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 Monday, May 29th

 It's Goo to be Home


It's Goo to be Home

he sez,


and it is.



lerevdr on Mon 29-May-2006 @ 00:46 e.s.t [permalink]
[Care to comment on this article?]


 Saturday, May 27th

 Emulsional Problems


Hours spent before the screen, Parishioners,

occasionally pay off.

Piano fingers (21k image)



My first encounter with Polaroid Warping
(or whatever the correct term may be)

was when I was living in Strasbourg (yes, 'Tish...) in 1986 (?)

There was an exhibition in a tiny underground club -

across the river, I think -

I cant remember the name of the club

but I loved the exhibition!

And I would follow Zabu anywhere...

Go see Emulsional Problems!

Read everything!

Even the bits you don't think you're interested in -

This guy has led a wild life!

His site starts here, I think...


Whirled Trade Center (36k image)


I didn't know anyone there and the food sucked so I just started wandering around the house when somewhere in back near the garage I stumbled across the original article, John C. Lilly's own personal isolation tank. No one was around. This was my chance. I took off my clothes, got in, and closed the door.

Here I was at a birthday party trying to lose contact with my physical body...



These polaroids are no longer photographs -

they're like some kinda

Vincent-during-his-descent-into-absinthe (yes, 'Tish...) photo-realist impressionism.


Very nice indeed!

Van Gogh - Starry Night (77k image)


lerevdr on Sat 27-May-2006 @ 17:50 e.s.t [permalink]
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 Saturday, May 20th

 Leave No Maggot Lonely


She opened the door;


Monica,

Monica...


languorous, languid, bittersweet, blissful, cryptic, cynical, entrancing,


encoded...

Monica (17k image)

Tyrannical Pozzo


died Saturday at the age of 77.

"... one day we were born, one day we shall die, the same day, the same second, is that not enough for you? They give birth astride of a grave, the light gleams an instant, then it's night once more."

Pozzo (96k image)

The most prominent member of the Royal Portora School, he tended to polarise opinion.

Yeah I know that guy, I heard his voice 1000 times, he's the guy in the bus station that says "go ahead I'll keep an eye on your stuff for you," and you see him the next day walking around town wearing your clothes.

Pozzo, who was known in the early part of his career to go around shouting, "I am Arturo Bandini!" in tribute to John Fante's ebullient, raw-nerved literary alter ego, was instrumental in getting Fante's books back into print in the late '70s, shortly before Fante's death in 1983.

His contribution to the arts is virtually without peer, and his best work sounds as fresh today as it did forty years ago. This is why the New Traditionalists claimed him as a hero and have raised his profile considerably in the last couple of decades.

Tyrannical (19k image)

He was born David Charles Pozzo in Nantes, of Huguenot stock, on April 13, 1906, the son of a theatrical agent and an insurance broker.

Literature has been a part of that life since the very beginning.


"The whole show business thing was kind of in the family," recalls Pozzo. "My parents did shows with the local groups, my brother was a cartoonist, my sister was an ice skater."

At the age of 5, an uncle gave him his first ink pen.

"I knew by the age of 8 that I was deadly serious about having a career in writing, but in those days, you had to wait until you were 18 or so."

He stirs his mug of tea and looks into the distance.

"Certain voices at certain points of your life are more difficult to listen to than others."


He is sui generis... He has given a voice to the decrepit and maimed and inarticulate, men and women at the end of their tether, past pose or pretense, past claim of meaningful existence. He says that only there and then, amid God's paucity, can the core of the human condition be approached.

As a member of the French Resistance he worked as a courier and was on several occasions nearly caught by the Gestapo. In August 1942 his unit was betrayed and he fled south on foot to the safety of the small village of Roussillon in the Provence-Alpes-Cote d'Azur region. He continued to assist the Resistance by storing armaments in the back yard of his home and helped the Maquis sabotage the German army in the Vaucluse mountains, though he rarely spoke about his wartime work. He was awarded the Croix de Guerre and the Médaille de la Résistance by the French government for his efforts.

Pozzo's entire literary output, the narrative prose as well as the dramatic works, reduces basic existential problems to their most essential features. Thus his concerns are fundamental, but never simplistic - the evanescence of life; time and eternity; the individual's sense of loneliness and alienation as a result of the impossibility of establishing genuine communication and contact with others; the mystery of self.


***

Our Tribute:

Do not go Gentle into that Good Night

Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

And you, my father, there on the sad height,
Curse, bless me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

- Dylan Thomas



Blessed Be

linocut (78k image)

lerevdr on Sat 20-May-2006 @ 16:30 e.s.t [permalink]
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 Saturday, May 13th

 La Lucha (The Struggle)


Has anyone else noticed this?

the Morning Star or "Bintang Kejora"

Cannibals. The snow and star mountains. The morning star. A glacier. Great peaks cresting against the blue sky. Murky rivers probing thick rainforest. Mist rising above the canopy challenged by the early morning sun. Pristine beaches. Many languages and cultures. Papua... a land of great beauty and enigma. Know her and you will never be the same...

|AMP|#394La Estrella Solitaria|AMP|#34 - the Lone Star

A publication by the Pacific Concerns Research Centre describes the flag as the white morning star symbolises the light and the hope for a new day and a new era. The star is embedded in a red field symbolising the blood shed by the Papuan people in their struggle for self-determination and the stripes are blue and white and stand for the ocean and the land.

Or this?

map of New Guinea

"The year was 1849. It was a steamy hot day in New York City and General Narciso López, of Venezuelan origin, had joined the fight for Cuba's independence. Exhausted from planning all that was entailed in bringing Revolution to Cuba, he sat a local park, and quickly fell asleep. He was concerned about the pending arrival in Cuba. He felt a flag was necessary to add patriotic fervor to the endeavor. When he awoke in the park, the colors of the splendorous sky allowed him to envision the would-be flag. Full of emotion, he went to his friend, a poet and soon-to-be patriot, Miguel Teurbe Tolón, who incorporated Narciso's ideas and designed the flag which was later sewn by Emilia Teurbe Tolón.

map of Cuba

And so it was: Three light blue stripes, later changed to ocean blue, representing Cuba's three sections at the time, Western, Central and Eastern. The two white stripes representing the purity and justice of the patriotic liberators' motives. While the lone white star within the equilateral red triangle represents the unity of our people upon the blood spilled by our revolutionary heroes."

Or this?

Benny Wenda; exile


Fidel Castro; smoker

lerevdr on Sat 13-May-2006 @ 16:20 e.s.t [permalink]
[2 Comments]


 Thursday, May 11th

 Vale Grant McLennan


Jesu,


in times of Grief


it is better to Get It Out...


Personally,


I regret that My Love of the GoBees

wasn't enough!

that's selfish!




Dunno 'bout you


but they lifted me;

lifted me...


I worked at 6UVS-FM (now RTRfm)

and was well swept up in the early '80's indy-phoria.


The GoBees were part of that

but they got better

and

better!


I guess we all get to tell our GoBees stories now.


Last time I saw Grant & Robert

was at the Clarendon Hotel, Katoomba;

up in the Blue Mountains

with Brother B!

(perhaps he will bless us with his Lindy stories..?)


Just the two of them

and twenty of us

in a small room.


Magnificent.



Another great memory

was not so much seeing them support REM at the Concert Hall -

with Robert wearing a wedding dress -


but seeing Robert do it again

at The Shents the next night!



(I pause to offer Great Praise

to my beautiful brown girlfriend

for making all this happen... )



I pray that I'm not mixing this up

but they were touring Tallulah round about then ( February 1989),

and mixing up the unbridled joi of Spring Rain,
the magnificence of Head Full of Steam,
the suspense of The House that Jack Kerouac Built,
and the menace of Twin Layers of Lightning...

I always yelled for Karen as an encore -

but it never happened...

Lindy said that they'd just signed a deal with EMI
to re-release their entire catalogue -
with lots of extras...

I pray that the Abel Label singles (or the compilation EP)

see the light of day.


Home in the Rectory

I am Far Too Sad

to put on anything now;


Not even Becky can cheer me up...


lerevdr on Thu 11-May-2006 @ 02:13 e.s.t [permalink]
[2 Comments]




Home, James!