One of my cold-weather Bob Dylan covers is featured on the latest mixtape from I Care If You Listen. Check it out here. This publication has been making significant waves in contemporary music lately, and it's a pleasure be included alongside some great tunes, including the tensely beautiful and enigmatic Streifenjunko, who I plugged on this space back in January. Here is the full Dylan set, The Moon Was Just Coming Over The Hills, written and recorded in Banff in February 2012. I write from scenic, swampy Orlando, Florida and the campus of the University of Central Florida, home of the Knights of Pegasus (seriously) and some bizarro 80-degree weather that has my body chemistry just all confused. Add to the mix a pleasant and musically intense hang with some bros from Austin days -- percussionists Thad Anderson and Owen Weaver, pianist Franklin Gross -- and you've got the recipe for a week all right all right.
We play George Crumb's Music for a Summer Evening tomorrow night, along with two group premieres: Thad's searing, kinetic rhythmic etude Five Messages and my own scenic, swampy Outer Channel, which is jointly dedicated to and inspired by drummer/composer/force-of-nature Paul Motian and sometime Orlandoian Jack Kerouac -- particularly the latter's "belief and technique for modern prose," which includes lovely and oblique directives like the following: "Believe in the holy contour of life" "Try never get drunk outside yr own house" "Like Proust be an old teahead of time" and of course, "Work from pithy middle eye out, swimming in language sea" I have some songs to share, soon -- the new Golconda collection, By these limits were they circumscribed and of them were they locus, is in the final mixing/mastering stages and awaiting cover art by stellar painter and VCCA friend Mary Laube. Under its leaf he watched through peacocktwittering lashes the southing sun. I am caught in this burning scene. Pan's hour, the faunal noon. Among gumheavy serpentplants, milkoozing fruits, where on the tawny waters leaves lie wide. Pain is far.
--Joyce (Ulysses) Something that you feel will find its own form. --Kerouac ("belief and technique for modern prose") |
A Selection• Gone Walkabout
• Migration • Music as Drama • Crossroads II • 10 Best of 2014 • January: Wyoming and the Open • February: New Mexico and the Holes • Coming Up • Notes on The Accounts • Crossroad Blues • Labyrinths Archives
October 2020
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