by exploring other stories or contextualizing the familiar ones."

Charles also thinks that it’s crucial to keep the journal as accessible as possible while expanding its reach. “Ideally, this would mean always having the whole issue be free online. I'm hoping for us to be able to have hard copies of forthcoming issues, if not this issue. That way folks who have money and would like to support us could buy hard copies if they could.”



______
Extras 2


Joy Ladin @ awp


Lucas Scheelk @ Lowry Lab


Rex Leonowicz


Stephen Ira 'WeHappyTrans Project's 7 Questions'


Jos Charles 'POEM WITH A DOUBLE ENTENDRE IN IT'



_______________________
Get Ready for THEM: Stephen Michael McDowell Reports
from HTMLGIANT




Stephen Michael McDowell, a writer loosely associated with the Alt Lit scene (as is Jos Charles), gives a 25-point report on Jos Charles’s new project THEM, Issue One, which was published online today:

1. I have a very low tolerance for cold, and often cite any setting below 75 degrees Fahrenheit as potential “jacket weather”.

2. Despite widespread public knowledge of racially polar male and female authors and poets [something about me not being able to think of any openly queer or racially unspecific authors and poets, especially given] my experience.

3. Something about how modern dress does not preclude a person from being a person but can prevent a person from being informed of different genitals which can prevent a person being aware that different genitals exist.

4. Focusing on queer or trans* identity as a central theme in literature vs. focusing on economics as a central theme in literature vs. focusing on writing about writing as a central theme in literature vs. focusing on nothing in general as a central theme in literature.

5. In THEM Issue One the assigned gender of each contributor in this journal is shrouded in a way that, regardless of the piece’s overall focus, seems to render every character, voice, feeling, and basis for confusion “human” in a way that I like.

6. I developed pneumonia the week my junior high school P.E. class started practicing lacrosse. I was relieved I wouldn’t have to compete against people in lacrosse, but practiced at home in my bedroom because I liked the mechanics of the instruments that were used in the game. I felt profound disappointment when I got back two weeks later and they had moved on to volleyball.

(read the entirety)



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Guidelines




'THEM is a literary journal of trans* writers. As such only authors that identify within the trans* umbrella will be considered (more here).

'THEM accepts poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, experimental writing, and pretty much anything. THEM is especially excited by writing that is particular, writing that doesn't appeal to "being trans*" as if it were one, complete narrative. We are not just trans*. Race, class, ability, size, and sexuality constitute and distribute the oppression of trans* folks. Addressing our bodies as they are engendered without addressing how they are racialized, sexualized, colonized, and/or colonizing is to default to normative and oppressive ways of naming and assembling our bodies. Writing as if there is one common trans* narrative is nothing more than writing a racist and ableist myth.

'For each issue of THEM we are also looking for cover art. Feel free to write outside convention: our bodies don't always pass, neither does our writing. Surprise us.

Upon publication, THEM retains one-time online and archival rights. Authors and artists retain all copyrights to their work. If your work is featured in a later publication (book, chapbook, ebook, etc) we politely ask that THEM is given publication credit.

'THEM will consider re-prints, but they are discouraged. If you choose to submit previously published materials please provide initial publication information in your submission. Previously published material to a blog, personal website, etc., is not a problem.

Simultaneous submissions are fine, just let us know if you get accepted elsewhere.

'Please keep prose submissions under 2,000 words; keep poetry submissions to 3-7 poems. If you have something longer you are set on, THEM trusts you; however, be warned: we will probably read your submission hastily.

'Create an account with Green Submissions here. Submission title should read: ARTIST NAME; GENRE (short story, poetry, non-fiction, cover art, etc). In the body of the email include preferred contact information. Please attach all work submitted as one document (docx preferred, but if not we'll work with what you have access to) and a brief bio if you'd like.

'THEM will try to respond to you within about three months but we make no promises. Sometimes THEM is busy.'-- The Editors



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Issue #1

Contributors: Boston Davis Bostian / Brody Wood / Calvin Gimpelevich / Cassady Bee / Codi Suzanne Oliver & Willow Healey / Gr Keer / Grey Vild / H. Melt / Janani Balasubramanian / j/j hastain / Joy Ladin / Levi Sable / Lucas Scheelk / Mx Glass / reba overkill / Rex Leonowicz / Stephen Ira / Van Binfa







*

p.s. Hey. ** Rewritedept, Hi. Well, if I wasn't/am too old for The Muppets, I was/am too something or other for The Muppets. Yay you indeed re: Xmas. I don't know what my favorite post-SY member-created thing would be. Hm. I guess nothing has made a unimpeachable grab for ultimate hierarchical status yet. Oh, yeah, about 'Anchorman 2'? My intuition says it belongs on a long plane ride's menu. I had a very quiet Xmas. The slice I had of Gisele's/my buche with Zac's name in it was very good, hearty. Yeah, but I want to know what Steve Shelley would do if he was the boss of something. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. That sounds like an appropriate fate for those motion stills yesterday. Yves Bonnefoy is swell in every regard. I don't know, I guess I think Celan is heavy in the perfect way, and I guess I think Kiefer is heavy like a bombastic ton of lead. But everything's objectively cool, Kiefer included, and we all get what we love from wherever is the right place. I liked MoT. It was a pleasure, surprising with gentle insinuations or something. Wow, thank you about the Ken Price book! That's so very kind of you. I like Ken Price's stuff as you know. I met him once very, very briefly. Yeah, gosh, thank you! ** Allesfliesst, Hi, Kai. I must admit that I do kind of like it when an animal's body makes a last fleeting defensive attack against humans by not being completely delicious. I'll look up Minae Mizumur to whatever degree I can. I don't know that work at all. Cool. Okay, onwards towards New Year's Eve/Day. Any festivities planned? ** Lee, Hi, man! Thanks a lot about my stack. Chuffed. Your Xmas was Xmas as fuck, yeah, at least in my book. Including the Chabrol and Carbonara aftermath. Happy first ... or, wait, second, I guess, day of Kwanzaa to you, buddy! ** David Ehrenstein, Ha ha, it was wasted, nice. Overlook what? Hold on. Oh, you can't overlook that at which you hadn't yet looked, I think. So now I'll look happily. As will this lot, perhaps. Everyone, if you click this, you'll get to read the mighty Mr. Ehrenstein's review of/thoughts on a new book containing the letters of Leonard Bernstein. An instructive and pleasurable read, certainly. Gay panic in Joyce? You could have fooled me. Sounds like interloping. ** Cooksappe, Hi there! Welcome to here, and thank you very much for visiting and for the heartwarming emoticon. ** Sypha, Hi, James. I guess I thought the word 'gig' would tip people off. But I guess gigs don't have to be musical, on second thought. You had a real old fashioned Xmas there with a loot pile and everything. So nice. ** Bill, Thanks, B. Yeah, I saw 'A Serious Man', and, yeah, the second you referenced that scene, it burst into life in my memory, so I guess I'm like you. The 24th, oh. I had this mistaken memory of his b'day being on the 26th, but I think I was mixing up Kevin with Bob Flanagan, the latter of whose b'day was on the 26th. Strange people to mix up with one another. Sounds fun. Now that Kitchell's off FB, I don't know what's up with him anymore. ** Kyler, Hi, K. Thanks, man. Phew, cool that the Florida visit was so smooth. Another victory for literature. Well, and I'm sure that your personal charms went a lot of the way as well, of course. ** Creative Massacre, Hi, Misty! I'm really good, thanks. My Xmas was low-key too. Lower than low-key. Any thoughts on what stellar place you'll go on your vacation? I guess it's a ways off. Oh, ouch, on the wisdom teeth thing. I'm one of those people whose jaws or whatever were very roomy, so my wisdom teeth grew in weird, but the rest of my teeth just kind of moved closer together in such a way that they ended up looking more normal afterwards than they had before. I know, lucky me, right? ** Etc etc etc, Hi, man! I've been well, yes, thank you. Mm, no, I never listened to NSYNC or Backstreet Boys other than when their stuff suddenly appeared in the air or airwaves near me. Although, wait, I think there was something about the BB's song 'I want It That Way' that I thought was kind of genius in some weird way. Something about the neutrality or blankness of them wanting it 'that way' and not specifying what 'that' was or something. Stories is a cool store, yeah, I like it, I miss it. I live(d) nearish there in Los Feliz. So it and Skylight are my LA regulars, bookstore-wise. And my high school was a 3 minute walk from JPL. Which might explain the Satanic quality of the school, perhaps. 'Black Clock' is cool. Never been published in it myself. It has this vibe of being kind of in-groupish, but maybe I'm wrong. Definitely worth a try. Steve Erickson seems like a nice guy, My only Xmas present was a box of American Macaroni & Cheese fixings. Which, when you live in Paris, is a cooler gift than it probably sounds to be. That was my only gift. So, no shrunken head unless the Mac & Cheese counts. What did you get gifted with? Positive vibes back to you from the French place. ** Misanthrope, Dandy? Cool. Outback ... never eaten at one. Steak and so on, right? Faux-Australian image, right? They don't have them over here, I don't think. That casserole sounds really tasty and meatless. What?! LPS has gotten that tall? Nah, you're joking, right? That's crazy. Does he want anything from Japan? I'm going there really soon, you know. ** Grant maierhofer, Hi, Grant! Oh, that's okay. I think it's the nature of this place that responses take whatever time they need. Gosh, thanks for what you wrote about my Cycle and all of that. You're very kind. Following up 'IJ' is a lot to ask. My pleasure, my honor on your book being on my list. I mean, where else would it be? I've been really good, thanks. I haven't checked out all the Death Grips videos. In fact, I don't think I knew they were there. My copy must be the bare bones one. Cool, I'll do that. 'The Weaklings (XL)' isn't actually out officially until, I think, next week (?), and I haven't even seen a copy of it yet. So I'm excited to get one too. Very best to you, G! ** Steevee, Was it a typo or a deliberation that you called them One Dimension, ha ha. In either case, nice call. ** Gary gray, You're still in Chicago? Oh, wow. Uh, if your comment on the 21st arrived after I launched the post that day, no, I didn't see it. I never look back. I probably should, but I never do. But now that I know it's there, I'll go find and read it, you bet. All is well with me, yes, and I certainly hope it's the same story for you. ** Right. I'm spotlighting 'Them' today, which I think is a great project and magazine, so do check it out, thank you. See you tomorrow, no doubt.

David Ehrenstein presents ... "High School Madness," a chapter from Raised By Hand Puppets

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     Hey, let’s rush ‘em” somebody said. It was typical autumn afternoon in 1961 on the Morningside Heights campus of New York City’s “High School of Music and Art,” and a group of us were engaged in our most beloved “prank” – “Rushing the Red Squad.” We would (almost instantaneously) form a pack and run up to the unmarked police car that was invariably parked in front of the building, yelling at the cops inside (some in uniform, some not). This would cause said cops to gun the car’s engine and take off down the street – to our considerable amusement. Then, roughly 10 to 15 minutes later the unmarked car and its cops would be back – parked in a different spot – to resume their activities, which consisted of taking pictures of students as they came and went from the building. The “Red Squad” was a permanent fixture of our lives, and my first exposure to the brand of government surveillance that Ron Paul-supporting cyber-spook Edward Snowden has with the help of “journalist” Glenn Greenwald turned into a “Major News Story” – for a spell. For what lay behind Glennzilla’s“scoop” was Standard Operating Procedure well before the ‘net was invented or Snowjob was born.

     Why were our pictures being taken? Simple. “Music and Art” was the home of the so-called “Red-Diaper babies;” the spawn of radical leftists of the immediate postwar era. One of our number, Mike Zagarell went on to run for Vice President in 1968 on the Communist Party ticket. Mike was a familiar figure on campus, always leaping about with leaflets devoted to one extreme left-wing cause or other – the most memorable of them warning about the coming U.S. invasion of Vietnam. Some of us were interested in what Mike had to say. Most of us weren’t. Yes we cared about “Politics” but a fortiori we were all about “Culture” – with as Capital a “C” as possible. In the chorus we reveled to music as varied as Orff’s “Catulli Carmina” and Brahms’ “a German Requiem” This was “The High School of Music and Art” after all. This was the cradle/context that opened me up to Breton, Sartre, Shakespeare, Leonard Bernstein James Purdy, Gavin Lambert and Jean-Luc Godard. The Catcher in the Rye and Siddhartha were also popular, but not taken quite so seriously. We were primed for more adventurous fare to match our adventurous emotions. Laura Nyro (then Negron) was a classmate. “M&A” was the site of my first (de rigueur unrequited) love. “Un” only in the sense that he enjoyed kissing me, and nothing more “Strange twilight urges” blossomed like flowers in springtime as I discovered the stealth ménage a trois of Jeff, Bob and Marty, whose modes and manners seemed to me at the time to be conquering the front lines of the “homoerotic.” But as we were teenagers this was largely “pose” rather than “position papers.”

     The only trouble I ever encountered on this sexual score was from a fellow African-American, who one day walking up the hill to school called me a “Faggot!” and punched me in the stomach. I was astonished I didn’t know this kid personally at all. But as asked him why he hit me he became terrified. What was going on was clear. He was gay himself, and fearful of that fact took out his self-loathing on me. Happily it was a discreet incident. He never launched a repeat attack. Au contraire he regarded me with not inconsiderable fear, poor bunny. Fear wasn’t part of the school curriculum. After all we were students at what the late great “Firesign Theater” would lovingly refer to as “Communist Martyrs High.” We feared no man – least of all the men of the “Red Squad.” What ever became of those pictures? They doubtless went into files that were being created for the delectation of the FBI and its closet queen boss J. Edgar Hoover. We were “subversives” that needed “looking after” much like New York’s Muslim community is monitored by the “Red Squad’s” successor today. When the Vietnam war Mike Zagarell had warned us about began in earnest the mini-protest he stage metastasized into a massive protest movement involving hundreds of thousands of young people who prior to this had never been involved in politics before. At “M& A” we had no expectation the “Red Squad” would physically assault us. The same couldn’t be said of those who witnessed the violence the Chicago police unleashed on anti-war protesters at h 1968 Democratic National Convention. And when on May 4, 1970 when the Ohio National Guard fired on unarmed student protesters at Kent State University, killing four and wounding nine others (one of who suffered permanent paralysis) all bets were off. This horror had its sequel on May 14 in a similar massacre at the African-American dominated Jackson State College in Jackson Mississippi where two were killed and twelve injured. Happily such government-sponsored slaughter didn’t become the rule, stateside. Overseas we had our army do the dirty work – or the “death squads” of our “allies” (particularly in Latin America.) Americans, with a few exceptions (eg. Fred Hampton), were “safe” More or less.

     Back in the early 90s I was hauled off an RTD bus in broad daylight, handcuffed and thrown to the ground with a revolver placed against my temple by a pair of police officers who had apparently “mistaken” me for a much shorter, much darker man. A few years later I had another “unfortunate” run-in with ‘the authorities” though this time race was not involved. A pair of Secret Service agents accompanied by members of the LAPD (gun drawn bien sur ) came knocking (loudly) at my door. They were inquiring about “threats” I had allegedly made to then President George W. Bush. Mystified by the charge as I had done no such thing, I discovered in our resultant doorway conversation (I refused to allow these people access to my apartment) that they were referring to a comment I had made in an internet chat room that was reported to them by the wingnut website “Free Republic.” It was quotation from Christopher Marlowe’s Edward II: “Remove their heads and let them preach upon poles for trespass of their tongues.” I was referring not to President Bush but the “Mainstream” media. Once my antagonists were informed of that fact – and who Christopher Marlowe was – they went away. Being that I had already experienced surveillance from high school on, as I was a member of the anti-war movement and a gay activist, these intrusions were par for the course. But this lesson learned “outside of class” wasn’t the only one my “M & A” years contextualized. There was also a clandestine love story.

     One early afternoon in 1970 I was walking toward The Ramble in Central Park (for a little al fresco action) when I heard someone call out my name. I turned and saw a man pulling himself out of Central Park lake and rushing up towards me. It was the area of the lake near the boat house so it was rather shallow, but what he was doing in the lake (Fall? Pushed? Deliberately jumped in?) I never learned. That’s because Steve was talking too fast for me to ask any questions. Average height, “stocky” (but in no way fat) Steve was the classic “Hail Fellow Well Met.” He was always smiling at school. Always talking amiably to all and sundry. The smile and the amiability were still there but what he was talking to me about – in a massive torrent of words – wasn’t something to smile about He was talking about Nelson. The seeming opposite of Steve, Nelson was the Great Beauty. Chilly, removed, always speaking in a voice a few shades above a whisper his noli me tangere was both off-putting and alluring. Ever so many girls had thrown themselves at him recklessly – to no avail. None of the boys so much as tried. That he knew Steve at all save by sight astonished me. But as Steve explained it he knew Nelson not only personally but Biblically. Why did I not see this going on right under my nose? But then nobody else did either. Had that been the case the gossip would have been non-stop. I can just imagine Marty Fulterman (who invariably took me aside in the Boys’ Room for “the latest” about whoever) getting wind of this. But he didn’t. And the wind was quite intense. For while Steve wanted to go on forever Nelson wanted to get married to a woman. He did. And Steve told me about showing up at the wedding, pleading with him to change his mind and being dragged off screaming in protest.

     And then as soon as he’d appeared Steve was gone – never to be seen or heard from by me ever again. Why did he choose me? Hell, what was he doing in the lake? There’s a song that explains it by Al Dubin and Joe Burke.

“This life's a play from the start,

It's hard to play thru a part,

When there's an ache in your heart all day

I have my dreams 'til the dawn,

I wake to find they are gone,

But still the play "must go on" they say.

When I pretend I'm gay

I never feel that way,

I'm only painting the clouds with sunshine.

When I hold back a tear

To make a smile appear,

I'm only painting the clouds with sunshine

Painting the blues beautiful hues,

Colored with gold and old rose;

Playing the clown,

Trying to drown

All of my woes;

Tho' things may not look bright

They'll all turn out alright

If I keep painting the clouds with sunshine.”



Bonus feature






*

p.s. Hey. This weekend we get an incredible treat in the form of an exclusive preview of eminent writer of innumerable stripes plus d.l. David Ehrenstein's legendary memoir, years in the gestating and writing. It's full of David's consummate gifts at their very finest, and I hope you will enjoy the treasure. Thank you so very kindly, David. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. Wonderful thoughts about writing, Celan, Bonnefoy, thank you. It was a joy to read and think about. I love small books, so that sounds perfect, and thanks for the mailing troubles. I know how that is. Ha ha, that cat bed. Not being much of a cat person, I think it would look even more great with a loaf of bread in it. ** Allesfliesst, I don't think anything Muppets would help me get into them. Their thing defies me. Humor is so delicate a transmitter. I'm no fan at all of NYE, never have been. I don't like parties, and I don't drink much or drink much when I do, and a metro system packed with drunks is not a fairytale for me, so the event's charms are elsewhere. If something is going on here that night, I might attend. Might go see the fireworks over the Eiffel Tower. Meh, but that's usually what I do that night if I do anything. Who knows? Never say never to nothing, I guess. ** David Ehrenstein, Thank you again so much, David. What a book this memoir is so clearly going to be! ** Sypha, Hi, James. Thanks for the Muppets link. I tried. I like Vincent Price. He made me wish it was a solo performance. But, you know, I like(d) the kid stuff things I grew up with like Bullwinkle and Captain Kangaroo and all of that, so yeah. It was a very good year for music, I totally agree! ** _Black_Acrylic, Cool about the completed script. Ah, you'll start it the day I go to Japan. Maybe that simultaneity is a good luck sign for both of us. It sure sounds like an exciting new chapter for you. I don't see how it can't be. ** Steevee, Hi. Great, thanks for the link to your top ten. Really nice list. I agree with you on almost all of the bunch of them that I've seen too. Very nice typo then. Everyone, I think you want to help complete your year in culture by clicking this and reading Steevee's Top Ten Plus films of 2013. ** Grant maierhofer, Likewise on the great to speak with you again thing. Yeah, 'THEM" is a great project, and really happy to add a little light to its existence. Cool, so you have 'TMS' with both the redacted under threat cover image and the legal one. Thanks a bunch for the DG video links. I'll use those as soon as I type the final period here. Well, technically after I push the 'publish' button then link to here on FB. You putting together a thing for this place is, of course, music to my ears. To my eyes too. Anytime would be great. I'm about to travel, and it always gets hard to keep the blog up to speed just before and after that. Thank you a lot for the thought, man. Very bon weekend! ** Gary gray, Hi, Gary. I snuck back and caught your lost comment, and thanks a lot for your faves list. I made notes. You know how I feel about nostalgia. It's a sworn enemy of mine, although I do like the confusion and weird emotional effect of being where you were in a form that doesn't fit as mindlessly and comfortably there. It's very unnerving, and that unnerving thing is a very rich, complicated source for stuff. Thoughts or emotions or stuff for the page. As you can imagine, I really like that writing apparatus. I like writing apparatuses in general, but I like yours in particular. It seems like it could totally work and be an exciting groundwork to paw through as well. Nice. Ha ha, sweet, thanks, about the sort of namesake. I wish my first name was Washington. Wow, that would be cool. ** Creative Massacre, Hi, M. Gee, that island looks really cool. What an amazing photo of it too. I just immediately want to be there when I see it. It looks so fragile or something. Not the island but the life built on it. And everything looks so sweetly dated, like it was built decades ago, which makes it seem like candy or something. I don't know. Seductive picture, and a place that will obviously be the footing for an awesome vacation. Sweet. Thanks a lot, pal, and enjoy your Saturday and Sunday. ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. We have those Outback joints in LA, and the commercials at least were ubiquitous when I was there 24/7. And I think their commercials were really loud or disruptively crass or something. Apropos of almost nothing, they opened the first ever Burger King in France this week. Can't be good. I just hope that, if the American fast food encroachment has to happen, there'll be Taco Bells and Chipotle's and Poquito Mas's (especially) ruining everything here too. Persian food, yum, I think. Sure, I'll get LPS something from Japan. But help me out by being as specific as you can. Like, what plush character or what, like, anime or TV show or whatever does he like or whatever. Or whatever else. I need hints or clues or something 'cos there's a ton of cool stuff like that for sale there, and it would be too easy for me to accidentally get him something dorky. But, sure, no prob at all. 5'8"?! When did that happen? Wow, he's like an adult or a simulacrum or something. ** I guess that's that. Spend some of your weekend learning about DE's life in his lustrous prose please. And speak to him in some way regarding your reading experience, okay? Thank you. Great weekends to you one and all, and I'll see you Monday.

Shamate Primer

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'On Nov. 5, a Chinese blogger posted three photos of a young man in spiky hair for his 1.6 million followers on Sina Weibo, China’s Twitter. “Caught a live shamate on the street today,” he wrote gleefully, adding that their hairstyles “look like the molecular structure of some virus.” Meanwhile, a music video called “Shamate Meets Wash-Cut-Blowdry,” a reference to the group’s often-maligned hairstyles, featuring leggy girls gyrating to the tune of Korean pop-singer Psy’s song “Gentleman,” has received more than 2.4 million views on Youku, China’s YouTube. (Predictably, comments to the video poked fun.) These shamate are the young migrants lost in China’s great urbanization push, a subculture whose numbers are unknown, but surely growing.

'To hip Chinese sensibilities, shamate — named after a deliberately nonsensical transliteration of the English word “smart” — are anything but. Baidu Baike, China’s Wikipedia, describes a shamate as a young urban migrant from one of the tens of thousands of podunk towns scattered across China. These men and women are in their late teens or early 20s, often with middle-school educations and few marketable skills, working low-paying jobs in the big cities, like a barber, security guard, deliveryman, or waitress.

'A shamate’s single most distinguishing (and derided) feature is his or her exaggerated hairstyle: curly perms, shaggy blow-outs, or spiky do’s, all held together with considerable abuse of hair coloring or wax. Clothing bought from a street market, some body piercing, and an off-brand cell phone often completes the look. Shamates usually linger in the social purgatory of small hair salons, smoky Internet cafes, or street market stalls in China’s big cities, not quite fitting into the world of shiny office buildings and expensive department stores that surrounds them.

'Shamate’s outré fashion choices reflect something much deeper: collective alienation, a byproduct of China’s massive urban migration push and the country’s widening class divide. While roughly half of China’s 1.4 billion people live in cities, the consultancy McKinsey projects the number of urban residents to grow by more than 350 million in 2025; more than 240 million of those new additions will be migrants.

'Of course, it’s nothing new for a subculture to shock the general public with its unconventional fashion sense — think Goths in the United States or Shibuya girls in Japan. Indeed, the shamate trend reportedly began as early as 1999 as a half-baked imitation of unorthodox getups donned by certain Japanese youth. But shamates face special challenges in China. Not only is conformity expected and education highly prized, but young migrants in cities are less likely to have the parental supervision or community support that would enable them to exit the underclass. That’s partly why China’s urban yuppies and educated elite — overrepresented in popular micro-blogging platforms like Sina Weibo, film and book discussion communities like Douban, and social networks like Renren — feel safe in mercilessly mocking shamate.

'In one viral blog post, a writer with the web handle Evil Cat Y describes spending a year “undercover” as a shamate. The post depicts a “highly organized” coterie where longtime members are given titles like “technology director” or “CEO.” Serious shamate often try to outdo each other with thick makeup that might resemble a U.S. punk rocker, living by their noms de guerre like Ghost Monster or Leftover Tears. According to Evil Cat Y, women outnumber men, and often look for mates in online shamate groups.

'The shamate phenomenon has grown large enough that its boundaries have blurred. For some members of the subculture, being a shamate is a part-time gig, an eccentric skin that can be willingly shed for job interviews or other formal occasions. But most casual observers are unlikely to make the fine distinction between a consummate shamate like Ghost Monster and a delivery boy with dyed hair — they are both called shamate because they are both young migrants perceived to occupy a low rung on the social ladder.

'The end result of this cumulative disdain is the widespread online shunning and jeering of shamate, remarkable in a country where Internet life has traditionally provided a haven for outcasts. Evil Cat Y observed that, because of cyber-bullying, serious shamate have “retreated” from China’s major online communities to QQ Space, a social networking site comprising private groups popular in small cities, and have even imposed waiting periods or approval processes before admitting new members in order to sniff out harassers. As a result of their mockery and resultant seclusion, Shamate have become a silent group in China’s normally noisy Internet discourse.

'As China continues its relentless urbanization, alienation and displacement will continue to plague its growing migrant population. If these big-city migrants further disengage from mainstream society — or fail to find meaningful ways to integrate — the shamates’ spiky hair and body piercings may no longer be a laughing matter to their neighbors.'-- Tea Leaf Nation







Gallery































'A while ago a thought came to my mind: Where have all the "MK people" (Mong Kok people) gone? The so-called "MK style" was oft-mentioned five years or so ago, but it suddenly disappeared. The emergence of a narrative of "mainland style" at the same time suggests that it has replaced the city's former concerns about the MK style. If the boundary between the MK-style and the mainstream local culture is demarcated by class, the narrative of "mainland style" - highlighted by examples of children urinating in the public and other "uncivilized" demeanors exhibited by mainlanders - assumes a single, unified "Hong Kong-style." With mainlanders possessing all the "otherness", our internal differences no longer matter.

'The term Mong Kok-style can be used for many different things. It is about the way you dress, style your hair, move and speak. "In this absurd trend," a blogger says, "bisexual young men groom their hair in a combination of mullet/comb-over, dress and apply makeup to imitate hedgehogs and pubic hair, and chain-smoke even if they hate tobacco. They wear tight, dark-colored trousers, numerous small silver necklaces, earrings, and bracelets, a fake leather jacket, and most importantly, a black shirt with white-lettered English slogans that don't make any sense. This style suggests a continuing love of things foreign. Strangely, no foreigner is actually doing things like this."

'Unfortunately, the mainlanders cannot escape the same kind of reasoning. They are calling their poorer cousins "shamate", a transliteration of the English word "smart". But while smart means stylish or clever, shamate is used as derogatory term, referring to young people from rural areas "with weird hairstyles, weird clothes, heavy makeup, and a strange attitude." Both Hong Kong residents and mainlanders believe that there is a hierarchy of styles. If "MK people" are kids trying to imitate a Japanese style but not quite making it there because they lack the financial resources to purchase the high-end stuff, "shamate" are village people not culturally sophisticated enough to adopt the urban fashion convincingly.

'Zhang Tianpan wrote in Nanfengchuang, a Guangzhou-based magazine, saying that the style of shamate is "the result of the semi-urbanization and incomplete modernization of individuals and groups". In other words, this group of people is too poor or stupid to acquire the "ultimate style", whatever that maybe. If we are to believe people like Zhang, the less well-off youth are either not aware of the mainstream culture, or something went wrong in the process of them acquiring the mainstream fashion. It has never occurred to Zhang that rural youth might have preferred the masculine punk look to the gender-neutral Korean look, and there is nothing inferior with this preference. We should not be talking about one culture and its degraded variants, but different cultures equally "modern" and "urban".'-- China Daily



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'Photos with Chinese teens wearing ridiculous hairdos, make-up and dressed in bizarre outfits have been spreading around social media sites for a while now, but the actual purpose or the origins of the pictures were quite unclear until now.

'Shamate is a new phenomenon in China. It represents a group of young Chinese who are around 20 years old and have strange hair style. Most of the trend's followers have low education level and don't have jobs. Because of lacking skills to survive, the Smart usually live in big cities with low income. It is hard not to recognize a shamate as their distinguishing features include incredible hairdos with an abuse of color and wax and vampire-like make-up.

'Shamate is transliterated from the English word smart. But the definition is completely different. Because of their cheap clothes, exaggerated hair style and odd make-up, the smart are thought to be the representitives of philistinism. Their particular fashion style is both fascinating and disgusting, painful to the eye and with a guaranteed wow-reaction. The trend has grown considerably in the last months, and it formed something similar to a secret society, hidden and highly organized.

'The shamate phenomenon has spread across the country, rumored to have almost two million members that communicate through their own chat room. How can we treat this phenomenon? According to the statistics, the migrants will be larger and larger in the future. And the group of Smart will be stronger and stronger. What should we do to help them to find the right identifications?'-- Ideology and Culture in China







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p.s. Hey. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. Well, your hard work has had a great pay off. No rush, of course, on the gift. I'm off to Japan a week from today anyway, so, even at a rush, I wouldn't get it for a while. Thank you! I'd never seen those Ken Price Japan plates before. Fascinating. I'll pore over those heavily later today. Thank you again! ** David Ehrenstein, Thank you so much again, David. It was a true honor. Everyone, Mr. E follows up his generous weekend here with a suggestion/ reminder, in his words: 'Be sure to listen to all four segment's of The Firesign Theater's classic "Don't Crush That Dwarf -- Hand Me The Pliers" after reading "High School Madness." The order of "Don't Crush That Dwarf" is as follows: One, Two, Three, and Four.' ** Steevee, Hey. Pippolo's book on Bresson is very, very interesting and useful. It has stuff that's written almost nowhere else. I think it's problematic, and I don't personally agree with some of his assumptions and opinions, but it's quite a valuable tome, if you're into Bresson. I think Jonathan Rosenbaum's read on the book is pretty spot on. I'll be curious to learn what you think. ** Cassandra Troyan, Hi, Cassandra! Oh, shit, blurb, Christ, my memory. I will get that to you today, and thank you for the nudge, and my apologies for making you nudge me. 'THEM' is awesome, for sure, and I hope it lasts at least a while. It's much needed and really well done. Your 2013 favorites? No, I didn't see that. Was it a late comment on the list day that I missed in my posting haste? I'll go see if I can find it. Thanks again, and much love to you too. ** Gary gray, Nice thoughts on Mr. E's chapter, and thank you a lot for them. Oh, that Mark Leckey work kicked off your story idea? Interesting. 'Fiorucci ... ' is strong. Wow, a movie by you, a seeable movie, no less. Dude, 'a fan video for Rivette' is a seductive phase/blurb or word-based trailer, to me at least. I will glue my eyes to that as soon as I get this blog's glue out of my eyes in about, I don't know, half an hour, 45 minutes? Cool, thank you, G! Everyone, We get the big treat of watching a film by Gary gray. I'll let him tell you about it: ' i burnt a "movie" i made while in la. when i say movie i mean it's recorded, long enough, has a script and a ending. it's not any good. it's like a fan video for Jacques Rivette. but i guess it really a fan vid. fan vid of alot of things. but it was a byproduct of staying up for a week watching his films. anyways, i do like it 15 mins in. i think i dance better when the acid kicks in. but, yeah. i burnt copys to be sold at head shops. i know a lot of people watch stupid shit as background. this is background for people getting really high/drunk. oddly enough i've sold a few. it's all very silly tho.' Go there, yes? And I'll go find out how your #1 album of this year and next effects my currently open #1 position. ** Keaton, Hi. I like glancing at Twitter once in a while. I can't imagine ever tweeting. I think I'd just post a link to the blog every day. I don't think I'm wordy enough for Twitter, despite what my doing the p.s. would indicate. I heard the new Motorhead is a highlight. I'll find out. Cool. Why wouldn't it be? 2014 could easily be the year of the novel. The horizon does seem unusually literary. Oh, you snuck in a Keaton special at the very last minute. Man, you're up early! Everyone, Keaton has newly piled up some Emo-inflected pictorial sexiness as only he can do, and the pile has a name -- 'A Thousand Ways To Cry (Fuck 2013)' -- and, without further ado, ...** Tomáš, Whoa, Tomáš! How cool to see you! How are you? Yeah, I'm still in Paris, or most of the time. I'm a big adventuring traveler these days, but, yeah, I'm still lodged here. What's up and going on with you? ** Allesfliesst, Hi, K. No, I never liked alcohol very much. I only ever drank either to lightly kill my nerves or to take the edge off whatever drugs I was on, and, otherwise, I had a couple of stints in my earlier of drinking too much for brief periods when I was deeply depressed. That's it. Just don't like the alcohol high. It doesn't agree with me. Hm, great that that novel is filling your bill, agreeing with you, etc. I had very little luck finding info in English about that writer unfortunately. But I did find intrigued me. ** _Black_Acrylic, 'Rack my brains for a hot idea' is a great phrase. I'm sure you'll find hotness using that password. ** Grant maierhofer, Hi, Grant. Wow, that's a resource if I ever saw one, or, in this case, intend to see one/it asap. Let me click over there and bookmark it. Hold on. Done. Now I'll pass it along to the fine, deserving folks around here and to the quiet readers out there. Everyone, Here's something you need to click and bookmark instantaneously. It's ... well, I'll let its maker, Mr. Grant Maierhofer, tell you: 'i collected every nonfiction thing i've written from 2012-2013 and posted them all on my tumblr with brief excerpts from each cos i wanted to use this to move forward or something. here it is. have at it if you'd like.' And do 'have at it'. Grant is one monstrously heck of a nonfiction writer, as at least some of you already know.' Thanks a ton, man, and a very happy New Year to you too! ** Creative Massacre, Hi. I can totally imagine that vibe from just looking at that one photo. You're really making me want to go there. Maybe I can put it on my future adventures agenda. Thanks a lot, Misty, and that was such a beautiful description of it! ** Misanthrope, I like Taco Bell for cheap, quick stuff when I'm lazy and happen to be driving by one. I don't know. It's all right. Or the vegetarian things are all right. My favorite of the cheap quickie Mexican drive-through place is Del Taco, though. I don't know if it's a West Coast only chain. Baja Fresh is pretty good among the slightly more upscale but fast places. The French do have both McDs and KFCs to fuck them up gastronomically here. Never eaten at any of their outlets, as you can imagine. Okay, well, I think I can easily get him both Japanese Yen note, obviously, and that Squirtle plushie thing. I've noted those things in my little notebook that I carry around with me, and it's a done deal unless Squirtles are rare in Japan itself or something. ** Okay. Go find out about Shamate today, why don't you. See you tomorrow.

Meet humancow, Mummy, KEEPSHIT100, removeme, and DC's other select international males slaves for the month of December 2013

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egg69, 18
Sometimes I feel as though there are two me's, one coasting directly on top of the other: the superficial me, who nods when she's supposed to nod and says what she's supposed to say, and some other, deeper part, the part that worries and dreams... Most of the time they move along in sync and I hardly notice the split, but sometimes like now it feels as though I'm two whole

Seeking permanent transformation into robot.






________________

23yearoldass, 23
Hi you want to rape and FIST a hole from a young boy and beat someone almost to death this is profile perfect for this






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BOYFRIEND4U, 18
Hey out there just moved here n just out n need guys who want be like a dad to me. My dads in prison here so im stuck here for couple yeats. Im 18 n my pictures when i was 15 buts all i got. My moms in Oregon n she has our computer. I really need help n dads to make it through. My dads cellmate is 19 n he gave me website cause he said guy friends are on here. I work as busboy at the restaurant and go to high school junior cause held back. Im a cool dude just trying to get by. I can check messages at school cause no computer at home so far. I got phone at home too. Im gonna get yahoo too. Im dping counseling too like therapy to cope. Its now i know im gay n like guys a lot n want to be with them. I think bout it all the time. I want to have guys do me n that. I hope youll be my dad while im stuck here please. Thanks from me. Will Waylon. I just at a new friend jareds house n use computer. Trey my dads cellmate is cool he said to help meet friends give info so i got yim now waitlong92 thats my last name n my football n my phone my dads cell.






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Didyouknow, 18
I'm Joel, 18 and currently in University studying Criminology (i know scary!!!) But the good thing is, I know how you could get away with committing let's say criminal acts with let's say me. I live with my dad, I work after school in a bakery and toys r us. I'm looking for an old gay man who's like me, someone destructive towards me. I'm into having things done to me that are legally porous like single-player russian roulette (look like suicide), hanging me (look like auto-asphixiation) or severe beating (look like "stand your ground") or whatever. I'm intelligent for what that's worth.






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KEEPSHIT100, 21
I'm a t-shirt, jeans, and flip flop kinda guy into sleazy BB with chems to release all the fluid you can shoot right in and over my heavily ass. I also love to get kicked in my balls. Every time I forget to say yes, I get another kick to my balls. I love exhausting fantasy. Hot is all I am. Loyalty is all I know.






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personaldevelopment, 18
Hey, Coach. 18, rower, need to get bigger to get better so i'm looking for a Coach. Just looking for a coach. I am ready to give myself entirely over to Coach, especially if there is any hypno involved. If Coach gets addicted to me and wants to be some sugar daddy who will look after me in return for being his exclusive that will be great. Some times I'm looking for real love. That it. No money no.





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OneManOneWoman, 22
I want to be kidnaped and raped by someone. Text me and be one of the firsts who explore me and my world. I will be a shy little boy that dont talk. And I want to know about him. Just don't lie to me.





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gimmeIT, 22
my names ray im 22 and im into extreme cbt play.. im into being heavily mummififed strapped down gagged n hooded with just cock and balls exposed for no mercy heavy cbt no way out ,,hard ballbusting heavy cock and ball whipping . severe electro knife play etc... i think id be into crude mercy castration n penectomy at that point ,,and i think id maybe be into u planting explosives in there n blowing my whole groin away if you are

HATE
MY
SELF





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removeme, 19
teen jail scum ready for for 24/7/365. bricked up in wall only good way for scum.






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immature, 23
buzzed drinking lines smoke
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i like my live i do but many things are just temporarily





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SeekKingKong, 24
Hi fetish guys of the internet! I'm Ben, live in Bristol (but like not originally from there, so I don't talk like a farmer! whoop!) I have kissed a couple of guys, and also a proper dodgy guy give me a handjob in his car when I was proper drunk at 3am, even typing about it is making me cringe! No effin idea where the dom guy comes into it, or why it's in my head! But like, er the thought of have some bigger older dude telling me what to do, calling me names, texting me, calling me, meeting up, embarrassing me, making me his dirty slutty whore bag and stuff? totally makes bits of me erect. Soo yeah!





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Writer/Slave, 24
As a writer, if someone falls in love with my work, I know they have fallen in love with my mind. Having no idea what my face looks like, they chose my mind. Art may be the only space a man can be whole without being seen.

Sliding down to the foot of the bed, I position my head above your crotch, lick my lips and slowly lower my mouth ‘til it is inches from your smooth, beautiful cock.

Darting my tongue out I slowly, sensuously, lick up and down the smooth skin until it starts to swell and thicken. Pulling away, I smirk as your cock springs straight out and a bead of pre-cum appears on the tip. I touch it with my pointer finger and spread it across my lower lip.

Freedom is a lonely road.





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youngfreak, 23
I love bondage, but I hate sex. I don't want sex. I don't like to get or give anal, or oral. I don't want to be groped, kissed, licked, fingered, or sniffed. I have an allergic reaction to sex. I also don't like to be edged. I don't like being forced to cum, but if I do on my own that's fine. I also only like intelligent muscley young white guys.





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bummer, 20
the love is samthing beauthiful . how nouse reali nwhat is love hy now to love.... this is may fist time to do this coz' i need love








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body4donation, 23
The user name says it all. I'm donating my body to an extreme Master. I have completely messed up my life and thought about committing suicide but instead of killing myself, i'm donating my body, mind an everything else to an extreme, brutal, cruel Master who has no mercy at all who can keep me captive until i am gore extreme and die. i have no more family and no job and most my friends are gone so disappearing is not an issue anymore. i can alienate the last two people in my life (i live on one of their couches), hack away my very limited online presence (i was briefly in a hacker group like "anonymous"), and surrender the body in few days. i can be picked up in the woods near my "friend's" house where no one will see. the body is healthy and flexible with no diseases, piercings, and with a good upbringing. i can relocate it anywhere. it doesn't need me.







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humancow, 20
I am 6'2 with a mental age of 41. Kick me. Hell to all.








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Sweetomaniac, 21
LOVE RAINBOWS AND BLOOD. LOVES CRAZY PEOPLE. NO blacks need reply. Sorry I'm just not into black guys please take NO OFFENCE.

Love men in suits. Love how they make their eatable asses look like.

I am pansexual so if you have a problem with that, you can go stab yourself and tell someone who actually cares.





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Mummy, 22
I met a man who's going to wrap me like a mummy. Maybe I'll be back someday. I don't know at the moment.





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ImPatrick, 18
I'm Patrick!
There is an upcoming SM Event, my birthday!! I will be a 18 years old slut for all the event because I'm really a 18 years old...if you enjoy fucking a slut or what so ever, please come sign up.

Requirements:
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If you are attached even better because slut like to seduce guy who is attached.... I want to prove to you man whore that there is no true love in this world but a super true slut exist, which is me...

Best Regards
PATRICK






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Craig, 19
Hello ever body. Are you looking for slave. Am the slave in world. Am craig am 19yrs old. Maybe am not looking good in this website but on earth, maybe I AM. Am as good as a virgin by ass with brain bigger than cock. Gay is happiness and am gay will give you happiness. I say that in small bottles holding poison!






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jackpot4masters, 19
find a master not scared to claim what's there's and own my emo son perm,i have a document i can send you, he have cute face& devil's vagina,climax over and ovre, but he am bad,does not obey

nothing else,why?







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SoftHands, 24
do you want to have some fun of a guy who looks like a boy?
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I always need a very large dick into me.
so let me give u a fantastic asshole that is u never see!



__________________

Theoneandonly,20
I'm tired. I'm bleeding. I'm laying in the dark. I have a blade in my hand. What should I do?






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p.s. Hey. ** Adrienne White, Hi, Adrienne! Happy New Year! It's so great to see you! ** GAYUMBOS E-ZINE, Oh, hey there! Thank you so much! I promise to enjoy Japan, if you promise to enjoy where you are. Deal? ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Mm, I don't agree with you at all about the importance of that autobiographical tidbit to an understanding of Bresson's work. But getting into disagreements about Bresson is one of my least favorite things to do on earth, and understanding is always a total crapshoot by definition, I think, and, in the case of Bresson's films, particularly by definition, if one takes into account his intentions re: his work and his belief in what he was doing, and I absolutely do, so I'll leave leave my differing opinion in the starting gate. Anne Wiazemsky's book is excellent in its own way, I agree. ** Tomáš, Hi. Sure, let's see each other. That would be really nice. I'm in Paris until January 6th, if you're around and want to hang. And, yes, I'm very interested in whatever idea you have for a post on the blog. That would be amazing! ** Gary gray, Nice story. Thanks. Yeah, it is funny how that works, for sure. For me, it was a John Baldessari piece I saw on a high school field trip to LACMA. I liked your movie. It was terrific! I was positively riveted. It suited the cut of my aesthetic's jib or whatever they say. How do I find your ex's youtube channel? Oh, wait, is it linked from that video, or ... ? I'll go check. Thanks, man! HNY! Any celebratory stuff in mind? ** Steevee, Hi. Did you read the texts? The fuss is about a lot more than how they look. Or their looks are seen as aggressive for reasons having to do with more than the superficial, extravagant Goth/Emo-like 'eyesore' they seem outside of China's context. It's the class war aspect and the fact that they're kids who are dismissed and shunned due to their low societal status and who are using/reinventing thrift store fashion and the most debased dance music as weaponry that interests me the most. I'll go at least give a serious listen to that Angel Haze album for sure. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. From all the stuff I've read about Shamate, it seems more like they unnerve the conventional Chinese or cause discomfort, less by how they look strictly than for the reason that they have found an effect way to empower themselves and raise their profile within their means. Or something. Sol Lewitt is a very sharp guy. I like what he thinks and says and sometimes writes more than the things he makes to manifest his ideas, I think. Right, New Years resolutions. I always forget to make one. Hm. 2013 was the best year of my life, so I guess my resolution would be to match or top it, and I actually think I will, amazingly enough. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Cool, yeah, very interesting, right? There's a lot going on there. Me neither on NYE tonight. Most of my friends are out of town. Zac is sick. Yury's going to party with his fashionista pals. I may do nothing at all, it looks like. Big deal. ** Misanthrope, Hey, G. I know Chevy's. I think they have those in LA. Never cracked their front doors though. No prob at all about the Japan bring-backs. My total pleasure. Like I said up above, it's the meaning behind/inside the Shamate look that I find really interesting and interestingly elusive since the context of Chinese society and the class system in which it's happening is necessarily pretty opaque outside of China. ** Torn porter, Thanks a lot, man. Uh, no NYE plans at all at the moment. Maybe my phone will ring with a proposal or possibility between now and dusk, you never know. How are you handling the much hyped status of this year's death? ** Keaton, Hi. Yeah, I'm not very wordy. Sometimes I'll get these bursts of enthusiasm about things and rattle on for a minute or something. Got the Motorhead, but I haven't heard it yet. The one with the longer caption was very moving. You rule hearts. HNY and HNYE to you too, buddy! ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Thanks, man. I'm definitely going to watch 'Computer Chess'. Maybe even today or instead of getting drunk and watching fireworks tonight or something. Linklater meets 'Upstream Color' is a boggling combination to think about. Excitingly so. Mm, have I seen any films lately? Gosh, no? I want to see the Scorcese. Maybe I'll do that tonight. I found a secret online storage vault full of recent James Benning films, and I've been indulging in it, which has been amazing, of course. Haven't snagged the Clementi yet, no. Thanks for reminding me. I'll do that today. ** Kyler, Happy New Year to you too, sir! Yeah, I don't know what they were thinking when they built the Bastille Opera the way they did. I guess it's supposed to be pretty great deep inside for the people who perform there. Interesting that the publisher is being so hands-on about the book's title. I know that happens. My publisher was not crazy about the title 'The Marbled Swarm', but they let me keep it. And Grove Press rejected a couple of my original titles for 'Try' and 'Guide', and made me rename them. Anyway, I'll be curious to hear what the title ends up being, you can bet. Please announce. ** Cassandra Troyan, Hi, C! I haven't forgotten you-know-what, it's just taking me until today to finish it. Aw, thanks a lot about the subcultural research thing. Yeah, there's a ton in 'TMS' if one wants to unearth that stuff. Tomorrow you're going to Chicago? I think you commented today. So, are you doing anything festive or whatever tonight to bring in the new 12-month long period? HNY in any case! Lots of love! ** Okay. It's NYE which means the last day of the year which means the last day of this particular month which means, yes, slaves! See you in 2014's early-ish moments tomorrow.

Jim Jarmusch Day

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'Back in the mid-80s, Jim Jarmusch was the last word in cinema chic, the coolest kid on the independent-movie block. Sixteen years and seven feature films later, Jarmusch stands as the last of a dying breed, defender of the purist faith. His newer films are packed with the genre tricks and mordant humour that have characterised all his output. But after drifting, unloved and unappreciated, in a cinematic limbo for most of the 90s, the world has started, once again, seeing things Jarmusch's way.

'His appearance only adds to the effect. Now 47, Jarmusch is practically identical to the Ohio-born, NYU-educated hipster who used his $12,000 film school scholarship money to make his first low-budget feature, Permanent Vacation. His second, Stranger Than Paradise, cost even less.

'Jarmusch's trademark upswept silver hairdo is perfectly in place; keen eyes ever eager to communicate some heartfelt idea; slow voice measuring out the words. "One thing that flipped me out," he says, "when we made Stranger, we were very conscious that it was 1982. Though it was post punk, style was still very rock'n'roll. We lived in that milieu in New York, but we wanted characters who weren't connected with that. We wanted them to look more like guys you'd see at the racetrack. And then two years later everyone started dressing like that. It's funny how things happen."

'Funny, indeed. Between 1984 and 1989, Jarmusch spearheaded the independent film movement, alongside Spike Lee and Michael Moore, with a trilogy of perfectly executed, thoroughly individual films. Stranger Than Paradise, Down By Law, and Mystery Train all shared a three-part structure, a wistful nostalgia for American pulp culture, and a downbeat, low-key narrative style borrowed from European and Japanese models. Jarmusch - in contrast to Lee's playful promotion of African-American consciousness, and Moore's self-help political radicalism - definitely occupied the high end of 80s alternative film-making, purveyor of an unflappable existential world-weariness that heralded the rise of a new wave of American auteurism.

'These days, however, Jarmusch is reluctant to dwell on past glories. "I don't look back," he says. "Especially not at my own work. I don't know why. It's not healthy for me. Looking back, in work and in life, is something I'm hesitant to do. I try not to. It's funny, though, I'm transferring all my films to digital masters, for future DVD release, and it's really excruciating for me to watch them again. Down By Law, or whatever. I leave really depressed."

'Jarmusch began the 90s with Night on Earth, his most ambitious film to date, boasting a pedigree cast that included Winona Ryder and Gena Rowlands, and a tricky five-city schedule. Despite Night on Earth, however, Jarmusch's career stubbornly refused to take off - unlike Lee, who was gearing up to make Malcolm X for Columbia. "My films are hand-made in the garage," says Jarmusch, "so it takes me a little while to get them together. My friend Aki Kaurismaki calls me the world's slowest film director, after Kubrick. My rhythm is my rhythm, and - how can I say this? - I'm not ambitious, and I'm not career-orientated in that way. If I were, I'd make different kinds of films. I'm lucky and happy and want to keep making work, but I have no desire to be more prolific. But then I see someone like Aki, who works in the same way, or Claire Denis. They make films more often than I do. But I'm always telling them to slow down. I want them to be happy and healthy; they worry me because they get stressed out by working too much. I'm happy with my rhythm, slow as it may be. It's how I talk."

'Despite the fact that Jarmusch's work instantaneously became the pet subject of graduate theses, he's as keen as ever to point up the collaborative nature of his film-making. "To me, the auteur thing is a lot of bullshit, because you collaborate on a film in every way, with everyone - even with whoever's stopping traffic. But I'm contradictory, because I'm a control freak to the point that I want to know every prop, every ashtray, every colour, everything that's in the set. But at the same time I'm collaborating with other people, who are helping me find those things. I would like to work in a more free way, but I don't have that luxury because I don't have that kind of budget."

'If nothing else, Jarmusch's long run demonstrates that you get what you give, that the love you take is equal to the love you make, that - indeed - what goes around comes around. And it's just as well he's content with his lot. "I don't want to be mainstream," he says. "I like being in the margins. I'm happy where I exist. The things that inspire me I find in the margins. I'm not consciously trying to be marginal, it's just where I end up and where I live. There's a gift in there for me and I'm happy to have that gift."-- The Guardian



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Stills








































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Further

The Jim Jarmusch Resource Page
Jimjarmusch.com
Jim Jarmusch @ IMDb
Jim Jarmusch @ The Criterion Collection
Jim Jarmuch's Twitter
Jim Jarmusch's 'Invisible Jukebox' @ The Wire
Jim Jarmusch & SQÜRL Interviewed
'Jim Jarmusch Outs Himself As A Mycophile'
Jim Jarmusch Discography
'Jim Jarmusch's Notes for a Ghostbusters Sequel'
Jim Jarmusch interviewed @ Interview
French Jim Jarmusch Fan Page
Jim Jarmusch bio @ film.factory
'The Auteurs: Jim Jarmusch'
'The Loneliness of Jim Jarmusch'
'Every Jim Jarmusch Film from Worst to Best'
Heck Yes Jim Jarmusch



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Documentary
'Filmed in Sevilla during 3 days on the set of The Limits of Control, Behind Jim Jarmusch (2009) is a rare behind the scenes glimpse into the process of this American auteur. Director Léa Rinaldi unveils an exquisitely personal glimpse into the relationship between Jim Jarmusch and his impressive ensemble cast, including Isaach De Bankolé, Tilda Swinton, Billy Murray, and John Hurt. For one of the few times in his career, the author of Stranger than Paradise and Dead Man has allowed a camera, during three days to breach into his creative arena. From the labyrinthine alleys of Sevilla to its orange-tree shaded squares, or to a bunker-like studio, the young French filmmaker leads us into the set pulse. It’s an initiation to Time, the time it takes to make a movie.'-- collaged



Behind Jim Jarmusch (Part 1)


Behind Jim Jarmusch (Part 2)



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Extras


Jim Jarmusch, Bradford Cox and No Age perform Neil Young's "Cortez the Killer"


Jim Jarmusch in Bored to Death


Fishing With John Episode 1 - Montauk with Jim Jarmusch


Jozef Van Wissem and Jim Jarmusch "Etimasia"


SQÜRL ( Carter Logan, Jim Jarmusch, and Shane Stoneback) "Pink Dust"



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Jim Jarmusch’s 5 Golden Rules
from Moviemaker



Rule #1: There are no rules. There are as many ways to make a film as there are potential filmmakers. It’s an open form. Anyway, I would personally never presume to tell anyone else what to do or how to do anything. To me that’s like telling someone else what their religious beliefs should be. Fuck that. That’s against my personal philosophy—more of a code than a set of “rules.” Therefore, disregard the “rules” you are presently reading, and instead consider them to be merely notes to myself. One should make one’s own “notes” because there is no one way to do anything. If anyone tells you there is only one way, their way, get as far away from them as possible, both physically and philosophically.

Rule #2: Don’t let the fuckers get ya. They can either help you, or not help you, but they can’t stop you. People who finance films, distribute films, promote films and exhibit films are not filmmakers. They are not interested in letting filmmakers define and dictate the way they do their business, so filmmakers should have no interest in allowing them to dictate the way a film is made. Carry a gun if necessary.

Also, avoid sycophants at all costs. There are always people around who only want to be involved in filmmaking to get rich, get famous, or get laid. Generally, they know as much about filmmaking as George W. Bush knows about hand-to-hand combat.

Rule #3: The production is there to serve the film. The film is not there to serve the production. Unfortunately, in the world of filmmaking this is almost universally backwards. The film is not being made to serve the budget, the schedule, or the resumes of those involved. Filmmakers who don’t understand this should be hung from their ankles and asked why the sky appears to be upside down.

Rule #4: Filmmaking is a collaborative process. You get the chance to work with others whose minds and ideas may be stronger than your own. Make sure they remain focused on their own function and not someone else’s job, or you’ll have a big mess. But treat all collaborators as equals and with respect. A production assistant who is holding back traffic so the crew can get a shot is no less important than the actors in the scene, the director of photography, the production designer or the director. Hierarchy is for those whose egos are inflated or out of control, or for people in the military. Those with whom you choose to collaborate, if you make good choices, can elevate the quality and content of your film to a much higher plane than any one mind could imagine on its own. If you don’t want to work with other people, go paint a painting or write a book. (And if you want to be a fucking dictator, I guess these days you just have to go into politics…).

Rule #5: Nothing is original. Steal from anywhere that resonates with inspiration or fuels your imagination. Devour old films, new films, music, books, paintings, photographs, poems, dreams, random conversations, architecture, bridges, street signs, trees, clouds, bodies of water, light and shadows. Select only things to steal from that speak directly to your soul. If you do this, your work (and theft) will be authentic. Authenticity is invaluable; originality is nonexistent. And don’t bother concealing your thievery—celebrate it if you feel like it. In any case, always remember what Jean-Luc Godard said: “It’s not where you take things from—it’s where you take them to.”



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13 of Jim Jarmusch's 13 films

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Permanent Vacation (1980)
'Rootless Hungarian émigré Willie (John Lurie), his pal Eddie (Richard Edson), and visiting sixteen-year-old cousin Eva (Eszter Balint) always manage to make the least of any situation, whether aimlessly traversing the drab interiors and environs of New York City, Cleveland, or an anonymous Florida suburb. With its delicate humor and dramatic nonchalance, Jim Jarmusch’s one-of-a-kind minimalist masterpiece, Stranger Than Paradise, forever transformed the landscape of American independent cinema.'-- Criterion Collection



Trailer


the entire film



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Stranger Than Paradise (1984)
'A downbeat pastoral just this side of sentimental, Stranger Than Paradise is a celebration of hanging out, bumming around, and striking it rich—American (pre)occupations as deep-dyed as they are disreputable. The film, which plays the [New York] Film Festival this weekend and the Cinema Studio thereafter, is a stringent road movie cum character farce, with a trio of lumpen bohemians—a teenage immigrant from Budapest, her Americanized cousin, and his affable buddy—boldly emblazoned upon a series of gloriously deadbeat landscapes (the Lower East Side, the outskirts of Cleveland, the anonymous Florida coast). It’s very funny, and it’s pure movie. No one will ever mistake this deadpan whatsit for a failed off-off-Broadway play.'-- J. Hoberman



Trailer


the entire film



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Down by Law (1986)
'Down by Law, released in 1986, was Jim Jarmusch’s third movie. Unlike its predecessors, Permanent Vacation (1980) and Stranger Than Paradise (1984), it did not take off from a semi-documentary view of downtown Manhattan. It was shot entirely on location in Louisiana, which in the context of low-budget independent New York City film­making was exotic, even more so than the previous picture’s forays to the forlorn outskirts of Cleveland and whatever derelict stretch of highway stood in for Florida. Here, the location is announced and front-loaded during the credits. New Orleans and its surroundings pass in review, from left to right, etched in crystalline black and white by Robby Müller’s camera: mausoleums, wrought-iron balconies, low-slung housing projects, shacks on stilts. After that, scenes unfold amid semitropical architecture and in the bayous; you hear Cajun accents and Irma Thomas singing, but for all the flavor of filé gumbo, the actual setting is no more Louisiana than the setting of Macao is Macao. Down by Law takes place in the land of the imagination, in the province of the movies.'-- Luc Sante



Trailer


the entire film



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Mystery Train (1989)
'I am equally moved by that moment in Jim Jarmusch's Mystery Train when the young Japanese couple arrive in the train station in Memphis only to encounter what appears to be a homeless black man, a drifter, but who turns to them and speaks in Japanese. The interaction takes only a moment, but it deconstructs and expresses so much. It reminds us that appearances are deceiving. It made me think about black men as travelers, about black men who fight in armies around the world. This filmic moment challenges our perceptions of blackness by engaging in a process of defamiliarization (the taking of a familiar image and depicting it in such a way that we look at it and see it differently). Way before Tarantino was dabbling in "cool" images of blackness, Jarmusch had shown in Down by Law and other work that it was possible for a white-guy filmmaker to do progressive work around race and representation.'-- bell hooks



Trailer


Opening scenes


Screamin´ Jay Hawkins in Mystery Train



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Night on Earth (1991)
'Jim Jarmusch's Night on Earth is an agreeably flaky comedy built around a surefire hook. Each of the film's five segments consists of a single extended taxicab ride through a different city; the idea is that each excursion is taking place at exactly the same time. Jarmusch starts out in Los Angeles, then moves to New York, Paris, Rome, and, finally, Helsinki. (Why Helsinki? As far as I could tell, so that the movie could end at sunrise.) Night on Earth's cosmic title may lead you to expect a spiritual overview of the state of the world, but the joke is that these cabbies and their passengers all speak a universal language of disconnectedness. Before long, the taxis themselves begin to feel cozy and familiar. The movie is like a hipster's ramshackle version of traveling around the world and never leaving the Hilton.'-- Owen Gleiberman



Trailer


Night on Earth - Helsinki


Night on Earth - New York



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Dead Man (1995)
'Dead Man is likely Jim Jarmusch's most stunning achievement. A period piece, and what's more, one that draws directly upon a genre (the western), the film stands apart from Jarmusch's other work categorically as well. Johnny Depp plays William Blake, who ventures westward by train to the dystopian town of Machine in search of work. While there, he meets Thel (Mili Avital), whose boyfriend (Gabriel Bryne) catches them in bed. The violence that ensues causes Blake to scramble across the wilderness with a bullet in his chest. Pursued by savage bounty hunters, his journey is an extended death scene—he avoids one meeting with mortality before encountering another.'-- Zach Campbell



Trailer


Excerpt


Excerpt



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Year of the Horse (1997)
'The film, directed by Jim Jarmusch, follows a 1996 Neil Young concert tour and intercuts footage from 1986 and 1976 tours. It's all shot in muddy earth tones, on grainy Super 8 film, Hi Fi 8 video and 16-mm. If you seek the origin of the grunge look, seek no further: Young, in his floppy plaid shirts and baggy shorts, looks like a shipwrecked lumberjack. His fellow band members, Billy Talbot, Poncho Sampedro and Ralph Molina, exude vibes that would strike terror into the heart of an unarmed convenience store clerk. These seances are intercut with concert footage, during which the band typically sings the lyrics through once and then gets mired in endless loops of instrumental repetition that seem positioned somewhere between mantras and autism. The music is shapeless, graceless and built from rhythm, not melody; it is amusing, given the undisciplined sound, to eavesdrop later as they argue in a van about whether they all were following the same arrangement.'-- Roger Ebert



the entire film



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Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999)
'A more crowd-pleasing exercise in fathomless cool than its predecessor, Ghost Dog is an impeccably shot and sensationally scored deadpan parody of two current popular modes—the hit-man glorification saga and the Cosa Nostra family drama—and is predicated on the clash of at least as many behavioral codes. The hired gun known as Ghost Dog (Forest Whitaker) is introduced reading the 18th-century samurai manual Hagakure. His lips don't exactly move, but the text thereafter serves as the major indicator of his consciousness: "The samurai is as if dead." Like the Parisian hit man who is the antihero of Jean-Pierre Melville's 1967 Le Samurai (which, no less stylized, opens with a quote from the invented Book of Bushido), Ghost Dog is an ascetic loner who must ultimately wreak vengeance on the employer who betrays him. Cowled like a monk in his hooded sweatshirt, the urban samurai leaves his rooftop shack, complete with pigeon coop and Shinto altar, to glide unseen through the nighttime streets of his derelict neighborhood (a seeming mixture of Brooklyn and Jersey City).'-- J. Hoberman



Trailer


Opening scenes


Excerpt



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Coffee and Cigarettes (2003)
'Jim Jarmusch has been working on Coffee and Cigarettes for so long that when he started the project, you could still smoke in a coffee shop. The idea was to gather unexpected combinations of actors and, well, let them talk over coffee and cigarettes. He began with the short film "Coffee and Cigarettes I," filmed in 1986, before we knew who Roberto Benigni was (unless we'd seen Jarmusch's Down By Law). Benigni the verbal hurricane strikes the withdrawn Steven Wright and is so eager to do him a favor that he eventually goes to the dentist for him. There's no more to it than that, but how much more do you need? A few minutes, and the skit is over. None of these 11 vignettes overstays its welcome, although a few seem to lose their way. And although Jarmusch has the writing credit, we have the feeling at various moments (as when Bill Murray walks in on a conversation between RZA and GZA of the Wu-Tang Clan and exchanges herbal remedies with them) that improvisation plays a part.'-- Roger Ebert



Trailer


Excerpt



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Broken Flowers (2005)
'Broken Flowers relies on Bill Murray’s persona, but it also turns that persona back on him. Instead of maintaining the satirical distance that made it easy to laugh at heartland eccentrics in, say, Alexander Payne’s About Schmidt, Jarmusch’s film avoids caricature, and Murray’s poker face melts. Don feels a bittersweet regret at becoming exn his self-effacement has achieved high comic art, and he collaborates with Jarmusch at a point in his career when he’s trying to be something more than hipster-serene. Both succeed, by committing to the notion that a yearning to be reborn within a hopeless, brittle soul is worthy of drama—as well as a deeper, gentler humor.'-- Ken Tucker



Trailer


Excerpt


DVD Extras



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The Limits of Control (2009)
'The effect of the new Jim Jarmusch film, The Limits of Control, is to prove that, however gracefully you groom a shaggy-dog story, it won’t stop roaming. Isaach De Bankolé—originally from Ivory Coast, and a Jarmusch regular, in works like Night on Earth and Coffee and Cigarettes— plays a man with a mission. That sounds decisive, but the man is a nameless itinerant, and you can no more explain his mission than finish a jigsaw under water. Clad in a succession of silk suits, he flies to Madrid, takes a train to Seville, then takes another into rural desolation. In each place, the same thing happens, with minor variations: a contact approaches, launches into a discussion of art, music, drugs, or whatever, and trades matchboxes with our guy. Each box contains a cipher on a slip of paper, which he reads and eats. The tale is constructed with infinite care, and shot with an almost aching clarity by Christopher Doyle. (Whole theses could, and probably will, be written on its use of blood-orange red.) The cast, too, is so hip that it makes your gums hurt, with cameos for Gael García Bernal, John Hurt, Bill Murray, and a white-wigged Tilda Swinton, whose deployment of a transparent umbrella as a parasol is a typical gesture of stylized futility.'-- The New Yorker



Trailer


Archival Talks: Jim Jarmusch, "The Limits of Control"



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Only Lovers Left Alive (2013)
'The Thin Man with blood cocktails, an ode to hipsterism through the ages, a mainline shot of cool and a playful tribute to artistic fetishism, Jim Jarmusch’s vampire romance Only Lovers Left Alive is an addictive mood and tone piece, a nocturnal reverie that incidentally celebrates a marriage that has lasted untold centuries. Almost nothing happens in this minor-key drift through a desolate, imperiled modern world, and yet it is the perennial downtown filmmaker’s best work in many years, probably since 1995’s Dead Man, with which it shares a sense of quiet, heady, perilous passage.'-- Hollywood Reporter



Trailer


Title sequence


"Only Lovers Left Alive" Q&A: Jim Jarmusch, Tilda Swinton




*

p.s. Hey. ** Thomas Moronic, Happy initial edge of 2014, T! Where would the slaves be without you, maestro? If I had noted where they were, I would pass along your messages to them. They, being your messages, were/are beautiful and enriching of the soul, theirs and mine, as ever. Thank you, pal. I hope whatever happened to and in your last night has made today seem as new as it famously is supposed to be. ** Adrienne White, Hi, Adrienne! I hope so too. Did you have a fun Eve? Does N.O. do anything special for its inhabitants pre- or on or post-the big turn over? Paris did fireworks. I heard them. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. Oh, I wish my best year ever had been more infectious. I'm sorry for your less than best year. I really appreciate your thinking and writing about the Chinese situation. It was very rich, and please accept my appreciation. It's the sincerest. Please be with me however you want to be with me. I'm pretty good at spotting and easing around insinuations anyway. Plus, I respect unease and feel no small amount of it myself, albeit not when I'm here on the blog very much. Oh, wow, fantastic about the Ken Price book and the others being so easily accessible. Thank you so much! I will, of course, go luxuriate in the Price and the rest very, very shortly, and I'll share them thusly. Everyone, d.l. les mots dans le nom has some great gifts for us to help start the new year right, courtesy also of The Drawing Room. So, do yourselves major favors by clicking the flowing blue words. First, here you can peruse the pages of a book by the fantastic artist Ken Price entitled 'Slow and Steady Wins the Race, Works on Paper 1962 - 2010'. And here lies the pages of a book by the super great Unica Zurn called 'Dark Spring'. And, finally, enjoy Dickinson/Walser's 'Pencil Sketches' at this location. Great, great stuff. Take advantage. Thank you, thank you! I hope your day is ultra-fine. I think mine will be very low-key since the great majority of everyone around me will probably be sleeping off something-or-other until the late afternoon at the earliest. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, and HNY, D! Understood and yes about Bresson. My French publisher knows Madam Bresson a little bit. I keep forgetting to ask him to tell me everything he can about her. He did tell me that she really liked that essay/remembrance thing I wrote about Bresson, which was a giant surprise and heavily heartening. ** xTx, Hey, buddy! So, so, so great to see you! I saw over on FB that you're determined to finish your novel this year! Yes! I don't know when my book is shipping. I think it was supposed to be out by now, but I haven't heard anything from the publisher in weeks. Love in a major amount to you! ** Gary gray, Immature seems to have been the fave. I really can never predict such things. The Baldessari piece was this large silkscreened, I think, canvas that had an image of him standing in front of a palm tree's trunk, and, at the top (or bottom?), it just said 'Wrong'. It doesn't sound like much in description, but, for some reason, it made the inside of my head grow up. I didn't get to his youtube channel yet, but I think I will today since everything is closed and almost everyone will be conked out. Did you wander about? I didn't even do that except inside that grown up head I just mentioned. ** Empty Frame, Happy New Year to you, my friend! Great to see you, duh! You posting more often is a very nice resolution. I second that. On your Blanchot question, I personally think you should really read his fiction, and since 'Death Sentence' is probably my all-time favorite novel, I guess you can guess what I recommend. 'Infinite Conversation' is staggeringly good, though. You might, if you want to put out just a little more dough, go for 'The Station Hill Blanchot Reader', which has 'DS' and a lot of his other fiction and so on in it. Just a thought. Thanks about the Shamate post. And, yeah, may your 2014 extremely rule, okay? ** Rewritedept, Hi Your NYE sounds like it was going to be nice, if you did that. I didn't do anything. The usual with a lot of noise going on outside or around me when I was outside. Oops, sorry about the suckiness of your 2013. I almost feel guilty for having had such a great year. Almost. Uh, I think removeme's borrowed ideas existed long before Deerhunter borrowed them. I think Poe and those kinds of relatively ancient guys get any credit that's due. Acoustic show, cool. You unplugged. Gilles De Rais unplugged. ** MANCY, Hi! Awesome, thank you. Your video will be the first work of art that I see this year. Sweet! Everyone, give your new year the right spin straight away while it's still a blank and virginal time-stretch by clicking this, which will take you to a new video work entitled 'ULTRADUSTER' by the very, very awesome artist MANCY, better known outside this place as Steven Purtill. If you know his videos, you know that you being blown away is destiny itself in the form of a bit of finger pressure that you need only employ. Can't wait, man. It's currently in a Safari window beckoning me to finish this p.s. asap. No, I haven't listened to the Part Wolf demo yet, sorry. Sorry for me. I've been a victim of too much stuff. Probably today. No, wait, for sure today. ** Chilly Jay Chill, HNY to you, Jeff! I didn't manage to find 'Computer Chess' yesterday, but I will, and I think the Scorcese will be seen in the next day or two. I'll let you know. Have an awesome day! ** Steevee, Hey and HNY! Boyfriend4U wrote in his profile text that the photos were old and showed him when he was 15. ** Sypha, HNY right back at ya, man. Cool, your list. I'll be all over that imminently. Thanks! Everyone, the superb writer and reader Sypha has posted a list of all the books he read in 2013, and it's here, and prepare to be humbled. ** MyNeighbourJohnTurtorro, HNY to you too, man! I think, to be completely accurate, I didn't celebrate at all, so last night neither whimpered nor banged. Wow, Les Rallizes Dénudés, yeah, I know them a little, but not enough. Interesting. Yeah, I think I might spend at least part of my day a la how you spent your night maybe. Thanks. I would love for you to do a post about the Glasgow scene. That would be great on every imaginable level. Feasible? Shit, yes. How to do it? Well, the normal way, if you like, is to create a kind of mock up of the day. Like, write out the text you're going to use. Show in the mock up where you want any photos and/or links and/or video imbeds to go. In those spots, type out the links or the titles of the images or the links to the videos. And send me the images as attachments or give me the links to them. Put all of that either in a Word doc or a TextEdit doc or in the body of an email, and then email it to me. Does that make sense? I can explain more or more clearly, if you like. Thanks a lot for wanting to do that! The novel is progressing well, thank you. ** Creative Massacre , Happy New Year to you, my friend! I agree: great 2014's to one and all of us! Love, me. ** Bill, You want yoga boy? I'll, uh, see what I can do, or I would, if I could do anything, which I guess I can't unless he sees the blog post and writes to me asking if I've found any owners for him. Great luck with your projects. I've got a couple of projects that, despite working hard on them, I'm still very behind on too, yikes indeed. ** Misanthrope, HNY! I concur on your ... resolution ...if it's a resolution, and I guess it is, even if an informal one, about saving moolah earmarked for getting you over here, and my crossed fingers join with yours, and, thus, luck itself is now twice as large and very knotted, which, I think, should form the magic key to accumulating untouched moolah. ** Okay. For whatever reason, and there really isn't a thought-out reason, I seem to have decided that 2014 should begin with an overview kind of thing re: the films of Jim Jarmusch, and, so, go for it, I hope. See you tomorrow.

Thomas Moronic presents ... EVERYTHING IS FUCKED # 4

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Hey. If you check this blog regularly, you must have gathered by now that I'm a huge fan of what the gif can and can't do. Thomas Moronic is a veritable gif auteur, and he's back with volume four of his investigative series EVERYTHING IS FUCKED, and I'm pleased as punch, duh, and I hope you will be too, in your respective fashions. It would be cool if you told him what you think and why or how or even how not maybe. Thanks! And thanks mightily to the maestro. ** Adrienne White, Hi, A. Cool. Drops a ball of gumbo? Literally? That's clever. Does it get eaten? I think your NYE sounds just dandy. It beat mine. I had the noise and lit up air things but no midget. NYE here isn't all that, or not as done-up as you would think Paris would dole out. Just fireworks over the Eiffel Tower and some illegal ones being set off here and there. And they close the metro down early that night for some bizarre reason. Honestly, I don't what Paris is thinking on NYE. But it was okay. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. Oh, the food thing, oops. I guess it would be like if you talked about all the amazing clothes you were buying if you bought amazing clothes, given my clothing allergies. I think I did miss your last comment. That bracelet is terrific. I just spent a minute or more enlarging and caressing it with my eyes. Gorgeous. Yeah, sorry, Paris looks amazing, it's a fact, but I think all the Xmas stuff comes down tonight, and then it'll just look amazing in its usual way, and I won't be waxing about it as much. Wow, is the Fujiko Nakaya who made that 1979 video the same FN I know and love? I've never seen that. I'll have to ask her about that. Wow, if so. Thank you so much! ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Too cool for a school is a legit thing. Bands use that quality as a thing to work with all the time, and I think it's kind of interesting how Jarmusch works with that. Sorry about Leeds. ** David Ehrenstein, That's an interesting way to think about it. Hunh. Dude, very cool both about the Hollywood Reporter article and the talk with Debbie Reynolds. Holy shit! ** Sypha, Cool that the post synced up with your familiarity. Your list was mega, bow-worthy. 4000 pages?! ** Jeffrey Coleman, HNY to you, Jeff! Good to see you! Oh, right, the legal marijuana in Colorado thing. How is that going to work? Will it be sold at, like, 7-11s and in vending machines and stuff? Trippy. 'LSD's quieter and more autistic brother' is the best way to put it. Yeah, I can get mildly paranoid if someone's smoking it in the same room with the windows closed and if enough filters inside me accidentally sometimes. Good, thank you, about the easier access to Martin's book in the States. I'll share that for sure and right now. Everyone, the awesome d.l. Jeffrey Coleman is about to help those of you who live in the USA more easily and inexpensively acquire a copy of Martin Bladh's book 'DES', which is something I recommend that you do. Anyway, Jeffrey alerts you to the fact that you can order the book here at a cool place called The Ajna Offensive, and thereby get around the trouble and expense of ordering it from Europe. I was just thinking a lot about 'Fable' and how incredible it is the other day. I don't know David Chaim Smith, but I'll use that link and go find out who he is and what his thing is. Thanks a lot, Jeff. You take care too. ** Flit, Hi, Flit! It goes good, pal. I can tell you're back to writing. That was some charged, delicious text right there. Oh, shit, yeah, I'm so sorry about those losses. I mean, you know how I feel about heroin, and that just ... yeah, I'm so sorry. God, I hate that fucking drug. I don't hate many things, but that's a big one. Yeah, 'R Plus Seven' is really funny. I think so too. Glad it got to you. Sweet. Nice day to you, bro. ** Allesfliesst, Abstaining from not abstaining is the same thing or something. Sounds most pleasant. Great, thank you a lot for those links. I hadn't seen either one of those for some weird reason. It's so easy to think that Google search knows everything like your doctor does(n't). Yeah, thanks, Kai. I'll go over there in depth shortly. 2013 was my best year ever, yeah. And I think this year might even beat it. Crazy shit. ** MyNeighbourJohnTurtorro, I know. I thought the same thing: I haven't done a Jarmusch post? Weird. 'Dead Man' is my fave too. I like 'Ghost Dog'. I like the early ones. I have a fondness for 'Broken Flowers', but then I'm in the 'Bill Murray is God' camp. I liked the new one quite a bit. His 'anthology' films like 'Night on Earth' and 'Coffee and Cigarettes' I don't like at all. They bug me. My email, sure, of course: dcooperweb@gmail.com. Excited that you're excited about that post. Thanks a ton. Unfortunately, I don't think that anything I'm working on will be something you will see this year. The novel has a ways to go. The current plan for the 'porn' film is to have it edited into its final form in December. I'm also writing Gisele Vienne's next theater piece about ventriloquism. And I'm co-writing (with Zac) a film that Gisele is going to direct, which is tentatively set to be shot in October. And there's the book Zac and I are doing about Scandinavian theme parks, but that seems to be stalled out for the moment. The only things of mine that'll see the light this year are the poetry book and maybe a book that Martin Bladh wants to publish that's a facsimile of a scrapbook I made in the early 80s. Anyway, thanks a lot for asking, man. What's on your agenda? ** Steevee, Hi. I don't know about a US opening date. It seems like there must be one by now. Curious to hear what you think of the film. ** Bill, Oh, I just told MNJT the things I'm working/behind on. Especially behind on the ventriloquism theater piece, which is proving to be a very tough nut, but I think I might have figured out a solution. The new Jarmusch is really nice, I think. See you what you think. How's the work going? ** Rewritedept, Hi. I did know that he did vocals on that. When he does music stuff, it's often quite interesting and wilder than I would have imagined. I imagined his music forays would be more Lounge Lizards-y or something for some stupid reason. Your NYE sounds pleasant. 'Life Aquatic', yes! My New Years Day was as quiet as my NYE. It was fine, no big deal. Love and whatnot back to you, boomerang-style. ** Postitbreakup, Hi, Josh! Happy New Year to you too! How are you? What's going on? ** Right. Back you go into TM's jittery onslaught, okay? See you tomorrow.

Gig #51: Of late 4: Tsembla, Richard Skelton, Blondes, Celeste, Kemper Norton, Croatian Amor, Felix Kubin, Rhys Chatham, patten, Rashad Becker, Innode, Glorior Belli, Gabriel Saloman, ÄÄNIPÄÄ

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TsemblaLive @ Lounge Bar
'Tsembla is the musical work of Marja Johansson, a Swedish-Finnish
artist operating out of Turku, Finland. Utilizing a wide range of
instruments, electronics, objects and manipulated samples, the music
of Tsembla rides on waves of warped melodies, fluttering rhythms,
abstract voices and mutating textures, crossbreeding the known and the 
imaginary. Loosely assembled, rough edged compositions, rich in details, come together into odd instrumental miniatures in an almost-pop format, venturing into fourth world territory from a lattering, wheezing and boiling DIY kitchen inspired by Moondog, Ruth White, Raymond Roussel, LAFMS, Jon Hassell, Anton Bruhin, René Daumal, Suzanne Ciani and folk musics of the Andes and Asia.'-- New Images Limited






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Richard SkeltonVéarsa Éan
'Since 2006, UK artist Richard Skelton has been releasing small run documentations of his own musical explorations through his Sustain Release label. These recordings are always exquisitely packaged, in materials and imagery that really invoke the feel of the recordings locked away on the discs. Place and space play a big factor in Skelton’s creative process, transporting the listener to the environment in which the music was originally recorded. The visuals and tactile objects that are always included with the discs facilitate in entrenching the listener further in Skelton’s magical world that is brimming with sensation and history, as its not only Skelton’s music that the listener is experiencing, but how, in fact, he is able to maintain a deep and engaging conversation with his surroundings.'-- collaged






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BlondesWine
'Blondes’ self-titled debut album was one of 2012’s most striking releases. An electronic album rooted in a kind of swirling mechanistic spirit, the sounds didn’t come from traditional forms of dance culture. Yes, there were echoes of house’s rhythmic pulse and techno’s sense of propulsion, but these sounds were all filtered through the Brooklyn duo of Sam Haar and Zach Steinman’s idiosyncratic approach. The sound became something quite special; a transcendent journey through dance’s ghostly otherworld. Perhaps what makes Blondes’ approach to electronic music so beguiling is their background. Both members met at Oberlin College in 2003 and have spent much of their time studying electro acoustic composition while finding ways to manipulate and distort analogue sound. When this approach is applied to making repetitive and hypnotic dance music, it creates a sound that blurs the lines between the body and the mind.'-- music OHM






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CelesteD'errances En Inimities
'Expressionistic, sophisticated, evolved, overflowing, pitch-black. Just a few words, a desperate attempt to properly approach ANIMALE(S), the fifth full-length record of the French combo CELESTE from Lyon. Musically, ANIMALE(S) sees CELESTE developing their metal and hardcore oriented sound in different directions. Their music was always characterised by the interaction of monumental melodies, dark riffs, violent drums and expressive lyrics, but on the new album all these ingrediences are more expressed. The last three years' time has carved out the contrasts in Celeste's music like a stream carves out a rugged canyon. The melodies are more melodic, but also more sparse. Many parts are much darker and more noisy than the past albums. The lyrics are as savage as they can be without being vulgar. At the same time, ANIMALE(S) features exceptional collaborations with artists such as the experimental musician Ben Chatwin from TALVHORROS -- also on Denovali Records - and the composers and sound designers Sabrina Duval and Jean Charles Bastion.'-- post-engineering






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Kemper Norton'Windwept' and 'Golowan' live @ at the Autumnal Nob Out
'The mysterious music of Kemper Norton draws its power from its apparently conflicting facets, which put the listener in a confused but entirely pleasurable state. The sound is formed of acoustic folk miniatures swimming through pools of synthetic texture, while found sounds float to the surface, dredging up tiny hints of dance rhythms in their wake. These ingredients - far from being a casually picked, if natty, selection from the twentieth century's smorgasbord of genres - are stirred together with idiosyncratic focus to produce a strange, heady brew that's neither folk nor electronica, neither analogue nor digital, but something else; boasting new flavours with familiar seasoning. Much, if not all, of Kemper Norton's output is borne of strong, sometimes elaborate concepts that are only fully revealed in sleevenotes. They often focus away from the typically urban concerns of electronic music to face folk's rural heartland, but eschew idyllic, pastoral stereotypes to reveal tales of domestic violence, "party melancholy", burial chambers and the dire consequences of industrialisation for rural Britain.'-- The Quietus






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Croatian AmorJulian
'Croatian Amor has progressed like an expanding sphere, encompassing all the neighboring sounds it encounters in its experimentation. Starting with the most stark and minimal industrial release, Brother, Sister and heretofore culminating with The World, Loke Rahbek and whoever else is behind one of the most unique bands associated with the label Posh Isolation have created not a linear narrative, but a logarithmic one. The themes and motifs explored become more defined on each release, but are vaster still: sexual identity, gender identity, and body dysmorphic identity issues and problems. These issues are not evoked as mere fetishism, but are held up to the light, exposed and expressed through sound, words, and the meaning behind grinding tin foil across a contact microphone. While not everyone would agree, I think the members of Croatian Amor would see Europe as a distinguished place for discourse about issues like these.'-- sputnik music






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Felix KubinLightning Strikes
'Felix Kubin actually began playing music at 8 years old, when he studied piano, organ, and glockenspiel. In 1980, he acquired a Korg MS-20 synthesizer and his recordings took off from there. He began experimenting and recording a variety of tracks, adding his own bizarre lyrics to them. In 1982, he formed a band with Stefan Mohn called Die Egozentrischen 2. In 1984, they played a legendary live show at the Möbel Perdú in Hamburg, a small multifunctional gallery founded in the early 80s by a.o. Claudia Schneider-Esleben, who happened to be the sister of Florian Schneider (Kraftwerk). They were only 15 years old. Although Alfred Hilsberg of the notorious ZickZack label (Palais Schaumburg, Die Toedliche Doris, Einstuerzende Neubauten) had planned to release Felix Kubin’s early music in 1985, it took another 20 years until the French label SKIPP and the German label A-Musik put out a selection of tracks for the first time. The press was raving about Felix’s music which gave rise to an increase in his popularity.'-- Minimal Wave






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Rhys ChathamDrastic Classicism Revisited
'Rhys Chatham's Harmonie du Soir has no melodies; there are barely any descents or ascents of tone, yet the mastery of rhythm, volume, and accentuation exhibited by Chatham and his six-guitar ensemble in the title track imbues it with enough variation and potency to hint at the kind of sublime narrative that would be denuded to the point of evisceration by something so crudely explicit as a tune. Such sublimity isn’t of the transmundane order conveyed by, say, Glenn Branca’s Symphony No. 2 or “The Ascension,” since the piece is grounded more in rock tropes than classical, yet the absence of tonal articulation still nonetheless intimates an experience suspended just beyond the effable. The album is nothing but dynamic intensity and textural density. It’s an insurgent denial of the importance of pitch and a single-finger salute to the expressivity of melody.' -- tiny mix tapes






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pattenAviary
'It might not seem easy to make sense of patten. “Abstract” is a word that often gets thrown around when talking about experimental music, but patten’s sounds are genuinely intangible, amorphous and seem to be constantly in flux. Familiar sounds become foreign, foreign sounds seem familiar, and it’s impossible to say where one thing ends and another begins. Fittingly, patten is also an anonymous artist—and that’s genuinely anonymous, rather than just elusive. Nobody knows his name (he’s only ever given it as “D”), and finding a photograph of him with a visible face will prove impossible, meaning that pinning any biographical narrative to his discography is impossible. But unlike a lot of reclusive or publicity-shy producers, patten is keen to speak about what he does as an artist, and talk about it confidently. He thinks about what his music means from a conceptual perspective before a musical or personal one, which is perhaps what makes his sound so refreshingly non-referential.'-- The Fader






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Rashad Beckerlive @ PAN ACT Festival
'Rashad Becker makes a living with his ears. As engineer at Berlin’s Dubplates & Mastering, he's mastered and cut a massive amount of dance, electronic, and experimental albums (his credits include at least 1200 records). He’s built a reputation for creating great-sounding vinyl, so it’s no shock that the first record of his own music sounds great, too. Traditional Music of Notional Species, Vol. 1 is thoroughly clear and precise. Everything on it is boldly legible, and though there are tons of sounds intersecting and overlapping, nothing is blurry. It’s as if Becker’s mastering his own brain and transferring what he hears in his head with little if any generational loss. It’s all pretty unpredictable, sure, but he’s always in control of his busy mix. You can start by gawking at his surprising, hilarious, exhilarating sounds, but you’ll likely find many more reasons to return.'-- Marc Masters, Pitchfork






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InnodeRotor
'A new project headed by Austrian musician Stefan Németh, who was previously a member of Radian and Lokai, and is also a co-founder of Mosz Records. Together with drummers Steven Hess (Pan American, Locrian) and Bernhard Breuer (Elektro Guzzi), Innode explores the spaces between noise, rhythm and silence based on a grid concept that exposes rigid structures to orchestrated disorder. It's a rhythmic chess match no less, introspective and strategic, but such is the unpredictability of the destabilised sonic environments Nemeth generates, that it's fascinating to observe and participate in.'-- collaged






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Glorior Belli'Negative Incarnate' live @ Hellfest
'Glorior Belli crept out from the temperamental suburbs of Paris in December 2002. What started as a notorious duo soon became a remarkable Beast, acting as a beacon for everyone looking to free themselves of the influence of the Demiurge. Over the course of four full-lengths, the band has progressively developed to become a more sophisticated musical entity, while conversely exploring the devolution of black metal’s heritage. With a captivating mix of bluesy, heavy stoner grooves, doom-laden lyricism, retro prog-rock flourishes and some thickly distorting sludge, the band has reaffirmed the diabolical principles of black metal while avoiding its most mind-numbing clichés. Lyrics and themes explored over the years reveal a sincere inclination for rebel-ism and developed sense of poetry. The experience would be described as an intriguing and almost hypnotic journey through dark deserts and evil fields with Lucifer as personal guide.'-- collaged






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Gabriel Saloman Adhere pt. 1
'Gabriel Saloman is a multidisciplinary artist based in Vancouver, Canada, who works in sound, text, visual medium and socially collaborative forms. He has been composing and performing experimental music for almost two decades both individually and in a variety of collaborations. He is best known for his work with Pete Swanson in the Portland, USA based free-noise project Yellow Swans. His current projects include Chambers, a live dub collaboration with M Red (Lighta! Sound, Low Indigo), and Diadem, an exploration of chance and divinatory processes in musical improvisation with Aja Rose Bond. Saloman's individual work explores noise and soundscape as a form of resistance and path of emancipation from an authoritarian social order. He works in a variety of mediums, moving through gallery installations, web projects, live performance, recorded music and spatial intervention. Recently he has begun composing for contemporary dance, exploring the possibilities of collaboration between choreographer, dancer and musician.'-- Miasmah Recordings






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ÄÄNIPÄÄMirror of Mirror Dreams
'ÄÄNIPÄÄ sees Pansonic's Mika Vainio team up with Sunn O))) figurehead Stephen O’ Malley. Both, of course, have serious pedigree: the former with two decades worth of experimental electronic solo releases under the Ø alias and his own name, the latter across a string of solo and collaborative (Nazoranai, KTL, Lotus Eaters) releases. ÄÄNIPÄÄ's album Through A Pre-Memory is out on Editions Mego, and it features material taken from three years worth of recording sessions. The four-track LP was laid down at Einstürzende Neutbauten’s studio in Berlin, and, according to the label, should be listened to with the following edict in mind: “MAXIMUM VOLUME YIELDS MAXIMUM RESULTS”.'-- Fact Magazine







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p.s. Hey. ** Adrienne White, Hi, A! 'Tard just keeps raking it in!': What a great sentence. Kudos. And, God, so weirdly true. Yeah, I don't know what the metro shutting down thing is about. To disable suburban kids' ability to train into Paris and maraud around under the excuse of drunkenness and a party atmosphere? Ah, a shame that it's not a ball full of real gumbo. I guess it would be cold and unappetizing from sitting up at the top of the ball-lowering structure for hours anyway. But still. What's Muses? I feel like I should know that. I'd love to get to N.O. I'll try to figure out a way. I might be going to the big annual ventriloquist convention this year in Kentucky as part of the research for this ventriloquism theater piece I'm writing for Gisele, and that's, well, not next door but close. I'll try. I'd love to. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. Yeah, since you posted the FN video, I looked into it, and it is hers! What a great thing to get to see it. I'm sure she'll be fine with you posting it. I'm going to see her in Japan, and I'll ask, but I'm sure she's cool with it. I only love clothing on other people. Even before my allergies started up in '91, I dressed low-key shabbily. Ocean regions are nice. I'm from LA, so ... In fact, I think Paris is the only place I've ever lived that wasn't on an ocean. Weird that I'm so okay with merely the Seine and the canal. ** Antonio Heras, Hey, man! Really awesome to see you! Thanks a bunch for supporting TM's crazy stack. Hugs back from cloudy Paris. How are you doing? What's new? ** David Ehrenstein, Hey. I agree with you about those two scenes. Any opportunity to get to watch Taylor Mead be himself is a major treasure. And Bill Murray's bit is typically sublime. ** Steevee, Hi. No, I'm not worried about that at all. Whatever we do is going to be absolutely nothing like what von Triers and Noe are doing, that's for sure. I plan to avoid the von Trier like the plague. I've given his stuff way, way too many chances already. I dread being swamped by the hype and social media blather about it. I'll go back and find what you wrote on Isaac Florentine's films. I hope the interview goes really well. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hey, Ben. Oh, yeah, you sort of can't have anything by or to do with Sade without long stretches of bogging down, I guess. I hope the Skype session goes really well today and is positively revelatory. ** Brendan, Big B! How's it? HNY to you, buddy! That's funny ... someone here was commenting just, I don't know, a week ago, less, about the occult-ish backgrounding of JPL. I intended to go research that, but then I forgot. It does sound like total post fodder. I'll make a note. Hold on. I just did. Yeah, my dad was kind of heavily involved in the beginnings of JPL, but I can't remember the details at the moment. I don't remember him mentioning anything occult-y, but he was kind of allergic to occult stuff because my mom was a bit of an occult-y person. I think you planting a garden in your yard is a purely positive image and anecdote. You're an artist, man. Your yard is a studio, no? Why wouldn't the earth be your material as well as an intriguing assignment? So good to see you, bud. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. So great: it, yesterday, the effect, the high, the coming down, the whole thing. Thank you and blessings on you, sir. ** Flit, Whoa, nice. Dude, broken record, I know, but you write so good. The dance with need must be handled intricately or something, for sure. ** Aaron Mirkin, Hi, Aaron! Oh, cool, I think I might actually be here in Paris during the festival. It's squarely in the window between my Japan and Patagonia/Antarctica trips. I have to go to Germany for a few days, but I think that'll be a sideswipe rather than a roadblock. Cool. So, I'll get to see it, and see you too! I've marked my calendar. Everyone, if you're going to be in Paris in late January and/or very early February, you might very well want to check out the Clermont-Ferrand Film Festival, and, particularly, the screening of filmmaker and d.l. Aaron Mirkin's short film 'We Are Not Here' based on one of the stories in the Lonely Christopher book that was the most recent release in my Little House on the Bowery series/imprint. So, try to do that. Here's info on the film/screening as well as on the festival in general. ** MyNeighbourJohnTurtorro, Hey. May? Oh, I hope I'll be here. I should be. I'll have a ton of reasons to be here working on stuff then. Cool, it would be great to meet. I didn't know about the Unpleasant Meeting Festival, no, and, whoa, what a fucking line up! Roedelius, Luke Fowler, Maja Borg, Heatsick, one of today's stars Mika Vaino, Aki Onda, etc, etc. Which one of the entries is Joe's band? Yeah, that festival is a total must. Thanks a lot for the alert. Sweet. ** MANCY, The video was/is really mega, man! One of your very best if not even the best yet, I think. I cycled it a few times. Great, kudos, great! Man, I love what you do! Add my crossed fingers to yours re: the studio assistant job. Let me know what happens. ** Misanthrope, I read that it was snowing there or around there. A wallop or something, no? Or are you inside the wallop zone? I envy whatever degree of snowfall you're getting. We haven't had the most fragile, tiniest flake of the stuff here yet. I wonder if we will. But I guess I'll get my fill of snow in Antarctica. Or of ice, or whatever that place is made up of. Ugh, shit, about the Medicare thing. That's savage. ** Keaton, Hi. It seems like it's getting easier to steal movies. But I can't remember the last time I did. I ask savvy people to do it for me. What am I talking about anyway? Weird. Glad you liked the slaves. They were a particularly dark bunch, I think. Now you've made me take time out of my day to try to find a twink painted like Grump Cat. Online, I mean. Any tips? ** Creative Massacre, Hi, Misty! Thanks on behalf of Thomas. My new year is pretty damned good so far. Really glad yours is too. High five. It seems like 90% of the people I know in the States are really into 'Game of Thrones'. I haven't seen even a second of it. My TV has been broken for six months or something so, even if they show it here, and they must, I haven't watched. So, all I know about it is that it's kind of fantasy/edgy and sort of weirder/better than a lot of TV, which means I don't know much about it at all. I guess I'll catch up one of these days. Enjoy! ** Cassandra Troyan, Hi, Cassandra! Oh, shit, feel better pronto. And, yeah, I'm being so slow with you-know-what. If I don't send it today, you have my permission to lop off my head, or to find some French person to do that. Weird antics ... any of them shareable? A foot of snow, sigh, envy, sigh. That Vimeo link leads to something of yours? Way cool! I'm so there! Everyone, do yourself a totally massive favor clicking this link and, thenceforth, watch a video called 'SHAME DREAM' by the incredible artist and writer and so much more Cassandra Troyan that's part of a new series she's making. Really, really do it. Thanks, and, yeah, get well, like, now, please? ** Cap'm, Hey, pal! Always a great pleasure! That outfit sure sounds like an infiltrating insider to me, not that I know any academics. Oh wait, of course I do. What's the backstory on your infiltration mission, if I might ask? ** Finis. I made a gig for you today of music I've been listening to and liking a lot of late. Unless you're dead set on traditional song structures and rock bands and all that tired old stuff, ha ha, you might find some things to love up there, who knows? See you tomorrow.

Novel-in-progress scrapbook page #7: Second section, part 3

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"I'm no longer a child and I still want to be, to live with the pirates. Because I want to live forever in wonder. The difference between me as a child and me as an adult is this and only this: when I was a child, I longed to travel into, to live in wonder. Now, I know, as much as I can know anything, that to travel into wonder is to be wonder."-- Kathy Acker

"He seemed excited by the story, which relieved me because it was my gift. My love for him was so immense, I’d decided it would take a fairytale’s unlimited decor to make him happy and would take its blessing of illogic to cause someone reading this who doesn’t want to feel that much for anyone, or who thinks there must be something faithless going on behind a love so vast, believe it was realistic."-- DC










"Love, a feeling unknown, unhoped for, unexpected -- in so far as it could be a matter of conscious awareness, took entire possession of him, and he understood, with joyous amazement, that this was for life.” -- Thomas Mann

"Sometimes you just know something."-- DC











"The sun and your heart are compacted of the same substance."-- Pierre Reverdy

"My heart is like the sun dressed up for Halloween."-- DC













"Love can only consist in failure ... on the fallacious assumption that it is a relationship. But it is not. It is a production of truth."-- Alain Badiou

"He was a mystery, whether he was puzzling to himself or just wanted to be known selectively. I longed to understand him, and he liked or even loved that I did, but he curtailed me at a certain depth, or else he guessed he was exactly who I understood by then and there nothing more covert to find, and he just liked that I was dreaming he was more concealed than who he was because that’s how he loved to see himself and maybe always had."-- DC











“What a wonderful phenomenon it is, carefully considered, when the human eye, that jewel of organic structures, concentrates its moist brilliance on another human creature.” -- Stendhal

"When he's happy, his face becomes the most profound, illusive face or thing or idea or even natural phenomenon in the world. You can not possibly imagine, and words withstand it. It’s the secret to me."-- DC












“All I want to do now is to make a last effort to understand, to begin to understand, how such creatures are possible. No, it is not a question of understanding. Of what then? I don’t know."-- Samuel Beckett

"I wish words weren’t so important when you fantasize about them. I wish sex didn’t make love seem really simple like a gun when you fantasize about it. That’s all."-- DC











“Love goes away when your mind goes away and then you're someone else.” -- Kathy Acker

"He warrants more happiness than anyone on earth could feel without exploding or something. But what would make him feel as jubilant as he deserves is too unrealistic, even for likes of fiction. Or it's not, but the delivery is easier conceptualized than said. Reality's a border where love, however intricately worded, dissipates into the crux of an imaginative leap or becomes explosive, and I'm that limit’s bitch."-- DC












“Genius is no more than childhood recaptured at will, childhood equipped now with man's physical means to express itself, and with the analytical mind that enables it to bring order into the sum of experience, involuntarily amassed.” -- Charles Baudelaire

"He began to call himself an artist when he reached the age when people wanted more than someone's name and how he looked as an ID because the things he dreams of making are too original to qualify as anything but art. But even art's too narrow a jalopy for his thinking. Art is like the chimneys through which Santa Claus ideally can but doesn’t scrunch."-- DC















"Love, with its frantic haughty imagination, swings its object clear of the everyday, over the rut of living, making him all looks, silences, gestures, attitudes, a burning phrase with no context."-- Elizabeth Bowen

"Maybe not unlike his love for dreams in which the clunky world could work with his imagination -- or else stop working, more like, maybe -- my love is too unskilled -- or maybe too skilled, more like -- to develop on my inconvenient surface. So, my love for him outflanks me, or tries its best, and employs the promise of my writing to reorient me as his dreams' devout if ill-equipped assistant, and I assist myself, or maybe both of us, I hope, by phrasing that."-- DC










"You will strike up the march of the future, boys will swear by your name, and thanks to your madness they will no longer need to be mad.” -- Thomas Mann

"I wish to blurt out something that would spread his impact, that, in its rashness and neglect of what I'm known for, would streamline what love's wallop of my measurable language has reduced or else enlarged me to. It definitely feels like I’m enlarging, but what I'm good at hasn’t come along yet."-- DC











“Whatever I wrote was surrounded by rays of light. I used to close the curtains, for I was afraid that the shining rays emanating from my pen might escape into the outside world through even the smallest chink; I wanted suddenly to throw back the screen and light up the world.” -- Raymond Roussel

"He does nothing but make art with every thought he has, but the things that art inhabits are too solid to cooperate. So, for all intents and purposes, his art remains a series of construction sites. Those who think artists must deliver frozen things to qualify as artists think he merely stares and smiles and plays a lot. Or, and this is key, if they’re imaginative enough to feel ambivalent about the object’s status as proof positive, they have everything they need to know he is beyond them, like, say, Michelangelo, but without the disappointing, dated things the artist left."-- DC












“To approach the Other in conversation is to welcome his expression, in which at each instant he overflows the idea a thought would carry away from it. It is therefore to receive from the Other beyond the capacity of the I, which means exactly: to have the idea of infinity. But this also means: to be taught. It comes from the exterior and brings me more than I contain. In its non-violent transitivity the very epiphany of the face is produced.” -- Emmanuel Lévinas

"To please someone, Santa Claus would use his magic skills to make the world seem weird to everybody else, fuck them all, and he would even give himself a gift -- love, someone's -- but someone only loves things that look like things that are unrealizable, and gifts are expositions, and Santa has that stupid overly articulated image problem."-- DC










“There is no such thing as an empty word, only one that is worn out yet remains full.” -- Martin Heidegger

"I’ve decided it’ll take a novel to accumulate enough of my deficient sentences to make anything I'm writing even worthy of him."-- DC












“The poet is never inspired, because he is the master of that which appears to others as inspiration. He does not wait for inspiration to fall out of the heavens like roasted ortolans. He is never inspired because he is unceasingly inspired, because the powers of poetry are always at his disposition, subjected to his will, submissive to his own activity.” -- Raymond Queneau

"People think Santa Claus is so abstractly nice he doesn’t differentiate between the recipients of his kindness. They think he just skims their billions of back stories and doles out goodies by necessity. They think he’s moral and that, to him, they’re traditionally good or bad and, thus, deserve to be rewarded annually or not. They think he thinks in the most average suppositions. They think his brain is almost a computer and his heart is like a Christian church. Actually, they don’t even think that. They just think about gifts or no gifts."-- DC










"O my dearest and most lovable thought, why should I try further to legitimize your birth?"-- Andre Gide

"He had blue eyes so warmed and startled by his thoughts, they looked both blind and blinding yet as compelling to explore as lakes that you’ve been told are bottomless. I also had blue eyes, as engrossing as his, but only when I looked at him or thought about him, which was almost always." -- DC










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p.s. Hey. ** Empty Frame, Hey. I guess we're both the birds and the worms? Krazsnakorkai ... I'm blanking on who/what that is. I think it's just a morning, coffee-impaired blank, though. Deleuze on Bacon? I don't know that stuff. Hunh, curious combo. Those drawings you're doing sound way intriguing. I'm not wild about any of the Rimbaud Collected/Selected books and translations, to be honest. I guess if I had to choose, maybe the Modern Library edition by Wyatt Mason. It's okayish. Wallace Fowlie's aren't too bad but are a little stiff. Avoid the Paul Schmidt ones. I would go for a book w/ 'Illuminations' and/or 'Season in Hell', and my favorite is the Enid Peschel translation of them both in one volume. But if you want the whole shebang in one book, I guess the Mason one, but, like I said, I'm not 100% in favor of it at all. ** Marcus Whale, Hi there, Marcus! Thanks, man, re: the selections. And for the report on the event. It sounds kind of nice, like an event that dawned rather than happened exactly or something. Any documentation of it that one/I could see? You should def. get Michael to show you 'Silence'. I'm going to talk to him in a few hours, and I'll nudge him in your direction when I do. Take care. ** Tomáš, Happy New Year to you! Well, I'll be back on the 21st and then will be here mostly until earlyish February, so let's try to meet up then. As you can surely imagine, a blog post circa "ten vintage porn movies that Dennis could write the script" sounds fantastic and like big fun to me. Yeah, if you don't making that, that would be so great! Thanks, T! ** Scunnard, No prob, thanks, re: the gig. Man, I so wish I had my record player here. I could almost fit it in this very small room where I live, but not fit enough vinyl to make having the player worth the space it would steal from other stuff. Sucks. What a trio of listens those are. Snakefinger, man, how long has it been since I've heard him. And it stills sounds effective? ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Trying to throw an Italo wrench into my gig, are you? Ha ha, kidding. I'll try that track. Everyone, _B_A countered my gig yesterday with a suggestion that you spend some minutes with this example of Italo Disco, and I certainly can't argue with that. Congrats on getting some art-making inspiration. Ah, Kate. Inverted even! I just read some poll the other day that reported which people Americans admire the most, and, in the 'female category', Kate was way up there, which simultaneously boggled my mind and made me briefly very depressed. Maybe my goodie bag will come today. The day remains young. ** David Ehrenstein, Thank you. Has there ever been a really good, and I mean really good novel written by someone who is primarily a musical artist? I can't think of any. I know there are lots of people who think Nick Cave's novels are great, but I don't. ** Kyler, Hi. Wow, I don't think anyone has ever used that pun on me before. So it was super fresh and effective, thank you. Title! I like it. Yeah, it's really good. It's a grower too. Yeah, that worked out really well. Nice, nice, K! I was positively astonished when I thought up the title 'The Sluts' and checked and found out that there had never been a book called that before. So weird. It is kind of the all-time best novel title, if I don't say so myself. But, man, 'TSofRT' has to be a close second. ** Cap'm, Job hunt, argh, yeah, take care of your knees, and best of luck to them and to the entirety of their surroundings, which is a labored way of saying you. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh. I go to Japan on Monday for two weeks, back to Paris on the 21st of January. Drat that our paths there won't intersect. I think I'll probably be in Antarctica when you're in Tokyo. Close but no cigar. Your trip sounds great, and I love that Japan is really good for your sentence structure. That's an exquisite idea. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. Well, as a fan of 'cool' music, I don't mind academics wrapping their heads and jobs around it, I guess. It makes sense even. I think of LA as a city of light, a city with huge, bright-light skies most of the time. That's interesting. Yeah, I think it's relatively quite light there. I guess it can't compete with being in the top parts of Scandinavia at certain times of year where I think it's light 80% of every 24 hours or something. My dad had some important thing to do with Cal Tech, I can't remember exactly what. Maybe he was on their board or directors or something? Very happy to hear that about your and Flit's connection! ** Allesfliesst, Oops, I suspect that today has crashed your browser to smithereens if you're even able to get far enough to read this. Sorry. Hm, yeah, a gigantic novel that is accessible and appealing might not be my thing. It's weird that, if a book is really huge, I can never get into it or work up interest in reading it in the first place unless it's really a difficult read. There seems to be some counter productivity going on there. Yeah, treat me to a super-oishii bowl of soba in Tokyo instead. That sounds good. I'll be long since back from Japan and getting ready to step onto a ship heading for Antarctica about the time you head to Tokyo. Damn. Next time. Thank you! ** Jeffrey Coleman, Hi, Jeff. Tsembla's real good. Cool, I'll go discover those two discoveries that you kindly blessed me with via links. What Cope likes always has something really, really interesting in it. Oh, I see, so the new marijuana thing is going to be kind of just like the medical marijuana thing. That's weird. I can't imagine that it'll stay exclusive like that for very long. Definitely a good step. Definitely the beginning of a bigger step everywhere. Thanks, Jeff. ** Gary gray, Hi, Gary. You sound like you were the kind of person I used to get romantically involved with before I went into therapy and figured myself out a little more, ha ha. It's true, though. You write beautifully and lucidly about it. Fascinating. Speaking of, those two things you're working on sound very exciting. I hope they pan out. It seems like they have everything you would need. Early Baldessari is great. Almost everything up until the 80s. I still like what he does a lot, but there was a searching going on up until then that maybe became paved over by his work's signature look or something. Man, that trailer is nothing like the 'porn' we're making, but it was cool to watch, thanks! ** Keaton, I was going to say something about the youtube ripping thing, but then Keaton said it with an actual key to the problem, if you saw his comment. That fucking plan seems sensible to me. Fucking and being sensible at the same time is an interesting combo. Congrats on the snow. We're still bone-dry over here. Or rather wet as hell, but no flakes. ** Flit, Hi, Flit. Cool, glad the gig got you shoveling. I need skipping needle-type nudges too. Not about writing, but about, well, emailing is writing too, I guess. Thanks, buddy. ** Bill, Thanks for the gig props, man. I think the new Jarmusch is a good one. Better than 'Limits of Control' almost for sure, although I did like certain things about that film. I think the new is more initially up your alley, at least. Up mine too. Art installations, cool. Seriously, I want to see that even in a flat documentative (that's not a word?) version. Best of luck with the deadlines. I hope it ends up being the art that ramps up, and that you yourself will get to ride it like that kid rides that doggie dragon creature in whatever that movie was called. Shit. Oh, 'The Neverending Story', which I never actually saw. Teasers, yes, please. Oh, man, no sweat on the post. I want it, but I'll take it whenever. ** Steevee, Yeah, the ÄÄNIPÄÄ album came out a few weeks ago. I haven't seen any argument against the Scorcese film amongst the crabs against it that has sounded convincing at all. But I haven't seen the film. ** Creative Massacre, Hi. It's true that it seems like all the shows that everybody I know were so into last year are being criticized as having lost their edge or inspiration or something now. I watched first minute or so of that 'Monsters Inside Me' clip before I got squeamish and stopped. I'm weirdly squeamish. But it does look like something one could get really into. Thank you, pal. You have a great weekend too. ** Misanthrope, Those few inches sound wonderfully catastrophic when you got nothing. It seems like if the arctic hated you, it would make things really hot, no? I mean to love is to share or something, right? So, maybe it's just trying to love you the only way it knows how. Re: the medicare thing: who knows indeed. Who the hell fucking knows, for sure. ** MyNeighbour JohnTurtorro, Hey. I was hoping your streak of liking my 'of late' gigs would not be cut short by my latest one, so cool! Thanks! Oh, I see. I totally jumped the wrong gun on those festivals. Damn, Glasgow ... not going to get to that. But Unpleasant Meeting Fest is plenty. The Cravats ... wow, I think I've heard of them and maybe have even heard them. I'm going to go find out. That's clear, yes, and exciting to boot. Best weekend to you too, man. ** Okay. This weekend I'm putting up the new scrapbook page re: my ongoing, building novel. As ever, what it transmits may or may not be of interest or be very legible, I don't know. Anyway, I will be back to blab with you 'live' one last time on Monday before I go to Japan and this blog goes into reruns for two weeks, and I greatly look forward to seeing you then.

Alan presents ... EGYPT

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p.s. Hey. I'm very happy to pre-send the blog off into its short winter reruns phase by offering you a guest-post by a true maestro of "the post", writer and d.l. Alan. Please use your eyes to trace and absorb his Egypt-oriented trajectory and say something to him, if you will. Thanks. And thank you so, so much, Alan! Okay, later today I head off to Japan where I'll be for the next two weeks. During that time, you'll get 10 rerun posts and 2 newbies. Let's say that there won't necessarily be p.s.es per say, other than a daily pre-programmed sentence or two intro-ing the post and saying hi and so on. However, I might just pop in unexpectedly a couple of times along the way to catch up with whatever comments you leave here if I end up having an activity-free morning or two or three. In any case, the blog will return to being its usual self with new posts and fresh p.s.es on January 22nd. Oh, and if anyone out there could make and send me any guest-posts in the next couple of weeks, that would really great of you because when I get back, I'll be scrambling to make new posts amidst almost assured bad jet lag.  Thus, any help the blog can get from you guys would be fantastic. Thank you for your consideration. ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. 'Sad santaness': that's a really nice word and characterization. I can see how it would seem sad, and I guess there's sadness in the novel, but it's ultimately going for hard-fought ecstasy, and we'll see if I can get there. I was just talking about LA as being technically bright courtesy only of the sky. I will pass long your admiration to Fujiko. Zac (my traveling companion) and I will be seeing her and working with her on the Gisele Vienne film that we're all collaborating on. My dad wanted to be a writer when he was young, but he wasn't so good at it. He wrote a memoir that he self-published. His early writer dreams kind of made him feel connected to me in a nice way, but he could also competitive with me too, i.e. 'If I wrote a book, it would be so much better than yours'. Complicated but very interesting guy. Huh, I don't have bad associations with the idea of the universal in combo with the oblique. When I'm writing, I like to put every goal in play, even impossible to achieve ones like universal. It helps me carve myself or something. I don't think I'll be using the word universal in the novel though, or I can't imagine doing so, or not without a ton of countering subtext or something. Thank you about that Santa quote. Do please have the most wonderful next two weeks that you can. ** Empty Frame, My pleasure, man. Thanks, I think I will have a great trip, and you have a great two weeks doing everything you do, okay? ** David Ehrenstein, I can imagine Morrissey pulling off a good novel. Ah, the problem with trying to work with gifs is that, even though I only want, say, a gif featuring dangling legs to be dangling legs in the gif's configuration, there's no way around people recognizing the source and being pulled out of my composition, but I wish that didn't happen. Oh, well. Please have a great next 14 days, sir. ** Misanthrope, I like cold. I don't like heat. So, I guess I'm with you. Hell and Greer were always writers as much as they were musicians, so that's a difference. I hope LPS got home safely -- well, actually I hope you guys made a U-turn -- and that the drive back wasn't too hellish. I guess it's nice that my scrapbook allowed you to get back in touch with your Jeremy Sempter lust. Not my intention, but so it goes, and locking him there was probably just asking for it. Yes, here's another prod to you to get some mileage on your novel while I'm indisposed elsewhere, please? ** Tosh Berman, Thanks, Tosh! I think people seem to think Cave's first novel was better than the second one. I didn't read the second, and I couldn't get through the first one. Musician memoirs are a whole other thing, yeah. Great musician memoirs definitely happen. I'd like to read the Jah Wobble memoir. I'll try to find that. Thanks, T., and have a splendid next 14 days. ** Sypha, Hi, James. Oh, thanks a lot for saying that, man. Really sorry to hear that you're feeling ugh and blah, and I guess it's good timing on the much hyped snow fall. Feel a lot better. Yeah, that Yo La Tengo song is really terrific. I haven't listened to them ages. ** MANCY, Hi, S! Aw, thank you so much! Yeah, ULTRADUSTER rules. I'll do my best to have a great trip, and I'm pretty sure I will, and you do your ultra-best with the next two weeks that time and location have saddled you with, yeah? ** Keaton, Hey. 'I like those little glimpses that can only be seen with bedroom eyes': that's beautiful. Health is definitely a great goal. It's, like, the fundament to all the other pleasures and revelations and all of that. 'Empire ... ': I thought about rereading that pre-this tip, but then I didn't. Best laid daydreams. Yeah, I think this new novel is going to definitely be my best. It sort has to be. Either that or my spectacular disaster. I only know the Disney Peter Pan. I don't even know that film that I swiped all those gifs from. Take care, buddy and see you ere too long happily. ** Antonio Heras, Hi, Antonio! Thank you, man. Well, the novel is essentially about the effect of love -- of feeling it, wanting it, giving it, getting, writing it, etc. -- so that might make it inherently romantic, but ... I used a Badiou quote in the scrapbook where he talk about love as 'a production of truth'. That's kind of more where I'm trying to come from. No, no title for the novel yet. I'm kicking around some possibilities, but nothing has seemed good enough to stick yet. You know, I haven't seen that Peter Pan movie that I took the gifs from. I was just looking for Peter Pan stuff to use in the composition, and the ones from that movie were the most appropriate and interesting re: what I wanted to make. So, I don't know if that movie is any good or not. It's really great to have you back. Sucks that I'm taking my vacation just as you return, but please hang in here while I'm away, and a big hug to you too! ** Kyler, Aw, gosh, thank you, my friend. Yeah, I'll get to spend my birthday on this amazing Japanese 'art' island, Naoshima, and with my favorite person in the world, so it should be a really good one. I was in three rock bands during the early phase of my developing as a writer, and I obviously have a bunch of music references in my novels, and they're as influenced by music as they are by writing, but you sound like you got much further with your musical side/talent than I did. My musical talent was tiny, which I guess was all for the best. Take good care for the next while. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! Thanks a lot for saying that, Chris. It means a lot. Super sweet that they want to publish the interview. Wow, that's really cool news. Thank you again so much for doing that. I'm really glad you like 'Wide Eyed'. I love that book a lot. It was a total boon to get to publish it. Trinie is amazing. ‘The Orange Eats Creeps’ is really great too, for sure. I think I've only read or tried to read some fiction I found online by James Franco. I didn't think much of it at all, or not enough to read more than a bit. Of course, not having read more than a bit or bits means I don't really have an informed opinion about it. I guess I would say it seemed like slightly quirky MFA-instructed writing. Nothing about it stood out as promising or anything, or not enough to me to keep investigating it. I'll check out Micael Cera's writing. I had no idea that he wrote. I can't figure out the Labeouf plagiarism thing either. I guess maybe it sort of seems like maybe he did plagiarize, and now he's trying to spin it into a Franco or Joaquim Phoenix kind of performative act by piling on more plagiarism or something? I can't really get sufficiently interested in it to try deconstructing it. I did see the "lean" thing, yeah. Curious to see what this is all about. Take good care and have a super great couple of weeks, Chris! ** Robert-nyc, Thank you so very kindly, Robert. That's so good of you to say. You great, I hope? ** Paul Curran, Thanks a lot, Paul! I head to where you are tonight. Yeah, other than a first day in Tokyo, during I think we'll mostly drift around in jet lag mode, we'll be in Tokyo from the night of the 16th until we head back to Paris on the 21st. You're working during then? Maybe at least we can have a get together for a coffee or something if you have time? I'll write to you from the road just before we head back to Tokyo, and hopefully we can plan a meet up. Oh, Kidzania is a no-go, eh? That's okay. I have a feeling that it's one of those things that's a lot more exciting in concept than in 3D point of fact. So, hopefully I'll see you in person before too long! ** Scunnard, Thanks, Jared. I'm sorry about your funk. Oh, well, there's a quote or two by me in that scrapbook that you can take as some kind of support or hug re: the non-materialization issue. The Cure's 'Pornography' is so good. Definitely my fave of theirs, and I don't think I've ever listened to it not on vinyl. 'Strange Day': my favorite Cure song. That's kind of how I guessed Snakefinger would sound now. I think your description is probably enough for me. Me? You mean re: older musical stuff? Uh, I wasted or used a while yesterday watching this BBC documentary about Peter Green and about the era of Fleetwood Mac when he was their god and they were kind of genius. There are actually characters based on Green and Danny Kirwan from FM in my novel. So, I was getting back into how great that early FM is. That's probably the closest. Be well and be yourself maximally during my break please. ** Thomas Moronic, Thanks so much, T! I will have an amazing time Japan for sure, and you have amazing time in the UK! ** Allesfliesst, Hi, Kai. Antarctica? Let's see ... oh, my friend Zac mentioned that going to Antarctica was one of his big lifelong dreams, and I thought about how bizarre and remarkable it would be to go there, so I said, Let's do it, and we looked into how it was possible, and it was possible but expensively and only in a full-fledged way if you took a ship from Argentina, so we just decided to do it and to go even more extravagant by spending a week in Patagonia beforehand, 'cos, you know, life's short and all of that. It won't be the same without you there in Japan, but we'll probably have fun. Yeah, you've been talking about a trip to Paris ever since we first cyber-met. If there's a penguin university in Antarctica, I'll pick up its brochure, scan it, and send it on to you. Yeah, the novel is kind of a love explosion, but especially the second section, which what I've been scrapbooking lately. It's definitely a challenge, but so far it's been working really well, and I'm kind of amazed by that, but we will see. Thanks a lot, Kai, and have a lovely couple of weeks if I don't interact with you from there. ** Flit, Hi, Flitster. Aw, man, thanks. Yeah, I was kind of thrilled that I could build that legs waterfall and fireworks pool at the bottom. All the quotes by me in the scrapbook page are taken directly from the novel, or at least from the current draft of the novel. Thank you so much. Heavily and intricately rock the time while I'm away please. ** Creative Massacre, Oh, no, being made squeamish is really good for me. I love a challenge, and my squeamishness seems silly to me, so it was very good! My weekend was mostly just getting ready to leave tonight, with some art-seeing and friend-seeing and Parisian Mexican food tossed in, but it was good. Oh, you're in the path of that much ballyhooed cold that we over here in merely chilly Europe keep reading about. I guess try to find it interesting, if you can, and I'm sure you will. Take care of your good self, Misty, and see you soon! ** Etc etc etc, Hi, Casey! It's great to see you! I'm glad I got to see you before I split. You're in Austin with the remains of DFW, cool. That's going to be so incredibly fascinating. Thank you kindly for your great words about the scrapbook page. Yeah, thank you a lot! Oh, please do keep me informed about your DFW discoveries and your no doubt great related ruminations. Enjoy everything! ** Steevee, Hi. No, I'm not worried about that trapped ship thing. It was on an explorative mission into the internal area of Antarctica, and that's why it got stuck on its way out. I think our ship is going to just cruise along the periphery and let us explore only the crust, so it should be okay. The only thing I'm worried about is the voyage there and back in combo with my tendency to get very, very seasick. I hope that all works out smoothly with the repair of your remote. It sounds like it's mostly likely to be fine. And I hope you have an excellent next couple of weeks, my friend. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Thank you. There's a new Pettibon book? Man, there are so many Pettibon books out there, Jesus, not that I'm complaining even the tiniest bit. Yeah, Zac and I saw a new Pettibon show when we were in NYC recently, and it was as dark and genius as hell. Enjoy, and tell me how the Buchloh essay is.  I'm curious. I'll enjoy my travels, thank you, man, and I look forward to getting to catch up. I hope your project goes really, really well while I'm off and away. ** Gary gray, Hi, Gary. Christians are the quaintest things on those rare occasions when they're not just awful and determined to ruin everybody else's fun and logic. Very nice reversed intro. Really promising. I'll read it again and more closely once I've run my pre-trip errands and have a more peaceful mind. Thanks for your wish for my fun in Japan. It seems pretty destined. And thank you about my scrapbook page. Be well, write well, until next we get to chew each other's fat, man. ** Bill, Thank you, Bill! Wow, given 'Doctor Faustus's' length, it's trippy to imagine you reading it, ha ha. I'll do my best to make the Japan trip worthy of your envy. See you soon! ** MyNeighbour JohnTurtorro, Thanks a lot, buddy. Means a ton. And thank you for the Japan well wishes. I'll try to report in from there if I can. Have a great couple of next 14 days! ** Okay. Get into Alan's wonderful post now, please. Maybe I'll be checking in from Japan before too long. I'll try. In any case, I hope the upcoming spate of reruns gives you pleasure if you decide to stick around this place for the duration. Best of the best to all of you until we get to be immediate and blabby once again. The blog will see you tomorrow.

Rerun: 31 notches in The Fall's big belt (orig. 03/10/07)

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Absolute basics
1. The Fall are an English post-punk band, formed in Manchester in 1976. Named after the English translation of Albert Camus' novel, La Chute (The Fall) (1956), they are notable for their idiosyncratic and innovative music, leader Mark E. Smith's enigmatic lyrics and drawling delivery, and for their subtle influence on several generations of musicians. Formed during punk rock's rise, The Fall never quite fit into that movement or its post-punk/new wave offshoots. For over a quarter of a century, The Fall have continued to produce music which varies richly in both character and quality. The abrasive lyrics and instantly recognizable half-droned, half-ranted vocals of frontman Mark E. Smith provide the one consistent note through more than three prolific decades of dizzying personnel changes. An interview with Smith in May, 2004 reported "49 (band) members, 78 albums and 41 singles," and also quoted the opinion of their longstanding fan, the legendary English DJ John Peel: "They are always different, they are always the same."

2. Mark E. Smith sculpture


3.Acknowledged influences from: The Monks, Link Wray, The Seeds, Can, Captain Beefheart, Frank Zappa, The Residents, Van der Graaf Generator, The Velvet Underground.
4.Acknowledged influence on: Sonic Youth, Suede, Wu Tang Clan, Pavement, Radiohead, Buck 65, DJ Shadow, Mobb Deep, Nick Cave, Bloc Party, Franz Ferdinand, LCD Sound System, Clinic, etc., etc.

5.Official Fall Website< 6.Unofficial Fall Website
7.The Pseud Mag: The Fall Fanzine
8.The Fall Gig Repository

9. Drawing by a 13 yr old Fall fan


10.Watch Mark E. Smith receive the NME Godlike Genius Award (2:53)


11. In January 2005, The Fall were the subject of an hour long BBC 4 documentary, The Wonderful and Frightening World of Mark E. Smith

Watch Part One
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four
Part Five
Part Six
Part Seven
Part Eight
Part Nine



____________

Five explanations for #10

12.

'Smile / 2x4' live on The Tube, 1983 (7:17)

13.

Interview, Bombast and Cruiser's Creek live on The Tube 1985

14.

'I Am Damo Suzuki' live at the Hacienda, 1985 (8:03)

15.

'Mr. Pharmacist' promo clip (2:27)

16.

'A Lot of Wind' on MTV's 120 Minutes, 1991 (5:26)



____________




Extracurricular
17.'I Am Kurious Oranj' (1988) Music: The Fall. Choreography: Michael Clark


'The last thing most Fall fans expected the group to do in 1988 was provide music for a ballet, but in fact this is what they did. Of course, it helped that the Michael Clark company of dancers were some of the most avant-garde at the time in Britain and were inspired originally by the Fall's "Hey! Luciani" single. The concept, very loosely, centers around William and Mary of Orange, and finds Smith arranging William Blake's "Jerusalem" for the band, adding his own lyrics ("It was the fault of the government," providing ironic contrast to the self-sufficiency espoused in Blake).' -- Answers.com





Watch a scene from 'I Am Kurious Oranj' (1:55)


Watch a clip from 'Hail the New Puritans,' Charles Atlas's documentary about the Michael Clark/Fall collaborations (2:11)



18.'Hey! Luciani' (1986), Mark E. Smith's play


"'Hey! Luciani' lasts about 100 minutes and features new Fall music themes for each of the play's main character, 'Have Found Boorman' (for the all-girl Israeli commando group who appear as a mysterious but vital connection in the thickening plot), 'Sleep Debt Snatches' which has a reggae atmosphere, a machine heart and spine cracking drumbeat, and 'Informant' which, fittingly in view of posthumous revelation of the cheeseburger being a narc is "the Elvis Presley type number." Apart from The Fall, there's Trevor Stewart as The Pope, Lucy Burgess as the ballet dancer and Pope's right hand girl, Michael Clark has a brief role and Leigh Bowery, star of the excellent Smith-directed video for 'Mr Pharmacist', is head of accounts at The Vatican. 'The play is a simulation of the conspiracy theory around Luciani Albino, Pope John Paul 1, says Smith. 'The middle bit splits up other things - South America and Britain, for instance. No way is it a factual indictment of Catholicism or even The Vatican. People think when they hear it's about the pope that it must either be a 'rock musical' or anti-religious statement or something. Which is a sad reflection on the way the theatre is viewed in this country. I chose the setting because the characters appealed to me and hopefully it makes good drama.'" -- from NME, December 13, 1986

Watch Mark E. Smith discuss 'Hey! Luciani' with Jools Holland on The Tube, 1986 (3:05)


Read a recreation of the original script of 'Hey! Luciani'


____________




Sans music
19. In 1989, the NME decided to host a 'Rock Summit' for their end-of-the-year issue.' So they put Mark E. Smith, Nick Cave, and Shane McGowan together in pub, plied them with drinks, and recorded their conversation.


Nick Cave"I think we have all tended to create some kind of area where we can work without particularly having to worry about what's fashionable."
Mark E. Smith"Yes, fair enough. But I think there's a lot of differences in this trio here. Nick was very rock'n'roll to me but he's turned his back on it which was cool. Shane's more, I dunno. To me the Pogues are the good bits from the Irish showband scene, like the Indians. You had that feel, probably lst that now. Your work's good though."
Shane McGowan"Fuck it man. Who wants to work in a place where there's all these people looking at you ?"
MES"Are you talking about your gigs ? You should stop doing them, then."
SM"Can't afford to."
MES"Fuck it, you could fight not to if you don't like it."
SM"...and leave the rest of them in the lurch ?"
MES"Nah, the rest of your band will always complain about not working. If you're paying them a wage tell them to stay at home and behave themselves."
SM"It's a democracy our band."
MES"Why aren't they here with you then ?"
SM"Cos the NME didn't want to interview them."
MES'Cos nobody'd recognise them."
SM"That's it ! They want to interview us because we've got distinctive characteristics. They just want to interview three high-brow loonies."
MES"In that case you should have brought your mate Joe Strummer along."
SM"I said high-brow loonies."
(read the rest)

20. Watch Mark E. Smith read out the classified football results on the BBC


21.Selected quotes


'Blue cheese contains natural amphetamines. Why are students not informed about this?'

'I've done all these scripts for a science fiction series, actually, a British science fiction series, worked me fucking balls off on them. Six stories, really short. Did the music, everything, made it all tight as fucking fuck. And they said it was complete crap. Then The X-Files comes on. Same company, they want to see me scripts, because The X-Files is running out of ideas, or they want to use the music or something. I said send 'em back, I just need to look through them, and I fucking burned them.'

'You should read "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich", that's proper journalism. I mean, he followed fucking Goebbels around, stayed up all night doing stuff, listening to tapes of broadcasts. Nowadays, they can't spell, they can't fuckin' paragraph for a start and that puts 'em right out in my book. You want to know what I read? The Daily Mail. You want to know why? Because everything is spelt correctly. I know it's a load of fuckin' bosh, but at least you understand it.'

'I used to be psychic, but I drank my way out of it.'

'Pre-cog is a Fall word.'

'English people will go to Africa and work out all the different tribes, but they won't look at themselves. It makes me laugh, this ashamed of being English thing, cos it's the most tolerant fucking country in the world. We went to Wales with Super Furry Animals, and it was like the fucking 'Wicker Mari - end of the night, they're all pissed, singing Welsh songs, running around outside. The bouncer's going 'You're English, you'd better stay in the van; and they've all got Welsh flags and stuff. We go back to the van and there's like 3,000 Welshmen with fucking torches going 'Adoobedoobedoo'. Imagine if that was fucking Germans or something!'

'John Walters wrote me a letter and said, you know, ‘you are the worst group I’ve ever seen in the [laughs] in the history of mankind’ [laughs]. He was good like that, John Walters was. You ever meet him? No, he was f**king fantastic. He said, ‘you were the worst, tuneless, rubbish I’ve ever heard’, you know, ‘even worse than Siouxsie and the Banshees’. This is what he wrote ‘you’re even worse than Siouxsie and the Banshees. I didn’t believe it was possible.’ You know what I mean? [laughs] He was a gem, what a gem.'


____________

Recent, rare, special guests

23.

The Fall 'White Lightning', rare biker promo clip, 1991 (2:05)

24.

The Fall with Coldcut 'Telephone Thing,' live in 1990 (4:09)

25.

'Blindness,' live on German TV in 2006 (5:31)

26.

The Fall live at Womad Festival in 1985 (1:16:45)

27.

Inspiral Carpets feat. Mark E. Smith 'I Want You,' 1994 (3:12)



____________




Misc.
28.Renegade: The Gospel According to Mark E. Smith (Penguin, July, 2007)


The first autobiography by the legendary leader of The Fall. Still going after thirty years, The Fall are one of the most distinctive British bands, their music — odd, spare, cranky and repetitious — an acknowledged influence on The Smiths, The Happy Mondays, Nirvana and Franz Ferdinand. And Mark E. Smith IS The Fall. For the first time we get to hear his full, candid take on the ups and downs of a band as notorious for its in-house fighting as for its great music; and on a life that has endured prison in America, drugs, bankruptcy, divorce and the often bleak results of a legendary thirst.
Preorder it here

29. My 10 favorite Fall songs (in no order)


1. 'Cruisers Creek'
2. 'Hep Priest'
3. 'Oswald Defense Lawyer'
4. 'Bremen Nacht'
5. 'C.R.E.E.P.'
6. 'My New House'
7. 'Carry Bag Man'
8. 'Hey! Luciani'
9. 'I Am Damo Suzuki'
10. 'Terry Waite Sez'

30.Read 'The Fall in Concert' by Luz


31. Mark E. Smith turned 50 on March 5th

Wish him Happy Birthday here.
The Fall's new album Reformation Post-TLC is their most exciting and furious in several years. You can buy it here
The Fall Forum
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p.s. Hey. Welcome to the first day of the reruns and two scattered new posts that will accompany my vacation away from the blog for the next two weeks. I should be in Tokyo today unless something weird happened. Enjoy this old paean to The Fall, I hope.

Rerun: Some of the skinny on Raymond Roussel (orig. 03/07/07)

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"A formidable poetic apparatus" -- Marcel Proust------"Raymond Roussel belongs to the most important French literature of the beginning of the century" -- Alain Robbe-Grillet------"Genius in its pure state" -- Jean Cocteau------“Things, words, vision and death, the sun and language create a unique form ... Roussel in some way has defined its geometry” -- Michel Foucault------"Creator of authentic myths" -- Michel Leiris------"A great poet" -- Marcel Duchamp------ An imagination which joins the mathematicians’ delirium to the poets’ logic” -- Raymond Queneau------"The President of the Republic of Dreams" -- Louis Aragon------"The greatest mesmerist of modern times" -- André Breton------"Among the strangest and most enchanting works in modern literature" -- John Ashbery------"My fame will outshine that of Victor Hugo or Napoleon" -- Raymond Roussel



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Chapter One: How I Wrote Certain of My Books

'Raymond Roussel was born into an immensely wealthy Parisian family in 1877 (he died a suicide in 1933), the money surrounding him acting as a cocoon between himself and reality. The quotidian is notable by its absence from his work: this is not a literature with much appeal for anyone in search of a social conscience. But if one is magnetized by works of the imagination derived almost solely from linguistics, Roussel represents some kind of summation. How I Wrote Certain of My Books, the posthumously published testament in which Roussel delineates many--but by no means all--of his writing techniques, is, as they say, essential reading. As a vade mecum it doesn't necessarily make the books easier to penetrate, but it does provide some clue as to what lies beneath them (though no matter how knowledgeable these clues make us, as readers, feel, no amount of shouting "Open Sesame!" at the threshold of the books entices them to reveal all their secrets).' -- Trevor Winkfield, Context



Buy it



Excerpt:Locus Solus (Chapter I)

On that Thursday in early April, my learned friend the professor Martial Canterel had invited me, with several other close friends of his, to visit the huge park surrounding his beautiful villa at Montmorency.

Locus Solus, as the property is named, is a quiet refuge where Canterel enjoys in perfect intellectual peace the pursuit of his diverse and fertile labors. He is in this lonely place sufficiently safe from the tur-bulence of Paris, and yet can reach the capital in a quarter of an hour whenever his research demands a session in some particular library, or when the time comes for him to make, at a prodigiously packed lecture, some sensational announcement to the scientific world.

Canterel spends nearly the entire year at Locus Solus, surrounded by disciples who, full of passionate admiration for his unending discoveries, support him zealously in the completion of his life’s work. The villa contains a number of rooms opulently converted into model laboratories, which are run by numerous assistants; and the professor devotes his whole life to science, having from the start leveled all the practical obstacles met in the course of his strenuous application to the various goals he sets, through his vast, uncommitted bachelor’s fortune.

Three o’clock had just struck. It was warm, and the sun sparkled in a nearly flawless sky. Canterel had received us not far from his villa, in the open, under old trees whose shade enveloped a comfortable arrangement of various wicker chairs.

After the arrival of the last guest, the professor started walking, leading our group, which followed him obediently. Tall and dark, his countenance frank, his features regular, with a slight moustache and keen eyes that shined with extraordinary intel-ligence, Canterel hardly looked his forty-four years. A warm persuasive voice lent great charm to his engaging elocution, whose seductiveness and clarity made him a champion in discourse.

For a while we had been advancing along a lane whose slope rose steeply.

Halfway up, at the path’s edge, we perceived, upright in a rather deep stone niche, a curiously aged statue, which seemed to be composed of blackish, dry, hardened earth, representing, not unpleasantly, a smiling naked boy. The arms were stretched outwards in a gesture of offering, both hands opening towards the ceiling of the niche. In the right hand, where once it had taken root, rose a small dead plant in the last stages of decay.

Going on absent-mindedly, Canterel was obliged to answer our unanimous question.

"This is the santonica Federal seen by ibn Batuta in the heart of Timbuctoo," he said, pointing to the statue; whose origin he then revealed.



____________




Chapter Two: Impressions of Africa

'Such raiding of the nursery to conjure up adult myths produced Roussel's first indisputable masterpiece, the novel Impressions of Africa, published in 1910 at the author's expense (as were all his books) under the prestigious Lemerre imprint. It begins like a boy's adventure story: a group of shipwrecked passengers are captured and held for ransom by an African king, Talou VII. To while away their time and keep their captors entertained, each captive is allotted a theatrical task or test of mechanical ingenuity based on his inherent skills, to be performed at a gala before their release. But in a reversal of the plot of his early short story 'Among the Blacks' and in defiance of all the rules of detective fiction, Roussel first explains and then describes his mysteries, somewhat like the playwright who, in the opening scene, tells us who the murderer is and then spends the rest of the play explaining why he did it. Suspense is thus dispensed with at the opening of the adventure. But it remains one of his greatest triumphs as a storyteller that after all the mysteries have been unravelled and explained away, they become even more mysterious--hence his appeal to modernists and ourselves. A further aspect of his appeal resides in his manipulation of people. Not exactly as a puppet master, but one who shuffles his characters around to serve the same purpose as words, strictly to unfold the story. No one could be less interested in psychology than Roussel. The surface of things is paramount, characters being defined by their rituals and attributes, not their personalities. Their belongings as a result can be more animistic than their owners.' -- T.W., Context



Buy it



Roussel on his compositional method for IOA: "I chose two similar words. For example billiards and pilliards (looter). Then I added to it words similar but taken in two different directions, and I obtained two almost identical sentences thus. The two sentences found, it was a question of writing a tale which can start with the first and finish by the second. Amplifying the process then, I sought new words reporting itself to the word billiards, always to take them in a different direction than that which was presented first of all, and that provided me each time a creation moreover. The process evolved/moved and I was led to take an unspecified sentence, of which I drew from the images by dislocating it, a little as if it had been a question of extracting some from the drawings of rebus. For example, Les lettres du blanc sur les bandes du vieux billard/The white letters on the cushions of the old billiard table… must somehow reach the phrase, …les lettres du blanc sur les bandes du vieux pillard/letters [written by] a white man about the hordes of the old plunderer."


____________




Chapter Three: Locus Solus

'This notion of lives episodically unfolding "before our very eyes" is carried even further in Roussel's second and final novel, Locus Solus, first published on the eve of World War I (his sole comment on that conflagration--"I've never seen so many men!"--being a mordant example of his blinkered humor) and for many of us his greatest, most perfect narrative construction. Set in the spacious grounds of Locus Solus, the "solitary place" inhabited by Martial Canterel, a wealthy scientific genius living on the outskirts of Paris, the novel's form, even more so than that of Impressions, relies for its model on the travelogue. Here our guide actually is a professor, one who escorts his guests through his landscape of marvels. A partial tabulation of what his guests are asked to admire would include a curious, antique sculpture molded from dry earth of a naked child holding forth a wizened flower; an aerial paving beetle-cum-weather forecaster which builds a mosaic made from rotten teeth, guided thither and yon by the wind (whose movements Canterel has predicted days in advance). Further on, we come across a gigantic faceted aquarium containing a curious medley of objects and creatures, including a depilated cat who, aided by a pointed metal horn, galvanizes the floating remains of Danton's head into speech; a dancer with musical tresses; and a troupe of bottle-imps performing scenes from folklore and history as they rise and fall through the oxygenated water. The central marvel, however, involves what amounts to a glass-enclosed graveyard where eight corpses are reanimated (thanks to Canterel's preparations of vitalium and resurrectine) in order to relive the capital moments of their lives, attended by their ecstatically grieving (but still living) relatives.

'This précis barely skims the surface of the novel's layout, which, like that of Impressions, is delineated by descriptions, which in turn expand and engender other descriptions, followed by explanations of those descriptions. And such is the concision of Roussel's language that itemizing all the episodes and their ramifications would entail a tabulation almost as detailed as the books themselves, ending up with something very much like Lewis Carroll's lugubrious map, the one that's so detailed it's on a scale of one mile to one mile, thus completely covering the landscape it is intended to elucidate.' -- T.W., Context



The novel Locus Solus can be downloaded for free from Project Gutenberg here

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Manuscript page from Locus Solus


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Two of Roussel's graphs/drawings related to Locus Solus





____________




Chapter Four: New Impressions of Africa

'Roussel's penultimate opus, New Impressions of Africa, is not, as its name seems to imply, a continuation of the earlier novel. Rather it is one of the most complex poems in the French language, four cantos based loosely on four Egyptian tourist sites. Not only is the text complex, it looks impenetrable. The layout proclaims "No Trespassing" to the casual reader, with its thicket of brackets within brackets within brackets and attendant footnotes as austere and foreboding as any Rosetta Stone. But once inside it reveals itself as even more impenetrable! For instance, the opening of the third canto (ostensibly extolling the virtues of a column on the outskirts of Damietta which, when licked, cures jaundice) is brought to a halt after only five lines by the mention of hope, leading to a parenthesis dealing with an American uncle whose nephews have hopes of inheritance. But that touching scene is not completed for five or six pages, the word "American" having provoked a double-parenthesis dealing with "that land still young, still unexhausted" whose dog's cold nose triggers a trio of brackets and a brief revery on an ailing pup. Which in turn triggers a bracketed aside within four parentheses, then another within five. After barely one hundred lines, even the most astute and intrepid explorer is all at sea and gasping for air. This avalanche of interruptions is akin to that produced by a group of partygoers, with one conversationalist being interrupted barely after he's begun talking; meantime his interrupter is in turn cut short by the person across the table whose memory has just been jolted, so she in turn relates an anecdote, which reminds her neighbor of a funny story . . . and so on and so forth. This simplistic exegesis of the technique is, I hope, sufficient to show that it's not for readers cursed with a one track mind. But to those who persevere, this Everest of High Modernism donates rich comfort: like all truly great works of art, it is inexhaustible in its rewards. The density of the language--its pared-down compression--is such that each line could be ascribed a physical weight as well as length. As Roussel himself said of an earlier version of this poem, abandoned after countless revisions, an entire lifetime would have been insufficient to complete the polishing. Likewise (and I know whereof I speak) an entire lifetime is insufficient to fully disentangle (and understand--my italics) its myriad branches. The same, of course, may be said of Roussel's entire oeuvre.' -- T.W., Context



Buy it
Read the introduction by translator Andrew Hugill



Excerpt:

Canto I
Damietta

The House in Which Saint Louis Was Imprisoned


Serious reflection, weighing it up, brings the certain
Realisation that there, behind that door,
The Saint-King was imprisoned for three months! ...Louis IXth!
But how can it be that this seems tangible and new
In this place strewn about with crumbling marvels
Than which there are none older under the sun!
Evoking, as if it were yesterday:
That name whose bearer, though crushed, is so proud of
That he knows by heart, faultlessly,
- Roots, trunks, boughs, connecting branches -
His family tree; the cathedrals eroded by time;
Likewise the proud menhir, the first cromlech
The dolmen beneath which the soil is always dry.

Canto II
The Battle-Field of The Pyramids

This battlefield conjures up nothing but the memory of him
At the time of the overcoat - that full-length greatcoat -
And the little hat - from which we can deduce
Intimidating rays of power emanating in all directions -
Grey overcoat, black hat (the image of which irresistibly evokes
The era when Kings were brought low
And which historians cannot leave alone;)
Worn by him up to the point when, on his craggy rock,
It no longer exaggerated his silhouette,
A fact which causes one to forget for a moment, lost in meditation,
Egypt, its sun, its evenings, its sky.


____________





Credits, further:


Meet Trevor Winkfield,
Roussel scholar, artist, writer



*
Context: A Forum for Literary Arts and Culture
* Raymond Roussel Resource (in French)



Francois Caradec Raymond Roussel (Atlas Press)
'The bizarre life of Raymond Roussel (1877-1933) had the makings of a Jules Verne novel, rivalling only his writings in outlandishness. His specially-constructed motorized caravan, his travels through Africa behind closed shutters, and his mysterious death in a Palermo hotel are among the numerous details of his extraordinary life. First published in France in 1972, Caradec's biography remains the definitive unraveling of the Rousselian enigma.' -- Amazon
Buy it



Mark Ford Raymond Roussel and the Republic of Dreams (Cornell University Press, 2000)
'Mark Ford's biography is a welcome introduction to both the man and the work. Ford offers both biography and a critical study of Roussel's unusual literary undertakings. Roussel's life and work were equally bizarre. They make for fascinating material, and Ford makes the most of them. Ford also has some fun with Roussel's efforts for the stage (put on at his own expense), spectacles that enjoyed some vogue mainly because of the strong and vociferous reactions by the audience ("There followed a scrum, as in rugby," Robert Desnos' wife Youki reports about the audience at one of the performances).' -- Complete-review.com
Buy it



Michel Foucault Death and the Labyrinth: The World of Raymond Roussel (introduction by John Ashbery, Continuum, 1963)
'Death and the Labyrinth was Foucault's first book, and the one focussed most specifically on literature. In it Foucault offers a thorough study of Roussel's work, paying particular attention to Roussel's special method, as outlined in his posthumous text, How I Wrote Certain of my Books. A bonus is translator Charles Ruas' interview with Foucault, shortly before his death. It offers some background about Foucault's interest in and understanding of Roussel -- and about Foucault himself.' -- Complete-review.com
Buy it
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p.s. Hey. I'm away and, thus, kept away from doing the p.s. in my usual wordy fashion right now, as you probably know. The sublime Raymond Roussel is up above. Why not have at him?

Rerun: SYpHA_69 presents ... American Psycho Day (orig. 02/24/07)

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AMERICAN PSYCHO: The Discovery

----I first learnt about American Psycho during my second year as a student at Rhode Island College (around 1999). At that time, I had a huge interest in extreme feminism and thus spent a lot of time at the library in the feminist section. Eventually I came across a feminist book that had two articles on American Psycho. It was the first time I had ever heard about the book, and at the time I didn’t even know who its writer, Bret Easton Ellis, was. The name of the first article was “There Are Better Ways of Taking Care of Bret Easton Ellis Than Just Censoring Him,” written by Tara Baxter (this article may be found in the links section below). I forget who wrote the second article, but I do remember that it dealt with the feminist reaction to the novel in question. While on one hand I sympathized with the feminists, on the other hand I was very much intrigued by the excerpts that they cited as being harmful to women. You see, at the time I was also very interested in serial killers, and so it was only natural that a book about a serial killer would pique my curiosity. And I found something erotic about the more violent passages that kind of disturbed me. Looking back now, some of those extreme feminists seem downright loony, as you can read in the two links below. If anything, I think their actions just generated even more curiosity about the book, which probably didn’t help their cause. I also became interested when I found out that Mary Harron (whose first film, I Shot Andy Warhol, I was a huge fan of) would be adapting it for the big screen. Still, many years went by before I finally went about buying the book (not to mention watching the film).
----Fast-forward to winter of 2004. I had just started working my first full-time job, at Barnes & Noble. During this period I was extremely interested in the, for want of a better term, “dark side of the human soul.” In particular I was interested in examining my own dark side, an examination that is still ongoing, though not as intense as it was back then. I was immersing myself in black magic, books by people like Dennis Cooper and Peter Sotos, and listening to very violent power electronics music made by bands such as Whitehouse, who I had discovered a few years earlier, while I was still in college. I had read somewhere that William Bennett, Whitehouse’s lead singer, was a big fan of American Psycho and Bret Easton Ellis in general. Remembering all those violent passages I had read years ago at RIC, I decided the time had finally come to read the book. So I purchased it at the local Borders sometime in March of 2004, and watched the movie the following month. I figured it would be a good way of exploring my violent fantasies regarding women, fantasies that are not quite as vivid today as they were back then, though they still crop up from time to time (some of these more recent fantasies including mutilating a woman’s asshole with a butcher knife and forcing her to eat her own sphincter, and another involves pouring bleach down a woman’s cunt using a rolled-up Dworkin book as a funnel… yeah, I’m creative like that).
----To make a long story longer, I fell head over heels in love with the book. To state it had a huge impact on me would be a dramatic understatement. I felt like I had finally discovered something I had been searching for my entire life. Something that made me feel complete. Something that vindicated my own theories regarding what you could and couldn’t do in fiction. A book that didn’t just break the literary rules, it shat all over them. I didn’t understand how people found the book boring, as I found it totally intriguing, with it’s dense layers upon layers of language, the massive amount of banal information that it bombarded the reader with, information I soon came to interpret as valuable data meant to be catalogued. I don’t often re-read books but American Psycho is one that I’ve read over and over again. The first time I read it was just for pleasure and cheap titillation. Now I read it more for the humor than anything else, as it really does have a lot of laugh out loud moments, especially if your sense of humor is as sick and twisted as mine. Soon I began taking notes. Lots of notes. Analyzing the novel’s internal timeline. Making a list of all the songs that get referenced in the book. Creating lists of the articles of clothing Patrick Bateman wears during the course of the novel. Eventually, I became obsessed with the book. I decided that I would become one of the most obsessive American Psycho fan boys to ever walk the earth. I wanted to become, in other words, an American Psycho scholar (why not? I already classify myself as, among other things, an H.P. Lovecraft historian). It should also be observed that the book had a huge effect on my own writing (some of you may recall that on the Confusion day I created back in December I listed Bret Easton Ellis as one of my book’s primary influences, in particular the book American Psycho).
----What follows is not just an article about the book itself, but also a chronicle of my obsession with the book. As such, it deals less with the themes of the novel (which have been over-analyzed to death anyway by others) and functions more as a microscopic look at various aspects of the book that interest me. It begins with a short history of the novel and its reception (most of which is culled from Jamie Clarke’s excellent interview with Bret Easton Ellis: see links below), proceeds onward to a very detailed profile of the book’s anti-hero Patrick Bateman, analyzes the timeline of the book’s narrative, looks at the locations mentioned in the book, brief thoughts on the film and the book’s use of music, a few choice extracts from the text itself, and so on. It ends with a few questions about the book I’d like to ask Ellis himself should I ever meet him one day, a brief trivia section, and finally some links of interest. Relevant pictures are scattered throughout to illustrate certain points. I’m not sure if this will be of interest to anyone who hasn’t read the book yet (or even people who have read the book), but I do hope it sheds the notion that fans of the novel are illiterate alpha male jocks who only read it for the sex and gore. Sure, the sex and gore are fun, but there’s also so much other aspects of the novel worth analyzing, as I’m sure you’ll see.


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American Psycho’s reaction:

Much has been written about the outrage that greeted American Psycho upon publication, so I don’t want to spend too much time dealing with that here. So I’ve just chosen to post a few excerpts from this website. It should give one a good idea about how people reacted to the book.

“That inflamed commuter summed up much of the furor that greeted the publication of American Psycho. More than this, and unusually, condemnation of the work both actually preceded, and affected, its publication. Although Ellis had been paid a substantial U.S. $300,000 advance by Simon & Schuster, pre-publication stories based on circulating galley proofs were so negative—offering assessments of the book as: ‘moronic … pointless … themeless … worthless (Rosenblatt 3), ‘superficial’, ‘a tapeworm narrative’ (Sheppard 100) and ‘vile … pornography, not literature … immoral, but also artless’ (Miner 43)—that the publisher cancelled the contract (forfeiting the advance) only months before the scheduled release date. CEO of Simon & Schuster, Richard E. Snyder, explained: ‘it was an error of judgment to put our name on a book of such questionable taste’ (quoted in McDowell, “Vintage” 13). American Psycho was, instead, published by Random House/Knopf in March 1991 under its prestige paperback imprint, Vintage Contemporary (Zaller; Freccero 48) – Sonny Mehta having signed the book to Random House some two days after Simon & Schuster withdrew from its agreement with Ellis. While many commented on the fact that Ellis was paid two substantial advances, it was rarely noted that Random House was a more prestigious publisher than Simon & Schuster (Iannone 52).
----After its release, American Psycho was almost universally vilified and denigrated by the American critical establishment. The work was criticized on both moral and aesthetic/literary/artistic grounds; that is, in terms of both what Ellis wrote and how he wrote it. Critics found it ‘meaningless’ (Lehmann-Haupt C18), ‘abysmally written … schlock’ (Kennedy 427), ‘repulsive, a bloodbath serving no purpose save that of morbidity, titillation and sensation … pure trash, as scummy and mean as anything it depicts, a dirty book by a dirty writer’ (Yardley B1) and ‘garbage’ (Gurley Brown 21). Mark Archer found that ‘the attempt to confuse style with content is callow’ (31), while Naomi Wolf wrote that: ‘overall, reading American Psycho holds the same fascination as watching a maladjusted 11-year-old draw on his desk’ (34). John Leo’s assessment sums up the passionate intensity of those critical of the work: ‘totally hateful … violent junk … no discernible plot, no believable characterization, no sensibility at work that comes anywhere close to making art out of all the blood and torture … Ellis displays little feel for narration, words, grammar or the rhythm of language’ (23). These reviews, as those printed pre-publication, were titled in similarly unequivocal language: ‘A Revolting Development’ (Sheppard 100), ‘Marketing Cynicism and Vulgarity’ (Leo 23), ‘Designer Porn’ (Manguel 46) and ‘Essence of Trash’ (Yardley B1). Perhaps the most unambiguous in its message was Roger Rosenblatt’s ‘Snuff this Book!’
----There were other unexpected responses such as the Walt Disney Corporation barring Ellis from the opening of Euro Disney (Tyrnauer 101), although Ellis had already been driven from public view after receiving a number of death threats and did not undertake a book tour (Kennedy 427). Despite this, the book received significant publicity courtesy of the controversy and, although several national bookstore chains and numerous booksellers around the world refused to sell the book, more than 100,000 copies were sold in the U.S.A. in the fortnight after publication (Dwyer 55). Even this success had an unprecedented effect: when American Psycho became a bestseller, The New York Times announced that it would be removing the title from its bestseller lists because of the book’s content. In the days following publication in the U.S.A., Canadian customs announced that it was considering whether to allow the local arm of Random House to, first, import American Psycho for sale in Canada and, then, publish it in Canada (Kirchhoff, “Psycho” C1). Two weeks later, when the book was passed for sale (Kirchhoff, “Customs” C1), demonstrators protested the entrance of a shipment of the book. In May, the Canadian Defence Force made headlines when it withdrew copies of the book from the library shelves of a navy base in Halifax (Canadian Press C1).”

(Note: Oddly enough, during this whole controversy the book attracted very few individuals who were willing to go out on a limb and endorse the fact they liked it, though I think Gore Vidal did so. Even Norman Mailer’s article defending the book that appeared in Vanity Fair was kind of backhanded in terms of compliments, essentially claiming that Ellis wasn’t a talented enough writer to work with such powerful material. But he did acknowledge that the book forced the reader to look at “intolerable” material, and that so few books did that anymore. Indeed, I think we need more books like American Psycho, books that cause a sensation. What we have these days is pretty lame. Jim Frey lying about his past in A Million Little Pieces? Christians outraged over The Da Vinci Code? Kaavya Viswanathan's How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild and Got a Life was plagiarized? Big fucking deal. We need a new literary outrage!)



PATRICK BATEMAN PROFILE

Name: Patrick Bateman
Age: 26 (at start of novel)
Born: October 1962?
Astrological sign: Libra
Siblings: Sean Bateman
Parents: Father (deceased… died in 1985?) Mother (committed to Sandstone, an insane asylum.)
Relationship: fiancé of Evelyn Richards
Friend of: Timothy Price, Craig McDermott, Dick Van Patten
Education: Exeter Preparatory School (1980) Harvard (1984), then Harvard Business School (1986)
Job: Vice President (?) at Pierce & Pierce Law Firm (Wall Street), specializing in Mergers & Acquisitions.
Apartment: The American Gardens Building on 55 West 81st street, on the Upper West Side of Manhattan (Ellis has stated that this buildings does not exist). Bateman’s apartment number is Ten I.
Favorite sport: Baseball. His preferred team is the New York Mets.
Favorite water: Evian (mentioned about 14 times in the book)
Favorite soda: Diet Pepsi (mentioned close to ten times in the book)
Favorite drink: J&B on the Rocks (mentioned about 29 times in the book)
Favorite person: Donald Trump
Favorite TV shows: Late Night With David Letterman, The Patty Winters Show, Jeopardy!, Murphy Brown, The Cosby Show, ALF
Favorite band: The Talking Heads
Other favorite bands: Genesis, Phil Collins, Mike & the Mechanics, Huey Lewis & the News, Whitney Houston, Madonna, U2, the Kingsmen, Bobby McFerrin, Bon Jovi, Belinda Carlisle, INXS, The Traveling Wilburys, Kenny G, Richard Marx, Stephen Bishop, Christopher Cross, Paul Butterfield, Vivaldi, Pachelbel, Dizzy Gillispie, Nat King Cole, Frank Sinatra, Janet Jackson, Beach Boys, etc.
Favorite album: The Return of Bruno (Bruce Willis)
Favorite reading material: Sports Illustrated, USA TODAY, A Farewell to Arms, Fatal Vision, New York Post, Money, GQ, Playboy, Cunt on Cunt, Lesbian Vibrator Bitches, Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, New York, Fortune, The Economist, Why it Works to be a Jerk, Art of the Deal, Elegance: A Guide to Quality in Menswear, Esquire, Garrison Keillor, Ted Bundy biographies
Favorite films: Tiger Warsaw, Dirty Dancing, Texas Chainsaw Massacre, A Farewell to Arms, Roman Holiday, Bloodhungry, Ginger’s Cunt, She-Male Reformatory, Body Double (his favorite?), Inside Lydia’s Ass, Toolbox Murders, Blond, Hot, Dead, Pamela’s Tight Fuckhole, Secret of my Success, Rambo, Cocktail, Top Gun.
Favorite artists: David Onica, George Stubbs, Frank Stella, Mark Kostabi
Favorite watch manufacturer: Rolex (mentions his Rolex about 27 times in the book)
Favorite credit card: American Express Platinum (mentioned numerous times)
Favorite prescribed drugs: Valium, Xanax, Halicon, Dalmane, Sominex, too many to list really
Favorite illegal drug: Cocaine
Favorite Broadway musical: Les Miserables
Favorite hangout: Harry’s at Hanover Street, Fluties at Pier 17, The Harvard Club, Tunnel
Favorite vacation spot: Aspen
Favorite recreational sport: Skiing?
Favorite serial killer: Ted Bundy. Also: Son of Sam, Hillside Strangler, Leatherface, John Wayne Gacy, Charles Manson, Ed Gein,
Magazine subscriptions: Sports Illustrated, Esquire, Playboy, the Polo catalog
Gets his groceries at: D’Agostino’s, Upper West Side
Gets his haircut at: Gio’s at Pierre Hotel
Rents his videotapes at: VideoVisions, a few blocks away from his apartment building

Likes: Jami Gertz, Donald Trump, working out, hard bodies, Aspen, the AT&T building (at night, only at night), videotapes, Zagat, pornography (especially lesbian pornography), Hemingway, slasher films, Woody Allen comedies, Oliver North, Les Miserables, fitting in, ATM Machines, Walkman, smoking cigars (mentioned about 12 times in the book), securing a reservation at a popular restaurant, sunglasses (especially Ray-Bans and Wayfarers).

Dislikes: his brother, live music, rap music, punk rock, Elvis Costello, Peter Gabriel, his job, cheap haircuts, trailer parks, the homeless, minorities, hockey, bowling alleys, barbecued ribs, the Russians, lots of things when you get right down to it.

(Note: Many of the yuppies of the novel, including Patrick, are often seen doing cocaine. Ditto for their girlfriends. This seems like a logical drug of choice, actually. On April 16, 1987, 15 employees of various Wall Street firms were arrested and charged with selling cocaine, and two undercover cops stated that same month that they believed that the drug was either used or accepted by 90% of Wall Street).

(Second note: It is argued that as a character Bateman has little consistency, but as the above profile shows there is some stability to his character. For example, he usually is seen drinking Evian water in multiple scenes, and the same goes with Diet Pepsi and J&B on the Rocks. There are also two points in the book where Ellis describes what Bateman eats for breakfast and both times the food items match in a fairly close way. Oddly enough, Bateman trashes the music of Bruce Springsteen in the “Genesis” and “Huey Lewis” chapters yet later on in the book mentions how he thinks the happiest song of all time is “Brilliant Disguise,” a Springsteen song. For the record, Bateman thinks the saddest song of all time is “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” by the Rolling Stones, though Bateman thinks that it is the Beatles who did that one).


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AMERICAN PSYCHO: The Timeline

----Many of Ellis’ books strive to capture a very specific time and place. In the case of American Psycho, the time is the late 80’s and the place is Manhattan. But what year does AP actually take place in? At the very start of The Rules of Attraction, we’re informed that that story takes place in the Fall of 1985. With AP, however, we get no such date. There are some clues, though. Mainly in the “Concert” chapter, where Bateman and his friends go see U2 play at the Meadowlands, and how he mentioned that the band was on the cover of TIME magazine the previous week. U2 did appear on the cover of that magazine on April 27, 1987, and they did play a series of concerts at the Meadowlands, starting on May 11 and ending on May 16 (the chapter in question takes place in the month of May). When Timothy Price is flipping through a copy of the New York Post in the very first chapter (“April Fool’s”) he complains about many of the topics covered in the paper, including Nazis. This was around the time that Rupert Murdoch was trying to find Josef Mengele in South America, covering the pursuit in the pages of the Post (this was later mocked in the May 1987 issue of Spy magazine). If I’m not mistaken the Les Miserables show hit Broadway in the year 1987. Much of the music playing at the first Tunnel chapter is from 1987 (such as “Pump up the Volume” and “New Sensation”, and in a later chapter, “Faith”). Also, Ellis writes that he started the outline for the book in December of 1986, and that his outlines usually take 3-4 months to complete. If AP was no exception, that would mean he must have started the actual writing around April 1987 (the book begins on April Fool’s day). So I think that American Psycho’s most likely starting date is April 1, 1987.
----Of course, this is by no means an accurate guess. At one point in the book, when Bateman is being questioned by detective Donald Kimball, he reveals that he was seven years old in 1969. At the start of the book we learn that Bateman is 26, and that he will turn 27 in October (the month of his birthday). If this is true, then that would mean the book would start in 1988. However, we must take into consideration that Bateman lies all the time. The book ends sometime in early 1989, a few months after George Bush’s inauguration. On the very last page, Bateman says that he’s 27. If this is the case, that would mean the book would only have covered one year, which is impossible, as there is certainly a passage of time, as can be seen here:

April: “April Fool’s” (first chapter) Most likely 1987.
May: The chapters “Morning” through at least “Concert” (“Killing Dog”, “Yale Club” and “Girls” aren’t dated) Most of the first half of the book takes place in May, actually.
December: The chapters “Shopping” and “Christmas Party”
(nothing in January, February, March, April)
May: “Nell’s” (mid-May, to be precise) Is this 1988 then?
June: “Paul Owen” (killed on the 24th of June)
July: most likely the chapters “Paul Smith”, “Birthday, Brothers”, “Lunch With Bethany”, “Thursday” and “Dinner with Secretary”
August: “Detective” (possibly… that one might be late July) and “Summer”
Autumn: “Girls”, “Confronted by Faggot”, “Killing Child at Zoo”, “Girls”
October: “Rat”, “Another Night”, “Girl”
November: “At Another New Restaurant” (first week of November), “Tries to Cook and Eat Girl”, “Taking an Uzi to the Gym”, “Chase, Manhattan”, “In Bed With Courtney” (before Thanksgiving… This must be 1988, actually, as in the “eats girl” chapter Bateman mentions the new CBS sitcom Murphy Brown, which debuted on November 19 of that year).
December: “Something on Television” (possibly… Bateman mentions that Bundy is weeks away from execution. Ted Bundy was executed on January 24, 1989).

After this, the chronology starts to get messed up. I do not know if this was what Ellis intended, or if he simply lost track of the dates while writing.

April: “Sandstone”(I still think this chapter might be a flashback to an earlier event).
????: “Best City For Business” (Ellis says this chapter is 161 days after Bateman kills some girls at Owen’s place, which was in the autumn, most likely October, placing this chapter either in March or April).
September: “End of the 1980s” (I think that either this is a flashback to earlier in the year, or maybe Ellis just messed up on the month. Or maybe it was a deliberate error).
December: “Aspen”
February: “Valentine’s Day” (this chapter is set on a Thursday. In 1989 Valentine’s fell on a Thursday).

After “Valentine’s Day”, there are a few undated chapters, then one last chapter, “Harry’s”, which takes place a few months after Bush’s inauguration on January 20. So, most likely sometime in the spring of 1989.

----I guess what I’m trying to get at is that it’s impossible to put together a 100% coherent timeline of the events that take place in American Psycho, though it does tend to follow a mostly linear structure until the last 50 pages or so, when Bateman’s psyche starts to fragment. Personally, I say it starts in April 1987 and ends sometime in the spring of 1989... Two years. Another hint that the book ends in 1989 is when Bateman refers to wanting to see Sting’s “Threepenny Opera” in Broadway, which I believe hit stages in 1989. Finally (and I could go on all day like this if I don’t stop myself), I think there was a lot of conflict in Sri Lanka starting around 1987 (didn’t a civil war break out in that country in ‘83 or so?) which explains Tim Price mentioning that country in the opening “April Fool’s” chapter.
----Of course, there are anachronisms in the text itself. The Madonna song “Like a Prayer” appears in the book’s first May month, but that song wasn’t released to the public until 1989, to my knowledge. The chapter “Lunch With Bethany” appears to take place in the summer of ‘88, but Bateman mentions the Patrick Swayze film Tiger Warsaw which wasn’t actually released until September 23, 1988. There are also facts that are inconsistent with some of Ellis’ other works. In American Psycho, there is a scene where Patrick Bateman has dinner with his younger brother Sean, who was the star of Ellis’ previous book, Rules of Attraction (the main cause of the dinner being Sean’s birthday). This dinner scene takes place in the summer, most likely July. Yet in Attraction it is stated very clearly in the text that Sean’s birthday is in March, not the summer. This all reminds me of the whole Glamorama conundrum, actually. Like in American Psycho, the exact date of Glamorama is never stated, but we can assume that it takes place in the year 1996, due to the character of Chloe Byrnes, who is 26 years old and was born in 1970. Unfortunately, the main character in the book, Victor Ward, is 27 years old. Victor was one of the college students in Rules of Attraction, which took place in the Fall of 1985. So, if we assume the book takes place in 1996, that would of meant that Victor would have been in college at the age of 16 (and considering Victor’s lack of brains, that doesn‘t seem likely)! To further complicate matters, in that book Victor says he went to Camden during the years 1982-1988! One must remember, however, that Ellis started Glamorama in December of 1989, and that he didn’t finish it until 1997, which explains all the mixed-up dates. Still, he probably didn’t count on nerds like me analyzing every one of his books in excruciating detail.


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AMERICAN PSYCHO: The Locations

----Have you ever read a book and wished that you could just enter it and hang out at the locations mentioned in the text? Well, that’s how I feel about American Psycho. I’m sure to Ellis the yuppie haunts of his characters must have seemed like Hell itself but to me I find it all very exotic: the minimalist apartments, the sterile & trendy restaurants, the hedonistic nightclubs, and so forth. A place I’d love to live in. It would be cool to have a time machine so I could go back to Manhattan during that particular time in the 80’s to see if things actually were like that, if the yuppies really did behave that way. When I acquired Patrick McMullan’s photographic collection so80s I was thrilled when I found out that places mentioned in American Psycho such as Tunnel, Area, and Nell’s actually existed. I began to wonder how many of the restaurants mentioned in the book were real and how many were fake. So I’ve begun ordering Zagat guides for NYC in the late 80’s. So far I’ve just got the 1988 edition. It was really awesome to flip through Zagats and see the names of restaurants mentioned in the book. For example, Harry’s, a popular hangout spot for Bateman and his pals, has an entry:

“Harry’s plain and predictable steaks, chops, broiled fish and pasta are well above average for its Wall Street locale, but this is basically a hard drinking watering hole that hits its frat house stride when the floor traders come in after work.”

----I’ve also made a list of all the restaurants that get mentioned in the book, in alphabetical order. This list is too big to post here, but for the curious, here’s an example, the “C” list: Café Luxemburg, Camols, Canal Bar, Carly Simons, Contra, Counterlife, Cranes, Crayons, and Cuisine de Savoy.


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AMERICAN PSYCHO: The Film

----Because this whole day is mainly about the book American Psycho, I don’t really want to go into the film. I will say that I enjoy it, love it actually, and it’s a good adaptation. The only thing that’s missing is the violence and some of Ellis’ offbeat humor. While some of the novel’s humor has been translated to the screen (such as the business card showdown and Bateman’s argument with the Chinese drycleaners) other humorous aspects of the book have been eliminated. Take The Patty Winters Show, for example. A fictional TV program created by Ellis, it’s Bateman’s favorite daytime TV talk show. In nearly every fragment of the book he feels the need to inform the reader what the show’s topic was that day, and as the book goes on, the topics become more and more insane. You start off with “Women with multiple personalities” and some of the later topics include “Dwarf Tossing,” “Boy who fell in love with a box of soap,” “Child orgies” and (my favorite) “a Cheerio being interviewed on a very small chair.” The film does away with this “subplot” entirely, which is too bad (all in all, there are 42 Patty Winters topics mentioned in the book). But I can’t really fault the filmmakers because I don’t think there’s been an Ellis adaptation yet that has managed to capture this aspect of Ellis’ work, his funny, surreal little bits of humor that don’t add much to the narrative yet are still good for a laugh (though the film version of Rules of Attraction came very close, even though it neglected to include the girl with a pet snake named Brian Eno). I really think the film would have been even funnier if they would have incorporated some of the Patty Winters stuff. Like the talking octopus who only says the word “cheese” or the old Nazi who juggles grapefruit. Or the Stupid Pet Tricks segment on Letterman in which a German shepherd wearing a Mets cap peels and eats an orange. Or the scene where Bateman gives his fiancé a piece of noodle for her Christmas gift and she mistakes it for jewelry. But, anyway, great film, great sets, great clothes, and Christian Bale makes a great Patrick Bateman (I loved Willem Dafoe as Detective Kimball also).
----Just for the record, this is, in my opinion, the funniest passage in the book:
----“I pause, stand up straight, run a hand over my face, breathe in and then lean back down. "Listen to me…" I breathe in again. "They've got midgets in there." I point with a thumb back at the brownstone. "Midgets who are about to sing 'O Tannenbaum'…" I look at him imploringly, begging for sympathy, at the same time looking appropriately frightened. "Do you know how scary that is? Elves" - I gulp - "harmonizing?" I pause, then quickly ask, "Think about it." (Page 190)


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AMERICAN PSYCHO: The Music

----One thing that I think sets Ellis apart from most contemporary authors is that his books very often name check a huge number of pop culture references, including song titles. While some literary critics might argue that this dates his work, I think it’s very effective at creating a sense of time and place (and who cares if they make the books dated? American Psycho still sells very well, so what do the critics know?). When I first read the book, one of the things that most impressed me about it was how many songs are listened to by the characters in the text. To me, it seems very realistic, as music is always around us anyway, and I don’t think writers should ignore that. When I took writing courses in college, the only major complaint I ever received was I mentioned too many songs that the listener probably has never heard of. So, when I saw Ellis doing the same thing, it was a real thrill to me. And with the exception of Lunar Park, all his books have massive “soundtracks.” Glamorama, in particular, has like 60+ songs or something. One thing I like about this is that it gives you something else to do after you read the book, that is, go back through it and make a list of all the songs to create your own soundtrack for the book (as you may recall, I did the same thing in my book Confusion, in the hopes that it would inspire readers like myself to make their own soundtracks for the book).
----Although I was unfamiliar with the music of many of the artists name checked in AP, I made sure to buy as many of the CDs mentioned in the book as possible, with a few exceptions (like The Return of Bruno… even I have standards). It was very fun to listen to some of the albums after having read Bateman’s reviews of them, and I actually enjoyed the second Whitney Houston album and the Genesis stuff (can’t say the same about Huey Lewis, though, but “Hip to be Square” is a great tune whose lyrics really do seem to sum up the book). Here, then, is a list of all the songs that actually get “played” in the book, either on car stereos, Walkmen, CD players, and so on (many more songs are mentioned, but not actually played in real-time by the characters, for example, most of the songs in Bateman’s music review chapters):

“Be My Baby” The Ronettes (Bateman thinks it’s the Crystals) (page 3)
New Talking Heads CD (page 8)
“The Lion Sleeps Tonight” The Tokens (page 24)
New Talking Heads CD (page 28)
Vivaldi on a Walkman (page 39)
“Then He Kissed Me” The Crystals (Bateman thinks it’s by the Ronettes) (page 40)
“Dancing in the Street” Martha and the Vandellas (page 40)
“I Feel Free” Belinda Carlisle (page 52)
“New Sensation” INXS (page 54)
“The Devil Inside” INXS (page 54)
“Love Triangle” (perhaps New Order’s “Bizarre Love Triangle”?) (page 57)
“Pump Up The Volume” (page 59)
“Party all the Time” Eddie Murphy (page 62)
“Sympathy for the Devil” Muzak version (page 63)
Paul Butterfield tape (page 65)
Stephen Bishop/Christopher Cross tape (page 68)
“Canon” Pachelbel (page 70)
New Huey Lewis CD (page 76)
“Cherish” most likely Kool & the Gang (Bateman thinks it’s by the Lovin’ Spoonful) (page 76)
“New Sensation” INXS (page 79)
“The Devil Inside” INXS (page 79)
“I Feel Free” Belinda Carlisle (page 79)
“Faith” George Michael (page 80)
“White Rabbit” New Age version (page 94)
New Christopher Cross tape (page 111)
“Don’t Worry Baby” Muzak version (page 116)
“Life in the Fast Lane” cover version (page 127)
Muzak version of les Miserables (page 137)
“Somewhere” song sung at a gay pride parade (page 139)
“Where the Streets Have no Name” U2 (Bateman hears it as “Where the Beat Sounds the Same”)(page 144)
Early Dizzy Gillespie (page 149)
“Like a Prayer” Madonna (page 150)
“Lightning Strikes” Lou Christie (sung by a Korean guy) (page 151)
“The Lion Sleeps Tonight” The Tokens (page 161)
“Wanted Dead or Alive” Bon Jovi (page 162)
“Les Miserables” Broadway Cast Recording (page 171)
“Joy to the World” sung by a Salvation Army choir (page 178)
“Hark the Herald Angels Sing” sung by a Salvation Army choir (page 179)
Old Christmas songs from the sixties (page 181)
“New Sensation” INXS (page 195)
“Her Shit On His Dick?” (page 198) He says it’s a black guy rapping, but I think he’s referring to the song of the same name by the Bar-B-Q Killers, who had a white female lead vocalist. Weird!
“Take Five” performed by some Jazz band (page 202)
“A Day in the Life” The Beatles (page 215)
“Four Seasons” Vivaldi (page 218)
The Supremes? (page 251)
Kenny G CD (page 266)
Traveling Wilburys CD (page 304)
“The Worst That Could Happen” Brooklyn Bridge? (Bateman credit’s the song to Frankie Valli) (page 328)
Richard Marx CD (page 345)
“Witchcraft” Frank Sinatra (page 363)
“Like a Prayer” Madonna (page 371)
Bix Beiderbecke tape (page 390)

----Bateman’s music tastes seem to revolve around 80’s pop, classical music, muzak versions of oldies, plus songs from the 50’s (and also a few black girl groups from the 60’s).



What follows is a list of all the songs that appear in the movie adaptation:

• "True Faith"
Performed by New Order
"Walking on Sunshine"
Performed by Katrina and the Waves
"Simply Irresistible"
Performed by Robert Palmer
"I Touch Roses"
Performed by Book of Love
"Hip to be Square"
Performed by Huey Lewis & The News
"Lady in Red"
Performed by Chris De Burgh
"In Too Deep"
Performed by Genesis
"Sussudio"
Performed by Phil Collins
"What's On Your Mind? (Pure Energy)"
Performed by Information Society
"The Greatest Love Of All"
Performed by The London Philharmonic Orchestra
"Im Nin'al"
Ofra Haza
"Paid In Full (Coldcut Remix)"
Performed by Eric B. & Rakim
"Music for 18 Synths"
Performed by Sheldon Steiger
"Secreil Nicht"
Performed by The Mediaeval Baebes
"Everlasting Love"
Courtesy of Opus 1
"Deck the Halls"
Stock Music Provided by Chris Stone Productions Ltd. Canada
"Joy to the World"
Stock Music Provided by Chris Stone Productions Ltd. Canada
"Ya Llegaron A La Luna"
Performed by Santiago Jiménez, Jr.
"Cuatro Milpas"
Performed by Francisco Gonzalez
"Suicide"
Performed by John Cale
"If You Don't Know Me By Now"
Performed by Simply Red
• "Pump Up the Volume"
Performed by M/A/R/R/S
"Red Lights"
Performed by Curiosity Killed the Cat
"Try to Dismember"
Performed by MJ Mynarski
"Something in the Air (American Psycho Remix)"
Performed by David Bowie
"Who Feelin' It (Philip's Psycho Mix)"
Performed by Tom Tom Club
"Watching Me Fall (Underdog Remix)"
Performed by The Cure
"Trouble"
Performed by Daniel Ash





----Frankly, I found the film’s soundtrack to be a little disappointing. While it’s nice that they got some of the songs mentioned in the book, like the Genesis/Phil Collins stuff and the classic “Hip to be Square,” a lot of the songs just seem to not belong there, such as “Paid in Full,” a rap song (and there are several points in the book where Bateman complains about how much he hates rap). Director Mary Harron stated on the DVD’s commentary that they couldn’t get the rights for the Talking Heads, ditto for the Whitney Houston song “Greatest Love of All” (which is why they were forced to use an orchestrated instrumental version of it instead… at least their hearts were in the right place). Anyway, the CD release was even more of a travesty. Although the filmmakers got the rights to use many of the above songs in the movie itself, they didn’t get the rights to release all of the songs on the CD soundtrack. This explains why Huey Lewis & the News’ “Hip to be Square” appeared on early releases of the CD, but was removed from later versions, not because Huey Lewis objected to the content of the movie (as has been reported elsewhere inaccurately), but because they didn’t have the right to include it on the CD. As a result, the CD only has a skimpy ten songs (intercut with a few Bateman monologues from the film), and two of these ten songs do not even appear in the film, such as Dope’s cover of “You Spin Me Round (Like a Record)” and The Racket’s cover of “Paid in Full.” Of the remaining eight songs, only five are actually from the 80’s, such as “True Faith,” “What’s On Your Mind (Pure Energy),” and “Pump Up The Volume”. The rest are modern songs created by artists who were popular in the 80’s, such as the Cure and Tom Tom Club (though the latter song is pretty good). In summary, this CD soundtrack is nowhere near as good as the one that came out for I Shot Andy Warhol.


____________




AMERICAN PSYCHO: The Text

“Soon everything seemed dull: another sunrise, the lives of heroes, falling in love, war, the discoveries people made about each other. The only thing that didn't bore me, obviously enough, was how much money Tim Price made, and yet in its obviousness it did. There wasn't a clear, identifiable emotion within me, except for greed and, possibly, total disgust. I had all the characteristics of a human being--flesh, blood, skin, hair--but my depersonalization was so intense, had gone so deep, that the normal ability to feel compassion had been eradicated, the victim of a slow, purposeful erasure. I was simply imitating reality, a rough resemblance of a human being, with only a dim corner of my mind functioning. Something horrible was happening and yet I couldn't figure out why--I couldn't put my finger on it.” (page 282)

“Later - now - I'm telling Tiffany, "I'll let you go, shhh…," and I'm stroking her face, which is slick, owing to tears and Mace, gently, and it burns me that she actually looks up hopefully for a moment before she sees the lit match I'm holding in my hand that I've torn from a matchbook I picked up in the bar at Palio's where I was having drinks with Robert Farrell and Robert Prechter last Friday, and I lower it to her eyes, which she instinctively closes, singeing both eyelashes and brows, then I finally use a Bic lighter and hold it up to both sockets, making sure they stay open with my fingers, burning my thumb and pinkie in the process, until the eyeballs burst. While she's still conscious I roll her over, and spreading her ass cheeks, I nail a dildo that I've tied to a board deep into her rectum, using the nail gun. Then, turning her over again, her body weak with fear, I cut all the flesh off around her mouth and using the power drill with a detachable massive head I widen that hole while she shakes, protesting, and once I'm satisfied with the size of the hole I've created, her mouth open as wide as possible, a reddish-black tunnel of twisted tongue and loosened teeth, I force my hand down, deep into her throat, until it disappears up to my wrist - all the while her head shakes uncontrollably, but she can't bite down since the power drill ripped her teeth out of her gums - and grab at the veins lodged there like tubes and I loosen them with my fingers and when I've gotten a good grip on them violently yank them out through her open mouth, pulling until the neck caves in, disappears, the skin tightens and splits though there's little blood. Most of the neck's innards, including the jugular, hang out of her mouth and her whole body starts twitching, like a roach on its back, shaking spasmodically, her melted eyes running down her face mixing with the tears and Mace, and then quickly, not wanting to waste time, I turn off the lights and in the dark before she dies I rip open her stomach with my bare hands. I can't tell what I'm doing with them but it's making wet snapping sounds and my hands are hot and covered with something.” (page 304-305)

“I make no comment, lost in my own private maze, thinking about other things: warrants, stock offerings, ESOPs, LBOs, IPOs, finances, refinances, debentures, converts, proxy statements, 8-Ks, 10-Qs, zero coupons, PiKs, GNPs, the IMF, hot executive gadgets, billionaires, Kenkichi Nakajima, infinity, Infinity, how fast a luxury car should go, bailouts, junk bonds, whether to cancel my subscription to The Economist, the Christmas Eve when I was fourteen and had raped one of our maids, Inclusivity, envying someone's life, whether someone could survive a fractured skull, waiting in airports, stifling a scream, credit cards and someone's passport and a book of matches from La Côte Basque splattered with blood, surface surface surface, a Rolls is a Rolls is a Rolls. To Evelyn our relationship is yellow and blue, but to me it's a gray place, most of it blacked out, bombed, footage from the film in my head is endless shots of stone and any language heard is utterly foreign, the sound flickering away over new images: blood pouring from automated tellers, women giving birth through their assholes, embryos frozen or scrambled (which is it?), nuclear warheads, billions of dollars, the total destruction of the world, someone gets beaten up, someone else dies, sometimes bloodlessly, more often mostly by rifle shot, assassinations, comas, life played out as a sitcom, a blank canvas that reconfigures itself into a soap opera. It's an isolation ward that serves only to expose my own severely impaired capacity to feel. I am at its center, out of season, and no one ever asks me for any identification. I suddenly imagine Evelyn's skeleton, twisted and crumbling, and this fills me with glee. It takes a long time to answer her question - Where are you going? - but after a sip of the port, then the dry beer, rousing myself, I tell her, at the same time wondering: If I were an actual automaton what difference would there really be?” (pages 342-343)

“The smell of blood works its way into my dreams, which are, for the most part, terrible: on an ocean liner that catches fire, witnessing volcanic eruptions in Hawaii, the violent deaths of most of the inside traders at Salomon, James Robinson doing something bad to me, finding myself back at boarding school, then at Harvard, the dead walk among the living. The dreams are an endless reel of car wrecks and disaster footage, electric chairs and grisly suicides, syringes and mutilated pinup girls, flying saucers, marble Jacuzzis, pink peppercorns. When I wake up in a cold sweat I have to turn on the wide-screen television to block out the construction sounds that continue throughout the day, rising up from somewhere. A month ago was the anniversary of Elvis Presley's death. Football games flash by, the sound turned off. I can hear the answering machine click once, its volume lowered, then twice. All summer long Madonna cries out to us, "life is a mystery, everyone must stand alone. . ."
When I'm moving down Broadway to meet Jean, my secretary, for brunch, in front of Tower Records a college student with a clipboard asks me to name the saddest song I know. I tell him, without pausing, "You Can't Always Get What You Want" by the Beatles. Then he asks me to name the happiest song I know, and I say "Brilliant Disguise" by Bruce Springsteen. He nods, makes a note, and I move on, past Lincoln Center. An accident has happened. An ambulance is parked at the curb. A pile of intestines lies on the sidewalk in a pool of blood. I buy a very hard apple at a Korean deli which I eat on my way to meet Jean who, right now, stands at the Sixty-seventh Street entrance to Central Park on a cool, sunny day in September. When we look up at the clouds she sees an island, a puppy dog, Alaska, a tulip. I see, but don't tell her, a Gucci money clip, an ax, a woman cut in two, a large puffy white puddle of blood that spreads across the sky, dripping over the city, onto Manhattan.” (page 371)

“... where there was nature and earth, life and water, I saw a desert landscape that was unending, resembling some sort of crater, so devoid of reason and light and spirit that the mind could not grasp it on any sort of conscious level and if you came close the mind would reel backward, unable to take it in. It was a vision so clear and real and vital to me that in its purity it was almost abstract. This was what I could understand, this was how I lived my life, what I constructed my movement around, how I dealt with the tangible. This was the geography around which my reality revolved: it did not occur to me, ever, that people were good or that a man was capable of change, or that the world could be a better place through one’s taking pleasure in a look or a feeling or a gesture, or receiving another person’s love or kindness. Nothing was affirmative, the term 'generosity of spirit' applied to nothing, was a cliché, was some kind of bad joke. Sex is mathematics. Individuality no longer an issue. What does intelligence signify? Define reason. Desire – meaningless. Intellect is not a cure. Justice is dead. Fear, recrimination, innocence, sympathy, guilt, waste, failue, grief, were things, emotions, that no one really felt anymore. Reflection is useless, the world is senseless. Evil is its only permanence. God is not alive. Love cannot be trusted. Surface, surface, surface was all that anyone found meaning in ... this was civilization as I saw it, colossal and jagged…” (page 374-375)

“…there is an idea of a Patrick Bateman, some kind of abstraction, but there is no real me, only an entity, something illusory, and though I can hide my cold gaze and you can shake my hand and feel flesh gripping yours and maybe you can even sense our lifestyles are probably comparable: I simply am not there. It is hard for me to make sense on any given level. Myself is fabricated, an aberration. I am a noncontingent human being. My personality is sketchy and unformed, my heartlessness goes deep and is persistent. My conscience, my pity, my hopes disappeared a long time ago (probably at Harvard) if they ever did exist. There are no more barriers to cross. All I have in common with the uncontrollable and the insane, the vicious and the evil, all the mayhem I have caused and my utter indifference toward it, I have now surpassed. I still, though, hold on to one single bleak truth: no one is safe, nothing is redeemed. Yet I am blameless. Each model of human behavior must be assumed to have some validity. Is evil something you are? Or is it something you do? My pain is constant and sharp and I do not hope for a better world for anyone. In fact I want my pain to be inflicted on others. I want no one to escape. But even after admitting this - and I have, countless times, in just about every act I've committed - and coming face-to-face with these truths, there is no catharsis. I gain no deeper knowledge about myself, no new understanding can be extracted from my telling. There has been no reason for me to tell you any of this. This confession has meant nothing ….” (376-377)


____________

AMERICAN PSYCHO: The Questions

What follows are ten questions I’d love to ask Ellis about his book should I ever get a chance to interview him in the future. I tried to avoid the obvious question that everyone always seems to ask (“Did he really kill all those people, or was it all in his head?”) and focused more on little things about the book that obsess me (yet would probably bore the average person to tears). Here we go:

1. When you introduced Patrick Bateman as a minor character in Rules of Attraction, did you have any idea then that he’d be the star of your third book? If not, what was it about this minor character that inspired you to make him a lead (in Rules of Attraction Patrick comes off as the older, responsible brother as compared to Sean, and no clues are given regarding his psychotic tendencies that would surface in American Psycho, though it is interesting to note that in Rules it’s mentioned that Bateman is dating Evelyn, who at the time is a Junior Executive at American Express. Bateman makes a reference to Evelyn’s job in the opening chapter of AP, yet he doesn’t reveal the company name).

2. Why did you decide to call the book American Psycho? Did you intend to evoke the spirit of the film Psycho (which is name checked in the book itself?)

3. What was the decision-making process used for deciding what bands Bateman would review? Why Genesis, Huey Lewis and Whitney Houston, and not some of the other big bands of the late 80’s? (Though, looking at the Billboard charts during that era, all three of the above artists were vastly popular). The yuppies you hung out with, was this the kind of music they were into?

4. Timothy Price: he is a very prominent character for the first 50 pages or so until he abruptly exits the text, only to appear again near the very end of the book with a weird smudge on his forehead (that only Bateman notices). What was the significance of this character? To show that no one can escape from this hell (symbolized by the novel’s last line, “This is not an exit?”) Price does seem like a different character after he resurfaces, or at the very least he doesn’t seem as shallow as he did before (though even in the first 50 pages he’s the only yuppie amongst Bateman’s friends to show any sort of intelligence). In my own personal interpretation, Price has undergone some kind of shamanic experience during his time away from Manhattan. The fact that he runs away alone into a tunnel (at the nightclub Tunnel) seems very much like a shaman turning his back on society and entering the so-called “Underworld.” During a shamanic experience the shaman undergoes a symbolic death and is torn to pieces, only to be re-assembled, often with a new artifact placed inside their body, such as a bone or a stone that gives them deeper insight, and this holy artifact is usually placed in the forehead, where the Third Eye is located (hence the smudge on his forehead). Well, that’s my own theory, though I’m sure it’s off. I know some people have claimed the smudge is a lesion as a result of AIDS.

5. For the first 300 pages or so of the book, the fragments are fairly extended. For example, there are about 11 fragments in the first 100 pages, 14 for pages 100-200, and 13 for pages 200-300. Yet there are about 22 during pages 300-399. Why did the scenes suddenly start to get shorter as the novel drew towards its conclusion? To make it seem like things were spiraling out of control, or…? Also, what was the point of some of the very short scenes towards the end like “Taking an Uzi to the Gym” or “Working Out?”

6. Regarding the narrative’s timeline, for most of the book it seems to follow some sort of linear/chronological order, until the last 12 chapters or so. Were these mistakes, or were they deliberate, to illustrate Bateman’s fragmenting psyche? Exactly when does the book end and begin?

7. I’ve always found the final 100 pages of American Psycho to be very odd. There’s one point where, for four straight chapters, you pretty much take scenes from Less Than Zero and just change the names and locations around to suit the new novel. What was the point of this self-plagiarism? To show that Bateman isn’t that much different from Clay?

8. What did Bateman’s “scary drawing” mentioned on page 306 look like, and why wasn’t it included in the final book?

9. I’ve read comments on the web that state that some of the novel was cut when it was picked up by Random House, mostly cuts made towards the beginning of the novel. What exactly was the nature of these cuts? I refer to the comments reported on this website.

10. Does David Onica actually exist, or is he a fictional creation? I can’t find any information on him anywhere.


____________




AMERICAN PSYCHO: The Trivia

- The Manic Street Preachers recorded a b-side called “Patrick Bateman” which was included on the 1992 single Le Tristesse Durera (Scream to a Sigh). Sadly, I have never heard this song, and if anyone has it on MP3 format, please let me know as I would love to hear it. The lyrics, inspired by the novel American Psycho, can be found below:

He's a real cool guy and he's a hero of mine
Travis, Rhinehart rolled into one cute son
Less than zero a grotesque nightmare
Subtly disturbing like normal behaviour

I understand nothing and I cannot speak
I'd walk in the park but the trees are diseased
No sweetheart and I am too confused
I only love my watch and my snake skin shoes

I feel so small in the supermarket queue
People seem to laugh at my choice of food
My personality is held together with sellotape
A loose fit just like a numb junkies hate

I pretty my face with all this cream and stuff
Ugliness inside much harder to cover up
I lack the thought to care about politics
Just do what I like ain't that democratic

Genesis, Huey Lewis, Filofax, CD5
A backdrop to discuss over expensive wine
Didn't even know when or why I should stop
I feel so stupid like a joke that belongs

I guess all psychos are made out of money
I cannot be saved as liberals keep telling me
I don't wanna be understood I just wanna kill
Out of blandness I am your everyday thrill

Patrick Bateman
We are babies crippled in Christ
Patrick Bateman
Therefore I must be God
I must, I must be God

I touched your lips but now I just paint
Surface reflection all I desired babe
I am melancholy, flower cutting through stone
I am a crime everybody has at home

Papers hate me but they need my behaviour
The dignity amongst Hollywood trivia
Escape is so cheap of alcohol and whores
Mines the sanity of exclusive gun laws

Art critics say porno's easily obscene
Late Show retards Dice Clay is true poetry
They've never tried living underneath the water
That's real end of the century nausea

Patrick Bateman
We are babies crippled in Christ
Patrick Bateman
Therefore I must be God
I must, I must be God

Patrick Bateman
We are babies crippled in Christ
Patrick Bateman
I fucked God up the ass
I fucked God up the ass

Patrick Bateman
Patrick Bateman
Patrick Bateman
Patrick Bateman

- From Wikipedia: Ellis goes into great detail when describing the clothing in American Psycho; he has admitted that he himself is not fashion-conscious but puts in ridiculous amounts of research to get the facts right. In a recent interview he explained how he could write in such detail and how he played a little trick on his readers:
"Research. I don't like clothes. I wrote two novels, one around the fashion industry and one around clothes whores, and it was all research. It was looking through GQ and seeing what the guys on Wall Street were wearing, since every other pictorial during those two years had guys hanging out in front of various office buildings downtown. Also, what a lot of people don't realize, and what I had a lot of fun with, is that if you really saw the outfits Patrick Bateman describes, they'd look totally ridiculous. He would describe a certain kind of vest with a pair of pants and certain kind of shirt, and you think, 'He really must know so much,' but if you actually saw people dressed like this, they would look like clowns. It was a subtle joke. If you read it on a surface level and know nothing about clothes, you read American Psycho and think, 'My God, we're in some sort of princely kingdom where everyone just walked out of GQ.' No. They look like fools. They look like court jesters, most of them."

- The picture above is the 18” Patrick Bateman collectable put out by NECA. I have one myself, it’s really cool. It quotes ten lines from the movie (such as “Do you like Huey Lewis & the News?” and the immortal “I have to return some videotapes”) plus it comes with some cool items, such as an axe, a hatchet, a butcher knife, a briefcase, and even a tiny business card. I think a smaller toy action figure was also made, put out by Cult Classics.

- In the 1980’s Ellis was a member of what the media dubbed the literary “Brat Pack,” a group which also included Tama Janowitz and Jay McInerney. Coincidentally, two of those latter writer’s characters make an appearance in American Psycho: Stash (from Janowitz’ Slaves of New York) and Alison Poole (the main character from one of McInerney’s novels, I forget which one… Poole was also a key character in Ellis’ book Glamorama).

-Although Patrick Bateman is the lead character of American Psycho, it’s not the only book of Ellis’ that he has appeared in, as noted above. He first appeared in a chapter of Rules of Attraction, and he also makes a cameo in Glamorama, where he has a strange stain on his Armani jacket (he also tells Victor that he likes to “keep abreast” while staring at Chloe, and Victor later tells Chloe that Bateman owns a “coat of arms”). Bateman is also mentioned many times in Lunar Park, in which a variety of crimes are committed bearing Bateman’s trademark.

- One of the big reasons why there was such a moral outrage over the publication of the book was that people were worried that it might inspire others to kill in an attempt to emulate Bateman. To my knowledge, the only example of this was the case of Paul Bernardo, a Canadian serial killer/rapist who purchased the book at a Waldenbooks in New York on April 17, 1991 and considered it his “Bible.” (he was also 26 at the time, the same age as Bateman at the start of the novel). Like Bateman, he enjoyed working out, wearing designer brand-name clothes, and videotaping his murders. His wife/partner in crime, Karla Homolka, even bought him an imitation Rolex.


In Conclusion:

----I think that this little essay clearly shows that, if I am not the world’s most obsessive American Psycho fan, I am at the very least in the upper echelon. For those who doubt, consider this. A short while ago I came across a website that had the entire text of American Psycho online (which is probably illegal!) So I cut & paste it into a Word document, mainly so I could get an accurate word count. Then I started going through the book, taking out all references to the name Patrick Bateman and placing my own name inside instead, in a bizarre attempt to insert myself into the text itself. I think I stopped the experiment around the “Tunnel” chapter, but it was a very odd experience, to say the very least!
----(Final note: My ultimate American Psycho Holy Grail would be the outline Ellis wrote before he started the actual book itself, as I’ve read that his outlines are usually even longer than the books themselves. A secondary Grail would be the early drafts of the novel. I have always had a fascination with projects in their embryonic stages, before their finished state).


____________




AMERICAN PSYCHO: THE LINKS

1. ___
2. ___
(Two radical feminists protest American Psycho. Entertaining.)
3. ___
(Check out the “press” section to read Ellis’ thoughts on the film version of his book.)
4. ___
(Dennis Cooper’s review of the film.)
5. ___
(There are many Patrick Bateman MySpace profiles, but this one is probably the best. Check out the guy doing a dead-on Bateman impersonation analysis of the career of Britney Spears).
6. ___
(article about Harry’s, the bar where Bateman and his yuppie pals enjoyed hanging out).
7. ___
(4th draft of the American Psycho screenplay).
8. ___
(unproduced screenplay by Matthew Markwalder, based on the book. Interesting.)
9. ___
(Jamie Clarke interviews Bret Easton Ellis. Possibly the most in-depth BEE interview on the web.)
10. ___
(Amazon text stat page for American Psycho. Includes the 100 most frequently used words in the book.)
11. ___
(American Psycho discussion forum. I don’t think anyone posts here anymore, sadly.)
12. ___
(Ellis didn’t actually write these Bateman e-mails that were used to promote the film, but they’re still a fun read.)
----




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p.s. Hey. The great writer and music maker and d.l. Sypha made this hugely impressive post way back in '07, and here it is again, and it's as relevant today as it was back when we were younger, I think you'll agree. Enjoy. Thank you, and thank you mostly, Sypha. If you're interested, today I will be mostly on a train and then a ferry traveling between Tokyo and my next destination, the island of Naoshima.

Happy birthday to me: 127 Bresson

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p.s. Hey. I guess it's my birthday today. And I guess I've given myself and my blog a gift by swamping it with images from the work of my all-time favorite artist and hero and role model Robert Bresson. And I guess I hope you enjoy it in some way. And, for my final guess, I guess that, if plans have gone according to plan, I'm spending my birthday today on the great Japanese island of Naoshima with my favorite person in the world, Zac, so I should be having a very happy one. And you? What are you doing coincidentally on my birthday? Do tell because, even though I'm not p.s.ing in my usual fashion, I am undoubtedly checking this place daily to see what if anything you've commented.
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