Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Antonio Porchia - The Master of Aphorisms


At first glance, it's quite strange that Hippocrates, the famous Greek physician of the 5th century BC, is somehow considered to be the father of the "aphorism". That is probably because, according to the Oxford dictionary, the term "aphorism" seems to have evolved from "a concise statement of a scientific principle, typically by a classical author" to "a pithy observation which contains a general truth" in the modern sense of the word. In all cultures, one can find great writers of this so called "wisdom literature". At its most basic form, an aphorism is just a witty statement sometimes evident and maybe just too easy to have some intrinsic value. At its best though, an aphorism transcends the narrow confines of a subjective "clever" observation, forcing the reader to reconsider the meaning of common words. Revealing a kind of universal truth and often venturing into almost haiku poetry. Welcome to the world of Antonio Porchia. 

Antonio Porchia was born in 1886 in the Calabria region of Italy but very young moved to Argentina settling in Buenos Aires from where he never departed until his death in 1968. He was a simple man who wrote one, and only one, small book called "Voces" in 1943.     

This book contained his "distilled" thoughts in the form of one or two sentence aphorisms. It is quite remarkable how this simple man who lived alone managed to tap such a source of infinite depth in form and substance.

Jorge Luis Borges had this to say of Porchia's aphorisms: "... In Porchia's aphorisms, the reader feels the immediate presence of man and his destiny. The aphorisms included in "Voces" lead much further than their written text. They are not an end but a beginning. They don't strive to create an impression. One can assume that the writer wrote them for himself, without knowing that that he was creating for others the image of a lonely man, who sees things with clarity and is conscious of the unique mystery of every moment."

Here are a few examples of Antonio Porchia's aphorisms as found translated in english from the highly recommended Argentinian site on Antonio and his work.

http://www.antonioporchia.com.ar/

Some of Antonio Porchia's aphorisms

"Man goes nowhere. Everything comes to man, like tomorrow."

"One lives in the hope of becoming a memory."

"You’ll find the distance that separates you from them, by joining them."

"What we pay for with our lives is never costly."

"Nothing ends without breaking, because everything is endless."

"I’ve come to be a step away from everything. And here I stay, away from everything, by a step."

"The less you think you are, the more you bear. And if you think you’re nothing, you bear everything."

"I’ve abandoned the beggarly need to live. I live without it."

"One who says the truth says hardly anything."

"The chains that bind us most are the chains we’ve broken."

"Sometimes what I want and what I don’t want make so many concessions
to each other that they end up looking alike."

"If we didn’t lose anything during life, we would lose life without anything."

"My voice tells me: “That’s how it all is.”
And the echo of my voice tells me: “That’s how you are.”

"Shadows: some hide, others reveal."

"Men and things rise, fall, move away, approach. Everything is a comedy of distances."

"Sometimes, at night, I turn on a light so as not to see."

"You have nothing and you would give me a world. I owe you a world."

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Το Θείο Τραγί του Γιάννη Σκαρίμπα




Το Θείο Τραγί του Γιάννη Σκαρίμπα γράφτηκε γύρω στα 1931 και δημοσιεύτηκε στις αρχές του 1933. Πρόκειται για ένα μοναδικό κείμενο στην ελληνική πεζογραφία στο βαθμό που εισάγει στοιχεία που έχουν τις καταβολές τους στους καταραμένους Γάλλους ποιητές του 19ου αιώνα (Baudelaire, Comte de Lautréamont, Arthur Rimbaud) προϊδεάζοντας θέματα και ιδέες που θα απασχολήσουν πολύ αργότερα την γενιά και το κίνημα των Beats της δεκαετίας του 50 και θα βρούν πρόσφορο έδαφος να δοκιμαστούν στην πράξη μέσω των επαναστάσεων και της φιλοσοφικής σκέψης της δεκαετίας του 60.

Η ανατρεπτική ιδέα του Σκαρίμπα να δημιουργήσει έναν αντι-ήρωα ο οποίος στρέφεται συνειδητά ενάντια σε κάθε αντίληψη καθωσπρεπισμού και ψεύτικης ηθικής, έναν στην κυριολεξία "ακοινώνητο" άνθρωπο που πληρώνει με το ίδιο νόμισμα κάθε έκφανση του σαθρού κοινωνικού, πολιτικού και θρησκευτικού συστήματος, φέρνει έντονα στο νου ποιήματα και κείμενα του Μπωντλαίρ, "Τα άσματα του Μαλντορόρ" του Λωτρεαμόν ή το "Μια Εποχή στην Κόλαση" του Ρεμπώ. Ίδια είναι η λύσσα, το φτύσιμο όλων των δήθεν αξιών, το κάψιμο όλων των αρχών αλλά και ίδιος ο ποιητικός οίστρος και η άγρια ομορφιά και εκρηκτικότητα του λόγου. Τίποτα δεν θα γίνει δεκτό επειδή, σώνει και καλά, έτσι πρέπει να είναι ή επειδή έτσι λένε οι κανόνες. Ούτε καν οι φυσικοί νόμοι. Ακόμη και ο ίδιος ο λόγος του Σκαρίμπα "έχει σηκώσει μπαϊράκι" και φαντάζει ευθύς, άφοβος και τελικά ποιητικά μοντέρνος μέσα στην αναρχία του, την επανάληψη και την συντακτική, γραμματική αλλά ακόμα και ορθογραφική του τρέλλα.     

Τέλος μέσα από το κείμενο του Σκαρίμπα βλέπουμε να βγαίνει πέρα από το άναρχο πνεύμα της επανάστασης και η αγωνία της φιλοσοφίας του Υπαρξισμού για την οποία θα μιλήσουν πολύ αργότερα, μεταξύ άλλων, ο Σαρτρ και ο Καμύ. 

Χαρακτηριστικό είναι αυτό το απόσπασμα από την αρχή του δευτέρου κεφαλαίου:

  "Είπαμε - ένας αέρας φυσούσε.
         Η δημοσιά φιδοσέρνονταν ατέλειωτη - σαν μιά αιωνιότη - στον κάμπο.  Εβούιζαν οι καλαμιές, κρύο έκανε.
   Κι αυτός προχωρούσε.
         Ήταν παραδομένος στο δρόμο του, σαν ο στραβός στο αιώνιο σκοτάδι· επήγαινε - όλο επήγαινε - σαν μια ψυχή μες' την ερημία του χρόνου.
          Τον είχαν παρεξηγήσει οι ανθρώποι· η σκόνη τον είχε κάμει ολόασπρο, κι ο δρόμος - αχ θεέ μου - ο δρόμος ποτέ δε θα τέλειωνε. Δεν αιστάνονταν τίποτε· μήτε χαρά μήτε λύπη· αδιάφορος ήτανε κ' ήσυχος· γιατί; μήπως δεν ήταν η δημιουργία στη θέση της; ή μην είχε αντίρηση για το νόμο της έλξης; η σιωπή τον εγνώριζε, οι νύχτες τον ξέραν· ήταν της ερημιάς αυτός άνθος...
          Ο κόσμος αργά· τα πράγματα αφημένα στο πάει τους· να δημιουργούνται οι ορίζοντες· να γεννιέται - μούλος - ο χρόνος· οι τόποι, οι εποχές να πηγαίνουνε. Ξέρετε πως περπατάνε στη γη; να, πηγαίνουν· τίποτ' άλλο· πηγαίνουν σε προυπαντάνε τα όρια σε ακολουθάν πίσω οι δρόμοι - οι πολιτείες - σου τραγουδάνε βαθιά. Έχει ένα χτύπο το χάος· έχει ένα σφυγμό το κενό· και μόνο οι ώρες σωπαίνουν· και μόνο οι καιροί δε μιλούν. Η αιωνιότη σε κοιτάζει και σκέφτεται· τα πλάτη, οι απόστασες, είναι αφιερωμένα στο βάδι σου· αναθυμιάζει μ' ευλάβεια κατ' απ' το βήμα σου η γη.
          Έτσι πάνε· όλο ίσα και ντρίτα· άκρη άκρη στις σιδεροτροχιές, στα ποτάμια, άκρη-άκρη στους ωραίους γιαλούς· πάντα δημοσιά κι όλο κάμπο· δεν ανεβοκατεβαίνουν τα βήματα, δεν πάνε οι στράτες λοξά· για σένα δεξά ή ζερβά να διαβαίνουν τα όρη, να εξελίσσονται οι θάλασσες· ή καμπύλη, ή ευθεία, αλλά τι καμπύλη; Όση η γη. Και τι ευθεία; Όσο ατέρμονη είναι η πλήξη των όρνιων και το τέρμα των τραίνων που κουβαλάν το χιονιά... κι ο κόσμος αργά· η αιωνιότη πιστώνει. Η φυγόκεντρη δύναμη ας είναι ένα παραμύθι των κύκλων, και μόνο μια ψείρα νάσαι συ στις στροφές· έτσι· έτσι όπως πάνε οι δρόμοι μονάχοι τους έτσι όπως στέκουν τα βράχια.
Και αυτός προχωρούσε..."

Αν ο Jack Kerouac είχε διαβάσει Σκαρίμπα δεν θα είχε νιώσει τη ανάγκη να γράψει το "On the road" το 1951. Το Θείο Τραγί τα είχε ήδη πει όλα, 30 χρόνια πριν και σε ελάχιστες σελίδες. Άλλη μια τρανή απόδειξη στο απόσπασμα που ακολουθεί:

"       ...Τ' απογιοματάκι μπάινει ένας ζήτουλας: μπρε του λέω, πώς σε λένε, πουθ' έρχεσαι; Από πάνω μου κάνει και μου δείχνει αόριστα· διακονεύω ψωμάκι· έτσι ο θεός να σχωράει τους θαμμένους σου, δεν κάνεις αφεντικό μ' ένα έλεος;
           Τον λυπήθηκα· αχ πως πόνεσε η καρδιά μου του δόλιου· σκέφτηκα πως η ίδια μοίρα μας ένωνε· περιπλάνώμενες είμαστε δύο ψιχούλες κ' οι δυό μας· σπουργιτάκια των δρόμων· να, δύο κακόμοιρα πλάσματα. Όλοι οι άνθρωποι είναι καταγραμμένοι και ήσυχοι· βρίσκονται καταχωρημένοι κανονικά στα βιβλία, με ημερομηνίες και ονόματα. Έχουνε κ' ένα αμετάβλητο νούμερο: τον αριθμό του μητρώου τους· είναι τα ονόματά τους μακρότατα: Γεώργιος Καντακουζηνός, του Ιωάννου και Ελένης· μην ψάχνει άδικα και τους βρίσκει η αιωνιότη, φτάνουν απ' το χωριό ως το έθνος· νομός, επαρχία, δήμος, κοινότης· κ' έπειτα οι θρησκείες και τ' άλλα· σίγουρα πράματα· η αλήθεια ολόσωμη με υπογραφή και σφραγίδα· όχι τρίχες.
            Ενώ εμείς όλο από πάνω ερχόμαστε και δείχνουμ' αόριστα. Είναι τα πιστοποιητικά μας αμφίβολα, είναι οι δρόμοι μας γρίφοι· άγραφη είναι η ληξιαρχική μας σελίδα· άγραφη αφού δεν μας γνώρισε και μήτε την ξέρουμε. Την αξιοπρέπεια, την τιμή, το δικαίωμα, τα κάνουμε μείς λαθρεμπόριο γιατ' είν' μονοπωλημένα τα είδη τους· κυκλοφορούν, χωρίς τα ένσημά τους στα χέρια μας τ'απαγορευμένα αυτά πράγματα. Τάχουν αυτοί κάμει φίρμα τους· τα βάζουν και στα εμπορικά τους ταμπέλα. Ο Θεός: είδος οικόσημο· η αρετή· σπεσιαλιτέ - ειδικότης... Μα ποιός θα μπόραε να ψήσει αντάμα τους κάστανα. Σας λέω μήτ' ο διάολος. Τουλάιστο ο διάολος - ο αγαθός αυτός άφρονας - σου ζητάει μοναχά τη ψυχή σου και σ' αφήνει όλα τ' άλλα: Το δικαίωμα της ζωής, την απόλαυση, τον έρωτα της γυνάικας, το γέλιο. Σε συντρέχει μάλιστα να τ' αποχτήσεις μπρε μάτια μ'. Πού τέτοιος φίλος! μια ψυχούλα στην έχω χαλάλι του. Ενώ αυτοί - άβυσσος αυτουνών το ιμάτιο - αυτοί όλα τα θέλουν, θέλουν και την ψυχή και το σώμα. Σου υπόσχονται και τη βασιλεία των ουρανών, μα σου χτυπάνε μαέστρικα τη βασιλεία της Γης μας. Ο «περί δικαίου των κώδικας» μόνο για δικαιοσύνη δεν γράφει. Ο «Οίκος» των προμηθεύει μόνο άστεγους, και η φιλανθρωπία τους «Αμαρτωλών Σωτηρίες»... Αμαρτιών μας τα πλήθη... εμείς... ενώ αυτοί συγγράφουν Βοκκάκιο στα γόνατα των κοριτσιών των δικών μας!... Σας λέω είν' εξαίσιοι!
             Να, για δαύτο γυρίζουμε. Είμαστε της ζωής μεις οι μούργοι κ' ειν' οι άλλοι κορόιδα μας. Εμείς καλλιεργούμε μόνο από έρωτα προς την ελευθερία το ψέμα - ένα ψέμα όλο ποίηση, μιάν αναποδιά όλην οίστρο - ενώ αυτοί είναι αυτόδουλοί του και σκλάβοι του. Η συμφωνία τους είναι ν'αλληλοκλέβουνται έντιμα, ενώ η κλεψιά είναι άτιμη. Είν' η συνθήκη τους τίμια με σήμα κατατεθέν της το ψέμα. Τί μπρίο! Τί μπρίο! Πώς διάολο συσχετίζουν τα άσχετα; Πώς μπρε μάτια μ' συμβιβάζουν τα άκρα; Είναι όλοι τους «τίμιοι» κατά τον πιό άτιμο τρόπο!... Πού να τους παραβγούμε εμείς οι κακόμοιροι σ' αυτή τους την ανομία τη νόμιμη, σ' αυτή την πεπειραμένη αρετή τους. Είναι πολύ πεζεβένηδες...
             Να, γι' αυτό γκιζιρνάμε. Μήτε σπείρουμε, μήτε θερίζουμε γιατί για μας είναι τα χούματα μπρούτζινα και νικέλινη η γη μας. Τα Έθνη, οι πολιτείες, οι τόποι, δεν έχουνε σύνορα στον δικό μας χάρτη και τα δυό ημισφαίρια μας πέφτουνε λίγα. Η ζωή μας δεν ανέχεται όρια. Εμείς ένα σύνορο ξέρουμε: της ζωής και του θανάτου· μια πατρίδα γνωρίζουμε: των σολών μας το πάτι. Είμαστε μείς οι πολίτες του άπειρου, κ' έχουμε κ' εμείς μια σφραγίδα: τον πάτο μας. Μ' αυτήν σφραγίζουμε μεις τα πιστοποιητικά της τιμής των..."   

Είναι πραγματικά δύσκολο με δύο μικρά αποσπάσματα και κάποια πεζά λόγια να μπορέσει κανείς να παρουσιάσει έστω και σχηματικά αυτές τις ηλεκτρισμένες εκατό σελίδες του Σκαρίμπα που αποτελούν το "Θείο Τραγί". Αφήστε στην άκρη λοιπόν ότι άλλο διαβάζετε και πιάστε στα χέρια σας αυτό το βιβλίο. Ή όπως θα έλεγε και αυτό το εξαίσιο τέρας, ο Γιάννης, ο πρωταγωνιστής της ιστορίας, ...μην αφήσετε άλλο να ξεχουρδίζετ' ο χρόνος. Γκιζιρνάτε ντεεε...

Το βιβλίο "Το Θείο Τραγί" του Γιάννη Σκαρίμπα κυκλοφορεί από τις εκδόσεις Νεφέλη

Monday, March 25, 2013

"...You can clap now" - Vic Chesnutt performing "Everything I say"


Some concerts can be life changing experiences. The venue is right, the artist and the audience straight away create a bond, the music flows and you feel you are about to witness something magical, something unique. It doesn't happen so often, to get all the parameters right, but when it does you feel it. From the first seconds.   

I am not going to say a lot about the late Vic Chesnutt. Paralysed at the age of 18 he discovered that he could still play some simple guitar in the wheelchair to accompany his beautifully written songs. He released 17 albums during his short career and even though he was not so well known to the wider public, he influenced musicians from around the world who mention him as their prime source of creative inspiration. Michael Stipe of R.E.M. produced his first two albums but Vic Chesnutt was never meant for mainstream success.  
        
Filmed for the music series "the neighbors dog", this concert took place in the living room of a Canadian house. There is no stage, no extravagant light show and no distance separating the audience from Vic and his musician friends who included members from Godspeed You Black Emperor and Thee Silver Mt. Zion. There is nowhere to hide in a setting like this. It's raw. Bryan Carroll (from All Music Guide) described Vic Chesnutt's music as a "skewed, refracted version of Americana that is haunting, funny, poignant, and occasionally mystical, usually all at once". The song "Everything I say" as performed in this crisp and beautifully filmed extract is a perfect confirmation of that statement. Chesnutt cracks a joke at the beginning and then starts playing as if there was no tomorrow. An electrifying performance where everything is balancing on the turn of each note. From a silent strum of the guitar to the distorted "wall of sound" attack, there is such a release of musical energy that the feeling you get is one of almost mystical exhilaration. 

In classical music concerts, a knowledgeable audience will wait for the final note to become inaudible and then still refrain from clapping and cheering as the last feeble vibrations of the musical wave are absorbed in silence. The same reverence can be witnessed in the audience's reaction at the end of this song. There is a long pause and Vic releases the tension with a simple "you can clap now". 

This show would be one of Vic Chesnutt's last performances caught on film.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

"End" - A poem by Jorie Graham


As soon as I bought Jorie Graham's new poetry collection entitled "PLACE", I leafed through the book looking for a quick entry point. A poem that would stand out from the rest, a quick gratification reference, a turning of a phrase that would drag me in, chain my eye to the page.

From one poem to the other I drifted, looking for familiarity in presentation, looking for hooks in the titles, the phrasing, the opening lines. I soon realised that I would have to dig deeper to unearth the treasure chest. I found myself skipping pages, unable to penetrate the strange form, syntax and ideas contained in the poems. No less than five or six times did I put the book down and returned, only to be denied access once again. Then, one fine morning, the "sound and vision" of the poem "End" progressively revealed itself  and there I was balancing the shifting emphasis from fragment to fragment and back. It all came together and the last words of the poem, I feel, really leave an indelible mark on the reader. What can that be other than the sign of great poetry in the making?  

In a very interesting interview by Thomas Gardner for the magazine "the Paris review", Jorie Graham is asked if she feels she is asking too much from the reader... This is what she says:

"...I do worry considerably about a reader’s patience—how much mental or emotional space they have in their life in this crushingly full world to give to the reading of a poem. Many of today’s readers prefer fast poems with stated conclusions, partly because they can fit them into their day. Who can blame them? They have precious little time. They want the Cliff Notes to the overwhelmingly huge novel. Of course, it is poetry’s job to try to provide the very opposite—to recomplicate the oversimplified thing. This doesn’t require going on at length—lord knows some of the more complex acts of human awareness occur in Basho. At any rate, it’s not hard to see where the shortened attention span has gotten us, the desire for speed, for the quick rush or take or fix . . .

INTERVIEWER

Some of that is the impact of technology.

GRAHAM

Yes, don’t you think? For example, when you have a split tv screen giving you main news (images), secondary news in text (often war facts), weather, stock reports, and even an “update” in the corner, on sports, how is a person—let alone one in a democracy and therefore responsible for clear-headed choice—supposed to feel any of the information she’s gathering? One is reduced to simply scanning the information for its factual content. The emotive content, unless reported to one or rhetorically painted onto it, is gone from the experience. It seems almost in the way. And yet it’s in the overtones of the facts, in the emotive overtones, that much of the real information lies. None of this can be separated out from contemporary poetics. The “multitasking” asked of us by the CNN screen is precisely geared to dissociating our sensibilities. It forces us to “not feel” in the very act of “collecting information.” But what value does information unstained by emotive content have, except a fundamental genius for manipulating dissociated human souls? Why, you can frighten them to the point of inhumanity. You can get them to close their eyes and let you commit murder in their name..."

  End


(November 21, 2010)

End of autumn. Deep fog. There are chains in it, and sounds of

                                                   hinges. No that was

                                                   birds. A bird and a

                                                   gate. There are

swingings of the gate that sound like stringed

                                                   instruments from

                                                   some other

                                                   culture. Also a

hammering which is held

                                                   in the fog

                                                   and held. Or it is continuing to

                                                   hammer. I hear the blows.

Each is distant so it seems it should not repeat. It repeats. What is being hammered

                                                   in. Fog all over the

                                                   field. The sounds of

                                                   boots

on soil in groups those

                                                   thuds but then it is

                                                   cattle I

                                                   think. The sound of the hinge the swinging chain it won’t

go away. But it is just the farmer at work. He must be putting out

                                                   feed. Fog. Play at

                                                   freedom now it says, look, all is
                            
                                                   blank. Come to the

                                                   front, it is

                                                   your stage it

                                                   says, the sound of the clinking of links of

chain, I think it is someone making the chain – that is the hammering – the thuds – making

their own chain. But no, it is the gate and the herd is let in again, then

                                                   out. I can hear

the mouths eating, dozens maybe hundreds, and the breathing in and out as they

                                                   chew. And the

                                                   chain, for now I am alive I think into the hammering

thudding clinking swinging of metal hinge – of hinge – and also think maybe this is

winter now – first day of. Fog and a not knowing of. Of what. What is inner

                                                   experience I think being

                                                   shut out. I look. A gate swings again and a rustling

                                                   nearby. All is

nearby and invisible. The clinking a chinking of someone making nails. The sounds of a crowd

meaning to be silent, all their breathing. Having been told not to move and to be

                                                   silent. Then having been told to

                                                   move and be

                                                   silent. The crowd is in there. All the breaths they are trying

                                                   to hold in, make

inaudible. And scraping as of metal on metal, and dragging as of a heavy thing. But it is a field

out there. My neighbour has his herd on it. When I walk away from the

                                                   window it’s a violin I

                                                   hear over the

                                                   chewing out of tune torn string but once it made

                                                   music it might still make

                                                   music if I become a new way of

                                                   listening, in which

                                                   above all,

                                                   nothing, I know nothing, now there are moans

out there such as a man accused and tossed away by his fellow beings, an aloneless, and

                                                   listen, it is blank but in it is an

appeal, a ruined one, reduced, listen: in

                                                   there this

                                                   animal

                                                   dying slowly

                                                   in eternity its

                                                   trap.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

The Alchemy of Light by dandyPunk - A Projection mapping live project



Imagine the possibilities for artistic expression if one could harness the light, project it, make a mould out of it, cut it up, split it, use it to wrap up objects, and intervene in the shadow play. The artist that goes by the name "a dandyPunk" has done just that. In a short video clip which includes some of the highlights of a live project mapping performance, dandyPunk creates a modern work of art mixing different media and techniques to great effect. Being an acrobat and having participated with the Cirque du Soleil troupe gives dandyPunk the edge especially in the way he handles the timing of the performance. But in the end it's all about imagination and creativity and these he seems to have in abundance.      


Take a walk on the wild side by visiting the site of an imagineer in exile...
The site of dandyPunk

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

In the Time Machine with Bryan Ferry


"...That is the germ of my great discovery. But you are wrong to say that we cannot move about in Time. For instance, if I am recalling an incident very vividly I go back to the instant of its occurrence: I become absent-minded, as you say. I jump back for a moment. Of course we have no means of staying back for any length of Time, any more than a savage or an animal has of staying six feet above the ground. But a civilized man is better off than the savage in this respect. He can go up against gravitation in a balloon, and why should he not hope that ultimately he may be able to stop or accelerate his drift along the Time-Dimension, or even turn about and travel the other way?" Thus spoke the Time Traveller in an extract from the famous H. G. Wells novella "The Time Machine" published in 1895. 

Flash forward, sometime in late spring 2012, early evening.

Mr Ferry was seen entering a telephone booth in East London smartly dressed in a 1920s style short tuxedo. He was carrying with him a black leather briefcase which contained an ebony comb, a bow tie and an extra set of gold cuff links. In a secret compartment, very few people knew that Mr Ferry was also carrying a brown envelope containing a selection of outstanding songs spanning the period from his Roxy Music days to his present solo carreer.

Flash back, early autumn 1927, late evening.
  
A smartly dressed gentleman enters the Cotton Club in Harlem, New York City and introduces himself as Mr Ferry from old Albion. After the end of the show he gets to meet the musicians back stage and is last seen having a drink with Duke Ellington by the piano.   

Flash forward, late summer 1928, midday.

Mr Ferry is seen exiting the 44th Street Studio in New York carrying a heavy box with a Victor Recordings label on the cover. He steadily walks towards a particularly quiet and shady back-street and enters a telephone booth.

Flash forward, November 2012.

The album "The Jazz Age" by the Bryan Ferry Orchestra is released.

Flash back, autumn 1927, late evening.

- "Them cats in the band, like your songs Mr Ferry even if I must admit they are kind of strange compositions"
- "How do you, feel about them Mr Ellington?" 
- "Let's say that I can see real potential in quite a few of them. I just need a little more time to work them out. You see, we can arrange them in different styles. We don't have to be all Louis, King Oliver and Orleans to make a hit these days. I would like to give some of the songs a more sophisticated, velvety feeling that will make them shine and I can guarantee the audience will love them."
- " But Mr Ellington, I told you, I don't intend to release these songs once they are recorded. Not at this particular time at least. I would just like to have them recorded and keep them for my private pleasure."
- " That's a pity Mr Ferry but, then again, you are the one who is putting up the money for all this."
- " I certainly appreciate your discretion on the whole matter Mr Ellington and I am glad you don't mind if I give fictitious names to the musicians in the band."
- " Mr Ferry, these are all your songs and as far as I am concerned, our meeting never took place. See you at Victor."

So there you have it. When you play this record, please spare a thought for all the trouble that Mr Ferry has gone through to have this music recorded. One can only imagine what the audience of the 1920s whould have thought of these songs if they were released at that time. I sincerely think we should convince Mr Ferry to make a few gramophone records out of "The Jazz Age" and get in the telephone booth once again.

Listen to:

Bryan Ferry - Reason or Rhyme (2010)

The Bryan Ferry Orchestra - Reason or Rhyme (1920s) 

Monday, February 25, 2013

The mechanical world of Edouard Martinet



Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) would be the perfect person to inaugurate an exhibition of Edouard Martinet's metallic sculptures. I imagine him reading the first few lines of his magnum opus "Leviathan" to an ecstatic crowd filling the gallery: 

"NATURE (the art whereby God hath made and governs the world) is by the art of man, as in many other things, so in this also imitated, that it can make an artificial animal. For seeing life is but a motion of limbs, the beginning whereof is in some principal part within, why may we not say that all automata (engines that move themselves by springs and wheels as doth a watch) have an artificial life? For what is the heart, but a spring; and the nerves, but so many strings; and the joints, but so many wheels, giving motion to the whole body, such as was intended by the Artificer? Art goes yet further, imitating that rational and most excellent work of Nature, man... "


Hobbes attempted to explain the universe as an amalgamation of mechanical processes or movements that are governed by mechanistic principles. Edouard Martinet seems to have taken the essence of mechanical philisophy quite literally.



Starting in the early 1990s, his powerfull imagination and artistic skill (he is a teacher of graphic design), combined with a childhood passion for insects and an uncompromising attention to detail, made him able to visualise a discarded piece of junk metal as the missing part of a larger than life mechanically assembled grasshopper or praying mantis.



Using old rusty bicycle parts, tins or whatever other scrap metal or disused object he could find in junkyards, boot sales or second hand shops and antique fairs, Martinet has managed to recreate in extraordinary detail the anatomy of diverse creatures from insects to fish, amphibians and birds.


What makes these sculptures so unique is the feeling that one gets when carefully observing these objects. There is a kind of authority of creation guaranteeing that these mechanical creatures are complete and capable of actually flying, walking, swimming or hopping around based purely on mechanical means. This feeling is probably due to Martinet preferring to use screws, nuts and bolts to join existing original pieces together rather than use welding to intervene and change the actual form of a given object to suit his needs.




Edouard Martinet lives and works in Rennes, France. 

Visit his site here:

Friday, February 22, 2013

Can: The Lost Tapes


18 of October 1970. The country is West Germany. You switch on the television and as you wait for it to warm up, the faint humming noise of the tube starts to transform into distant drumming that becomes louder and louder and just as the colourful small yellow and black rhombus patterns fill the screen, a frantic splash of musical beat anounces TETV präsentiert: DAS MILLIONEN SPIEL. It's a film made for the WDR television channel, based on Robert Sheckley's short story "The Prize of Peril". The protagonist of the story takes part in a television reality show where he has to survive being hunted down by a killing squad. If he manages to survive, he can take away one million deutsche mark. If he loses, well, he loses his life. The very distinctive music of the opening titles for this film was created by "Innerspace Productions". Another name for Germany's foremost experimental krautrock band, CAN. 

 

Revisiting these "lost" music fragments of a bygone era in CAN's "The Lost Tapes" 3 LP box, is a treat. Containing recordings spanning probably the most creative period of the band from 1968 to 1973, this archive material manages to convey the whole palette of CAN's music and sound experimentation from ambient textures to 15 minute wild live rock and fusion excursions. Studio doodles and moments of genius, contrasting moments of loose improvisation and tightly controlled segments of lucidity that have even commercial appeal, it's all there.

Czukay's loops in millionenspiel gets the adrenalin flowing as you follow the frantic efforts of the protagonist running for his life. One year after this recording, CAN would also frantically escape the hired killers of commercial aspirations, producing the holy trinity of albums in their catalogue ("Tago Mago" in 1971 broke all barriers of structure, content and feel in music. It was followed in 1972 by "Ege Bamyasi" redefining the word psychedelic and then "Future Days" in 1973 stepping into distorted, avant garde ambient territory). Now, I am not very sure CAN got their reward of one million deutsche mark but they certainly deserved it. They survived and their music sounds as fresh and mind blowing today as it did in the early 70s.   


Listen to: