Friday, May 31, 2013
Truly a Believer
"If you don't believe anymore... you can still just "act" as if you do. You can act as if you believe. I know this might seem lame or false, but it's just a matter of commitment. If you totally throw yourself into the role of "a believer" you will be convincing. You may even be able to convince yourself. If you are a "method actor" you might remember a time where you did believe, or a very particular incident where belief enveloped your being. You can use it. You can act, drawing upon that particular time and impulse. If you are an accomplished actor it will be really hard to tell if you are truly a believer or just acting. And really maybe it won't even matter..."
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Dramas of Light & Shade!
Over the last few days I blasted out a new script. I must acknowledge an assist from Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones and John Bonham. Led Zeppelin provided the soundtrack to my intensive writing frenzy. Pretty much every album they made except "Live at the BBC," and their last one, "In Thru the Out Door."
So yes, Zeppelin's music of bombast, their over-heated blues and dramas of light and shade provided the perfect backdrop to my dire scribblings. Thank You boys!
So yes, Zeppelin's music of bombast, their over-heated blues and dramas of light and shade provided the perfect backdrop to my dire scribblings. Thank You boys!
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
He Actually Could Get Satisfaction!
Still in the midst of a Rolling Stones jag. Learning songs for our upcoming event. We will be doing their big 1965 hit, Satisfaction. As in "I can't get no..."
As my good friend Mr. Mo pointed out to me, there is a secret subtext to this song. Remember Mick Jagger was a student of Economics, no dummy. So using a double-negative was a conscious choice.
Really what Mick is telling us when he says he "can't get no satisfaction," is that he is extremely, immensely, supremely satisfied. There is no way he can be unsatisfied! This song was a huge hit on the charts.
It's dressed up with a fuzz tone guitar, and it's snappy, but really it's not far from the blues. It's kind of a dressed up, popped up blues. And it made the boys big time r&r stars!
As my good friend Mr. Mo pointed out to me, there is a secret subtext to this song. Remember Mick Jagger was a student of Economics, no dummy. So using a double-negative was a conscious choice.
Really what Mick is telling us when he says he "can't get no satisfaction," is that he is extremely, immensely, supremely satisfied. There is no way he can be unsatisfied! This song was a huge hit on the charts.
It's dressed up with a fuzz tone guitar, and it's snappy, but really it's not far from the blues. It's kind of a dressed up, popped up blues. And it made the boys big time r&r stars!
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Miracle Film in Glorious Black & White!
I didn't know they still made great films anymore. I thought they only made movies about stuff blowing up, in 3D. I guess they still do make some great ones once in awhile. Miraculously. Filmed in glorious black & white. I mean, I know they do. Saw this one yesterday. Great. Yes. Really. And superb use of a cool David Bowie song too...
Monday, May 27, 2013
Hackneyed, Banal, Commonplace, Trivial, Threadbare - Oh Yeah and True!
So yeah, maybe that's the dirty little secret. All the great little pearls of wisdom we are searching for, are really just little homely, brain-numbing, invisible-in-plain-sight "trite expressions" that just make us yawn... stuff that can be found on bumper stickers and birthday cards... total dreck...
"This is the first day of the rest of your life."
"One day at a time."
"Live in the moment."
"Be here, now."
But then, just because these words are so plain and seemingly empty, doesn't mean they aren't true. Maybe they are so yawn-inducing and mind-fogging because they are true. And they are the types of expressions you can use to live. You can actually base your life on such simple dreck!
"This is the first day of the rest of your life."
"One day at a time."
"Live in the moment."
"Be here, now."
But then, just because these words are so plain and seemingly empty, doesn't mean they aren't true. Maybe they are so yawn-inducing and mind-fogging because they are true. And they are the types of expressions you can use to live. You can actually base your life on such simple dreck!
trite
/trīt/
Adjective
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Synonyms
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Sunday, May 26, 2013
Pain, Fear & Doubt - These States are Useful Too!
Pain, fear & doubt. Yes, even these states can be useful. They can come in handy. They tell you when you've walked into the flame. Or alert you to danger. Or make you pause and consider.
Think the opposite: Pleasure, fearlessness, certainty. These states can lead you off the cliff. They are the mark of the Holy Fool.
So yes, we are looking for a blending, a balance of these states. If we must experience pain, hopefully it's for a short time only. The fear will pass in the light of day. We have our doubts and maybe they make us re-think, adjust, reaffirm, recommit.
Think the opposite: Pleasure, fearlessness, certainty. These states can lead you off the cliff. They are the mark of the Holy Fool.
So yes, we are looking for a blending, a balance of these states. If we must experience pain, hopefully it's for a short time only. The fear will pass in the light of day. We have our doubts and maybe they make us re-think, adjust, reaffirm, recommit.
Saturday, May 25, 2013
Friday, May 24, 2013
New Music We Love!
I write about our band and music at r&r diary at whitewolfsonicprincess.com. This is a "cross-post" from yesterday, I thought it was worth posting here too. New music we love, from some really cool bands!
We love music, and are always on the hunt for new sounds. These four records have been on "heavy rotation" in our house the last few weeks. They don't really have much in common, except they are phenomenally good. Made by artists with clear, inspiring musical visions. Highly recommended!
1. Montana Fix from the Gunnelpumpers - instrumental music of the highest order. Open-your-head music. An amazing, expansive mix of influences - classical, jazz, world music. The record is intense, moody, introspective, groovy, transcendent, atmospheric, mind-expanding. A great collection of grooves that roam across the sonic horizon. The collective vibe of this group is stunning. Inspired!
2. Invisible Way from Low - A quiet masterpiece. Hushed. Two beautiful voices. Crystalline songs. Hard. Diamond-like. A very unconventional drummer, and a unique sound. This record sneaks up on you. Can't shake it.
3. Amok from Atoms for Peace - Thom Yorke's other band. Groovier and looser than Radiohead. If you think that's a good thing, also add in Flea on bass guitar. Total funky underlay! Thom Yorke actually sounds like he's having fun, even if it's sometimes hard to tell. Didn't think Yorke really needed another really cool band. Didn't think it was necessary. Guess what? This is a great record! Didn't think it would fly? It flies!
4. Go-Go Boots from the Drive By Truckers - One of their best. Great band. Three distinctive singers. A powerhouse r&r sound with a loose, damn the torpedos feel. The songs are stories, and there's some kind of loopy, gothic southern narrative thread. Recorded on analog tape. You can hear and feel it. Warm, organic, kick-ass. This is soul music. Feeds the soul. Their cover of Eddie Hinton's song "Everybody Needs Love," is just the best. Can't get over it. Love.
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Vacation
"Yeah, when I say 'I need a vacation,' I mean, a vacation from myself. I mean, I'm not talking about a permanent vacation. Just a little break from myself - a break from the seething mass of emotions, the whirlpool of thoughts, the never-ending internal monologue that just goes on and on, that just loops around and around. I mean, even when I'm sleeping there is this wild kaleidoscope of images that flood through my brain. So sleep doesn't do the trick.
I'd like a vacation. Wake up as a little Korean woman. Or a Zulu accountant, or an old Mexican barber, a serious Serbian teenager, or whatever, you know? Someone else. Someone different. Wake up in another skin. With other thoughts, other emotions. Just for awhile. Try it on for size. Maybe it'd be like going on a cruise, or something... a cruise in another being for awhile..."
I'd like a vacation. Wake up as a little Korean woman. Or a Zulu accountant, or an old Mexican barber, a serious Serbian teenager, or whatever, you know? Someone else. Someone different. Wake up in another skin. With other thoughts, other emotions. Just for awhile. Try it on for size. Maybe it'd be like going on a cruise, or something... a cruise in another being for awhile..."
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
You Are Badly Out of Tune My Baby!
We will be hosting a Rolling Stones tribute show in early June. We have been going thru Stones songs, and it's a real pleasure. Working out guitar parts, transposing keys to make it easier for the singer.
I love doing these types of shows, it's a way of really studying a band or artist, and exploring how they created songs, and find out what makes a song tick. My thing is we always want to interpret and make the song our own, and at the same time convey the essence of the thing.
Anyway our good friend Mr. Mo. is playing ukulele and he will be doing a couple songs. He picked one that I didn't know, a poppy tune called "The Singer Not the Song." It is a nicely constructed pop song. But Mr. Mo pointed out to me that what's really remarkable about the recording of the song is how out of tune the guitars are. I mean, badly, badly out of tune.
You wonder how this could have been released. Did no one hear it? Did no one have the guts to tell Keith and Brian that their guitars were badly out of tune? Really?! Did they think it actually sounded good? Really? Kind of amazing...
I love doing these types of shows, it's a way of really studying a band or artist, and exploring how they created songs, and find out what makes a song tick. My thing is we always want to interpret and make the song our own, and at the same time convey the essence of the thing.
Anyway our good friend Mr. Mo. is playing ukulele and he will be doing a couple songs. He picked one that I didn't know, a poppy tune called "The Singer Not the Song." It is a nicely constructed pop song. But Mr. Mo pointed out to me that what's really remarkable about the recording of the song is how out of tune the guitars are. I mean, badly, badly out of tune.
You wonder how this could have been released. Did no one hear it? Did no one have the guts to tell Keith and Brian that their guitars were badly out of tune? Really?! Did they think it actually sounded good? Really? Kind of amazing...
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Slamming Doors!
You can have an "open door" policy, but slamming doors, and burning bridges is part of it too.
Ray Manzarek died yesterday. His legendary band opened doors for sure. I never heard another band quite like the Doors. Jim Morrison's voice, Manzarek's organ, Robby Kreiger's guitar, John Densmore's drums. The sound came out fully formed. Their first album is just stunning. Perfect.
They burned out fairly quickly. Morrison was dead by 1971. But those sounds, those vibrations still live. The Doors were not a feel-good outfit. Lots of trouble surrounded them. And Morrison just imploded - a drunk, a junkie falling in on himself.
The after-effects of that band lasted for a long, long time. Their legend just got bigger and bigger. They are a darkness. They are still with us.
Ray Manzarek died yesterday. His legendary band opened doors for sure. I never heard another band quite like the Doors. Jim Morrison's voice, Manzarek's organ, Robby Kreiger's guitar, John Densmore's drums. The sound came out fully formed. Their first album is just stunning. Perfect.
They burned out fairly quickly. Morrison was dead by 1971. But those sounds, those vibrations still live. The Doors were not a feel-good outfit. Lots of trouble surrounded them. And Morrison just imploded - a drunk, a junkie falling in on himself.
The after-effects of that band lasted for a long, long time. Their legend just got bigger and bigger. They are a darkness. They are still with us.
Monday, May 20, 2013
Addicted to Addiction
Addicted to addiction (see previous post). Some of us have what is called an addictive personality and all that comes with it: impulsive, alienated, anti-social, sensation-seeking, tolerance for deviance, high value of nonconformance, weak commitment to goals... etc.
I mean what's the problem? No, really, I mean, of course, yes, I'm an addict. Aren't you? I think most of us are addicted to something. And I know that much of my activity could probably be seen as addictive behavior.
I think the key to an interesting life is to pick your addictions wisely. Hard drugs? Not a good choice. Jack Daniels Whiskey - are you fricking crazy?! Cheap, dangerous thrills? Well, maybe.
I am certainly addicted to music. And coffee, and Pop Culture. And frozen yogurt. And literature. And asthma medicine. And meditation. And well, just about anything that gets me motivated. I tend to want to swallow it whole. And gratify myself until I'm completely gratified.
I don't eat chocolate or cake often - but when I do, I want to eat every last piece, every last crumb. As Oscar Wilde once commented: "I can resist anything but temptation."
I can see it's a problem. But it's also a feature. A curse and a blessing. Some of these addictions work and some don't. You want to seek out the ones that do... if you can.
I mean what's the problem? No, really, I mean, of course, yes, I'm an addict. Aren't you? I think most of us are addicted to something. And I know that much of my activity could probably be seen as addictive behavior.
I think the key to an interesting life is to pick your addictions wisely. Hard drugs? Not a good choice. Jack Daniels Whiskey - are you fricking crazy?! Cheap, dangerous thrills? Well, maybe.
I am certainly addicted to music. And coffee, and Pop Culture. And frozen yogurt. And literature. And asthma medicine. And meditation. And well, just about anything that gets me motivated. I tend to want to swallow it whole. And gratify myself until I'm completely gratified.
I don't eat chocolate or cake often - but when I do, I want to eat every last piece, every last crumb. As Oscar Wilde once commented: "I can resist anything but temptation."
I can see it's a problem. But it's also a feature. A curse and a blessing. Some of these addictions work and some don't. You want to seek out the ones that do... if you can.
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Addicted to Love, Or What Else You Got?!
I'm nearly 400 pages into David Foster Wallace's "Infinite Jest." It is sort of like Melville's "Moby Dick," a monster of a novel. It tries your patience, and asks you to push past it. And if you do, and I am determined that I will, I think you, I mean I, will be captivated. I mean, I am captivated. One paragraph at a time. I have swallowed it hook, line and sinker!
One thread of the narrative is about AA and it became apparent to me, that the AA's 12 step credo can be applied to everyone in our society. It is an organization dedicated to helping recovering alcoholics but really, we should all be in recovery. Our society is addicted to entertainment, amusement, shopping, the internet, pop culture - you name it. We all need our fixes all the time.
Our lifestyles are built on our addiction to cheap fuel: toxic substances like oil and coal, which are choking our planet. We are addicted to cheap labor, clothes and fancy gizmos made by sweatshops and third world workers barely making it. We are addicted to cheap thrills on cable tv.
Oh yeah, and don't forget our addiction to fast food: processed, chemically altered to hook us, advertised to death over the airwaves to seduce us with cool pictures and flashy packaging.
We have filled our lives with substances and products and life-choices that actually are harmful to us and to nature and to all it's wonder. We are all "substance abusers" of one kind or another, out of control, out of our heads. Addicted!
We could use a little humility, humbleness. Admit we have a problem. And try to see a little more clearly, through more sober eyes and minds. I was surprised by this thread of the book, but I can see it's a major theme. Kind of blew me away. I love, love, love this book. Kind of addicted to it too!
One thread of the narrative is about AA and it became apparent to me, that the AA's 12 step credo can be applied to everyone in our society. It is an organization dedicated to helping recovering alcoholics but really, we should all be in recovery. Our society is addicted to entertainment, amusement, shopping, the internet, pop culture - you name it. We all need our fixes all the time.
Our lifestyles are built on our addiction to cheap fuel: toxic substances like oil and coal, which are choking our planet. We are addicted to cheap labor, clothes and fancy gizmos made by sweatshops and third world workers barely making it. We are addicted to cheap thrills on cable tv.
Oh yeah, and don't forget our addiction to fast food: processed, chemically altered to hook us, advertised to death over the airwaves to seduce us with cool pictures and flashy packaging.
We have filled our lives with substances and products and life-choices that actually are harmful to us and to nature and to all it's wonder. We are all "substance abusers" of one kind or another, out of control, out of our heads. Addicted!
We could use a little humility, humbleness. Admit we have a problem. And try to see a little more clearly, through more sober eyes and minds. I was surprised by this thread of the book, but I can see it's a major theme. Kind of blew me away. I love, love, love this book. Kind of addicted to it too!
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Higher Power. Yes. Of Course.
I've always had "issues" with authority figures. Especially the human ones. Tuns out that human authority figures are really, really, human. Which means that aren't always what they say they are, they don't always really know what they say they know, and they don't always act as they say they act, or as they counsel others to act.
So these figures of authority come across as poseurs, or liars or worse. And it's often these figures of authority turn out to be disappointing on so many levels. And when another one falls, it just confirms all my suspicions about authority and humanity.
This has probably also seeped into my belief and trust in a "higher power." But you know, over the last 15 years or so, I have been able to kind of define my higher power as a very nebulous, amorphous and very much non-human force. And if we are talking about an abstract enigma, a force that just exists out there somewhere, kind of like gravity, or nature, or energy, I can believe.
I have experienced a presence of a higher power. I have had my little epiphanies. My spiritual mind-blowers. I do feel like I am swept up in an adventure that is much bigger than me. This is not just a belief, it's an experience. This experience is it for me.
This was a long strange process. And it has nothing to do with an organized religion or creed, or dogma.
Higher power. Yes. Of course.
So these figures of authority come across as poseurs, or liars or worse. And it's often these figures of authority turn out to be disappointing on so many levels. And when another one falls, it just confirms all my suspicions about authority and humanity.
This has probably also seeped into my belief and trust in a "higher power." But you know, over the last 15 years or so, I have been able to kind of define my higher power as a very nebulous, amorphous and very much non-human force. And if we are talking about an abstract enigma, a force that just exists out there somewhere, kind of like gravity, or nature, or energy, I can believe.
I have experienced a presence of a higher power. I have had my little epiphanies. My spiritual mind-blowers. I do feel like I am swept up in an adventure that is much bigger than me. This is not just a belief, it's an experience. This experience is it for me.
This was a long strange process. And it has nothing to do with an organized religion or creed, or dogma.
Higher power. Yes. Of course.
Friday, May 17, 2013
Oh Yeah, Everybody Needs Love!
We recently purchased some new music. One of the discs we scored is the Drive By Trucker's "Go-Go Boots." It was released in 2011. Just discovered it! We own 6 other Truckers cds and this is one of the best. No one quite does what they do. Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley are just such two distinctive voices. Recorded to analog tape, the record just jumps out of the speakers. The tracks breathe with vibrant life. And that organic drum sound is just the best. Highly, highly recommended.
There are two covers on the album, covers of songs by Eddie Hinton, a great lost voice. Here are the Drive By Truckers live on Letterman doing a cover of Eddie Hinton's "Everybody Needs Love." One of the greatest songs ever written. Yes. The Truckers do it right!
There are two covers on the album, covers of songs by Eddie Hinton, a great lost voice. Here are the Drive By Truckers live on Letterman doing a cover of Eddie Hinton's "Everybody Needs Love." One of the greatest songs ever written. Yes. The Truckers do it right!
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Happy
Happy. Joyous. Euphoric. Don't ask why. Don't probe too deeply. Probably can't be justified. There ain't no "why," there ain't no "how." It's kind of like you have a beautiful little cat. And you decide you want to find out how it works. So you take it apart. Dissect it. You end up with a dead cat. Better to just enjoy. The moment or string of moments.
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
A New Beat to the Beat
Yes, so then it occurs to you, that what you did yesterday, isn't necessarily what you will do today. You can decide to continue to beat your head against the same wall, or try another wall. Or maybe pick a spot where there are no walls.
And just because that wall has always stood, it's not true that it will always stand. It can fall. It can disintegrate. You can watch it vanish right before your eyes. You may think that that is "magic" but really, sometimes a wall isn't really a wall. It just has the appearance of a wall. It may be a misperception. A misconception.
So you beat and you find a new beat to the beat...
And just because that wall has always stood, it's not true that it will always stand. It can fall. It can disintegrate. You can watch it vanish right before your eyes. You may think that that is "magic" but really, sometimes a wall isn't really a wall. It just has the appearance of a wall. It may be a misperception. A misconception.
So you beat and you find a new beat to the beat...
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
I Can Eat Cake!
I can eat cake. I can eat it for breakfast. And lunch. Or, actually, I guess, technically, brunch. I realized yesterday that I was the kind of person who could. I didn't know. I didn't think it was something I could, or would do. Not part of my normal eating routine. Not my self-image. I am a disciplined, smart, health-conscious eater. Have been for a long time. I am not a person who eats cake. All day. Early in the morning. In the middle of the day. An irresponsible kind of person who just eats cake.
And not just any old cake. A big gaudy, over-stuffed chocolate cake, layered with cream, with strawberries, with thick butter-cream frosting. Also studded with these little buttery, creamy and sugary doodads, colorful flowers, and little pretty things sprinkled on top.
I just ate it. All of it. Ate it up.
And there was no guilt. No. I was surprised. I didn't know. I didn't think I was that kind of person. And I was pleased. I was happy. I was actually giddy. "I can eat cake!" And for some reason, it seemed like an important thing to know. I could do it, if I wanted to do it. And I did it.
And not just any old cake. A big gaudy, over-stuffed chocolate cake, layered with cream, with strawberries, with thick butter-cream frosting. Also studded with these little buttery, creamy and sugary doodads, colorful flowers, and little pretty things sprinkled on top.
I just ate it. All of it. Ate it up.
And there was no guilt. No. I was surprised. I didn't know. I didn't think I was that kind of person. And I was pleased. I was happy. I was actually giddy. "I can eat cake!" And for some reason, it seemed like an important thing to know. I could do it, if I wanted to do it. And I did it.
Monday, May 13, 2013
Astrologically!
Person #1: "If you have an 'existential crisis' at the same time that I have an 'existential crisis,' well then, we can spin out together, kind of like two hula hoops, and then we can root to see who hits bottom first."
Person #2: "Astrologically, this is a difficult time for us. It looks like Uranus is clouding the issue."
Person #1: "Indeed!"
Person #2: "Astrologically, this is a difficult time for us. It looks like Uranus is clouding the issue."
Person #1: "Indeed!"
Sunday, May 12, 2013
It Felt Great!
whitewolfsonicprincess played a show at the Underground Wonder Bar last night. We were in the basement. I love that place. It reminds me of another dark basement where we used to do theater called Cafe Voltaire, now just a distant memory.
The Underground Wonder Bar is just an amazing place, upstairs, downstairs, three stages. Music and performance every night. Comedy, burlesque, theater, music. Every kind of music you can imagine. And the place is a family business. Lonnie Walker is the matriarch. She's a powerhouse singer, and just the nicest person. And her vibe is filtered down to everyone who works there.
Classy place. Cool people. And we were able to do two expansive sets last night. The band was in fine form and we really put on an intense show. Small crowd, just a handful of listeners, but they really listened, really tracked with us. It felt great!
The Underground Wonder Bar is just an amazing place, upstairs, downstairs, three stages. Music and performance every night. Comedy, burlesque, theater, music. Every kind of music you can imagine. And the place is a family business. Lonnie Walker is the matriarch. She's a powerhouse singer, and just the nicest person. And her vibe is filtered down to everyone who works there.
Classy place. Cool people. And we were able to do two expansive sets last night. The band was in fine form and we really put on an intense show. Small crowd, just a handful of listeners, but they really listened, really tracked with us. It felt great!
Saturday, May 11, 2013
We Get to Choose What Has Meaning...
This is how my life works. I wonder, does it work like this for you too? I focus on one thing, or get obsessed with some topic, or novel or person, or band, and then everywhere I look, everything I see gets reflected back through that lens.
Lately I've been reading David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest. And everywhere I turn I see Wallace, or I see events in the novel that are reflected in the world... here's Wallace's "Commencement Address" from 2005. Astonishing. Beautiful. Essential...
Lately I've been reading David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest. And everywhere I turn I see Wallace, or I see events in the novel that are reflected in the world... here's Wallace's "Commencement Address" from 2005. Astonishing. Beautiful. Essential...
Friday, May 10, 2013
Thursday, May 09, 2013
I woke up...
I woke up early today. Earlier than usual. I woke up with an idea. An idea for a "play." Maybe it's just a monologue. But I woke up with an idea and a character. A name. And that's how it starts. How it begins. How it's possible to happen.
So I fired up the computer, opened a page, and began to write. I wrote a title. I wrote a name. And then words started to tumble out. Don't exactly know where it's going. But I'm glad that words have been put on "paper." Virtual paper. I woke up with an idea!
So I fired up the computer, opened a page, and began to write. I wrote a title. I wrote a name. And then words started to tumble out. Don't exactly know where it's going. But I'm glad that words have been put on "paper." Virtual paper. I woke up with an idea!
Wednesday, May 08, 2013
Think It!
Sometimes you think, if you think it, it must exist. If you think "aliens" there must be aliens. If you think "time-travel" there must be time travel. If you think "god" there must be god. If you think it. It exists. I mean, this is just a way of thinking. There are things that you think that maybe don't exist, or maybe we just haven't discovered them yet. We often think "destiny." Destiny!
des·ti·ny
des·ti·ny
/ˈdestinē/
Noun
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Synonyms
Update: There are levels and types of destiny. There's biological destiny: this sperm meets this egg, this being is the result. Hair color, eye color, height, weight. Mutations that are in-built.
And this being born in a certain time and place will sleep, and talk, and dream. What does the being talk about and dream about? Is that part of the biological inheritance too? And how does the being occupy itself, what does it do, where does it go, what stories does it tell itself? Are there "spiritual" destinies too?
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Tuesday, May 07, 2013
Work and Joy!
With any of these creative projects a weird calculus sort of kicks in. You do the work. You enjoy doing the work. There's work and joy.
You take on new challenges, the work gets more intense, the work deepens. So it's incrementally harder to get to that joy level. Your perfectionism and professionalism dictates that the joy only comes when the work goes extremely well.
You shoot for the perfect performance, the perfect show. You shoot for transcendence every time. So anything short of perfect or amazing is sort of disappointing, unfulfilling. It's a real trap. It's a way to crush the joy.
And the work without the joy is just a job. Still, you can't will things to be amazing, and joyful; you can't just conjure it up, those things descend like the rain, or like sunshine. You must find the joy in the work and not the end result. You do the work and hope for the best.
You focus on doing the work. That is the joy. You can't forget. It's sort of a Zen thing. The Work is the Joy. The rest is a sideshow.
You take on new challenges, the work gets more intense, the work deepens. So it's incrementally harder to get to that joy level. Your perfectionism and professionalism dictates that the joy only comes when the work goes extremely well.
You shoot for the perfect performance, the perfect show. You shoot for transcendence every time. So anything short of perfect or amazing is sort of disappointing, unfulfilling. It's a real trap. It's a way to crush the joy.
And the work without the joy is just a job. Still, you can't will things to be amazing, and joyful; you can't just conjure it up, those things descend like the rain, or like sunshine. You must find the joy in the work and not the end result. You do the work and hope for the best.
You focus on doing the work. That is the joy. You can't forget. It's sort of a Zen thing. The Work is the Joy. The rest is a sideshow.
Monday, May 06, 2013
The "Hard Cases" Open Your Head!
If I have a religion, it's probably that big, undefinable, all-encompassing one called "ART." It's an amorphous, ephemeral thing. Very, very subjective, but I know it when I see it. But it's also a constantly evolving, living thing. And my favorite artists are the ones who like to test the limits of ART.
I love (for instance) those "hard cases" (see previous post) that make you open your head!
Here's Steven Soderburgh on the "inevitability of art..."
"It was on the wall of a cave in France 30,000 years ago, and it’s because we are a species that’s driven by narrative. Art is storytelling, and we need to tell stories to pass along ideas and information, and to try and make sense out of all this chaos. And sometimes when you get a really good artist and a compelling story, you can almost achieve that thing that’s impossible which is entering the consciousness of another human being – literally seeing the world the way they see it. Then, if you have a really good piece of art and a really good artist, you are altered in some way, and so the experience is transformative and in the minute you’re experiencing that piece of art, you’re not alone."
Yes, the experience of great art is transformative, entrancing, enlightening. That's why I love it! And build my life and altar around it!
I love (for instance) those "hard cases" (see previous post) that make you open your head!
Here's Steven Soderburgh on the "inevitability of art..."
"It was on the wall of a cave in France 30,000 years ago, and it’s because we are a species that’s driven by narrative. Art is storytelling, and we need to tell stories to pass along ideas and information, and to try and make sense out of all this chaos. And sometimes when you get a really good artist and a compelling story, you can almost achieve that thing that’s impossible which is entering the consciousness of another human being – literally seeing the world the way they see it. Then, if you have a really good piece of art and a really good artist, you are altered in some way, and so the experience is transformative and in the minute you’re experiencing that piece of art, you’re not alone."
Yes, the experience of great art is transformative, entrancing, enlightening. That's why I love it! And build my life and altar around it!
Sunday, May 05, 2013
A man lives by his system and dies by it too!
Let's dispense with the Derby quickly... My horse got lost in the crowd. A man lives by his system and dies by it too. Now onto other things...
I've been obsessed with two remarkable American artists lately. David Foster Wallace and Matthew Barney. Two very different men. Two very different visions. They create all-encompassing worlds. Two hard cases. They dare you to come along with them, but they make no concessions.
So unfashionable. So other-worldly. You really, really have to work to try to track with them. They are both amusing and inspiring. But prickly. They don't make your life easier. They demand a different kind of perception and intention.
One is all about words, an over-flowing of words, a hurricane of words. Words from all directions, all corners. Strange words. Foot-noted words. Technical words. Obscure words. Convoluted words. Baffling. Puzzling. So many words. Finally you just have to succumb. Trudge thru. Go with the flow. Noodle the words. Bully the words. Let them roll. Let them take you. One word at a time.
And jargon. Lots of jargon. Medical. Technical. Intellectual. It's endless. Funny. Dazzling. Overwhelming. Stunning. Boring. Beyond boring. Fascinating. Enlightening.
The other guy is all about images. Structural. Cellular. Architectural. Bold. Beautiful. Strange. Off-putting. Long meandering scenes. No words. Or very few words. Discordant. Baffling. Unexplainable. Sexual. Explodes all expectations. His movies work like no one else's movies. His movies are like sculptures.
Both artists have sort of hooked me. I have been seduced. Love their work. Hate their work. It doesn't matter. The work is amazing. Substantial. Beyond criticism. A man lives by his system and dies by it too!
Update: I'm reading Infinite Jest now. It's a major task. Just to track with it. It challenges you. Challenges your patience. Challenges your idea of what a novel is supposed to be. Challenges your assumptions about what's entertaining. What's stimulating. What's good.
And we just saw saw a couple of the Crewmaster movies again. We've done the whole cycle in the past. Challenges your patience. Put's you in a different world. Makes you wonder what is a movie. What is a good movie.
Both works change you. Change your perception of time. Challenge you. Confound you too. Entertaining. But not too!
Saturday, May 04, 2013
Lines of Battle - One Good Reason!
The Kentucky Derby is today...
I remember that guy who used "dope out" the Racing Form, who poured over past performances and made little marks on newsprint with a pen, highlighting key info. I hesitated at going to the newsstand and buying a Racing Form, but then I remembered that guy who wouldn't have hesitated, and I walked over and bought a Form in memory of that guy.
And then it was obvious: I buy the Racing Form, I study it, I make my picks, I must make my bets. The first step requires each of the following steps. A whole series dictated by that first step. You cannot make your picks and then not bet! Worse than a mortal sin!
So after intensive study, I traveled downtown to place my bets at the betting parlor. But it turns out all the betting parlors in the big city have vanished. One site is now a pizza place. Another is a Chick-fil-A. Hah! I am living in a past that no longer exists. It has been erased.
And my "system" is a relic from another time and place too. Weird. Who knew I was living in a time-warp? So I made a call and someone else is running my bet for me. And I've picked a long-shot. There are many good reasons why my pick should not win the Derby. And just one good reason why he will win.
I stake my hopes and my cash on that one good reason. Lines of Battle - morning line 30-1 shot! That's my pick. That guy I used to know, that guy I used to be, would be betting on him too.
I remember that guy who used "dope out" the Racing Form, who poured over past performances and made little marks on newsprint with a pen, highlighting key info. I hesitated at going to the newsstand and buying a Racing Form, but then I remembered that guy who wouldn't have hesitated, and I walked over and bought a Form in memory of that guy.
And then it was obvious: I buy the Racing Form, I study it, I make my picks, I must make my bets. The first step requires each of the following steps. A whole series dictated by that first step. You cannot make your picks and then not bet! Worse than a mortal sin!
So after intensive study, I traveled downtown to place my bets at the betting parlor. But it turns out all the betting parlors in the big city have vanished. One site is now a pizza place. Another is a Chick-fil-A. Hah! I am living in a past that no longer exists. It has been erased.
And my "system" is a relic from another time and place too. Weird. Who knew I was living in a time-warp? So I made a call and someone else is running my bet for me. And I've picked a long-shot. There are many good reasons why my pick should not win the Derby. And just one good reason why he will win.
I stake my hopes and my cash on that one good reason. Lines of Battle - morning line 30-1 shot! That's my pick. That guy I used to know, that guy I used to be, would be betting on him too.
Friday, May 03, 2013
Nice Game
Why do we remember what we remember when we remember? And why do we forget what we forget when we forget? Is everything recorded in our brains? Can everything be recalled, everything be erased?
I don't know.
I do know that yesterday I remembered playing this game when I was a young lad. I lived in a little suburban enclave, where lots of other kids my age lived too. We played this game called "smear the queer." I don't know why the game was called "smear the queer." I don't think it was a "sexual" slur. "Queer" was more like "the weird one."
The "queer" was the kid with the football. The football would be kicked to the queer, and then the rest of the gang (anywhere from 5 to 10 other boys) would try to tackle him. If you were the queer, your mission was to run, evade, or plow through the swarm of tacklers to get to the "end zone." If you were successful you scored a point, and then did it all over again.
So the queer was the kid with something no one else had, and everyone else did their best to tackle this kid and basically pound him into the dirt. You wanted to be the queer, but at the same time you were marked out to be crushed. You were different from everyone else when you held that football. And no one liked you. Everyone wanted to destroy you. Still, if you had that football, you could score, you could get to the end zone, you could jump for joy.
Or, of course, you could be swamped, crushed, pounded. Left a broken thing on the ground.
Nice game.
I don't know.
I do know that yesterday I remembered playing this game when I was a young lad. I lived in a little suburban enclave, where lots of other kids my age lived too. We played this game called "smear the queer." I don't know why the game was called "smear the queer." I don't think it was a "sexual" slur. "Queer" was more like "the weird one."
The "queer" was the kid with the football. The football would be kicked to the queer, and then the rest of the gang (anywhere from 5 to 10 other boys) would try to tackle him. If you were the queer, your mission was to run, evade, or plow through the swarm of tacklers to get to the "end zone." If you were successful you scored a point, and then did it all over again.
So the queer was the kid with something no one else had, and everyone else did their best to tackle this kid and basically pound him into the dirt. You wanted to be the queer, but at the same time you were marked out to be crushed. You were different from everyone else when you held that football. And no one liked you. Everyone wanted to destroy you. Still, if you had that football, you could score, you could get to the end zone, you could jump for joy.
Or, of course, you could be swamped, crushed, pounded. Left a broken thing on the ground.
Nice game.
Thursday, May 02, 2013
Genuine Guise of Innocence
I guess we don't have to pretend that we know what we are doing, I mean, sometimes we do pretend that we know what we are doing, because we don't want to appear stupid, or clueless about our lives and about LIFE, but really, the pretending about the knowing is probably not necessary, or is at least sometimes not necessary.
We can be more humble about our not knowing, and admit to ourselves and others that we don't really know what we are doing. We may appear stupid or clueless if we admit this, but if we really are stupid and clueless, then maybe by admitting it, it's a more genuine, heartfelt way to be. It's maybe a more innocent, naive way to be, but maybe admitting or experiencing this innocence, this naivete, is a good thing. I mean it might be a little embarrassing, but better to be embarrassed, than to pretend to be more knowing than we really are.
Maybe not pretending to be wise, is wise? This genuine guise of innocence, naivete, stupidity and cluelessness could really open us up to a more genuine way of life. Damn the embarrassment! Embrace the humbleness!
But of course, stupidity and cluelessness is no excuse. For anything! We will be held accountable for everything we do. Everything. That's just part of this grand enterprise; innocent, clueless, or not. Accountable. Responsible!
We can be more humble about our not knowing, and admit to ourselves and others that we don't really know what we are doing. We may appear stupid or clueless if we admit this, but if we really are stupid and clueless, then maybe by admitting it, it's a more genuine, heartfelt way to be. It's maybe a more innocent, naive way to be, but maybe admitting or experiencing this innocence, this naivete, is a good thing. I mean it might be a little embarrassing, but better to be embarrassed, than to pretend to be more knowing than we really are.
Maybe not pretending to be wise, is wise? This genuine guise of innocence, naivete, stupidity and cluelessness could really open us up to a more genuine way of life. Damn the embarrassment! Embrace the humbleness!
But of course, stupidity and cluelessness is no excuse. For anything! We will be held accountable for everything we do. Everything. That's just part of this grand enterprise; innocent, clueless, or not. Accountable. Responsible!
Wednesday, May 01, 2013
Dedicated to the Cause
"We are dedicated to our cause, and we like to do the work. Even when it's hard. Maybe especially when it's hard. That's what I like about us." - Sunny Jimmy