Category Archives: 1001 things to do before you die

World music classic #34

[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=perVFDDy_xg&]

Theme De Yo Yo” is a musical composition by American jazz band Art Ensemble of Chicago with vocals by Fontella Bass. The composition was part of the soundtrack to the 1971 French film Les Stances à Sophie and was first compiled on the 1995 Soul Jazz Records free jazz compilation Universal Sounds Of America.

AEOC recorded this album when they were staying in Paris in the early 1970s. Did they also record at that time “Comme à La Radio” (Brigitte Fontaine; Areski)?

Words to describe the track are: fierce.

Introducing French imprint Chute Libre

This post is part of the cult fiction series, this issue #4

Norman Spinrad on Chute Libre

Norman Spinrad on French collection Chute Libre

Chute Libre is/was a French publishing imprint directed by Gérard Leibovici. They published, amongst others, the translated work of the new wave of science fiction authors Philip José Farmer, Norman Spinrad, Michael Moorcock, Roger Zelazny and Theodore Sturgeon.

I can’t remember who I had this conversation with, but the conclusion was that “we” could not find the illustrator of this beautiful series (follow the link to the source post to find some succulent tentacle erotica), so if anyone knows who was behind these designs, please let “us” know.

Norman Spinrad provided the inspiration for the name Heldon, French guitarist Richard Pinhas‘s band (which to me is the bit the French equivalent to Sonic Youth, but 10 years sooner). The name of the band was taken from Spinrad’s 1972 novel The Iron Dream.

Chute libre is French for free fall.

Via bxzzines, see also English-language covers posted by John Coulthart and all the covers in one handy place by Mike.

I just don’t feel that way about you

World cinema classic #44

[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRcuDz1ZZhw]

Tom Cruise advertises Seduce and Destroy in Magnolia, his best part to date.

Another epic of American depression, and one of my first positive surprises when I took up film-viewing again in the early 2000s. A philosophical film in the magic realism vein. The opening scene – a rumination on the nature of the coincidence – totally blew me away. Anderson’s other films: I’ve started watching Boogie Nights but did not finish it and can hardly remember anything about it. Same with Punch drunk …, failed to get me involved. Have yet to do There will be Blood, but doubt if I will. 1999 was a good film year.

World Cinema Classics is a series of films canonical to ArtAndPopularCulture.com.

Update: infomercial transcription:

Frank TJ Mackey: In this big game that we play, life, it’s not what you hope for, it’s not what you deserve, it’s what you take. I’m Frank T.J. Mackey, a master of the muffin and author of the Seduce and Destroy system now available to you on video and audio cassette. Seduce and Destroy will teach you the techniques to have any hardbody blonde just dripping to wet your dock. Bottom line? Language. The magical key to unlocking the female analytical mindset. Tap directly into her hopes, her wants, her fears, her desires, and her sweet little panties. Learn how to make that lady “friend” your sex-starved servant. I don’t care how you look. I don’t care what car you drive. I don’t care what your last bank statement says. Seduce and Destroy produces an instant money-back guarantee trance-like state that will get you this — naughty sauce you want fast. Hey — how many more times do you need to hear the all-too-famous line of ‘I just don’t feel that way about you?’

Lullaby for friends

[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1EAwTOujG-0&]

Tikiman, 1999

World music classic #32 is a nice and easy track by German producers Ernestus and von Oswald on their Basic Channel label. This one from 1999, from “Round One to Five”, a CD compilation which also featured more housey work by Ron Trent of Prescription Records.
If you want to find out more, follow the links from Tikiman.

World music classics #29

Sleeve of the seven inch of Max Berlin’s “Elle et moi (1978)

Elle et moi” is a musical composition by Max Berlin, first published in 1978 on the Belgian recording label USA Import.

This is the type of track which has survived in popular consciousness through nightclub play rather than radio play. I can’t remember hearing “Elle et Moi” on any commercial radio station.

Skilled and knowledgeable DJs usually play “Elle et moi” after or before Gainsbourg’s 1968 Requiem pour un con (YouTube), from the soundtrack to the film Le Pacha.

Cult fiction #3

Verschijningen van Henri Michaux
Verschijningen

I started reading Verschijningen today, a Dutch translation of a selection of texts by Henri Michaux, published by Meulenhoff in 1972.

My first conscious exposure to the thought of Michaux was by way of David Toop‘s Ocean of Sound, in which Toop describes Michaux as an armchair traveler.

The collection comprises Les poètes voyagent (1946); Un certain Plume (1930); Apparitions (1946); Ici Poddema (1946); texts from Façons d’endormi, facons d’eveille; followed by a short essay by the translator Laurens Vancrevel.

My first impressions are based on reading Les poètes voyagent; Un certain Plume and Apparitions, Plume providing the most satisfying reading experience: the whole of Plume breathes Edgar Allan Poe and especially Poe’s incomparable short story Loss of Breath.

Keywords of Michaux’s writing are viscerality; the tropes of the macabre, fantastique, rocambolesque and grotesque; petrifaction, death, the void, lightness and emptiness, “everything-you-know-is-wrong” feelings, disintegration, decapitation and dismemberment, walls (and especially ceilings). All things considered, this is a very eerie collection told in a matter of fact voice.

If the content and tone are definitely Poe, the form of this collection’s most likely sibling is the writing of Baudelaire, and especially Baudelaire’s prose poetry.

The “liner notes” to this collection also alerted me to Images du monde visionnaire, a film by Eric Duvivier and Henri Michaux, an educational film which was produced in 1963 by the film department of Swiss pharmaceutical company Sandoz (best known for synthesizing LSD in 1938) in order to demonstrate the hallucinogenic effects of mescaline and hashish. It is the only venture in film of notable French writer and painter Henri Michaux. See that film by following the Documents entry, read more at Ombres Blanches.

World music classics #28

100 percent pure poison
Coming Right at You (1974) by 100% Pure Poison

Youtube: 100% Pure Poison’s “Windy C”, St. Germain’s “Sure Thing” and, “Get Involved by Pete Rock

If a musical composition’s popularity and quality can be measured from the number of times it’s been sampled, “Windy C” has fine credentials.

Windy C is a musical composition from the 1974 “Coming Right at You” album by 100% Pure Poison. “Windy C” was sampled for Pete Rock‘s “Get Involved” and St. Germain‘s Sure Thing.

Continuing the musical connections:

Sure Thing is a musical composition by Ludovic Navarre published on Tourist, featuring samples from “Windy C” and the soundtrack of Dennis Hopper‘s film The Hot Spot (John Lee Hooker, Miles Davis and Taj Mahal).

Let me give that video (not sure if original or some Youtube bricolage, stylish nevertheless):

[Youtube=http://youtube.com/watch?v=FgUFZQ4-HcY&]

Icons of erotic art #22

Study of a Seated Nude Woman Wearing Mask (c. 186566) by Thomas Eakins

This drawing by American artist Eakins is a testament to the aphrodisian qualities of sensory deprivation. Central to this drawing are the breasts, ripe and heavy, surreal and unreal, proof that the most beautiful of women are not to be found in real life (except in brief photographic glimpses); but rather on paper.

Previous entries in Icons of Erotic Art here, and in a Wiki format here.

World music classics #27

“California Soul”Youtube (1969) by Marlena Shaw

There are those records which invite you to perform grand gestures and theatrical movements on the dancefloor. This is one of them. A very spacious sound from the sunny side of the United States. Happy music.

My sensibilities in literature, film and the visual arts may sometimes be more to the gloomier side, in music I love bright, happy and danceable (exceptions notwithstanding).

Shaw is best-remembered for the use of her vocals in the 1996 “Remember Me” by Blue Boy Youtube.

Previous World Music Classics.