Archive for the ‘music’ Category

15
Jan

Blindsided by music

   Posted by: pywacket

The following outpouring brought on by watching Emily dance unreservedly to Clementine by Pink Martini. If I ever get my video rendering capabilities up to snuff I’ll post a link here. Just trust me-it is 7 year old interpretive dance at its best. You know-remember how YOU felt being seven and dancing, just dancing. No judgment, just dancing. Ahhh. It was gorgeous.

 

I’ve always been overly affected by music. I won’t tell you what my first listening of the eponymous Psychedelic Furs did to the next several years of my life way back when or why the Dead Kennedys caused me to shave my head when everyone knew that girls were supposed to be pretty not angry. But it didn’t stop way back when. I just can’t help being beaten or seduced by music. Have you ever had a song hit you unexpectedly? A song in a style you maybe you don’t normally listen to? Or from an unexpected source? One that grabs your guts, give you shivers and just stuns you? This has happened to me several times lately.

One was, of all things a song by Everlast from a TV show–the theme to saving grace. Yes I like the show and character (a lot actually, I fancy myself having a bit of her type of personality in me) but those of you who know me know this ain’t my usual kind of music–I’m more of a Dead Can Dance, Abney Park, gothy techno girl).

I also have a complicated relationship with the themes of that song…my spirituality is in flux and my understanding of the divine is now interspersed with moments of earth shattering congruence (When all of a person`s internal beliefs, strategies, and behaviours are fully in agreement and oriented toward securing a desired outcome–basically when everything is exactly as it should be ) which are leading me to places of thought and belief I’ve not been before).

But for some reason this song just tears me up. It makes me shiver, it nearly makes me cry, it certainly makes me feel fierce. Yes really. All that. What don’t you have those sorts of reactions to music?

Another bit of music that hit me hard came when I was student teaching in Sharla’s class. She played Explosions in the Sky to help the kids during writing time. I’d never heard them before. It think they are on a tv show someone said, but I’d never heard of them. (Confession: I go through spates of watching a lot of TV. I have it on authority (notice I didn’t say good) that I’m supposed to feel badly about that; however I read an obscene amount so I don’t. And I spent about 8 years without a TV so I’ve got the cred already). Anyway, I now have three of their CDs and I’m looking into the instrumental post rock genre now. Do what?

I’ll forever associate this music with this …do I say attempt? Do I say deviation? I don’t feel as if I failed when I left the M.A.T. program, though this is hard won. I feel …well all who wander are not lost, you know? I wanted that, it was a dream I’d had since I was a kid, but I found the dream and reality didn’t mesh. I found I really wanted something different and I’m lucky enough that I’ve got that now. But back to the music. Explosions in the Sky will always mean meeting a new and amazing friend, someone I feel touched my soul almost immediately, someone who replaced a darker, earlier incidence of a similar meeting. EitS also soars and crashes as I did during that 5 months. I learned so much, in some ways more than I wanted to. I wish I could have kept the idealism but …I can’t. I’ve seen too much in my life. Explosions in the sky is all of that.

I made a video (actually several) during my time in the teaching program. It is almost painful for me to watch now. I was angry by that point. ONE girl,worked with me on it,the other did almost nothing. I did all the video work and if you know about how much goes into something like this you KNOW…well I just can’t do less than my best. The time I let that happen in classroom management class…EW…that’s another story and another part of the reason I left the program. You know it actually IS important to do your best;. Yes I like doing stuff like this but it only works easily if you do WHAT I ASK YOU TO DO –Yo, respect your compatriots right?

I wish I hadn’t quit, but only because I hate to quit, hate to give up– not because it was the wrong decision, it’s just that I hate quitting. But– I guess when you spend a week in the fetal position, crying and sick, that’s telling you something. I will applaud in awe of those who finish and go on…it ain’t for me–you know how much I’ve always chafed against “the system.” And I can support people working creatively within the system I just can’t be the one…”kicking against the pricks.” (Nick Cave) Something I’ve learned often and again now–I do better liminally. Jyllian exists just to the side of most things. I am happiest that way. Anyway–this music will always be this highs and lows, the sorrows and triumphs of reaching for that dream, holding it and putting it(not so) gently away. At least I know that when I am on my deathbed, I will not have that as regret. I would have before.

Finally The Penguin Cafe Orchestra. J and I watched a movie that I despise–Napoleon Dynamite (I find it mean spirited, not funny) but there was a song in it that I had to find. It was Song for a Found Harmonium by PCO. To say it changed me is an understatement. I began finishing my mid life crisis because of this music. Some of ya’ll might know I started off as a kid with a classical music fixation–even years later when I worked for KUAF I did CLASSICS BY REQUEST, not because I got paid (that helped) but I love(d) classical music. Honestly I like most music…I think I’ve even found some country and some western. I like expressions of feeling with instruments—words or not. So when I started looking for the next thing… I ran across this song after hating this movie (late to seeing it). Because with a kid–we don’t’ see movies most times (until recently) until they’ve been out of the theatres for about a year or more.

ANYway…I spent my first year in Fayetteville going through (the trauma) of moving home. Moving back after 20 years is good, but not without challenges. There’s more of that in another entry. But after that first year I had 2 deaths, and three miscarriages in er..my first 3 years back in the land I grew up in. Oh yeah and major surgery (and I’ll never ever get over certain good folk who brought us food, mowed our lawn..god no adequate words for those kindnesses). And I got back one of my two best friends (the other died when she was 24 and me 26) and then she left a couple of years later. Wow I just saw that written down and um yeah…so no wonder I’ve been a bit looney. Ok…This music IS me coming to terms with past, present and future. There’s classical and punk in Penguin Cafe Orchestra. Just like me. Comic books AND Candide. Sex pistols and Stravinsky. Emily Dickinson and eXene Cervenka. yep.

So this turned into something much bigger than I intended. I just wanted to know what music grabbed you by the guttiwuts recently. So do please respond. I’m always taking in new music.

Saving Grace
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vxu21fYnKMw

Explosions in the sky
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explosions_in_the_Sky
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jotDBl1vilg

Penguin Café Orchestra
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJg1NNyke2E
another song that makes me feel like I”m a kid running down a hill

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FvbCV6E0Wro

http://www.penguincafe.com/

19
Mar

Perpetuum Mobile

   Posted by: pywacket

~redacted~Now on an entirely different note…I absolutely despise the movie Napoleon Dynamite. I think it is mean spirited. It’s yet another movie that makes fun of misfits. Being one, I feel strongly that that sort of cruelty should really stop in high school. I do like his dancing scene though and as J was flipping channels, we stopped to watch just that bit. And immediately afterwards there was a lovely song I remembered liking. I was so put off by the movie the first time I saw it that I didn’t remember to find out what the song was. This time I could. And now I’m wondering why I didn’t know about The Penguin Cafe Orchestra before? Their music is a revelation. It sweeps through me and tingles my brain and fills my ears with rolling lovliness. I want to throw on my biggest skirt and twirl in a field of flowers and fling handfuls of jackson pollock colors into the sky. The song from the movie–”music for a found harmonium” (redone in the movie by another lovely group–Patrick Street on Green Linnet) is more than gorgeous. Perpetuum Mobile and Air a Danser are so perfect they defy description. I want to laugh and cry and dance when I hear those two in particular. I swear I think about marrying J, kissing E’s head for the first time, helping my kitties take their leave and then seeing them in my dreams again. It’s like spending time in an afterlife I think.

This is music I feel like I’ve known all my life, only I haven’t. I’m only just finding it. I felt stupid for a moment for not knowing them before, but how could I? I was too young when their first album came out and it was on Brian Eno’s very obscure label. Those were the years of The Dead Kennedy’s and The Replacements, not instrumental music. But now, after many years spent in goth clubs and ren faires–well I guess I was ready for this. I just wish I’d known about them early enough to see them. I am awestruck when music makes my heart ache and exult simultaneously.

Take a moment and listen–with your eyes closed.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FvbCV6E0Wro

15
Nov

The video that started it all

   Posted by: pywacket

For me anyway. I remember staying up late and watching this. I was amazed–I’d never heard anything like this. In my small town you got southern fried rock, country, some horrid metal thing, folk or classical. I’m sure there were other things going on, but that’s all I heard in junior high.

This was so different. He LOOKED different. He looked like a dreamy, angry nerd boy. His lyrics were harsh and beautiful, his playing powerful. It sounded like nothing I’d heard, but like something I felt in my guts and my heart. This the music, the video that started me down the musical path I’m still on. And he’s still amazing, to this day

We’ll see if this embedding works….

Well it did, but then when I added the next entry it screwed up the formatting, so here’s the url

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOuknbvu21Q

9
Nov

oh dear

   Posted by: pywacket

I just realized I do politics like other people do sports. I’ve been watching different versions of the same press conferences and speeches. Flipping channels like a crazed hog fan. I’m all over the web reading various interpretations and predictions and staying up too late increasing the information overload.

I called people all over the place yelping with glee about the outcome. It’s almost embarrassing how rabid I am about this :-)

Almost.

At different times a hollow space: A vague story told in Soundtracks

A recent experience has caused me to contemplate the hollow space that must be within everyone but the most simple of us. Smaller at some times than others. More obvious at times and at times more painful.

In your teens, the hollow space is that of identity. If you are successful in extricating yourself from parental bonds, as all teenagers must, you then have to find who you are. It begins as who you are in oppositionto them, to others you dislike, to larger parts of the culture you find distasteful. And so you begin to try on your identities. In the form of clothing, of music, hairstyles and ambience you change in and out of who you might be. Emo, Punk, Goth, Hippyany and all of these fit a little bit here and a little bit there. Then one fits more than the others.

For me it was at first generic oddball, then some strange early amalgam of punk/new wave and goth.And the soundtrack was a hand held tape recording of Elvis Costello on SNL and the Rocky Horror Picture Show.

But, for me at first, it was just freak. I found some other freak friends (or they found me) in high school. The outcasts, the brains, the weirdoswe found each other lurking in the shadows on the periphery of regular life.

And so we built a full social life of our own. With music and parties and involved conversations and friendships that would be remembered forever. The time was as sharp as an afternoon in October and I wore my red shoes certain Id never get any older.
Oh I used to be disgusted
and now I try to be amused.
But since their wings have got rusted,
you know, the angels wanna wear my red shoes.
But when they told me ’bout their side of the bargain,
that’s when I knew that I could not refuse.
And I won’t get any older, now the angels wanna wear my red shoes.

With their influence, the soundtrack enlarged to become Laurie Anderson and the Psychedelic Furs. The Who and the Dead Kennedys. Siouxsie and The Banshees and the Stranglers. The Police on an eight track in that horrible old Grand Prix.

And the lyrics got more obscure and we found more meaning.
We were walking and falling at the same time,

I wanted you. And I was looking for you. But I couldn’t find you.I wanted you. And I was looking for you all day But I couldn’t find you. I couldn’t find you. You’re walking. And you don’t always realize it,but you’re always falling. With each step you fall forward slightly.And then catch yourself from falling. Over and over, you’re falling.And then catching yourself from falling. And this is how you can be walking and falling at the same time.

bleeding words another christ is on the cross the nails are words the nails are liesto make it crawl and make it screamand make it real and make it bleed and make it bleed and make it bleed and make it dream imitation of christ imitation of christ this you who lie and scream you fall to dust you fall to dust in walls of words your words are blind you speak and you are dumb and blind
and going to war You’re planning for a war with or without Iran Building a police state with the Ku Klux Klan Pissed at your neighbour? Don’t bother to nagPick up the phone and turn in a fag Every single thing we did had a song attached to it. Every love affair had lyrics to go with every fight and every reconciliation.

And then, of course, it all fell apart. College did it for some, an argument for others. Some got married early, others ran away from home. And it was time to start again, the hollow space returned.

Before it all fell apart it was a soundtrack of tapes made from the mixing board of local band. We were sure their words were oracle and any chord would bring us enlightenment. Songs were writen by for our about us. Mix tapes were aural love letters or odes to friendships that we only had to replay to remember every moment. Sinead Oconner and UB40. Early U2 and the Sex Pistols,Oingo Boingo and X. The Pixies. Ever Fallen in Love with someone you shouldnt have fallen in love with. And Relentlessly Suzanne Vega.

And then the hollow was filled with college and graduate school for me. And while there was music, it now sounded like plainchant growing polyphonic. A risqué lyric here (merrily sing cuckoo) and a jar of fuschia dye there. It wasn’t filled much by my first marriage, unlike now with J. But college and graduate school and striving for the future were enough. And trying to find the way as an adult. I made art from things I found in other peoples trash cans and played fawning fan to a wide variety of bands. Mostly though, I studied. Studied and divorced.

And found I had to refigure identity and the hollow space again because I was so tired. I was no longer a punk rock wife (if I ever was one) but a tired graduate student trying to extricate myself from a failed marriage and find what was next.

And I had had my identity mapped out. Sometimes I wish Id followed through with that map. I had planned on being a professor of medieval literature. But I didnt want to leave my beloved San Francisco and I was beaten by my ended marriage, trying to survive and start over again, some pretty nasty professors at SFSU (though of course there were wonderful encouraging ones as well,I was too young to realize the cruel folks had their own problems and agendas that had very little to do with me) and just being tired and burnt from working full time and going to school full time.

But first there was a detour into Michelle Shocked, and Phranc and Tori Amos. A little Ani DiFranco and more Suzanne Vega. And looking for love and finding and losing it again. A time or two.

I found out that my computer hobby was actually a skill in demand. And that I was good, really good. Simultaneously with that I discovered I could be an actual part of a Renaissance Faire.

And found Devo and kraftwerk again. And some Juno Reactor. But then only somewhat related (since back then all sysadmins were black clad and pointy) with Dead can Dance and Bel Canto, some Sisters and Fields of the Nephilim. How about more Siouxsie and lets bring back the Psychedelic Furs. Nick Cave, the Legendary Pink Dots and dont forget, never forget the Cure.

So for about 12 years (there is overlap) computers and rising to the top of my abilities and profession filled the hollow space. And it did. I studied and hacked and built and rebuilt everything I could find. I went from desktop monkey to LAN admin, to sysadmin, to senior engineer to IT director/senior sysadmin pretty damn quick. And I stayed there and loved it.I spent summers speaking a actorized version of Renaissance English and listening to Turkish music, drum circles and ren faire musicians.

But like everything else that couldn’t last either. I still enjoy the work to this day, but I got burnt out by tantrumming salesmen. Over the years I had laptops thrown at me and had my door kicked open. Ive been called every bad name in the book. Ive removed more than one hand from my thigh and had to haul mine out to compare sizes with the tech boys too many times to count.

And the Faire moved from a woodland Dell to a parking lot and I broke up with my faire love.

I got tired and sick. We didn’t know what was going on at the time, but a combination of MSG poisoning and sensitivity to new building materials was making me really ill. I was hospitalized. I had a number of procedures done on me, at me and around me. I was sick and depressed. I had a crazy boss, then a good one, then another good one that went a little nutty and then the whole dotcom boom came down and the business downsized.I stopped listening to music for a while in there, the sound of being ill was too loud.

I could have stayed, I elected to go. And then it was time to get married and have a baby. The hollow place was open again where my job had been and while that wasnt the reason for having our darling Bean, it sure took careof that issue in a hurry. And it has continued to do so.

The music stayed the same. He wasn’t a rennie, but he was a gothboy and a geek and we met on an Email List. Find a playlist for your local goth club and chances our thats what was playing our house for the first few years.

And then we had the Bean and the music went Irish, very Irish. And Bluegrass (yeah, I’m still not sure about that one). But also back to They Might Be Giants and over to Baby Einstein. But really it was pretty quiet except for the sound of my voice singing to her. She turned 3 and we moved back to where I grew up. Back to where I could still see myself in that graveyard with my little blaster playing the Cure or walking down Dickson blaring the Dead Kennedys. I swear I turn a corner and I hear an echo.

I suddenly understand why some women live through their children. I understand why some men buy red sports cars. Why it would seem beneficial to take up extreme sports. Shes 4 and in preschool. I have more time and I’m being offered so many of the things Ive wanted for awhile by the Universe,or God whatever you want to call it, but its all there if I can take it.

There’s just a small problem.

Music has informed every moment of my life.. From my moms reel to reel to a tape recorder held next to the radio, to a walkman, then a discman now an ipod all with me nearly all the time, giving every moment its soundtrack. From the Beginning with the Who onward to Devo to the Dead Kennedys to through Siouxsie to The Cult through Qntal and Voltaire and now….well Im stumped.

Because Saturday night the music stopped playing and the hollow space opened again. Its actually been opening for awhile, but I tend to need proof and sadly, I got it.

As I said.I’ve (we’ve) moved back to Arkansas. After 19 years away (14 in SF, 4 in Chicago) and were happy to be here. Its odd of course, but life is good. We have a wonderful house with a big back yard, good friendships growing around us, the Bean is flourishing around caring neighbors and many wee friends and J and I are back to being content, happy even. So wheres the problem?

I cant find the soundtrack and the lack of music tells me theres a problem. We went to a local club because one of my favorite musicians of the last 6 or so years was playing: Voltaire. Once long ago he even dedicated a song to us (our song Anniversary,we danced to it at our wedding) at Convergence 6 in Seattle. I was a goofy fangirl and he was friendly and kind. He gave a rousing performance and that song had us in tears. As it did a year later when we got married. As it still does when we hear it today. His music was always the right combination of earnest, silly and beautifuljust like the last six years of my life with James and the Bean.

But when Voltaire played here it seemed he really didn’t want to be in Arkansas. And he brought his C- or D show. He didnt care. Or he was tired. He talked down to the audience and made fun of it more so than he does at other bigger venues and in other bigger cities. And if I’d forgotten what I’d lost when we moved here (aside from traffic, outrageous housing prices, overcrowding, crime and just general angst) I suddenly remembered. Oh yeahwere in Arkansas. The butt of everyones joke. It didnt matter that some of the people had driven for hours to see these musicians. I know it didnt matter that there were a few of us who knew everything hed done back to front and back again. Id written him some of my some of my stupidest fan mail ever (and Ive not done that since I wrote William Shatner WAY back when). Nopehe seemed to have made a judgment that we were all unsophisticated vampire club kids or something along those lines. And admittedly, like all audiences, this one had its share of assholes. And there were a few kids in capes and a wizard or two walking around. I guess I just expected better, and I’m not sure why. Because the artist *is not* his art. Sometimes you make something better than you are. Or maybe better than you can be at that particular gig anyway. I’d hoped he could look past the dorkiness and see all the folks trying to be different in a place is isnt as easy to be different in as say New York or San Francisco. But again, why did I expect that? Simply because his music had meant so much.

And while the entire song doesnt apply (I’m not that rabid):

Do you hear me?I’m here for youYou don’t see meI’m way in the back of the ballroomI’ve been here since last night at nine I was the first in the line
~ Voltaires #1 Fan lyric

Well, I kind of knew not to go this time . We’ve pretty much figured our club days or over. This was the first time in over three years we’d been. But Voltaire was one of my favorite performers and one I’d thought was a pretty good guy too. Someone I wanted to support. Someone I knew it was unlikely I’d ever see again (I’m thinking that Fayetteville doesn’t get a lot of A list Goth Acts). I needed to go or I’d regret it.

And going I regretted it.

And the music stopped that night and the space opened to my eyes again.

The music must change /For we’re chewing a bone/We soared like the sparrow hawk flied/Then we dropped like a stone.

Ive been saying it for some time that what was once the most of me is now the least of me. I didn’t mean for that to happen, it just did. The spooky life meant so much to me:the music, the people, the feeling of belonging (something I only ever got at Ren Faire or at a Star Trek convention , wow geek much? ) the joy of the darkness and the thrill of being on an edge, of many edges.

It’s gone. Ive well, I’ve done all that now. I dont think I can be shocked and I accept nearly anything you throw at me. It just never got too weird for me. There are some very very neat people in the scene here and I hope to spend more time with them. Outside of a club. Its just too much of the same thing Ive seen too much of.

I can’t say never though. Why should I? Its all still a part of me, from Devo to Danny Elfman and the Violent Femmes to Voltaire. But no one is the loudest yet.

There are other things trying to fill the hollow space now if I can just let them. I asked the powers that be for a few opportunities and I’ve been offered them ALL. Every single one of them. From time to write to places to perform. From explorations in spirituality to a chance to work with kids. And I have to let some things go if I’m going to accept all these other things. I’m not sure how I know that, I just do know that. And these things need a new soundtrack.

I wonder what’s next on the playlist?