Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Go Pope!

"'In today's consumer society, this time [of the year] is unfortunately subjected to a sort of commercial 'pollution' that is in danger of altering its true spirit, which is characterized by meditation, sobriety and by a joy that is not exterior but intimate,' the pope said in his traditional Sunday blessing.

"'Assembling the Nativity scene in the home can turn out to be a simple but effective way of presenting the faith to pass it on to one's children,' Benedict added.

"'The Nativity scene helps us contemplate the mystery of the love of God, which is revealed to us in the poverty and simplicity of the grotto in Bethlehem."
Got this from a blog I tend to look at, Left I on the News. They got it from FoxNews, of all places.

Maybe KZA is right. Maybe we should post when it occurs to us. It's worth a shot.

Sunday, December 04, 2005

Against Interpellation

Did anyone else notice that the Post-It on the far left of Susan Sontag's Mac gives the directions of how to open a new file in Microsoft Word? (Visible in the paper version but not online.) Now I know that I'm a computer snob and that I have no right to make fun of people who cannot find their way around the most basic computer interface elements (even commands that haven't changed in twenty years). I know it's not the same as having a Post-It that says "Start car here" on the ignition switch in your Toyota. And I know it's not like never glancing at the embossed plastic icon in the dishwasher that shows that flatware should point downward. But it is funny (to me) that the person that Times types routinely trot out as the smartest person of the 20th century--someone who managed to be a monument to learning and bookishness but not, yuck, an academic--would need notes (several, really) to remember how to use her computer.

[Now, before you accuse me disrespecting, let me tell you that we love Susan. What I've read of hers has usually been fascinating. Plus, she sat behind Anne and me when we watched Fiona Shaw perform Eliot's Waste Land. It was all very highbrow, and she'll be missed.]

Friday, December 02, 2005

Greybeard Paroli de Malnova Objekto

If you’re wondering what to get me for Christmas, I’ll save you a trip to my Amazon Wishlist and tell you that I’d like just about anything from here. You may know the Lester Bangs piece on the Godz or maybe, like me, a part of your mind requires Spiritual Unity and Heliocentric Worlds. But you may not know the extent of this remarkable experiment in good vibrations. Is there anything that more perfectly exemplifies the excitement and excesses of the 1960s than this? Scorsese’s Dylan feature, though rather interesting in its middle-aged way, doesn’t come close.

I was reminded of the improbable, beautiful story of ESP Records by this interview with ESP’s founder, Bernard Stollman, and I’ve already spent too much time looking at the artwork, reading the descriptions, and playing the samples. If nothing else, be sure to read the story of Lowell Davidson, composer of “Dunce” and just cool looking dude. And it’s not just jazz, either. Try some Pearls Before Swine if you’re more of a songs person.

Yesterday, I gave away my four-track to a student with big ideas about his songwriting future (if only small ideas about things like how to play a C chord). I can only hope that he’ll accomplish as much as Mij, the yodeling astrologer. All we can do is offer words of encouragement and hope that the tape is running when the inspiration comes.

From the interview:
I didn’t have the education or the preparation to take on being a patron in the arts. I didn’t have the money and wasn’t affluent. But I did go to my mother at just about that point [1964] and I said “I’ve found what I want to do (I was 34, so you can imagine I wasn’t a kid), I’ve found my calling. I’m going to document this whole community of desperate composers of improvisational music.” When I went to her I had an idea to start a record label, and I wanted my inheritance. She gave me $105,000 which in those days was a fortune—now, you multiply that by ten. So in eighteen months, I produced 45 records. I wasn’t what you’d describe as an aficionado of the music; it was something I could do that was meaningful. I could document it, and the choices I made—well, in most cases I didn’t know what they sounded like [before recording them]. Marion was playing with Burton Greene; I liked Marion’s music, and so by this process I captured a whole community.
To Valbert: my dyslexia continues, as I meant to say that the Withholders first podcast sounds like “EXP,” not “ESP.” Forgive me. Mi fari ne paroli Esperanto.