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Mark Gluth presents ... 15 The 15th’s

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p.s. Hey. The exquisitely wrought and mysteriously decided sensibility of mega-writer and d.l. Mark Gluth meets a great track by one of my all-time favorite bands, and the rest of everything speaks for itself. Enjoy your good luck today, thank you, and, naturally, the lion's share of my thanks goes to you, Mr. Gluth. ** Steevee, Hi. Out of curiosity, I just googled metalhead + dubai and learned that the 7th annual International Metalheads Day Conference and Festival was held in Dubai in 2012. Your WiFi provider blocks porn?! In NYC?! That's completely bizarre. Thanks for the E. Sweatshirt link. I'll stream that sucker today. ** David Ehrenstein, Thank you. It's those handcuffs, right? Gotta love an escort in handcuffs. Cool, kind of excited to see the Allen now. ** _Black_Acrylic, Thank you, Ben. Everyone, here's a treat from _Black_Acrylic, and I quote: 'This may be of interest: my friend and fellow Dundee alumnus Steven Cairns now works for London's ICA, and here is his brief interview with the legendary Kenneth Anger.' ** les mots dans le nom, Hi. I know, escort_slash_addict's particular literary talent got him the top berth in the post. There's also a Butor book called 'Le retour du boomerang', but I can't tell if it's the same book or a sequel. Butor is great, no doubt about that, and he's still alive and writing books, which is amazing. No problem about the delay, obviously, and just thank you for the inclination, and whatever results is gravy. Cheers to your weekend too. ** Squeaky, Hi, Darrell! I know, it worked like a charm bracelet, right? You good? ** Sypha, Hi, James. Gaga just released a video of her Abramovic, and I thought you might have watched it. I guess she seems more like an anti-acquired taste, whatever that even means, ha ha. Yeah, I like short books, story books included, so I applaud your decision, not to mention the possibility of a novel arising out of the new story. Exciting. Really sorry to hear about your health crap. Good timing on the days off, though, at least. ** Allesfliesst, Hi there, Kai! Corny joke ... Uh, I might have 'told' this one here before, but, to continue to speak of what I just spoke about, a 12 year-old girl told me this joke: 'How do you wake up Lady Gaga?'  'Poke her face.'  Did I call you a gypsy? Huh, that's kind of nice, if I did. Nice sort of vacation you had there too, and awesome about her book! Thoughtful and introspective does not seem like whatsoever of a leap of interpretation of you at all. Yeah, Friedrich von Spielhagen is totally news to me. Not translated into English, I bet. 'Jacon von Gunten', now there'a hell of a novel, at least to an American. I assume it's great in its immediate context too. I always wonder, though. I mean, Germans of excellent taste often say to me, 'Charles Bukowski, so great!' or words to that effect. Your paper sounds exciting to me, very. My life is very good apart from weeks of sleep issues which, knock on wood, might finally be vaguely abating maybe. Otherwise, things are fairly superb, thank you. It's a fine thing to see you, buddy. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Wow, Palais Schomberg, yeah. Very curious stuff. I like them. In fact, I think I'll dip back into them today, so thanks. They have a nice effect of making it difficult to get one's head completely around them. Got your email. It all sounds great! ** Rewritedept, Yeah, 'Jerk' in LA. The last ever US performances of it. You'll need to get tickets early, if you want to go. It mandates a small audience size by necessity, so it'll likely sell out pretty fast. GbV have done 'Blimps Go Ninety' live a number of times when I've seen them. The writing goes well. Mm, I guess it's getting novelistic, but my notions of what constitutes novelistic aren't everybody's. The writing on computer decision has been the right one so far, I think. Did Kiddiepunk suggest that? I don't remember. I assume the Vegas escort thought that posting a photo of his dick would speak a thousand words, leaving him free to note his other virtues. I'm guessing that the avocado pleased you, not to be presumptuous or anything. ** Misanthrope, Oh, I see, about little George or Georgina. I've never even had that kind of daydream. Strange maybe. Oh, no sweat whatsoever about the psychic thing. Not at all. It just doesn't seem like LS will be ensconced down there that long. Does she just insist that he be there for some reason? Does she get tax breaks or something that makes him being there with her important or something? The MGMT song is charming, yeah, you're right. ** S., Hey, man! Good to see you! The escorts would appreciate that, I'm almost sure. They only don't like it when guys masturbate while exchanging emails and false promises with them, I think. Dude, sweet color negative action in the new stack. Everyone, at long last, a new Emo stack from S., and it's charismatically = inexplicably entitled 'Strawberry Shortcake', and it's here. May loneliness have gotten incredibly bored of you by the time you read this. ** That's it? That's it. Please do the click and listen method repeatedly with Mr. Gluth's post today as it would be to your great benefit. See you tomorrow.

Errol Morris Day

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'The 65-year-old filmmaker Errol Morris is sitting in his East Cambridge offices, a cleanly designed floor-length warren of cubicles, editing bays, bookshelves, and objets d’art. His personal office is shaded against the afternoon sun, a cool oasis of eccentricity. A stuffed baby penguin stands on a side table and a horse’s head protrudes from the wall. On his desk, in a glass case, is a monkey’s head — a Hanukkah present from his wife. The office, like the mind of the man who presides over it, is a cabinet of curiosities.

'That mind is more restless than it has ever been. Morris is a Boston institution and a national treasure for the nine documentaries he has made during the past 30 years. 1988’s The Thin Blue Line freed an innocent man from prison. 2003’s The Fog of War, in which Robert McNamara broods over his part in the Vietnam War, won an Oscar. And 2008’s Standard Operating Procedure probed the nature of photography and the sins of Abu Ghraib. Gates of Heaven (1978) remains the greatest film about pet cemeteries ever made.

'Yet at the moment Morris is busier than he has ever been — active not just in film but on all fronts. He has published two books in the last three years; the most recent, A Wilderness of Error, opens up the 1970 Jeffrey MacDonald murder case for reappraisal. He is putting the finishing touches on “The Unknown Known,” a documentary on former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, to meet the fall film festival season, after which it should go into theatrical release. “Inevitably, there will be comparisons to The Fog of War,” the director says, “but it’s a very different kind of story. It’s a story about someone absolutely convinced of their own rectitude.”

'His essays on history, imagery, evidence, and the knowability of facts spill onto the New York Times website and Slate.com. He’s an active, if not obsessive, tweeter (@errolmorris). Morris has also signed up to direct not one, but two fictional feature films; the one about cryonics, Freezing People is Easy, is set to star Paul Rudd and Owen Wilson, while Holland, Michigan is a “Hitchcock-like movie” set at a tulip festival. And his second career making commercials — he has shot more than 1,000 spots for everything from Target to Cisco — would be enough of a first career for many people.

'Alfred Guzzetti, a filmmaker, professor, and former head of Harvard’s Visual and Environmental Studies program, says his students see Morris “as a major figure, because he was very influential in documentaries coming back into theaters.” Guzzetti befriended the director when Morris relocated from New York to Boston 25 years ago, and the two men still meet weekly to play chamber music together, Guzzetti on piano, Morris on cello.

'“He’s patented a certain style,” Guzzetti says, “and that style is widely imitated: the combination of these very ironic interludes and comparisons, the way in which he edits sync-sound talking heads, the driving minimalist music — I don’t know whether he agrees with this, but I’ve always told him that I think that the films are kind of oratorios.”' -- Boston Globe



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Further

Errol Morris Website
Errol Morris @ IMDb
Errol Morris & Werner Herzog in conversation
Errol Morris @ Twitter
'The Murders of Gonzago' by EM @ Slate
Errol Morris: The Thinking Man's Detective'
'Errol Morris Lets Loose'
Video: Errol Morris on The Colbert Report
Errol Morris interviewed @ BOMB
Errol Morris @ mubi
'Scandal and Subjective Reality in Errol Morris's Tabloid'
'Elusive Truths: The Cinema of Errol Morris'
'The Devil's in the Details'
'Errol Morris, in Five Takes'
Errol Morris' A Wilderness of Error Site
Video: 'Errol Morris: Two Essential Truths About Photography'
'59 Minutes With Errol Morris'




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First Person




'First Person was an American TV series produced and directed by Errol Morris. The show engaged a varied group of individuals from civil advocates to criminals. Interviews were conducted with "The Interrotron", a device similar to a teleprompter: Errol and his subject each sit facing a camera. The image of each person's face is then projected onto a two-way mirror positioned in front of the lens of the other's camera. Instead of looking at a blank lens, then, both Morris and his subject are looking directly at a human face. (Diagram) Morris believes that the machine encourages monologue in the interview process, while also encouraging the interviewees to "express themselves to camera". The name "Interrotron" was coined by Morris's wife, who, according to Morris, "liked the name because it combined two important concepts — terror and interview."' -- collaged



Serial Killer Groupie Sondra London Part 1


In The Kingdom Of The Unabomber


Stairway to Heaven — Temple Grandin Part 1


The Parrot Part 1


Joan Dougherty - Crime Scene Cleaner Part 1


Stalker Part 1


I Dismember Mama - Saul Kent, promoter of cryogenic immortality Part 1



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How to Interview Someone
by Errol Morris




My advice to all interviewers is: Shut up and listen. It’s harder than it sounds. Most interviewers feel like they’ve got to be Mike Wallace, laying out booby traps and gotcha questions in what amounts to verbal combat. I think an interview, properly considered, should be an investigation. You shouldn’t know what the interview will yield. Otherwise, why do it at all?

I started developing the shut-up-and-listen school of interviewing in the 1970s. I was in my late 20s and traveling around the country interviewing murderers and the families of their victims for a book. I spent hours in high-security and psychiatric prisons with people like Ed Gein, the Wisconsin serial killer who inspired the movie Psycho. I always used two Sony (SNE) cassette recorders, and at some point I started playing a game with myself: Speak as little as possible. The cassette tapes got longer and longer—first 30 minutes, then 60, then 120—and the number of words I spoke became fewer and fewer. I was really proud of the interviews where my voice wasn’t on the tape at all.

Be well prepared, though. I’m surprised at how many people don’t prepare. When I interviewed Robert McNamara, he said he was shocked I’d read his books and actually thought about them. But I never go into an interview with a preconceived set of questions. I almost always start the same way: By saying, I don’t know where to start. Maybe it’s a nervous habit. But it’s also the truth. You fumble around for a beginning, and then suddenly you’re off and exploring.

As I was arranging an interview with First Lady Laura Bush for a short film that would air on the 2002 Academy Awards, her aide asked me for my list of questions. I told her I don’t prepare a list. She pressed, and we went back and forth on this several times. When I showed up for the interview, it was clear I wasn’t going to provide a list—so the aide handed me a typewritten sheet with not only the five questions I was supposed to ask but also the First Lady’s responses! When I sat down with the First Lady, I immediately went off script. The first question the aide had provided for me was, “What’s your favorite movie?” The sheet said The Wizard of Oz. So I asked, incredulously, is The Wizard of Oz really your favorite movie? She said, in fact, it’s Giant, the 1956 Western. As a young girl in Texas she’d stood in line for hours to be an extra in the film, which was shooting in her town, and it’s been her favorite ever since. That’s a story I never would have gotten had I been guided by a grocery list of questions.

A final tip: Don’t be afraid of technology. We think of technology as limiting intimacy. But think about the telephone. Certain kinds of intimacy emerge on a phone call that might never occur if you were sitting right next to the other person. Technology limits things, but it makes other things possible. In all my interviews for film, I use a setup I call the Interrotron. Basically, it’s a teleprompter in front of a camera. I stand in a different room, out of sight of my interviewee, who interacts with my image on the teleprompter—and effectively stares directly into the camera. When Robert McNamara is talking about the Cuban missile crisis in The Fog of War, about how close we came to nuclear war, it’s not me interviewing him. It’s him talking directly to the audience.



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Extras


A Brief History of Errol Morris (Documentary)


Errol Morris on Confirmation Bias


Errol Morris ESPN Team Spirit Film


Errol Morris & Werner Herzog in conversation


Les Blank's Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe


11 Excellent Reasons Not to Vote? - A Film by Errol Morris


Recovering Reality: A Conversation with Errol Morris



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Secret Weapon
by Jon Pavlus




Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker Errol Morris has a signature style that's as instantly recognizable as Martin Scorsese's or Wes Anderson's: namely, showing his interviewees talking right into the camera lens. But I've always wondered - unless he has a video tap from his eyeball going right into the camera, how does he actually shoot that way? Here's an example of the direct-to-lens style, from his Oscar-winning The Fog of War:





And from the Apple commercials:





And from a recent documentary commissioned by IBM:





Think about it: How does Morris get such penetrating interviews if the interviewee is just looking at a camera? If they're looking into the lens and not at Morris, it would be hard for Morris to get anything like the unsettling, revealing, startlingly personal interviews that are Morris's bread and butter. Would you tell a flat piece of glass about the biggest mistake you ever made in your life?

Morris solved that problem with the Interrotron, an ingenious bit of camera-rig design:





By shooting through a simple two-way mirror with a video monitor mounted under the camera lens, Morris can film his subject and make eye contact with him/her from the exact same angle. But that's only half of it. The real genius of the Interrotron is that it's a two-way street: the same mechanism gives the interviewee continuous eye contact with Morris, as well. No hiding behind a monitor while lobbing awkward questions for this director; Morris, who's known to interview people for literally dozens of hours, doesn't fake the intimacy you see on camera. It's the real outcome of an intensely human process -- and the Interrotron's subtle design genius humanizes the filmmaking process enough to break down the subject's emotional barriers.





Morris didn't invent this camera angle -- nor was he the only one to devise this clever system. Production designer and frequent Morris collaborator Steve Hardie (who also made these illustrations) independently invented a nearly identical system a few years before Morris started using his. But thanks to a slew of riveting, Oscar-winning films, both the technique and system have become forever associated with (and usually attributed to) Morris.

Luckily, the basic idea is simple enough that any enterprising filmmaker could probably build her own if she really wanted to.



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Errol Morris's films

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Gates of Heaven (1978)
'Gates of Heaven is the story of two California pet cemeteries transformed into an eccentric portrait of the American dream. Errol Morris began this, his first non-fiction feature, in 1978 after reading a headline in the San Francisco Chronicle: "450 Dead Pets To Go To Napa." "Gates of Heaven" follows the stories behind two pet cemeteries -- one that fails (set up by innocent Floyd McClure at the intersection of two superhighways) and the Harbert family, who apply the latest marketing concepts to the pet cemetery profession. Alan Berger in the Boston Herald wrote, "The appearance of an original talent in the arts frequently conforms to a pattern. Simply put, the newcomer presents us with a work which defies nearly every criterion in the established canon of taste. The new work -- like a new theory of light or matter -- abruptly makes its predecessors appear inelegant, clumsy and misguided. This is precisely what Errol Morris has done with his first feature, Gates of Heaven." Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times has called Gates of Heaven "a masterpiece" and "one of the ten best movies of all time."' -- collaged



the entire film



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Vernon, Florida (1981)
'Vernon, Florida is an odd-ball survey of the inhabitants of a remote swamp-town in the Florida panhandle. Henry Shipes, Albert Bitterling, Roscoe Collins and others discuss turkey-hunting, gator-grunting and the meaning of life. This second effort by Errol Morris, originally titled Nub City, was about the inhabitants of a small Florida town who lop off their limbs for insurance money ("They literally became a fraction of themselves to become whole financially," Morris commented.) but had to be retooled when his subjects threatened to murder him. Forced to come up with a new concept Morris created Vernon, Florida (1981) about the eccentric residents of a Southern swamp town. David Ansen in Newsweek wrote, "Errol Morris makes films unlike any other filmmaker. Vernon, Florida, like his earlier study of pet cemeteries, Gates of Heaven, is the work of a true original. On the surface, it is simply a portrait of several somewhat eccentric residents of a slow backwater town... There's a taste of Samuel Beckett in the film's tone of droll, forlorn hopefulness, and something of Buster Keaton in the spacious frames and exquisitely deadpan comic timing. Vernon, Florida isn't sociology at all, it's philosophical slapstick, a film as odd and mysterious as its subjects, and quite unforgettable."' -- collaged



Excerpt


Excerpt


Excerpt



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The Thin Blue Line (1988)
'The Thin Blue Line is the fascinating, controversial true story of the arrest and conviction of Randall Adams for the murder of a Dallas policeman in 1976. Billed as "the first movie mystery to actually solve a murder," the film is credited with overturning the conviction of Randall Dale Adams for the murder of Dallas police officer Robert Wood, a crime for which Adams was sentenced to death. With its use of expressionistic reenactments, interview material and music by Philip Glass, it pioneered a new kind of non-fiction filmmaking. Its style has been copied in countless reality-based television programs and feature films. Terrence Rafferty in The New Yorker has called it "a powerful and thrillingly strange movie. Morris seems to want to bring us to the point at which our apprehension of the real world reaches a pitch of paranoia -- to induce in us the state of mind of a detective whose scrutiny of the evidence has begun to take on the feverish clarity of hallucination."'-- collaged



the entire film


The Making of 'The Thin Blue Line'



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A Brief History of Time (1992)
'In 1992, Errol Morris finished A Brief History of Time, about the life and work of Stephen Hawking, the physicist who is often compared to Einstein and who is paralyzed and has spent much of his life in a wheelchair. In this film adaptation of Hawking's book about the origins of the universe, Morris has woven together graphics, interviews and archival material in a story about both Hawking's life and science. David Ansen in Newsweek has called it, "an elegant, inspirational and mysterious movie. Morris turns abstract ideas into haunting images, and keeps them spinning in the air with the finesse, and playfulness, of a master juggler". Morris' interviews for the film have been incorporated into a book, A Reader's Companion, published by Bantam Books. The film appeared on many "top ten" lists for 1992, including Time, The Los Angeles Times and The San Francisco Chronicle.'-- collaged



the entire film



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Fast, Cheap and Out of Control (1997)
'Fast, Cheap & Out of Control may be Errol Morris' most unusual work yet. Morris himself calls it "the ultimate low-concept movie--a film that utterly resists the possibility of a one-line summary." The film interweaves the stories of four obsessive men, each driven to create eccentric worlds of their dreams, all involving animals: Dave Hoover, a lion tamer who idolizes the late Clyde Beatty, and who shares his theories on the mind of wild animals; George Mendonça, a topiary gardener who has devoted a lifetime to painstakingly shaping bears and giraffes out of hedges and trees; Ray Mendez, who is fascinated with hairless mole-rats, tiny buck-toothed mammals who behave like insects; and Rodney Brooks, an M.I.T. scientist who has designed complex, autonomous robots that can crawl like bugs without specific instructions from a human controller. As the film proceeds, thematic connections between the four protagonists begin to emerge. The lion tamer and the topiary gardener look back at ways of life which are slowly disappearing; the mole-rat specialist and the robot scientist eye the future, envisioning creatures that may someday replace the human race.'--errolmorris.com



Excerpt


2 excerpts


Excerpt



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Mr. Death (1999)
'Fred A. Leuchter, Jr., an engineer from Malden, Mass. decided to become the Florence Nightengale of Death Row — a humanitarian whose mission was to design and repair, electric chairs, lethal injection systems, gallows and gas chambers, . In 1988, Ernst Zundel, publisher of Did Six Million Really Die? and The Hitler We Loved and Why commissioned Leuchter to conduct a forensic investigation into the use of poison gas in WWII Nazi concentration camps. Leuchter traveled to Auschwitz and illegally took brick and mortar samples for analysis in order to "prove" that the Holocaust never happened. Leuchter fully expected his involvement with Ernst Zundel to be the crowning achievement of his career, but instead it ruined him. Reopening the doors to this century's keystone atrocity. Morris bypasses a more obvious discourse on bigotry to examine instead the origins of evil in vanity and self-deception.'-- collaged



Trailer


Excerpt


Excerpt



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The Fog of War (2003)
'It is the story of America as seen through the eyes of the former Secretary of Defense, Robert S. McNamara. One of the most controversial and influential figures in world politics, he takes us on an insider's view of the seminal events of the 20th Century. Why was this past Century the most destructive and deadly in all of human history? Are we doomed to repeat our mistakes? Are we free to make choices, or are we at the mercy of inexorable historical forces and ideologies? From the firebombing of 100,000 Japanese civilians in Tokyo in 1945 to the brink of nuclear catastrophe during the Cuban missile crisis to the devastating effects of the Vietnam War, The Fog of War examines the psychology and reasoning of the government decision-makers who send men to war. How were decisions made and for what reason? What can we learn from these historical events?'-- collaged



the entire film



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Standard Operating Procedure (2008)
'The story of Abu Ghraib is still shrouded in moral ambiguity, but it is clear what happened there. The Abu Ghraib photographs serve as both an expose and a coverup. An expose, because the photographs offer us a glimpse of the horror of Abu Ghraib; and a coverup because they convinced journalists and readers they had seen everything, that there was no need to look further. In recent news reports, we have learned about the destruction of the Abu Zubaydah interrogation tapes. A coverup. It has been front page news. But the coverup at Abu Ghraib involved thousands of prisoners and hundreds of soldiers. We are still learning about the extent of it. Many journalists have asked about “the smoking gun” of Abu Ghraib. It is the wrong question. As Philip Gourevitch has commented, Abu Ghraib is the smoking gun. The underlying question that we still have not resolved, four years after the scandal: how could American values become so compromised that Abu Ghraib—and the subsequent coverup—could happen?'-- Errol Morris



Trailer


Excerpt


Deleted scene



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Tabloid (2011)
'Thirty years before the antics of Lindsay, Paris and Britney, Joyce McKinney made her mark as a peerless tabloid queen. In TABLOID, Academy Award(R)-winning filmmaker Errol Morris (THE FOG OF WAR) follows the salacious adventures of this beauty queen with an IQ of 168, whose single-minded devotion to the man of her dreams leads her on a labyrinthine crusade for love. Down a surreal rabbit hole of kidnapping, masochistic Mormons, risque photography, magic underwear, celestial sex, jail time and a cloning laboratory in South Korea, Joyce's fantastic exploits were constant headlines. Morris, interviewing the Fleet Street reporters and photographers who covered the events at the time, wants to deconstruct the addictive, almost metastasizing power of how tabloid news stories work on us. At 88 minutes, Tabloid is short and sweet (it's pure movie candy), but by the end we've forged an emotional connection to Joyce McKinney at the deep core of her unapologetic fearless/nutty valor. And that's what really makes a great tabloid story: It's a vortex that's also a mirror.'-- collaged



Trailer


Errol Morris interviewed about 'Tabloid'




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p.s. Hey. ** DOVEY, HI, Dovey! It's so very lovely and such an honor to have you here. I was thinking about you a lot yesterday on the very sad anniversary of Antonio's passing. I miss him every day. He was greatly loved here, and I think I can speak for all of his contemporaneous d.l.s when I say that we were all very in awe of him, his genius, his person. Thank you so much for the link to that gorgeous sound and visual piece of his. I'll embed it below so everyone can enjoy it. I send you so much love and respect, now and always, and take very good care of yourself, okay? Everyone, yesterday was the anniversary of the passing of Antonio Urdiales, a beyond extraordinary young artist in every medium imaginable and one of the rare people I've known who possessed true and absolute genius and who we here at the blog were incredibly lucky to have as a d.l. for a long time. Whether you were here in those days or not, I draw your attention to a memorial post that people here and I made for and about him, wherein you can experience a lot of his work as well as the effect he had on all of us. Here's 'A Weekend for and by Antonio Urdiales, Day 1'.  And, at the bottom of the p.s., I've embedded one of Antonio's sound and visual video works that was very kindly passed along to us by his mother, Dovey. ** S., Hi. Wow. Everyone, here's a stackless Emo stack of a different color by S. aka 'Who's that sexy lego man?' ** Allesfliesst, Oh, happy to help. Okay, good, I'm glad I'm not a mistaken interloper in some 'JvG' cult. 'Taipei' is quite good, yes, I certainly agree. Aw, re: you know what. Everyone, Allesfliesst proposes to lead us lock, stock, and barrel into a little thing called 'Baby Panda born at Taipei Zoo meets mom for the first time' I saw a panda at the Tokyo zoo when I was there. He was eating and inattentive. I didn't resolve my sleeping problems. I might be very gradually, with stops and starts, getting better. Yesterday, I would have said I'm on the cusp of being in the clear, and then last night happened, so I don't know for sure. Get rid of your thing and tell me how the fuck you did please. ** David Ehrenstein, International good morning to you! ** Grant maierhofer, Hi, Grant. Things are mostly really good, thanks. Not a lot to report from the last several days either, but they were good. Great weekend to you. ** HyeMin, Hi. Oh, it's okay if we're not aligned on Lydia Davis's translations. Apples and oranges, or whatever they say. I like Richard Howard's translations a lot too, though. But, not knowing French except in the most rudimentary fashion, I just try to be trusting of translations unless something really jars me 'cos I don't know what happened in the translators' tacklings of the originals, for better or worse. ** Dan, Hi, Dan! Yes, I saw the great potential news-bearing email. Fingers very crossed. I'll hope to see you in person too. I'm not coming to LA for the 'Jerk' performances, but hopefully not too long thereafter. Take care, sir! ** Steevee, Hi. It's interesting to look at the comments after the fact and think about how time passes between them, as in the case of your pre-modem and post-modem reports. I like the Earl Sweatshirt album pretty well. I didn't fall in love, but I'm going to spin its sound again today and see what happens. No, I still haven't tried the new New Puritans album. Thank you for reminding me. I keep forgetting. Noted. ** Mark Gluth, Oh, gosh, Mark, thank you and so very much! ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T! ** Jeff, Howdy, Jeff. Cool about that song for Antonio. I'll go listen to it in just a bit. Everyone, speaking of the late, very great Antonio, here's d.l. Jeff with an alert and recommendation: 'Here's a song by 'Witchboy' that is dedicated to Antonio. I discovered it by chance a while ago. I was streaming the Witchboy album in the background to my internet browsing one day (because a musician I like was pretty enthusiastic about it), and it was a ghostly feeling when that song came on, and I realized who it was about. (The rest of the Witchboy stuff at that bandcamp page is pretty cool as well.)' ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Wow, you were arrogant and callous once? Man, that is super really hard to imagine. Really? The mastery of sex and drugs characterization is not a stretch however, ha ha. But, yeah, I understand about the sadness. Cool, I'll go look at the MFA profiles, thank you a lot! Don't be too sad, Ben, you're totally the awesomest. Love, me. ** Statictick, Thanks about the posts, buddy. Yeah, I went for a long time squinting at cloudy words before I bit the bullet and got reading glasses. I kind of really recommend it. Apart from the reddish indents at either side of the top of my nose, it's cool. ** Sypha, Hey. It's definitely a boon that you can go both short and long. I couldn't write a long book if someone offered me a million dollars. Well, maybe for a million dollars, but it would be a terrible book. Really, you think sickness can encroach that way? Interesting. I mean, why not, I guess, although my logical side offers much resistance to the thought. But logic can only know so much. ** Gary gray, Hi, man. Saturday is today! Wow. Yeah, I hope it's really inspiring and productive-making. Do report back. I'm very curious. Nice show that you've got waiting for you at the tail end too. I only know of 'Diary of a Chambermaid', I think, unless I'm spacing. I'll investigate. Thanks about the stacks. Re: the number of images, it depends. Sometimes the number is meaningful and is a code and is a preset goal of the stack, and sometimes it just indicates the number of images I managed to find acceptable. See you on Monday! ** Misanthrope, Right, that's what I basically figured about the LS + mom situation. Man, ... I don't know what to say. That's heinous. I hate generalizations, but I would say that, in general, I respect kids a ton. I just never wanted to produce one. I've never been curious to find out what my DNA and genetics would produce in combination with someone else's. I guess people have this deep, primal need to leave a new human in their wake, but, like I said, I've got the crapshoot of my books as my leftovers, and those are offspring-like enough. ** Okay. This weekend is devoted to Errol Morris, one of my favorite filmmakers in general and especially re: 'Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control', which is in my top 10 fave films list. Enjoy it maybe or hopefully. See you on Monday.


ɆȾɆɌ/\/ȺȽ by Antonio Urdiales

Spotlight on ... Dunstan Thompson: On the Life & Work of a Lost American Master (2010)

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'If Dunstan Thompson had died young, a few more people might recognize his name today. I’d like to think I might have pulled one of his early books -- Poems (1943) or Lament for the Sleepwalker (1947) -- from a dusty library shelf in my teen years, when, eager to understand my gay poetic heritage, I first fell in love with the work of iconic writers like Walt Whitman, W.H. Auden, and Frank O’Hara. ...

'Born in 1918 to pair of devout Catholics in New London, Connecticut, Thompson grew up in Washington, DC, and Annapolis, Maryland, later going on to study English Literature at Harvard. Just shy of graduating, Thompson left the school, apparently disappointed (and unimpressed) by the department. He was, by all accounts, a confident man, though he seems, in the poems and critical essays collected here, to have struggled throughout his life with his own strong sense of disillusionment.

'The early poems are fantastic — almost uniformly homoerotic, both subtle and bold in turn, often sad (“Death is a soldier and afraid/ like you. If he could talk, he’d tell/ the world how he was hurt.”) Both Poems and Lament for the Sleepwalker received favorable reviews from a number of publications, including Poetry (though Thompson had derided the magazine in Vice-Versa, his own short-lived literary journal). The self-indulgence of which The Nation accuses him is certainly evident in his sometimes heavy-handed conceits, but the “private symbols” (could the reviewer have meant queer?) and unceasingly self-aware wit strike me as incredibly modern. Thompson, a proud formalist, knows when he is being clever. ...

'With his return to Catholicism, Thompson’s work underwent an abrupt change in subject and style, the daring eroticism gone, the distinct voice flattened. Though he continued to write prolifically throughout his life, his reignited sense of religious obligation spelled the end of his literary stardom. His poems stopped being accepted for publication, only a few new ones finding their way into print. In the house he and Philip Trower, Thompson’s literary executor, former lover, and lifelong companion, shared on the English seaside, Dunstan Thompson retreated into the annals of literary obscurity a changed man.

'I’m a young, gay writer, and because of this, I want history to remember Dunstan Thompson a certain way—not, in this case, the way he wanted. I prefer the image of him swishing about some upscale Manhattan cocktail party, rubbing elbows with T.S. Eliot and whomever else he was eager to impress, drinking a little too much and flirting with the cutest boy in the place.

'It pains me to think of this brilliant, groundbreaking poet grown old and irrelevant, cloistered in a cottage by the sea and denying himself physical intimacy with the man he’d loved for thirty years. It breaks my heart, too, that he insisted Trower never allow his first two books to be republished, that he wanted, more than anything, for his later work to be remembered as his one truly important literary contribution.' -- Jameson Fitzpatrick






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Gallery


D.T. with his parents on liner to Europe, circa 1929


D.T. front row, far left. Canterbury School, Conn. c. 1934


The Poet, circa 1942. Drawing by Alfonso Ossorio


D.T., London 1943-4. Photograph by Vogue, shortly after the publication of his first book.


The Rocket House, Cley-next-the-Sea. D.T.'s home 1948-51


D.T. Grand Canal, Venice. November 1950



______________
from Word Portrait
by Philip Trower

I don’t know whether [Dunstan's] birth was in any way difficult, but it left him with birth marks at the back of his neck and down one leg and a slight tremor in one hand - the right, I think. The tremor was not a serious affliction, and it was not there all the time. But it became noticeable if he was nervous or upset, and he was always self-conscious about it, at least during the years I knew him. If he was meeting new people, for instance, and they offered him a drink the tremor might start and he would sometimes spill the drink as he was handed it leaving his host or hostess with the impression that this was not the first drink he had had that day. Since there came a time when he drank quite a lot this embarrassed him all the more.

His physical appearance was another cause of embarrassment to him, at least as a youth and young adult. It was not that he was ill-looking. As he approached middle-age, and his face and body filled out, he was even positively good-looking, as you can see from the photographs taken by Vogue when his first volume of poems appeared, and there is a nobility in the drawing by Alfonso Ossorio, which although done when he was in his twenties, anticipates in a remarkable way what he looked like when he was dying and immediately after death. But up to his mid-twenties, he was certainly unusual looking.

It would have been difficult for anyone seeing him for the first time not to notice and be struck by the large slightly protruberant eyes with heavy lids coupled with a rather prominent nose above full lips and a slightly receding chin. As a young man he was also exceptionally thin with long loosely knit limbs and long expressive thin-fingered hands. The immediate impression was of a nervous highly intelligent antelope whose movements were not fully under its control. Throughout his life he had difficulty in co-ordinating his legs and arms, something which made playing games next to impossible. He was equally bad at catching balls and aiming straight, and the nuns who taught him to write seem never to have managed to get him to hold a pen properly. His handwriting remained strangely awkward and crabbed until he tried to improve it after he had been at Cley for some time.

In addition to being physically far from robust, he was emotionally and nervously highly strung. This too could have been partly due to problems at birth. ... After his death, more than one person, including one of his closest friends, admitted to me that there were moments when they were frightened of him. It is a not unusual reaction of average people, like you and me, confronted with a powerful intelligence linked to strong convictions. The paradox is that physically, as he would himself have admitted, he was for the most part, or except when on an emotional or spiritual “high”, anything but a model of fortitude. ...

I don’t want to exaggerate the degree of his gifts. If I say that I sometimes had the bewildering impression of at one moment listening to Burke or Dr Johnson, at another to Sydney Smith, Wilde or Horace Walpole, at yet another to Newman, or Keats, I am not trying to suggest that he was some kind of world genius, or that he was necessarily on a level with any of these famous names. I believe he was a poet of exceptional talent and insight. But Parnassus has many “mansions” and they are of all shapes and sizes. What I am trying to do is convey the particular combination of qualities, often startlingly contradictory and sometimes at war with each other, that made him the person he was.



D.T. and Philip Trower outside the front door of The Lodge, c. 1949



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Book

Ed. D. A. Powell & Kevin Prufer Dunstan Thompson: On the Life & Work of a Lost American Master
Pleiades/Unsung Masters Series

'Largely unknown today, Dunstan Thompson was once one of the most celebrated young poets in America. Published during and shortly after WWII, his often harrowing, homoerotic poems—many set on the battlefields and in the hospitals of the European Theater—were compared favorably to the work of W. H. Auden, Hart Crane, and Dylan Thomas. Then, as far as the general public was concerned, Dunstan Thompson disappeared. In a series of essays, interviews, letters, and clippings, this book traces Thompson's journey from a wildly successful literary enfant terrible, through his strong Catholic reawakening, and into his later years as a writer of mature, meditative, largely unpublished poetry. The first volume in the Unsung Masters Series, this book also includes a generous selection of Thompson’s very best poetry.' -- Pleiades


Excerpts


This Loneliness for You is Like the Wound

This loneliness for you is like the wound
That keeps the soldier patient in his bed,
Smiling to soothe the general on his round
Of visits to the somehow not yet dead;
Who, after he has pinned a cross above
The bullet-bearing heart, when told that this
Is one who held the hill, bends down to give
Folly a diffident embarrassed kiss.
But once that medaled moment passes, O,
Disaster, charging on the fever chart,
Wins the last battle, takes the heights, and he
Succumbs before his reinforcements start.
Yet now, when death is not a metaphor,
Who dares to say that love is like the war?



Introspection

My eye aches, and I
Am too tired not to care,
As the dust glitters by
In the reflective air.
   Poems unknown
   Are hard to bear.

My eye aches - the eye
Is a mirror where
Self-deceptions try
Vainly to disappear.
   Things I have done
   Are no longer sure.

My eye aches, but I
Must see through the tear,
Take trouble to spy
Out light from the glare.
   Youth has gone:
   But age is not here.



This Tall Horseman, My Young Man of Mars

This tall horseman, my young man of Mars,
Scatters the gold dust from his hair, and takes
Me to pieces like a gun. The myth forsakes
Him slowly. Almost mortal, he shows the scars
Where medals of honor, cut-steel stars,
Pin death above the heart. But bends, but breaks
In his hand, my love, whose wrecked machinery makes
Time, the inventor, weep through a world of wars.
Guilt like a rust enamels me. I breed
A poison not this murdering youth may dare
In one drop of blood to battle. No delight
Is possible. Only at parting do we need
Each other; together, we are not there
At all. Love, I farewell you out of sight.



Youth

Only the old are grateful. Not the young,
Who snatch their present like wild birds that feed
In winter; thankless, bear it off. Among
Those avid mutes, sometimes the wounded cede
Some gratitude, for they are old too soon.
Not so the-strong-winged ones, whose jewel-like eyes
Glitter with instant fame, perpetual noon;
Who lavish on themselves a lifetime’s prize.
Yet see them now as what they are - in flight
From childhood, eager, frightened, soaring off
To lonely falls, travail with traps, and night
Ambuscades. Those cygnets, swanned by grief,
Will be so grateful, it will frighten you,
Remembering yourself as thankless too.



Songs of the Soldier

Death is a soldier and afraid
Like you. If he could talk, he’d tell
The world how he was hurt. This sad
Faced, grave eyed, beautiful as steel

Young man, his sex a star, has pride
That sharp, unshadowed, surgeon’s light
By which heroes are turned inside
Out, their flamboyant guts put straight

Or lopped off.



Poem

Eros, his plumes bedraggled by the snow,
Came on me walking through the frozen park.
‘Well met,’ he said, ‘the day is dying now,
So we shall talk together in the dark.’

But there was light enough to see his face,
Those eyes of ice, that mouth impassioned stone,
The whole expressionless, as though a place
Where happiness and suffering were not known.



An Incident during the War

There in the crumbling gaunt Red Cross hotel,
Its race-track grandeur spurned by Army feet,
I lingered in the lounge among the few
Sad soldiers there, and fell asleep.
I woke at ten and found myself in hell -
My time was overstayed: I would not get
Away to London, but would have to keep
To barracks: ‘No more week-end pass for you!’
I ran the whole way back, along that street
Of sleazy stucco villas to the gate;
In darkness met the guard I never knew.
He shone his flashlight on my pass: ‘You’re late,
Soldier, and I’ll have to turn this in.’
His voice was low: we might have been two friends
Together in the same mistake. ‘I’m due
To go to London, and it matters. Can
You help me?’ Even now that minute tends
From him to me, from me to him. He shone
The flashlight on my face, then clicked it off.
‘I shouldn’t do this, pal, but, okay, you’re
On time. Now get the hell in there. Be sure
To have a drink for me in London.’ Safe
Again, I said: ‘Thanks, thanks a lot.’ And softly
Walked away. I never knew his face.
I never knew his name. What he had done,
An unguarded kindness, made me feel the grace
Of being brothers. And that war he won.



Sceptic

The truth, he thought, was what he thought about,
While he declined, he thought, to nothingness.
This thought, he feared, might somehow lead to doubt,
And he, when dying thoughtlessly profess
Belief in something other than this truth.
Temptation stalked him like the dog he took
On walks to ease his restlessness. In youth
He had denied; in youth had dared a book.
A second. And a third. Then more. They lined
His past as they had lined his anguished brow,
Which had become a mappa mundi, where
The curious could plot his searchings, find
How he had fought his first belief, who now,
Almost apostate, breathed a childhood air.



Portrait Busts

Hard men - you see their faces everywhere:
Across those desolate desks, or, masklike, at
Some rostrum: lines and furrows, marble eyes;
Old faces, seamed and pitted like the moon.
And these were children, graceful, debonair,
Who fed their rabbit, hugged a clinging cat;
Later were boys, with poems like kites, and wise
With a young wisdom, whistling a small tune.

All gone, with even memories twisted round
To show them now as always - artful, shrewd,
Quick at the means to do another down.
Lost, lost that innocence, and lost the sound
Of gaiety in voices cracked and crude
From lying. Gone. Lost. Instead that iron frown.




*

p.s. Hey. ** Squeaky, Hi, D! I'm very happy to hear that all is good and vice versa. Lovely Antonio memory and ritual. Thank you, pal. Lots of love. ** L@rstonovich, Loganberry, nice. Super paragraph, man. International and interstellar hugs. ** Chris Goode, Hi, Chris! Oh, my pleasure, thank you, and a blush for your stack props too. Amazing to think of you thinking so deeply about Bresson and to be able to share in the evidence. And your thoughts are very commiserate with mine, of course, I guess, but with a grace that may happen in the thoughts themselves, I'm not sure, but does a disappearing act rather than be transcribed. Bresson's ideas on 'models' vs. actors influenced my characters in pretty much every way possible. I suspect that's where his huge influence on me is most manifest. Trying to translate his collaboration with the people who become models in his films into a collaboration between me and my, I don't know, devised personas (?), is tough, although I think I've metabolized a workable strategy after all these years, and I guess it involves a kind of responsibility I feel towards the people in my life who are at the centers of my fictions, and who may or may not be represented as characters therein, and that responsibility ends up being about me being responsible towards myself necessarily. I don't know. It's very hard to parse and talk about. And you're right about the fount of the necessary event, absolutely. It's very useful to think of the event as the inventor for me. Another Bresson influence has to do with 'amateurism', with the 'unskilled' and the 'unprepared', and the idea of characters who are technically ill-suited to be characters in the traditional sense, who are charismatic rather than manipulative or something. I don't know if that makes a lot of sense. Bresson really tongue ties me, which is why I've never moved on from his work, I guess. Anyway, it's a joy to read your thinking on him, it really is. Abramovic, yikes. I don't envy that infiltration, but I would be super interested to hear what you come up with about her. Likable unfamiliar patterns sounds great. Other than weird, ongoing bad sleep issues, I'm doing pretty well, thank you. New novel happening, a few collabs in progress, summer is over, a few trips/adventures coming soon. Ha ha, the Smiths/Peanuts thing, great. Everyone, the majestic Chris Goode kindly links any of us who might be intrigued to Smiths plus Peanuts aka 'This Charming Charlie'. Big love to you, man. ** HyeMin, Hi. I understand about Davis. I always think that not connecting with a writer or artist of obvious talent is maybe even more interesting and telling than the connections. Like my not getting or being interested in Pasolini, for instance. The disconnections feel very alive. That was a lot of reading you had to do. I hope it went pleasantly or productively. I'll try not to get sick. I'm generally pretty good at not getting sick so far. ** Gary gray, That does make sense. I looked up 'DoaC', and, yeah, sure, I was just spacing out. Okay, that story sounds really, really interesting. Is that what you showed to the workshop? Really great to heat that it worked out so very well, and if you're headlong into working on your story, it was the best it could have been, obviously. Awesome. Lurk productively, and I'll look forward to seeing you on the other side. My weekend was quiet but fine, basically. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Ah, a persona, I see. I've never been good with personas. I guess that's why my few months-long flirtation with becoming an actor when I was a kid ended disastrously. Yeah, getting on with it. What the fuck else is there, I guess? ** James, Hi, James. Yeah, I'm still struggling with sleep. I have better and worse sleeps, but not good ones. I really think the only cure would be going to some other time zone and confusing my body clock by getting jet lag, but I won't be doing that until about a month from now, unfortunately. Oh, man, that's awful and ridiculous that you still haven't gotten that California job. Jesus. Obviously, I hope there's some solution, and there must be, but I don't what what it would be. Wild Turkey is a killer. I can't drink dark liquors. They destroy me, even a few sips, for some reason. I hope things get infinitely better for you instantaneously somehow, man. Much love to you too. ** Misanthrope, Errol Flynn? Weird. Continued huge ugh on poor LS's situation. I think that need must be primal and intuitive and all, yeah. Makes sense. I feel like most people I've talked to about that issue admit that they'd like to produce a genetically similar being. LS is sharp. He has always seemed so in your tellings. He seems to be absenting FB these days unless his posts are getting lost in my news feed. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. You don't like Morris's work because he was a bit of a control freak in one interview you did with him and because he was a 'troublesome' audience member? It doesn't take much. You simplify what happened between Morris and Herzog. They're old friends and comrades with a very complicated history, and the shoe eating thing was inspired by a whole lot of longstanding interpersonal issues. There are plenty of recountings of their friendship, fallings out, and why the shoe eating thing happened, etc. out there to read. I was relieved to read that John Greyson is safe this morning, and hopefully he'll be released very quickly. That was quite scary. ** Ken Baumann, Ken! Glad you dug the Morris Day. Those frames from EarthBound that you posted on FB made me really excited. I'd play it if I could, and, since that's unlikely for numerous reasons, I'm more dying than ever for your book. Other than endless sleep problems, I'm doing quite well, thank you. And you? Writing? Progress on the school entry thing? Fun? Food? ** Steevee, Hi. I'm really pleased that you're a fellow lover of 'Fast, Cheap and Out of Control'. Such a great film, and very undervalued. Herzog and Morris are friends, quite old if complicated friends. No, I've read about that Kendrick Lamar verse, but I haven't heard it. I'll go find it. Thanks! ** Rewritedept, Blogger seemed to have been particularly hungry and heartless yesterday. My weekend was okay, pretty low-key. It seems weird to me that a lad your age would even know who Errol Flynn is. I'm mega-older than you, and I barely know who he is/was. I love avocados like every sane person does. I read somewhere once that, statistically, people who worry that they'll never have a relationship and will die alone tend to more often get married and have lots of kids than people who have relationships in their plans. P-Funk, or what's left of them, are still touring? Oh, right, I think they played here a while back. I saw them a couple of times back when. They were, duh, incredible, but that was, gosh, decades ago. Good luck in the studio. That sounds sweet. ** Sypha, I apologize profusely on behalf of Blogger. ** Right. There's a movement afoot to resurrect the work of Dunstan Thompson, and I thought I would do my part today. See you tomorrow.

Chilly Jay Chill presents ... 69 Free Jazz Album Covers

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For more free jazz images and music, check out www.destination-out.com




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p.s. Hey. Today we get a feast of covers and style machinations and designs and promises of sonic treasure curated by the fine writer and free jazz connoisseur and d.l. Chilly Jay Chill. If you haven't done so already, please scroll gradually and let the popping commence. Typed thoughts and reactions for our guest-host would be most welcome, thank you. Oh, and, coincidentally, I recommend that you head over here at some point and read a newly public and terrific interview with CJC's real life component Jeff Jackson re: his forthcoming novel 'Mira Corpora' and about writing and inspiration and more, courtesy of Tin House. Thanks a ton, Jeff. ** Rewritedept, Hi. Hm, I don't think I could vote for you as head of state based on those election promises, sorry. I don't understand spite. It just seems like emotional corruption to me, and the idea of eugenics is one of my least tolerable manifestations of fascism, but whatever works in the safety of your own head, as they say. You know as much about Errol Flynn as I do. I think he played Robin Hood or swashbucklers or something. Yesterday wasn't so busy. Not sure about today yet.  Hope so. I was going to say, May your cranky pants have gotten ruined in the washing machine of your sleep, but I think they did. ** Gary gray, Hey. I love poetry. I love that it isn't judged based on how it handles the kind of preset, standardized expectations that saddle fiction writers. It's free to be a pure experiment, and I love that, and it's also a really tough form to do great things in, or so it seems to me, which I love too. Awesome that you're a full-time computer guy again, and, you know, thanks, man, for the kind words and all. The growing and maturing thing is important, yeah. Well, I don't have a choice 'cos it takes a shit ton of refining and stuff for my writing to be any good, so of course I think that. 4th draft, nice. Wow, you laying out the draft progress like that was fascinating. Thanks a lot. I'm a big process junkie, so that's like manna, whatever manna is. Justin Mortimer, yeah, very interesting. Super skilled painter, and weirdly so in a compelling way. Yeah, I like his stuff too. I should do a post on him, I think. Thanks for the alert. You really sound great. It's really heartening to see. ** David Ehrenstein, Hey. Last I read, i.e. a few minutes ago, it seemed like Greyson was going to be released today? I hope that's from a reliable source, obviously. Fine review of 'The Butler'. I guess I have to see that when it gets here. Everyone, here's Mr. Ehrenstein's review of 'The Butler' for Fandor, and you should take it in, obviously. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. I don't know Seidl's 'Models' at all. Hunh. I'll do some research. Great about finishing the article! Oh, it's deadline time? Let me ... Everyone, it's nearing your last opportunity to submit work to the next issue of the awesome zine Yuck 'n' Yum, co-edited by our own _B_A. YnY is a reliably great zine, an awesome context, and I highly recommend you send some stuff for consideration. Here's a flyer, and here are instructions vis-a-vis how to submit. ** œ, Hi. Thanks for the beautiful reaction and writerly response to the Thompson post. It was a real pleasure. Here it's been seagulls not cicadas, and it's not quite like singing, but their pinched squawks bring LA to mind, which is nice. ** Wolf, Wolf! Dude! It's been, like, forever and a day! How incredibly amazing and sweet this is. Nerdishness is the best excuse for everything in some way. That was a spontaneous unthought-out thought, but it feels snug. Wow, it's been that long? Yeah, the trips north and east were amazing. The northern one has occasioned a book project that my pal Zac and I will be going into seclusion soon to work on and hopefully finish. And Japan was beyond incredible. In fact, I think we're making a return trip there in January, if current plans hold. The novel is happening. It's still earlyish on, but so far so quite good. You were just in our fair country, very nice. And, yeah, dude, so great to see you! If you can not be a stranger while preserving your admirable nerdishness, please do. Masses of love to you! ** Katalyze, Kat! Another exciting return! Hooray! I'm good, just beset with some sleeping problems, but I seem to be getting used to them. I've heard the Earl Sweatshirt album twice now. Yeah, it seems really good. The second listening upped the ante of my interest. He's performing here soon on this insane bill with Tyler the C. and Kendrick Lamar, opening for Eminem, but it's at the gigantic Stade de France, so I'm not going to venture there. I haven't heard the King Krule. I'll check it out. Home plus Iceland! Very sweet! Wow, it's great to see you here! I've missed you. I send you meta love! ** Steevee, Hi. I agree with your disagreement about Morris' attitude towards his subjects. I think the nuances of his approach are self-evident, but people can be so kneejerk and shallow. ** Ken Baumann, Ken! Holy shit re: that game. It sounds like it deserves a church or something. Or a book-shaped church with you as the smithy. Done! Cool, cool, cool. Yours, and love, me. ** Allesfliesst, You think so? Catholicism as sleep aid? Tryptophan sounds more promising. Do tell how that beset. I should do more physical stuff. But it's a waking up problem for me, not a falling asleep problem, so I don't know if that would work. Maybe. Why not? I have had the occasional complaint about me snoring. Not too, too often, but yeah. There's this anti-snoring stuff that you spray down your throat before sleeping that I do sometimes and that maybe works. Or maybe I should just loop The Cure's early oeuvre on my iPod. Hope you got some. ** Kyler, Hi, Kyler. Email, cool, thanks. I'll go look for it. I forgot to check my mailbox this morning, which is weird. Hugs. ** Misanthrope, Glad you liked his stuff. No internet or wrestling?! Sounds like non-paradise, yeah. It's amazing how much is happening down there so fast. Crashing and burning, it sounds like. There is something kind of old school about FB whereas Twitter seems both newer and prehistoric at the same time or something. ** Postitbreakup, Hi, Josh! Wow, that was two years ago? Weird. Maybe I'll save my champagne toast for the two year anniversary of when you exited the mental ward? You good otherwise? Love, me. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hey there, man of the next 24 (at least) hours! Thank you, man. It's beautiful. And that's a really sharp interview you gave over at Tin House. I am a fan of the Death album. Or I was, and I'm sure I still would be. I didn't know about the documentary, I don't think. I'll find a stream. Thank you again so much, Jeff! ** Armando, Hi, man. Yeah, right, about 'To the Wonder'. Amazing. Malick's films always make me tongue-tied, so I know where you're coming from. Anyway, high five and hugs back, A. ** S., Hi. Sweet stack. Scary sweet. And it kind of rhymes, speaking of poetry. Everyone, consider your attention directed to S.'s latest, maybe darkest (?) Emo stack as of the reaching of this word. ** With that, back (or forward) you go into the reaches and riches of Chilly Jay Chill's post until I see you tomorrow, thank you.

Novel-in-progress scrapbook, page #3: Intervening grid #1

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* all texts by Gilles Deleuze






“The problem is no longer getting people to express themselves, but providing little gaps of solitude and silence in which they might eventually find something to say. Repressive forces don’t stop people from expressing themselves, but rather, force them to express themselves. What a relief to have nothing to say, the right to say nothing, because only then is there a chance of framing the rare, or ever rarer, the thing that might be worth saying.”










"Nothing will enter memory, everything was on the lines, between the lines, in the AND that made one and the other imperceptible, without disjunction or conjunction but only a line of flight forever in the process of being drawn, toward a new acceptance, the opposite of renunciation or resignation — a new happiness?"







"Becoming is involutionary, involution is creative."








"What anybody would call affect or feeling, a hope for example, a pain, a love, this is not representational. There is an idea of the loved thing, to be sure, there is an idea of something hoped for, but hope as such or love as such represents nothing, strictly nothing.”












"To have dismantled love in order to become capable of loving. To have dismantled one's self in order finally to be alone and meet the true double at the other end of the line. A clandestine passenger on a motionless voyage."








“It is no longer a question of imposing a form upon a matter but of elaborating an increasingly rich and consistent material, the better to tap increasingly intense forces."








“You will not be defined by your form, by your organs, by your organism, by your genus or by your species, tell me the affections of which you are capable and I'll tell you who you are. Of what affects are you capable?”







“The most beautiful thing is to live on the edges, at the limit of her/his own power of being affected.”









"The plant contemplates by contracting the elements from which it originates - light, carbon, and the salts - and it fills itself with colors and odors that in each case qualify its variety, its composition: it is sensation in itself. It is as if flowers smell themselves by smelling what composes them, first attempts of vision or of sense of smell, before being perceived or even smelled by an agent with a nervous system and a brain."







“Belief is necessarily something false that diverts and suffocates effective production.”










"Words possess a comprehension which is necessarily finite, since they are objects of a merely nominal definition. We have here a reason why the comprehension of the concept cannot extend to infinity: we define a word by only a finite number of words. Nevertheless, speech and writing, from which words are inseparable, give them an existence; a genus thereby passes into existence as such; and here again extension is made up for in dispersion, in discreteness, under the sign of a repetition which forms the real power of language in speech and writing."












"I imagined myself as arriving in the back of an author and giving him a child, which would be his and which nevertheless would be monstruous. That it really be his is very important, because the author had to really say everything that I made him say. But it was also necessary that the child be monstruous, because it was necessary to go through all sorts of decenterings, slippage, breakage, burglary, secret emissions that gave me a lot of pleasure”.








“Writing has nothing to do with meaning. It has to do with landsurveying and cartography, including the mapping of countries yet to come.”









"In order for music to free itself, it will have to pass over to the other side — there where territories tremble, where the structures collapse, where the ethoses get mixed up, where a powerful song of the earth is unleashed, the great ritornelles that transmutes all the airs it carries away and makes return."







"We know nothing about a body until we know what it can do, in other words, what its affects are, how they can or cannot enter into composition with other affects, with the affects of another body, either to destroy that body or to be destroyed by it, either to exchange actions and passions with it or to join with it in composing a more powerful body."














“If you’re trapped in the dream of the other, you’re fucked.”








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p.s. Hey. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh. I forget how Errol Flynn came up. Oh, wait, because Misanthrope initially hallucinated his name when he first saw Errol Morris's. I have heard of that memoir and of its delights. Maybe fate via referentiality is saying, Read it. Maybe I will. Glad you dug CJC's post, of course. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, D. Yeah, strange and worrisome that it's taking so long to release them. Seems like a no brainer. Maybe some face saving is going on? Heavy wishing that it happens asap, obviously. ** œ, That's a really nice phrase: 'disheveled behind the screen', but I'm sorry you are. Yes, I'll have about a two week blog break marked by a sequence of reruns in a week and a half or so. Thanks much about my projects, and best wishes to yours. ** Sypha, 'Atlantis' is pretty great. I've read some but not a lot of Dennis Potter, but I remembering liking what I read a lot. I'm more familiar with the TV/cinema adaptations of his writings. He seems like a very good area of investigation to me. I should do a Potter post, actually. Great luck on hitting your 'Trinity' deadline. A new blog Day from you would super sweet. ** Gary gray, Hi. I guess you have to get into the slowness of reading poetry, or just get used to how differently it operates your eyes. Then, when your attention span is comfortably off the preset grid that fiction locks in, it gets exciting, or for me, I mean. I'll try to do that Mortimer post, yeah, and thanks a lot again for the idea/nudge. For some weird reason, FB let me get way over the friends limit before cutting me off, and it sucks, but I can't bring myself to make one of those self-devised fan pages for myself that would allow unending friendships. People have to 'follow' me, which is so one-sided and weird in terminology. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. Super great that you're writing enough to have tripled the word. Nothing better. I'm good. Writing fairly well, but not in triplicate yet. ** Steevee, Hi. Not that CNN International is any kind of godsend at all, but it's a lot better than the domestic version. I'll try the Zola Jesus. I saw her live once after sort liking her recordings and was really not impressed at all, but I know I need to try her again. The combo with Foetus is intriguing. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. ** Katalyze, Hi! Yeah, the bill is amazing, but the stadium context is too gross and anti-experience or something. Kind of hoping KL and/or ES and/or TtC do a secret small gig here that isn't too secret. I think I have the King Krule lined up for listening today. I just put together a gig post of the stuff I've been listening to, some which/whom include the new Portal, Tsembla, Fuck Buttons, Vår, Unicorn Hard-On, ... I'm really curious to hear how you find Iceland. Seriously want to go there. It's on the agenda of my newfound adventuring, but the logistics are still kind of vague and not figured out. That's exciting, K! More love to you still. ** Rewritedept, Sleep is a great antidote for cranky pantsdom. I don't always know when people are joking, or when they're commenting drunk, ha ha, unless their typing skills are notably decayed or something. I'm very sincere and a bit hazy upstairs and the rush of p.s. writing in combo can take their toll. ** Kyler, Hey. Oh, don't ever take my email slowness as meaning anything other than obnoxiously expressing one if great weaknesses. It's kind of a miracle when I actually ever end up writing anyone back ever. I used to be more okay at email, but doing the p.s. every day has kind of disabled my enthusiasm for my other correspondence. I think my full moon night was just another night, and I actually got better sleep than usual, so ... what does it mean? Oh, and, yeah, the DW letter was nice as those things can go, and it's cool he's being supportive and advisory. ** Jeff, Hi, Jeff. Great response to CJC. A real please to read. ** Josh Winter, Hi there. A spell? Uh, what kind of spell? I don't think I know the word count of the final version. I guess I could look through the pdfs and stuff that I traded with my editor and check. But, yeah, a spell of what sort? ** Misanthrope, I think it's probably an easy transition from texting to Twitter, so it feels comfortable from the outset. I have a bunch of quite young 'friends' on FB, but I don't know that that indicates any kind of trend or whatever. I'm in a phase of finding a newsfeed packed with people spouting off simplistically about the news of the day really tiresome, so I mostly stay away, but this too shall pass, I'm sure. I mean my weariness will pass not the spouting off. Hopefully the inevitable sounding explosion down there will blow LS unharmed back into your family's arms length. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Thanks so much again! It was a hit! I didn't read that about the AR-G film releases. That's great news, obviously. I wonder which titles, although I could probably guess, but I'll go find out. About time. ** End. I did another scrapbook page for my in-process novel that, as usual, may or may not be of interest or cogent to anyone but me, but, hey, that's showbiz. See you tomorrow.

Peter Sellers Day

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'Peter Sellers, born into a touring theatrical family, became a "drummer, pianist and general funnyman" for RAF Gang Shows during the war. After demobilisation, he worked on radio as an impressionist, exhibiting the extraordinary vocal inventiveness that became one of his trademarks and was a cornerstone of radio's highly popular The Goon Show (1952-60). Sellers made two Goon Show spin-off films, Down Among the Z Men (1952) and The Case of the Mukkinese Battlehorn (1956).

'His other 1950s film parts were bewilderingly varied: timorous Teddy Boy in The Ladykillers (1955), fly Petty Officer in Up the Creek (1958), aged, obfuscating Scottish accountant in The Battle of the Sexes (1959), or Brummie villain in Never Let Go (1960), complemented by multiple roles in The Naked Truth (1957) and The Mouse that Roared (1960).

'The role that confirmed his acting ability was Fred Kite, the Communist shop steward in I'm All Right Jack (1959), where his brilliant performance captured both the vanity and poignancy of this ideologue and intellectual manqué. It was this mixture of sharp observation and pathos that characterised Sellers' ordinary men with aspirations: the provincial librarian in Only Two Can Play (1961), the idealistic vicar in Heavens Above! (1963).

'These qualities infused his most popular achievement, Inspector Clouseau, in five films beginning with The Pink Panther (1963) through to Revenge of the Pink Panther (1978). In Clouseau, Sellers combined his vocal ingenuity and skill as a slapstick comedian, yet always retained an essential humanity through the inspector's indefatigable dignity in the face of a hostile universe.

'His other performance which endures in the memory was the triple role in Dr Strangelove (1963), as the well-meaning US President, unflappable RAF group-captain and the nightmarish Dr Strangelove himself, the government's adviser on nuclear warfare, who is unable to control his own body, the black gloved hand always trying to make a Nazi salute, expressing an ineradicable desire to dominate and destroy.

'Always restless, insecure and self-critical, Sellers sought to play romantic roles as in The Bobo (1967) or Hoffman (1970), but was always more successful in parts that sent up his own vanities and pretensions, as with the TV presenter and narcissistic lothario in There's a Girl in My Soup (1970). Sellers' career meandered in the 1970s; only his role as the humble gardener turned guru in Being There (1979) showed the range of his talent.

'Sellers died in 1980 at age 54 of a massive heart attack, a victim of the heart disease that first struck him in 1964 and continued to haunt him during his most productive years as an international star. Mr. Sellers was in London at the time to work on the screenplay of Romance of the Pink Panther, which was to have been his sixth film in the role of the bumbling Inspector Clouseau, his most famous comic creation. He was still basking in the acclaim for his starring role in the previous year's Being There, which won him an Academy Award nomination.

'Filmmaker Blake Edwards, who directed the Clouseau movies, said, "One lived with the realization that Peter could go at any time. But he was a very courageous man who refused to let his heart problems interfere with his personal life." Mr. Sellers gave evidence of that during the 1978 Pink Panther press conference. A reporter asked if he would mind answering a personal question. "Of course not," Mr. Sellers said. "I understand you've had some heart attacks . . ." the reporter began, before Mr. Sellers interrupted him with gallows humor: "Yes, but I plan to give them up. I'm down to two a day."' -- collaged



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Stills























































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Further

Peter Sellers Official Website
Peter Sellers Fan Site
Peter Sellers Appreciation Society
Peter Sellers @ IMDb
'The Paranormal Peter Sellers'
'Forgotten film of Goons restored by BFI'
'For Pete's sake, spare us another account of Sellers' life and death'
'Biopic's many strange faces of Peter Sellers incense the actor's son'
'Here, there and everywhere'
Peter Sellers discography @ Discogs
'Peter Sellers Dies at 54'
'THE PARTY THAT IS PETER SELLERS'
'The Lost Roles of Peter Sellers'
'A Cocktail Recipe For Disaster: Peter Sellers And Orson Welles On The Making Of Casino Royale'
'10 Things You Might Not Know About Peter Sellers'



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Extras


Peter Sellers - RARE interview - '74


Peter Sellers on the Muppet Show


Peter Sellers performs 'A Hard Day's Night'


PETER SELLERS - 'Balham - Gateway To The South' - 1958


DEAN MARTIN & PETER SELLERS - 1973 - "The Elephant Sketch"


PETER SELLERS & SOPHIA LOREN - 'Bangers And Mash' - 45rpm 1961



Peter Sellers: Complete Guide To Accents of The British Isles


Peter Sellers - Barclays Commercials 1980



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Interview




Within a short period of time you have progressed from being an English radio comedian to international star status. Do you regard yourself as a star?

Sellers: No, I’m not a star. I’m a character actor. The character actor must tailor his talent to the parts that are offered. If I were a leading man, a tall, good-looking sort of chap, you know, a chap who has a way with him, who gets parts tailored for his personality, like Cary Grant, then I could regard myself as a star. I’m not a star, because I have no personality of my own.

Hasn’t success enabled you to find your personality?

Sellers: Success hasn’t enabled me to find out anything about myself. I just know I can do certain things. If you go too deep into yourself, if you analyze yourself too closely, it’s no good for the job. You can either act or you can’t. If you analyze your own emotions all the time, and every doorknob you handle, you know, you’re up the spout.

But supposing you were asked to play a character called Peter Sellers, how would you play him?

Sellers: What I would do, I’d go to see all my friends, I’d go to see my acquaintances, and ask them how they see me, ask for their impressions of Peter Sellers. And then I would sift these characterizations. That’s all I can do, because I am quite unaware of what I am. A politician can see himself, can see what sort of an impact he is making. I can’t. I know I’m a bad conversationalist. Often I’m at parties, and people think Peter Sellers is going to do an act, and they wait, and when nothing is forthcoming, they’re disappointed.

Don’t you see a concrete personality when you look in the mirror?

Sellers: It’s difficult but — er — I suppose what I’d see is someone who has never grown up, a wild sentimentalist, capable of great heights and black, black depths — a person who has no real voice of his own. I’m like a mike. I have no set sound of my own. I pick it up from my surroundings. At the moment I’ve got a South African architect working on my new flat in Hampstead, and so I tend to speak in a South African accent all the time. As for the face in the mirror, well — my appearance is fattish, a more refined-looking Pierre Laval, sometimes happy, but always trying to achieve a peace of mind that doesn’t seem possible in this business. This business breeds a tension that is difficult to live with.

Does this make you sad?

Sellers: They say all comedians are sad. I wonder if that's true? Still, I'm not really a comedian. I don't know what I am.

You're certainly a star.

Sellers: To be a star means coming out from under the cover of the character, the work, the celebrated anonymity of the featured player. I've stepped into the spotlight, looked behind myself and see I cast no shadow. Stanley Kubrick famously said of me, "There is no such person as Peter Sellers." Spike Milligan, my fellow Goon, said of me, "Peter's not a genius. He's something more. He's a freak." Blake Edwards said of me, "I think he lives a great part of his life in hell." These people who know me, you understand. I writhe when I see myself on the screen. I'm such a dreadfully clumsy hulking image. I say to myself, "Why doesn't he get off? Why doesn't he get off?" I mean I look like such an idiot. Some fat awkward thing dredged up from some third-rate drama company. I must stop thinking about it, otherwise I shan't be able to go on working.

And so you work.

Sellers: Here's my credo -- "What is to be will be even if it never happens."



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17 of Peter Sellers's 60 films

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Alexander Mackendrick The Ladykillers (1955)
'The fable of The Ladykillers is a comic and ironic joke about the condition of postwar England. After the war, the country was going through a kind of quiet, typically British but nevertheless historically fundamental revolution. Though few people were prepared to face up to it, the great days of the Empire were gone forever. British society was shattered with the same kind of conflicts appearing in many other countries: an impoverished and disillusioned upper class, a brutalised working class, juvenile delinquency among the Mods and Rockers, an influx of foreign and potentially criminal elements, and a collapse of 'intellectual' leadership. All of these threatened the stability of the national character. Though at no time did Bill Rose or I ever spell this out, look at the characters in the film. The Major (played by Cecil Parker), a conman, is a caricature of the decadent military ruling class. One Round (Danny Green) is the oafish representative of the British masses. Harry (Peter Sellers) is the spiv, the worthless younger generation. Louis (Herbert Lorn) is the dangerously unassimilated foreigner. They are a composite cartoon of Britain's corruption.'-- Alexander Mackendrick



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Mario Zampi The Naked Truth (1957)
'A different twist on the Peter-Sellers-plays-a-bunch of roles, whereas he only plays someone who plays a bunch of roles. Of course we all know it is Peter Sellers no matter which twist is being used, this one clearly makes it's game part of the story. I don't think there is even a sense that he's supposed to be a master of disguise, as few of his fellow characters seem to fall for it - only the most important one - or incidental bumpings into. The Naked Truth is a scandal rag that never seems to get published, as the publisher uses its contents for blackmail, which is supposedly just as lucrative as publishing it. Save the trees! A couple of other familiar faces contribute to the cast, Terry Thomas and Dennis Price.'-- The Pirate Bay



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Jack Arnold The Mouse that Roared (1959)
'The economy of the teeny-tiny European duchy of Grand Fenwick is threatened when an American manufacturer comes up with an imitation of Fenwick's sole export, its fabled wine. Crafty prime minister Count Mountjoy (Peter Sellers) comes up with a plan: Grand Fenwick will declare war on the United States. Grand Duchess Gloriana (Peter Sellers again) is hesitant: how can meek little Grand Fenwick win such a conflict? Mountjoy explains that the plan is to lose the war, then rely upon American foreign aid to replenish Grand Fenwick's treasury. Bumbling military officer Tully Bascombe (Peter Sellers yet again) leads his country's ragtag army into battle. They cross the Atlantic in an ancient wooden vessel, then set foot on Manhattan Island, fully prepared to down weapons and surrender. But New York City is deserted, due to an air raid drill. While wandering around, Sellers comes upon atomic scientist David Kossoff and the scientist's pretty daughter Jean Seberg.'-- Sony Pictures



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Richard Lester The Running Jumping and Standing Still Film (1960)
'Director Richard Lester first worked with Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan on three television series, The Idiot Weekly Price 2d, A Show Called Fred and Son of Fred (all ITV, 1956), each of them an early attempt to transfer the surreal humour of radio's The Goon Show to a visual medium. The Running, Jumping and Standing Still Film, itself entirely shot in a field, can be viewed as an extension of these inserts. Lester later acknowledged that even some of the sketches were variations on those filmed for the television series. Following some earlier shooting by Sellers and Milligan, the majority of the film was shot over one or two Sundays (accounts vary) using Sellers' own 16mm camera, and edited by Lester and Sellers in the latter's bedroom. The sound effects and music score were added by Lester shortly afterwards. The film's lasting legacy was its influence on British comedy in general, and on Monty Python's Flying Circus in particular. This is evident not only in its surreal humour, but in the way that elements of one routine are threaded through subsequent scenes, transcending the stand-alone sketch form - a tactic subsequently favoured by the Python team.'-- BFI



the entire film



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John Guillermin Waltz of the Toreadors (1962)
'Sellers was just on the cusp of emerging as an international box office phenomenon, but his comic skills had already been well noted in a number of productions, and he had recently won the Best Actor Award from the British Academy for I'm All Right Jack (1959). While filming Waltz of the Toreadors, a comedy of romantic and marital upset, the actor was undergoing his own marriage woes. He and first wife Anne Howe were bitterly nearing the end of their relationship, a crisis fueled largely by his philandering, and Sellers sought relief from this distress with near-constant work. Even that, however, wasn't always enough. During production on Waltz of the Toreadors, he held up production for many costly hours while he called his friend David Lodge to the Thames valley location shoot, begging him to talk to Anne and apologize for him, in the hopes he could patch things up one last time. The gesture ultimately proved to be in vain. Unfortunately, the completed film version of Waltz of the Toreadors did little to raise Sellers's spirits. It was not a box office success, and he thought "the whole thing looks terrible."'-- TCM



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Stanley Kubrick Lolita (1962)
'From the beginning, British-comedy fans loved the work of Peter Sellers for its wit and sure attack and for its fillip of emotion. But it took a brilliant young American director with a hip, cosmopolitan temperament to exploit Sellers' talent fully. As Quilty, Sellers is quicksilver-changeable -- a portrait of the artist as a phony. He's ostentatiously high style. At a summer dance in a high school gym, he manages to look good even though he bops only from the chest up. As he haunts Humbert, he takes on diverse flaky disguises; at one point he impersonates a suspiciously ingratiating state cop -- the kind of weirdo turn Norman Mailer once reveled in. When Quilty poses as a German psychologist, the dagger-glint in his eyes lets Humbert know that the pseudo shrink has his number. Sellers' Quilty sees through the weakness and hypocrisy in Humbert. In the film's daring narrative frame, you feel that the ultra-civilized Humbert is able to kill Quilty because the victim starts his death scene under a sheet and finishes it hiding behind a painting. In the end, Humbert doesn't have to look at him.'-- Baltimore Sun



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Blake Edwards The Pink Panther (1964)
'The Pink Panther of the title is a diamond supposedly containing a flaw which forms the image of a "leaping panther", which can be seen if held up to light in a certain way. This is explained in the beginning of the first film, and the camera zooms in on the diamond to reveal the blurry flaw, which focuses into the Panther (albeit not actually leaping) to start the opening credits sequence (this is also done in Return). The plot of the first film is based on the theft of this diamond. The diamond reappears in several later films in the series. In the original Pink Panther movie, the main focus was on David Niven's role as Sir Charles Litton, the infamous jewel thief nicknamed "the Phantom", and his plan to steal the Pink Panther. The Inspector Clouseau character plays only a supporting role as Litton's incompetent antagonist, and provided slapstick comic relief to a movie that was otherwise a subtle, lighthearted crime drama, a somewhat jarring contrast of styles which is typical of Edwards' films. The popularity of Clouseau caused him to become the main character in subsequent Pink Panther films, which were more straightforward slapstick comedies.'-- collaged



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Outtakes



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Stanley Kubrick Dr. Strangelove (1964)
'Peter Sellers is quite literally all over the picture--he plays three parts: an RAF group captain attached to the air base, the President of the United States and Dr. Strangelove himself. In the first of these roles, Sellers establishes a tone of British disdain that by itself could alienate a good part of the American audience. We have become a big country since Mrs. Trollope put us across her knee, but the curled British lip is still intolerable anywhere in the United States outside the Anglophile lecture circuit. Sellers's President, on the other hand, is a work of such persuasive art that, although he in no way resembles any of our Chief Executives, you can scarcely believe that he is not an inspired piece of mimicry. President Muffley is the embodiment of the American executive ideal--a man whose sole quality is a talent for deciding what other men should do--and the fiendish notion here is to project such a man into a moment of ultimate crisis where any decision is irrelevant.'-- The Nation



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Clive Donner What's New Pussycat? (1965)
'The swinging '60s got a new catchphrase and Woody Allen got a box-office hit that put him on the road to directing his own films when What's New, Pussycat? hit the screen in 1965. With an all-star international cast including Allen, Peter O'Toole, Peter Sellers, Romy Schneider, Paula Prentiss and Ursula Andress - highlighted with the tag line "Together Again (For the First Time)," and a hit title song recorded by Tom Jones - it seemed like a surefire hit. But if a film's success was measured by what went on behind the scenes during production, this frenetic sex farce would have been one of the biggest flops of all time. Peter Sellers, who was recovering from a heart attack, agreed to play the psychiatrist, a small role that would help him get back into the swing of filmmaking. But once he got on the set, he started improvising his own lines and suggesting added scenes. Even more damaging, he and Allen developed a rivalry that wasn't helped by their resemblance to each other. Sellers resented people's mistaking him for the neophyte actor-writer. And it got worse when an executive producer on the film, thinking he was Allen, reassured him that he wouldn't let Sellers damage his picture. Sellers began improvising more and even got the producer to give him lines and scenes Allen had written for himself. Suddenly Sellers was the film's star, and Allen was reduced to a supporting role.'-- TCM



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Blake Edwards The Party (1968)
'Blake Edwards’s The Party is the most maddeningly inconsistent of Hollywood comedies. Its hero is one Hrundi V. Bakshi, an incompetent Indian actor played with exquisite politeness and a touch of preening self-satisfaction—and in brownface—by Peter Sellers. Almost the entire movie takes place at a party of Hollywood swells to which Bakshi mistakenly gets invited; needless to say, the actor, hoping only to fit in, winds up destroying the house, which is an amazing piece of sixties fantasy, with its pools, sliding panels, and acres of Formica. Some of Edwards’s work with Sellers, including long, virtually silent passages of physical comedy (set to Henry Mancini’s music), comes within hailing distance of Chaplin—for instance, a scene of exquisite anguish in which Bakshi has to pee and can’t move because a French starlet (Claudine Longet) is singing an interminable chanson. Other jokes, however, are just routine, and the movie collapses into chaos.'-- The New Yorker



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Hy Averback I Love You, Alice B. Toklas (1968)
'One of the few 1960s satires of the hippie culture that doesn't appear to be concocted by grumpy old men, I Love You, Alice B. Toklas stars Peter Sellers as Harold Fine, a staid Jewish attorney. Engaged to the equally straitlaced Joyce (Joyce Van Patten), Harold wistfully dreams of having a more exciting lifestyle. Through a fluke, Harold is obliged to drive a station wagon emblazoned with "psychedelic" imagery; it is with this vehicle that he picks up his flower-child brother Herbie (David Arkin), and Herbie's groovy chick Nancy (Leigh Taylor-Young). Rather enjoying the company of people outside of his establishment orbit, Harold lets Nancy stay over at her place, and she plies him with marijuana-spiked brownies. His inhibitions released by the spiked pastries, Harold kicks over the traces, grows his hair to shoulder length, and embarks upon an affair with Nancy. But when the effects of the brownies wear off, Harold suddenly feels like the rather foolish middle-aged man that he is. The beauty of I Love You, Alice B. Toklas is that it patronizes neither the hippies nor the Establishment characters; both groups are shown as human beings rather than agit-prop stereotypes.'-- Rovi



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Joseph McGrath The Magic Christian (1969)
'The Magic Christian, Terry Southern's best book, is not so much a novel as collection of episodes in the life of the eccentric, incalculably wealthy Guy Grand, who constructs elaborate and immensely practical jokes designed to upset his fellow men and sometimes himself as well. His usual targets are greed and conventional values, but he also attacks good sportsmanship, good living and rudimentary business ethics. The Magic Christian is funny, uncomfortable and without an ounce of benevolence. The meeting of McGrath with his material produces not so much a tension as a revaluation—and the results turn out to be a mixed bag. The episodes have been shuffled around, so that Terry Southern's bitter beginning (a put-on of a poor hot dog vender) and enigmatic ending (a disappearing chain of super-bargain grocery stores) have been lost in the middle of the film to no good effect. Guy Grand, a middle-aged American tycoon in the book, becomes a British business baronet (Peter Sellers) in the film. And he adopts a son (Ringo Starr), whom he names Youngman Grand, and who serves no reasonable purpose except to give Peter Sellers somebody to talk and relate to. Ringo is fine, and Sellers is finer—in a performance, that vastly enriches and normalizes the archly enthusiastic Porky Pig of Terry Southern's imagination.'-- NYT



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Alvin Rakoff Hoffman (1970)
'Hoffman is the satirical tale of an older man, played by Peter Sellers, who invites a female employee to his flat in London. As the film progresses, it is revealed that Sellers' character has caught one of his workers dealing in a scam against his company, and has decided to blackmail the man's lovely fiancée away for a full week to convince her to fall in love with him instead. A witty drama rather than a comedy, the film has an almost terrifying performance by Sellers, involved in intricate mind games with the other protagonists. Reportedly, Sellers despised Hoffman because the lead character too closely reflected his own personality. According to Bryan Forbes, who was head of the studio that financed the film, Sellers went through a depressive phase after filming completed and he asked to buy back the negative and remake the movie. He also gave an interview where he said the film was a disaster. It was not a success at the box office.'-- collaged



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William Sterling Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1972)
'A star-studded cast highlights this musical adaptation of the classic fantasy tales of Lewis Carroll. One day young Alice (Fiona Fullerton) takes a nasty spill down the rabbit-hole and finds herself in the bizarre kingdom of Wonderland, where she encounters a number of strange and enchanted characters, including the playful White Rabbit (Michael Crawford), the manic March Hare (Peter Sellers), the mysterious Caterpillar (Ralph Richardson), the Doormouse (Dudley Moore), the imperious Queen of Hearts (Flora Robson), and the quizzical Mad Hatter (Robert Helpmann). The cast also includes Spike Milligan, Peter Bull, Roy Kinnear, and Michael Jayston as Lewis Carroll. Alice's Adventures In Wonderland won two prizes at the 1973 British Academy of Film and Theatre Awards -- for Georfrey Unsworth's photography and Anthony Mendelson's costume design.'-- Rovi



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Joseph McGrath The Great McGonagall (1974)
'That matchless British farceur Spike Milligan stars in The Great McGonagall. The story concerns indigent Scotsman William McGonagall, who aspires to become Poet Laureate of Great Britain. McGonagall might have a better chance of accomplishing this if he had any talent, but he is hilariously inept. The plot is abandoned somewhere in the middle of the film in favor of a series of virtually unrelated comic episodes. Peter Sellers, Spike Milligan's onetime Goon Show cohort, steals the show in drag as a sexually voracious Queen Victoria!'-- Rovi



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Robert Moore Murder by Death (1976)
'It was one of the top 10 grossing films of 1976, but Murder By Death has the feel of something Neil Simon and his brother Danny might have cooked up for Sid Caesar during their days writing for Your Show of Shows in the '50s: Assemble a group of well-known literary sleuths (winking versions of everyone from Sam Spade to Hercule Poirot to Nick and Nora Charles), throw them in a rambling gothic mansion for the weekend and let the whodunit spoofing commence. The cast is an embarrassment of riches that includes Maggie Smith and David Niven. Alec Guinness. Nancy Walker (Mrs. Morgenstern!). Peter Falk. Truman Capote, of all people. James Coco (a Simon regular). Brennan, who died last month. James Cromwell, in his first movie role. And Peter Sellers as a pseudo-Charlie Chan in one of the weirder examples of cinematic yellow face since Mickey Rooney went faux Asian in Breakfast at Tiffany's.' -- Chicago Tribune



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Hal Ashby Being There (1979)
'In 1971, Jerzy Kosinski published the novel Being There. Soon afterwards he received a telegram from its lead character, Chance the Gardener: "Available in my garden or outside of it." A telephone number followed and when Kosinski dialed it Peter Sellers answered. For years afterwards, Sellers would try to get this film made. "That's me!" he would tell people of the Chance character. He hawked the idea of a film to whomever he could find. Finally, in 1979, with the clout he had gained from the Pink Panther series, he was able to fulfill his dream. What followed was the culmination of Peter Sellers' career: a masterpiece of double-edged satire on politics and television. But Kosinki's screenplay goes deeper than that. What he and director Hal Ashby expose is a self-serving and self-deceived society. Through the innocence of the Chance character, all the schemes and manipulations of the world are laid bare for what they are: pure folly. For those who hunger for the truths in life, this is a film that will satisfy your appetite.'-- sarcasmalley



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*

p.s. Hey. ** S., Hi. Aw, thanks. I guess it was a full moon here too, right? I think the whole world shares those things, don't we? ** Rewritedept, Hi. No, the previous two scrapbook pages used quotes from Blanchot and Bresson, not Deleuze. The page could be read in whatever order one liked, I think. Well, that page was an intervening grid, as the title said, so it came from elsewhere and influenced rather than coming from the center and spreading influence outwards. Irony has been dense and ingrained for at least a few generations, I think. It just evolves in its modes and styles of representation. I think when anger or spite or whatever is a generating force, it has a polluting effect on irony, and I think that's where what you wrote accrued some haze re: its intentions. Or that's my best guess. Body language is probably 3/4 of the battle, for sure, yeah. I hope the decent lead lives up to its decency. I don't know, I think I take what I write pretty seriously. I think I like artists who are really serious about what they do. They just don't go around saying so 'cos what's the point. The proof's in the pudding, as people used to say. I think that craftsman thing is either an external interpretation or a matter of artists who call themselves merely craftsmen being shy or insecure or something. I know Pollard is very serious about what he does. Anyway, ultimately, everything can work. You should think about what you do in whatever way that makes you do it, and the seriousness is ultimately whoever else's call, I guess? ** œ, Yes, indeed, i.e. Bambi. Oh, that's interesting: I actually really like Deleuze's writing. I've only started reading him again and more carefully lately because he's important to the novel for reasons too complicated to explain, and I'm kind of really into his sentences and paragraphs and stuff for some reason. I think my brain does this trick where it humidifies his writing or something. It's strange. I've been thinking about that, how that works. Yeah, Smithson's writing are really good, I agree. I haven't read them in ages. I should do that again. Thank you for the kind words, my friend. ** Lee, Hi, Lee! Good to see you, buddy. Thanks, man. Deleuze is a snake? Wow, ha ha. I guess I think not, although it depends on what you mean by snake, I guess. Snakes are just snakes plus human fear or something, or ... I don't know, ha ha. I shouldn't try to think too hard in the morning. Awesome about your film program. What is Serra's 'Boomerang'? I don't know that. That Harry Mathews novel is amazing, right? So cool that you read that. I think that's my favorite of his, and it's probably his least read and known and noted maybe. Things are great here, thanks. There? ** David Ehrenstein, Hey. Yeah, it gets more worrying every day, but at least people are rallying and making as much noise as they can, and I have noticed that the Canadian media, at least, are picking up on it in the last 24 hours. But, yeah. ** Allesfliesst, Hi, Kai. Thank you. Wow, the original quote is more, well, everything, if that's true. The English translation doesn't go there, obviously. I haven't read the entirety of Deleuze's long thing on Sacher-Masoch, etc., but what I have read was very sharp and useful, thinking-wise, I thought. Well, I got a full night's sleep last night for the first time in a month, so hopefully the spell is breaking, but I have been waking up between 4 and 5 am-ish very alert every morning no matter what time I've gone to sleep, and then I couldn't sleep more. Weirdness. ** Gary gray, Thanks a lot, man. No, uh, if you mean the previous two scrapbook pages, they were for the novel too. I don't think I've made scrapbook pages for my work with Gisele, just posts inspired by the interests that the work occasions. I find making sketches or graphs or collages or whatever for the stuff I'm writing absolutely necessary, but I never learned how to write fiction in a school or formal way, so I don't have any of those taught skills, if they are skills, which I guess they must be. Poetry suggestions? Wow, so many, but, okay, I would recommend starting with my personal faves. Try James Schuyler, John Ashbery, Frank O'Hara, James Tate, ... and I guess just going with the Selected Poems i.e. overview in each case is best, but if you'd rather start with a specific book, I can suggest one. I don't know if I can delineate why I like the Earl Sweatshirt album. I'm not in love with it, but I like the textures, and I think his word usage is pretty interesting, and I think the word/sound intersections are fresh and intriguing, at least on two listens. Thanks a lot for the link. That page looks super intriguing at a glance. I'll pore over it in a bit. And thanks for wishing me a great day. I think it actually might end up being one. I don't think it's wrong to be sexually aroused by anything that I can think of at the moment. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh. Thanks about the post. I have a bead on the Flynn memoir. Shakespeare & Co. has it, so I just need to get on the metro. You do scrapbooks? That's very cool. Would you be able to describe what the 'Sparks-Tastic' scrapbook was like? I would be really fascinated to know. ** Bill, Hi, Bill. How are you doing? Where are you physically/technically? Those are peeks at the novel. The thing itself will probably stay private until it's finished, or that's how I usually need to work. Oh, duh, you're in Barcelona, I see. Doing what? Having major fun? Awesome to see you, B! ** MANCY, Hey! Thanks a whole lot, man. You good? What's going on? ** Squeaky, Hi, Darrell! Aw, thank you so much for that, man. I want to see Nayland and Joe Goode's behind-the-scenes thing. Maybe evidence of it is online? I'll check. You doing great? How's work going and everything else? ** Wolf. Hi, Wolfy. Oh, gosh, thank you, pal. I'm kind of really happy with that scrapbook page, if I don't say so myself, ha ha. Really interesting thoughts about the Deleuze quote. It's hard to explain, but, due to what this novel is about, the Deleuze ideas come intersected with a personal reference or generative source that is very emotional, and they also get qualified and 'misinterpreted' by me via where I come from strategically, so they're inseparable from those two mirrors and, thus, not as solid as they probably seem outside of my head, although I tried to qualify and make tangents out of them with the gifs as imagination substitutes, or ... yeah, I think it was too hard to explain, basically, ha ha. Yeah, the ... fucked' quote is really nicely confusing, and you know how I like that shit. What's up? Love to you! ** Grant maierhofer, Thank you a lot, man. For whatever reason, I'm more into Deleuze's solo stuff than his stuff with Guattari. You're reading Mailer. That's a nice idea. I never read 'The Executioners Song', weirdly. It's a real hole in my reading. I mostly read/know his earliest books, which kind of really blew me away at the time I was into them. I'm doing well. It sounds like you are too. Summer seems to be finished over here, which is awesome news. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. I'm not sick of you liking the scrapbook pages, don't worry, ha ha. Obviously, they're kind of more important to me personally than most posts here, and it means a lot if they come across well. Proofing is fun. There's something really fun about it. I guess because it's like putting on the safety straps in the roller coaster car. Release date!! And so soon a release date! Superb! Man, you should let/help me make a celebratory launch post, no? I mean, if you want to. Highlight, you bet. Everyone, the first novel by the great Thomas Moronic aka Moore is coming out next month, which is world news in and of itself, and here he is to ask you something related: 'If anyone out there writes reviews for any sites or publications or whatever and would like to review my novel or anything along those lines, then please feel free to get in touch with me by email: god_or_nothing(at)hotmail(dot com).' Please do write to him if you're in a position to offer support. Thanks! ** Steevee, Hi. Oh, hm, as best I can remember, the Deleuze quotes came from these books: 'Empiricism and Subjectivity', 'Pure Immanence', 'Difference and Repetition', 'The Logic of Sense', 'Cinema 1: The Movement-Image', and 'Desert Islands and Other Texts'. Well, yeah, the charges against Greyson are bizarre. I don't know much of anything about his fellow arrestee. ** Josh Winter, Hi. Oh, okay. Did you read Gary Gray's comment to you? Maybe you should to see if you want to know the word count or count it out yourself? Anyway, I found the word count of the almost final edit of the novel, but it might be off by a handful or more of words since there might have been some last second changes. In case you want to take GG's advice, I'll put the word count at the very end of the p.s. That number you see there is the word count. Take care. ** _Black_Acrylic, Thanks, buddy. Sounds nice, that event, not to mention the mental and sonic image of you jacking actual vinyl. Sweet! ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! I'm really good, thank you. August has been odd, but it's turning a corner into awesomeness central finally. Good timing on your cabin fever, but cabin fever is a great predecessor in your case. Thank you muchly about the scrapbook page. I'm getting into Deleuze right now more than I was in the past, so I'm still kind of newish to him. Someone I know who's really into him likes 'Bergsoniam' the best, I think. I haven't looked into that one yet. Sure, I would be nothing but really honored to do the interview. I mean, thank you a lot for wanting to do that. Next week is good. I'll be going away and being busy the following week, but next week is good. Yeah, thanks again a lot, man. I don't think I've read Bianca Shipton, so that's super great and helpful. I'll go over to NM as soon as this p.s. is in the bag. Everyone, want to join me in investigating the work of one Bianca Shipton over at Chris Dankland's imperative The Neato Mosquito Show site? Should be a cool, instructive voyage. If you're game, click this. Talk soon, for sure! ** Misanthrope, Ha ha, well, you know what I say: Confusion is the truth. So maybe you understood it perfectly, ha ha. Oh, the kitchen counter scene, how I could I forget? And how could you not, you sicko. I suppose you're all excited for that One Direction 3D movie that I was reading about yesterday and that isn't wowing the critics, I understand. That joke of his, hm, yeah. ** Chris Cochrane, Mr. Cochrane! Goodness gracious! It's so lovely to see you! I'm doing good, thank you kindly. Yes, I would like a rough cut of your project. I mean, duh, yes. I accept your offer. Cool, man. I've just had almost a month of relative sleeplessness myself, and I may not yet be out of the woods, so bedtime hugs to you, big C. ** Okay. Peter Sellers. What more need be said, I guess. Peter Sellers. See you tomorrow.  **  44,325

Metalcore Vocal Covers Day, featuring "Abigail" by Motionless in White

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Original


Motionless In White - "Abigail" Official Music Video



Lyrics

Burn baby burn
She's a witch, she's a witch and I'm a heretic
So, learn baby learn
She's a witch, she's a witch and I'm a heretic so, learn

Oh Abigail how could you do this to us?
You were a product of lust (Product of lust)
And now this rope on my neck stopped all the blood to my head
So, now Salem please save me (Salem please save me)

Wish upon the stars, but they won't save you tonight
God has forsaken thee to hell, we're going to hang from the sky
Feel the weight of the stones crush hard on your chest
Confess, confess before you run short of breath
Confess, confess here for your sins

Burn baby burn
She's a witch, she's a witch and I'm a heretic so, learn
Oh Abigail how could you do this to us?

Oh Abigail how could you do this to us?
You were a product of lust (Product of lust)
And now this rope on my neck stopped all the blood to my head
So, now Salem please save me (Salem please save me)

"It's not on a ship we'll meet again Abigail
But, in hell... I say God is dead"
I'll see you when we both meet in hell

How could you?
When we both meet in hell



Metalcore

'Metalcore is a fusion genre blending extreme metal and hardcore punk. The name is a portmanteau of the names of the two genres, which is known as metallic hardcore distinguished by its emphasis on breakdowns, which are slow, intense passages that are used for moshing. The vocalizing technique in metalcore is generally shouted or growled vocals, particularly common among many 1990s metalcore groups. Today many metalcore bands combine growled vocals and screams with some shouting occasional in the backing vocals. However, some metalcore bands, like Killswitch Engage and Motionless In White, have also done clean singing. But there are also modern bands who only growl or shout, such as Parkway Drive.

'Heavy guitar riffs, double-bass drumming, blast beat drumming, and breakdowns are used a lot in metalcore. Drop guitar tunings are used almost universally, earlier bands usually used either Drop D, C# or C tunings. More recently certain bands have been known to tune as low as Drop G1 and even F#1. Drummers typically use a lot of double bass technique and general drumming styles across the board. Bass tends to be down-tuned and low and guitar riffs tend to usually derive from punk or metal.

'For a lot of heavy music listeners, the genre label “metalcore” has become almost a dirty word. The genre quickly rose in popularity over the past 10 years or so and stole the torch from punk rock as the preferred underground music genre among teenagers and 20-somethings. With a steady rise in popularity also came an explosion of new bands and a steady decline in creativity and innovation. It’s remarkable how many bands are content simply copying the flavour of the week instead of having their own musical direction. The bubble is going to burst if things don’t change.'-- collaged



How can I do scream vocals in my singing?

'By “screaming” I’m assuming you mean an aggressive, unclear, somewhat raspy distorted tone in the upper or upper-medium vocal range. Asking how to scream without hurting your voice is a bit like asking how to punch yourself in the face without bruising it. Screaming is abusive to the vocal cords, plain and simple. You might ask, “Well how come (insert famous screaming singer name here) can scream and doesn’t lose his/her voice and he/she’s been doing it for years?” Good question. Here are a few of the realities that explain it.

'The reality is that the vast majority of screamers trashed their voices a long time ago. Most of them have had multiple surgeries, and many can no longer sing at all. What their voices MIGHT be able to handle in the recording studio once a year isn’t the same as handling that kind of abuse all the time. Many of these “screamers” (the smart ones) sing with softer and clearer voices outside the studio in order to try to save their voices from permanent damage.

'Each person’s tissue has a different reaction to abuse. For instance, you might slap one person across the cheek and 5 minutes later there isn’t even a red mark. Do the same to someone else and they’ll be bruised for a week! Allot of times the singers you hear do this don’t have tissue that irritates as easily as the average person. Also, they aren’t singing as loudly as you think. If you “pretend” to scream loud, but you are actually singing at a soft or normal volume level holding way back, then you can let the microphone (with allot of reverb behind it) make it sound like a huge screaming voice.'-- Eric Bruner Vocal Studio Blog



Covers

Crucify Taymour:I couldn't scream the way Danny screams in this song. I'm sorry about that. Watch my other covers, my highs are way better than this.






Stefani Lam:so yea, finally did one of the songs by one of my favorite bands!! might be doing Immaculate Misconception soon c; keep supporting! Like my band page.





FlamicArtan:Check out my band :D vote for... (dont forget to request as well)





Tyler Thurston:I've been screaming for about a month now and am still working out some kinks. I just started doin lows seriously yesterday so thats very new to me as well, feel free to leave comments and also check out my band Tr3ason.





ChealyTheNinja:Hope you like it :) I struggled with the clean vocals a lot, but I felt I should still put them in instead of just doing the screams/growls :) If you enjoyed it :D Thank you!





EdgeOfTheEarth91:my vocal cover of Abigail by Motionless In White, ALL screams are exhaled (false chord)





Johnny Gionette:For the people who have requested this cover, here is Abigail by Motionless In White! Maybe for one of the next covers I will do just one full take and no editing to show what I can do.





KtheScreamer:The mic I'm using doesn't really pick the highs up too well, and I'm sick, which you can hear when I talk, but I tried. :)





VinCasey37:[Studio Quality]





Angel Sifuentez:I'LL SEE YOU WHEN WE BOTH BURN IN HELL. Mic NOT plugged in. Exhales.





KyleCVox: She's a witch and i almost hit a squirrel





David Sky:Fucking shit up. You know, the usual.





UrSTHEtEaM:Just a cover i hope you like it and sry for the shitty quality i recorded with my phone:/ oh and the mic is fake it's not working xD :D





xxabrfreakxx:Thanks guys comment and like please! sorry for the mistakes.





PvtCaboose964:Song is by Motionless in White. Enjoy ^^





Kevan Rose:me doing scream cover of Motionless in White's, Abigail. i only do ex-hails there where no in-hails at all. enjoy.





ScreamAndRawr:I did this song in Music class once :P





SammyVengeance92:My first vocal cover for my fav band (: There are no effects on my screams, nor my clean vocals I literally recorded it straight.





Jamesrulezd00d:MOTIONLESS IN FUCKING WHITE! Currently my favorite band. I haven't uploaded a cover in a while, and I haven't screamed in a while so sorry if I'm not as awesome as usual :// lmao. I went to their show last weekend and got to scream into the mic in Abigail and Immaculate Misconception. The show was fucking awesome. After The Burial, Norma Jean, For The Fallen Dreams, Stray From The Path, and Nausicaa played that show with MIW. And btw, check out Nausicaa, they're a local band here in Gainesville, FL. They're fucking awesome. They were sick as shit at the show.





Cody Gallo:Sorry the shitty video quality, and im not sure what youtube is going to do with the timing so im sorry in advance for that.





iPwnUrScreams:Mic is a prop..(This is done with exhales, the way I learned it is just weird)My cover of Abigail by Motionless In White. I think I did fairly well but tell me what you think.





Screamingturtlez:I first heard this song a couple of days ago and have been listening to it like 100 times alreday! a new band to love?? Anyway i'm sorry for the singing parts i know they suck so just stand with it...:c





theconspiracy124578:Vocal Cover of Abigail By Motionless In White, I own no part of this song. All credit and rights to the music go to Motionless In White and Fearless Records.





Deithis: This is me doing my first attempt of "Abigail" by Motionless in White off their newest album called Creatures. Please let me know what you think, and subscribe if you wanna hear me do every song on the album. All inhale screams.





Kyle Pennell: do whatever. :]





Josh Allen:Cheeky cover, recorded just with the microphone on my camera so the quality isn't the best. Let me know what you think.





Chad Cavender:whats up guys im 14 follow me on twitter at chadcavender1 :) and if you could share this with friends and possibly Facebook it will be greatly appreciated:D or share it on MIW Facebook wall or tweet it at them\m/





DropDeadDaws:Hey guys, I really love this song! One of my favourites from Motionless In White! If you enjoyed, please like, comment, favourite or share. It really helps me grow and I appreciate your help.





josh debey:motionless in white bro :)





Thomas Abigail: Recorded with inbuild laptop microphone





Jarett Laudadio:Attempted this. One take. Not super happy with it. I'll probably redo it at some point.





TwoWithinMyEyes:jizz





IcameAsRussArm: 0:07- 0:23 - Fail. I know it. Sorry Guys





Dawson Staudt:tell me below what you think and if you want to here more! C:





Lucas James:Not my best but it works :p hope you guys enjoy it





BeforeTheGate:umm not a huge fan of this band but have had several requests so i hope yall like it :D COMMENT!!!





Chris Wilson:This is my screaming cover of Motionless in White's Abigail. Comment, rate, and subscribe for more videos! Message me suggestions ;)





Josh Begbie:yee





DieForMeIfIPray:So, another cover. As always only exhale





VlogThatShoot:Our cover of Abigail by Motionless in White.





Jaybo1594:I own nothing.





Ryan Lawson:Old Cover, decided to start putting some videos up on Youtube :)





Asken0809:First MIW cover, hope you like it :D (no clean vocals yet D: )





OMFGITSTYL3R:Me and Scream1095 check it out!





AlterBridge2830:I felt like I could do alot better on this than I did on my other so I did it again! I hope you enjoy, no mic this time, adn all rights go to motionless in white!





Element3141:Cover of Motionless In White's song Abigail, this song was a little different than what I'm use to, but that's why I did it! :) Check out my band here. "Like" Our page please it would really mean a lot to me! :)





Chris Welker:My first time screaming after I had strained my vocal chord.





CarnifexChoseMe:Confess For Your Sins





Chris Tito:Best Cover I've done haha, on a rooftop swag. Subscribe if you liked! Like my band on facebook please. facebook.com/EverlastingEmpire





Bradsvocalcovers:Hello everyone this is my first YouTube video as well my first vocal cover I have done and uploaded to YouTube. If you all could please give me feedback in the comments or inbox me that would be amazing! As well If you would like to see any other videos upon this channel please let me know and I'll try and do my best to entertain everyone as possible. I don't know why the video went sideways sorry, I'll look into that!:)





blacktears210:I don't own this song hope you enjoy :)





David Vargas:quí les va otro cover!!! espero que los disfrute :)





Cian Russell:Love this song so thought i would do a cover for the laugh, I recorded it off my shitty phone camera, So sorry for the bad quality. It's mostly all high exhales i can also do low exhales which i will do in some other video, Hopefully i will have better equipment to record, Enjoy!






*

p.s. Hey. ** Rewritedept, Hi. Steve Martin has been/can be pretty great, but taking over for a super genius like Sellers is a no win. I see what you mean about the tag 'artist'. It's interesting that the term is more intimidating than identifying oneself as other things, I guess maybe because it's a thorough and very committed self-definition. To say you're an artist means it'll always be there, and I guess if one doesn't succeed at being an artist to the standards one applies to the notion of success and quits making art, there is a feeling that one is less an ex-artist than a failed artist? I mean it's not like identifying yourself by the job you hold where your identity can be more fluid. Your day sounds like it was useful enough. My day was good. My great friend/collaborator Zac spent the afternoon rethinking and revising the script of the porn film we hope to make. And it was sunny and nice out. And I worked on the novel some, so it was very productive. Very glad that you're through the withdrawal management. Stick to it, I say. Deerhunter, nice. I'll finally be seeing them live for the first time at the end of October and hopefully finally having an in-person meet with Bradford, who used to be a d.l. of this blog way back when. ** œ, Hi. My mind tends to humidify stuff, but then my writing and voice kind of dries it out again or something. But I need things to be moist in my imagination. Maybe everyone does. Nice psychedelic Bambi butt, thanks! Really interesting thoughts on Smithson. More reasons why I need to dig back into his writings. It's all kind of a blur. I didn't know that he was close to WCW. That's a curious idea. My sleep problems seem to be abating finally. They were a fluke for me, usually designated strictly for jet lag situations. Thank you so much about the chain. No rush, no, please. The thought and promise are beautiful enough. I hope you got some sleep last night! ** Lee, Hi. Twisty and devious, that's interesting. I think I get what you're referring to. I guess I see it or try to see it as courageous and generous in a weird way, but then I really like the eluding or fracturing, and I guess I see it less as deliberate than necessitated?  I like trying to find the source of his explosion, or making up a source or something. I don't know. I see what you mean, though, yeah. Maybe he's devious, I can see how that would be possible, but I don't feel that going on, which is quite possibly my idiosyncrasies at work. I need to read Smithson again, like I said. I have this trace memory of dickishness or something resembling that, but I can't parse it from this far away. Great, thank you for the link to the Serra/Holt film! Thanks a lot! Cool. Bon day, bud. ** Allesfliesst, Hey Kai. Yeah, on Sellers. Uh, yeah, I don't think that condition you speak of is what I have or, yeah, I hope not. I don't really have a fear of dying at the forefront, but then I have this intuition that I'm somehow magically immortal. Call it a hunch, ha ha. Anyway, I seem to have finally been cured of my morning malady as of two nights ago, fingers severely crossed. 'More or less decent' works for me. Let's face it: If we spoke exactly, we'd put 'more or less' in front of every word except maybe 'the'. ** David Ehrenstein, No progress yet with Greyson, weird. Why is this so complicated? I wonder what we don't know. Great Sellers anecdote, thanks! ** S., I used that 'Moon' photo in a blog post, I can't remember how or where. But I think I cropped out the dick 'cos I wanted his reaction to float. Everyone, Here's a NSFW S. thing called 'The moon'. I prefer them unshaved. I like them to be theirs and not neutralized in order to be overly mine. Hugs back. ** Tosh Berman, That's funny, and sorry if it's irksome, but I did think about there being some kind of Sellers resemblance with you when I was making that post. Oh, your 'Sparks-Tastic' scrapbook looks very exciting to me! Cool! I will spend quality time with it once I get out of here. Thank you a lot, Tosh, and, yeah, new computer. Unfortunately that bullet must inevitably be bit. ** Steevee, Hi. I actually have been kind of surprised and shocked by the response to Manning's gender change announcement, but I can be very idealistic. It's weird to realize that how you and I and, I think, most everyone I know personally and respect feel about such things is as isolated as it is. I suppose it's good in the long run that his announcement has forced people's weird fears out into the open where the fears can at least potentially be made to seem as peculiar and unfounded as they are or something. But, yeah, really ugh on the reactions. I almost unfriended a bunch of people of Facebook yesterday, and I still might. I read your 'Grandmaster' review as I was coffeeing this morning. Very good, very interesting. A fine thing. Kudos. Everyone, the awesome Steevee aka noted critic Steve Erickson weighs in superbly on the new Wong Kar Wai film 'The Grandmaster'right here ** Gary gray, Oh, those scrapbook pages were for the failed novel I was writing about my friend George Miles. 'Doris' feels like a grower, yeah. The blog post was very interesting. I spent a fair amount of time peering at it and trying to decode it in the most intriguing feeling way. Have an awesome one. I had one yesterday, and I'm going to try for two. ** _Black_Acrylic, I will for sure see that film, thank you, Ben. ** Chris Dankland, Totally, about Sellers. He was all over the place and almost always genius every time. Oh, man, seriously, the interview is an honor. I'm excited. I was actually surprised by the 'TMS' word count. It seemed so low, but that's probably because it was at least two times longer at one point. Take care, man! ** Misanthrope, Maybe you don't like him because he played so many Asian characters, ha ha. Oh, re: confusion, you know me. I don't think there's any collective way to create order, just billions of different ways that would coexist very interestingly if given the chance. That's actually a pretty good Beatles song. No title for the novel yet. A working title, but it's my secret. Sweet on finishing the transcription. I hate transcribing. That's the worst part, even worse than the writing part. Shit, your novel is huge, whoa. George and Harry sitting in a tree, ... ** And so it goes. I dare anyone out there to watch/listen to all 53 metalcore vocal covers of Motionless in White's 'Abigail' like I did and then report back on what that felt like. In any case, there you go, and I'll see you tomorrow.

Grant Maierhofer presents ... Vito Acconci Day

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I’ve struggled fairly hard since I began writing and reading seriously to reconcile my constant fascination with the art/ film/ music/ sculpture/ pop culture world with the mandatory study of literature. Since day one I felt insistent that my love for bands like Discharge or Bad Brains had to be just as valid an influence on my writing as Celine or even Chaucer, and yet for all that insistence it has remained an ever-present burden to figure out just how I could use these nonliterary (obviously it can be argued that everything is literary, but in the interest of time I hope you’ll accept the term in this context) media when the time came to sit down and write something.

Early on a big influence in this respect was Don DeLillo. For all his discussion of literature he was just as adamant that going to the movies in his late twenties was one of the most important art-centric activities in his entire life, and considering his propensity for bringing the art/film/music/etc. into his books, I’d say he’s likely correct.

Lately, and I’d say this no matter where this piece was posted, a great influence has been Dennis Cooper. As many followers of this blog/readers of Cooper’s know, film and high/low art and culture has remained a constant presence in his books, and it could be argued that alongside DFW and Bret Easton Ellis he’s one of the latter 20th century’s masters at making whatever he needs the stuff of literature. It’s because of writers doing this in the past that I’ve chosen to shirk the canon whenever it seems appropriate, and thus I’ve become fascinated with any number of visual artists, musicians, et al, and use their work constantly when thinking of new approaches to writing.

I’ve chosen to create a day for Vito Acconci because, along with Bas Jan Ader, and Bruce Nauman, Acconci’s work is a pretty constant presence in my life of late, and unlike the other two—one is generally reclusive, the other dead-ish (theories abound, I prefer to imagine Ader riding his sailboat on mars)—Acconci is fairly outspoken and hence there’s no shortage of fantastic material to share regarding his work. Furthermore, considering the personal end of this post, Acconci studied writing, and received an MFA from Iowa before getting into visual/ conceptual/ performance/ sculpture artworks, and I find the literary edge to his early stuff absolutely fascinating (and wish more writers could be so bold).

And so, without further ado, here is a smattering of material either by or related to Vito Acconci that moves me of late. I hope you enjoy.

Note: it is next to impossible to feature everything essential about this artist in a single post, and hence I’d like to think of it as a mere opening of a door into a seemingly inexhaustible mind.



SOME MOMENTS FROM ‘LANGUAGE TO COVER A PAGE’ (the early writings of vito acconci)















THROW (1969, Ink and pastel on painted foamcore with gelatin silver prints)





NOV. 22, 1969; CITY SERIES (1969, Typewriting on paper)





FOLLOWING PIECE (1969, Gelatin silver prints, chalk, and ink on index cards mounted to board)






SOME VIDEO TO MOVE FORWARD IN YEARS

‘CENTERS’ (1971, video)



"Pointing at my own image on the video monitor: my attempt is to keep my finger constantly in the center of the screen—I keep narrowing my focus into my finger. The result [the TV image] turns the activity around: a pointing away from myself, at an outside viewer."

—Vito Acconci, "Body as Place-Moving in on Myself, Performing Myself," Avalanche 6 (Fall 1972)

"By its very mise-en-scène, Centers typifies the structural characteristics of the video medium. For Centers was made by Acconci’s using the video monitor as a mirror. As we look at the artist sighting along his outstretched arm and forefinger toward the center of the screen we are watching, what we see is a sustained tautology: a line of sight that begins at Acconci’s plane of vision and ends at the eyes of his projected double."

—Rosalind Krauss, "Video: The Aesthetics of Narcissism," October 1 (Spring 1976)



‘UNDERTONE (excerpt)’ (1972, video)



“In this now infamous tape, exemplary of his early transgressive performance style, Vito Acconci sits and relates a masturbatory fantasy about a girl rubbing his legs under the table. Carrying on a rambling dialogue that shifts back and forth between the camera/spectator and himself, Acconci sexualizes the implicit contract between performer and viewer - the viewer serving as a voyeur who makes the performance possible by watching and completing the scene, believing the fantasy." – Artforum



‘THEME SONG’ (1973, video)









(there are more excerpts available on Youtube, split up in different ways. I felt this was sufficient)



‘OPEN BOOK’ (1974, video)





STILLS FROM MANY OF THE AFOREMENTIONED WORKS AND MORE


‘Blinks’ (1970)



"Holding a camera, aimed away from me and ready to shoot, while walking a continuous line down a city street.
Try not to blink.
Each time I blink: snap a photo."


‘Seedbed’ (1972, video)



“In January 1971, Acconci performed Seedbed intermittently at New York's Sonnabend Gallery. On days he performed, visitors entered to find the gallery empty except for a low wooden ramp. Below the ramp, out of sight, Acconci masturbated, basing his sexual fantasies on the movement of visitors above him. He narrated these fantasies aloud, his voice projected through speakers into the gallery. This video documents the performance.

The following text, which documents and transcribes Seedbed, was published in Avalanche magazine in 1972:

. . . I'm doing this with you now . . . you're in front of me . . . you’re turning around . . . I’m moving toward you . . . leaning toward you . . .

Under the ramp: I'm moving from point to point, covering the floor . . . (I was thinking in terms of producing seed, leaving seed throughout the underground area).

I'm turned to myself: turned onto myself: constant contact with my body (rub my body in order to rub it away, rub something away from it, leave that and move on): masturbating: I have to continue all day—cover the floor with sperm, seed the floor.

Through the viewers: because of the viewers: I can hear their footsteps, they’re walking on top of me, to the side of me—I’m catching up with them—I’m focusing on one of them: I can form an image of you, dream about you, work on you.

. . . you’re on my left . . . you’re moving away but I’m pushing my body against you, into the corner . . . you’re bending your head down, over me . . . I’m pressing my eyes into your hair . . .I can go on as I think of you, you can reinforce my excitement, serve as my medium (the seed planted on the floor is a joint result of my presence and yours). You can listen to me; I want you to stay here; you can walk around me; walk past me; come back; sit here; lie close to me; walk with me again.

Reasons to move away from a space: there’s no need to stay—I’ve left something there, outside, that used to be here, inside—I’ve left something there that can grow, develop, on its own.

Reasons to move: I can move with an easy mind—what’s left behind is safe, in storage.”– MoMA


‘Trademarks’ (1970, performance)




0_0_0



“One of the more thoughtful and articulate artists of his generation, Vito Acconci began producing conceptually-driven performances in 1969 with Following Piece. In that work, he randomly followed strangers around New York City until they went into a non-public space. Since then he has often explored the relationship between the artist and viewer, challenging the very nature of the artistic experience.

In another group of works, Acconci tests the question: “How do I prove I’m concentrating on myself? I do something to myself (attack myself).” In Rubbing Piece (1970), he sat in a restaurant and rubbed his arm until it bled to see if viewers were more likely to approach him if he made himself vulnerable. In Trademarks, Acconci again puts his body to the challenge. Sitting naked in a gallery space, he bit different parts of his body in an attempt to reach as much of it as possible. His motive was “to move into myself–move around myself–move in order to close a system.” He then applied printer’s ink to the bites and made imprints of them, thus literalizing the idea of the artist as the maker.” – The Walker

(I’m now going to let myself go nuts and simply insert images without their background and such. I apologize for this, and yet immediately rescind that apology, because for all the stress it may cause to pin down just where each image comes from, the visual feast resulting will make everything well worth it. Enjoy.)
































































INTERVIEWS/READINGS
W/ RICHARD PRINCE FOR BOMB MAGAZINE

I met Vito in Vienna in 1986. We’ve been following each other around, in a way, ever since: we both showed at International with Monument and now we both show with Barbara Gladstone. He just had a show, and my show followed his: I told him I felt like the Rolling Stones following James Brown at the Tammy Awards in 1964. I wanted to talk to him about mainstream cults.

Richard Prince Born in the Bronx, 1946?

Vito Acconci 1940; I wish you were right with 1946.

RP And graduated from Holy Cross in 1962?

VA Went to Catholic elementary school, high school, college. There wasn’t a woman in my classroom between kindergarten and graduate school.

RP When did you come to New York?

VA I thought I was always here; the Bronx, after all. But then again, in retrospect, it was like the country, a wild country where I grew up, but at the same time, a kind of Midwest in New York. Then I went to the real Midwest, graduate school in Iowa City. I came back to New York in 1964 and saw a lot of movies. I was writing poetry then; I saw a Jasper Johns for the first time, and realized that I was at least ten years behind my time.

RP 1971: John Gibson Gallery—who were some of the artists around then? Was anybody else doing things like you? What about minimalism? Robert Smithson?

VA I thought everybody was doing things like I was. I think we all shared the same general concerns, to break out of, and break, the gallery system—to range the way the “Whole Earth Catalogue” ranged—to be as articulate as possible about work so that art wasn’t mystified, to see art as just one system in an interrelated field of systems, to hate the United States, and power, during the Vietnam War.

Minimalism was my father-art. For the first time, I was forced to recognize an entire space, and the people in it (I had to look at the light socket on the wall, just in case, I wasn’t going to play the fool). Until minimalism, I had been taught, or I taught myself, to look only within a frame; with minimalism the frame broke, or at least stretched.

Smithson was probably everybody’s conscience. Maybe because Smithson went outside, I could go inside—I had to go somewhere else—inside myself.

RP What about someone like Dennis Oppenheim?

VA He’s the art context person I’ve been personally closest to, from the beginning. He’s the most restless artist I know.

RP Chris Burden was somebody on the other coast who got a lot of publicity for that gun shot piece. I always thought that was a major network piece, something the prime timers, Life or People magazine, could get, whereas your work was more a mainstream cult. Your pieces didn’t have any hambone or dancing bear stuff in them. Your work never seemed to have a facelift. What did you think of that Burden piece—cheap shot? Good shot? Corn ball? Did you roll your eyes and say, “Please?”

VA I didn’t take Chris seriously enough until later; maybe at first, I saw him as a competitor—anything you can do I can do better, anything you can do, I can do more tortuously. I pay more attention to him now than ever: he grabs particular situations better than anyone else—for that situation, after careful consideration, he performs a serious prank.

RP I see the media as the Antichrist. How do you view the media?

VA My early work depended on media. An action needed reportage, it didn’t exist unless it was reported. For my work now, I see the media as a travel guide, it points out places. But the situation hasn’t changed much, most of the public stuff I do doesn’t get built. It remains in model form, the embodiment of the idea. A model space is a purified space, away from the changes of place and time and people; media can put it, if not into an actual place, at least into the news. As long as there are multiple media, I love the “distortions” of media, because those distortions are multiplied and contradictory.

RP What about feminism? The difference between the ’70s and now?

VA My early work came out of a context of feminism, and depended on that context. Performance in the early seventies was inherently feminist art. I, as a male doing performance, was probably colonizing it.

RP Pornography—what do you find pornographic?

VA A conversation in which a man keeps touching a woman’s arm, a man on the street looking back at a woman who’s just walked by; a man kissing goodbye a woman he’s just met . . . and probably a woman doing the same. I don’t know if these things are pornographic, but they’re probably obscene.

RP What kind of sex do you like?

VA The kind in which two people use every part of their bodies and every secretion of those bodies and every level of pressure those bodies can exert.

RP Did you have any encounters with the Vietnam War?

VA I was in the usual demonstrations. I was one of the usual suspects. My early work came out of the context of the Vietnam War: self-immolation, boundary protection, aggression. The problem was that the work generalized those themes away from a particular target. It made them “ideas” and not political action.

RP They always talk about your voice. You really think you would have been able to fuck anyone without it (using your voice as a sexual persuasion)?

VA Anyone? Well, that’s probably exaggerated. But there are people I would never have fucked with if I hadn’t been an “art star.”

It’s not that I’ve used my voice as a sexual persuasion. I hope I’ve never tried to persuade anyone to fuck me. My voice probably has, for some people, a storage of sexual associations (Humphrey Bogart, Ida Lupino). Also, it seems to come out of some depths, so it probably promises intimacy, sincerity, integrity, maybe some deep, dark secret (it ties into biases of Western culture, it seems to go beyond surfaces).

RP You live in your studio.

VA I can’t separate living and working; I like to sleep for an hour, get up, work, sleep again, etc. I need to have books and records (tapes, CDs) around me at all times like pets, like walls.

RP You’re Catholic. Is that like being . . .

VA Was Catholic. But you didn’t finish the question. The thing that still interests me about Catholicism is the number of saints. There’s no void, no distance between “person” and “God.” There are all those saints in between: every misfit, every problem has a patron saint attached. So you’re always part of a crowd, and there’s no abstraction, everything’s tangible.

RP What kind of drugs have you taken? Have they done anything for you?

VA The usual late sixties drugs: pot, hash, mescaline, not even LSD. And hardly more than once. I was only a tourist. I get woozy, I’m afraid of losing control.

RP There’s an old joke, “Sex between two people is beautiful. Sex between five people is fantastic.” What would be an ideal sex situation for you?

VA Theoretically, sex with everybody. In fact, sex with one person I feel inextricably connected with.



Acconci, Adjustable Wall Bra, 1990–91, rebar, plaster, canvas, steel cable, audio, and lights, 288×96 x 60” variable. Courtesy of Barbara Gladstone.


RP What are your favorite TV programs, if you watch it at all?

VA Mainly watch when I’m eating. It could be anything (eat anything, watch anything). Eat late; so I see news, Nightline, Night Heat, ends of ballgames, commercials.

RP Movies? Which one comes to mind?

VA The Searchers, Videodrome, Blade Runner, Detour, Phantom of Paradise, Shock Corridor, Double Indemnity, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, Last Year at Marienbad . . .

RP Do you ever feel like disappearing? Your early pieces had an appearance/disappearance method to them.

VA The early work applied stress to the body that then had to adapt, change, open up, because of that stress. Remember, this was just after the late sixties, the time—the starting time of gender other than male, race other than white, culture other than Western; I wanted to get rid of myself so there could be room for other selves.

RP You’ve said a lot of the early work focused on your self so you started using a camera because one thing you were sure of was that “I had my own person.” Do you see a difference between personality and person?

VA Personality fixes person, makes it static. That was a flaw of my early work: it started by being the activity of a person, any person, like any other—but once that person became photographed it became a specialized person, the object of a personality cult. After a while, anyone who knew work of mine knew what I looked like; action had become trademark. So I had to disappear from my work, certainly. And that takes us back to the question before this: I don’t know if I ever feel like disappearing—spreading out and branching out maybe—but I’m stuck with old habits: I want to keep working, other people work with me, there’s got to be someone for them to work with, I have to be around somewhere so work can be around elsewhere.

RP Do you still see yourself as a male cartoon?

VA When I said that, I meant—I hope I meant—not “myself” but “myself-as-performer” in some of the early work, where maleness was made so blatant that it stood out like a cartoon: so then it could be targeted, it could be analyzed, it could be pilloried.

I still see a lot of my work as cartoon-like: turn a house upside down, build a miniature Supreme Court that’s “ours” and submerge it in the ground in front of “theirs.” I’d like a piece to appear in the world, on the street, like anything else on the street except that maybe it’s in a dot matrix, maybe the colors are too simplified, maybe it oozes.

RP Polanski?

VA Except for early stuff, like Knife in the Water, I haven’t thought about his movies much. I think of the person, or the myth of the person, more than the work, and I don’t like that myth; I’ve been in relationships with people much younger than I am, and he makes a relationship like that look ugly, and I don’t want to believe they have to be ugly.

RP Have you ever had someone who you’ve been close to come to some unspeakable harm?

VA People died, in ordinary ways, probably too unspeakable.

RP What’s your relationship to your mother?

VA We speak on the phone every night; I’m an only child; my father’s been dead over 25 years. By this time we should know each other, but neither of us asks the right questions; maybe, in spite of all the phone time, we leave each other alone too much.

RP Would you consider serving on the Supreme Court?

VA I don’t want to make laws and commandments. I do want to make places that function as models, models for activities, but models can be tampered with, and added to and subtracted from, and there’s no punishment.

RP What did you mean by “dumb literalness”?

VA I don’t remember in which context I said this. What I would mean now is: I want a thing, a place, to just be there, and not look as if it’s asking for interpretation—maybe you wonder about it later, or you wonder about it on the side, but you don’t have to talk about it in order to use it—something that’s so clear you can’t believe your eyes, something without an inside, like a stone.

RP Can insanity be prevented?

VA For me, insanity would be like a vacation, or a belief in god; out of desperation, you let yourself fall into it.

RP When a person says gloomily, “No one understands me,” are they telling the truth?

VA They’re telling the truth in the sense that they’re making a demand: “Don’t understand me.” (Underneath the imperative is a subjunctive: “I hope nobody understands me, because if somebody does, then I’m just like everybody else. Who am I then?”)

RP Do you think anyone understands how another person feels?

VA Everybody, in a particular culture, understands the language other people in that culture use when talking about feelings, and that’s all understanding can do, it can understand language. Language is the realm of feelings when thought about or talked about, and that’s enough to take us from language to some kind of action.

RP Did you ever play any sports?

VA When I was a child; all the usual sports, in the usual awkward way. At the same time, from the early sixties, I’ve had a make-believe baseball player. I follow his career, think about him when I’m falling asleep, when I’m drifting around the studio. He’s my age, based on somebody I went to elementary school with (there had to be a real person to ground this on, though that real person was, as far as I know, nothing like this make-believe person, the real person functioned as a man without qualities, only the bones onto which all my storage could be grafted). The ballplayer’s an outfielder (all alone like an American pioneer), he’s batted .500 once, hit 121 home-runs one season, pitched a little toward the end of his career in the mid-eighties (relief pitcher, came in just when everybody needed him). He’s played other sports off-season (the thing about this guy is that he has only basic skills, he’s taught himself to be—willed himself into being—a superhuman player). One trouble is, he’s been traded a lot, he sticks out like a sore thumb, he’s never been on a World Series-winning team. He has a personal life: he’s gone out with actresses, rock singers. After he retired, he made a movie, 24 hours long, about the real invention of baseball, around the wagon trains on their way west (Jodie Foster plays the woman who began the sport). He’s making a comeback now, trying to stretch his career into four decades (he tried a comeback a few years ago, but he had gotten into trouble with some kids at The Palladium, and was drummed out of baseball). Now he’s playing with Oakland. After all, people forget. And anyway, they don’t worry about that sort of thing in the birthplace of the Raiders, so now he has one last chance at a World Series, one last chance at being a team player on this team of individuals.



Vito Acconci, Proposal for Site 3B, Expo 1992, Seville, 1990, 19 ½ x 78 ¾ x 39 ¼” model at 1/4 scale. Photo by Vito Acconci. Courtesy Acconci Studio.

RP Do you think women are more easily satisfied with their portraits than men?

VA More easily satisfied with (painted) portraits, less with photographs. (I don’t have any idea what you’re talking about, I’m just playing your game.)

RP I was wondering, do you think you can break a bad habit by practicing it to excess?

VA By practicing it to excess, you can break the habit of calling it a “bad habit.” It just becomes ordinary life.

RP Do you think it is possible to reason with people who are in love?

VA When I’m in love, I think I can be reasoned with most easily. On one hand, I’m always eager to find reasons to question my love, break that love; on the other hand, I’m determined to be in this love-state, love-event. But, in order to be really determined and adamant, I have to know all the reasons against it, and do it anyway.

RP Is there one sure sign that you’re not an emotional grown-up?

VA When I’m stuck on a piece, or when I hate my work, and I complain about this to people around me, I’m making the assumption that other people would be interested in what are, after all, ordinary troubles, and just mine, and of no concern to them.

RP What’s the best way to conquer fear?

VA My early pieces were based on stage-fright. In every early performance, I spent the first few minutes having second thoughts, “This is the worst piece I’ve ever done. The only honest thing is to admit this and get out of here.” But then, after a while, since the pieces usually involved some kind of talk, both to myself and to others, after a while I talked myself into it. I was hypnotized and the piece went on. (But, if I conquered anything, it was only the fear of performing. In everyday life, I’d be as afraid as I always was.)

RP How would you cure an inferiority complex?

VA Remind myself of some kernel of something in some piece I’ve done, tell myself that this could—just possibly—improve and range in the future. That might be illusory, of course, but so might the inferiority complex. I’d be fighting it at its own level.

RP Under what circumstances would you murder someone?

VA I could see myself murdering the Fascists in Salo, the rapists in Ms 45.

RP Don’t you think it’s a little pessimistic to believe you can read a person’s character by the way they look?

VA Yes, since it implies direct cause-and-effect. The character causes the look, and the look causes the character, and there’s no escape. But it might also be said to be optimistic, the belief that things can be so solvable and handle-able.

RP Is anything worth worrying about?

VA Yes. Falling into old habits, customary modes of working, already-used solutions. At the same time, I worry about not reusing solutions. I have a tendency, when starting a piece, to act as if I’ve never done a piece before, as if I have nothing to fall back on. I worry about that, so I have to assume it’s worth worrying about. It’s worth worrying about because it reveals a romanticization, a desire to divorce myself from history, from my own history, a desire to think of myself as a person alone in a vast unanswering universe—I hate ideas like that so I’d better worry about it.

RP What about anxiety, do you have any?

VA Anxiety about exclusion from large group shows, particularly European shows, anxiety that certain directions aren’t clear enough in my work. (E. g., I think of my work as more political than apparently a lot of other people think. I think the only way art should exist is as politics, as a critique of power and an impetus to change. I’m anxious: either I’m missing something or they’re missing something, and if it’s them then I’m missing an opportunity to change their minds.)

My biggest anxiety is that my stuff just isn’t good enough, and sometimes I can’t even answer “good enough for what?” That’s what causes the anxiety.

RP Is there some piece you’ve wanted to put out there but thought, “Even I couldn’t get away with that?”

VA There have been pieces I didn’t know how to do, so I never worked them out far enough to put out. In the early days, there was an idea of some performance on a floor filled with babies. In the early ’80s, there were some vague ideas of walking houses and rolling homes.

Doing a public space project always means adaptation, and modification, sometimes because of subject matter (no pricks, no cunts, no burning American flags), sometimes because of safety standards (no holes, no heights without railings). But I don’t think I’ve felt stopped from something I’ve wanted to do. I don’t think I’d want to do something that didn’t fit into the conventions of public space (the pieces aren’t put out in front of people, they already contain within them at least a general idea of people, actions and customs). You don’t put something out, you infiltrate, you squeeze something through.

RP What part of women do you like best? I like the voice, I think, just the way a woman can say your name.

VA The vagina. If the person is someone I’m not involved with, then the vagina must be the reason that the characteristics/qualities I’m drawn to in that person are different from those similar characteristics in a man. If the person is someone I’m involved with, then the vagina is, literally, my way to get inside that person and that person’s way to envelop me.

RP What do you live for?

VA If I can’t change the world, then maybe I can at least change something about the space in the world, the instruments in the world.

What keeps me living is this: the idea that I might provide some kind of situation that makes people do a double-take, that nudges people out of certainty and assumption of power. (Another way of putting this: some kind of situation that might make people walk differently.)

RP Do you eat pizza?

VA Yes. There was a time in the seventies when I couldn’t walk by a pizza parlour I hadn’t tried, I had to go in for a slice. I wanted to eat every pizza in New York.

RP Who do you think the Pat Boone of the art world is?

VA This might be the question I love most, but I have no idea how to answer it. (Shit, I suddenly have one or two ideas, but I won’t say a word.)

Let me avoid the question. The thing that means most to me about Pat Boone is that for people of my situation and class, at a certain time, he made black music available—distorted certainly—but enough so that you could go and hunt down the real thing.



Vito Acconci, Convertible Clam Shelter, 1990, fiberglass, galvanized steel, clamshells, audio, and lights, 4×10 x 8’ when closed. Photo by Vito Acconci. Courtesy of Acconci Studio.

RP What makes you cry? Is there some kind of music, a scene in a movie?

VA Twice, when a person I was in love with left me, I cried. Now, in love with someone, I cry sometimes when I’m with her and I feel I’m part of her and she’s part of me and that’s all there is to that.

I cry at the end of Last Year at Marienbad, when the narrator says (and there’s no one left on screen):
“You were alone—together—with me.”

I cry when Gloria Swanson comes in for her close-up at the end of Sunset Boulevard and she blurs out on the screen.

I cry when John Wayne slips down off his rearing horse in The Searchers—the horse is just about to pounce down on Natalie Wood—and he picks her up in his arms and says, “Let’s go home, Debbie.”

I cry (or something like it) when Jeremy Irons in Dead Ringers drifts around his dead brother’s body (his dead self) and says/sings, “El-lie, El-lie, El-lie . . .”

I cry (or something like it) in the middle of the Sex Pistols’ “Bodies” when the music stops for an instant and then starts again, with Johnny Rotten’s voice coming in, “Fuck this and fuck that.”

I cry (or something like it) when I look up through the Guggenheim’s spiralling ramps, up to the circle of light coming in at the top.

I’d probably cry, or something like it, at the Malaparte House in Capri, if I were there.

RP Do you think about what you are going to wear before you go out?

VA A little. If I’m going farther than my immediate neighborhood, I take off my green pants (indoor pants) and put on my black pants (outdoor pants). I decide whether to wear a black collared shirt or a black turtleneck (the old one that’s turning blue-gray, or the newer one still black, or the one with the hole in the sleeve). I choose between my black jacket (if I care about my image that day) or my green army jacket,

I guess whether it’s cold enough to wear my green army coat.

RP I’ve heard you referred to as “The Hunger Artist.” The hunger artist supposedly leaves out or forgets about public opinion.

VA I never leave out public opinion, not public appreciation but public consideration, public response; people are part of all the pieces I do. I anticipate a range of responses, or at least actions.

RP Why do you think you’re an artist’s artist?

VA If I’m an “artist’s artist,” it’s probably because: I don’t make much money; my work seems to change, so it looks as if I must be trying; I’ve been with a lot of galleries, so it looks like I’m my own person, no strings on me.

RP You once told me you’ve saved a lot of money by not having to go to a shrink. What did you mean?

VA Early work of mine might have been a substitute: I went through the motions of therapy, I physicalized therapy. (But I don’t think that was the purpose, I thought I was doing art. I was shifting the focus from art-object to art-doer. To prove I was focusing, I could target in on that art-doer, myself, physically—by extension—I could knock that art-doer out of existence and move out of self and on to place. So, if therapy is about getting rid of the problem, then my early work was getting rid of me.)

Also, I used to be Catholic, I couldn’t make myself go to another priest.

RP Did you really ever have an orgasm under the Seedbed?

VA Yes.

RP Have you ever seen someone murdered or executed? What do you think about capital punishment?

VA No. No use for it, and even if there were use, no justification for it.

RP Do you really describe yourself as a minimalist, can that be amended?

VA My early work came out of minimalism (and also out of R. D. Laing and Erving Goffman and Edward Hall and Kurt Lewin and pop psychology of the time . . . but that’s another question.)

If minimalism was my father-art, I had to find something wrong with it, I had to kill the father. (The flaw in minimalism, as I saw it, was that it could have come from anywhere, it was there as if from all time, it was like the black monolith in 2001.) Well, if something just appears out of nowhere, then you never can tell where it might have come from, all you can do is bow down, kneel down, you’d better respect it. To get around this, I probably made the decision that, whatever I did, I would make its source clear: that source was me, I was the doer, I would present my own person. (When I think of Seedbed, I think of the room as a prototypical minimal-art space: nothing on the walls, nothing on the floor, except in this case there was a worm under the floor.)

I still think of my stuff as making minimal moves: it bulges walls out, digs under floors, it’s usually tied into buildings so it’s based on right angles. But I don’t know if that has anything to do with minimal art. It probably has more to do with co-habiting a space and fitting in, nudging in . . .

RP Would you shoot an animal for sport?

VA No.

RP Who do you do your art for?

VA For myself, to prove I can think. For other people, living people, to join in a mix of theories that might sooner or later lead to practices; for future people, to function as a track that might be renovated and taken from.

RP What kinds of food do you eat?

VA I could probably eat nothing but Chinese food everyday for the rest of my life. But I don’t. What I eat is: if I go out, Indian, Chinese, Thai; if I stay home, which is what I usually do, basic chickens, basic pastas, basic salads.

RP Do you know any good jokes?

VA Best joke I’ve heard recently is an old Milton Berle routine.

A resort in the Catskills. Lots of women around: widows divorcees, they’re searching for men; one of them spots a man she hasn’t seen before.

“You’re new here,” she says.
“Yeah,” he says, “I’ve been in the can!”
She’s confused, “You’ve been on the toilet?”
“No, no, I graduated.”
She’s confused again, “You’re just out of college? You’re that young?”
“No, no, when I say I’ve been in the can, when I say I graduated, I mean I was doing time.”
She’s still confused, “Doing time? What time?”
“Let me explain. You see, there was my wife. I took an axe, I chopped my wife into 25 pieces.”
“Oh, you’re single?”

RP Have you been married, any children?

VA I was married in 1962, just after I graduated from college, we lived together on and off until 1968, no children.

RP Do you have a good memory? How far back can you recall?

VA I remember scenes from movies well, and lines from books and movies and songs. I don’t remember faces well or, more precisely, I don’t connect names and faces. I don’t think I remember further back than to the age of four and even then, it might be that I’ve been helped by photographs.

What I remember most from childhood, around five or six or seven, is a recurrent childhood dream. I’m in the bathroom, I’m standing in front of the toilet, I’m pissing. I’m pissing blood. I draw back, shocked, scared: as I draw back, my piss shoots all over the place, all over the walls, over the ceiling. I see what’s happening, I make a sudden decision, I grab my prick and direct my piss more determinedly over every inch of the walls and ceiling, I’m not scared anymore, I’m exulting. The color of the room is changing and it’s all because of me.

The real life incident I remember is: I’m over my father’s knee, he’s spanking me, I’m about five. As he spanks me, I throw up, I’m vomiting spaghetti all around his feet. (The spaghetti I had eaten had tomato sauce on it, I was sure of that, but as it came back out of my mouth, it came out all white, as if it was filtered through my insides).

RP What kinds of men and women do you dislike?

VA I like multi-directedness, and the look of a frightened colt, and the little engine that could, and grasping at straws: I dislike smugness and self-satisfaction.

RP Did you find when you were growing up, that people often frowned upon those who sought out psychiatric help? What about now?

VA When I was growing up, people had priests, or they assumed they had themselves. There are no individual bodies now, no skin, no separation between public and private. (If there was, would I be so earnestly trying to answer these questions?)



Acconci, Proposal for Housing Complex, Regensberg, 1990, 19 ½ x 78 ¾ x 39 ¼” model at 1/4 scale. Photo by Vito Acconci. Courtesy Acconci Studio.

RP If fashion is what comes after art, what comes before art?

VA Probably everything. Let me put it this way: when I realized I wasn’t writing anymore, in 1969, what drew me to “art” was that art was a non-field field, a field that had no inherent characteristics except for its name, except for the fact that it was called art: so in order to have substance, art had to import. It imported from every other field in the world.

Let me put it another way: for me, what comes before art—in the sense of influence—is architecture, movies, (pop) music. (But probably literature and or philosophy come first. Books provide, literally, a text, theory. But of course, a book can provide a text, a theory, only because it’s a storage of what really comes first: history, science . . . )

RP Do you write letters? To whom?

VA Three times in my life I’ve written a lot of letters, each time to a person whom I was in love with and who was, either physically or some other way, very far away.

RP What makes you really angry?

VA Being cheated, being tricked, being slighted in stores or at business offices because of the way I’m dressed. Right now what’s making me angry is that I’m spending so much more time answering these questions than you spent writing them. (I work so much more slowly than other artists seem to work: that makes me angry.)

RP Do you ever hang out at topless bars?

VA No.

RP What sort of porn should be banned?

VA On the one hand, I believe that porn influences crime; if I didn’t believe that, then there’d be no reason at all to do art, since art couldn’t affect a real-life situation. On the other hand, I don’t believe that porn should be banned. You can only ban the crime, not the influence. (All you can do is hope that other influences, colliding influences, might act as a buffer. That’s what the electronic age is all about.)

RP Do you think art is one of the places in the world where something perfect can happen?

VA Visual art, architectural models, (concert) music, books . . . all those situations where there’s a viewer, an audience, where there’s a separation between person and thing: something perfect can happen only where there’s visual distance.

Which is why I resent the visual: the visual means you don’t touch it, the visual means somebody owns it and that somebody isn’t you.

I prefer the perfect to come down to earth and be imperfected: the architectural model become architecture, the architecture become renovated, music become pop music, blasting out of some radio while some other pop music blares out of the speaker in front of some store . . .

RP How many pairs of shoes do you own?

VA One pair for going out, another pair that used to be for going out but then wore out and now functions as house shoes, and a pair of all purpose sneakers, sort of on reserve in case one of the two majors breaks down and I need a quick replacement.

RP What artists do you like: old, peers, new?

VA Peers (we can commiserate and maybe my position can be buttressed); new (I can try not to be left behind).

RP Did you do your homework when you were in school?

VA Yes. All my life, I’ve never had particular skills, particular talents; I’ve just had will, and I’ve worked hard. I see myself as a drudgerer. (As for school homework, it wasn’t pure academics, I knew I couldn’t keep going to school unless I got scholarships, so I did what I had to do).

RP Do you wear underwear?

VA No.

RP Do you eat meat?

VA Yes.

RP I don’t like it when men whistle at women on the street. What about you?

VA I hate it, too. At the same time, walking down the street, in the city of the ’90s, means putting yourself out in public, subjecting yourself to the public, you’re up for grabs. This applies to men as well as to women, men realize they can be victimized, too. You don’t have to accept this situation, you just have to guard against it. And I don’t mean carry weapons, but I might mean wear armor: this is what late capitalism is all about. (At the same time, it’s apparent that women are subjected to whistling and men aren’t, except in specialized situations: women-whistling, therefore, should be a punishable crime.)

RP Has anyone ever tied you up?

VA Yes.

RP I heard that Elvis and Jerry Lee Lewis bought brand new Cadillacs with their first money. Have you ever gone out and blown a couple of inches of cash on something you really didn’t need?

VA Just on books and records/tapes/CDs, and I always need them. And, at various times, on presents for a person I was in love with. And that person needed them, or we needed them in order to be a couple.

RP Would you ever trade places with a woman?

VA Yes. Except that, as in your previous trading-places question, I don’t understand what it means: would I know I’d traded places, or do I “become” that person? Do I keep doing “my” work, only doing it as a different person? Who am I anyway?

RP Have you changed your bedroom situation since I last visited you?

VA It’s still the same. So that others can know what we’re talking about: all the implements for living—bathroom, sink, stove, refrigerator, table and chairs, bed, clothes closet—are squeezed into what’s probably less than 10% of a 3500 foot loft space.

RP What’s the best place you’ve been to? I mean, do you ever see yourself away from New York?

VA LA maybe Paris. New York follows an old model of a city: it maintains the idea of a center, it keeps vestiges of piazzas and town-meetings. The new city would be more like a blob, like ooze, like LA; the new city would be a ground for floating privacies, floating capsules; the new city would have more to do with the curves of a highway than with the grid of streets.

RP Have you ever walked into a bar and picked somebody up or been picked up?

VA I’ve been in situations, not bars, where I’ve met someone, we talked, and then within a few hours we fucked. I assumed we were picking each other up (I don’t think the word “pick up” came up in anybody’s mind: I assumed we were, simply, meeting each other).

RP Do you have call waiting?

VA No. I never answer my phone directly, always have my answering machine on; don’t like to be surprised and at a loss for excuses; call-waiting would be asking to be put on the spot; I want to avoid calls, not be in the middle of more.

RP What is the connection between the bras and Seedbed? It seems like you’ve come full circle, from masturbation to nursing (a kind of regression).

VA It’s hard for me to pinpoint the meaning of a piece; I’d want the reference, the connotations, to free-float. I want to make a situation where a passer-by says: “It’s a wall! No, it’s a bra! No, it’s a room-divider! No, it’s the attack of the 50-foot woman!” Then you could go on from there, and possibly have fleeting thoughts about sex and comfort and power and regression, etc., but by this time you’d be inside the space, and the space would be part of your everyday life.

I’m afraid people pay attention to my stuff only when it has something to do with sex: that’s my art role, and I’d better live up to it.

Seedbed started by taking architecture, something assumed as neutral and apart from person, and filling it with person: I’d be part of the floor, the wall would breathe. Adjustable Wall Bras started with taking a wall, the wall in front of you, and bringing it out to you, making it bulge. Now that it bulged physically, it could bulge with a person inside it, it could bulge with metaphor. (Seeing the world the way a baby might see the world, the breast as the baby’s wall.)

I hope the piece brings up other ideas besides nursing, I hope it brings them up all at the same time.

RP Having to follow your show with mine, I feel like the Rolling Stones having to follow James Brown.

VA Doing this interview, I feel like Eddie Constantine in Alphaville, answering the questions of Alpha 60. (One comment: the Rolling Stones sell a lot more albums than James Brown.)



VITO ACCONCI: ARCHITECTURE IN WORDS ONLY




TateShots: Vito Acconci




23 Minutes with Vito Acconci




Curator Chrissie Iles in Conversation with Vito Acconci




SHOWstudio: In Your Face: Interview, Vito Acconci




The Future of Architecture and Design





FURTHER

ACCONCI STUDIO

@ MOMA

BELIEVER INTERVIEW




*

p.s. Hey. ** This weekend, the superb scribe of numerous hats plus d.l. Grant Maierhofer gives us a highly appropriately big, wild, and wooly intro to and celebration of the very key artist Vito Acconci, and your attentiveness and exploration will be rewarded to the nth. So, do that this weekend, report something back to Grant, if you will, can, and don't mind, and thank you. And, Grant, my most giant thanks to you! ** Wolf, Hi, E! 'I guess it's fundamentally unclear, this whole literary business': at its best, absolutely for sure in my book, yeah. Cool thought/riposte. I hear about your need re: biochemistry review papers. The right and the wrong, yeah, seductive. I don't know why I want to try to scramble up a steep cliff when I see those words. It's weird. Apparently, something or other has become so sophisticated that you really can do that to your voice without rusting the shit out of your ability to coo and sigh and stuff forever. It might be some kind of biochemical advance even or something. ** Tosh Berman, Yeah, the resemblance is kind of technical but kind of, I don't know, spiritual or something? I think I've told you that people used to always say I look like Ray Davies. Never got how that would be, but I used to hear that all the time. Yes! (About your new computer).  I did read one Spike Milligan book a long time ago, and I was kind of really dazzled by it. Milligan deserves a whole Day to himself, and, yeah, I think I'll get on that. Later, gator. ** David Ehrenstein, Yesterday was a whopper. Even I had trouble loading it, and I made the fucking thing. Glad to hear that Greyson and the doctor are safe at least. I just don't get this delay at all. But I guess no one does. Interesting about the Geimer book. Thank you! ** Thomas Moronic, 53, I know, and I eventually had to stop collecting because there must have been at least 80 of those things out there. Thanks for giving thoroughness your all. Great response that quite mirrors my own. Beautiful, thanks! And I'm excited that you're up for an intro post for your novel! I'll be yours when you need me. Cool, I'll go read your thing on 'The Canyons' and see if it makes me less ambivalent re: seeing it. Everyone, the one, the only Thomas Moronic has laid out his thoughts and opinions about Paul Schrader/Bret Easton Ellis's 'The Canyons' over on the ever crucial Fanzine site, and you totally should read it, no? Yes! Here it is. ** œ, Hi. Which one was Lucas James? Hold on. Oh, the shirtless guy. Interesting. I can't remember his speciality very well. I'll do him again, so to speak. Yes, the backgrounds in the videos were definitely a big part of their excitement. Awesome that you're reading the Fujiko Nakaya book, of course! That's very interesting about the RS and WCW friendship. I had no idea, but it makes a very curious sense. Hunh. Thank you! I will follow the lead of that link you provided to me this weekend because I'm intrigued. Very kind of you. Have a most pleasant Saturday, Sunday. ** Steevee, You have a lucky FB newsfeed. Well, yeah, the reaction is absurd and self-incriminating, which is quite interesting in theory, but so unpleasant to read. ** Rewritedept, Hey. I'm not a Metalcore type. Often times the posts here are kind of records of investigations I do into things, and that was one. It's just been super bad timing on my missing Deerhunter. I've always been somewhere else when they've played here. Lame coincidence. Cool that Pundt gave you a beer. Nice set list, yeah. They're never perfect, are they? Not bad. My weekend? Writing to do, see pals. I'm starting to do interviews for 'The Weaklings (XL)', so I might do one or two of those. I don't know. It should be nice. Sucks about no Fuck Yeah. But, yeah, you'll live, trust me, and there'll always be the shitty evidence on youtube. I've been more writing than reading lately, so no mind-boggling reads to tip you to, at least in the last week or so. Have a sweet one. ** Bill, Hi, Bill. Wow, you're over here in Europe for while. Nice. Lucas James again. Interesting. I think we have a long night of the museums here. Well, we have Nuit Blanche which incorporates that, and which is coming up soon pretty soonish. Some great sounding stuff in it this year. Pretty excited. ** Gary gray, You accepted my challenge! You rule! We're twinsies! It was kind of life affirming in a way, wasn't it? Interesting, or maybe we're the interesting ones? The disclaimers were the best part almost or maybe for sure. Blacktears210 .... oh, yeah, right. He was really good. I don't think I have a favorite. Hold on. I'll scroll back through the imbeds and see if I can remember. No, too hard to choose. So cool to have shared that giant experience with you, sir. ** _Black_Acrylic, I think it's just a wing of the kids. I don't know how big the wing is. Bigger than the wing that's into Noise and Black Metal, for sure. I mean, Metalcore charts. Excellent about the progress on your TV project. And your concept for it is really interesting. I hope the meeting with her goes really well today. Did it? I usually don't mind spoilers because plot and all that kind of stuff doesn't interest me very much, so ... I've bookmarked the piece, and I'll give myself a second opinion on the spoilers issue then either dive in or archive it. Thanks, Ben. ** Martin Bladh, Hi, Martin! I saw your email. Yes, that's the first scrapbook I made and the best one, I think. I'll write to you this weekend. Thank you so much! ** Sypha, Yeah, sorry about the video imbed overload. Very cool about the Lovecraft Fest. Those speeches were very particular in an invigorating way. Or the first two were. The third one had more of general appeal type appeal, I guess. Really nice. Enjoy your second visit. ** Squeaky, Hi, D! Thanks a lot for directing me to the Vimeo evidence. I did a google search yesterday using their names in combo, and it came up with the barest of info. Yes, I do know, or I think I do, so you were right. Yeah, cool. Have a superb weekend of whatever you end up doing. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Uh, hm, how did I get to that post? Let me think. Oh, it was inspired initially by Mark Gluth's recent Wire post, and then ... I think I decided to look more into Screamo, i.e. in some kind of depth, and the Screamo and Metalcore genres are often confused, apparently, and I ended up detouring into an investigation of Metalcore, and then I somehow ended up inside the Metalcore Vocal Covers youtube phenomenon, and the rest is history or something. There is something very particular about the novel that lead me to Deleuze, but to explain what would give too much of the novel's core away, and I want it to be mine and private/protected for now. If you feel like looking at yesterday's comments, I listed the Deleuze books from where the quotes came in my comment to Steevee. See, those R-G films are the ones I guessed would be the ones. They're all fantastic. I guess my fave, if I have to choose, would be 'Slow Slidings ...'. What's on your weekend's plate, man? ** Misanthrope, So, guess what? Yesterday I had a coffee with these young guys who edit this very cool new French magazine called 'Congrats'. They're doing a thing about me in the upcoming issue. Anyway, their original plan for my contribution had been that they wanted me to interview One Direction for the magazine, and they looked carefully into it, but it was too difficult to arrange. So, that would have been something, no? Would you have wanted to kill me or shake the hand that shook theirs? Yeah, we didn't disagree about the confusion thing. Confusion is nothing if not a thing with both dark and bright sides. ** Kyler, Hi, K. It is nice to morning in Paris, I won't disagree with you. But New York mornings aren't so shabby either. I have heard that using editors' comments publicly is a big no-no, but you didn't use their names, so I think it's totally fine. If you had named them, yeah, you might have had some lawyers on your tail or a besmirched name in the publishing world or something, I don't know? I did enjoy them! Have the weekend of your dreams, man. ** Right. Let Vito Acconci and his bearer fill your weekend with art thrills and enlightenment and god knows what else, won't you? See you on Monday.

Spotlight on ... Barbara Pym A Glass of Blessings (1958)

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'I discovered Barbara Pym in my sophomore year of college, thanks to a friend who gave me her 1958 novel, A Glass of Blessings. I loved the book for its understated humor, the way its heroine, Wilmet, mocks her own lack of direction as she drifts through a world divided into church jumble sales, dull sherry parties, and a secret crush on a man who turns out to have a live-in “friend” named Keith. Though the copy was a reprint, I still thought we'd stumbled onto some lost treasure, a forgotten library gem. Soon enough I realized that what I'd stumbled onto was a gigantic literary bandwagon. In 1985, everybody seemed to be reading Barbara Pym, though she herself had been dead for several years.

'Of course, people had different reactions to her. There were readers like me who became annoyingly obsessed with her novels; even our vocabulary reflected it. Whatever slang we'd been speaking before Barbara Pym, we quit using it and started tossing around tweedy words like unpleasantness and cloakroom. Against the advice of our teachers, we took to using the pronoun one as in “One regrets the unpleasantness in the cloakroom.” Less-besotted readers enjoyed Barbara Pym but lumped her in with Miss Read and other writers of “gentle fiction,” a condescending term if there ever was one.

'Still others couldn't see any attraction at all in Pym's stories about women who dote on men and men who accept feminine devotion as their due. They considered her work depressing (men, she said herself, often found it so), uneventful, or simply shallow. A professor of mine said that he found her fiction (he'd read only one novel) “nothing but fluff.” How, he asked, could John Updike have praised her so highly? ...

'Excellent Women appeared in 1952, followed by Jane and Prudence, Less than Angels, A Glass of Blessings, and No Fond Return of Love. These novels of the 1950s (she finished the last by 1960) all share some elements: the distinctive Pym irony, the landscape of London with its crowded lunchrooms and crippled churches, and her recognizable character types. Some of these types include the “splendid” women who know how to deal with life's pivotal events: “birth, marriage, death, the successful jumble sale, the garden fete spoiled by bad weather.” Or the maddeningly or perhaps endearingly vain men, whether priests or anthropologists, who imagine that any woman should be glad to do their laundry and proofread their manuscripts. ...

'For me, raised on the dreary fiction of the 1960s and 1970s, Barbara Pym's affectionate irony was a revolution of its own. Though I never successfully applied it to my own writing, it colored the way I looked at life, helping me find a way out of personal pain, or at least giving me hints of a way. Now I see less comedy and more essential sadness in even the brightest of her novels—a feminine longing that underlies all the jokes about dutiful women, charming but vain men, tribalized anthropologists, high-minded priests. I also see the strengthening effects of love and forgiveness upon comedy. If the literary archdeacons of her time couldn't appreciate it, well . . . one does see the irony in that.' -- Betty Smartt Carter, First Things



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Gallery














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Further

The Barbara Pym Society of North America
'The novels of Barbara Pym'
'Philip Hensher toasts the novelist Barbara Pym'
'Marvelous Spinster Barbara Pym At 100'
'Celebrating Barbara Pym'
'Patron Saint of Quiet Lives: A Look2 Essay on Barbara Pym'
'Barbara Pym fans converge on Boston'
'The Blagger's Guide To: Barbara Pym'
Barbara Pym's Desert Island Discs
'Pride and Perseverance'
'Barbara Pym: The Other Jane Austen'
Barbara Pym Doll Miniature Art Collectible
'“Allegra! … Isn’t that lovely?” Names in Barbara Pym’s novels'
Buy 'A Glass of Blessings'



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Extras


The Legacy of Barbara Pym


Barbara Pym's correspondence with her publishers



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Finding a Voice
by Barbara Pym




I’ve sometimes wondered whether novelists like to be remembered for what they’ve said or because they’ve said it in their own particular way—in their own distinctive voice. But how do you acquire your own voice or indeed any kind of voice? Does it come about as inevitably as your height or the colour of your eyes or do you develop it deliberately, perhaps in imitation of a writer you admire?
    I’ve been trying to write novels, with many ups and downs, over more than forty years. I started as a schoolgirl, when I used to contribute to the school magazine—mostly parodies, conscious even then of other people’s styles. Then in 1929, when I was sixteen, I discovered Aldous Huxley’s novel Crome Yellow. I came across this sophisticated masterpiece in the wilds of Shropshire, through that marvellous institution Boots’ Library, now, alas, as much of a period memory as the seven and sixpenny hardback novel. I was a keen reader of all kinds of modern fiction, and more than anything else I read at that time Crome Yellow made me want to be a novelist myself. I don’t suppose for a moment that I appreciated the book’s finer satirical points, but it seemed to me funnier than anything I had read before, and the idea of writing about a group of people in a certain situation—in this case upper-class intellectuals in a country house—immediately attracted me, so I decided that I wanted to write a novel like Crome Yellow.
    And so my first novel—unpublished, of course—was started in that same year, 1929. It was called Young Men in Fancy Dress and was about a group of “Bohemians”—I must put that word in quotes—who were, in my view, young men living in Chelsea, a district of which I knew nothing at that time.        The hero wanted to be a novelist and, as one of the characters put it, “If you want to be a proper novelist, you must get to like town and develop a passion for Chelsea.”
    Reading the manuscript again, I detect almost nothing in it of my mature style of writing, except that the Bohemian young men aren’t taken entirely seriously, and that there’s a lot of detail—clothes, makes of cars, golf, and drinks (especially descriptions of cocktails—which . I’d certainly never tasted). I’ve always liked detail—in fact my love of triviality has been criticised—so perhaps that was something I developed early. And obviously at that time I read a lot—if a bit indiscriminately. In this early novel all the “best” or at least the most fashionable names are dropped, from Swinburne and Rupert Brooke to D. H. Lawrence and Beverley Nichols.
    When I was eighteen, I went up to Oxford to read English. Most aspiring novelists write at the University, but I didn’t, though I did start to write something in my third year, a description of a man who meant a lot to me. I tore it up, but this person did appear later in a very different guise as one of my best comic male characters. There was nothing comic to me about him at the time, but memory is a great transformer of pain into amusement. And at Oxford, as well as English Literature, I went on reading modern novelists.
    I particularly enjoyed the works of “Elizabeth”, the author of Elizabeth and Her German Garden. Such novels as The Enchanted April and The Pastor’s Wife were a revelation in their wit and delicate irony, and the dry, unsentimental treatment of the relationship between men and women which touched some echoing chord in me at that time. I was learning; these novels seemed more appropriate to use as models than Crome Yellow—perhaps even the kind of thing I might try to write myself.
    It must also have been about this time—still in the 1930s—that I was introduced to the poems of John Betjeman. His glorifying of ordinary things and buildings and his subtle appreciation of different kinds of churches and churchmanship made an immediate appeal to me. Another author I came across at this time was Ivy Compton-Burnett—I think More Women than Men, her novel about a girls’ school, was the first I read; then A House and Its Head, one of her more typical family chronicles. Of course I couldn’t help being influenced by her dialogue, that precise, formal conversation which seemed so stilted when I first read it— though when I got used to it, a friend and I took to writing to each other entirely in that style. Another book we imitated was Stevie Smith’s Novel on Yellow Paper, a fantasy, written with all the humour and pathos of her poems.
    So all the writers I’ve mentioned played some part in forming my own literary style. But of course I’d also been reading the classics, especially Jane Austen and Trollope. Critics discussing my work sometimes tentatively mention these great names, mainly, I think, because I tend to write about the same kind of people and society as they did, although, of course, the ones I write about live in the twentieth century. But what novelist of today would dare to claim that she was influenced by such masters of our craft? Certainly all who read and love Jane Austen may try to write with the same economy of language, even try to look at their characters with her kind of detachment, but that is as far as any “influence” could go.
    The concept of “detachment” reminds me of the methods of the anthropologist, who studies societies in this way. The joke definition of anthropology as “the study of man embracing woman” might therefore seem peculiarly applicable to the novelist. After the war, I got a job at the International African Institute in London. I was mostly engaged in editorial work, smoothing out the written results of other people’s researches, but I learned more than that in the process. I learned how it was possible and even essential to cultivate an attitude of detachment towards life and people, and how the novelist could even do “field- work” as the anthropologist did. And I also met a great many people of a type I hadn’t met before. The result of all this was a novel called Less Than Angels, which is about anthropologists working at a research centre in London, and also the suburban background of Deirdre, one of the heroines, and her life with her mother and aunt. There’s a little church life in it too, so that it could be said to be a mixture of all the worlds I had experience of. I felt in this novel that I was breaking new ground by venturing into the academic scene, although in many ways that isn’t unlike the worlds of the village and parish I’d written about up to then.
    I admire those people who can produce a new book regularly every year. I’ve found it more difficult as time goes on. I suppose it’s easy for anyone to produce their first novel—it’s all there inside you and only needs to be written down. Also a second and third may be just under the surface and comparatively easy to dig out. After that it becomes more difficult, unless you’re prepared to go on writing exactly the same book with only slight variations, over and over again. And people are always very ready to tell you anecdotes from their own experience—which, in their opinion, would be just the thing for one of your novels. Read- ers who don’t like your kind of story sometimes suggest plots or subjects for you in the hope that you may write something different. And sometimes, especially when things aren’t going well, it’s tempting to give it a try.

(the entirety)



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Book

Barbara Pym A Glass of Blessings
Virago Press

'Barbara Pym’s early novel takes us into 1950s England, where life revolved around the village green and the local church—as seen through the funny, engaging, yearning eyes of a restless housewife

'Wilmet Forsyth is bored. Bored with the everyday routine of her provincial village life. Bored with teatimes filled with local gossip. Bored with her husband, Rodney, a military man who dotes on her. But on her thirty-third birthday, Wilmet’s conventional life takes a turn when she runs into the handsome brother of her close friend.

'Attractive and enigmatic, Piers Longridge is a mystery Wilmet is determined to solve. Rather than settling down, he lived in Portugal, then returned to England for a series of odd jobs. Driven by a fantasy of romance, the sheltered, naïve Englishwoman sets out to seduce Piers—only to discover that he isn’t the man she thinks he is.

'As cozy as sharing a cup of tea with an old friend, A Glass of Blessings explores timeless themes of sex, marriage, religion, and friendship while exposing our flaws and foibles with wit, compassion, and a generous helping of love.' -- Open Road


Excerpt






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p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Well, and without the brains and meaning and edge too. I know you dislike Salinger, but, as a lover of his prose, I'm quite excited about those possible forthcoming books. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, T. You liked 'The Canyons' too. Hm. I guess I'll get on that. I'm not a big fan of Schrader's directing, but of course I do like how he always slips in Bressonisms. Yeah, must see, I guess. You see the Ray Davies thing? Interesting. We should totally do a Sellers/Davies meet up film, a 'My Dinner with Andre' type of thing maybe. Accents? Good question. I don't think I could do a convincing British accent, though. Maybe an unconvincing American accent. Maybe they/we could be getting into character for some upcoming America-based something or other. **  œ, Hi. I remember liking WCW's poetry pretty well in a kind of young, aspiring poet to established poet-style admiration for what he manages to pull off, language- and effect-wise, but I haven't read a thing by him in a very long time, so who knows. So glad you like the Nakaya book! She's a great person in addition to her work's greatness. ** Wolf, Hi, bigger W! Oh, sorry about the blog's loading time. There has been short run of giant, information packed posts in recent days. That could be part of it. I think my having fallen so in love with gifs might be a culprit too 'cos they're time eaters. After a whopper tomorrow, the posts should be fairly modest for a while. Unless it becomes a widespread headache and hassle, I kind of want to keep doing the blog the way I do with 'too big' posts sometimes because, I don't know ... I like fucking with the format, I guess. Anyway, I'm sorry for the impatience-creating load times, and I hope it'll get easier once tomorrow's post is in the archives. Interesting about the not getting performance art now as opposed to before. I mean, yeah, whatever works and feeds and all that, right? For me, performance art is up there with sculpture as my favorite art mediums, I think, for whatever reason. Hm. Great thinkfest about Acconci. That was an awesome boon. I love your mind, Wolfster. Oh, ha ha, right, about the cliff confusion. I guess I thought 'scrambling' would do the trick, but I can see how that's actually kind of an awesome idea of a thing to do. For some people, I mean.  I don't know about me. Maybe me, hm, I don't know. Def. on the time and place for both. I still think it should be more like 'temporary facts' or 'facts-in-progress' or 'facts by consensus' or something rather than just 'facts' with its distrustful tone of certainty or something. But that's why I don't try to cure cancer. ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. Oh, yeah, I probably could have been impressed by them personally. I don't see why not, and certainly they're young guys in the middle of a fascinating moment/situation. I'm sure I would have asked them something about overexposure. I assume they leave all that to their managers and team or whoever, but, yeah. I hope that whatever makes seeing American football live a good thing was a good thing when you were in the crowd. ** MANCY, HI, man. I don't know of Kimbery Kubis, no, and when I went to that web address you linked to, all I found was a white page and the words 'permanently down'. Is that her/his work, or is the site just down? I'll google search the name in bit. Thanks a lot for the alert! ** Steevee, Hi. Like I said, there's been a short run of dense posts, and I'm hoping the slowness thing will ease up. Glad your plumbing got righted. So, you think the hair in the drain was a melange of generations of previous tenants' hair? Oh, I don't know, about the One Direction questions. It was a cancelled possibility before I had time to think about it. Definitely questions that they hopefully wouldn't be expecting or at least wouldn't be prepared to answer in a rote way. I'm not sure. I haven't seen their new video, no. I'll go watch it. ** Grant maierhofer, Thanks a gazillion again, Grant! It was super great. How was your weekend? ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. I did have a cool weekend. You? Good move on setting up the site. I'll go devour it when I'm done here, of course. Everybody, Mr, Thomas 'Moore' Moronic has set up a tumblr/site for his imminently (September 17th) forthcoming first novel 'A Certain Kind of Light' (Rebel Satori Press), including an excerpt among other goodies. You should totally click this and go have a long look, if you want my opinion. ** Gary gray, Hi. Oh, nice about getting into FYF. Not to mention as a VIP. Death Grips actually performed? I mean, they were there? That's cool 'cos I'd read about them doing that installation art piece sans their presence for their recent gigs. Anyway, very cool, man. Take some envy in the friendliest form. ** Rewritedept, Hey. Cool, no doubt, about the Lemmy book. I watched some video of last night's Mats reunion gig this morning, and I thought they were pretty great. I got chills even. Yeah, Zac and I went over the existing script and revised/refined it into something much, much better. We threw out out one of the scenes, which was both not so good and really kind of unfilmable, and Zac came up with this completely genius new scene to replace it, and I'm putting it into a draft of wordage today, and then we'll go over it and refine it into what he intended. It's going really great, yeah. 'Life Aquatic' is genius. It was always my fave of his, but I think 'Moonrise Kingdom' has replaced it maybe. I'm guessing we won't get a long set out of Deerhunter since they're on a very long festival bill, but who knows? I'll take whatever I can get. No S-K this weekend, but what a good idea. I've read about the Kathleen Hannah doc, but that's all. And I haven't seen the Big Star doc yet. Will do when it's in my orbit. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. That residency sounds fantastic! I'm so glad you're going for it. Are you hoping for the November slot, or does the timing matter? Fingers obviously crossed into a tangled mess that you get it. ** Martin Bladh, Hi, Martin. Great, exciting, thank you so much! ** Schlix, Uli! Hey, dude! It's been forever! How sweet to have you delurked. Your 'English Little League' listening fest is indeed a perfect occasion to arise. How are you? What's been going on? Catch me up, please, if you don't mind. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hey, J. You haven't seen any of those R-G films? You're in for a big quadruple treat, man. I don't even know what 'The World's End' is. It hasn't been covered here yet, I don't think. Actually, unless I'm forgetting something, I don't even know what 'Hot Fuzz' is. I guess I'll go find out. Cool about the b'day celeb, and, of course, about the novel tinkering. My weekend was good. Great porn script progress as well as novel progress and lots of best friend hanging out time and lots of nicely gloomy rain. ** Sypha, Hi, James. Glad you were able to take a second dip into the event, and, yeah, what a very nice weekend you had there, and so deserved. ** Okay. Back in the 1980s, it seemed like everybody I knew was into Barbara Pym, as was I, but I haven't heard her talked about very much recently, so I thought I'd break the relative silence. See you tomorrow.

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p.s. Hey. Apologies for what I imagine will be a pretty slow load time on the post. At least the blog has reached its slowness capacity, and it'll maybe never emerge more laboriously than now. ** Bill, Howdy, Bill. Lovely weather here too. I always forget how nice this temperate slide from summer into fall can be. I don't recall the name Philippe Moenne-Loccoz, at least at the moment. I'll hit the link and see/hear what's what. Thank you, pal. How was the quartet and the preceding work? Enjoying Berlin in general? I guess it sort of feels like you obviously are. ** Chris Goode, Hi, Chris! Ha ha, a Pym/Acconci two headed monster is such a nice, brain fucking idea. I thank you for that interlude. No prob on the slow reply, of course. You writing and working off-blog is kind of the best comment ever or something. I don't know 'Wounded Geode'. I'll see what I can find about it. It's really hard for me to go back to thinking she did interesting things sometimes, but she did. Abramovic-pivot-Bataille. Wow. That I'll need to read at some point. Interesting that the holding up and related isolation is a mixed bag for you. I mean, of course it is, and it would be, but I guess it's so fairly standard for me when I'm in novel writing mode that I can easily forget what's erased or architect what's being erased into a field trip or something or ... I don't know what I'm trying to say too complicatedly for some reason. Braco? No. Never heard of him. I hope searching out Braco will get me somewhere. Isn't there a semi-famous actress with the last name Braco? I'll wade through her hits, if so. No big. When I build these image stacks, at some point I always try searching for whatever I seek plus the word 'weird' 'cos that's usually fruitful, which causes me to constantly be wading through a sea of images of Weird Al Jankovic, and, you know, I've lived. Anyway, I seem to be prone to blah-blahing even though something's wrong with my articulation this morning or something. See, 'or something'. How many times am I going to end a sentence that way? I'm sorry. Good morning, Chris! I hope the rehearsal space experience errs towards the glorious today. ** Wolf, Hi! Oh, the code? I don't know anything about that, or I just use the code that Blogger gives you except for youtube/Vimeo imbed codes and such. I don't know. It's weird. I'm sorry. Interesting about your discomfort with heavily self-based art forms du jour. So, is, say, poetry irksome in general? Or, like, Cindy Sherman? Or is it more about art that requires a real-time experience with a human body/person? What about in music or live music at least? No, I don't think I've ever climbed. There's something about the idea of it that doesn't excite me in theory. Too gradual or something? I think I like doing things, exotic things, 'dangerous' things in company maybe. Not that you don't climb in company, of course. I don't know what it is. I'll probably try it sometime. I think maybe there's some climbing involved/scheduled on the Antarctica trip I'll be doing next February, so maybe then. Yeah, LA is pretty great for outdoor sports stuff, I'm pretty sure. Well, it's great for most things. I see what you mean about the danger, i.e. creationism. I guess I think logic should always be behind decisions or tentative decisions, but I'm, like, kind of a logical dude or something. What did you do today, maestro? ** David Ehrenstein, Very nice Pynchon link, thank you. Everyone, if you're into Pynchon, this link provided by Mr. E has some good stuff at the end of it. ** œ, Hi. How nice that you liked the Pym post. Thank you. Oh, yes, Anne-Marie Duguet. I've only read the Nakaya texts by her. I know that Fujiko was very happy working with her on the book. Oh, I can't imagine that everyone or even anyone here likes all the writers and artists I like. I just like offering intros and seeing what happens. The consequent liking or not among readers/comments is only very interesting. Thank you about the chain. That's super kind. Have the loveliest day possible. ** Chris Cochrane, Hey, Chris! My address is still the c/o Centre International des Recollets one. Thanks, awesome! Oh, you got that Nilsson box set! I've been looking at it and reading about it and drooling and trying to justify the expended dough involved. Great to see you, buddy. ** Scunnard, Hey, J! Missed you, man. I'm blanking on which artist you mean, but I think this is the post you want, and I think the artist should be there? If not, let me know, and I'll make my brain hunker down. Things are good with me, yeah. Very happy that they are with you too, moving and all. ** Rewritedept, The 'Mats set looked really good, yeah. An actual reunion worth doing, it would seem. I think getting shit for loving ELO and Tom Petty makes sense, but we all have our things that we can see/hear with an intricacy that others do not possess. I love the first ELO album when Roy Wood was still in the band, but that's like a different band. I like a couple of Tom Petty songs, but I can't remember what they are. Anyway, love is the best. Fuck justifying it. Ouch, about the ant bites and their troublesome location. Yeah, I had a good day yesterday, thanks. It's sunny-ish and cloudy-ish here in Paris right now. Yesterday was weather perfect. That's funny, I was just talking about Elliott Smith in an interview I did last night. Further synchronicity. Aw, thanks for wanting me to treat myself. I will, in fact, because my nearby favorite boulangerie Du Pain et Des Idées reopens today after their summer vacation, and I get to stock up and share. Treat yourself to something wow too, okay? ** Tosh Berman, Hi, T. I saw the pix on FB of the Sparks lyrics book. It looks great! ** Robert-nyc, Hi there, Robert! Things are pretty peachy here, yes, thank you. Oh, you love the Var album! Cool! Like I think I said before, that's been my most listened-to album this year. Very cool. Fuck those people who are bothering you. Not literally. And the linking thing was only my honor, sir, don't you know. ** Steevee, Hi. No, I've never heard of that film. I only barely know the director's name. A hunt will commence momentarily. Thank you, man. ** Allesfliesst, Hi, Kai. Reasonable excuse for missing the Acconci Day. You were excused. Do/did you like the Quay Brothers film 'Institute Benjamenta'? I remember really, really liking it at the time it came out, but I haven't watched it since, so I don't know. Oh, I don't know the nature of my feeling that I am immortal. I suppose it's probably fear based, but I do have quite good instincts as a general rule, and yet I am quite a logical person as well, and, hence, my confusion as to the veracity and source of my belief. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. I liked Pym's books a fair amount when I read a handful of them in the '80s. I don't remember if I had/have a favorite. I think she's a very good, distinctive, subtle stylist. You can see the Compton-Burnett influence, and I don't think Pym's on the IC-B weird genius level, but there was something off/on in her prose that excited me a fair amount and made me study her prose for writing tips for a while. Oh, 'Shaun of the Dead', okay, gotcha. I didn't know they made more films. I don't know how I missed that. I'll try to find 'Hot Fuzz' somewhere and watch it, cool, thank you. ** Grant maierhofer, Hey, Grant. Dude, thank you. It ruled. I will forever rule as long as there is an internet and those who seek Acconci. I'm very sorry about the suicide. Suicide is a very hard one for me, or, well, for everyone. Short fiction, poetry: yes. I'm good. Stuff is really good at the moment. ** Sypha, Hi, James. It seems like getting out and doing stuff is probably a really good plan for you. Sometimes the simplest, most obvious things are curative. You haven't read Sade before? Interesting. Masochist, ha ha. ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. The three or four times I've gotten dragged to see American football live were among the most tedious experiences of my life. I even took acid once to see if that would help, and even acid couldn't do anything with a football game. The outrage over the Miley Cyrus thing is as boring as shit, ugh. Both the uptight response and the out-there sexual politics response. I don't know, I seems to me that Justin Timberlake puts some kind of spin on the mainstream, self-cannibalizing r&b/pop model that's as tinily interesting as anyone else's approach. ** S., Hey. Oh, delete/config. I gotta remember to get your stacks in my time machine or whatever they call it. You ain't no retard. I don't know about cat in a corner. I'm not a cat person. New stack despite it all! Everyone, S. just eliminated his trove of Emo stacks as he occasionally does, so you probably should jump on this new one, now with accompanying texts (!), while it has a chance to live. ** MANCY, Hi, man. I'll try the site again today. I found some stuff yesterday, and it looks really interesting, and I'm pursuing it further today. ** Okay. Enjoy your molasses-y, action packed stack if you feel like it. See you tomorrow.

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8 poems by Kenneth Koch + a conversation between Kenneth Koch and John Ashbery + links + Kenneth Koch talks to Mr. Rogers

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Mountain

Nothing's moving I don't see anybody
And I know that it's not a trick
There really is nothing moving there
And there aren't any people. It is the very utmost top
Where, as is not unusual,
There is snow, lying like the hair on a white-haired person's head
Combed sideways and backward and forward to cover as much of the top
As possible, for the snow is thinning, it's September
Although a few months from now there will be a new crop
Probably, though this no one KNOWS (so neither do we)
But every other year it has happened by November
Except for one year that's known about, nineteen twenty-three
When the top was more and more uncovered until December fifteenth
When finally it snowed and snowed
I love seeing this mountain like a mouse
Attached to the tail of another mouse, and to another and to another
In total mountain silence
There is no way to get up there, and no means to stay.
It is uninhabitable. No roads and no possibility
Of roads. You don't have a history
Do you, mountain top? This doesn't make you either a mystery
Or a dull person and you're certainly not a truck stop.
No industry can exploit you
No developer can divide you into estates or lots
No dazzling disquieting woman can tie your heart in knots.
I could never lead my life on one of those spots
You leave uncovered up there. No way to be there
But I'm moved.





Paradiso

There is no way not to be excited
When what you have been disillusioned by raises its head
From its arms and seems to want to talk to you again.
You forget home and family
And set off on foot or in your automobile
And go to where you believe this form of reality
May dwell. Not finding it there, you refuse
Any further contact
Until you are back again trying to forget
The only thing that moved you (it seems) and gave what you forever will
have
But in the form of a disillusion.
Yet often, looking toward the horizon
There—inimical to you?—is that something you have never found
And that, without those who came before you, you could never have
imagined.
How could you have thought there was one person who could make you
Happy and that happiness was not the uneven
Phenomenon you have known it to be? Why do you keep believing in this
Reality so dependent on the time allowed it
That it has less to do with your exile from the age you are
Than from everything else life promised that you could do?





The Boiling Water

A serious moment for the water is
when it boils
And though one usually regards it
merely as a convenience
To have the boiling water
available for bath or table
Occasionally there is someone
around who understands
The importance of this moment
for the water—maybe a saint,
Maybe a poet, maybe a crazy
man, or just someone
temporarily disturbed
With his mind 'floating'in a
sense, away from his deepest
Personal concerns to more
'unreal' things...

A serious moment for the island
is when its trees
Begin to give it shade, and
another is when the ocean
washes
Big heavy things against its side.
One walks around and looks at
the island
But not really at it, at what is on
it, and one thinks,
It must be serious, even, to be this
island, at all, here.
Since it is lying here exposed to
the whole sea. All its
Moments might be serious. It is
serious, in such windy weather,
to be a sail
Or an open window, or a feather
flying in the street...

Seriousness, how often I have
thought of seriousness
And how little I have understood
it, except this: serious is urgent
And it has to do with change. You
say to the water,
It's not necessary to boil now,
and you turn it off. It stops
Fidgeting. And starts to cool. You
put your hand in it
And say, The water isn't serious
any more. It has the potential,
However—that urgency to give
off bubbles, to
Change itself to steam. And the
wind,
When it becomes part of a
hurricane, blowing up the
beach
And the sand dunes can't keep it
away.
Fainting is one sign of
seriousness, crying is another.
Shuddering all over is another
one.

A serious moment for the
telephone is when it rings.
And a person answers, it is
Angelica, or is it you.

A serious moment for the fly is
when its wings
Are moving, and a serious
moment for the duck
Is when it swims, when it first
touches water, then spreads
Its smile upon the water...

A serious moment for the match
is when it burst into flame...

Serious for me that I met you, and
serious for you
That you met me, and that we do
not know
If we will ever be close to anyone
again. Serious the recognition
of the probability
That we will, although time
stretches terribly in
between...

Anonymous submission.





Poem For My Twentieth Birthday

Passing the American graveyard, for my birthday
the crosses stuttering, white on tropical green,
the years’ quick focus of faces I do not remember . . .


The palm trees stalking like deliberate giants
for my birthday, and all the hot adolescent memories
seen through a screen of water . . .


For my birthday thrust into the adult and actual:
expected to perform the action, not to ponder
the reality beyond the fact,
the man standing upright in the dream.





To My Fifties

I should say something to you
Now that you have departed over the mountains
Leaving me to my sixties and seventies, not hopeful of your return,
O you, who seemed to mark the end of life, who ever would have thought that you
     would burn
With such sexual fires as you did? I wound up in you
Some work I had started long before. You were
A time for completion and for destruction. My
Marriage had ended. In you I sensed trying to find
A way out of you actually that wasn’t toward non-existence.
I thought, “All over.” You cried, “I’m here!” You were like traveling
In this sense, but on one’s own
With no tour guide or even the train schedule.
As a “Prime of Life” I missed you. You seemed an incompletion made up of
     completions
Unacquainted with each other. How could this be happening? I thought. Or
What should it mean, exactly, that I am fifty-seven? I wanted to be always feeling
     desire.
Now you’re a young age to me. And, in you, as at every other time
I thought that one year would last forever.
“I did the best possible. I lasted my full ten years. Now I’m responsible
For someone else’s decade and haven’t time to talk to you, which is a shame
Since I can never come back.” My Fifties! Answer me one question!
Were you the culmination or a phase? “Neither and both.” Explain! “No time.
     Farewell!”





The Magic of Numbers

The Magic of Numbers—1

How strange it was to hear the furniture being moved around in the apartment upstairs!
I was twenty-six, and you were twenty-two.


The Magic of Numbers—2

You asked me if I wanted to run, but I said no and walked on.
I was nineteen, and you were seven.


The Magic of Numbers—3

Yes, but does X really like us?
We were both twenty-seven.


The Magic of Numbers—4

You look like Jerry Lewis (1950).


The Magic of Numbers—5

Grandfather and grandmother want you to go over to their house for dinner.
They were sixty-nine, and I was two and a half.


The Magic of Numbers—6

One day when I was twenty-nine years old I met you and nothing happened.


The Magic of Numbers—7

No, of course it wasn’t I who came to the library!
Brown eyes, flushed cheeks, brown hair. I was twenty-nine, and you were sixteen.


The Magic of Numbers—8

After we made love one night in Rockport I went outside and kissed the road
I felt so carried away. I was twenty-three, and you were nineteen.


The Magic of Numbers—9

I was twenty-nine, and so were you. We had a very passionate time.
Everything I read turned into a story about you and me, and everything I did was turned into a poem.





To Stammering

Where did you come from, lamentable quality?
Before I had a life you were about to ruin my life.
The mystery of this stays with me.
“Don’t brood about things,” my elders said.
I hadn’t any other experience of enemies from inside.
They were all from outside–big boys
Who cursed me and hit me; motorists; falling trees.
All these you were as bad as, yet inside. When I spoke, you were there.
I could avoid you by singing or acting.
I acted in school plays but was no good at singing.
Immediately after the play you were there again.
You ruined the cast party.
You were not a sign of confidence.
You were not a sign of manliness.
You were stronger than good luck and bad; you survived them both.
You were slowly edged out of my throat by psychoanalysis
You who had been brought in, it seems, like a hired thug
To beat up both sides and distract them
From the main issue: oedipal love. You were horrible!
Tell them, now that you’re back in your thug country,
That you don’t have to be so rough next time you’re called in
But can be milder and have the same effect–unhappiness and pain.





The Circus

I remember when I wrote The Circus
I was living in Paris, or rather we were living in Paris
Janice, Frank was alive, the Whitney Museum
Was still on 8th Street, or was it still something else?
Fernand Léger lived in our building
Well it wasn’t really our building it was the building we lived in
Next to a Grand Guignol troupe who made a lot of noise
So that one day I yelled through a hole in the wall
Of our apartment I don’t know why there was a hole there
Shut up! And the voice came back to me saying something
I don’t know what. Once I saw Léger walk out of the building
I think. Stanley Kunitz came to dinner. I wrote The Circus
In two tries, the first getting most of the first stanza;
That fall I also wrote an opera libretto called Louisa or Matilda.
Jean-Claude came to dinner. He said (about “cocktail sauce”)
It should be good on something but not on these (oysters).
By that time I think I had already written The Circus
When I came back, having been annoyed to have to go
I forget what I went there about
You were back in the apartment what a dump actually we liked it
I think with your hair and your writing and the pans
Moving strummingly about the kitchen and I wrote The Circus
It was a summer night no it was an autumn one summer when
I remember it but actually no autumn that black dusk toward the post office
And I wrote many other poems then but The Circus was the best
Maybe not by far the best Geography was also wonderful
And the Airplane Betty poems (inspired by you) but The Circus was the best.

Sometimes I feel I actually am the person
Who did this, who wrote that, including that poem The Circus
But sometimes on the other hand I don’t.
There are so many factors engaging our attention!
At every moment the happiness of others, the health of those we know and our own!
And the millions upon millions of people we don’t know and their well-being to think about
So it seems strange I found time to write The Circus
And even spent two evenings on it, and that I have also the time
To remember that I did it, and remember you and me then, and write this poem about it
At the beginning of The Circus
The Circus girls are rushing through the night
In the circus wagons and tulips and other flowers will be picked
A long time from now this poem wants to get off on its own
Someplace like a painting not held to a depiction of composing The Circus.

Noel Lee was in Paris then but usually out of it
In Germany or Denmark giving a concert
As part of an endless activity
Which was either his career or his happiness or a combination of both
Or neither I remember his dark eyes looking he was nervous
With me perhaps because of our days at Harvard.

It is understandable enough to be nervous with anybody!

How softly and easily one feels when alone
Love of one’s friends when one is commanding the time and space syndrome
If that’s the right word which I doubt but together how come one is so nervous?
One is not always but what was I then and what am I now attempting to create
If create is the right word
Out of this combination of experience and aloneness
And who are you telling me it is or is not a poem (not you?) Go back with me though
To those nights I was writing The Circus.
Do you like that poem? have you read it? It is in my book Thank You
Which Grove just reprinted. I wonder how long I am going to live
And what the rest will be like I mean the rest of my life.

John Cage said to me the other night How old are you? and I told him forty-six
(Since then I’ve become forty-seven) he said
Oh that’s a great age I remember.
John Cage once told me he didn’t charge much for his mushroom identification course (at the New School)
Because he didn’t want to make a profit from nature

He was ahead of his time I was behind my time we were both in time
Brilliant go to the head of the class and “time is a river”
It doesn’t seem like a river to me it seems like an unformed plan
Days go by and still nothing is decided about
What to do until you know it never will be and then you say “time”
But you really don’t care much about it any more
Time means something when you have the major part of yours ahead of you
As I did in Aix-en-Provence that was three years before I wrote The Circus
That year I wrote Bricks and The Great Atlantic Rainway
I felt time surround me like a blanket endless and soft
I could go to sleep endlessly and wake up and still be in it
But I treasured secretly the part of me that was individually changing
Like Noel Lee I was interested in my career
And still am but now it is like a town I don’t want to leave
Not a tower I am climbing opposed by ferocious enemies

I never mentioned my friends in my poems at the time I wrote The Circus
Although they meant almost more than anything to me
Of this now for some time I’ve felt an attenuation
So I’m mentioning them maybe this will bring them back to me
Not them perhaps but what I felt about them
John Ashbery Jane Freilicher Larry Rivers Frank O’Hara
Their names alone bring tears to my eyes
As seeing Polly did last night
It is beautiful at any time but the paradox is leaving it
In order to feel it when you’ve come back the sun has declined
And the people are merrier or else they’ve gone home altogether
And you are left alone well you put up with that your sureness is like the sun
While you have it but when you don’t its lack’s a black and icy night. I came home
And wrote The Circus that night, Janice. I didn’t come and speak to you
And put my arm around you and ask you if you’d like to take a walk
Or go to the Cirque Medrano though that’s what I wrote poems about
And am writing about that now, and now I’m alone

And this is not as good a poem as The Circus
And I wonder if any good will come of either of them all the same.





Conversation




KENNETH KOCH: John, do you think we both might be too much concerned with matters of taste? Or don't you think it's possible to be too much concerned with it?

JOHN ASHBERY: What else is there besides matters of taste?

KK: How would you change that statement if you wanted to put it in a poem? I think that statement would seem too pompous to you to put into a poem. Or too obvious.

JA: I would not put a statement in a poem. I feel that poetry must reflect on already existing statements.

KK: Why?

JA: Poetry does not have subject matter, because it is the subject. We are the subject matter of poetry, not vice versa.

KK: Could you distinguish your statement from the ordinary idea, which it resembles in every particular, that poems are about people?

JA: Yes. Poems are about people and things.

KK: Then when you said "we" you were including the other objects in this room.

JA: Of course.

KK: What has this to do with putting a statement in a poem?

JA: When statements occur in poetry they are merely a part of the combined refractions of everything else.

KK: What I mean is, how is the fact that poetry is about us connected to the use of statements in poetry?

JA: It isn't.

KK: But you said before -

JA: I said nothing of the kind. Now stop asking me all these questions.

KK: I'm sorry.

JA: Now I'll ask you a few questions. Why are you always putting things in Paris in all of your poems? I live there but it seems to me I've never written anything about it.

KK: Isn't "Europe" mainly set there?

JA: No. Reread that poem. It all takes place in England.

KK: What about the gray city and the snow valentines and so on - even though the main part of the narrative obviously takes place on the flying fields of England, the real psychological locale of the poem always seemed to me to be in Paris. No? Where were you when you wrote it?

JA: In Paris. But there is only one reference to Paris in the entire poem.

KK: Well, I wrote Ko in Florence.

JA: I wish you would answer my question and also explain -

KK: And there is only one reference to Florence in it, but the way things come together and take place always seemed to me to be very dependent on the fact that it was written in Florence. What did you want me to answer?

JA: Let's ignore for the moment at least your enigmatic statement that the way things come together reminds you of Florence –

KK: I did not say that.

JA: Anyway I wish you would explain for me and our readers –

KK: Listeners.

JA: – why we seem to omit references to the cities in which we are living, in our work. This is not true of most American poetry. Shudder.

KK: Hmm. I guess we do. I did write one poem about New York while I was in New York, but the rest of the poems about America I wrote in Europe.

JA: I repeat, why we seem to omit ALMOST all references – ?

KK: I find it gets to be too difficult to get through my everyday associations with things familiar to me for me to be able to use them effectively in poetry.

JA: Snore.

KK: I myself am bored by my attempts to make abstract statements and wish I could do it as facilely as you do. I'm going to cut out my previous statement. What made you snore?

JA: Well, if you're cutting out your statement, then my snore naturally goes with it, I suppose.

KK: Maybe I won't cut it out. Or I might just keep the snore.

JA: It sounded too much like the way all artists talk when asked to explain their art.

KK: Yes, I agree. I dislike my statement. Why do you suppose are so bothered by such things?

JA: It's rather hard to be a good artist and also be able to explain intelligently what your art is about. In fact, the worse your art is the easier it is to talk about it. At least, I'd like to think so.

KK: Could you give an example of a very bad artist who explains his work very well?

JA: (Silence)

KK: I guess you don't want to mention any names. Why don't you want to mention any names, by the way? Especially since I once heard you say that names are more expressive words than any others.

JA: Some people might get offended. I don't see the point of that.

KK: Do you mean you're afraid?

JA: No. Just bored in advance by the idea of having to defend myself.

KK: Have you ever been physically attacked because of your art criticism?

JA: No, because I always say I like everything.

KK: Would you say that is the main function of criticism?

JA: If it isn't it should be.

KK: How can one talk about what should be the function of something?

JA: Our problem seems to be to avoid it.

KK: To avoid what?

JA: Talking about what you said.

KK: Let me go back a little.

JA: That's always a mistake.

KK: All right, I'll take you at your word. But we were getting on to something interesting – but it went by so quickly.

JA: This is true of much great poetry.

KK: And even truer of the rest of it. I was thinking today as I drove over here what my poetry could possibly do for me or for anyone who reads it. I thought it might make people happy temporarily.

JA: That's a pretty tall order.

KK: I know. I was just going to change the word from happy to something else.

JA: I'd be interested to know what you were going to change it to.

KK: Maybe to pleasantly surprised.

JA: Now you're talking!





Koch links




Kenneth Koch Website
Kenneth Koch bio @ The Poetry Foundation
Kenneth Koch interviewed
Kenneth Koch's 'Some Generational Instructions'
'One Man In His Time Plays Many Parts'
Kenneth Koch @ goodreads
Kenneth Koch interviewed @ PBS
Kenneth Koch @ The Allen Ginsberg Project
A Tribute to Kenneth Koch @ Jacket2
Kenneth Koch posts @ Locus Solus: The New York School of Poets
Kenneth Koch's 'On Aesthetics'
'Getting some with Kenneth Koch'
'The Adolescent: Marit MacArthur on Kenneth Koch'
Kenneth Koch's poems @ The New Yorker
'One Author May Hide Another: Kenneth Koch and Latour'
'The Impossible Comics of Kenneth Koch'
Buy Kenneth Koch's books





Kenneth Koch talks to Mr. Rogers






*

p.s. Hey. ** Peter maloney, Hey there, Mr. Maloney! How very cool of you to enter here, and thank you for the props. Really, really nice paintings by you on your blog. It's a total treat to get to lodge them in my consciousness. Everyone, artist Peter Maloney kindly entered the blog's airless space yesterday, and I recommend you click this link to his blog and look at his terrific paintings and the other stuff over there. Weird/funny coincidence: A couple of days ago, I saw the summer show at the Palais de Tokyo, which is mostly awful, but the best thing in it by far was a video of a boy dancing/facing the very painting that you're using as your avatar. What are the odds? I don't know those Janine Gordon images, no, but now I will, thanks to you. Cool, happy to have here, and please come back anytime. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Wow, that is wild. I sent the link to Gisele immediately, and I'm sure she'll dig it. Wow. Thanks, buddy. ** Tosh Berman, Aw, thanks a lot, my friend. ** David Ehrenstein, Happy slightly belated b'day to the great alternative film goddess! ** Gary gray, Hi. Cool, great, thank you! Yeah, that's a quite clever and very committed technique you had going on there. Super awesome DG live report. They just seem more and more interesting/great all the time. Me, up to? Lots of projects in progress, mostly: novel, collab book about the Scandinavia theme park trip I took a while back, collab porn film project, new Gisele piece, etc. Upcoming trip(s) planning. Hanging out. Things are good. So, you're getting a withdrawal effect that encourages and fuels writing? Hunh, interesting. Can you describe the effect it's having on the writing or on your writing approach or whatever? Maybe it's best to just let it happen without analyzing. Yeah, probably, right? Cool. ** Don w, Hi, Don! Thanks a bunch, man. That's awfully sweet you to have typed. How in the world are you and everything you do? Big love. ** Kyler, Thank for saying and, I presume, thinking that, man. I think someone mentioned that book you're reading to me. In fact, it might even have been my agent. How curious. Want to see the Allen. It opens here this week, I think. The p.s. yesterday was essentially the previous post. You just had to keep scrolling and clicking 'Older posts' if need be. Happy Wednesday, whatever Wednesday means and involves. ** Allesfliesst, Dance scholar, interesting. What's your syllabus or dance examples line-up or whatever? I can imagine that the Quays' film could sit in some place within me that is similar to the place where it has come to rest in you. Perhaps I'll let it flourish in memories. The main and maybe only thing I remember about it at this point is how incredible Alice Krige was in it, or how incredible seeming she was at the time, at least. Hanna Schygulla as FB! I think I maybe have to find that. ** Wolf, Hi, Wolf. Your little dance? Surely I would remember it, if you did, so I guess that treat awaits my next in-person with you when, first thing, I will politely demand to see it. The blog's loading problem will forever be a mysterious problem, it seems. Very interesting. I mean your approach to self. Hunh. I admire that. I even aspire to a place of at least making art like that. But it wouldn't work with me, I don't think. I think I wouldn't be a good writer at all. The self has to hold total sway for me and then be battled and tortured into language's proper place. So interesting that there are so many ways to make it work, whatever I mean by 'it'. Oh, that is a nice building. That's in Brighton? Weird. On Naoshima in Japan, there were a bunch of pretty great Sugimotos in the museum/hotel/etc. complex where we stayed. Punching a hologram, ha ha, what?! I'm going to be figuring out that image's relationship to a live music gig all day, which is, obviously, a good thing. 'Elysium' is bad? That's sad. I've been semi-into seeing it. Maybe sub-semi now. Thanks, Wolfy! ** Scunnard, Hi, pal. It's kind of nice, the pre-moving boxing up and stuff, no? The getting rid, the reassessing, the tape dispenser, etc. Am I totally romanticizing that? Surely not. Yeah, hm, yeah, I had this sneaking suspicion that 'IB' might not hold up. Weird how that happens, or not weird, or I don't know. Like I really liked Aronovsky's 'Pi' when it first came out, and then I saw it again and thought it was pure misery, but I've found his subsequent films to be varying degrees of pure misery, so maybe I was actually innocent and right the first time about 'Pi'. I don't think so, though. Anyway, blah blah. Best of the best of what it takes to get packed up. When do you move precisely? Ultra-soon, yes? ** œ, Hi. Yes, that Fujiko video, so nice. My friend Zac and I will be visiting and documenting two of her France-based works while on our work trip to the Loire Valley next week. I'm going to find and read that Sollers thing on Mallarme. Cool, thank you for mentioning it. Oh, okay, well, if you feel you need to stay away, I hope everything goes incredibly well for you until I get the pleasure of visiting with you again. Much love to you. ** Sypha, Hi. I didn't know that was Chris Colfer for a while, since I don't know 'Glee' at all, and then, when I realized, I had to pair it with the Taylor Swift gif, which somehow seemed to justify my including those guys. Never danced in public? What about privately in your room? Do you ever play air guitar? ** Heliotrope, Hi, Mark! It has been too long, but you get a pass to take however long you want, man. As long as it's not too long, okay? Except for the work shake-ups and car death (RIP) and the loss of your parents' last friend, I'm sorry, your summer sounds to have been kind of nicely summery. And that was a nice summary, to create a rhyme. It's terrible that the Dodgers being great right now just makes me feel nervous and suspicious. Fingers crossed, though. I miss you always too. I wish you guys would/could come to Paris. I'll get to LA soon some way or another, I hope. Love you too, bud. ** Rewritedept, Finally the post caused someone's computer or whatever problems! I was so sure that it would. Dude, everything at that bakery is edible heaven. I've got a bag of all kinds of their things in my kitchen waiting to be devoured by me and others in a few hours. Ugh, sorry, man, about the living situation shit. Take the genius tag. Surely that's true, and it isn't often that genius gets recognized externally or something. There are still intelligent people, they just aren't wasting their intelligence in/on social networks. That's my theory. The American anti-intellectual thing is eternal, I think. It's been around and prominent ever since I was a kid. It was just much easier to forget it existed in 'the old days'. My sleep thing is much better, but it's not completely cured, weirdly. Solitary living might be good, yeah. It sure can be, at least for getting art done. Yeah, I don't know, I think love for other people is the absolutely ultimate thing. For me, it is, for whatever reason. A secret? Cool. ** Steevee, Hi. Your Fassbinder piece at last! Great! I'll be over there in just a while. Everyone, the extremely head-screwed-on critic and dude Steve Erickson aka Steevee has written a piece on Fassbinder's early films for the Roger Ebert site, and I can tell you without even having read said piece yet that it is a must. So, head over here as soon as you are able. ** Bill, Oh, that sounds really good. That sextet, that line up. Sweet. New stuff! New Bill stuff! Yes, yes, yes! ** Schlix, Hi, Uli! Yeah, I've been waking up weirdly early due to the last vestiges of my sleep problems, so the blog has been more 'on time' than it usually is. Your Croatia trip sounds amazing. I would really like to go there sometime. It allures. You are right about the problem with the Frankfurt dates. The performances got rescheduled for next May, and I totally forgot to change the dates, but now I have. I haven't been traveling with 'The Pyre', and Gisele has barely been in Paris this summer, but she tells me that the performances have been going really well, so I guess they have since she's normally not deluded about how things are going. ** MANCY, Cool, thank you, man. ** S., Actually, I have some kind of back up thing on my laptop that I could use to preserve time-enslaved stuff, if it worked, which it doesn't, so, no, I don't have a time machine. Do you think I'd be sitting here writing this p.s. if I did? Maybe I would be, though. Weird. Cool about the good school thing and the blond surroundings. I was a pet person until I was about 14. There are a shitload of 'dog slaves' out there. A few 'horses' and I think maybe a 'cat' or two. A lot, and I mean a lot of 'pigs'. Never have come across a 'scorpion' or 'centipede' slave. Some boy should offer that service, if he could figure what the service would involve. He would have the market cornered. You're addicted to Kyler Moss? Interesting. He seems so 'last year' to me or something, but then it's so easy to turn on things when they get famous. New short story, cool, duh, very cool. ** Right. We're back to the normal post/p.s. fused situation today. And, to celebrate this great reunification, what better thing than the marvelous stylings of the poet Kenneth Koch. See you tomorrow.


Galerie Dennis Cooper presents ... The Firework Displays of Cai Guo-Qiang

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'Internationally lauded “explosives artist” Cai Guo-Qiang has already amassed some stunning stats: He may be the only artist in human history who has had some one billion people gaze simultaneously at one of his artworks. You read that right, one billion. I’m talking about the worldwide televised “fireworks sculpture” that Cai Guo-Qiang—China-born, living in America now—created for the opening of the Beijing Olympics in 2008. If you’re one of the few earthlings who hasn’t seen it, either live or online, here’s Cai’s description: “The explosion event consisted of a series of 29 giant footprint fireworks, one for each Olympiad, over the Beijing skyline, leading to the National Olympic Stadium. The 29 footprints were fired in succession, traveling a total distance of 15 kilometers, or 9.3 miles, within a period of 63 seconds.”

'But a mere billion pairs of eyes is not enough for Cai’s ambition. He’s seeking additional viewers for his works, some of whom may have more than two eyes. I’m speaking of the aliens, the extraterrestrials that Cai tells me are the real target audience for his most monumental explosive works. Huge flaming earth sculptures like Project to Extend the Great Wall of China by 10,000 Meters, in which Cai detonated a spectacular six-mile train of explosives, a fiery elongation of the Ming dynasty’s most famous work. Meant to be seen from space: He wants to open “a dialogue with the universe,” he says. Or his blazing “crop circle” in Germany, modeled on those supposed extraterrestrial “signs” carved in wheat fields—a project that called for 90 kilograms of gunpowder, 1,300 meters of fuses, one seismograph, an elec­troencephalograph and an electro­cardiograph. The two medical devices were there to measure Cai’s physiological and mental reactions as he stood in the center of the explosions, to symbolize, he told me, that the echoes of the birth of the universe can still be felt in every molecule of every human cell.

'As a youth, he says, “I was unconsciously exposed to the ties between fireworks and the fate of humans, from the Chinese practice of setting off firecrackers at a birth, a death, a wedding.” He sensed something in the fusion of matter and energy, perhaps a metaphor for mind and matter, humans and the universe, at the white-hot heart of an explosion. By the time of the political explosion of Tiananmen Square in 1989, Cai had left China and was in Japan, where “I discovered Western physics and astrophysics.” And Hiroshima.

'The revelation to him about Western physics, especially the subatomic and the cosmological Big Bang levels, was that it was somehow familiar. “My Taoist upbringing in China was very influential, but not until I got to Japan did I realize all these new developments in physics were quite close to Chinese Qi Gong cosmology. The new knowledge of astrophysics opened a window for me,” he says. The window between the mystical, metaphorical, metaphysical concepts of Taoism—the infinity of mind within us and that of the physical universe whose seemingly infinite dimensions outside us were being mapped by astrophysicists. For example, he says, “The theory of yin and yang is paralleled in modern astrophysics as matter and antimatter, and, in electromagnetism, the plus and minus.”

'Maybe there’s the sly wink of a showman behind these interspatial aspirations, but Cai seems to me to be distinctive among the current crop of international art stars in producing projects that aren’t about irony, or being ironic about irony, or being ironic about art about irony. He really wants to paint the heavens like Michelangelo painted the Sistine Chapel ceiling. Only with gunpowder and flame.' -- The Smithsonian



___
Stills



































_____
Further

Cai Guo-Qiang Website
Video: Cail Guo-Qiang @ PBS
'Why Cai Guo-Qiang Is Good For China And Bad For Art'
'Meet the Artist Who Blows Things Up for a Living'
Cai Guo-Qiang Studio Blog
Cai Guo-Qiang @ Facebook
'Contextualizing Cai Guo-Qiang'
'Cai Guo-Qiang Explodes Onto Soho Real Estate Scene'
'Playing with fire'
'Cai Guo-Qiang, Move Along, Nothing to See Here'
'An Encounter With Cai Guo-Qiang, The World’s Foremost Explosion Artist'
'Gunpowder Plots'


____
Extras


Cai Guo-Qiang Explosion Work


'Body Scan': 2013 Cai Guo-Qiang Interview


Cai Guo-Qiang: Desire for Zero Gravity


Cai Guo-Qiang at Guggenheim Museum New York


cai guo-qiang with wu yulu: robot imitating damien hirst



_______
Interview
from Cool Blog English




Where do you find themes for your works?

Cai Guo-Qiang: After the 9/11 attack in New York, my themes and works has been quite diverse. For example, I made the rainbow of fireworks above the East River and expressed the colorfulness of the city. I also made the black rainbow under the daylight, whose theme was to express the dismay of the modern society. The pieces with cars inspired me to produce pieces about terrorist attacks.

You have works which have concepts of Feng Shui. Do you arrange your studio according to Feng Shui?

Cai Guo-Qiang: Absolutely. Feng Shui is the first priotiry when choosing studios. Even after choosing the studio, I rely on Feng Shui where to place Buddha and other stuff. I placed the Lion Rock between doors. I have many female staffs, and when they complained that they were too busy with work to date, I placed some stuff that would bring opportunities to meet great matches. I also made a Japanese-style garden in the studio. At exhibitions at local towns, Feng Shui represents the energies of the culture, people's history, and space of the town. The life energy "Qi" is an invisible energy. I develop ideas and work on my pieces, taking that energy highly into consideration. I don’t always express like “This is Feng Shui” in my works directly, but when I am working, I am conscious of Feng Shui in an invisible way, like aesthetically.

Upon the production of your works in which you use gunpowder, you invented the technique to control the altitude of explosions of fireworks by putting microchips into firework balls. How did the invention affect your work after adopting microchips?

Cai Guo-Qiang: First, it had been said that using gunpowder was dangerous. Until I started developing the technique of built-in microchips around 2001, all the fireworks were exploded by fuse and the timing of explosions were calculated by the length of fuse. Since fuse was made by hand, it was very difficult to fix the shape and order of explosions of fireworks. But if you use fireworks with built-in microchips, the altitudes and timing of explosions are already calculated.For instance, it is like 2000 people who have tickets get seated exactly in their right seats. I can control the altitude and timing of the explosions of 2000 fireworks. However, there are a good thing and a bad thing about introducing microchips. The good thing is that now I can use the sky as canvas. The bad thing is that they are expensive. I feel pressured in many aspects because huge amount of money is spent on few dozens of seconds of art. That is, promoters try to gather many people to see that expensive piece of art by using the media. The pressure gets even more intense when thousands of people come to see the few dozen seconds of art. That kind of pressure is basically nothing to do with arts, though. Now that I can collect funds and attract people for my work, but I still feel apprehensive if that something in the sky was an art and that the piece was really an artistic piece.

When do you feel the excitement while working?

Cai Guo-Qiang: All the time. I always joke that making pieces is the same thing as having sex (laughs). Even when you fail, you can't start over again. Each time is the last time, and you never know if it will end up good or bad if you don't try. But when I finish working, all I feel is a joy. No matter good or bad. I always feel delighted and happy after completing my works.

What is an art for you?

Cai Guo-Qiang: An art is what I do. Through the artistic eyes, everything in the world, from election campaigns of politicians or constructions on the streets, can look as arts.

If you were not an artist, what do you think you would be doing?

Cai Guo-Qiang: I can't imagine. I can't see myself being anything but an artist. Sometimes I myself think that I am good at making artistic pieces, but I am not that good at anything else.



____
Show

Mystery Circle, MOCA Los Angeles, 2012
'Wait -- he’s shooting the fireworks at us? That was the general worry Saturday night as Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang readied his explosion show outside the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA. After all, fireworks should go up, vertical, away from people -- not toward them. But Cai didn’t get his reputation as a world-renowned pyro-wiz by doing what’s expected. “Mystery Circle,” Saturday’s event, would be no exception. Around 7:40 p.m., the sky rapidly darkening, the two-minute warning was given, then it was one minute, 30 seconds, 10 seconds, a spirited countdown -- and boom. Some 40,000 rockets, arranged on the northern wall of the Geffen Contemporary in a crop circle-like pattern, exploded outward in a massive display of light, heat and sound.'-- LA Times








Black Ceremony, Hiroshima, 2008
'The City of Hiroshima has selected the winner of the 7th Hiroshima Art Prize, contemporary artist Mr. Cai Guo-Qiang (born 1957 in Fujian Province, China, currently resident in New York). Cai Guo-Qiang has created a great number of pieces that are not only based on a unique vision of the universe rooted in traditional Chinese culture and thought but his art offers a penetrating view of human history and civilization. In his outdoor project in Hiroshima, both a celebration of the rebirth of Hiroshima and a requiem, Cai was able to use his personal methodology of using gunpowder to raise questions regarding not only the historical significance of Hiroshima but also the physical phenomenon of the A-bomb.'-- city.hiroshima.jp







Tornado, Washington, D.C., 2005
'Washington will be treated to a state-of-the-art pyrotechnics event along the Potomac River, created exclusively for the opening of the festival by artist Cai Guoqiang, who has stunned onlookers from New York to Shanghai. Called an "Explosion Event" by the artist, his spectacular display will incorporate beautifully choreographed traditional fireworks, basic primordial gunpowder and fuse, and high-tech computer-chip embedded firework shells to ignite dancing boats, floating kites, and flying fire dragons--as well as an awesome tornado spiraling across and punctuating the sky.'-- china.org







Black Ceremony, Qatar, 2011
'At the Arab Museum of Modern Art in Doha, Qatar this week, Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang put on his largest "explosion event" of the last three years, utilizing microchip-controlled explosives to form incredible designs and patterns. The video we've embedded of the event is an impressive testament to how a volatile black powder explosion can be controlled and shaped by computer.mEach set of explosions was calculated to paint a different picture. One series of explosions created black smoke clouds that looked like "drops of ink splattered across the sky." In another, 8,300 shells embedded with computer microchips exploded in a pyramid shape over the desert.'-- Nate Mook







Black Christmas Tree, Washington, D.C., 2012
'Just in time for Christmas, Cai Guo-Qiang has brought his pyrotechnics skills back to America. Commissioned by the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery at the Smithsonian in Washington DC, the renowned Chinese contemporary artist executed three separate explosions in a performance entitled Black Christmas Tree described as acupuncture treatment for arts in the city. Surprisingly, the tree is still alive post-detonation and will be re-planted elsewhere.' -- Arrested Motion







Simulated Demolition, Taiwan, 1998
'A simulated demolition by fire of the Taichung (Taiwan) National Gallery of fie Arts (1980), as it reopens in modernist carapace in 1998. The incendiation seems meant to be a celebration of the re-architecturing and change in focus of exhibitions: Destruction" opening the way for "Construction".'-- asianimperialisms.com







Fallen Blossoms, Philadelphia, 2009
'Fallen Blossoms consists of a poetic meditation on the passing of time, memory, and memorializing. One of the artist’s signature “explosion events,” Fallen Blossoms: Explosion Project was specifically commissioned for the exhibition and occurred at the Philadelphia Museum of Art; followed by a second explosion event at the Fabric Workshop and Museum. It took place at sunset on Friday, December 11 on the East Terrace of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, where a blossoming flower shaped from gunpowder fuse was ignited.'-- dissidents.com







Black Rainbow, Valencia, 2005
'Cai Guo-Qiang conceived Black Rainbow: Explosion Project for Valencia as part of a series of salutes that will take place in cities across the world (Black Rainbows are also scheduled for Edinburgh and Beijing). Black Rainbow is unique as a project sited in multiple venues. The repetition of Black Rainbow in the international community is intended as a series of omens of widespread unease. While signaling alarm like ancient smoke signals, the ominous arc of smoke in Black Rainbow also serves as a somber and dreamlike salute and reminds us, despite our contemporary associations with explosive materials and warfare, that violence and its signifiers can possess ethereal and profound beauty.' -- Culturebot






New Years Fireworks, Taipei, 2011
'2011 was a special celebration for Taipei, the new year saw in the Centennial of the Republic of China’s (Taiwan) founding in 1911, and to celebrate, China’s Cai Gui-Qiang was commissioned to choreograph a special fireworks display. The superstar artist who’s has previously worked on displays for the Beijing Olympics and World Expo Shanghai’s, and fireworks are very much of the artists method of work, in his iconic ‘Gunpowder Paintings’.'-- slamxhype.com








Explosion Event, Copenhagen, 2012
'For Faurschou Foundation's inaugural exhibition, Cai Guo-Qiang has referenced the foundation's new location in the Free Port of Copenhagen, as well as the country's historical and cultural connection to the sea. On the day of the opening, Cai ignited thousands of mini rockets from a small traditional Danish boat 'Freja' on the water behind the foundation, in front of an enthusiastic crowd from all over Denmark and beyond. The scorch marks from the explosion transformed the boat into a three-dimensional gunpowder drawing, and this sculpture subsequently becomes a part of the exhibition.'-- faurschou.com







*

p.s. Hey. ** Scunnard, I think tidiness is a big factor in the upbeat effect probably. Organizing is blissful too of course. And consolidating. Friday, wow, tomorrow. Man, let me know what it's like to be relocated while you're in the heady early days, and, yeah, glad the Ponge spun the experience. Best of luck and ease with everything it takes. ** Allesfliesst, Hi. Sexualizing memories is one of the brain's least openly celebrated tricks, and disinfecting the charge through the legit stylings of dudes like Deleuze is another. Gravity, nice. Good angle, as it were. I guess it's more than an angle. Sounds sweet. You have a good brain. I do think maybe we talked about Dragan Zivadinov, as a bell is rung, but hazily. I'll refresh the memory, and maybe even sexualize it. ** Wolf, Hi, Wolf. Oh, in Marseille? I guess I was confused. I know that fort, but I think I just gazed on it from afar when I was there. Hunh. Yeah, you just move on, sure, right, true. It's cool that you can move back differently home too. Moving is awesome. Okay, on 'Elysium'. Hm. Might be a plane film. I like those kinds of big, empty, noisy movies as distraction and I guess also 'cos I really like seeing how popular entertainment evolves, and I like trying to surrender to the way pleasure reconfigures to see what happens or something. But on planes mostly. I liked 'District 9' okay, but I never got what the big deal was. It just seemed to have a bit more care and IQ points than the usual, which was interesting but not enough to kick my ass, I guess. If you know KK and JA's work, and maybe you do, I can't remember, the wit and surface play in the interview is very self-reflexive and emotionally complicated or something, or it was for me. ** James, Hi, James. I was in Santa Fe only once and briefly, and I didn't get or like it much at all. Yeah, I couldn't understand it. It had been one of your dreams, or you being there had seemed dreamy? My novel's going well. I have a very tentative title in mind. It depends: sometimes I have a title before I start a novel, and sometimes it changes multiple times during the writing. I think that will be the case with this new one. No idea at all on word count. I'm too early on. No idea at all whether the length will be similar to 'TMS'. At the moment, it could be any length, although not hugely long. Thank you for asking, man. I have but haven't yet read the Ashbery translation. I'm going to read it more for the Ashbery than for the Rimbaud. Take care! ** David Ehrenstein, Yes, indeed! Everybody, For those into Pasolini, DE passes along this interesting link. Happy to see Pierre at the top there. ** Don w, Hi, Don. Thanks for coming back. Exciting about your novel and its early reception! Who's publishing it, and when? Me? Traveling a lot all over the place. Working on a lot of projects. Things are really good. I'm feeling as happy and good as I ever have, I think. Love, me. ** Gary gray, Cool, glad you dug the poems. I'm glad this place makes you feel sharey. It's a boon. Intense about you and your mom. And about your disappearance and your friends' guess as to why. Sounds like heated stuff to have underlying something you're writing. But I work from trauma, confusing life shit, etc., a lot. Thanks for finding my projects good. They are good. I'm really lucky at the moment. No, I don't know Marcel's Music Journal. Thank you. It's booked and will be imbibed later on. ** œ, Hi. You're back after all, good. Super nice read on and response to what makes Koch's work so good. Ashbery would vie for the crown of greatest living writer in my world if that crown wasn't a bogus idea. Pleasant day! *** Rewritedept, Yep, a solo space is what you need, sounds like. What are the prospects? Don't force a secret on me, just wait until something seems exciting and nerve-wracking to to reveal. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Thanks about the dances thing, man. Mm, I don't think I have a particular fave Koch book. I think he might be one of those poets where starting with the Selected Poems -- 'On the Great Atlantic Rainway: Selected Poems 1950–1988' -- might be the way to go. Really good luck fighting off that sickness. Very nice to see your book's release propped in PW, obviously! Love and perfect health back to you. ** _Black_Acrylic, Koestenbaum on Ashbery is great if I'm remembering that essay. I did bookmark the doll thing, and I'll make sure to check in there a few times a day until the deed is done. Thanks, Ben. ** Steevee, I guess I would have thought that Al Jazeera was already on that. ** S., I think I have Google +. I think you have to have Google + if you have a blog now, right? I've never even looked at it. I never hear anyone ever talk about it. It seems like a dead zone or something. You'd have to go back in time wearing a contamination suit, though. Sounds like you had fun. Recommend boys? You mean for you to have sex with, or to dream about having sex with? No, I can't think of anybody. I'm sort of out of the loop. Ask Misanthrope maybe. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! I'm really glad you dug the Koch poems, cool. I saw your email in my box upon waking this morning, thank you, and I'll get on answering the questions asap. Yeah, thanks a lot, man! Have a great morning if it's morning! ** Alan, Hi, Alan! Really good to see you! I wondered if Koch might very pleasurably (for me, I mean) pull you in here. Thank you! Yeah, like I said up above, I'm gonna read the Ashbery Rimbaud translation mostly just to see what decisions Ashbery made. How are you? What are you doing and working on and everything else? ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. Yikes. On the sleep/almost falling thing. I don't know. I never see people doing their own variations on what others have done before as a bad thing. I just think that means you have to look more carefully for the differences and think about them, if you want. I always think the 'it's been done before' approach to new things is a fast lane to losing touch with what newness means and getting muffled by cynicism. I always try to think that when something seems to resemble something from the past it just means I have to work harder to appreciate it or something. I don't know. Were poets ever 'the unacknowledged legislators of the world'? Hunh. Like when? ** Sypha, I guess that qualifies as private dancing. Wow. I used to play air guitar a lot when I was younger and I found it very exciting. But I never do now. That's probably a bad sign. ** Tomkendall, Tom! How super great to see you, buddy! Thanks, man, about the posts. How are you? What's up? Why are you in Miami? I've never been there, so I don't know anything. Everybody, does anybody among you have any tips of things to do in Miami for the awesome writer and d.l. Tomkendall, who happens to be there right now seeking things to do? Thanks! Bunches of love to you, man! *** Done. Maybe you will enjoy exploring the galerie show today. I hope so. See you tomorrow, whatever happens.

Gig #44: Portal, Tsembla, Fuck Buttons, Toshimaru Nakamura, Vår, Bill Orcutt & Chris Corsano, Egyptian Sports Network, Laundry Room Squelchers, µ-Ziq, Unicorn Hard-On, Interplanetary Prophets, Eric Copeland, Moonface

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'Noise is resistance, or at least it causes resistance, so can never be the mainstream. We should not have the idea that noise is subjective - it is something that happens to the individual, but it is not solely driven by that, however directly painful the moment might be when you encounter a concert that is too loud, or the relentless thrum of TV-derived hit songs. It's more interesting than that: if that's your reaction, you are noise, you are the bit that doesn't fit.

'But noise is a judgment, a social one, based on unacceptability, the breaking of norms and a fear of violence. So what do we seek if we are drawn to noise music? How and why would anyone want to be assaulted by it?

'There is something ecstatic about extreme volume that undoes controlled listening, and creates a moment where you are just hearing, and not just through your ears. That moment is a moment of noise music - ideally a long moment with no obvious end or markers in it, like the assault of My Bloody Valentine's You Made Me Realise, where their music was stripped of all instrumentation until the effects played themselves. Disturbance, disruption, distortion, these all make up noise music. But if all you're doing is combining these elements, you will have a simulation of noise music, a generic version.

'What I like noise music to have is a deeper sense of being overdriven, of being near to collapse, of courting failure, or using failure of machinery pushed too far (this includes human machinery).

'At its strangest it should create a sense of liberation from thought, from trying to find structure, it should be made of material that just shouldn't be there ("there" being in a concert, on a recording, or anywhere at all if you're really lucky). But this is not an easy liberation. Instead of the ecstasy of the repetitions and crescendos of dance music, this is the joy of loss through the inflicting of sound (is this the time to say that noise music can be quiet, full of the threat and promise of silence, of sensory deprivation?).' -- Paul Hegarty







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PortalKilter
'Parsing Portal's Vexovoid should take you the better part of this calendar year. Initially forceful and ultimately complex, Vexovoid redirects the image of death metal through a dervish funhouse, where the expected shapes have been mutated and multiplied into orders so strange they seem surreal. Rhythms stay the course where you expect them to shift before finally switching without warning. Sharp-barbed riffs emerge from and climb above dins that once seemed irreparably unordered. Songs that, for the first minute, appeared to have but one aim and direction find a half-dozen new missions and vectors in a five-minute span. Hearing it all go by-- the forms flux, the pieces connect, the momentum volley-- provides an exhilarating, bewildering sort of audio whiplash. Vexovoid is a gauntlet that, to run again and again, is every bit as exhilarating as it is exhausting.'-- Grayson Currin, Pitchfork






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TsemblaIn B (excerpt, live)
'Tsembla-- Finland-based artist Marja Johansson-- creates and inhabits melodic landscapes that are as decieving as they are addictive. Like fellow Finnish outré-experimental musician, Jan Anderzen-- the brain behind projects Tomutonttu and Kemialliset Ystävät-- Johansson creates recordings that feel equal parts childish, psychedelic, and tribal. Her craft may sound like alien transmissions sent from the past, but her style is inherently home-grown and of this world. On "Aivojen Pimeydessä," Johansson weaves strangely melodic rhythms on top of each other before introducing pulsing, spaced-out bass hits. It's not until halfway through, however, that Johansson restrains individual layers to show the true complexity of an effortless-seeming sound.'-- The Wire






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Fuck ButtonsBrainfreeze
'Andrew Hung and Benjamin John Power have always been masters at dynamics and building momentum, only now they seem to have found a way to augment their strengths without having it derail the song. Unlike the constant building (which might be more accurately described as throbbing) that made much of "Street Horrsing" and "Tarot Sport," on Slow Focus the songs actually build towards something. The band removes drums and synth parts for sections at a time, which gives the songs a feeling of pace they never had (and in my opinion always seemed to lack) before. "Brainfreeze" is the perfect example of this. It also is a track that tries to sonically recreate the feeling of an actual brain freeze, which is a pretty sweet thing to do.'-- Bitcandy






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Toshimaru Nakamuranimb #37
'Toshimaru Nakamura began his career playing rock and roll guitar, but gradually explored other types of music, even abandoning guitar and started working on circuit bending. He uses a mixing console as a live, interactive musical instrument: "Nakamura plays the 'no-input mixing board', connecting the input of the board to the output, then manipulating the resultant audio feedback."Nakamura's music has been described as "sounds ranging from piercing high tones and shimmering whistles to galumphing, crackle-spattered bass patterns."'-- collaged






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VårPictures of Today / Victorial
'Vår is the project of four best friends from Copenhagen. Each member of the band is involved in several other Danish bands and all four members are also accomplished visual artists. What began as the extremely lo-fi two-piece of Elias Rønnenfelt and Loke Rahbek recording on 4-track has evolved into an experimental noise/industrial/techno pop quartet. On this album Vår utilize everything from acoustic guitar, power electronics, bass, trumpet, multi-tracked vocals, and various percussive instruments, to broken glass & sheet metal samples. No One Dances Quite Like My Brothers is a remarkable debut, an emotional roller coaster of sorts which at times is profoundly uplifting, at times decidedly morose but remains unfailingly moving throughout.'-- Sacred Bones






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Bill Orcutt & Chris Corsanolive @ Industry Lab
'You know Bill Orcutt from dozens of releases with now-defunct Miami noise legends Harry Pussy (including the recent One Plus One 2xLP comp on his own Palilalia Records, and the reissue of Let’s Build a Pussy via Editions Mego) or from his skull-obliterating solo acoustic guitar work. If you’ve seen him live, I bet you know him as one of the most memorable guitarists you’ve encountered. You know Chris Corsano from dozens of releases with collaborators in the avant/free-jazz/improvised music scenes, as one third of Rangda, or as improviser-in-residence at Hopscotch 2012. If you’ve seen him live, I bet you know him as one of the most memorable drummers you’ve encountered. Together, nothing is softened: strikes of the E-string correspond with cymbal crashes; both players reach the end of a winding phrase and stop on a dime before swinging into a new barrage; shouts rise up into the room mic; a guitar is picked with such speed and savagery that it seems to both diverge into too many discrete voices and spiral into itself as if it could chew into the vinyl (the MP3 will probably be fine); a snare drum is struck hard enough, you think, to split it. This is the sound of two minds and four hands striking in every direction and covering the mix in treble shrapnel.'-- Tiny Mix Tapes






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Egyptian Sports NetworkNecropolis Highlights
'Egyptian Sports Network is the new collaborative project between Matt ‘Ducktails’ Mondanile and Spencer Clark, also known as one half of The Skaters (with James Ferraro), one half of Inner Tubes (with ex-Emeralds member Mark McGuire) and label boss of Pacific City Sound Visions. Taken from their debut five-track suite called ‘Interstitial Luxor’ for Mondanile’s New Images label, the track is written by Mondanile and Clark and beautifully executed by Mark McGuire. It’s as fresh as you’d imagine and expect, combining weird and wonderful textures in a thick vein of metallic, futuristic abstraction and undulating riffs.'-- collaged






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Laundry Room Squelcherslive @ International Noise Conference, Miami
'Laundry Room Squelchers is one of the most unpredictable outfits in all of noise's underbelly. A founding member of the despicable To Live and Shave in LA, Mr. Rat Bastard (Frank Falestra to Mom) has been cracking heads, bursting eardrums, and causing structural damage in shitty clubs for decades, most recently with his sprawling International Noise Conference, which touts: "No droning, no mixing boards, no laptops." I had the opportunity to see the Squelchers at last year's No Future Fest in Chapel Hill, NC, where a burly man with black-rimmed glasses and beanie (Rat Bastard) hurled his static-spewing amplifier into the faces and chests of audience members.'-- Washington City Paper






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μ-ZiqPulsar
'Mike Paradinas, the man behind µ-Ziq and peerless electronic label Planet Mu, has been a central figure in progressive and inventive electronic music for over 20 years. His work both as a label boss and as an artist has been very much founded on the principles of exploring sound and all the possibilities it possesses. Just as important as the sound itself is its relationship with the body and the mind. This relationship is at the forefront of all his work and Chewed Corners, the first µ-Ziq album for six years, is an album that is the product of all those years of exploration. he music collected here flows and glides. It sounds like the work of a man who understands perfectly the music he wants to make and the feelings he wants to convey.'-- music OMH






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Unicorn Hard-Onlive @ Raw Meet 10
'Valerie Martino's Unicorn Hard-On project has been a long running staple in the American underground since it's inception in 2003. Through her own Tangled Hares imprint, as well as many others, she's built a strong, constantly evolving catalog of singular works that serves to many as a prototype of the current beat-oriented phenomena currently sweeping the nation. Martino's vision, however, remains unphased and flourishes accordingly to her own unique vision; standing outside of any trends and remaining loyal to the Unicorn Hard-On sound.'-- Spectrum Spools






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Interplanetary ProphetsZero Hour
'The American producers Ital and Hieroglyphic Being, both known for their idiosyncratic and experimental approaches to house and techno, first teamed up for a performance at Unsound in Krakow last year under the Interplanetary Prophets moniker. The duo reconvened in the studio earlier this year, and this EP, Zero Hour, is the fruit of that session. They've boiled it down into three tracks, and from the sound of it, they're covering a lot of stylistic ground. Expect everything from electronic post-punk textures a la Ike Yard to what the press materials describe as "deep space voyaging."'-- Resident Advisor






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Eric CopelandMasterbater
'While the sonic crush of Brooklyn noise trio Black Dice consistently aims for the gloomiest part of the brain, its principal vocalist, Eric Copeland, aimed for the body in his 2012 solo effort, Limbo. Made up of plundered VHS tape breaks stitched together by an amateur seamstress, it was rough around the edges, and the songs lurched in their color and arrangement. Limbo was unquestionably tied to dance-floor rhythms in a way only foreshadowed by the kick-drum pipe bombs on Black Dice’s Mr. Impossible. Copeland’s first solo effort for DFA, Joke In The Hole, largely carries on that tradition: whimsical beat-driven cuts, indebted more to Copeland’s ADD crate-digging than to the noise conventions that populate both his Black Dice material and his earliest solo work.'-- A.V. Club






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MoonfaceMarimbas and Shit-drums
'For those familiar with Spencer Krug, you know the drill when one of his many projects emerges with some new music. Acquire it, listen to it, and, in most cases, love it. For the newcomers… where have you been? Over the last decade, Krug has proven to be one of indie rock’s more intriguing contributors. The guy doesn’t sleep much, what with being a key member of every band you like (Wolf Parade, Sunset Rubdown, Swan Lake, Frog Eyes, etc.). However, when he does take a few minutes to lay down, he dreams of riding around on leopards, exploring confetti-filled wastelands, getting lost in folds of dresses, and slaying dragons. But he’s always dreaming up something new. This time around, either somebody slipped something strong into his cactus juice, or he dozed off to a Discovery Channel special on Zimbabwean rituals. Who knows, maybe it was a combination of both. Either way, with the newest manifestation of the Krug Empire, a little project called Moonface, shit just got a little tribal.'-- Consequence of Sound








*

p.s. Hey. ** Bill, Hi, B. First! Yeah, I'm not so into his non-fireworks pieces. He can get kind of precious or overdetermined or something when he works with solids maybe. How's the hacking going as of whatever time you see this? ** Allesfliesst, Hi, Kai. That cover's not so ideal, yeah. But those black fireworks pieces are such great eye-quicksand that it works anyway. My interest? Sure, the ephemeral sculptural aspect totally gets to me. And I'm a sucker for fireworks in a wide-eyed kid sort of way. And it's pretty cool to watch fireworks and not spend most of the time thinking how unadventurous the practitioner is being, to be given such a new image that it stalls the imagination or something. So, I like his explosions the way I like the words and sentences in experimental fiction, and I like his stuff the way I love an innovative roller coaster. The black fireworks are the best, yeah, the real monsters. And the Xmas tree one made my head spin. ** Wolf, Hi. You made the blog's very slow loading process exciting. It makes me wish I could control the speed with which the posts load in every browser. I could maybe work wonders with that or try to. Wow, nice meditation on his jumper. See, there you go. At my end of things, the post loads so fast I don't have the time to notice things like that. No, I didn't know that about the Shiva figure at the entrance of CERN. I'm going to CERN next year. I booked a private tour as a b'day present for my friend Zac. Did you know you can do that? You can, but it's booked up in massive advance. Both Guo-Qing and Fujiko are doing pieces in this year's Nuit Blanche. They're happening way far apart (Fujiko on Republique, and G-Q over the Seine nearish the Eiffel Tower), but maybe there'll be a very strong breeze that'll make them touch or something. I knew you weren't dissing them. I just meant that they both use wit in their work kind of architecturally, so the wit in the interview had this nice instructive quality. Or scary and pretty cool at the same time. That's totally the best, no? ** David Ehrenstein, Thanks, D! ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh. As I was just telling Wolf, he's doing a piece in Nuit Blanche this year, so I'm very exciting to see his stuff in person. Word is that he's figured out a way to spell words with fireworks and that the NB piece might be his first attempt to do that. I love fireworks, yeah. When I'm in LA for the 4th, I usually go up to Griffith Observatory where you can watch all the fireworks displays going off around the city simultaneously. I recommend doing that. ** Steevee, Hi. Obviously, I hope the blood test will end with a simple explanation and mild treatment if any. ** Heliotrope, Hi, Mark! My pleasure, buddy boy. That's weird that people think of the Dodgers as winners. Maybe thirty years ago. They're the collapsers to me. Like fucking clockwork. Wow, you've made me schedule a re-listening of 'Electric Music For The Mind And Body'. It's been decades, I think. All I can remember is that crazy drifting organ sound. Interesting. Why are the Hitchcock fan group people nonplussed by his new one? What isn't there for them? Can you say? I don't miss those never ending LA summers, that's for sure. Paris summers always end about three weeks too early, yum. I felt the more maxi-personal touch. How did you do that? How can I respond to both of you in kind? I'll think of something. Love upon love, me. ** œ, Hi. I got here late and missed the previous comment's explosion. I just saw the dull gray, cinder-like standard Blogger sentence announcing that said explosion had taken place at some point. I like the black ones the best. They freak me out very pleasantly. Ashbery rules. His humor is incredible if you end up entering it, but the work works whether or not. I won't do a Lady Gaga Day, I assure you. If someone else here does, it'll likely happen. I think in the whole history of this blog, I've only rejected one guest-post, and that was eight years ago now or something. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, B. Yes, I caught the selling price. Crazy yet understandable. Awesome about your djing tonight, and the Crawl sounds like a lot of fun and even more than fun maybe. ** Alan, Hi, Alan! I'm so glad that you're doing well. By the end of the year?! That's fantastic! This novel has come together kind of swiftly, no? Or, I'm forgetting, is the tempo at which this new novel is completing itself the way such things work for you generally? I love the title. ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. Interesting. I guess I feel like plagiarism has become a more slippery thing post- the post-modern. What that person did to Florian's drawing is robbery. I don't see any gray area there. And I've never even heard 'Blurred Lines', as far as as I know, other than kind of hearing it while watching the notorious Miley clip, so I don't know about that, but it seemed a bit more transformative re: the Marvin Gaye track than the 'Try' alteration example, but I don't know, like I said. I guess for me it's an example by example thing. Theoretically, taking something pre-existing and putting a slight personal spin on it, and that slight spin being the point or art or whatever, could be okay. That's different than just stealing Florian's art and putting it on a shirt that you only made in order to earn money. 'Blurred Lines' didn't sound interesting to me in my half-listen, but it seems to have made millions happy, and that means something that's worth thinking about and studying, I think. I don't know. It's slippery to me, I guess, and I have this heavy anti-generalizing thing. ** S., I'm just whatever about Google +. It doesn't seem either worth investigating or opting out of. I don't think I know those paintings. I don't know ... you know, I get kind of skin crawly about objectification, so I can't think of whether any boys I know are hot or not. For me, their visuals are too intersected with who they are to me to coagulate and simplify like that. Scott McClanahan's books are very worth reading, I think. You leave near him? Weird. Or not weird, I guess. I've never quite figured out where you live. Or where he lives, for that matter. You get a slaves post tomorrow, so good timing on that. Wow, your place is white. That's interesting. I like it. It does some kind of crystalizing, hands-off thing with the stacks or something. I'll go scroll through the new stack pronto. Everyone, new Emo stack from that stacker among stacker S., now with a shiny white background. You've got to see it It's called 'Arcade Boys'. Here. ** Will Decker, Hi there, Will. Well, thank you very, very much. I hope all is going very well with you. ** Statictick, Hi, big N. High five on the American football thing. We are not legion and must stick together. Thanks, of course, for your kindness re: the recent posts. I'm glad that, if it has to be mysterious, your latest court appearance was mundane. That's one of the few contexts wherein the mundane and the sublime bear a certain resemblance. ** Rewritedept, There's a super-great huge fireworks store on the outskirts of Las Vegas. I used to drive all the way there from LA sometimes just to buy fireworks since California only allows the wussiest kind. Interesting, wise thoughts there about art making and writing. Kudos. Word count ... mine? Mostly up but with a constant whittling back at the same time. Today I'm going to work on some stuff, mine and collaborative, and help a friend move, and we'll see what else comes up. Hope your Friday pays off. ** So. There's a gig of mostly new stuff that I've been into lately for you today. Take it or leave it or something in between, please. See you tomorrow.

Meet BreadMe, dontdont, i_was_kyle, itastegood, and DC's other select international male slaves for the month of August 2013

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AGuyFromIreland, 24
I am three. At least that is my slave name; it comes from my slave registration number 464-189-333. I am of course willing to change that name to something a new Master chooses for me. I'm trouble, and I have amazing back freckles if you're into that. I like to take it slow and very, very, very deep... then a little bit of a rock to it. But I'm guessing you want more than that.





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BottomIdiot, 20
Noooo, you decide.





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dethslave, 21
"HAIL SATAN, it loves muscles and huge cocks so much it is willing to submit unto THEE and loose it’s life chemed in it’s sexual xtasy, while have sex with THEE . Please send it SATANIC MASTERS - that have the knowledge power will and ability. Hail Satan, Fuck Christ. It has not sex - cause it is waiting for THEE to make it’s offer become real-life. It safes it’s sexual energy for it’s offer to come true.

Please SATAN accept it’s offer and give it the best time of it’s life for this sacrifice, dethslave"

that was just a dream, just a dream just a dream..... that's me in the corner... that's me...







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Breadme, 25
You craving for d hole......in d whole of my life.....coz hole is wer v cam frm....n hole is wer v gonna go.....






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Whitepoison, 18
I'm really stupid and can't think very good so all I want to do for the rest of my life just be a cumdump bitch. I'll worship anyone's cock, I don't care what you look like or if you're poz or have SARS or any bad shit going on as long as you want to pound an 18 year old submissive skinny bitch hole with your cock or hand or foot or even your leg or head if you can get them in there. Note: I live with my family. If you want me, they'll want $$$$.





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JIMMYSOLUTIONS, 23
You can take everything I have
You can break everything I am
Like I'm made of glass
Like I'm made of paper
Go on and try to tear me down
My cock will be rising from the ground
Like a skyscraper, like a skyscraper






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Loveyoutiltheend, 22
ALEXANDER, a SOLDIER at MARINE CORPS, here for your entertainment and down for anything in general and I like very much what I do and I put allot of soul in what I do and I'm going to give you the life you will ever have the sex experiences you will never forget but I'd appreciate if you'd mention the kinky stuff in advance because I am not into any weird shit and THIS IS IMPORTANT I am only into CHOLOS, if you're not a cholo you will be blocked.





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StrangleMe, 19
Hi, i am person atractive . Wile strangling i like kiss, lick, licked, suck, sucked, fuck, fucked, hard touch, foot sex, fisting, heavy smell or not after you . Call me or another detalies.







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dontdont, 21
Hey im tim, an accostable gay who waits your dick in my ass.
I am very hot so I need a guy who is also hot so that I will lick his penis.
As I am a gay I want to have sex with 25 to 60 aged mens.
Love love 25 to 60 aged mens and would love to kiss and get raped by all of you.
If you would like to feel well and dam! in bed write onto me. xx





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squeezetoy, 20
I'm looking for a guy, of just about any size or build, to body squeeze me to the limit I like. I love being bearhugged, or bodyscissored and I'm quite the masochist with how I like being squeezed. I especially love being squeezed until I pass out if the guy has the endurance to do it. I'm not afraid of being hurt doing this and I take full responsibility if I do get hurt. Big or small, short or tall, I'll take em all.

My favorite way to do this is to have a guy squeeze me with full force and aggression until he either tires out or I pass out. If he intends to do damage, all the better.

I'm willing to do almost anything, including hiring someone,for my squeeze. If you're an escort and/or strapped for cash, I'll hire you to fuck me up with a body squeeze, but I pay for results, not time. $200 if you make me pass out, $300 if you do some damage in the process, like crack or break my ribs... Up to $400 if you're under 20 and can do this to me.





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BlowMeAway, 19
Im blahhh blahhhh blhaaa.... something... something.... something.... something..... something..... something...






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i_was_kyle, 21
i am a slave from 21 years old

and i have a master whos giving me a task.

the task is to find 500 slaves for him the slaves that i find have to at at is skype address (i give it to you)

my master is a muscular master from 30 years old whit a xxxl cock you will love him

like i love him






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MilkingUnit, 25
I want an extremely possessive Man to take me and turn me into something sub-human. Livestock, really. From that point forward, I have ONE purpose: produce milk. No, not for a night... or only a long weekend. I want a permanent transformation. Brutal, unrelenting, unforgiving... forever.

GONE: my ability to see
GONE: my ability to hear
GONE: my ability to move!

That's right, if ever i need to be removed from immobilization, make sure i'm sedated before a single lock gets taken off. NO ESCAPE EVER.

I'm looking for someone to install me into like some dedicated chair or gurnee where i will pretty much spend the rest of my life. Plumbing attached too. I just piss where i am, shit where i am and it all gets carried away without my needing to be disassembled. Tube-fed a liquid diet enhanced to better the quantity and quality of cum yield. Air fed into breathing hoses so my hood/mask doesn't need to be removed for a LOOOONG time.

Once the straps go down, I know i'll never even see another human being again.

So if you're crazy enough to want this object, i'm crazy enough to be it.





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itastegood, 23
hallo ,, i'm a rubbercovered guy .. a rubberdecoration /rubberdog /rubberrobot /rubberdoll .. i'm simple and have a sense of humor to talk with .. to be simple is to be great ..




___________________

SAVExMEx21, 21
I'm just ordinary person. Like me, Masters? If you don't like me please don't judge me. Thank you. I try to live my life without Love. Anyone who realises what Love is, the dedication of the heart, so profound, so absorbing, so mysterious, so imperative, and always just in the noblest natures so strong, cannot fail to see how difficult, how tragic even, must often be the fate of those whose deepest feelings are destined from the earliest days to be a riddle and a stumbling-block, unexplained to themselves, passed over in silence by others. So basically, if you need to hit/bash me, I understand. And any Master who wants to destroy my body and life slowly until death will be more than welcome to come to Ecuador.





_________________

enslave-me-asap, 20
hello plz talk to me my wife just left me
i have many dark thoughts
i have moments of insanity
ull get to know more darker things about me i swear







__________________

TV-ACTOR-FORYOU, 21
Hi..
the hottest boy from the television industry is available on rent as slave..he is a tv actor and a model...worked in many tv commercials and now working in tv daily soaps...sorry I cant disclose his real name here..i hope u understand the privacy. u can take him to Hell because he's in heaven and he thinks its boring. HIS DETAILS are given bellow..
Position : very bottom
Body type: thin
Height : 5'11"
Dick size: 6" thin

HE NEEDS ONLY CLASSY AND ELITE MASTERS.CHARGES ARE HIGH IN COMPARISON TO OTHER PEOPLE..SO PLEASE MAKE YOUR MIND..About the charges i would greatly appreciate if u can call me directly as its difficult to discuss these things here....I'm his PR person and Manager (Aryan). I can send u his pics once we have a word with you.Thank u.

cheers
ARYAN





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looseNwide, 18
twisted faggot pass around, pig cum whore bitch hole whos had a boyfriend w 11" cock since i was 13 and im going to the university of miami around late august and im very proud of my huge, hungry, insatiable, wrecked cunt!






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GodWorshipper, 22
My name is Dan, I'm 22. Strong, masculine men have always been my gods. We all have needs. Some needs we all share: Food, water, air. Others are particular to us as individuals. I need to worship a man. I need to tell him - with words and actions - who he really is and what he does to me. I need to help him to become even more the god I see in him from the start.

I don't need to be your boyfriend, I don't need to be your one and only, I just need you to let me worship you.

I know this may sound a little far-out to some, but hey, take a look around this site. I rest my case.






___________________

whokillsquirrel, 24
no limits snuff piece of shit.
kidnap, break, rip, cut, beat, kick, torture and kill me.
looking really to be killed.






__________________

FOREVERYOUNG, 18
HII HOTTIES...I AM LOOKING FOR 24/7/365 FOREVER MASTERS WITH NO AGE LIMIT...ITS THE SIZE OF THE EVIL THAT COUNTS NOT THE SHAPE IT TAKES...ALL WHO LOOK AT ME AND THINK "IF THERE WAS NO SPACE TIME CONTINUUM I WOULD FUCK THAT BOY BITCH FOR THE REST OF MY LIFE" ARE WELCOMED...YOU CAN FUCK ME HARD MAKE ME SUCK UR PENIS WILDLY AND BRUISE AND BLEED AND SPEW EVERY DAY AND NIGHT UNTIL YOU DIE...YOU CAN SPEND A LIFETIME FUCKING ME ALMOST LIKE I LOOK IN MY PICTURES AND REMEMBER IT FOR YOUR AFTERLIFE...!! SOUND IMPOSSIBLE..? NO..!! HERES HOW... YOU JUST HAVE TO GIVE ME PLASTIC SURGERY AND HAIR TRANSPLANTS TO KEEP ME TEENAGE ALL MY LIFE AND LOOKING CHEAPER AND WEIRDER SO YOU WONT WANT TO TALK TO ME OR SHOW ME TO YOUR FRIENDS OR DO ANYTHING BUT FUCK ME... TOO EXPENSIVE..? NO..!! JUST WHORE ME OUT AND USE MY EARNINGS TO PAY FOR IT..!! TO CONCLUDE I AM THE KITTEN WHO WILL NEVER BECOME A CAT AND IM HERE FOR YOU... YOU ARE ALL MOST WELCOME..!!







___________________

biiiitch, 20
hello yes you want me to give a unosti em if you want and want to speak English only ok year

what are you looking for good sex if PACA is ok but you do not have room if you want us Teleca year ok





_________________

pleasehelpnick, 19
This guy has endangered my life telling people to kidnap me and rape me please help thank you for your kindness xxxxx
This is a guy who has been threatening me for months and the police wont do anything about it he has screenshotted my photos from other places you can see on them these are my originals i have come from a neglective and abusive family been homeless for the past two years i do not need people doing this to me ruining my reputation trying to destroy me all because i wouldnt date the asian whore i have his adress but nobody will help me stop him from doing this please message him we dont need abusive gay guys on here like that destroying homeless teenagers lives please help cheers if you see any bad profiles with my pictures let me know this stupid website does not prosecute people who wreck peoples lives like this =(






*

p.s. Hey. A slightly early heads up about the blog's immediate future: On Monday, everything will be usual with a new post and p.s., but, on Monday afternoon, my friend Zac and I are heading off to the Loire Valley for two weeks where we'll be hold up working on a couple of our collaborative projects, mainly the book that occasioned our Scandinavian theme park trip of a couple of months back, as some or all of you may remember. As I'll be mostly stationary, chances are that I'll be doing the p.s. off and on during that time, but certainly not every day. In any case, posts-wise, the blog will be in reruns from Tuesday until the 18th. ** MyNeighbourJohnTurtorro, Hey! Really good to see you! I'm good, I'm really good, thanks. And thanks about the post/gig. Yeah, there's some great stuff in there, I think. Life is great at the moment. My sleep thing is very close to being back to normal at long last. Oh, you should totally come here to see your pieces, if you can. It would be terrific to meet up if you do, obviously. Well, as far as the pieces that are currently scheduled to play here, 'This Is How You Will Disappear', which is happening in a new, looped version during Nuit Blanche on October 5th, is in English. 'Jerk', which is playing in November, can be and is performed in three different languages, but I think it'll be in French for the November performances. I think we're going to do 'The Pyre' again here ere too long, and that one has no onstage text, but part of the piece is a small book written by me that the audience is given, and that's in English and French. Pitchfork Festival, for sure, yeah. I'm going the first two days. It looks like it's going to seriously killer. How are you? What's going on? Any music tips or anything? ** Bollo, Hi, J! Did the Norwegian jaunt go well? I'm guessing so. Very cool about how your busy your work's public interaction is at the moment. That's exciting! Awesome that the Bresson quote found a home in your work. That's ... yeah, that's so cool. Please do let me see any images. That would be a big boon. I'm doing great, thanks! Talk soon. ** Wolf, Hi, Wolfy. Yeah, we're going to CERN! They still let people go underground, yeah, or that's how the tour is described anyway, and I found pix of people down there on tours. I'll bet, about the Shiva statue + controversy. That's funny. Yeah, dig, about noise gigs. Those are the gigs I'm mostly interested in seeing and end up seeing these days. Have the sweetest weekend. ** NYCIC, Hi! Thanks a lot! And thanks even more for the link to the Pharmakon vid! I'll let that play as soon as I get out of here. Take care, and it's real nice to see you. ** Allesfliesst, Nice text/outdoors collaboration. I remember that Drew Daniel piece in the Wire. Yeah, it was fun. I live next to a park, so the only construction sounds I hear are crows verbally constructing their social lives. That tumblr does look really cool. I'll get into it in a bit. Thanks a lot, Kai. I hope the weekend is extremely weekend-like in your neck. ** David Saä V. Estornell, Well, hi, David! Sweet of you to grace here, and thank you so much. ** Chris Cochrane, I'll await the CD with giant church bells on. Yeah, to judge by my FB news feed, that new 'Self-Portrait' Dylan release has turned a whole bunch people into Dylan listeners and paean-makers. I'm trying to imagine what your 'Self-Portrait' would sound like, and I kind of really dig what I'm imagining, so no worries either way. Super about the Paris gig! Do let me know what you know when you know it. ** Matty B., Hi, Matty! Cool, yeah, the 'birds' ones are mindfucks, no? The black fireworks thing is such a great idea. Chandelier! Yeah, my sleep has returned to pretty much normal but quite begrudgingly, so I'm just dealing with the begrudge now. Seems okay. Great weekend to you, maestro! ** DavidEhrenstein, Jesus, the release of Greyson and the doctor is taking forever! Craziness, stressfulness, totally confusing. Paglia doing Miley, Madonna as GLBT villain, wow. I can't tell if the world itself is topsy turvy or if people are looking for enemies under pebbles now. ** œ, Hi. Glad you liked the Interplanetary Prophets. I don't know if I understand my own humor either, ha ha. Music is the format through with Lady Gaga does her thing so far, yeah. Wow, a poem by you! My brain is too caught up in p.s. thinking right now to do it any kind of justice, so I'll read it once I'm finished and have had a restorative cigarette and shower. Thank you! ** S., Yeah, we're really different about the surface/interior thing, so, yeah. Interesting that you like my work since I think it's all about the importance of interiorism, but what do I know, I guess, seriously. It does sound like a slave who wants to live as an objectified thing might be perfect for you, and there are a whole bunch of contenders right up there. Roggenbuck is tres fun, yeah. I think so. Have a both productive and fun packed weekend if that combination is doable, and it certainly seems like it would be. ** Steevee, Hi. Cool, I look forward to reading that! Everyone, here's evidence of Steevee's awesome mind tackling the documentary film 'Our Nixon'. It's gotta be excellent. ** Gary gray, It does happen. I mean, I agree. The Unicorn Hard-On clip was especially good, I thought, yeah. I think it's great that you want to line up some workshops. I mean, for sure. Make those walls disappear, man. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Thanks, Jeff. Hm, I'm listening to a lot of stuff, including the artists in the gig, and more all the time, but nothing is jumping to the top of the pile as a obvious stand-out at the moment. I'll let you know. The Julia Holter is really nice. How is that Superchunk? I read good things. I'm eternally very in love with their four albums, and one hears that there's something of that era of their work in the new one? That is very weird about the proposed and never realized Acker autobio of Nico. Wow. I can't get my mind around that. Such a weird clash/mix, which is probably why it didn't happen and why it's exciting to think about. Totally bizarre idea. Thank you about the post materials! ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. That Portal album is a great monster. Really, really good. Cool that you had contact with him. Var! Zac and I are dreaming about them writing the theme song of our porn film. You never know. Have a lovely weekend. Is the writing still going strong? ** Rewritedept, I guess that must be the fireworks place I mean. It's north of Vegas a ways on the highway. New likeminded friends, cool. Age is just a number and all of that. I always inevitably have much more in common with people a lot younger than me, so, yeah, there you go. Sucks about the bad blood with Dad and bro, but you have to do what you're gonna do. My Friday was good. Helped a friend move, finished the porn script finally, etc. Good day. Yes, I got one of those l'escargots cassis. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris. The Portal album is kind of insane. It's great. Stone Titan, I don't know them, very cool. I'll go find that today. For some reason, the new No Age album hasn't gotten to me. I haven't figured out why yet, and I'm still giving it a go. Thanks for the Wiley link. I'll play that pronto. I'm working on the questions you sent, thank you. Have a great, great weekend. ** Misanthrope, We are virtually the same person, or we were until you said you 'fucking love' MC whom I couldn't really give a shit about one way or other, and especially when you said she's making some of the best pop out there. If that's true, pop is kind of really fucked at the moment or something, I say. That weekend you have ahead sounds kind of nice for some reason, I'm not sure why. Maybe because I like the name Mt. Airy. You love Harry Styles?! Stop the presses! Jesus Christ, that story and maybe end of the mother's pill-head boyfriend saga is an amusement provoking sweetie pie. ** Will Decker, Hi, Will. I'm glad you're doing well. The McClanahan is very, very good, in my opinion. Take care. ** Okay. By the luck of the draw, you a weekend-long spate of time in which to meditate on this month's slaves selection. See you on Monday.

92 shadows

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*

p.s. Hey. So, like I said on Saturday, I'll be off on a work/pleasure trip starting this afternoon until the 18th, and the blog will be in reruns during that time. I'm likely to be showing up here sporadically to do the p.s. during those two weeks, so feel free to comment as usual or almost usual, if you like. ** MyNeighbourJohnTurtorro, Hi, man. Cool, great, really happy that some of the music clicked. Why do you move so often? Are you into doing that? I'll look for the 'Kings of Summer' trailer. Yeah, if you think you'll make it over here, let me know. Would be cool. Always really good to see you. ** DavidEhrenstein, Hi, D. I can see that 'GFI' has you at least semi-written all over him. Good for The Nation. Weird to prop a place for merely reporting on something that should be all over the news. ** Wolf, Hey. Ha ha, I think that actual hunks with a stake in the status would bristle at those lightly muscular 'twinks' being called hunks. I think the difference is more in the hair length. I've the advantage of having seen all the slaves' photos and not just the ones I chose to share, but a bunch of those floppy-hairs had abs, etc. lurking under their loose t-shirts, and the right camera an angle and light level can work wonders. But, blah blah, yeah, I get your point. I think if more giant guys wrote better profile texts and were more pleasing to my particular eyes, there'd be a better balance, but oh well. There do seem to be a whole bunch of ex-military in/on the S/M social networks, and I would say 90% of them are self-billed as slaves rather than as masters. Interesting. Loire, sweet, totally. We'll be hold up in Tours 'cos it's central-ish, biggish, and probably has an array of okay restaurants and maybe even a heath food store. Thanks, big W. Talk to you soon. ** Misanthrope, Hi, George. American car radio context, okay. I'm a know-nothing on its current wares, so I'll believe you, and I haven't given MC's stuff an attentive listen. I'm def. on her side, I guess, in this stupid MVA hoohah. Yeah, when I read Mt. Airy, I think I probably see why it was named that, but if a suburb has been stamped on it, all bets are off. Was the weekend fun? I saw some pix of you on FB looking like you were having a quite pleasant time, if they were up-to-the-minute. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, man. Particularly beautiful slave responses this month, I thought. Really, keep them. We should try to get Kiddiepunk to let us do a collab. slaves calls-and-TM-responses booklet or something. You're good. I never google the texts, so I miss out on the song lyric quotations a lot of the time. Anyway, it was an honor, sir. ** Bill, Hey. I know, words to live by, ha ha. That is a good profile text. Some of the most linguistically colorful slaves are based in Berlin. Thanks about the gig post. How was Night of the Museums? Any highlights? The Loire Valley is really lovely. I had fantasies while there last time of having a 'summer home' thing in the area even. ** James, The camera angle and low light didn't hurt his thing either. Cheers to you! See you probably way before the 18th rolls around. ** œ, Hi. The slaves are intense. I like their texts especially in general, but that makes sense considering my stuff, I guess. We'll be documenting two Nakaya pieces while there, one in Loire itself in the garden of a castle and one in a tiny village not so far from there. Probably no editing. I think we're going to wait and shoot a bunch of her works before we start thinking about the presentation. Packing is done, and no pre-trip anxiety at all. I only get anxious when there's a long plane flight involved for some reason. Yes, what you wrote about not letting the text get to the center of your head makes total sense. Love back. See you again soon. ** Graham Russell, Hello, welcome, Mr, Russell. Or maybe 'can't be bothered' as a strategy? It got me interested, but I'm weird. Anyway, hi, thank you! ** Murat, Hello. Thank you for a-botting my blog. ** _Black_Acrylic, Thanks, Ben! It should be really nice. Yes, sweet about the two-part success! Especially re: your giant set, whose details I will investigate between soon and slipping on my backpack. Everyone, the multi-talent known around here as _Black_Acrylic is also known here and elsewhere as Ben 'Jack Your Body' Robinson, who DJed the shit out of a thing the other night, and who, and here I begin to quote him, 'played a mammoth 4-hour set, and the playlist is right here. Mostly raw and psychedelic with lots of early Chicago jams. If you click a link there's the Discogs page for each track, should you be curious about anything.' There are far worse ways to spend your Monday than in the cradle at the other end of that link. ** S., It feels like dawn. I'm bad with 'I' too. I go for constructed, faux- but sincere/authentic 'I', which is easier. A master who sees boys as haute couture is an interesting combo. You might be a total magnet Master. ** Steevee, Hi. I haven't listened to 'Self-Portrait' since it came out. I thought it was a mess at the time. But I'm one of those people whose interest in Dylan's work lessens significantly post-'John Wesley Harding'. It's spooky when paint smells like chocolate. I know what you mean. Someone is paying people to draw attention to the new Seidel film? Nice boot strap pulling action there. ** Grant maierhofer, Hi, Grant. The trip should be really great, yeah, thanks. I have high hopes for the Scandinavia book, and working collaboratively with Zac is always really exciting. 'Carnage', right, I forgot all about it. Hunh. Maybe I'll see it. It seems like a total possibility for in-flight movie schedules maybe. I do like Pissed Jeans, yeah. I don't think I've seen those videos, though. Consider them marked for viewing, and thanks for the tip. When does the academic year start? I'm feeling very good lately, thanks for asking. Yeah, things are great. I did get the copy of 'Crows', and it's going on my trip with me! All that love looped back to you, man. ** Rewritedept, Hey. Oh, right, it's like ... whatever holiday over there right now. Labor Day, I think? Drinking will screw your kidneys over time, so some caution and moderation might be advisable re: later life. Grim/sad about your neighbor. Fingers crossed for him. Pix while on the trip will be taken by one or the other of us, I'm sure. Anyway, I think I won't be going totally away from the blog unless I'm surprised. That seasoning stuff looks kind of delicious possibly, yeah. Okay, later, soon. ** Chris Dankland, Hi. Which one's biiiitch? Hold on. Oh, right, yeah, he's kind of alt lit-y or something on every level. I can't remember that comment you mention, very weirdly. I may have to go hunt that. The blog seems to get a spambot maybe once a month at most, and almost always only on escort or slave days, maybe unsurprisingly. I'm sorry about Lil Wayne's down-spiral. Why do you think that has happened? Any theories? Happy MD! ** Postitbreakup, Thank you, Josh! I will try, and I will likely succeed. You have some kind of great everything while I'm off doing that, okay? Love, me. ** Sypha, Wow, you found people to type for you? You're lucky man with legible handwriting and legible friends too. Thanks for the good trip wishes. I'll likely be letting you and everyone else know what's what here and there along the way. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Thanks, Jeff. Should be great. Cool, I'll get the Superchunk. I liked 'Majesty Shredding' pretty well. In fact, it deserves a lot more listens. Back in the day, they ruled. And they were a guaranteed total bliss fest live. More thumbs up on 'The Grandmaster'. I will def. make sure to see that on a decent screen. Dash Snow: Hm, I was never all that into his work, but I liked the whole scene he was in and part of and the area he was working in. I haven't looked at his stuff in ages. So, let me do that and refresh my opinion because I don't feel so sure at the moment. Why, are you into his stuff? ** Okay. I leave you with one of my stacks. I mean 'leave you', in the sense of going into reruns and being back here with a p.s. in tow less consistently than is usual. But I'll see you soon, no doubt.

Rerun: 20 bitchin' robots (orig. 05/18/09)

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Coughing Robot Spews 'Flu Germs'




Amazing Catwalk Robot




Yaskawa Motoman plays taiko drums




CB2 baby humanoid robot




Live Webcast: da Vinci® Robotic-Assisted Prostatectomy




Robot Snake




Robot x Dr. Smith




Japanese Crawling Robot




Kraftwerk - Die Roboter




robot hunting trophies




the Trons - self playing robot band




Robot Commando commercial ( Ideal 1961 )




Modular robot reassembles when kicked apart




Actroid DER2 fembot - Face expressions




Robot Fish




ROBOT PLAYS VIOLIN




Big Dog Beta (early Big Dog quadruped robot testing)




Sexy Robot - the Pinkertones




Japanese Battle Bots




Pololu 3pi Line Maze Solving Robot




*

p.s. Hey. The blog's here, but I'm away from the blog working on a project until the 18th. I'll probably be showing up during that time to do the p.s. every once in a while without warning, but not today apparently. Enjoy the return of the robots. Thanks.

Rerun: Kevin Killian presents ... Jack Spicer (1925-1965) (orig. 05/14/09)

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----



The poet Jack Spicer was born in Hollywood and died in San Francisco forty years later, a broken man and a drunk. When he died he left behind five or six books and a vast mass of poetry and other writing. In New York, on May 15th, the Poetry Project in collaboration with Poets House, is producing an evening devoted to Spicer’s work, called “My Vocabulary Did This to Me,” after the volume of collected poetry that I have edited with Peter Gizzi. The evening will be in two parts, first there will be a panel I will be moderating, and Geprge Stanley, Dodie Bellamy, Samuel R. Delany, and Jennifer Moxley will be my co-panelists. Hmmm, all of their names end in the letter “Y,” a coincidence Spicer might have been alarmed by.

Then later in the evening there will be a reading by various poets, artists and writers from Spicer’s work, including Dodie Bellamy, Anselm Berrigan, Julian T. Brolaski, C.A. Conrad, Samuel R. Delany, Peter Gizzi, Basil King, Douglas A. Martin, Deborah Remington, Harris Schiff, Rod Smith, George Stanley, Lewis Warsh and Karen Weiser.

Please, New York friends, come on out and say hello.






---The American poet Jack Spicer, who was born in Los Angeles in 1925 and died, in San Francisco, forty years later, in 1965 interests today’s readers on many levels, and not the least of his interests was his theory of dictated poetry. He avowed that his best poetry was written by an outside force, a confluence of forces he hesitated to name, but sometimes called the “Martians,” or the “Outside,” and he compared the poet to the radio in Cocteau’s 1950 film Orphee, through which transmissions are heard from hell. Poet, or speaker, as radio. The way the sound amplifier in the stereo system is called the speaker. Spicer’s body of work collapses notions of self and agency with a greedy, brilliant flair for the absurd. Through his subconcious state, voices from the “outside” find human expressions, as he allows himself to be overwhelmed by the alterity of a will stronger than his own. The poet’s own voice thus has always a quality of abjection, for Spicer disclaims to having written the poems. “When someone praises my work I feel like they’re talking about my brother,” he said once. When he announced his “dictation” theories, claiming that his poetry was the product of “outside,” alien forces, he joined the mystical band of his heroes Yeats, Blake, and Rilke, but became a freak to the hard-edged, career-driven poets of MFA programs and prize committees.

---I wonder if there are any biographers on Dennis’ blog, who have shared my experience, that the biographer and the subject change roles as the work goes on. What does that mean? It means that in 1990 I was totally on Spicer’s side (the biographer loves the subject, some kind of very primitive identification goes on in which, tracing a life, I step into the shoes of the man and ascribe the best motives to everything he does, or as it amounts to, I do). His enemies—like Lawrence Ferlinghetti—were my enemies. A few years later I passed into the intermediate stage, where I came to loathe Jack Spicer, and I began to suspect that people like Ferlinghetti were right. He was a sucky excuse for a human being and his writing isn’t all that great either. Finally at great length the biographer luckily moves into the third phase, which is really a combination of A and B. We’ve all read biographies of the Phase A type. Recently I read, with a mxiture of horror and fascination, Jackson Benson’s life of the California novelist Wallace Stegner. It was like—There but for the grace of God go I. And surely we know a lot of Phase B books too: I think Tom Clark’s life of Charles Olson was begun in Phase A and finished in Phase B, so that Olson gets worse and worse on every page and almost in every paragraph.





---Anyway I’ve moved into the third phase, which is why I explain my diffidence, since I don’t any longer know if Spicer was a medium or not, but thinking about it, I know at least that he cultivated this image and may have believed it himself. The evidence is suggestive. First I wanted to back up a bit and explain Spicer’s life in general . . .

---As a young boy Jack Spicer had a dream, one of those precognitive dreams that seem absolutely real and terrifying. It would not be exaggerating to say that this dream had some affect on the rest of his life, both as a poet and, you know, as a human being. He was dreaming about nothing in particular and then without a transition he was transported through the clouds into the darkest reaches of space, a space big beyond imagination, and strangely quiet, and he saw a murder being committed. I always think of this dream as “Murder in Space,” a cheap pulp type title, but that seems to be the way Spicer thought of it too, and perhaps his later addiction to science fiction and to detective stories issued from an attempt to try to clarify the nature of his dream—a dream, as I say, so vivid that he actually believed it had happened to him. The way that the survivors of space abductions really believe that they were chosen to be transported into silvery ships and probed with amazingly flexible steel rods in their rectums. But you notice the difference between this Whitley Strieber type of story and Spicer’s dream—generally speaking, nothing happened to Spicer—nothing touches his body, nothing clouds his brain: he’s there as a witness.

---This episode was to color the rest of his life, the way Henry James’ “obscure hurt,” whatever that may have been, colored his view of social relations and human destiny. It was the implacable cruelty of the non-human beings that spooked him. As a young, sickly kind of boy growing up in pre-war LA, Spicer was familiar with the ordinary human cruelty—the petty dislike for anything different that drew him to Tennessee Williams’ early plays. But the cold cruelty of outer space seemed to leave its mark on Spicer’s inner self. The ghosts and voices that appear in his poetry are not sweet, they’re mean as hell, and strangely indifferent to human response. Like “Tak” in Stephen King’s books.

---Anyway when he came to Berkeley in 1945, an intellectual, kind of gawky, kind of cute guy, six feet tall and about 120 pounds, kind of in the closet, but kind of confused sexually, not really sure but that he wasn’t, after all, as heterosexual as anyone else, he fell into the company of two other young poets, Robert Duncan and Robin Blaser, and in this company, which the three of them later called the “Berkeley Renaissance,” he began to practice magic in earnest.

---He had already met, in Los Angeles, the British novelist and essayist Aldous Huxley, who introduced him to Hinduism, Busddhism, and Yoga. Spicer was a kind of seeker after truth, and the realms of the other world intrigued him. Of course they would, they intrigue any sensible child. A few years later he met Huxley’s friend Christopher Isherwood, whose experiments in automatic writing further intrigued him. As a teenager he hung around carnivals and circuses hoping to meet gypsies, and somewhere along the way, perhaps from the gypsies, he learned to read the Tarot cards. Not as popular then as they are today, where all of us know more or less what a Tarot card looks like. My point is that Spicer really hungered after magic. In Berkeley, in the company of Spicer and Duncan, he really went to town with it. I don’t know if any of you have ever done any drugs, but the whole time Spicer was in college he was living in this artificial paradise comprised of such a heavy-duty intellectual camaraderie that the participants all felt drugged. It was in this state of heightened consciousness that Duncan hit on the idea of the serial poem. Each night, around a wooden round table, in the kitchen of a rented Berkeley house, Duncan would compose a poem more or less in a trance. Ten nights later he had ten poems, the “Medieval Scenes.” There was also s series of domestic scenes. There were swans in the wallpaper in the bathroom that you could see while you were taking a bath: but not really see: you registered them in your subconscious and then forgot them, and they came out in your poetry.





---You started to call all the cute new young guys you met yours “swans,” and you didn’t even know why. And then one day Duncan looked very closely at the wallpaper and saw the swans with his conscious mind, and this explained everything. This was their discovery, at the rooming house at 2029 Hearst Street, in Berkeley, that they were all living in a magical world.

---Bruce Boone and I went to the house at 2029 Hearst and asked the people if they would let us come in, because this was the famous house where Duncan lived with Hugh O’Neill and Janie O’Neill, and they let us in and Bruce chatted them up and I asked if I could use the bathroom. So I got in there and you know, flushing the toilet and everything, I started to peel away the damp paint on the wall on the other side of the bathtub—which was one of those standing tubs, and I was looking for those swans, and instead just this kind of wet plaster goo stuff came off under my nails, so I ran the water in the sink and I imagine I looked so guilty coming out that those people probably thought, well, who knows what they thought, but it’ll be a cold day in hell before they let anybody in the house again, and Bruce told me he kept them occupied by talking about the Gnostics and about Bataille and S and M. No wonder they looked dazed.

---Anyhow, I think part of the thing about magic was about sex, and about gay sex, and playing with magic was one way of actually playing with sex without actually having to come out and have it. Especially in the immediate postwar period when homosexuality was this incredible taboo. The way that many gay men would get drunk, have sex with each other, and then be able to say, “I was so drunk I don’t remember what we did last night.” This wasn’t true of Duncan who, Leonard Wolf said, was the “most out man he ever knew.” On the other hand, there’s out and then there’s out, and it means something different today than it did in 1946. James Schevill recalled that Duncan would go into bookstores with his book and depending on the store, sometimes he would bring in a woman friend with him and introduce her as his wife, if the bookstore owner was thought to be leery of selling the books of homosexuals. And indeed, of course, Duncan had been married, and lived a bisexual life throughout this period. Spicer too. He claimed to some to be a virgin, to others he let on that he had had sex for money as a teen with the aging and disgraced tennis star Bill Tilden. The gay men of Los Angeles knew him as a player in the bars. But to Duncan and Blaser, and most of the men and women of the Berkeley Renaissance, he represented himself as a virgin—a blank page, a untouched vessel. And it was at this juncture that Philip K. Dick came into their lives.

---Some are surprised to hear of the link between Jack Spicer and Philip K. Dick. I gave one talk at the Art Institute in San Francisco, which is like slacker heaven, and a lot of people were raising their hands, jumping in, talking and yakking, but dotted across the room around the seminar table sat these young guys, their arms folded, it was summer so you could see the henna tattoos up and down their arms, sunglasses, slacker heaven. So I mentioned Spicer’s influence on Philip K. Dick and they came alive like—like black sunflowers:“Valis, yeah, Valis, Vast Active Living Intelligence Fucking System.” Anyway at the end of his life, Philip K. Dick was about to write another novel, this one to be called “The Owl at Midnight,” which would have been a memoir of the six months he spent at UC Berkeley, living in the same house as Duncan, Spicer, Philip Lamantia, all these crazy poets who sat up all night trying to scare themselves into poetry. But he died. In the meantime it was really a pathetic story, because here he was, right, the world’s greatest science fiction writer, he’d written “The Man in the High Castle” and all those other books, and he wrote to Robert Duncan a letter something like, “Say, do you remember me? I was just a kid in your house and I looked up to all of you and now I’ve written, you know, like 20 books and I wanted to tell you how much you meant to me,” and he never heard back from Duncan. And later Duncan said that he didn’t write back because no, actually, he didn’t remember him, and he still hadn’t read any of Philip K. Dick’s books. But Spicer had kept up with Dick’s career for sure. And indeed, right at the moment that he discovered dictation, he was reading not only Philip Dick, but William Burroughs, and starting to write his own masterpiece The Heads of the Town Up to the Aether, a book in four parts, and the first part is called “Homage to Creeley.”

---And so I find that the atmosphere of Heads of the Town is just filled with all these references, or emanations, from Burroughs, Dick, another writer called Alfred Bester, whose two great novels The Demolished Man and The Stars My Destination were among Spicer’s favorites. It’s funny because, after Spicer’s death, Robert Duncan began a long introduction to his work, an essay he never actually finished, in which he speculates at some length on the amazing similarities between Spicer’s writing and Burroughs’ writing, and he says something to the effect of, but of course Spicer never read Burroughs. Luckily we now have the lectures Spicer gave up in Vancouver where a member of the audience asks him if in fact “Naked Lunch” isn’t indeed a dictated poem, and he says, no. And indeed he puts down Burroughs in this very dismissive nothing way, but that’s just defense, the way that I have sometimes been guilty of sneering at, say, hmmm, Djuna Barnes or Hemingway when the truth is that my writing couldn’t have existed without theirs. I asked William Burroughs if he knew Spicer’s writing and he explained the difference between their projects was that he, Burroughs, aimed at expanding the human consciousness and that Spicer seemed to be interested in narrowing it or blunting it in some way.





---Spicer thought of himself as a real patron of the arts. And never hesitated before saying, So and so is good and so and so is awful. His voice had a lot of authority to it, people listened to what he said. He wasn’t a patron in the sense of someone who spends a lot of money on art and artists, no, for he wasn’t wealthy, or even most of the time especially solvent. What’s the name of that couple in New York who amassed that huge, huge collection of minimalist work by paying $25.00 a month to different artists? Spicer didn’t even go that far. He was the type of patron who just shows up at galleries, nods, or frowns, goes for the cheese and wine, then talks about the work to different people afterwards. He felt important, because the painters deferred to his judgement, but what was his judgement about art? You can see that a biographer wants to know about these things. Did he have good taste?

---He seemed indeed to sneer at those who cared about art. The painters who loved him constantly wanted to give him their paintings. There’s a wonderful picture by Jess, which he gave to Jack Spicer, but Spicer turned around and gave it away to another friend, which is good in a way since it still exists, seeing that Spicer lived like a pig and prided himself in owning only two artworks, and these of declaredly awful taste, a terra-cotta bust of himself, hollow, in texture and shape like a flowerpot, which he had commissioned in Minneapolis by a local artisan, in the spirit of those tourists who come to Fisherman’s Wharf and pose beside those people who do your picture in charcoal and crayons in seven minutes with a backdrop of the Golden Gate Bridge behind them. There’s a photograph of Spicer kissing his own head. This head still exists too and it’s really terrifying. There are photos of Spicer and Blaser holding a seance in 1959, 1960, around the same time that Blaser was beginning “Cups” and Spicer “Homage to Creeley.” The other artwork Spicer owned was what he called his Egyptian frieze, a frayed hanging he also called “Uncle Louie.” Despite its down-home name, “Uncle Louie” was a gaudy piece of Orientalism, the representation of a pharoah surrounded by lines of hieroglyphs and Egyptian figures, created in Cairo during World War II by women artisans. The piece hangs four feet long, and eighteen inches wide, and its present owner described it in these terms, “It’s just a commercial piece of appliqué.” The representation of the Pharoah is so askew that others thought it was actually the caterpillar from Alice in Wonderland smoking a hookah.

---One of the painters Spicer knew, Paul Alexander, remembered this work, asserting that “That was a purposely ugly image, hung over his bed, meant to offend.” Spicer, although gay himself, disliked what he thought of as the effeminacy, or should I say the effeteness, of the affectations of both collectors and artists, particularly the intriguing art collections of his two greatest friends, the poets Robert Duncan and Robin Blaser.

---Let me now resketch some details of Spicer’s life and you can see where the magic fit in, or didn’t fit in. He was born in Hollywood in 1925 and died in San Francisco forty years later—in a way his career was much like that of Frank O’Hara, only in a humbler West Coast way of course, and the startling coincidence of their dates (both poets died at age forty, a year apart) is perhaps no more than a coincidence, but I sometimes wonder if their meeting in 1955 didn’t spur Spicer on to a greater interest in the visual arts. He nursed a stubborn feeling, almost a grudge, that anything O’Hara could do, he could do better. Duncan’s interest in Surrealism—he had, during the war years, lived in New York in the “View” group of Charles Henri Ford and Pavel Tchelitchev—inspired Jack Spicer; Duncan’s first-hand knowledge of the European painters who had fled their homelands for New York during World War II must have been a very good education in what they called modern art back then. And soon, once Duncan had met the painter Jess Collins a few years later, and moved in with him in 1950, Spicer was on the fringes of Jess’ wide circle of painter friends.





---When you read The Collected Books of Jack Spicer, and particularly the long essay by Robin Blaser that concludes the book, “The Practice of Outside,” you get the idea that all of the work in the book was written under dictation, but that’s a little misleading. The book begins with Spicer’s first book, “After Lorca,” during the writing of which he discovered the concept of the serial poem—an entirely different kettle of fish. It was during the writing of “Homage to Creeley,” several years later (say, from November 1959 to the spring of 1960) that Spicer announced to Blaser that he had been writing his poetry through “dictation.” He was no longer “in charge” of his writing—some outer force was using him as a trance medium. For Spicer, dictation was a release from the responsibility of authorial intention and all it denotes. No longer was his “personality” to intrude. The days of dedicated poems were over. The spirits that wrote the new poems hardly knew the boys Spicer loved. The morning after he wrote “Dillinger,” he stumbled across a copy of the San Francisco Chronicle and discovered that the last of Dillinger’s gang had been shot down in a barber shop. He became convinced that he was in touch with—and perhaps had been in touch with for years—a great “Outside” force, as powerful and omniscient as the spirits that visited Blake and attended the seances of William and Georgie Yeats, or those who wrote the “Sonnets to Orpheus” through Rilke. He was now a radio, picking up transmissions from “ghosts.”

---He began to speak of poems that “scared” him, such as this one, “Magic,” from “Homage to Creeley.”


----Strange, I had words for dinner

----Stranger, I had words for dinner

----Stranger, strange, do you believe me?

----Honestly, I had your heart for supper

----Honesty has had your heart for supper

----Honesty honestly are your pain.

----I burned the bones of it

----And the letters of it

----And the numbers of it

----That go 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7

----And so far.

----Stranger, I had bones for dinner

----Stranger, I had bones for dinner

----Stranger, stranger, strange, did you believe me.1


---His students would say to him, look, on the one hand you are telling us that your poetry does not come from your own mind, that you are only a vessel and that spirits or ghosts are speaking through you, like a Ouija board; and yet on the other your poetry is filled with exactly all the things that interest you. And Spicer explained this by his theory of the “furniture in the room,” itself taken and bent slightly from the essay “Le Roman Demeuble,” by Willa Cather, the novelist he admired. Cather’s thesis was that the 19th century novel had been overstuffed with things—descriptions, antecedents, clothes, jewelry, interiors, gesture, and that the modern novel was the novel “without furniture.” Anyhow Spicer changed the terms a bit and began to defend his dictation theories by arguing that the ghosts come into one’s brain and can only work on what’s there inside the individual poet to work with, like poltergeists, those earthbound spirits who can only communicate with the living by dragging furniture around. If you know two or three languages, that’s more furniture the ghosts can use to make their message clearer. If you have a rich and varied emotional life, that’s even more furniture. Everything you know and everything you’ve felt gets stored up inside one’s mind in a key Freudian interchange, and that’s what the ghosts use. Thus, Spicer argued, his knowledge of jazz, of linguistics, of baseball, of High German, would naturally come into his poetry. They might as well be the letters in a bowl of alphabet soup. The ghosts use what they can and in some poets, for example, Ferlinghetti, there wasn’t much there to use.





---I interviewed Ferlinghetti a few years ago and he was very polite and so forth but after the interview was over he said, “But Kevin, what I don’t understand is, why write a whole book about Jack Spicer? He’s almost forgotten nowadays, isn’t he?” I said, no, actually there are many interested in his work. He said, “Waste your time if you want to, but I can’t imagine anybody publishing it.”

---I drew myself up rather coldly and replied, “Well, maybe thanks to your help we can revive his memory. Thank you very much for your time, Mr. Ferlinghetti.”

---I mean, in a way, the Beats, whom Spicer disliked so much, were, with their “first thought best thought,” “spontaneous bop prosody” awfully close to the idea of the poet as medium, except that Spicer scorned their misuse of mediumship, because the results, or so he thought, were in the interest of “self-expression.” The banality of self-expression was this hideous thing to him, perhaps because of his LA background, and besides, once you’ve seen a murder in space, one’s own self loses charm, and the selves of others are beneath poetry. I remember once, I was interviewing Allen Ginsberg, who knew Spicer very well, and he spoke very openly about their differences, until I asked him what he felt about Spicer’s very last poem, which in commonly read as an attack on him.


---At least we both know shitty the world is. You

----wearing a beard as a mask to disguise it. I

----wearing my tired smile. I don’t see how you

----do it. One hundred thousand university

----students marching with you. Toward

---A necessity which is not love but is a name.

---King of the May. A title not chosen for dancing.

----The police

---Civil but obstinate. If they’d attacked

---The kind of love (not sex but love), you gave

----the one hundred thousand students I’d have been

----very glad. And loved the policemen. Why

---Fight the combine of your heart and my heart or

----anybody’s heart. People are starving.2


---So Allen said, “I don’t know if I know that poem. What book is it in?” Well, he continued to deny ever having heard of the poem, even after I sent him a copy. So about six months later he was in, I don’t know where he was, in Prague or somewhere, and Dennis Cooper and Mark Ewert were staying in his apartment in New York and called me up. I asked them to go through the books—which were in alphabetical order—and see if any of Spicer’s books were there. One stayed on the line and the other came back with the book—Spicer’s last book, the posthumously published Book of Magazine Verse.“Well, turn to the end,” I commanded and you’ll never guess what happened.





---I see I’m running out of space and time and wanted to send you off with parts of a questionnaire I’ve been transcribing, a questionnaire Spicer was in charge of in his capacity as publications chairman for the Oakland chapter of the Mattachine Society in 1953. This was one of the first gay liberation groups in the USA and prospective new members were encouraged to answers as many questions as they cared to, for sociological purposes, while retaining their anonymity. There are dozens and dozens of questions and these are just a few...


18. I can __________, cannot __________, be spotted “a mile off”; two miles off and I don’t care __________; I do care very much __________, somewhat __________, a little __________; I watch myself constantly __________, a lot __________, somewhat __________, seldom __________, when I remember __________, never __________.

19. The item, starred “*” on the list in question 13 above, is the characteristic which I feel gives me aweay most often. (Star several if you feel there is more than one.) I am not aware of any give aways __________.

31. I am married to a member of the opposite sex __________, happily __________, unhappily __________, outwardly satisfactorily but inwardly torn between conflicting loyalties __________.

32. I wish I were married __________, “married” __________, living with a homosexual friend __________, living with parents __________, living with (other relations) __________, living with a lover __________, alone __________.

33. I am very good looking __________, fairly good looking __________, unusual looking __________, interesting looking __________, ordinary __________, plain __________, homely __________, ugly __________, some of each at times __________, don’t know __________, don’t care __________.

37. At work I hope to heaven they don’t find out __________, don’t care if they do find out __________, don’t think about it __________.

38. I hope my relations never find out __________, I have told them __________, don’t care if they do find out __________;

They found out accidentally __________, they have known all along __________, and are resigned to it __________, object to it __________, have cut me off __________, take it in their stride __________, they are rather proud of me __________;

My parents do __________, do not __________, know; if they find out they will take it in their stride __________, be proud of me anyway __________, cut me off __________, it will probably kill them __________.

46. I always dress to look my “sharpest” __________, to look masculine even if it entails studied carelessness and roughness __________, sometimes let myself/allow myself touches of the opposite sex __________, exactly the way I please __________, always conventionally so as not to be overly noticed __________, honestly don’t care about my clothes __________.

The general ensemble usually turns out masculine __________, more or less masculine __________, feminine __________, more or less feminine __________, startlingly bohemian __________, acceptably bohemian __________, acceptably intellectual __________, well-tailored __________, acceptably groomed __________, don’t know __________, don’t care __________.
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p.s. Hey. Four years ago, the great writer Kevin Killian gave us this post about the great writer Jack Spicer. Please enjoy it again or for first time, please. I'm up early here in Tours, so I thought I'd do a quick-ish p.s. and catch up while I have the space. Things are very good here. Not much to tell yet, but we started working on the Scandinavia book yesterday, and so far so good and exciting. We're staying at a lofty apartment that I think used to be the horse stalls of a masonic temple in the medieval section of Tours. Maybe I'll take pix. ** Monday ** Kyler, Hi, Kyler. Thanks for taking the stack up a major notch. I almost put your add-on image in the stack, weirdly, but I couldn't find the right transition point. I'm so or too persnickety.  ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Maybe Zac's and my porn project can cajole him and whatever clout he had to come out of retirement. ** Lee Vincent, Hi, Lee! Long time indeed. Sweetness to see you, man. Interesting, a direct descendent. Was he even subtly Kafka-esque, whatever that quality would embody? You sound like you made summer bow before you, which is summer at its best. Congrats on the work, the love, and I hope my stuff's input is a helpmate in whatever way possible. Cool, thanks for telling me that. My summer was good. Well, I'm on a trip right now, coincidentally, and it holds the promise of excitement for sure. I'm really glad you're back on the blog too. Talk to you soon! ** œ, Hi. A couple of the castles we're going to visit are in/near Ambroise, so there's an awfully good chance. It seems to be most renowned for its hot chocolate. I'll let you know. Thanks! ** Tosh Berman, Aw, thanks, Tosh, that's very kind of you. ** Sypha, So thrilling that 'Trinity' is that far along. ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. That sounds scenic. And hokey can be nice. I'll google the place's margins. So much undercurrent in the bill paying, jeez. Did you see the 1D movie in IMAX 3D? I don't know why I'm interested to know, but I weirdly vicariously am. Hope you got some novel mileage or inches in. ** Bill, Hi, Bill. Thanks! Oh, the 'Book of Shadows' thing is curious. We're not that far south of Paris, but summer is still in full-swing here, sort of slightly unpleasantly. The sky is so complex. Who'd have thunk? ** Kiddiepunk, Thank you greatly, sir Michael. Trip's on the up and up so far. I was excited to the see the Sotos/Salerno book announcement! ** Chris Dankland, Thank you, Chris. Seems that we will. Well, artists decline all the time unexpectedly and probably for reasons too personal and thick with tangents to parse, but it's always interesting to wonder how that disconnect between someone and their aesthetic touch happens and if the artist knows it's happened, and, if not, which usually seems to end up being the case, why not or how or something? Scary. Best to you, bud. ** Rewritedept, Hi. That 'playing while obscured by a screen producing the band's shadows' thing has happened at least a handful of times. I saw PiL and Cabaret Voltaire do it live. But I don't think it's an overworked strategy. I had a Superchunk day just the other day. ** Don w, Hi, Don! Oh, cool: that sounds good: the press, etc. The indies are where something like 80% of the best stuff is happening in books much less fiction now by my taste and reckoning. Teaching, nice. You sound good, man. There's a spring in your keyboard stepping or something. ** Steevee, Hi. ** S., Thanks a bunch, capital S. Or is it capitol S., I always forget. Both work. Good luck with the short-storying plan. ** Tuesday ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, D. That Delon thing is all over the French social media and news, predictably. What a weirdo. ** Allesflieest, Do you know that I never read 'Hitchhiker's ... '. I seem to be so rare in that. Saw the movie, though, although I don't remember anything about it. We're working on a book of mostly photos plus possible DVD plus possible pop-up(s) of Scandinavian amusement parks mainly. How's your stuff? ** 灑瀟, Hi. The underwater fish robots have gotten incredibly more sophisticated and exciting in the years since that post. I almost switched that one out for a more jaw-dropping recent example, but it seemed like that would be cheating. It is expensive, yeah. Weird, wait, not weird in the slightest, but unpleasant. Good morning! ** Sorry for the bit of a rush. I need to wake up my collaborator and buddy now and get back to work. See you at some point soon. In the meantime, Jack Spicer via the brain and wordage of Kevin Killian is so deserving of your attention.

Rerun: Philippe Grandieux Day (orig. 09/08/09)

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'The films of Philippe Grandrieux pulsate. They pulsate microcosmically: in the images, the camera trembles and flickers so violently that, even within a single, continuous shot, no photogram resembles another. And they pulsate macrocosmically: the soundtrack is constructed globally upon unidentifiable, layered, synthesised, ambient noises of breath or wind, sucked in and expelled, which underlie the entire film and constitute its disturbed heartbeat, returning to our ear when all other sounds have disappeared. In the very beginnings and endings of his films, over the credits, there is nothing but this strangely bodily sound.' -- Adrian Martin, Kinoeye

'There is something profoundly new about Grandrieux's plastic exploration of violence, but also something very contemporary. His approach is not based on such editing and framing effects one finds and admires in Hitchcock and Ray, nor in an exploration of excess as in Tarantino. He works on the inside of an image, on the special relation between the luminous content and the vibrant and fragmentary representation.' -- Christa Bluminger, Parachute

'Grandieux's films carefully try to understand the exact inner-working of one’s psychic, and more especially the part that deals with desire and transformation. How does desire work? What are the elements that this energy-matter is using to expand its empire? What are the social repressions that desire has to face? Unlike Pasolini who is really interested in the way that society is theatrically transforming the ceremony of predating into a show, there is here an experimental cinema; it is true; that is trying to register, thanks to the camera, what humans eyes would never be able to see in order to deconstruct and analyze reality. Grandrieux’s films are analytical films, like a microscope, that give the viewer the possibility to see more accurately what is movement, emotion, sensation, colour, darkness and the emergence of the image (either material or thought). What is the process that enables something to become an image in the dark? Why can this process only be seen as a threat?' -- Jean-Claude Polack



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Further

* Philippe Grandieux Official Website
* PG @ Wikipedia
* PG interviewed by Nicole Brenez
* Magick Mike on PG's 'Sombre' @ EEP
* PG's 'Un Lac' reviewed @ Screener
* PG @ Facebook
* PG @ the Harmony Korine Website Forum
* Video: PG interviewed (in French)
* PG Torrent Search
* Buy PG's 'Sombre' DVD




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Films




'How to sum up Un Lac? It’s no easier than with Sombre or La Vie nouvelle, the two last films by Philippe Grandrieux. Suffice to say that Grandrieux has been hotly acclaimed on both sides of the Atlantic as one of Europe’s most innovative and uncompromising filmmakers, his visionary films testing the very limits of screen language. This minimalist new work is at once Grandrieux’s most accessible film and his most abstract. The vestigial narrative takes place in a frosty Northern landscape of forests and mountains, where young woodchopper Alexis lives with his sister, their blind mother and a younger brother. Then one day a younger man arrives on the scene... Grandrieux doesn’t make events easy for us to follow, often shooting in near-darkness, with sparse dialogue sometimes pitched barely above a whisper.

'But narrative apart, the film is distinctive for the unique, self-enclosed world that Grandrieux creates with a palette reduced almost to monochrome: a world of stillness and near-silence, of forbidding yet alluring landscapes whose affinities are as much with the Romantic paintings of Caspar David Friedrich, as with the cinematic ilk of Alexandr Sokurov, Bela Tarr and Fred Kelemen.' -- Jonathan Romney



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'Since its premiere screenings in late 2002, Philippe Grandrieux's second feature La Vie nouvelle (The New Life) has been a cause célèbre. On its theatrical release in France, it was savaged by a large number of prominent newspaper and magazine reviewers. But the film has many passionate defenders. Grandrieux's work plunges us into every kind of obscurity: moral ambiguity, narrative enigma, literal darkness. La Vie Nouvelle presents four characters in a severely depressed Sarajevo who are caught in a mysterious, death-driven web: the feckless American Seymour (Zach Knighton), his mysterious companion (lover? friend? brother? father?) Roscoe (Marc Barbé), the demonic Mafioso Boyan (Zsolt Nagy), and the prostitute-showgirl who is the exchange-token in all their relationships, Mélania (Anna Mouglalis).

'Eric Vuillard's poetically conceived script takes us to the very heart of this darkness where sex, violence, betrayal and obsession mingle and decay. Grandrieux feels freer than ever to explore the radical extremes of film form: in his lighting and compositions and impulsive camera movements; in the bold mix of speech, noise and techno/ambient music (by the celebrated experimental group Etant Donnés); and in the frame-by-frame onslaught of sensations and affects.' -- Adrian Martin, Kinoeye



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'Philippe Grandrieux’s first full length cinema film has unleashed a storm of controversy since its showing at the Locarno initernational film festival in 1998. It had critics solidly divided into two camps – those who regard it as an obscene, unwatchable mess, and others who rate it as a sublime masterpiece of the psychosexual thriller genre. It is clearly a film which is acceptable only to certain tastes, and many will find the film very hard to stomach.

'Certainly, Grandrieux’s extremely minimalist photography, much of which involves jerky camera movements and hazy out-of-focus images shot in virtual pitch-blackness, makes few concessions to traditional cinema audiences. To his credit, this unusual - and frankly disorientating – cinematography serves the film well, heightening the menace in the killer and the brutality of his murders by showing little and prompting us to imagine much more than we see. The idea presumably is to show the world as the obsessed killer sees it, through a darkened filter with periodic loss of focus.' -- James Travers, filmsdefrance



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'Philippe Grandrieux's work has often invoked the world of Francis Bacon, but in this almost purely experimental piece it is even more pronounced, as he takes Bacon's fascination with the triptych and the body and insists on utilising only the middle section of the frame.

'Here are bodies in primordial states, fully formed as muscle and flesh, but as if unformed in the nature of their desires and subsequently somehow closer to nature. Utilising a dense soundtrack that both suggests the internal organs (lungs, larynx and heart) and the extended sounds of the forest, Grandrieux has made a film that isn't easy to watch but equally not easy to forget. It is a strategy that has worked wonderfully well for him in the past with moments from Sombre (for example, the Punch and Judy contest), La vie nouvelle (the scenes filmed with a thermo camera) and the misty lake in Un Lac all examples of the cinematically unforgettable. Perhaps the images here are too abstract and sculptural to fascinate us fully, without that soupçon of story that can make Grandrieux's work maddeningly suggestive, but this is is still a film by a modern master.' -- List Film



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'This tribute to the radical Japanese writer-director Masao Adachi is the first in a series of documentaries that Philippe Grandrieux wants to dedicate to deeply political filmmakers. For decades, the eccentric Adachi was a member of the extremist Japanese Red Army.

'French director Philippe Grandrieux (Sombre, 1999; A Lake, 2009) wants to make a series of portraits of politically committed filmmakers. His film about Japanese avant-gardist Masao Adachi (1939) is the first in this series.

'In the 1960s and 1970s, Adachi was a prominent film critic and underground filmmaker, with experimental films such as Sain (1963) to his name. He often collaborated with his contemporary and ally Nagisa Oshima, wrote scripts for Koji Wakamatsu and made films in the pink genre.

'Disappointment with the political direction of Japan made him join the the extreme left-wing Japanese Red Army in the early 1970s and he started making films in Beirut.

'Grandieux engages in sometimes cryptic conversations with him about film, art and politics and films him in his characteristic style: sometimes out of focus, sometimes under or over- exposed. With a few clips from Adachi’s work, such as The Red Army/PFLP: Declaration of World War from 1971.' -- IFFR



the entirety




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Hey. Today the superb French filmsmith Philippe Grandieux holds sway here in this slightly tweaked and updated version of a post from a few years ago. Give it your best, please, thank you. I'm away in the Loire Valley working on something. Hopefully it's going as well as I thought it would when I wrote this sentence and preprogrammed this post to launch on the day before I left.

Rerun: Every quote and excerpt I could find online from Klaus Kinski's All I Need is Love (1988) (orig. 08/26/09)

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'The naming of autobiographies is a minor art. A great title can be nobly direct (Nabokov's Speak, Memory; Jack Paar's I Kid You Not), bitterly cryptic (Josef von Sternberg's Fun in a Chinese Laundry; Adolf Loos' Nevertheless), or too clever by half (Roman by Polanski). In this obscure pantheon, a place must be reserved for Klaus Kinski, the erratically gifted Polish-German actor and noted mal vivant, who tried to publish the English version of his autobiography in 1988 under the massively ironic title All I Need is Love. The book was caught in a copyright dispute between Random House and a West German publisher, with huge libel problems looming; it was withdrawn shortly after publication, and became one of the books most often stolen from public libraries. ... This ghastly and hypnotic memoir lives up to its long-festering legend. The whole witless genre of the celebrity confessional undergoes a horrifying self-disembowelment.

'On and on it goes, sickening and tedious by turns. But this book is weirdly enjoyable for what is not in it: conventional film gossip, name-dropping, show-biz folly of any kind. Here is a man who reports working on For a Few Dollars More, but fails to mention Clint Eastwood. For good long stretches, you'll be wondering, "What year are we in?" or even, "What decade?" There are no dates, and few hard facts; movies are referred to as "some piece of crap," directors, as "some idiot." (The "New York actress slut" referred to on page 309 is Susan Sarandon.) He doesn't even give the full names of his various wives. You also wonder whether certain things actually happened. Some of the sexual escapades sound curiously like unfulfilled fantasies. Phrases recur in them like literary motifs.' -- Alex Ross, The Rest is Noise





Herzog is a miserable, spiteful, envious, stingy, stinking, money-hungry, malicious, sadistic, incidious, backstabbing, blackmailing, cowardly person, and a liar through and through. His so-called talent is nothing more than torturing helpless creatures and, if necessary, putting them to death or simply murdering them. No one and nothing interests him but his lousy career as a so-called filmmaker. Driven by a pathological addiction to cause a sensation, he himself provokes the most senseless difficulties and dangers and puts the safety and even the lives of others on the line only so he can later say that he, Herzog, has mastered the seemingly impossible.


Each time I touch her, she tears herself away from me. After two hours of this, I rip her blouse off with one swipe. Her tits force themselves into my mouth. We tug at each other's clothes, stumble, stumble, fall onto the floor, pant, gasp, scream as if our lives depended on shredding our clothes. Naked, we crouch in front of each other, bite each other. Hit each other. Our bodies. Our faces. Our genitals. Attack each other dangerously. Painfully. She throws herself onto her belly, her ass juts up, her cheeks gape wide, as I shove my twitching cock into her hot, wet cunt.


I hold on to a street light and think that this is the end. I pull out the kitchen knife and stick it down my throat like a sword swallower. And then it happens. The boil breaks! And I puke half a liter of pus into the gutter. Now I'm rid of everything and my pains are gone.


Those assholes! Do you ask a car crash for another take? Do you ask a volcano for another take? Do you ask the storm for another take?


Once again our lives are constantly put at risk because of Herzog's total ignorance, narrowmindedness, arrogance and inconsideration... He's the same decaying garbage heap that he was ten years ago, only more moronic, more mindless, more murderous... Over and over again I refuse to stick to Herzog's hair-raisingly crappy script or take his amateurish 'direction.'


Why am I a whore? I need love! Love! Always! And I want to give love, because I have so much of it to give. No one understands that I want nothing from my whoring around but to love.


I`d have been better than Adolf Hitler. I could`ve delivered his speeches a lot better. That`s for certain. Where a beast would have claws, I was born with talent. The dimensions of my feelings are too violent. I knew there were, in myself, the souls of millions of people who lived centuries ago; not just people but animals, plants, the elements, things, even, matter. All of these exist in me. Sometimes my heart hurts so much, I beat it with my fists. I try to run. But you cannot run from this. It waits for you. Even when you think you have escaped it, it is there. I am your fairy tale. Your dream. Your wishes and desires, and I am your thirst and your hunger and your food and your drink. The truth is, I can never die. For I will be in everything and see you in everything and watch over you. I am your reaction in the water of a mountain lake.


She pulls off her panties and stands before me with open legs, protruding pelvis, and slightly bent knees. Her rough, swollen tongue fills my mouth. Her belly pushed against my dick as if she were knocked up. The stiff little wads of her vaginal lips keep springing together like two halves of a rubber ball. She moans. Her abdomen works like a machine. She shpritzes and shpritzes. Our knees buckle. I shove my dick into her from behind, right up to my nuts, and I writhe as if I were touching a high-voltage line -- while she, impaled, and with her tongue hanging out, rattles like a slaughtered calf.


Once when I was asleep I pissed on my sister because I dreamed she was a tree. I believe there is no stench that I haven't stunk of.


As soon as I fuck a girl or she's sucked me off, I want to leave her immediately. If one sucks me over for so long that I let her sleep with me and she wants to cuddle up to me, I kick her away.


The chick with the blond curls ... yells 'Kinski!' which sounds like 'Fuck me'.


I actually get venereal disease more often than most people catch colds.


Steven Spielberg wants me to do RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK, and someone brings the script from Hollywood to Paris. But as much as I think that Spielberg is the best director America has to offer, the screenplay is the same tired old shit. Fellini wants me in his next film and asks me to come to Rome. In Rome Dominique drives me to Fellini's home. He struts around for hours speaking French, because I don't speak Italian yet. He starts to get on my nerves. It's all so very important! I whisper to Dominique, 'Let's get out of here!


The German government writes me that it has awarded me the supreme distinction for an actor: the Golden Film Ribbon. What gall! Who gave these shitheads the right to award me anything? Did it never occur to them that there might be somebody who doesn't want their shit? What filthy arrogance to award me - me of all people! - a prize! What does this prize mean anyway? Is it a reward? For what? For my pains, sufferings, despair, tears? A prize for every hell, every dying, every resurrection? Prizes for death and life? Prizes for passion, for hate and love? And how did you shitheads intend to hand me the prize? As a gift? As a favour, like those tasteless hosts that the pope distributes like fast food? I'll kick you! Or do I come submissive, whimpering? I'll kick you again! And there's not even a check. It's outrageous!


They hammer, they hammer; it is unbearable. That is why you have to go away. They hammer everywhere! Everywhere they can possibly hammer! They hammer in your brain! Hell, these idiots, they come with their hammer, where people are sitting, to hammer, to hammer, to hammer!


It is true what Rimbaud said; If you think a book is strong enough, try it at the ocean, in the wind, at the waves. If the book can resist the ocean, then it exists. Otherwise, throw it away.


Now I absolutely despise the murderer Herzog. I tell him to his face that I want to see him perish like the llama he executed. He should be thrown to the crocodiles alive! An anaconda should throttle him slowly! The sting of a deadly spider should paralyze him! His brain should burst from the bite of the most poisonous of all snakes! Panthers shouldn't slit his throat open with their claws, that would be too good for him! No. Big red ants should piss in his eyes, eat his balls, penetrate his asshole, and eat his guts! He should get the plague! Syphilis! Malaria! Yellow fever! Leprosy! In vain. The more I wish the most horrible of deaths on him and treat him like the scum of the earth that he is, the less I can get rid of him!









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p.s. Hey. I hope everyone reading this is doing very well. It looks like Klaus Kinski is what you'll be doing today. What could go wrong? See you soon, if I haven't seen you already, and I guess even if I have.
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