Leica M9, 21mm Summilux. Saint Chapelle, Paris, March 2012
Walking With Jesus: In Honor of Spiritualized’s “Sweet Heart Sweet Light”
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Leica M9, Summilux 21mm on April 16, 2012 by johnbuckley100On Spiritualized’s “Sweet Heart Sweet Light”
Posted in Music with tags "Sweet Heart Sweet Light", Jason Pierce, Lou Reed, Spiritualized, Velvet Underground on April 16, 2012 by johnbuckley100Tomorrow, after an impressive campaign to reintroduce Jason Pierce’s Spiritualized to an audience that may never have heard of Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space, the album Sweet Heart Sweet Light at last will be released. Thankfully, we were able to listen to the epic opener, “Hey Jane,” beginning in March, and NPR has been continuing its public service by allowing us to stream Sweet Heart Sweet Light in its entirety for the past week. Interviews and profiles of Pierce have flowed like altar wine. The album has been so well publicized it arrives devoid of mystery, but because it is Spiritualized, and because according to most rock’n’roll playbooks, Pierce should have been dead long ago — and also, to be sure, because the music is so good — we still have the transubstantiation of mere bits, bytes and musical notes into something miraculous and fine.
Calling an album Sweet Heart Sweet Light (Spiritualized seems allergic to commas in album titles) and leading off with a song called “Hey Jane” lets you know exactly in front of which God Jason Pierce genuflects. If they’d called the album White Light White Heat and the song “Sweet Jane,” would it have been any clearer? We wouldn’t ordinarily think of the Velvet Underground, and particularly Lou Reed, in spiritual terms. But then there are those lines in “Heroin,” which probably inspired Pierce all the way back in his Spaceman 3 days: “When I’m rushing on my run/And I feel just like Jesus’ son…” No matter how many times he invokes Jesus — and Pierce has walked with Jesus, at least in his lyrics, for some 20 years, and does so repeatedly on Sweet Heart Sweet Light — we don’t actually think of him in spiritual terms, no matter what his band is called.
We think of Pierce as a heroin surviver who has made transcendent music, inspired by the Velvets and Lou to a degree that makes Dean Wareham or Anton Newcombe seem like casual fans. Although we didn’t realize it at the time, we have long since concluded that Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space was the great album of the 1990s, even as it was overshadowed by other albums from the exceptional vintage year of 1997 (OK Computer, Strangers Almanac.) Longtime readers of Tulip Frenzy may find it puzzling that we think of Spiritualized the way we do, as we’ve been critical of anything that smacks, if you’ll pardon the expression, of heroin chic. But some years ago we clarified that we view Jason Pierce as nothing so much as an anti-heroin morality play. His greatest work was essentially all about heroin, not to glamorize it, though yeah, sure, it offers ecstasy and all that, but as much to deal honestly with its aftereffects. Space rock it may be called, but Pierce has always been exceptionally honest, not exploiting his having breakfast right off of a mirror so much as matter-of-factly offering it as a glimpse of his life. The consequences of heroin have predictably, and we have to say satisfyingly (to someone who despises heroin chic) been borne out over these past many years; the boilerplate about Pierce is all about his near-death experiences, the lingering damage — shot liver, double pneumonia — of a body ravaged by having lived too hard, which is a euphemism for saying he loved putting powder in his nose and his arm. We are sad this is the case, thrilled by the music, thrilled he’s still alive, admire him for his honesty. We are relieved, on some level, that he has paid a price, but one that — based on the evidence at hand: a new record, and a great one at that — has not been too dear. We know that the benefit of this ecstasy and agony, this yin and yang, has been simply incredible rock’n’roll music: dense, sui generis even as it has been dipped, like a celebrant in baptismal water, in the deep pools of the Velvet Underground.
Sweet Heart Sweet Light is variously thrilling, beautiful, a little sappy, uplifting. It is a glorious rock’n’roll album, exciting and pretty in turns. Pierce’s affinity for taking minimal numbers of chords and drenching them in maximalist orchestration — not just strings and horns, but wicked guitar feedback and blues harp, trilling piano and gospel choruses — is back, fifteen years after Ladies and Gentlemen. Spiritualized’s music is, at times, so over the top, and also so simple: R&B informed by the Brill Building’s lessons taught to young Lou Reed. “There She Goes Again” meets “Heroin.” We find spirituality in the ecstasy that comes from music, not music that comes from Ecstasy. For us, Spiritualized’s cup runneth over. We are so glad that Pierce has survived to deliver something this pleasing, both to his old audience and, potentially, given the amazing run of media coverage these last few weeks, to new ones.
Whether Pierce’s current recovery from liver failure, and the regimen that is keeping him from drink’n’drugs, is long lasting or not, we rejoice — yeah, that’s the word — at his clear-eyed current state. One day at a time. Easy does it. But easy as some of the new album may be on the ears — and it is; he has succeeded in creating a pop album — it gets to that same place, that thrilling dangerous place, that Lou Reed and the Velvets also brought us to. “Street Hassle” may hide within Pierce’s music like a Nina in an old Al Hirschfeld cartoon — it’s always there someplace, from Spaceman 3 to Spiritualized — and he pays it full reverence. On this one, to use Lou’s words, Pierce is “going for the kingdom if I can.” But it’s not at the end of a plunger, syringe and needle. Not high, on liver medicine not blurring drugs, Sweet Heart Sweet Light comes from something deeper, and more beautiful still — from Jason Pierce’s emmense creativity and the deep wellspring of talent within.
Waiting For Ty Segall’s Next Rocket From The Crypt
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 35mm Summilux Asph, Leica M9 on April 16, 2012 by johnbuckley100Waiting For Ty Segall To Roll Out Of The Garage
Posted in Music with tags Kelley Stoltz, Ty Segall, Ty Segall & White Fence on April 16, 2012 by johnbuckley100Do Ty Segall and Kelley Stoltz ever get together over beers and talk shop? You can kind of imagine the scene — the San Francisco fog coming in on little cat feet, Kelley fresh from his day job in a record store, en route to going home and, without benefit of bandmates, recording a perfect update of Ray Davies-style pop craft; Ty fresh from the studio where, without benefit of bandmates, he’s just recorded a perfect update of Ray Davies “I Can Only Give You Everything” punk rock… Imagine what would happen if ever they teamed up, with a proper rhythm section?
We are eagerly awaiting the release of Segall’s next album, this one a collaboration with another human being, Tim Presley, under the heading of Ty Segall & White Fence. Hair is due out on Drag City on the Queen’s birthday, April 23rd. We wonder if, forced to work with another musician instead of, Prince-like, on his own will force the young genius to add, you know, bridges and choruses to the incredible riffs he’s capable of churning out in songlets at 1:40 in average length. Segall is one hell of a rock’n’roll guitarist, singer, and (partial) songwriter, as he proved on last year’s gem, Goodbye Bread, as well as 2010’s Melted. The Kelley Stoltz reference is true to the point that these are San Francisco-based pop historians that can produce incredible records on their own, but it breaks down when you consider that Stoltz is a craftsman carefully working alone in his atelier and Segall is a tyro churning out crude, if exciting fare in his garage.
The fatal flaw in most solo records in which the artiste-as-utility-infielder plays all the positions tends to be the drumming, the lack of swing that comes from not having bandmates to get that first track laid. From Paul McCartney to Skip Spence to John Fogerty to Paul Westerberg, the underlying and unsatisfying weak spot has been the drumming. This is one of the remarkable things about what Kelley Stoltz has been able to do — as the sometime drummer in Sonny & The Sunsets, Kelley’s got the drumming covered. And Segall’s an adequate drummer, we guess. But one of the reasons why punk rock is so much fun is that musicians who have not mastered their instruments mask it by playing really fast. With Segall — who has more than mastered guitar — we still have to deal with Black Sabbath meters, when we’re yearning for something with a little more energy.
We’re counting off the days til April 23rd, as it sure will be nice to hear his work leavened by, you know, an additional human or two on bass’n’drums. Meantime, we’ll just marvel at his prodigious talent and output.
Tulip Hospice: After The Frenzy
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 35mm Summilux Asph, Leica M9 on April 15, 2012 by johnbuckley100Happy Easter From Tulip Frenzy
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 50mm Noctilux 0.95, Leica M9 on April 8, 2012 by johnbuckley100Tulip Frenzy’s Berlin Field Trip
Posted in Uncategorized with tags "Heroes" by David Bowie, "Memphis, 35mm Summilux Asph, Berlin, Egypt", Leica M9, Mekons, Summilux 50mm on April 7, 2012 by johnbuckley100Leica M9, 50mm Summilux
The shadow of the past is everywhere in the new Berlin. Right here, across the Spree from the reborn Reichstag, people died trying to swim to freedom. While remembrance, admirably, is to be found throughout the city, perhaps the most interesting thing about Berlin in the 21st Century is how much it takes its sad and awful 20th history in stride, how much it has moved on.
The entire gang from Tulip Frenzy World Headquarters has long wished to return to the city of “Heroes,” of Achtung Baby, of Iggy singing “Nightclubbing/We’re nightclubbing/We’re what’s happening.” We were here twice in the ’80s, passing through Checkpoint Charley from the vibrant West Berlin to the soot-stained, depressed East. We’ve dearly wanted to stage a field trip here ever since.
Berlin and rock’n’roll are connected in ways that virtually no other non-English speaking cities ever have been. For how marvelous it was that, the same year the Mekons released “Memphis, Egypt,” (“East Berlin/Can’t buy a thing/there’s nothing they can sell me/Walked through the wall/no pain at all/I’m born inside the belly of rock’n’roll”), that wall came down, and we could be heroes for more than one day.
What once was the center of the city, and then was locked away behind The Wall, is once again the center of the city. The Brandenburg Gate is open enough for half-marathoners to pass through where once The Wall stood, before the admonishment to tear it down was, if not heeded, then simply overtaken by events.
Leica M9, 50mm Summilux
We tried to remember if that 1987 speech by President Reagan was on the same trip when he visited, because Helmut Kohl asked him to, the SS burial ground in Bitburg, giving rise to one of the Ramones’ best and least appreciated songs, “Bonzo Goes To Bitburg.” This all was such a long time ago.
Different from when last we were here was the way the German government now directly addresses its past. This photograph of disposessed Jews, expelled from the German Volk, is embedded in concrete on the sidewalk outside the building in which Goring once held forth:
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
And in the Bebelplatz, where the books were burned, even in the shadow of one of the world’s great universities, there now is a thick pain of glass that allows light to emanate from an emptied library below. Look carefully. Click on the photograph to see the ghostly details.
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
At the Topography of Terrors, a modern museum that tells the story honestly about the horrors of Hitler’s machinery of murder, and on the very spot where Himmler and the other psychopathic gangsters planned their crimes, history is laid open. No punch is pulled. Whether or not Germans visit it could not be told; most of the conversations we overheard were in English. But it has been open for some years now… Though our sense was that at the stunning Memorial To The Murdered Jews Of Europe, the visitors were as much German school children as tourists.
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
But on a sunny day — we actually had one — it’s a gorgeous city, and it exists in living color, not the black and white of news reels. One walks around a city that has shrugged off most notions of division, and has punctuated what survived the war — and what survived the communists — with the post modernism and precise design sense of a rich and sophisticated city that weirdly has little in the way of contemporary airs. It’s somewhat stunning to learn that Angela Merkel lives in a modest town house just across the street from the Museum Island, protected by a single policeman. But in the context of what Berlin — and Germany — is now, it makes perfect sense.
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
At night, on the east side of the Brandenburg Gate, where once guards stood with machine guns lest anyone try bolting for the West, there now is freedom to demonstrate, and in behalf of causes — the environment — that only rich countries pay attention to.
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
The Germans now take transparency almost to the level of fetish, but can you blame them? After having been ruled by a criminal gang that brought destruction down on everyone, the most vulnerable in particular, until finally the rubble came down on the German people themselves — after 45 years of imprisonment behind a Curtain and 27 years behind a Wall — walking in the clear light of a normal country is an achievement, and one to admire.
Leica M9, 50mm Summilux
For more images of the new Berlin, go here.
Street Photography In Paris, And The Leica And Painterly Tradition
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 35mm Summilux Asph, Eric Kim Street Photography, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Leica M9, Paris street photography, Reid Reviews, Sean Reid, Shoot Tokyo, Yanick Delafoge on April 3, 2012 by johnbuckley100Leica M9, 35mm Summilux Asph (with floating element)
There is a wonderful photographer and camera equipment reviewer named Sean Reid who, through his Reid Reviews, occasionally writes essays on photography. One of the things his essays have made me realize is the relationship between street photography and painterly traditions that predate modern photography. Maybe it was because we were in Paris that the photo above made me think of Renoir (a painter of whom I’m not particularly fond, but who did capture people in the act of enjoying life.) When walking through the Luxembourg Gardens on a sunny Saturday afternoon, it’s hard not to think of the artists and photographers who have come before you.
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux Asph
It was the great Henri Cartier-Bresson, whose foundation we’d visited earlier that day, that made us think in terms of “the decisive moment.” Did we realize that the woman whose friend was taking her picture was actually looking at us take her picture that made us take this photo, at that moment?
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
There are these days a great number of fantastic street photographers, many of them Leica photographers, who publish websites about their activities — Eric Kim, for example, or Yannick Delafoge, or the more location-specific Shoot Tokyo blog, which is run by an expat street photographer who captures Tokyo’s otherworldliness wonderfully — and a constant theme is how important it is to “let the picture come to you.” I think that’s a little different approach to trying to find “le moment decisif,” but it’s clear that if you stay in a particular well-trafficked spot, the world will come your way.
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
There is a certain degree of discomfort, for someone who instinctively is polite, to capturing people who are strangers in the midst of their daily lives. This is especially true for photographers who use wide angle lenses and need to be close to their subjects.
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
In order to take an interesting and spontaneous shot, sometimes you have to get over the idea that you are essentially spying.
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
It’s all worth it, if you can capture people in the act of being human.
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
And every once in a while, you hit the jackpot — the decisive moment.
Leica M9, 35mm Summilux
For more images from The City Of Light, go here.





















