There are occasional stirrings among those my age, music fans of a certain generation of decade, who become nostalgic for the surface noise and commotion of their own record collection and, in indulging their yen for a commodity fatally beyond its expiration date, will wax, wane and syllogize until the music of the spheres play slow blues solos some now deservedly disputably fad was, actually, not so bad, not bad at all, in fact, pretty damn good and unfairly maligned. Beware these acolytes, lest someone try to convince you of that the true worth of progressive rock, that hyperventilated amalgam of trick pony riffs that made radio something you dreaded turning on. I don't buy it, for the most part. The fascination with progressive rock grew out of the long improvisations pioneered by the essentially blues-based bands like The Butterfield Blues Band, Jimi Hendrix Experience and Cream, as the going conceit of the time was that rock and roll had become something smarter like "rock" and could now rival jazz as a young musician's medium for instrumental chops. The transition to classical borrowings, occasional jazz motifs and jacked up time signatures and tick-tock chord changes made for its own kind of monotony. Jazz, whatever its form or origin, was premised on the idea that, as a form, it was in a state of constant transformation--the musicians we still listen to rarely played the signature tunes the same way twice. Progressive rock, generally proud and defensive about the form's gerrymandered fussiness--this was the best place to learn the distinctions between the words "complicated" and "complex"--became insulated ever so much faster than jazz did. A one idea concept, with rare exceptions --Zappa, King Crimson, Pink Floyd--progressive rock could only become fussier, crankier, more incestuous. It actually became something resembling "rock" not at all, in any sense. It was the arena of sterile perfection and was truly unlistenable to a young listener having no desire (or need) to stare at the sky and ponder stoned philosophies. Punk rock was the shock rock and roll needed; stupid, obnoxious, repetitive, angry, the rude style pretty much revealed what a conceptual crock of mung progressive rock turned into. It was time to flush things away and allow the progressive rock to become something actually useful, such as fertilizer.
Friday, September 28, 2012
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
You are what you think you're eating
A knife , fork and a cracked plate don’t
constitute a meal , though all three items are handy for show, as are empty
frames on the wall when there is any kind of company visiting , who demand our
attention, taxes, documents of your legal rights, you just say it’s the wall
you wanted to highlight, the frame is only a, well, a, well, uhhhh,a
framing device!to bring a viewer’s attention to the rub of the paint,
the embedded fingerprints, the light switch in the center. Likewise, it’s
knowledge we’re hungry for, isn’t it? Knife, fork, cracked plate are about the
idea of eating as others go without forks, knives, or cracked plates.
This is to insist that I have always believed in love and virtue and connecting words that give the typist permission to push the sentence further than the original idea needed,the original excuse desired as a pretense of topic, we need these words to join and twist and coil around the legs of the table and then to find their way through the living room and into the front yard , we need to let the sentence become the vine tangling upon itself, in love with it's embrace, sleepy and ready to elongate again should the batteries on the smoke alarms die and whistle their frantic warning that their voice is softer now, gone with the smoke.
Dead
ethics professors choke in non-intrusive urns and French deconstructionists
blow kisses from balconies and any perch they can secure, Appearances are
misleading, explanations are fictions worth listening to for the way the words
are warped and wrap around each other until it’s not reasonable descriptions of
a material world we are listening to, but rather melodies flitting about like
nervous birds trapped in a small cage, a messy page of tuneless songs, all this
for a description of my house that now seems to rest on top of a giant hill,
bracing clouds and tree tops, a form I’m filling out asking me to describe
myself and all the desires I would bring into the world if finances would
allow, I would allow everything is what gets written, and everything not
forbidden would be inscribed in the rhetoric of future tense, when software
anxiety rules the body electric.
Friday, September 14, 2012
David Foster Wallace's grand failure
David Foster Wallace was sporadically,brilliant, verbose,an unrestrained word machine that seemed program to jump every rabbit hole and tar pit on his way to vaguely addressed Idea. His books could sometimes be the case of talking a subject to death;one might say that he wrote an alcoholic drank, which was compulsively, without any regard tot he consequences. An alcoholics consequences are the stuff of bad soap operas and the diseased thinking real people justify their illiberal behavior with; broken homes, broken promises,lost jobs, lies and more lies about the lies one has already put on the record, isolation, pitiful and incomprehensible demoralization. Wallace's consequences were far less dramatic and, one says guardedly, less grandiose, but it's the results are dire all the same, which would be a sheer missing the point of writing at all and treat it as mere process with no real need to regard a reader . Wallace's digressions are legend and his attitude seemed to be that readers cold let him drive this metaphorical vehicle down any and all side streets, blind alleys and dirt roads and be there for the ride while he maintained a monologue of increasing irrelevance, or they could fuck themselves with their desire to be enthralled and remain at the equally metaphorical bus stop. He was depressed and stressed, having made it his writer's mission to contain the multitudes that swarm within him and without him; this was a quixotic task to notice everything about the universe he's chosen to parse, and in turn parse his own thinking about the characters he is giving a close inspection for. His was a virtuosity that couldn't end, as one item led to another item, a distracted description before a circuitous return to the scenario at hand , usually by way of another round of qualifications and self-doubt mongering about his chosen occupation of being a writer , the one who creates a document readers far decades from now will refer to garner something of the verve of the moment in which he lived.We realize , to,that DFW tried to contain these things in sentences, long sentences, many long, serpentine sentences that stretched , coiled, curled and eventually untied themselves by the time the author had exhausted, or more likely quit ,the tangent he was on. This was his problem in the longer books, the distractions, the digressions, Although I enjoyed large chunks of Infinite Jest ,, there was simply, plainly too much padding between the good parts; there have been especially intelligent discussion in many places of what traditions DFW falls in line with, and that his is a legacy that adds to the sprawling, decenter ed universe Thomas Pynchon has eviscerated so splendidly. But even Pynchon had some control and was not prone to introduce himself as the self-doubting author attempting to inject a trace of irony with bloated indecisiveness. Pynchon lectured at times, yes, gave us bounds of information about unexpected things and their history, but he trusted the scenes he created--his ruminations , his research, were the texture and color light in the crowded universes he chose to inspect. DFW , much of the time, was merely chattering all the while in his long novels , Infinite Jest and Broom of the System, and was, as often as not, tone deaf, not unlike one of those extended , unaccompanied Keith Jarrett piano impromptus where there is the inevitable and sad drift into artless noodling. DFW often made me think of the guy in back of you at a movie theater who kept talking during the movie; you had to deal with two soundtracks at the same time.
That, of course, might have been what he was attempting, something like a Robert Altman movie where the camera takes it all in and dwells on how inaction resonates among the furniture in is frame and where dialogues ,and city noise overlapped. It might be that Wallace's writing was an attempt to capture his own thought processes in action, as the notions occurred to him, in that proverbial stream of language and instinct where thinking about things are restless and fluid and nearly erotic in their intensity which can never quite be recorded in their abundance. Trying to get that on paper, in between book covers, obsessively , would be doomed to failure, with each book and short story judged by the author as inadequate to the mission. That would depress anyone, some much more severely than others.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
TEMPEST /Bob Dylan (Sony)
TEMPEST--Bob Dylan |
It's not fair to the particular artist, whether great or mediocre. For Dylan, though, the generally solid reviews that he receives for his stream of albums seems an irrational response from someone who hasn't demonstrated more than the capacity to be mysterious and inscrutable. Mystery and inscrutability are qualities that in themselves that do not make for something that will turn my head ahead and cause me to cogitate beyond reasonable length when the disc is done playing. I don't know what the fuss is all about other than it seems to be a recurring outbreak of Everything- Dylan -Does-is -Genius fever. Musically it is solid, well-produced, and the musicians have a disciplined grittiness that has more polish than the cluttered and slapdash quality of much of Dylan's recent work and yet avoids sounding slick and corporate. It is obvious that sometimes was spent over the soundboard adjusting the mix. The pity is that Dylan is far from his best form here; for all his striving to write with an idiomatic tone his bucolic phrase-making has nearly always seemed practiced, rehearsed too much in a mirror. What is obvious to me is that Dylan continues to traffic in cliches; he is, as Lester Bangs remarked, selling off what is left of his charisma with under-constructed songs and ideas.
Much of the lyrics for this album seem like a parody of an aging musician long past his brilliant work doubling down on bad version of himself; there is an art to sounding as though your lyrics are from a vernacular, but the magic happens when the listener, the witness, forgets the contrivances and believes, for a moment at least, that the voices are from an era and place forgotten . This is what Robbie Robertson did with the Band; lyrics giving elliptical tales a plain-speaking, direct address from within the narrative line, not from without. There is something genuinely conversational and intimate in the best of the Band's rustic workings, no large message or grotesque rumbles of the philosophical swell. Life is too short and interesting to try to make sense of it and the characters Robertson and his bandmates are rather too busy telling everyone what just happened, what happened before, what things were like before any catastrophe, cataclysmic event or historicist debacle made the tides rise and the price of gas to go up.
The reviews have been absurdly positive while the music is merely passable. The lyrics, though, are what's truly abysmal. Smart pop music critics, especially younger ones eager to reinforce the conceit that Dylan is untouchable, have tripped over themselves to praise "Tempest" when in point of fact what Dylan does with this disc is resort to the cliches, tired tropes, and convenient moralism that he proved in the sixties could be abandoned altogether. Once or twice, as in an effort like "Self Portrait", you could argue that the songwriter was being supremely ironic, daring his followers to find sage advice, worth and significance in the banality that album is marked by. Forty years worth of raiding the Prison House of Chestnut Schematics, though, indicates not irony but a bad habit. Some writers are brilliant in their old age, managing a new style to meet their tested experience; Dylan is only vague and pedestrian in his narratives, without a quotable line for the effort.
"They battened down the hatches
But the hatches wouldn't hold
They drowned upon the staircase
Of brass and polished gold. "
The fact that Dylan cannot seem to write anything that does not include hoary prophecies that are more smoke than thunder, nor stay away from convenient phrases that seem more author notes in a screenplay-in-progress, late Dylan is only another workman in the field, dutiful but not brilliant. Dylan wants to write parables of indefinite place and time, but his linguistic invention, his ability to mash up idioms from folk traditions, hip argot and Modernist poetry--TS Eliot, prime period Allan Ginsberg, Rimbaud--is gone; as with Norman Mailer's famously baroque prose style constructed in the 3rd person, I think his ear for that kind of writing has gone deaf. Unlike Mailer, Dylan did not create, for the most part, a compelling replacement. He is a shadow of what he was and stalwart fans pay him a fortune to be precisely that, a stick figure reminder of their youth, not an aging artist who has managed to remain interesting on the merits of his later work. Dylan, I think, is a class of artist who had an enormous, galvanizing, revolutionizing style for a period of his career, years in which he released an impressive series of albums, from Another Side of Bob Dylan up to Blood on the Tracks, that is one of those bodies of work that are untouchable works of genius . Fitting perfectly well within his interesting notion of The Anxiety of Influence, Dylan's songs and lyrics in that period so profoundly changed the nature of what popular songwriting can be that all songwriters, regardless of style, write in the shadow of that genius. Younger writers can write further into the direction they believe Dylan was headed, taking further risks, bigger chances, or they can go in the other extreme, writing away from the pull of Dylan's gravity, writing in a way no less risky and perplexing as those who become Dylan apostles. Dylan's case, within that of songwriting, is comparable to that of Shakespeare's, an influence so vast that no artist, even those who intensely dislike the work, can ignore the artist; lesser writers, "weaker" writers as Bloom would put, cannot help but be influenced by the profundity of the work that has gone before. Like it or not, it is a standard that compels you to make a stylistic choice. Genius, though, is fleeting, and Dylan's ability as such was that it came out of him in a flow that was, I believe, effortless,savant-like, requiring less craft than a brain that was firing on all cylinders and producing a language that seemed to compose itself. But genius leaves a good many of our great artists--it is a spirit, perhaps, that takes residence in a person's personality long enough to get the work done and then leaves, sometimes quickly, sometimes gradually.
Other things come into play as well, such as a change in why one engages in the kind of self-interrogation that writing essentially is; Mailer dropped his high style, my favorite style when he came across the Gary Gilmore story and wrote in simpler terms as his fiction become more nuanced and rich. This is was a plus. Allen Ginsberg became a Buddhist and fell in love with the notion of "first thought, best thought" and essentially transcribed his continuous notes to himself, unedited, unmediated by literary qualification, in the effort to present a truer, constantly evolving face to the public in his books of poetry. Much as I like the reasoning and dedication, AG's poetry became far, far less exciting, interesting, became far less good. For Dylan, after his motorcycle accident, he has taken up with simpler more vernacular language, and we see the good it offered he and the listener, with John Wesley Harding and Nashville Skyline. The language was simpler, and the sources from which Dylan took his inspiration, folk tales, old songs, country western bathos, navigated closely to the banal and hackneyed, but we must admit that Dylan had the skill, the instinct, to manage his language no less artfully than Hemingway would have done at his prime and kept matters enticingly elliptical at the heart of things: there are ways to create a sense of what you're getting at without too much artifice and pretension, useless . He was masterful in creating simpler lyrics that still drew you in and still kept you making intelligent guesses.
Like Hemingway, this virtue wouldn't last, in my view; Hemingway fell prey to depression and concerns of his virility and sought to write his way out of his depression, the result is a series of late-career books that lack the grace or conviction or the brilliant insinuation of his great work; he veered toward self-parody. Dylan's work, post Blood on the Track, became alarmingly prolix and parochial in ideas and a contrived rural diction that sounds completely false, the phoniest I've heard since the quaint southern tales of Erskine Caldwell.
I know that Dylan has always trafficked in clichés, but what he did previously with stale phrases was to subvert them, place them in unexpected juxtapositions, and cleverly invert their meanings to expose their shortcomings. He is not doing that these days--rather I think the good man just starts writing something without an inherent sense of where to go or when to stop or where to edit and seems to write in an attempt to maintain equilibrium. He seems to need to hear himself write; it is more the process than the result that matters. His use of clichés or banal phrases seems more stitchery than rehabilitating the language; they are means that he can connect his stanzas, do patchwork on an incomplete idea. Dylan wears his age as if it allows him to say what he wants because he has wrinkles you can hide your money in-- he stands apart, swaying about, the voice that is too busy documenting feats and folly: it fits neatly into the covert self-mythologizing Dylan has turned into his secondary art. His principle art, his music, and his lyrics are what Andy Warhol foretold decades ago--art is anything he can get away with. What I hear, though, is a slovenly , lazy, uninteresting filter of the creaky, eyebrow-raising cliches and obvious transitions ; there are no amazing associational leaps of fancy here, no "Desolation Row", no "Memphis Blues Again", nothing as truly brilliant as the succinct parables in "John Wesley Harding"; the man who gets the credit and the blame for expanding the pop lyricist vocabulary is now involved in convincing his audience that the contrived, the hackneyed, the severely corny and portentous are, in his hands, masterful reworkings and reinventions of old forms. I think it more apt to say that he makes me think of a bankrupt interior designer who is constantly rearranging the same old broken, tattered, torn furniture in a wan hope that few will notice how tacky the whole thing actually is.
Monday, September 10, 2012
The greatest album ever made. Zzzzzzzzz...
Blood And The Ballad: Bob Dylan’s Macabre New Album | The New Republic:
The hero worship of Dylan continues unabated . The poor man is more Living Legend than Artist, who sense of imagery these last few decades has been more a storehouse of tacky stage props than anything quotable, witty or head turning. A generation of critics remains too close to Dylan to give him the rigorous estimation they would an actual poet; John Ashbery and Frank O'Hara receive franker reviews. Even Billy Collins, beloved by millions , gets the occasional Bronx Cheer from reviewers who regard him as a perennial lightweight. Dylan is a songwriter, not a theologian, nor a moral philosopher. He was once a brilliant songwriter and a lyricist with originality and power. That moment is a long time ago. His writing in the last four decades don't come near the genius had once. There is something to be said about an artist's late work in that one can connect a number of themes that have morphed and changed due to age and gathered experience, but Dylan is , again, a songwriter, not a poet, not a novelist, not a playwright, and his writing has been reliably hackneyed and cornball for decades.
The hero worship of Dylan continues unabated . The poor man is more Living Legend than Artist, who sense of imagery these last few decades has been more a storehouse of tacky stage props than anything quotable, witty or head turning. A generation of critics remains too close to Dylan to give him the rigorous estimation they would an actual poet; John Ashbery and Frank O'Hara receive franker reviews. Even Billy Collins, beloved by millions , gets the occasional Bronx Cheer from reviewers who regard him as a perennial lightweight. Dylan is a songwriter, not a theologian, nor a moral philosopher. He was once a brilliant songwriter and a lyricist with originality and power. That moment is a long time ago. His writing in the last four decades don't come near the genius had once. There is something to be said about an artist's late work in that one can connect a number of themes that have morphed and changed due to age and gathered experience, but Dylan is , again, a songwriter, not a poet, not a novelist, not a playwright, and his writing has been reliably hackneyed and cornball for decades.
Styx were an abomination at best, a wind up toy designed to pop a spring and collapse on itself. I always considered them to be Grand Funk Railroad taken to the next level, which wasn't very far to go, a journey that graduates from a slow lumbering and becomes a club-footed stumble.
Kansas, though, had chops as instrumentalist and were able to deftly handle quick changes and scatterbrained time signatures with ease.
Although derivative of their English cousins through out their career, they could play the busy arrangements with the best of them; guitarist Kerry Livgren had a definite talent for this stuff.
Kansas, though, had awful lyrics, lots of them, but that was mitigated somewhat in the form of vocalist Steve Walsh, a cogent blend of Paul Rodgers and Mark Farner. His bluesy, wailing read of the band's wheat field mysticism was a welcome respite from the Brit habit of being nasal and neutered in their precise pronounciation of utter nonsense.
All told, though, not much of the progressive rock and prog rock inspired music of the era, the Seventies, has aged well into the 21st century. If this had been instrumental music, we might have had discussion of the technical aspects of the music; as is, though this genre's congenital habit of needing lyrics that are unwieldy in cadence and top heavy with the arrogant sophistry only the most isolated first year liberal arts major could manage drag this music to the bottom of the lake. The heaviness these bands sought is rather like a big chain with a profoundly unforgiving anchor .
Kansas, though, had chops as instrumentalist and were able to deftly handle quick changes and scatterbrained time signatures with ease.
Although derivative of their English cousins through out their career, they could play the busy arrangements with the best of them; guitarist Kerry Livgren had a definite talent for this stuff.
Kansas, though, had awful lyrics, lots of them, but that was mitigated somewhat in the form of vocalist Steve Walsh, a cogent blend of Paul Rodgers and Mark Farner. His bluesy, wailing read of the band's wheat field mysticism was a welcome respite from the Brit habit of being nasal and neutered in their precise pronounciation of utter nonsense.
All told, though, not much of the progressive rock and prog rock inspired music of the era, the Seventies, has aged well into the 21st century. If this had been instrumental music, we might have had discussion of the technical aspects of the music; as is, though this genre's congenital habit of needing lyrics that are unwieldy in cadence and top heavy with the arrogant sophistry only the most isolated first year liberal arts major could manage drag this music to the bottom of the lake. The heaviness these bands sought is rather like a big chain with a profoundly unforgiving anchor .
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Freddie Hubbard Oscar Peterson 01 All Blues - YouTube
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Freddie Hubbard Oscar Peterson 01 All Blues - YouTube:
I recently read on an online music forum a conversation regarding the use of speed in an improviser's playing and it seems that there is an element of the audience that is loud and absolutist in their opinion that the capacity to play fast is merely cold technique executed by soul-less show off egotist. There might be something to that idea--too many musicians learn to play with it only in mind to take solos like they were Rambo blow torching a sniper's perch--but these guys, virtuosos all, play fast and furious but most of all swing at all times.
They do not sound like they are going berserk; their phrases weave and cascade, and build a new section of their solos with quotes and paraphrase of what has gone before. This is the swinging, uplifting acceleration of musicians who happen to be interested in being musical.One can , and several thousand goosed up guitar goons insist upon pointing out that the expansive likes of a Malmsteen is able to play guitar consistently faster note flurries against stupidly unplayable time time signatures, making those remarks with the implication that Malmsteen's bloviated ersatz fretwork is superior to what Joe Pass could do.
Speed in itself, though, "does" nothing"; it is merely a result of concentration in how one practices their craft, it is a facility that pays dividends for the listener only when there is something of melodic and tonal interest involved in the mix. Indeed, the melody is the motivation for how amazing the soloing will be in a what we think of being the traditional jazz combo, bass, piano, drums, horn, guitar . Rock and roll guitarists of the virtuoso stripe are less musicians in the strictest sense than they are quick wristed imbeciles.
Take away the amplification and the effects and you wind up more often than not with another drop out who hasn't finished his studies on the instrument. And put any of these fellas against the likes of Freddie Hubbard or John Coltrane , with the emphasis being to discover which set of stylists, rock vs jazzbos, achieve the speed only God can hear, my guess, a safe one, is that FB and JC would leave the angry fretsterbators cringing in their cribs, humiliated, crying for their mothers.
Friday, August 31, 2012
Morning Eastwood
Video of Clint Eastwood's RNC speech.:
The saddest headline of the morning is what I just saw on
the front page of Slate.com for a news video;
"WATCH EASTWOOD TALK TO A CHAIR".
Sometimes you imagine an iconic film maker/actor getting out
of their comfort zone and attempting something edgy and avant gard , something
steeped in a High Modernist aesthetic.
Eastwood
might be further around the curve than I might have imagined.
Rather than do a Beckett play, he instead morphed into a one man Beckett
production, a self contained diorama of babbling alienation. This is the imagination of bad results, testimony to life replaying conversations on broken tape machines. What this had to do with what President Obama has done right or wrong is besides the point; what this reveals about politics is non existent. What this has to do with is staring too long at the intersection thinking that there is a face in the easy chair across the room that is listening to your views and inserting their own remarks,
Is this is a man walking backwards into genius?
Monday, August 27, 2012
Norman Mailer’s movies: Revisiting Maidstone, Wild 90, and Beyond the Law - Slate Magazine
Norman Mailer’s movies: Revisiting Maidstone, Wild 90, and Beyond the Law - Slate Magazine:
Norman Mailer's experimental narratives will remain intriguing curiousities , examples of what happens when a brilliant writer attempts to conquer another medium that he has no natural affinity with. Mailer could talk a good game, to be sure, and he demonstrated skill as a film critic--his essay on "Last Tango in Paris" is especially sharp and eloquant on the task of getting to an existential moment within a developing storyline--but his improvisational forays seemed stoned and foolish. "Tough Guys Don;t Dance", not a film I recommend looking for a satisfying murder mystery, does rise above the rest for having a budget and some professional polish. It is awkward, but it does have wierdness to it that Mailer might have developed, ala David Lynch.Lynch, though,has his own problems , with dead camera tonality descending , with continued viewing, from strangeness to mere tedium.
'
Norman Mailer's experimental narratives will remain intriguing curiousities , examples of what happens when a brilliant writer attempts to conquer another medium that he has no natural affinity with. Mailer could talk a good game, to be sure, and he demonstrated skill as a film critic--his essay on "Last Tango in Paris" is especially sharp and eloquant on the task of getting to an existential moment within a developing storyline--but his improvisational forays seemed stoned and foolish. "Tough Guys Don;t Dance", not a film I recommend looking for a satisfying murder mystery, does rise above the rest for having a budget and some professional polish. It is awkward, but it does have wierdness to it that Mailer might have developed, ala David Lynch.Lynch, though,has his own problems , with dead camera tonality descending , with continued viewing, from strangeness to mere tedium.
'
Friday, August 24, 2012
History of prog: The Nice, Emerson Lake & Palmer, and other bands of the 1970s. - Slate Magazine
History of prog: The Nice, Emerson Lake & Palmer, and other bands of the 1970s. - Slate Magazine:
This was a genre that had so much instrumental activity for
so little music that was genuinely pleasurable. The conceit had been that rock
had advanced to the degree that it was indeed an art form, concert music, in
both the instrumental and lyric sense. This yielded some nice and clever albums
and individual tunes that still endure, but in all the mass result was bloat,
pretentiousness, ersatz mysticism or bargain bin despair; it was not fun and it
was work to listen to. What is amazing is how much work many of us did trying
to convince ourselves that most of this material would last beyond our
lifetimes. It hasn't. Slate does a nice series detailing the history of the
rise and fall and the contents of the progressive rock we all used to love .
I
remember the conversations with Steve Esmedina and David Zielinski and George
Varga about this stuff; only Esmo defended progressive rock as a genre, on its
own terms. I always thought the style was hit or miss for the most part, with the
misses, the extended, busy and aimless constructions that occupied the air more
than made it sweeter, becoming the norm, rapidly. There were prog rock bands I
liked, those being most of King Crimson's career in all their line ups, Yes up
to the Fragile album, and smatterings of Jethro Tull, ELP, and so on. What is
missing from the story is anything about the American equivalent of British
progressive rock; not Kansas or other bands directly copying the Euro style,
but rather the likes of Zappa, Captain Beeheart, Steely Dan, Little Feat--the
list could go on, of course--but these personalities and bands had the usual
devices going for them, like tricky time signatures, off the wall lyrics,
impressive instrumental chops, longish and dense arrangements.
The key
distinction, though, was the American tradition of blues, jazz and rhythm and
blues came to merge very heavily into a mixture that included classical music
as a matter of course--what resulted, though, is something altogether different
and, I think, a damn sight weirder and less same-sounding than what the Brits were,
in time, manufacturing like so many widgets. Let us not forget our glory days
of rock/fusion : MILES DAVIS, WEATHER REPORT, TONY WILLIAMS LIFETIME,GARY
BURTON, MAHAVISHNU ORCHESTRA, RETURN TO FOREVER; love it or hate it, jazz
musicians took up rock dynamics and created a sound that was a fleet, dissonant
and complex response to the tinker toy music Europe sent to us. Sure enough,
the American version of progressive rock became another version of
slick commercialism , resembling the dissonance and explosive virtuosity of
the early days and evolving to ever more simple forms, resulting at last in that horrid genre called smooth
jazz.
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
'Justice League' #12: DC reveals Super Man's new Woman -- EXCLUSIVE | Shelf Life | EW.com
'Justice League' #12: DC reveals Super Man's new Woman -- EXCLUSIVE | Shelf Life | EW.com
This is a perfect development for the New 52 rebooting of the Superman universe--Lois Lane had been an imperiled paper doll for decades who was busy having her haplass presence rescued by Superman. She was an interesting character, used more as device to impede Superman's ongoing mission to fight for truth, justice and ...Now that she's free of Superman, DC writers can develop her character in ways they couldn't before. And since the new version of Superman emphasises his "otherness", his feeling of feeling apart from the human race he has sworn to protect, it is more realistic and dramatically compelling the he find attraction to some one likewise super-powered and sharing Superman;s alienation. It makes sense as well that he should have a partner who wouldn't be destroyed in the act of love making.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Ayn Rand on Johnny Carson: Watch the full Tonight Show interview. (VIDEO)
Ayn Rand on Johnny Carson: Watch the full Tonight Show interview. (VIDEO):
Ayn Rand is a one trick pony and
an effective marketer of snake oil. The key is that her alleged philosophy has
only one premise that things would be so much better had humanity not strayed
from the Path it was intended to be on. Whether it lies in the cruder readings
of Marx and Engels and the vulgar literalism that overtakes the Religious Right,
these are variations on the Fall from Grace trope. It is a simple paradigm,
simply presented, that presents a powerful and seductive reason for why things
are not perfect. It is a fantastically reductionist movement that, although
Rand protests that no one, not even the State, may initiate force against
another to compel him or her to act against their own judgment, Rand's dogma
isn't workable, even in the most botched and disastrous application, unless the
absolutist policies favorable to her ends find implementation in a manner that
brutishly and none so subtly exclude an opposing view.
The inevitable result of her
views and the views of her followers is to establish an authoritarian regime,
with rights and privileges restricted to those with money, land, industry at
their full disposal. Rand as much argued this in her writings. Now is the time
for all of us to imagine the sheer hell an America governed by Randroids would
be like. Bear in mind that I am talking about Rand's ideas and her followers
and not about the Libertarian Movement in general. Rand has spent a good amount
of her writings arguing who should have power and who should not, and
regardless of the finer points of her grating prose, it comes down to that
those with the business genius, which is to say downright ruthlessness, are the
only ones who have the natural right to shape the world in which they live.
Others are no consequence; it is implicit that others in the culture, the
majority of us, must be subservient to those who build corporate edifices to
their self-defined greatness. This comes across as authoritarian and calling it
something else or claiming that it isn’t so does not change the matter that
life for the rest of us, under Rand regime, would be Hobbesian nightmare, nasty
, brutish and short.
It's fitting. Rand was nasty, brutish and short.
Ayn Rand continues to infuriate the left, because she clearly identified the basic and crucial political issue of our age: capitalism versus socialism, or freedom versus statism. “
Ayn Rand famously presented herself as an atheist in her desire to be branded an intellectual, and yet the diagnosis she presents as to what the defining and most crucial issue facing America as a country and culture,, "free vs. statism", is a trope she borrowed from the Bible and it's fables of end times, of the war between Heaven and Hell being fought here on earth through the human agents for God and Satan. This Manichean view demonstrates the laziness of her thinking. Not that this habit of borrowing particulars from the narrative template Christian orthodox places upon us is limited to rigidly Hard Right demagogues; erstwhile atheist philosopher Karl Marx foresaw the end of history as process where, after achieving through violent revolution the "dictatorship of the proletariat", the State would wither away and the world and the people within in would be restored to a pre-Capitalist state of naturalness. Among both their sets of codified ideas are a great many notions taken from other sources, and the presentation of their ideas into comprehensible arguments entails rummaging through the same stock of rhetorical devices and sleights of hand. The upshot of all this, of course, is that it feeds beautifully to a population that desires an answer to the over arching question that consists of When Did Things Go Wrong?
It's fitting. Rand was nasty, brutish and short.
Ayn Rand continues to infuriate the left, because she clearly identified the basic and crucial political issue of our age: capitalism versus socialism, or freedom versus statism. “
Ayn Rand famously presented herself as an atheist in her desire to be branded an intellectual, and yet the diagnosis she presents as to what the defining and most crucial issue facing America as a country and culture,, "free vs. statism", is a trope she borrowed from the Bible and it's fables of end times, of the war between Heaven and Hell being fought here on earth through the human agents for God and Satan. This Manichean view demonstrates the laziness of her thinking. Not that this habit of borrowing particulars from the narrative template Christian orthodox places upon us is limited to rigidly Hard Right demagogues; erstwhile atheist philosopher Karl Marx foresaw the end of history as process where, after achieving through violent revolution the "dictatorship of the proletariat", the State would wither away and the world and the people within in would be restored to a pre-Capitalist state of naturalness. Among both their sets of codified ideas are a great many notions taken from other sources, and the presentation of their ideas into comprehensible arguments entails rummaging through the same stock of rhetorical devices and sleights of hand. The upshot of all this, of course, is that it feeds beautifully to a population that desires an answer to the over arching question that consists of When Did Things Go Wrong?
You can find an answer for ever
No one is arguing against property rights; rather one is arguing against a
belief system that insists to the exclusion of all other evidence that it is
morally wrong for property owners to be held accountable for what they do with
their property, or that there should be enforceable standards and limits on
what can be done with that property lest it seriously and dangerously conflict
with --gasp!--the greater good. When the hack architect Keating in The
Fountainhead breaks his promise to Roark and allows government bureaucrats to
alter the design he (Roark) ghost-designed for him, Roark feels betrayed and
personally violated by the forces he abhors and takes it upon himself, by
reason of him being a self-motivated and self-contained creator, to ignore the
Law and all shared sense of decency and avenge his hurt feelings by destroying
the finished destruction of the public housing project.
The shelter and
elevated standard of living it would have provided the poor and needful was of
no consequence--the solipsistic principles Roark lived by needed to be enforced
over all else. Roark's long and one-note speech at the end of The Fountainhead
is a fairly good outline of the Objectivist point of view, and with it Roark
defends his action. There was a disturbance in the balance of things, much as
it goes in classical tragedy, and only an act of severe violence, unmindful of
what death might occur as a result, could put the balance right again. Roark
here is conspicuously Rand's mouthpiece, a sock puppet peddling her peculiar
brand of inverted morality; the implication is clear, conspicuous, very plain
indeed: should the work of genius creators like Roark be interfered or changed,
the creator reserves the right to become to rise above the petty, slave morality
laws of common society and commit an act of TERRORISM to keep his point clear.
This is not merely a fictional spiel intended to tie up loose plot threads, it
is a serious if deluded argument meant to be taken seriously by the reader.
Roark is very much a fictional creation whose example we are meant to be
inspired by. ...more
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Books and their secrets
Thinking that books should have secrets like people do implies that you
think books are very much people in the first place; the further implication is
that books have their own private agendas to execute upon the world by way
their readership.
Books, if they had personalities and whims and manifest
duties independent of the men and women who wrote them, would have no duties
other than to be an enthralling, pleasurable reading adventure, the preferred
result for the reader being an experience that challenges and shakes their
assumptions, perhaps even depresses them a little, but which leaves them
resilient above all else.
The writer is not obliged to make his fictions cohere
with anyone's enforced standards of content and result; otherwise it would
cease to be fiction, that is art, and become instead a lie, that is propaganda.
The secrets books remain secrets until the pages are read. Quality control is
impossible, though, and not all secrets are created equal. Many secrets are
dull, tacky, tawdry, inane altogether. Not every sin is spectacular , not every indiscretion is evil, not every thought of mendacity is , in itself, worth of another world war, or even a disapproving slant of the head and crosseyed frown.
The more exciting secrets, the truly
enthralling ones, even in the context of a novel, can make you wonder if you're
any better off for knowing what indecent things a writer was purging in
character garb.
Thursday, August 9, 2012
Bleaky, batty and brilliant
The Dark Knight Rises has inspired a dedicated coterie of nay sayers who complain that the film is a lugubrious bore, muddled in plot and spectacularly pedestrian in superhuman feats; considering that the director is Christopher Nolan , an artist who chases bad ideas with the same meticulous ambition he pursues good ones, the charge might have credibility if one hadn't seen the film.
Chris Nolan's last film "Inception" was a superb
example of what this director does with an idea when he decides to worry the
notion and overwork it to the extent that it becomes a slow, waddling crawl of
a film bloated with intellectual pretensions that cease to be parts of an
intricate premise and more a case of a screenwriters who have fallen in love
with the sound of their own voice In other words, this auteur of bleak proves
himself capable of being hung with the many strands of his own ideas--so many loose
strings left untied. "Dark Knight Rises", though, benefits greatly
for having comic books as its source material, a form that demands a leaner,
straight forward narrative.
Not that TDKR is a simple tale--it's a murky terrain of moral
ambivalence, self doubt and ambivalent morality--but Nolan provides a masterful
tone to all of this, a noirish brooding contained in this film's dark corners,
and moves along the plot points at a relatively brisk pace, considering the
length of the film. It is a murky film, but it is an epic murk, a series of
catastrophes wherein in it appears that not just the characters fight for what
it is good and decent in this world, but also the zeitgeist, the spirit of the
times, struggling to free itself of many foul diseases that have invaded its
body politic. The Dark Knight Rises has a Gotham City that is a noble force
battling every bit of foulness a malevolent universe can toss at it. It is an
epic tale and to witness this is enthralling. Nolan, who can indeed be
pretentious and vague in his work, did well, very well this time out.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Making a living
Rock and roll is all about professionalism , which is to say that some one
of the alienated and consequently alienating species trying to make their way
in the world subsisting on the seeming authenticity of their anger, ire and
anxiety has to make sure that they take care of their talent, respect their
audiences expectations even as they try to make the curdled masses learn
something new, and to makes sure that what they are writing about /singing
about/yammering about is framed in choice riffs and frenzied backbeat. It is
always about professionalism; the MC5 used to have manager John Sinclair, story
goes, turn off the power in middle of one of their teen club gigs in Detroit to
make it seem that the Man was trying to shut down their revolutionary oomph.
The 5 would get the crowd into frenzy, making noise on the dark stage until the
crowd was in a sufficient ranting lather. At that point Sinclair would switch
the power back on and the band would continue, praising the crowd for sticking
it to the Pigs.
This was pure show business, not actual revolutionary fervor inspired by
acne scars and blue balls; I would dare say that it had its own bizarre integrity,
and was legitimate on terms we are too embarrassed to discuss. In a way, one
needs to admire bands like the Stones or Aerosmith for remembering what it was
that excited them when they were younger, and what kept their fan base loyal. All I
would say is that it's not a matter of rock and roll ceasing to be an authentic
trumpet of the troubled young soul once it became a brand; rather, rock and
roll has always been a brand once white producers, record company owners and
music publishers got a hold of it early on and geared a greatly tamed version
of it to a wide and profitable audience of white teenagers. In any event,
whether most of the music being made by Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis and others was a
weaker version of what was done originally by Howlin Wolf, Muddy Waters et al
is beside the point. It coalesced, all the same, into a style that perfectly
framed an attitude of restlessness among mostly middle class white teenagers
who were excited by the sheer exotica, daring and the sense of the verboten the
music radiated. It got named, it got classified, the conventions of its style
were defined, and over time, through both record company hype and the endless
stream of Consciousness that most white rock critics produced, rock and roll
became a brand. It was always a brand once it was removed from the black
communities and poor Southern white districts from which it originated. I have
no doubt that the artist's intention , in the intervening years, was to produce
a revolution in the conscious of their time with the music they wrote and
performed, but the decision to be a musician was a career choice at the most
rudimentary level, a means to make a living or, better yet , to get rich. It is
that rare to non-existent musician who prefers to remain true to whatever
vaporous sense of integrity and poor.
Even Chuck
Berry, in my opinion the most important singer-songwriter musician to work in
rock and roll--Berry, I believe , created the template with which all other
rock and rollers made their careers in music--has described his songwriting
style as geared for young white audiences. Berry was a man raised on the music
of Ellington and Louie Jardin, strictly old school stuff, and who considered
himself a contemporary of Muddy Waters, but he was also an An entrepreneur as
well as an artist. He was a working artist who rethought his brand and created
a new one; he created something wholly new, a combination of rhythm and blues,
country guitar phrasing and narratives that wittily, cleverly, indelibly spoke
to a collective experience that had not been previously served.
Critics and historians have been correct in
callings this music Revolutionary, in that it changed the course of music, but
it was also a Career changes. All this, though, does not make what the power of
Berry's music--or the music of Dylan, Beatles , Stones, MC5, Bruce or The High
Fiving White Guys --false , dishonest, sans value altogether. What I concern
myself with is how well the musicians are writing, playing, singing on their
albums, with whether they are inspired, being fair to middling', or seem out of
ideas, out of breath; it is a useless and vain activity to judge musicians, or
whole genres of music by how well they/it align themselves with a metaphysical
standard of genuine, real, vital art making. That standard is unknowable and
those putting themselves of pretending they know what it is are improvising at
best. This is not a coherent way to enjoy music. One is assuming that one does,
or at one time did, enjoy music. . What matters are the products--sorry,
even art pieces, visual, musical, dramatic, poetic, are "product" in
the strictest sense of the word--from the artists successful in what they set
out to do. The results are subjective, of course, but art is nothing else than
means to provoke a response, gentle or strongly and all grades in between, and
critics are useful in that they can make the discussion of artistic efforts
interesting. The only criticism that interests are responses from reviewers
that are more than consumer guides--criticism , on its own terms in within its
limits, can be as brilliant and enthralling as the art itself. And like the art
itself, it can also be dull, boring, stupid, and pedestrian. The quality of
critics varies; their function in relation to art, however, is valid. It is a
legitimate enterprise. Otherwise we'd be treating artists like they were
priests. God forbid.
Monday, August 6, 2012
Endorsement: Clint Eastwood makes Romney’s day | The Salt Lake Tribune
Endorsement: Clint Eastwood makes Romney’s day | The Salt Lake Tribune:
Eastwood is one of my favorite directors, and it's
frustrating when a hero endorses a candidate who espouses policies that
essentially embody a meanness of spirit. Eastwood is a well known Republican, of
course, but I had thought that he would have no truck with Romney, who has
turned into a sock puppet for Wall Street and the Tea Party. The irony of this
match up shouldn’t be lost on anyone; Eastwood, who has had a long career in
movies portraying characters of genuine integrity and honesty, has endorsed a
politician who has shifted,waffled, and misrepresented his political positions
during this campaign in a conspicuous effort to say anything in order to attain
power. In effect, Hollywood’s Last
Rugged Hero has taken up the cause of of a candidate who is a wrenching
combination of Thurston Howell 3rd and Walter Mitty. Republicans have always been about
rugged individualism, and it's not a surprise that he aligns himself,
philosophical, with the GOP's legacy bootstrap philosophy. But lately these
fellows have just been mean, creepy social Darwinists in general, heartless
bastards.
Eastwood never struck me a mean guy, but rather as a man with compassion for human
suffering. Suffering may be inevitable in our lifetimes, but there are things
we can do for each other to increase a sense of community, a sense of serving a
greater goal.It is a revelation that a man who has demonstrated real genius as
a film maker--Eastwood-- seems to be falling back more on Party loyalty rather
than supporting a candidate with real principles.
This makes the work of separating Eastwood's art from his
politics problematic; it does, of course, introduce the notion that his best
films have a political dimension, disguised under narrative diversions, that
are not quite the Universal Truth of Human Experience liberal fans like me
flock to when praising the director's films
Eastwood's
skill, honed over a long career, is that he has an instinct for a compelling
human story and that he is especially adept at creating a framework where his
direction is subtle, nearly invisible .
He is technically able , but not showy. A strong script and
a strong cast is what makes this man an amazing director. He may not be the
most nuanced political thinker, but he does appreciate the nuances of emotion
and human frailty in times of struggle. We will just have to take what we like
and disregard the rest for later reference, I suppose.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
GORE VIDAL
Gore Vidal will be missed because he was, perhaps, the last of the Great Public Intellectuals with the ability to discourse knowledgeably on an impressive variety of inter-related subjects. Let's say right here that Vidal isn't, of course, the last intellectual who will attempt to conquer all media and become on the few anointed by the Infotainment State to appear with bright elucidations on the variety of platforms available in a demonstration of Marcuseque tolerance that resists the codifications which allow corporate coffers to swell. There a number of others who can talk up a good contrarian view on a number of subjects, but none of them are as entertaining as Vidal had been, the cynic, the Wildean wit puncturing holes in the thin balloons of bullshit that his way. His presence on the talk shows throughout my childhood, admittedly, helped formed my progressive views and instructed me, more or less, to think harder on subjects, to be skeptical, to think critically, to be willing to change my mind based on new evidence; all that was good enough on the face of it, but that was essentially a side benefit of paying attention to what Vidal was, in fact, which was an entertainer, another distraction, a decent enough man to utter views half way critical of a racist/misogynist/ /homophobic status quo who would not, all the same, dissuade viewers from purchasing the sponsor's products. It was a racket and Vidal knew it. But his performances on the talk shows did inspire me to read his books, which makes me thankful that the talk shows of the time--Carson, Cavett, Griffin, Mike Douglas--booked serious American writers as guests , a class of introverts who spoke of great things and ideas while the camera was on them and which, in turn, pushed me to the bookstore, the library sale, the library stacks to get their books. We can run down the list of items he had a nuanced opinion on literature, politics, antiquity, American history, film, particular and peculiar aspects, niches and submerged terrains of popular culture and the currents that ran under it. He was the man to read whenever a new essay appeared or a new novel appeared on the new release table in a local bookstore. He was a lively, challenging read.
Still, there was something about Vidal that struck me as being a mile wide and an inch deep; there are points in both his essays and the many, many interviews he gave where he would cite the same facts, make the same sweeping declarations, offer the same crowd-pleasing diagnosis as to what exactly the matter with American at large happens to be and the same crowd soothing prognosis for the country, citizens and culture at large if his advice were heeded; Vidal would often sprinkle his views with scattered facts, but he rarely cited his sources, rarely delved into a matter and provided substantial, vetted analysis of many of things he spoke. As with many people I've met over the decades, Vidal seemed to be a brilliant writer who can make provocative and well-structured speculations to the origins of our lust for power and the cultural and institutional disguises we disguise our ambition with, but remaining, by and large, an intriguing conversationalist, the center of every cocktail party who offers things more quotable than useful as regards policy.
That being said, allow me to insist that I agreed with most of what Vidal noted and recommended for the country. Vidal was a novelist, most of all, especially brilliant and grossly underrated by critics who were condescending even when they were giving his books favorable reviews. And I think his intellectual legacy will be less the political writings for which he most noted for and more for the large body of literary criticism and book reviews he wrote during his lifetime. He was a first-rate literary intelligence, powerful, insightful, able to detect fakes, fads, and balderdash in the work of other novelists who were trying too hard to be unique. I am grateful to him for a long essay he wrote reappraising the career of novelist Dawn Powell, author of "The Locusts Have No King" and other novels; she is, as Vidal wrote, the best American comic novelist of the 20th century. His essay helped bring her books back into print. I wound up being doubly blessed, being a man who had the honor of reading both Vidal and Powell in the same lifetime.
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Whattaya know?
I was making one of my constant vain attempts to clean the apartment when I came across a dog-eared mass market of Danny Sugarman's Jim Morrison memoir No One Here Gets Out Alive. Sugarman passed away in January of 2005, and a little bit of a flash back was all I needed to drop the broom and delay the clean up. Sugarman had the fortune and infamy to have been hanging around with the Doors since he was a mid-teen, and spent a good part of his adult life cashing in on the fact. During the Seventies he was scheduled to do a college reading in San Diego, and the editor of a local music weekly I wrote for at the time gave my name to the events organizer to be Sugarman's "local poet" opening act.
I didn't care for Sugarman's writing, but there was money in the deal, so I went and did the deal, and found old Danny to be a very nice guy indeed. Not a shred of detectable ego . It was the most enjoyable fifty bucks I've ever earned. I have to say that the least enjoyable fifty bucks I ever earned was having to read No One Here Gets Out Alive for a review for a local underground paper. Even as a young man who hadn't yet outgrown his obsession with the late Morrison's confused poetics and drunk posturing.I thought Sugarman's book was too much of a love letter, a mash note he couldn't stop writing. That said, I will add that I remember Danny Sugarman being a super guy, friendly, supportive in my own writing. He bought a copy of a chap book I brought to the reading. Alas. The apartment, you guess rightly, is still cramped with stuff and dusty as ghost town plates.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Loose Fitting
(A slight expansion of a previous post.-TB)
_____________________________________
_____________________________________
I thought this small verse I wrote was a decent attempt at the loose-fitting
sonnet form, as practiced by Ted Berrigan and featured in Gerald Stern’s
engagingly gangly book American Sonnets. The
distinction between these efforts and the Elizabethan sonnets one parses in
college courses is that the “loose-fitting” form (my phrase) is an attempt to
bring the particularly American instinct to confess and promote one’s idealized
personality in free verse, ala Whitman and Charles Olson , with the limits a
more formal structure. The results satisfy nearly no one but those who
appreciate perversions of form, with the hope something new emerges. Sometimes
something does. A side comment, the
phrase “loose fitting” comes from the
last time I bought a near pair of jeans, forty bucks worth for one pair, a cut of denim termed as
such, looser than what you would
normally purchase I suppose. It maybe a euphemism for sizes intended for those recently widened
in the waist line and who tip the
scale more than they had. None of this, though, ads gravity y to the sonnet,
which is precisely what it is, nearly weightless, but nice all the same.
Sonnet 16
A sign of the cross and a sign on
the door or just sign
yourself out if it’s a weekend pass
you’re dealing with,
sign yourself up for a moment in the
sun when you
have your tax refund check in hand,
give us some cash for
the diversions that approach the
distraction level
of morons who get their exercise
reading the labels
on records as they go ‘round and
‘round on the
phonograph, signs of life in a
living room, your parents
house and sofa, I am hiding behind a
chair before the light
switch is flipped and a panic like
business plans that come
undone where you signed a dotted
line that ends up
being a perforations around your
wrists, like you see
on butcher’s charts, you know, under
the sign that reads
NO CHECKS, NO CREDIT, DON’T ASK.
He looked puzzled as
we shook hands as asked me what I meant by "flip side". In an instant
I realized that he was too young to remember long playing albums, vinyl, and
briefly explained that before CDs records had two sides, side A and side B, and
that the phrase meant the other side of the record. The long and short of his
wasn’t crucial to anything at hand, nor was it that interesting to anyone, but
it was informative that I was now old enough that some of the cultural
references I'd been using for decades were now potentially incomprehensible to
younger adults. Existentialism returns to toss another bowling ball down that long empty hall called a mind: life is incomprehensible outside the meaning you create for it, and the terms of that meaning , subtle though they maybe, are quickly made obsolete by perversions of old definitions, and changes in technology. "Flip Side" has no slang currency. It has precisely the same resonance as that of an old man on a bus trying to tell a college student about his glory days of seeing the MC5 and the Stooges in a Church basement on Detroit's 6 Mile Road. The student's eyes are off in a stare, his head plugged into his telephone, pizza joints, barber shops and tattoo parlors stream by the passenger windows. So we should remember this : wear the moments like it were a loose fitting garment, and bring a change of clothes.
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The Atlantic a month ago ran a pig-headed bit of snark-slamming prog rock as "The Whitest Music Ever, "a catchy bit of clickbait...