Category: text

recent recommends

Posted by – 2010/07/29

philip corner – three pieces for gamelan ensemble

thrums and rumbles without ever becoming ominous. the less aware you are, the more pleasant it becomes. discreet music. live performance would be a different experience.

philip jeck – 7

campus-seclusion burial, stripped of all urban imperatives. melodies shimmer in the distance. buzz and crackle cannot obscure heavenly melodic resonance, even more satisfying are the occasional forays into deeper waters. now you can let go is halfway between turntablism and plunderphonics – drama derived from the re-structuring of off-kilter source material.

ellen band – 90% post-consumer sound

performances informed by the spontaneity of field recordings and the sensibility of musique concrete. the microtonalities of radiatore conjur up childhood rattlings stripped of impatience; xenakis kidnapped and left in chains. railroad gamelan is an edit of railside recordings. swinging sings is a duet for violins. the diverse methodology produces uniform results – Das Wohltemperirte DAT.

chris watson – stepping into the dark

cabling ultra-sensitive mics over long distances, the better to remove the recordist from the picture, allows watson to create field recordings of enchanted places. this album is a midnight stroll in a strange land, and almost impossible to listen to piecemeal.

geir jenssen – cho oyu 8201m (field recordings from tibet)

biosphere (disguised as a mountaineer) takes his recording equipment into the tibetan highlands. unlike watson, there is a life and a particular experience at the heart of these recordings, which are studies less than they are mementoes. nonetheless, their very richness makes them rewarding – startling and unusual juxtapositions are strewn throughout, supported by the conceptual crutch of the climb.

Banville on Kafka discovery

Posted by – 2010/07/20

I have already dug out my various editions of “The Complete Works of Franz Kafka” and added “almost” in Sharpie.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/8837821.stm

Milan Kundera’s Testaments Betrayed is the most vicious portrait of Max Brod I’ve read, though I’m sure there’s worse. In ‘The Castrating Shadow of Saint Garta’, Kundera writes:

Max Brod created the image of Kafka and that of his work; he created Kafkology at the same time. The Kafkologists may distance themselves from their founding father, but they never leave the terrain mapped out for them. Despite the astronomical number of its texts, Kafkology goes on elaborating infinite variants on the same discussion, the same speculation, which, increasingly unconnected to Kafka’s work, feeds only on itself. Through innumerable prefaces, postfaces, notes, biographies and monographs, university lectures and dissertations, Kafkology produces and sustains its own image of Kafka, to the point where the author whom readers know by the name Kafka is no longer Kafka but the Kafkologized Kafka.

The key notion here is that Kafkology is exegesis rather than criticism. It makes of Kafka’s work a series of parables and codes rather than concentrating on the formal innovations which characterize the real substance of Kafka’s work. In other words, it treats Kafka as if he were no more than Orwell. Kafka’s debt to the Talmud is more about the how than the why, as my GCSE English teacher would say.

So what are we to make of the notion that these newly discovered works are  - because of their neglect hitherto – probably aphorisms, and almost certainly fragments?

What are we to make of Banville’s claim that Kafka’s aphoristic pieces are more valuable than his aborted novels? & what of the notion that these pieces may somehow transform our understanding of Kafka?

What if The Castle not only has an ending, but it’s rubbish?

My own feeling is that, in the event of (positive or negative) complications, Brod will get the blame. He always does. If there are difficulties in our immediate reception and response to Kafka, Max will step in and shield poor Franz from the slings and arrows. Brod is Kafka’s own version of Godwin’s Law. The interesting thing will not be the new Kafka texts, but the possibility that – between Brod’s secretary and her two daughters – a new Brod may emerge to stand in our light while we try and read Kafka.

Do Not Work In Your Own Way

Posted by – 2010/07/20

This superb piece by Bryant Urstadt, over at New York magazine, is full of goodies like:

“It is my vision to create uniforms for the future: pure, sophisticated clothes that work like a common language for a global community.”

and:

Uniqlo is a company that prescribes, records, and analyzes every activity undertaken by every employee. [...] To some extent, management science is an element of all international companies, but Uniqlo’s obsession is more like a turbocharged version of kaizen, the Japanese concept that translates roughly as the continuous search for perfection.

and:

While he was working on the design, Katayama focused his thoughts by making a poster from a photo he had found of a store in London that had covered a five-story building with raincoats.

and:

This morning, 30 “advisers” (as Uniqlo calls its employees who help customers) stand at the bottom of the stairs leading to the lower floor, with notebooks open and pens poised. Each is instructed to carry a notebook at all times, and to write down everything any manager tells them.

and:

Cashing out is a timed art at Uniqlo, too; advisers must complete every transaction in less than 60 seconds.

and:

“We tell advisers that you have to smile until you feel like you’re crazy.”

It’s brilliant. Well worth the time.

Second Date

Posted by – 2010/07/19

Embarrassing, skewed and sincere this is music for teenagers. Music for people who believe; people who haven’t had their hope choked out of them. If I was heading out for a first date, I would listen to Toro y Moi just to make my tummy feel funny

- is what I wrote about Toro y Moi back in March. Since then we’ve had a single, and it’s B-side was called, funnily enough, First Date.

I’m still absorbing the shock of hearing real live proper instruments on a Toro y Moi rekkid. It’s not that I wanted him to be a one trick pony or nuthin’, but Causers of This and its synthetic media dreams seemed to preclude any notion of acoustic origin. This was all immanent stuff, emotion wrenched from the recursive symmetries of process. It was Oval as pop star.

Now he’s taking his sound on the road. He has a band. Hm.


‘Sfunny. I imagined him singing and dancing over a CD of instrumentals. But that requires a performer, and a performer is a personality type. You can’t fake being a frontman, you’ll get found out. I’m sure cocaine helps, but the impulses to perform, borne of narcissism, arrogance and a violent insecurity, are not bespoke – they are illnesses, really, weaknesses that have been venerated over the course of a century.

It’s hard to make a massive critical point out of Toro y Moi’s inability to be Madonna imagined by Brian Eno. If he had a showman’s flair for performance, he probably wouldn’t have bothered making Causers of This.

I can’t hold it against him. & the lowering of expectation ahead of his second LP is probably for the best.

Europe Re-Imagined

Posted by – 2010/07/19

The Economist has reimagined Europe. Highlights include:

Germany can stay where it is, as can France. But Austria could shift westwards into Switzerland’s place, making room for Slovenia and Croatia to move north-west too. A welcome side-effect of these changes will be to make space for previously fictional creations such as Anthony Hope’s Ruritania, Hergé’s Syldavia and Borduria, and Vulgaria, the backdrop for “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang”.

and

In Britain’s place should come Poland, which has suffered quite enough in its location between Russia and Germany and deserves a chance to enjoy the bracing winds of the North Atlantic and the security of sea water between it and any potential invaders.

It’s a splendid idea, though I’m sure there is still room for improvements. I note the lack of Narnia with some dismay.

The Ghost of Seasons Past

Posted by – 2010/07/19


Radon Brainstorm has posted on the strange case of the ghosting footballer, Joe Cole; well,  methinks he might just have finally found his ideal club, with Anfield qua Hades.

Η ρητορική της μεταμέλειας και το σύγχρονο ύφος

Posted by – 2010/07/08

Ένα κείμενο του αγαπημένου Γ.Γ για την ιδεολογική σούπα της Ελλάδας των 00 και τα ΜΜΕ, αφιερωμένο στο RadicalDesire
Για ευκολότερη εκτύπωση στο scribd:
Η ρητορική της μεταμέλειας και το σύγχρονο ύφος – Γ. Γιαννουλόπουλος

The Reviews Revue: A Look Back

Posted by – 2010/04/27

Tony Herrington at The Wire, writing on the new Fall album:

All the tracks on Your Future Our Clutter sound the same, more or less, and so the record coheres than impacts with genuine force. [...] As is the case with Bob Dylan, Smith’s voice has collapsed with age, but also attained a rare and peculiar gravitas which can inject the most banal or cryptic phase with a profound sense of import.

anon2324 on iTunes, however, saw things differently:

I was told by a friend that these were really good. I purchased this album and was shocked to hear a 90 year old man moan into a microphone in a voice that couldn’t be understood , while the “band” played without melody.
In short this is awfall.

It seems we have an early frontrunner in the “Review of the Year” awards for 2010.

Chinstroke FM

Posted by – 2010/04/27

Two great reads – long-form:

Matthew Teague’s Double-Bind is a thoroughly researched long-form piece about British episonage during the Troubles. It’s pretty long, but I dare you to start reading – impossible not to get hooked.

On a cheerier note, Dave Mothersole blogs on the origins of Goa Trance over at Bleep43. Scan-read until you get to the bit about DJ Laurent; then check out the only surviving video footage of him DJing. What a sound! And this is the mid-eighties? It’s Aphex Twin on R&S a decade early!

Chillwave 5

Posted by – 2010/04/23

CHILLWAVE = BEACH HOUSE x ANIMAL COLLECTIVE / 80s NOSTALGIA

Too much of this stuff is like the aural equivalent of sunstroke, but Chillwave – named as a joke, taken up by everyone regardless – is here to keep us dazzled this summer. It’s total earworm music, and in some ways so poppy and brash that I can’t help but feel that overexposure could kill it off (delicate flower, delicate flower).

Toro y Moi – Low Shoulder


Chillwave is pop music made by graphic designers. Toro y Moi is a graphic designer when he’s not fronting various no-mark bands and cobbling together ‘Causes of This’ in his spare time. ‘Causes of This’ is the best pop album since ‘Homework’. There are valid parallels to be drawn between Toro y Moi and J Dilla, Arthur Russell, Panda Bear, the Beach Boys and Daft Punk. Embarrassing, skewed and sincere this is music for teenagers. Music for people who believe; people who haven’t had their hope choked out of them. If I was heading out for a first date, I would listen to Toro y Moi just to make my tummy feel funny.

This time next year Toro y Moi will be advertising soft drinks.
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