Archive for May, 2014

On How Following @UlyssesReader And @FinnegansReader Have Improved My Life

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , on May 4, 2014 by johnbuckley100

For the past several weeks, we have followed two feeds emanating from the same source in some mythic Norse lair that unspools, 140 characters at a time, both Ulysses and Finnegans Wake.  Every five minutes, Timo Koola, who goes by the Twitter handle @tkoola — and who either is in Helsinki or Paris, the information on his various feeds contradict — posts, or has posted by computerized elves, consecutive segments from Joyce’s work.  Like Finnegans Wake itself, the two texts are in a continuous loop, again at the beginning five minutes after Molly has uttered “yes I will Yes.,” five minutes after “a long the.”  And so we plunge back in, to “Stately, plump Buck Mulligan,” and “rivverrun past Eve and Adam’s,” and the cycle begins again.

On weekend mornings when we wake up and check our Twitter feed, we find that the lull in tweeting in the wee hours, as practiced by our usual crew, has allowed the stream from both books to wash together in consecutive counterpoint, and the quotes from both get our day off to a magical, musical beginning.  We might see this from Finnegans Wake:

https://twitter.com/finnegansreader/status/462958077244088321

Or this from Ulysses:

https://twitter.com/UlyssesReader/status/462921617069592576

But when you see such quotes together, it makes you realize, first, how much less of a leap it was for Joyce to go from Ulysses to Finnegans Wake than is commonly imagined, and second, how broken up into 140 character segments, atomized in random excerpts, both books are long poems from an imagination that sparkles today every bit as much as it did in 1922, or 1939, when the two books were published.

And then you come across a sequence in succession and it just blows your mind.

https://twitter.com/finnegansreader/status/462984000911708160

https://twitter.com/finnegansreader/status/462985763882561537

https://twitter.com/finnegansreader/status/462986518064537600

https://twitter.com/finnegansreader/status/462988278804021250

In the Ulysses feed, I can pretty much always guess where we are within a few tweets, but you can begin to pick up patterns that, out of context of reading the book, make you wonder how you could have spent so much time engrossed in the text and not have the least remembrance of a particular passage.

And I can’t, right now, find the tweet itself, but on Friday, at lunchtime, when I checked Twitter, the first 140 characters I read were the following quote from Ulysses, and I laughed so hard, my lunch was nearly propelled across the desk:

“the rustle of her slip in whose sinuous folds lurks the lion reek of all the male brutes that have possessed her.)”

Whether or not you have read the two books — and I admit to never having made it through Finnegans Wake — these two feeds are worth following. You will waste a lot of time reading, or re-reading, these two works of genius in a such a manner.  Ah, but you will gain some poetry in your life, some kismet and joy.  Go for it.

 

 

Tulips In Contrast

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , on May 1, 2014 by johnbuckley100

The usual gear: Leica, 50mm Noctilux, ND filter.

TulipFrenzy2014e

Pink Mountaintops’ “Get Back” Reveals More of Stephen McBean’s Multiple Personalities

Posted in Music with tags , , , , on May 1, 2014 by johnbuckley100

In the early years of Black Mountain and Pink Mountaintops, the meme developed that the latter band was an “alternative side” of Stephen McBean’s personality.  In retrospect, that’s a little hard to figure, or it is at least a little simplistic. Stephen McBean is such a protean figure that his constant alternatives to his last invocation could rapidly resemble a hall of mirrors.

And anyway, are the two bands, the two… aspects… of McBean’s songwriting, singing, and most excellent guitar playing, really so different? Let’s rewind to the beginning. Pink Mountaintops’ brilliant 2006 album Axis of Evol could easily be seen as coming from a similar sensibility as, say, Black Mountain circa its first record or the Druganaut E.P.  “Cold Criminals” sounded like it was the product of someone who’d spent a lot of time listening to Pere Ubu’s The Modern Dance, while “Bicycle Man” was steeped in the No Wave sound of New York circa ’78.  Are those different sides?  So far away from one another?  Not really.

To us, McBean has always been one of the great dabblers, an ambitious throwback who could in the span of two years record one of the best Velvet Underground-sounding songs — Pink Mountaintops’ “The Gayest of Sunbeams” — and one of our favorite invocations of Led Zeppelin — Black Mountain’s “The Hair Song.” The only people who split the difference between Zep and the Velvets while in the same rough phase of their careers are those who, as the lyrics to the great Black Mountain song “Voices” would have it, have come down with the same bug all of us at Tulip Frenzy are riddled with: “Rock’n’roll voices on the radio/I’ve been in love with you since I was five years old.” He loves it all: all those rock’n’roll voices: Lou’s, and Bowie’s, and Robert Plant’s, and often in harmony with a singer as great as Amber Weber, which brings us to such pairings as Exene and John Doe and Sonny and Cher.

While his shambling, hippy-era countenance might give off a hash and patchouli perfume, leading you to think of McBean as a slacker, and while the pace of releases since 2005’s eponymous Black Mountain album might not seem like he breaks a sweat, the sheer volume of not just good, but thoroughly excellent music McBean’s been responsible for over the last nine years is pretty remarkable.  If his interest was simply in being a rock star, he probably would have helped corral the Black Mountain Army to keep pushing through in support of Wilderness Heart, which caused a stir in 2010.  But instead the band put out some new songs on the Year Zero film soundtrack, toured a bit, and did not sustain the momentum.  It’s easily recaptured, they’ve built a good following.  But McBean’s not interested, it seems, in such straight forward careerism.

Enter Pink Mountaintops’ Get Back, in which with an imposing posse behind him — J. Mascis on guitar, Daniel Allaire from Brian Jonestown Massacre on drums, Rob Barbato of Darker My Love on bass, etc. — McBean invokes everything from Station to Station-era Bowie to “All Along The Watchtower.”  Ensconced in Los Angeles these days, McBean continues a Canadian-style assault on greatness: low-key, humorous, thoroughly competent.

We think “Ambulance City” may be the most infectious rocker out this year, which is saying something since John Dwyers’ Thee Oh Sees have already released an album.  “Through All The Worry” sounds like something you wish Social Distortion was still putting out.  “Wheels” is the “All Along The Watchtower” analogue, though obviously invoking the Hendrix version.  Whether that’s Mascis or McBean on lead, we don’t know, but it is like sonic dental floss, cleaning out the cavity between our ears. We can see the members of Crocodiles smiling when they hear “Sell Your Soul,” one of those songs that makes you remember how mid-70s Bowie was so influenced by early Springsteen, he borrowed Roy Bittan to play piano. “North Hollywood Microwaves” is Not Safe For Driving With Children Or Spouses, an hilarious novelty.  By the time we get to the closer, “The Last Dance,” we’ve returned to mid-’70s pre-punk, to the Station To Station sound with which the album began.  It’s an impressive, Rockist tour de force.

How Get Back ultimately fits into McBean’s canon is unknowable at this time.  What we know is that his multiple personalities are given full vent, and that a figure whose bands have called to mind Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin, the Velvet Underground and Pere Ubu, and Bowie, always Bowie, is as well-rounded an artist as there exists today.  Selfishly, we can’t wait to see the set of characters McBean inhabits on the next slab of Black Mountain.