Thursday, October 9, 2008

Oodles of Ooloi








Years ago, when I had a fairly long daily commute, I quickly burned through all of Octavia Butler's books that were in print at the time. There was something about the situations and the character interactions within the work that captured very familiar feelings and sensations, despite the unfamiliar field where those phenomena took place. Critics and readers have pointed out the racial, sexual and gender themes that weave through her novels. For me, however, their profundity came not just from those "real world" topics, but from the characters' reactions to them, which was captured not just in dialog but within the narrative itself. Bewilderment, claustrophobia, pessimism, compassion, tranquility, realization. It is a reminder that the real world is surreal enough in itself (Charles Burnett's masterpiece of filmmaking, The Killer of Sheep, which I will touch on at a later date, is an example of a work from another genre that captures that impression perfectly). What has attracted me to so-called Science Fiction is indeed that abstract center of sensation and feeling. I will never forget opening up John Brunner's Jagged Orbit to see that the first page was nothing but "I-," and the second page was nothing but "solationism." I think it even gave me goosebumps. Another obvious example is of course Samuel Delany's Dhalgren, which pulls the reader into a psychosexual, sense-bombarding, world of confusion not unlike our own samsara, with a touch of Maldoror. I once talked to someone about this book who complained about the fact that nothing "happens," nor is anything solved or resolved. I believe she missed the point. Getting back to Butler, the reason she is on the mind is because I have been listening to Nicole Mitchell's tribute to her, Xenogenesis Suite, and really digging it. I was admittedly disappointed in Mitchell's last album, Black Unstoppable, because her recordings up till then were so uniquely her sound, using uncommon instrumentation to create a flowing yet angular, inspirited experience, but Unstoppable felt locked in by forms. Xenogenesis is pure magic. Even if the listener is not familiar with the source material, the music will take he or she into that very feeling I described above. There is transcendence, (re)connection, and catharsis. If only Octavia Butler were around to hear it. I envision her listening to it at home in isolation, her eyes enlivened with the knowledge that her creation in turn inspired another beautiful creation.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Eat me at the King of Southern-Fried Chicken


"Charles Wright’s THE WIG marked a change in African-American fiction. All of us who wanted to 'experiment,' as we were seeing our painter and musician friends experiment, used it as a model. Though some would call me the literary son of Ralph Ellison, in the 1960s I was the younger brother of Charles Wright."-Ishmael Reed


Sunday, September 28, 2008

October Revolution


The last couple of weeks in October are going to be insane when it comes to live music in the area. Funds are limited, so of course choices must be made, but how does one choose? Check it out:


Evan Parker 10/17 & 10/18



Paul Lytton 10/20 & 10/21 not with Parker (how did this happen?), but with Nate Wooley on both dates and including Fred Frith on the 21st


Billy Bang 10/21


Archie Shepp (pictured with that amazing two 'bone front line of Rudd & Moncur) 10/23



Cecil Taylor 10/24


Marilyn Crispell 10/26

Whew. There are actually some others (like Toumani Diabate and TV on the Radio) that spill into November. Well, Shepp and Crispell are the only two I've never seen. Archie Shepp is one of my favorite musicians/improvisers/composers, which should be reason enough for that show to be the first choice. However, I do have one concern, and that is he might settle into his Ben Webster bag for the whole set. Don't get me wrong, I love Webster (a lot), and I love the way Shepp handles breathy ballads in that mode and tone, but Fire Music is what I'm yearning for. Cecil I've seen quite a few times, and none of those shows were less than beatific. In fact, many folks I've befriended, loved, or greatly admired were at the same C.T. poetry reading back in 2000 which was backed by Positive Knowledge, Marco Eneidi, and Ledoh! Portions of that reading can be seen in the C.T. documentary All the Notes. Marilyn Crispell would be nice to see; her solo work covers every mood and musical facet imaginable. Her piano playing provided some of the most intense communal surges on perhaps one of the greatest musical recordings I've ever owned. Parker, Lytton and Bang are actually in my price range. One should feel blessed for even having these options. Any suggestions?

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Ecclesiastes 3

The starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) are beginning to moult their summer plumage. Since moving to northern California, this phenomenon has been one of the many subtle signs of seasonal change that I have come to depend on. A fact that teases my imagination even more (when I consciously choose to ignore the scientific explanations) is that the starlings' beaks change from yellow to black in the winter. I used to wonder if I was seeing two different species or sexes. There are of course other ways to spot seasonal transitions in the region, especially in riparian areas. Sycamores, black oaks and black cottonwoods stand out among Monterey Pine, coast live oaks and Douglas Firs with their autumn colors. The flowers on the buckeyes wilt away, and pear-shaped seed capsules hang from their branches. Walnuts with husks that smell green form and fall. Poppies no longer carpet meadows. Blackberry brambles no longer bear fruit. During San Francisco winters, when it's not raining (something that has been a bit lacking the last couple of years), Orion's belt (or The Three Kings) is a constant companion in the night sky, visible despite the billions of artificial lights. This was my last summer in San Francisco, and perhaps I'm getting sentimental. The first few lines from that Fever Tree song, "San Francisco Girls," suddenly come to mind.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Personal Version of Chaos

Somehow I missed the news that Mauricio Kagel passed away earlier this week. His work has always appealed to me due to its complete disregard for borders between disciplines. Creative people that have this quality (Art Ensemble of Chicago, Brecht, the Black Artists Group and Cecilia Vicuna all come to mind) seem to be deeply in touch with the mysterious animating forces of the universe. No hyperbole intended. Many times a trickster is necessary to show humans just how insignificant their structures and systems imposed on nature really are, and Kagel definitely had those anarchic traits. There is a very good interview with him here.


Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Now Ask Yourself...

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Viparinama-dukkha




Memory: Once when I was in Marcus Books in San Francisco, which is located in a sort of liminal space between Pacific Heights and the Fillmore District (the people who live in Pacific Heights call it "Lower Pacific Heights"), I had a conversation with the woman working there about redevelopment and gentrification. At one moment, we both silently looked out at the passing crowds of "Specific Whites," and I asked: "How do you deal with that every day?" She replied: "It's all illusion, baby."


Is it? Really? Does that mean that my dismay at the changes occurring in the city is simply due to an emotional attachment, and that I should just let go? Granted, if one obsesses over changes that seem impossible to prevent, those charged thoughts will be rather destructive. I don't want to become an old misanthrope. However, shifts such as those we are experiencing in one urban city lead immediately to contemplation of immense issues that seem way beyond an individual's capability to act on.


Many people (including me at times) focus on the pseudo-hipsters (you have to be hip to something to deserve that name-somebody needs to bring that Ted Joans book back into print*) and their impact on the Mission, but there have been much more conscious actions taken to uproot San Francisco neighborhoods in favor of a new population. Of course the city's redevelopment agency has a notorious history, one that created the situation with the Fillmore District referenced above and the forced evictions from the International Hotel, but there have been more subtle but just as destructive moves being made within the last decade.


The Nob Hill Gazette helped me realize this. For those who don't know, the Gazette is a free monthly newspaper that comes to the doorsteps of the nabobs in both Nob Hill and Pacific Heights. The paper's wedding column is called "Mergers and Acquisitions." Reading was revealing, especially two issues I still have somewhere in storage. One contained an article discussing Bayview/Hunter's Point, and how it is going to be the next hot neighborhood in San Francisco, and that real estate was at that time still affordable there. Of course there was mention of how the area was being cleaned up and improving. The next issue contained a letter to the editor in which a reader was overflowing with pleasant surprise and plans to invest. The end of the letter was virtually gushing with the realization that Bayview is the "sunniest" area of the city.


At the time, I was working at Candlestick Point, and as I was riding the 15 bus down Third Street on my way to work, I would look at the construction sites for the Third St Rail, and all the new buildings popping up everywhere and grit my teeth. I then of course had no idea that development plans would even include my own workplace.




*Actually, the whole Village scene that eventually became popularized and commercialized after the Beat Generation hype on the surface seems similar to what is happening now.