Thursday, February 10, 2011

Teleporter Dreams (and Stranger Things)

Welcome, and in some cases, welcome back!
Great to have you here.

Let's see what's up this time...

CURRENTS

One of My Turns
I got a number of things accomplished this morning.
I asked my doctor about a couple of medications (to see if they were right for me). I committed to a specific number for my side of my Select Comfort Sleep System. Most importantly, I finally got around to gathering up all my loose, broken and unwanted gold and jewelry and sent it off for payment.
Ah, gold. That elusive stuff that's fueled dreams, schemes and empires for much of human history is back on everyone's lips. (Of perhaps greater interest is the phenomenal rise of silver, a commodity that's doubled in price in the last three years!). There's a hedge for you, then, an inoculation against disaster. This business in Tunisia, Yemen, Egypt and elsewhere is really heavy stuff, and one wonders whether it's just the throngs further shaking off oppressive fetters or a harbinger of greater regional unrest to come. These developments dovetail with a greater thing I'm feeling these days. It's like I can't get up in the morning without being confronted with competing groups who are anxiously getting out their own message about dissolution, disaster, apocalypse. The other day I stumbled across a website whose producers claim to have nailed down the exact date for the end of the world (spoiler alert: don't plan anything for this May 21st).
Y'know, at some point doesn't all this stuff open the door for self-fulfilling prophecies? Is doomsday that titillating? Do we need the thrill, the spike, that much? Here's the thing. After a certain point, especially in such times as these, you simply cannot worry about this stuff anymore. So - where does that leave me, and you, and the whole planet? There's really only one thing that conquers death, ruin, warnings, alerts and panics. It's life, that is to say, the stuff of life. Every little day-to-day thing that is good. Be it a seriously satisfying cup of coffee, a favorite piece of music or a violet and orange-streaked evening sky, there are things that are good. Seek them out. They will feed you, and clothe you against the dire minutiae of our world and its crazed impulses. Such small rewards make no ripples, stir no waters, and don't announce themselves over the blaring klaxons of our societal din. They aren't supposed to. But a person's claimed pleasures, their daily victories, are, when you get down to it, the makings of a tolerable, even enjoyable, life, one that no feverish prognostications can derail.

BOOKS

Butterflies for the Tsar
Vladimir Nabokov, his wife Vera and son Dmitri hustled on to a freighter leaving France in 1940, barely ahead of the Nazi occupiers. It was the culmination of 23 years of fleeing, the first departure having been from the chaos of 1917 Russia. They sailed for New York, where a new country awaited the writer along with new opportunities and time, at last, to relax into his various endeavors and begin the series of novels which gained him, rightfully so, the status of giant of letters. Twenty years after disembarking he began to collect various autobiographical fragments into what became Speak, Memory, a book that preserved these formative years and experiences, and it's an engrossing look into the creative process and its fruits.
He opens with a meditation on the nature of time, and of the development of his own consciousness, his own differentiation, from his parents. A harsh baptismal moment, then a walk through a lovely lane of young oaks on the family's country estate (his father wearing military finery brought out specially for the day), bring to the young boy his first taste of self-awareness, and blessedly, serene contentment and peace. Yet he notes "Neither in environment nor in heredity can I find the exact instrument that fashioned me, the anonymous roller that pressed upon my life a certain intricate watermark whose unique design becomes visible when the lamp of art is made to shine through life's foolscap." Bliss gives way to larger awareness. The Russo-Japanese War, being waged in 1904, occurred while young Vladimir was still a preschooler, and its less-than-optimum outcome was a dim part of his youth, along with governesses, tutors, and other local figures including the working-class laborers for whom his father acted as a sort of lieutenant.
Nabokov's disclosure of his synthesia, wherein a person associates letters and their sound with certain colors, or atmospheric associations (much as in the related phenomena of "seeing" music, or "tasting" colors) apparently extends to his mother as well. The boy would sit during recitations and see only the words and the sensual impressions they left, something that greatly affected his very visual prose. He life was geared to detail, and his mother's admonition "Vot zapomni," "Now remember," leads him to reconstruct for us the countryside, the family sleigh and the footmen, the still-intact environs of beautiful old St. Petersburg.

Accordingly, his mother's hunt for, laying out for inspection and preparation of various mushrooms becomes a two-page idyll. The family's life, as befits that of true gentry, is one of breathtaking leisure. Each evening at dessert, the elder Nabokov pens the following day's menu for the butler. When the family is not at the house in St. Petersburg they're at the country home, receiving the attentions of some 50 servants. As WWI is dispatched in a dazzling, evocative paragraph, it's on to the beginnings of flight and exile.
Nabokov reckons it a time in the text for summing up, to trace a family line that reaches back to the 14th Century. This past is peopled with the likes of Chekov (from whose dachshunds come a beloved family pet), to Dostoyevsky (imprisoned under Nabokov's great-uncle in the Peter and Paul Fortess in St. Petersburg) and a man who married a friend of Pushkin. The lineage includes a strong Prussian miltary heritage, Siberian prospectors, physicians, Decembrists and a Saxon composer of note, Carl Heinrich Graun. This family - tossing off little bons mot at the dinner table and stocking their children's shelves with books fresh from British and American presses - moved in the company of tsars, diplomats, counts and princes, and Nabokov recreates this world with startling clarity. (With regard to literary pursuits, his Uncle Konstantin translated Pushkin, much as Vladimir would later translate, with commentary, Eugene Onegin).
Of the revolution that swept this world away, the writer seems ambivalent. He pines not for "lost banknotes" but rather for his suddenly, sharply truncated youth. He'd come into a bit of an inheritance, not to mention the summer home, upon turning 16.

"That robust reality makes a ghost of the present," he writes from his adopted home on the other side of the globe. So great is his attachment to the past and its humble, magical objects that he's loathe to transport them from memory to page. Such items as a set of colored pencils or a beloved mirror, when interpolated into a later book, are "lost forever" to a manuscript. He realizes, though, that nothing can ever be truly lost if captured on a page, and so he zealously charts a course to populate that page. Here is sleep: a "nightly betrayal of reason," a "black-masked headsman binding me to the block," and a park: a "white lacery of berimed avenues." His initial attempts at poetry are "languid rambles," yes, but also "glowing" ranks of words, with their "puffed-out little chests and trim uniforms." Much of his meditations upon the girls he now encounters betray the onset of puberty, although ten elegant pages pass before the reader realizes this.
At eight, in a storeroom in the country home, the boy finds a trove of old books on insects and butterflies in particular, a find that coincides with his love of their capture. Barely a teen, he reads entomological periodicals in English and ponderous catalogues in German. He so relishes the solitude of this pasttime, the mental exertion, the thrill of both the chase and the capture - and if the specimen is a rarity, so much the better! His "demon," his "obession," binds him to other enthusiasts he refers to as "fellow sufferers." Lepidoptery is something that will thrill him at his core for the rest of his life.

Young Vladimir, on a wonderfully rendered train and headed south toward the sandy, salty expanse of Biarritz begins to discover the larger world. His first true affections for the fairer sex are imminent, and arrive as, fittingly, he is discovering the pleasures of poetry. Later, the little seaside girl is forgotten in favor of a certain Tamara. His breathless pursuit of her leads beyond furtive trysts spied on by groundskeepers to stolen moments in museum alcoves and darkened cinemas. Incidentally, the young aspirant publishes a collection of his writings at this point, although the ridicule of a teacher serves to forever thereafter cure him of any sort of regard for the words of the critic.
At last, the Bolshevik lunacy he's only alluded to thus far breaks into the narrative. It's onward, for a mixed clutch of Nabokovs, to first the Crimea, then Greece, then England, where the young man enters Cambridge. Cambridge: there his twin current fascinations of football and poetry overlap. He courts a number of young, slyly dancing damsels, and corrects the misinformed among his liberal schoolmates about the Bolshevik "struggle."
So are enjoined twenty years in searching exile, as part of the unmoored Russian emigre community cast abroad in Berlin and Paris. Back home the fiery flare of Lenin was giving way to the grinning wolf of Stalin, and those writers, thinkers and artists not dead or in the gulag were joylessly churning out plays and manuscripts meant first for censors' eyes. Indeed, Nabokov notes that "...the successful Soviet writer was the one whose fine ear caught the soft whisper of an official suggestion before it had become a blare." He frets a bit, later, over this period - even though he's been publishing fiction in Russian and making a name for himself (even while being without a tantalizingly unavailable readership in his homeland), he during this time devotes a great many hours to the construction of elaborate chess problems. No greater sweetness, no higher victory is there than a nettlesome series which suddenly reveals to him the kernel of its solution.
So go his fascinated days, with butterflies even on the back burner for a time. At this point we dip back to 1934 for the birth of his and Vera's son, Dmitri, and Nabokov devotes a fair expanse to Dimitri's early days. Then it's back to France, May 1940, and boarding for America. His first novel in English, The Real Life of Sebastian Knight will follow in the next year, and later the dystopian fable Bend Sinister (1947), watershed Lolita (1955), Pnin (1957), Pale Fire (1962), the publication of a revised version of Speak, Memory (1966) and Ada (1969).
Perhaps one could draw the conclusion that Nabokov's old-world sensibilities, together with an early life of ease and reflection, led to his producing of such an amazing body of work. There's still the man himself, though, shepherding his prose together according to his own designs and producing brilliance, and finally it is that prose which holds us rapt.

FILM

Fierce Beauty: Contemporary Danish Cinema
Having been pleasantly surprised by so many visitors from Denmark (my ancestral homeland), I thought I'd take a look at a few of the country's films as a thank-you. So pour a tumbler of akvavit, relax, and read on.

Photographer Peter Elfelt got the ball rolling in 1896. A documentary filmmaker, he also made Henrettelsen (Capital Execution) in 1903, the first Danish feature film. Early directors of note include Carl Theodor Dreyer (who produced the chilling Vampyr) and Johan Jacobsen, who led a field which produced everything from bleak dramas to thrillers.
For a ten-year period beginning in 1965, erotic films were produced in large numbers, concurrent with other such developments in Sweden. In 1972 Det Danske Filminstitut was founded, and in conjuction with Den Danske Filmskole was a key player in developing the next wave of directors. In 1983 graduate Lars von Trier began to receive attention for his frank, controversial subject matter, and in 1987 Gabriel Axel won the Best Foreign Film Oscar for Babbettes Gaestebud (Babbette's Feast). Billie August picked up the award in 1988 for Pelle Erobreren (Pelle the Conqueror), and both of these movies made inroads in America, being widely available at US video stores.

Let's begin then with von Trier, an auteur's auteur, a man who is periodically subject to a depression so crippling that it renders him unable to work. He began shooting shorts on a little Super-8 at the age of 11, and in 1979 entered the national film school. He made his mark while still a student, and was soon no stranger to Cannes. His first trilogy of sorts included 1984 noir The Element of Crime, 1987's Epidemic (a twist on the nature of reality), and 1991's Europa, aka Zentropa, three films that were experimental in style and content. His Dancer in the Dark, starring Bjork, anchored a "Golden Heart" trilogy and attracted commentary and love/hate furor everywhere it was shown. He further pushed boundaries with Dogville (minimal, chalk-mark stage sets with white outlines for objects), Mandalay, and The Five Obstructions, which retold 1967's The Perfect Human with various inserted impediments.
Von Trier attracted much hubbub again with 2009's Antichrist, an elemental and disturbing spectacle of madness and decay. Willem Dafoe is He to Charlotte Gainsbourg's She. After losing their child to a freak accident, Gainsbourg retreats to a deep forest (where she'd studied the previous summer), as much to gather her wits as to escape Dafoe's emotionally detached analyst. After a stunning black-and-white Prologue, von Trier unfolds this unsettling tale in three segments - Pain, Despair and The Three Beggars - which correspond to a trio of figures from the couple's apartment. Various images leap out of the screen as Dafoe is shaken by Gainsbourg's psychic retreat: a mangled crow, an eviscerated fox, and a tree that heaves in spasm as Dafoe pins his maddened woman beneath its boughs. The director pulls no punches, and includes probably the most diabolically misogynistic image ever filmed. He wants to inhabit the viewer's mind, and does so in this dark fable.
Von Trier lives and works to provoke, and accordingly he formed Dogme 95 with fellow director Thomas Vinterberg. The qualifications for a film to be so certified require it to be shot onsite, with no interference or special effects and using only such materials and props as are readily at hand, and forbidding even the later addition of music. This seeming austerity might sound off-putting, but there have been a great many movies produced under these auspices. In fact, Dogme 1 was produced by Vinterberg, and was a film called Festen (The Celebration). In it, a family gathers to celebrate the 60th birthday of its patriarch, Helge. Son Christian (Ulrich Thomsen) shakes up the dinner with a few shocking revelations. The evening proceeds, however, in spite of further disclosures (including one from beyond the grave). Vinterberg confounds expectations, and deftly controls every onscreen moment, showing what is possible through editing, pacing and slow, subtle character development.
In addition to the film winning several awards it was adapted for a number of stage productions worldwide.
Lone Scherfig's career was well established in TV and film when she began 2000's Italiensk for Begyndere (Italian for Beginners), also a Dogme film. In this wonderfully interwoven story a group of disparate, lonely people including Andreas, a pastor (Anders W. Berthelsen), a hairdresser, Karen (Ann Eleonora Jorgensen), a put-upon shopgirl from the bakery (Annette Stovelbaek) and two buddies (Peter Ganzler as the shy Jorgen and Lars Kaalund as the obnoxious Finn) periodically gather for Italian lessons in a small hall. After the instructor dies suddenly it's up to Finn, who speaks decent Italian, to carry on. It won its share of awards from Berlin to Barcelona, and is in fact the most profitable Scandinavian movie ever made.
Ulrich Thomsen again appears in two further films, Susannah Bier's 2004 Brodre (Brothers), (remade in the US in 2009 with Tobey Maguire), and Per Fly's Arven (The Inheritance). In the first he's Michael, an army officer back from Afghanistan with a secret so dark it may destroy his family (where Thomsen receives fine support from Nikolaj Lie Kaas as brother Jannik), in the second he's Christoffer, a restaurateur living in Sweden who's called back home to handle the family business after his father's suicide. Thomsen displays a knack for seeking out roles where he may portray men with gentle spirits, yet hearts given to pragmatic hardening.
There are those directors who do painstakingly craft their images and go to immense lengths to hone their personal images. These include Ole Bornedal, who produced the gripping Kaelighed parfilm (Just Another Love Story) in 2007. Anders W. Berthelsen is Jonas, a police photographer who's heavily mortgaged, trapped in domesticity, and entertains reveries of a new life. This new life arrives in the form of the unhinged Julia (Rebecka Hemse), who is on the run - "not from a grey, humdrum existence but from a sharp black cloud." She does get away ("all the way away") and ends up with amnesia. Her car crash alone is masterful, and Bornedal sweeps us into her world from there, a world that Sebastian (Lie Kaas again), the one tie from her previous life, has gone missing, presumably dead. Jonas is blissful in "...a world beyond coffee, herring and chatter." Bornedal's juxtapostions are marvelous, with Jonas entertaining Julia while his dinner guests look askance: entertaining her as Sebastian, when Sebastian's identity is, we are shown, not up for grabs!
I was most struck by Henrik Ruben Genz's Frygtelig Lykkelig (Terribly Happy), a master class in composition and mood. Genz's previous life as a graphic designer informs his eye, and the result is brilliantly shot and perfectly paced.
Jacob Cedergren is Robert Hansen, a cop on leave from Copenhagen who's assigned to a tiny municipality out in the hinterlands of South Jutland...a place where theings are done a certain way, including law enforcement. Hansen's entanglement with a local housewife leads to trouble: he tries to put a stop to her abuse, but instead creates a brutal dilemma that draws the entire town into its path.
There is not a second of wasted film here, and to chatter on about it would only serve to belabor a singular work of art.
Naturally, with the gangster/caper/double-cross film reaching new heights of popularity in the '90s, everyone wants to have a go, and Denmark is no different. Nicolas Winding Refn inaugurated what became a gritty trilogy with 1996's Pusher. He initially filmed a short to try to raise money for a feature-length version, then decided to do it himself with whatever money he could scrounge up (before funding did in fact arrive).
We meet Frank (Kim Bodnia) and sidekick Tonny just this side of a decent drug score, and soon a simple deal falls, completely, drastically apart. After a couple more films, including 2003's acclaimed Fear X which starred John Turturro, Refn completed a very interesting story cycle with Pusher II and III, in 2004 and '05. We'll finish with a director who does shoot a nice little caper movie, albeit one that opts for a bit more complexity.
Anders Thomas Jensen wrote Brothers, and was story supervisor for Antichrist. He also won Best Short Subject for 1998's Election Night, an 11-minute nibble that starred Ulrich Thomsen. In 2000 he dropped Blinkende Lygter (Flickering Lights) wherein Torkilde (Soren Pilmark) runs afoul of a heavyweight called The Eskimo. He only wants a chance at a new beginning: at 40 he's getting a little desperate. Therefore, after ripping off the crime boss again he and mates Arne (Mads Mikkelsen, a go-to Danish actor), Peter (Thomsen again), and Stephan (once more, a funny Lie Kaas) convert a stopgap hideout - an abandoned restaurant - into a going concern.
A recurrent window motif sets up a glimpse into a key event in each man's life, with Stephan's tying the four together. They're violent, they're from violence. The Eskimo shows up, as we know he must, but the group is spared by a most unlikely savior!

When watching these films I don't get the impression of Danish actors as cossetted stars, living life under a microscope and being hounded from red carpet to red carpet. Denmark's filmmakers seem to want to tell a story, and they do, often with breathtaking originality of vision.
This is not to suggest that the actors in these films are some simple part of a whole - far from it - but it is refreshing to become engrossed in a story in which the cast melt into their roles. I've often lambasted American cinema (in the last 25 years at least) for churning out movies that fit easily into slots, that ask nothing of the viewer and seek to add nothing to film. Europe (and pretty much everyone else) simply present their story: elements comedic and dark, mundane and absurd appear in the course of the movie's telling, and thus mirror real life.
Denmark, then, offers the Continental and the provincial, the bleak alongside the beautiful, and delivers to the happy filmgoer an experience that is subtly understated yet elegant, provocative and quietly profound.

MUSIC

Into the Noose: Alice Cooper in the '70s
Now that Alice Cooper can add membership in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame to his curriculum vitae, and as we're approaching the 40th anniversary of the landmark LP of his classic band, let's take a moment to consider the man at the peak of his powers. It's been a fascinating, bumpy road for this entertainer, a road that includes not only a life in music, stage and screen but also turns as a restaurateur, Pro-Am golfer, radio host and self-appointed addiction counselor. If we delve into the past, back beyond the '80s when he found himself lumped in with the hair-metal hordes, we arrive in the America of the early 1970s, a place where the country's kids found themselves surrounded by parents, teachers and Nixon. It was here that Cooper developed a stage show so bizarre, so theatrical, that it soon threatened to overtake the music, which is a shame: his band of these years turned out a string of brilliant albums, records that have lost none of their power, complexity and honesty.
Vincent Damon Furnier's family relocated from Michigan to Phoenix when he was just a kid, and it was here that young Vince began a musical career, in order to get some of the attention that his heroes like the Stones and Yardbirds were getting. A high-school coach saddled him with the task of organizing a talent show (with participants drawn form among the ranks of the school's jocks), and this led to the formation of the Earwigs, Vince's first band.
The Earwigs became the Spiders, then the Nazz. After gigging around the area, then moving the show outward toward the greener pastures of California, the group finally relocated to L.A. in early 1968. Their lineup was now solidified as Glen Buxton and Michael Bruce (lead and rhythm guitar), Dennis Dunaway (bass) and Neil Smith (drums). By May they'd changed their name to Alice Cooper, a name-change story that in subsequent interviews was tarted up with a lot of Ouija board/reincarnation backstory baggage, but was really only chosen because Furnier thought it was a cool name, vaguely suggestive of an archaic personality about which an elaborate image might be constructed.
The group was at the epicenter of the golden West Coast '60s, surrounded by and playing with Led Zeppelin, The Doors, Janis Joplin, Iron Butterfly, Buffalo Springfield and various other heavies. In August '68 they opened the Newport Pop Festival in Costa Mesa, and it was at this time that a talent hustler named Shep Gordon got them in contact with Frank Zappa, who was launching a boutique label called Straight. The label also featured a pack of groupies called the GTOs (Girls Together Outrageously, among other variants), one of whom - Miss Christine - became smitten with the gangly Furnier, and took it upon herself to outfit the band in some properly weird outfits. Those outfits, the ongoing performances which sharpened the band's chops, and a recording deal greatly boosted the guys' confidence. At a 1969 festival in Toronto, the singer tossed a wayward chicken off the stage into the audience, and this for some reason led to tales of his biting off the animal's head and drinking its blood. Factual or not, such stories proved to be great for publicity, and proved an omen of coming stage mayhem.
The band's first album, 1969's Pretties for You and its 1970 follow-up Easy Action were not really focused, and show a band still carrying around a lot of uneasy psychedelic chops. The band's leader, who was on the verge of fully going by his outfit's name, summed up the group's vibe at this point - they "drove a stake in the heart of the Love Generation." Very well. The boys had to produce one more LP to fulfill their contract with Zappa, and it proved to be a turning point.
Producer Bob Ezrin was called in, and his work began a fruitful relationship with Cooper and the band. In late 1970 the band entered the RCA studios in Chicago and emerged with the polished, powerful sound they'd been seeking, with an album called Love It To Death. Album opener "Caught in a Dream" and "Long Way to Go" are succinct, guitar-fueled gems about the vagaries of impending stardom, but Cooper further demands - in "Is It My Body" - "...have you got the time to find out - who I really am?" A taste of the big time arrived with the #21 chart placement of "I'm 18," a tune fated to be shanghaied for the Noah's Ark of "classic rock" radio. As with most other songs commandeered by that damnable format, the song is fantastic when heard within the context of its home album. Cooper leaves it all on the studio floor, rolling out a raw-throated delivery of controlled (but only just) desperation, and his vocal makes the song.
Ezrin contributes keyboards to the sessions, most notably on the set piece"Black Juju," a riveting psychodrama where the band can really spread out and explore a theme, and the concise wig-out "Hallowed Be My Name." This sets up "Second Coming"/The Ballad of Dwight Fry," a study in strange, encroaching madness. We close with "Sun Arise," an odd choice (being a cover of Rolf Harris, the man who gave us "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport"), but which nevertheless the band nail, and with great zeal. So closes a lyrically rich record, with guitars surgical in their economy and arrangements strong across the board. It's a sonic postcard aimed at the huddled teen masses yearning to breathe free, and my pick for desert-island LP by the band.
The response to the single got the attention of Warner Brothers, who bought out the band's contract and reissued LITD. The increased promotion sent the LP to #35, and set up a US and European tour that rapidly got out the word. Arriving soon thereafter was Killer, and the lead track "Under My Wheels" dispelled any doubts or ambiguities in a blast of sax-laced bluster. In "Be My Lover," a composite band member tries to explain his life to a motel-bar acquaintance, in a song that's as wistful as is it rocking. The band serve up "Halo of Flies," like "Black Juju" another dream-state, impressionist exploration of a series of propulsive, jagged riffs. Cooper's raw bawl again appears on "Yeah Yeah Yeah" and the strings-enriched "Desperado," a rumination that he sometimes claimed to be about Jim Morrison (who'd only just died).
Here's the difference between the two, however. Morrison's theatre was broad, intense, and presented an Eros/Thanatos axis that kept both the man and his lyrics distant, aloof, inaccessible. Cooper's writing offers theatre, yes, but it's a kindred-spirit approach, one man seeking his way, clutching toward self-expression, shaping his career and art even while being immersed in the machinery of stardom.
He does plant a seed here, with "Dead Babies," and again the concept of raw shock bricks itself in as a component of his approach. The title track, a seven-minute multipart trip, closes things up on this last recorded stop before superstardom.
The timetable seemed to suggest a breakthrough album, a monster to capitalize on the band's momentum, and School's Out didn't disappoint. Demonstrating his new pull with Warners' was the record's jacket, a die-cut affair that could be propped up like an old schoolroom desk complete with opening top. The vinyl was housed in a pair of faux panties (so inaugurating a packaging effort with the group that lead to finding complete packages quite a challenge for collectors in later years). The title track leapt to #1, the LP to #2, and the ride began. With "Luney Tune" and "My Stars," the band's arrangements travel further afield, and the jailbird number "Public Animal #9" has Alice's words degenerate into a grating howl that is in fact animal.
The album's centerpoint deals with a sort of West Side Story vibe, given the subject of "Gutter Cats vs. The Jets" and "Street Fight," and thus we find Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim in the studio sharing production duties! Alice bares himself again on "Alma Mater," a bittersweet recollection of the maze of high school life, and a vulnerable moment that further strengthens the album's emotional spectrum. It was another triumph, and cause for another tour, the stage presentation for which now featured the singer - after a visual spectacle - being hanged.
By now the band's alcohol intake had reached heroic proportions, especially in the case of Buxton, who'd begun displaying the lifestyle's ravages. The band then repaired to a mansion in Greenwich, Connecticut to lay down the tracks for the next album. There were a number of guest musicians and eight engineers alongside Ezrin for the production of Billion Dollar Babies, a glittering production of Cooper baroque. Here is the band at the pinnacle of the Rock heights, soon to put a show on the road that broke all existing records, and its dazed, bleary members offer up a chronicle of those heights.
It's a mixed bag that yielded up a clutch of signature tunes, like the comic "No More Mr. Nice Guy" and leather-lunged "Elected." Alice plays to the controversy machine with "Sick Things" and "I Love the Dead," and onstage he'd gone from finishing up by being hanged to now being guillotined. It was over the top, and the band's fans, now found worldwide, demanded more. It was this pressure that led to the breakup of the original group, but they still had one more album to make together, and it proved to be their most underrated.
Late in '73, running on fumes, the guys recorded Muscle of Love. It's a strong collection, diverse and energetic. There's the sad beauty of "Hard Hearted Alice" and "Teenage Lament '74." Horns punch up the compelling "Never Been Sold Before" as well as "The Man With the Golden Gun," a deft submission for the current Bond flick (that lost out to a lesser offering from Lulu). Closer "Woman Machine" is as heavy as the swaying, Dixieland-flavored "Crazy Little Child" is playful. Then there's the title track, a rocker that blends several riffs into a gripping whole. Opening track "Big Apple Dreamin'" and "The Man With the Golden Gun" are both credited to the entire band (as are "School's Out," "I'm 18" and "Elected"), and showcase the collective might that the band accessed during this amazing time.
Solo outings and future heights of fame awaited Alice, but it was the music from this time, with this band, that cemented his greatness.
PERIODICALS

The Conversation Continues
I'll never forget the blankly grinning mannequins, some years ago in an ad in Us magazine, who reflected warmly that "...the line between entertainment and information is blurring, and so what?" While it is true that the industry has gotten very chummy with sidebars, bullet points and whittled-down "paragraphs" of easily digested pablum, there are still a few publications out there that expect, even require you to engage yourself. Perhaps pre-eminent among these defiant holdouts is The New York Review of Books, a magazine that seeks to continue the conversation of the mind, even in a time where active thought is seen as an impediment. Enough boring proselytizing, however: let's just look at the mag in question.
It was founded in 1963 by a group of NYC literary industry figures, who felt that a serious, consistent organ for substantial reviews and essays did not exist. A city printing strike was impetus for the title's launch, as it put the Times at a standstill. This early founding group - Robert Silvers, Barbara and Jason Epstein and Elizabeth Hardwick strove to publish material from the best writers and critics of the day, including a few from outside the establishment or, indeed, the country. the purpose was, and remains, a conversation about books, and the cultural, political and historical worlds those books seek to comment upon.
Over time, it has gravitated between true-Left leanings and a general universal approach, although the instability and tension of the last ten years has created in the paper a vocal, sustained critique of US policy, domestic and especially foreign. After Barbara Epstein's death in 2006, Silvers remains as sole editor, a position he holds in great understanding of the magazine's tradition and standards. Accordingly, a look at the February issue shows a publication as diverse, as challenging as ever.
Let's begin with a (literally) far-out piece - Nobel-winning physicist Steven Weinberg on Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow's The Grand Design. Weinberg first lays out the mechanics of one of the duo's key models, the multiverse, and presents their arguments for such a system, of which universes such as ours are but fragments. In so doing he provides an overview of familiar concepts such as string theory and dark matter, but also newer, still-developing ideas such as the theory of chaotic inflation. He takes Hawking to task for a few historical errors involving work presented by Archimedes and Copernicus, and does make note of the great man's complete and total dismissal of any sort of "design" behind the vastness of deep space, or humankind and its thinkers and seekers, for that matter.
After a piece that is - for the lay reader such as me - fairly heavy sledding, Weinberg concludes that he need not concur with Hawking and Mlodinow to appreciate their work, and so it should be.
Next up, law and philosophy professor Ronald Dworkin presents an excerpt from his recent book (Justice for Hedgehogs), in which he discusses the pursuit of a Good Life. After drawing a distinction between ethics and morality, he proceeds to reconcile the two (in a sense of personal duty to oneself and others) with the search for a fulfilling life. Dworkin sees, as an outgrowth of personal responsibility, the obligation to live a good life, to strive toward whatever ends will achieve this. For him, the material evidence left by a writer or artist (for example) is not the important thing. It is the fact of those creations' existence, the energy required to produce them...indeed, his words hold out great hope for those two occupations, as he posits "...even an unrecognized...achievement makes a life a good one." Additionally, though deeds may produce a life of subjective value, he states clearly that the Aristotlean ideal (a life of contemplation) is desirable - objectively good, of objective value. Strong words - wise words.
Jason Epstein (again, one of the co-founders and a man whose many other accomplishments include the founding of Library of America with Edmund Wilson) is on board to review John B. Thompson's Merchants of Culture: The Publishing Business in the Twenty-First Century. He does discuss the book, but he also provides a fascinating look into his own years at Random House, when the culture of publishing was in a far different place. We're given a timeline of sorts, beginning with the ubiquity of books (and bookstores, and a culture that valued both) in America's midcentury cities. Large, independent stores where relationships were cultivated were overtaken by chains which may or may not have room for backlists of any depth. Malls, mergers and a decline in stores staffed by readers led to the current climate of publishing houses approaching the surviving few chains on bended knee, big-gun A-list offerings in hand.
Epstein rightly ascribes the role of provider of depth to Amazon, and though he soundly spanks e-books and other non-print media early in the piece, is speculating on the future of such phenomena as self/POD publishing by its end. He provides excerpts from Thompson that offer up such revelations as a) books are critical parts of our lives and b) they and the places that house them will always be with us. Regardless, any discussion about the state of the industry, even if it reveals white-knuckle trepidations and flagging backlists, will always be welcome...and necessary.
The arts are of course well represented. NYU professor Thomas Nagel reviews Tony Judt's posthumous The Memory Chalet, a collection of essays about the critic's life and beliefs, dictated by Judt even as his body wasted away under the ravages of ALS. Nagel ponders these theses and places them within the framework of Judt's life - the old-style social liberal convictions, coming as they did from an unapologetic meritocracy (something he feels the US, like the UK has done away, with disastrous results), and especially his complicated search for his own identity, as a man born Jewish but who wrestled his whole life with Zionism in its various modes and expressions. Nagel gets in the man's head a bit, and leaves us with an appreciation for this most remarkable memoir.
Willibald Sauerlander, former director of the Central Institute for Art History, Munich, discusses a collection of Dutch portraiture currently on loan to the city's Alte Pinakothek, a rare loan that depicts a city moving away from occupation, war and religion and toward a new, business-driven world of prosperity and industry. Architectural historian Martin Filler, in reviewing a number of works by Glaswegian (by way of Liverpool) architect James Frazier Stirling, affords us a look at the combative postmodern world of this field, with its snares and bitter rivalries. Most rewarding are two books that introduce unfamiliar characters with rich, troubled lives.
First, Stanford's Robert Pogue Harrison discusses Canti, a newly translated selection of poems by Giacomo Leopardi, a man revered in Italy but fairly obscure elsewhere. This extraordinary figure (who died in 1837) mastered Greek, Latin and Hebrew as a teen before moving on to the life of an autodidact, and moreover, one who wrote poetry. Harrison describes Leopardi's numerous physical afflictions (which led to a metaphysical, cynical despair), then moves to an analysis of the difficult job before translator Jonathan Gaslassi. The translator faces the gulf of hewing to the true nature of the poet's words as he converts them to another language, but Leopardi also aggressively used parole (older words with broad, often instinctive possible meanings) as opposed to termini (very specific, concrete words). Leopardi's confrontational vision sought transcendence, and he got his back up against the temporal and finite. In this respect, his countrymen honor him for precisely the right reasons. Second, poet and editor Adam Kirsch considers several works by the Austrian writer Thomas Bernhard: a new translation of My Prizes: An Accounting, Prose, and Ritter, Dene, Voss. We meet Bernhard, a writer and playwright active from the mid '60s through the early '80s. Kirsch shows us a man who meets life at every turn with disdain, criticism, and enough stagy ennui to place him squarely with the Exis, were he French. Bernhard made a habit of biting the hand that fed him, as evidenced by My Prizes, from 1980. He writes a blithely pointed essay around each literary prize he's won, and reserves a special sneer when describing his hasty purchase of this car or that home, gestures of provocation that also bespeak constant self-invention. That we probably wouldn't have been able to hold a conversation with Bernhard is beside the point. He bears, in one way or another, a closer look from the American reader.
Wrapping up the issue's cultural coverage are various volumes on the natural world, a smattering of Houdini biographies in honor of a new traveling show, and Geoffrey O'Brien's review of Frank: The Voice by James Kaplan. I must say at the outset that I'm no fan, and find Sinatra to be one of the most absurdly deified performers of the last century. I care not for glad-handing, rapturous accounts of the glory years of the lunatic asylum known as Las Vegas, nor its alcohol-sodden, orifice-plumbing Rat Pack of yesteryear. It was therefore with some disdain that I approached this piece, which traces the singer's first flush of success, ca. 1938-1947. Kaplan deftly retraces this rise, and I was at least glad for the few glimpses into the offstage Sinatra that O'Brien selects for comment, such as the singer's disciplined approach to learning his craft and his love of reading.
Less appetizing were revelations of his offering to be a fink for the FBI, re: "subversive" elements (one supposes hanging out with mobsters gets a pass). I already knew him to be an early and vocal critic of rock 'n' roll. I had to re-read phrases such as "...the disciplined release of an unfathomably powerful force" a couple of times in disbelief, but was generally edified and yes, a bit intrigued by the piece.
Moving onward, pleasant variety again presents itself in the form of Max Hastings' review of C.J. Chivers' The Gun. It's the story of a weapon that's been the bane of Western armies for over 60 years, one that was the principal weapon of choice in 46 out of 49 major conflicts of the '90s, a rudimentary rifle so simple that children can operate it (as they sadly so often do): the AK-47. Hastings balks a bit at Chivers' retracing of the machine gun's lineage in general, back to Gatling, then forward to the Maxim/Vickers, then Lewis, through Thompson and finally to the offerings of Hugo Schmeisser. It's through a late-WWII design of the latter's, the MP44 Sturmgewehr, that we meet a poster boy for Soviet arms development, Mikhail Kalishnikov.
The designer's resulting rifle, which worked even under appalling conditions, is contrasted by Chivers with the miserable performance of the M-16, whose sorry record began in the rice paddies of Vietnam. Hastings provides insight into the book, while pondering other such technological comparisons over time. (He certainly chose a book with an influential topic: the History Channel, in one of their addictive specials on the top rifles of all time, rates the AK with top marks in all categories. And apropos of nothing, I recently killed a little time with an issue of Shotgun News, an all-around firearms title, where I was transfixed by a lengthy piece on the weapons of the Spetsnaz. The stars? A vast series of modified AK-47s!) Interesting stuff.
Orhan Pamuk puts in an appearance here to discuss Europe and its relationship with its immigrants, and writers Michael Tomasky and Garry Wills both offer studies of Obama, which bracket two resonant pieces concerning our recent past. Hussein Agha and Robert Malley, in "Who's Afraid of the Palestinians?" study the current relationship between Netanyahu and Abbas, as well as the Obama adminstration's seeming paralysis in moving the discussion forward. Such Palestinian gambits as unilaterally declaring statehood prick up the ears of other nations, and force Israel's hand, yet the writers note that restricting voting saps the country's democratic instincts, while a compromise-state would dilute, perhaps irreparably, its Jewish nature.
Prime Minister Salam Fayyad is discussed, as regards his approach to the problem - an abandonment of Arafat-style "bleeding wound" theatrics, while focusing on day-to-day improvements in his peoples' lives and government. Agha and Malley then arrive at the thorniest ongoing problem on the table: the dependence of Israel on the US (a blank check, it may be fairly said), and the influence of external states upon the Palestinians. That is where they find the two nations at the moment. Israel, sensing a looming "delegitimization" in the eyes of the region and Europe, and Abbas's potential loss of control as the last man with the credibility and expertise to effect a solution.
Finally up is Harvard professor Roderick MacFarquhar's review of Franz Dikotter's Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958-1962. In addition to the Cultural Revolution (that imprisoned or slaughtered outright anyone that got in the regime's way, the Great Leap Forward - a systemic attempt to implement a series of dreadfully bad decisions - was responsible for the deaths, by conservative estimate, of 30 million Chinese. Dikotter traces this movement to an emulation of Kruschchev's industrial boasts, though China had little of the USSR's resources or industrial infrastructure.
Mao put in place several ruinous policies: he broke up existing farming collectives, and families, to create utopian "communes," thus creating shortages that compelled people to panic and eat everything in sight; diverted rural labor toward the factories, ensure crops that rotted in the field; had peasants operate pathetic backyard "foundries" that created an unusable product, and had local farming directors (those who weren't toadying up by overfilling quotas, thus starving their local citizenry) adopt radical new or experimental tchniques, most often with horrible failure as a result.
MacFarquhar's conclusion that this book, which goes beyond any other in, for example, the treatment of the young, the women and the old left at the tender mercies of the regime's enforcers, is the new standard on the subject is absolutely correct. Here, then - a sample issue and its contents.
The magazine, not content to rest on its laurels, has spawned British and Italian editions, as well as a book-publishing arm with three imprints to cover reprints, translations, collections and children's books as well. It's not a "gimme" read, something to flick through at the DMV.
It's, thank God, far more.
TUBE
Muck, No Diamonds
We are, 60 years into TV's reign, standing before a trough...a pile of corn shucks, a salt lick and a few apple cores are almost all that remain of a onetime bounty of decent programming. We can thank the slavering poltergeist of "reality" TV for the blight, and it looks as though, with these shows multiplying like mushrooms in a dank cellar, this is much of what we'll be served from here on out.
How did we get here?
First came the "marquee" shows, when the phenomenon was fairly new and such programs developed followings. Things like Survivor, The Apprentice, Trading Spaces, American Idol, Cops, Big Brother and The Bachelor grew fan bases that followed their subjects' exploits raptly. Yet these initial offerings generated imitators, which assume that if one thing in a subject area is a hit, why can't they all be?
People are fascinated by food, so they're given not only No Reservations and Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern, but also Man vs. Food, Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives and two standoff diner contests - Food Feuds and Food Wars. If Iron Chef will make it, why not Chopped? If martians land tomorrow, will they see a raft of shows about not only cakes, but for-chrissakes cupcakes, and scream off back into space?
If viewers were fixated on Antiques Roadshow, why not brawn it up a bit with Pawn Stars, which begat not only Hardcore Pawn and Storage Wars, the latter of which features...cutthroat bidding on abandoned storage spaces. Completing the obsession with the ephemera of America's past are American Pickers, Oddities and a late entry called Cash & Cari.
So much of the problem stems from a simple thing, and that's networks getting away from their primary mission statement.
MTV could be showing music videos this minute, instead of the parade of bottom-feeders it normally airs. Yet they got in bed with the devil in 1992 with the inaugural season of The Real World and haven't looked back. And VH-1 gets no slack: it couldn't even stick to its MTV-lite rockumentaries, instead unleashing such fare as The Surreal Life, which led to Flavor of Love, Bret Michaels' Rock of Love, and so forth. (I also don't need swine like Mo Rocca smarmily analyzing the cultural vibes of decades in which he hadn't been born yet).
TLC may once have offered something remotely about "learning," but now it's a festival of My Strange Addiction and Say Yes to The Dress. And oh, how the mighty have fallen: Discovery now numbers Pitchmen among its Dirty Jobs and Storm Chasers, and Bravo - once the province of fine movies and provocative, intelligent series - now seems to be a procession of brassy power-queens slapping down chastened simps like misbehaving puppies. At least E! never had any pretense toward substance, but their propping up of Kendra and the unspeakable army of Kardashians is so offensive that no amount of Joel McHale or Chelsea Handler's bile can wash out the taste.
After the gaggle of competition shows (singing, dancing, if you're lucky, "with the stars"), the game show lives on, not just as Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader and Cash Cab, things that offer a bit in the way of trivia, but also Deal or No Deal, essentially a bimbo-augmented Price is Right.
Younger view-pods aren't left out, either. If the Kinder tire of "rocking out" with the Nick or Disney crews (as dissected last post), there's always Destroy Build Destroy, wherein Andrew W.K. guides two teams of teens through various challenges, and Silent Library, where two smirking teams try not to laugh as their fellows are subjected to various painful indignities. If those are too taxing, there's Dude, What Would Happen, which features three special-needs youth ostensibly acting out their every feverish whim.
It's as if no vicarious desire is unavailable - I can watch Bear Grylls tame the wild, and lap up Ax Men, Ice Road Truckers and other sagas of peril and exhiliration. If I'm sated with real-life exploits, it's back to not only a tawdry roster of celebrities, but also their wives. If I don't give a damn about the power-brokers' Real Housewives of Fill-in-the-Blank, why do I care about the spouses of rock stars, or NBA players, or (*gulp*) BMX racers?!
At least with these "wives" trying to pass themselves off as normal you'll still get catfights, but fewer instances of Jersey Shore-style instances of drunken, mascara'd strumpets alight in a hot tub and demanding "...put it in my aaaasss..." There seems to be a few of these hosts who don't want to be caught out by sudden shifts in popular tastes: witness Only in America with Larry the Cable Guy and Adam Richman's The Traveler's Guide to Life. Those guys are protecting the brand, to be sure.

Look, I've already wasted more time on this crap than I'd planned, and it matters not anyway. It's cheap to make, people climb over each other to appear on its shows, and the shows generate rip-offs and spinoffs so fast that the networks can now simply say "Next, on an all-new ---" without you, the target, doing a lot of wondering about a show you're pretty sure you've never seen.
If you need to see addicts, addicts in rehab, people hoarding string, or cats (or whatever floats their boat), midgets or polygamists or tiny beauty contestants ruthlessly pimped out by craven, sad parents, it's there.
Just turn it on.


Well, there's two down endings in a row. I'll try not to make it a habit. Maybe I've purged myself a bit - maybe next time we can find something decent on the box! Regardless, once again, many thanks for stopping by.

Tak,

Dave














Friday, January 7, 2011

It's a Minor-Chord Masterpiece...

Here we are in 2011, eh? Wonder if we'll make it 'til next year, to see if our Mayan grand-daddies were right, y'know, about all that cataclysmic-change unpleasantness? Until then, we can at least track our own individual afflictions. To that end, the CDC has classified and released another new batch o' diseases, for which we may rush headlong to purchase colored lapel pins.
I've helpfully included some of this new guide:
24-Hour Lymphadenopathy (periwinkle), Samoan Leopard Rash (yellow/black), Pinkney's Digit (well, it's pink, innit?), Petulant Toenail (goldenrod), Nervous Folliculitis (aquamarine), Furtive Colon Syndrome (sunburst orange), Echolalia (Red #5), Twilight Sweats (angry purple) and Rapid-Cycling Ennui (either mauve or magenta...oh God, what does it matter?...what does it all mean??!!) and so forth.

So let's all show a little support, eh?


CURRENTS

That was Reveille, Honey
I met lots of different people in my comings and goings while on four years of active duty in the US Army.
One of those that left a deep impression indeed was a hard-charging young female E-6. She was an Aviation Refueling Specialist, and someone who - by anyone's yardstick - was a superb soldier.
She was also as gay as the day is long.
No banner-waving, hysteria, nothing set her apart as someone who also wore BDUs, someone who also had a job to do. That's a good thing about the military: it redirects existing or potential prejudices, so that it is often far easier to simply see someone as another service member.
I don't know what she did in her off-time, and furthermore don't care, but I rather suspect she wasn't hitting on every female with a pulse. There are problems to a degree with the modern military, problems which reflect a society in transition. It's no longer all-white (which it was until 1948) or all-male (which it was until 1978). Yet these within-the-ranks problems largely stem from the successful integration of women into those ranks. Where the "gay" kerfuffle erupted from, I'm unsure.

President Obama repealed the Clinton-era Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy on December 22nd, and there are plenty of people up in arms. Radio's clarion-calling Mark Levin equated the repeal to nothing less than an assault on one of the few remaining bulwarks of our society, but is it really?
Is there really a war room somewhere filled with vaguely tousled, driving-moc wearing, John Varvatos-scented radicals who are chuckling over driving another chink in America's armor? Over the advance in their nefarious timetable toward some swishing, mincing debauched barracks? It's laughable. (For that matter, I saw debauchery in the barracks, and it was pretty damned hetero).
We've all seen and heard interviews of people who were in the military, enlisted or officer, some of whom saw combat, and who lived in mortal fear of being known for who they were. How sad. Here are a group of people who only want to do what they feel is right - they want to do what they believe will defend their country! How is that wrong, O hard-righters, many or most of whom have no idea about miltary life because you've never served?

The icing on the cake is that these people want to serve at this particular moment, during this astonishingly ill-advised and ongoing foreign adventure. That should mean something. Willingness to stick out your neck on the nebulous, shifting (literal) sands of the 21st-century battlefield really is remarkable.

C'mon.
Does every straight person walk around in a state of arousal, entranced by and lustful for every person of the opposite sex they see?? Then why would a gay person? And can I please make a point that I've never seen made anywhere during this whole stupid debate?
I'm mentally going over a list of gay friends and acquaintances I've had in life...gauging, in my mind, the prospect of them going into the military with its privations, difficulties, and most importantly - utter adherence to uniformity and routine. Can I imagine any of them charging the gates to enlist?
No. That's no disparagement, either: most would probably tell you the same thing. A Pentagon report was released recently that dovetailed with the repeal, saying it just wouldn't be the nightmare it's been painted as. Apparently, nearly 70 per cent of 115,000 troops surveyed said the controversy was hot air, as they'd already known of a gay serviceperson.

If I'm wrong, then, someone come along and steer me, er, straight.

BOOKS
A Journey Toward Understanding
Carl Gustav Jung was an amazing man, to say the very least.
He saw the emergence of psychotherapy in the first two decades of the 20th Century as a wonderful convergence of medicine and spiritual analysis. As he immersed himself in its practice, he opened himself and his sensibilities (he was a man already given to perceptions of the immensity of human experience, both natural and supernatural) to a world that produced in him insight, revelation, and not a little madness.
It's him that we have to thank for personality "types," for "projection" and the corollary phenomenon of the "persona," for "individuation," for archetypes and synchronicity and that great, dim germ of being, the Collective Unconscious (itself a refinement of and move beyond Freud's personal unconscious). He dwelled from a young age in a seeming receptivity to dreams and (literal, it seems) visions, events which affected him deeply while steadily broadening his personal and professional quest.

The 2009 release of Liber Novum (aka the "Red Book") was cause for celebration, as Jung's trustees were finally releasing this large, brilliantly illustrated journal for the first time. It renewed interest in a man who we'll most likely always find worthy of repeated visits.

Jung scholar Dr. David Rosen made a pilgrimage to Switzerland in the mid '90s to experience Jung's world and dwellings at closer range. He found in his reflections a man who not only hewed to his own (European) experience and understanding but that also discovered deep meaning in the preserved wisdom of the East, and in particular the Tao te Ching of Lao Tzu. That text sought to impart the Tao (the "way") and its simple flow, through both life and those who were open to its deceptively simple messages.
Rosen, in The Tao of Jung: The Way of Integrity (New York: Viking Arkana, 1996) illustrates the connection Rosen made between the two mens' work. The reconciliation of opposites was of prime importance to Jung, and Rosen sees this everywhere in the marrow of the Tao. From the complement and conflict of male/female, water/fire, inward/outward, he drew some of his firmest conclusions.
Consider his juxtapositions from 1916's Septem Sermonos ad Mortuos (Seven Sermons to the Dead), the nothingness and dissolution of the plemora which is contrasted with the ideal state of creatura ("...we die in such measure as we do not distinguish," he wrote); the duality of t'ai chi in contrast with wholeness of wu-chi; the self 1 of the persona, the old (Freud) ego-base in contrast with one's true, revealed self 2, Self/Tao, and the creation of art as an external thing made by an outer person with everyday needs and concerns in contrast to the person themselves as art.
Rosen's path while on his trip contained significant stretches of solitude, and he learned about the duality of that as well. It fed his spirit, but also amplified his understanding of otherness, of the path of enlightenment, of the burden of revealed truths. It's a book that's well-worth reading.

Richard Noll has more to add on the subject of Jung. In 1997 he published The Aryan Christ: The Secret Life of Carl Jung. Noll exhautively consulted theretofore-unpublished primary sources - thus steering as clear as possible of presuppositions and bias - and produced a biography of Jung that delves deeply into the fads and fancies of Germany during its heady 19th-century glory. These include most of the amusements that swept the rest of the world, including mesmerism, seances and other forms of bogus spirituality, but also the growing fascination with the ideas of Volk and Kultur, of land and blood and the ancient Aryan glories of figures such as Arminius, ferocious fighter of the Romans.
Jung was born into this heady milieu, and even traced his personal family to memberships in several of these proud, emergent, staunchly Teutonic enclaves. Noll makes a case for Jung as the developer of a cult of personality around himself, with plenty of supplicants to appreciate his gifts and insights. He also damns as a peurile hagiography the compilation of Jung's thought that was Meanings, Dreams, Reflections, the 1962 "autobiography" which Noll states was merely cobbled together by Jung intimate Aniela Jaffe and contains little critical effort.
He delves deeply into Jung's 1913 break with Freud, with the conclusion that the disassocation left the younger man in a turbulent period during which his explorations into his own shadows led to a literal self-deification 1916, whereupon he saw himself as a Mithraic god with the head of a lion. As a harrowing of Jung's flawed brilliance, Noll's book bears study.

There are several primers of the man and his work, but those seeking an indepth biographical account (containing, yet again, untapped sources and material) should seek out Ronald Hayman's excellent 2001 work Jung: A Life, in which Hayman succeeds in presenting a truly balanced portrait of Jung and his complexities.
Whichever way the reader turns, there is much food for thought to be had from the playful, wizened seeker Carl jung.

FILM
The Holy Madman of Network
What can you say about a film that provides a deft, blackly satirical commentary on modern media? That includes serious firepower both in front of and behind the camera? That offers the most deeply prescient monologue ever captured on film?
The film is Network, and it's all the more chilling because it was released in 1976, fully pre-dating the rise of cable TV with its 24-hour news cycle and desperate need for programming, no matter the increasing stench. There was a time when Hollywood still had something to say, and the means to say it. There were identifiable divisions between things - newspapers, TV, movie studios - and you could make a point. Sidney Lumet, at the top of his game, did just that.

Faye Dunaway is the statuesque, resolutely braless (it was the '70s, one supposes) Diana Christensen, a lower-level programming exec at failing TV network UBS. She wants something new, something with theatricality..."angry" shows, anti-establishment stuff. She sees in Howard Beale an opportunity.
Beale has been told he has two weeks left on the air due to flagging ratings. He promptly, on the air, promises to commit suicide one week hence. Given a chance to recant by Max Schumacher (a brilliant William Holden), he launches instead into a tirade: it's all bullshit, this "...daily parade of lunacy that constitutes the news!" Frank Hackett, point man for CCA - the corporation that's poised to take over the ailing station - is apoplectic, but then the ratings come in. Beale's a smash.
He's kept on, but with the proviso that the "prophet" bit be dropped. He's moved beyond such considerations, however, either having had a breakdown of some sort or, as he reports to Schumacher, having truly been "imbued" with some new insight. Hackett, impatient, green-lights Howard as the anchor, literally, of the news, with rancorous result. Beale is a man afire, bellowing at the cowed yet rapt audience the words that they then scream from their windows (and which have become a pop-culture punchline): "I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not going to take this anymore!"
His star burns brightly. The station's evening news slot is re-done as shtick, with Beale heading things up as its anguished focus. There he is, pacing, feverish, on a black studio set - the audience in his thrall - framed only by a circular stained-glass window, and he eviscerates them. They're idiots, driven completely by the "tube," and he demands they turn off their sets now. "You people are reality!" he shrieks, scarcely in control. "We are the illusion [and] we'll give you any shit you want to hear!"
Lumet and DP Owen Roizman sculpt the characters wonderfully, and perhaps no one more than Dunaway's Christensen: during an illicit getaway with the married Schumacher, her every waking moment is permeated with chatter about her programs and their development. For her, TV constitutes even foreplay.
Television veteran Beatrice Straight gets one of the most shockingly affecting scenes. When Max reveals the affair with Christensen, Straight's Louise Schumacher reacts with subtle gradations of pain, anger, and defiance. Her confrontation takes all of five minutes 40 seconds, yet it garnered her an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress - the shortest performance ever to land the award.

Paddy Chayefsky was a seasoned writer who'd worked in TV and Broadway, and whose later works included the stark Altered States. His screenplay offers a healthy dose of the absurd to the proceedings, as at the meeting with Laureen Hobbs (around whom Christensen is building a hopeful ratings hit called The Mao Tse Tung Hour). The topic is ratings and distribution, and a battery of lawyers are present. Hobbs (Marlene Warfield, channeling Angela Davis) seethes at the prospect of her money being tampered with. Her fellow revolutionary (and co-star) finally fires his pistol in rage, closing the argument. "Man, give her the fuckin' overhead clause," he demands.
Ned Beatty's Arthur Jensen appeals to Beale personally, and as the head of CCA he must make the man understand precisely what's at stake. There are no nations any more, as he explains, only dollars, only corporations. "It is currency...that determines the totality of life on this planet," he plays out slowly. "That is the natural order of things today." Beale has stepped on that arrangement. "All necessities are provided," continues Jensen. "All anxieties tranquilized, all boredom amused." Thus is Beale armed for his greatest declamation yet.

In another finality, Max leaves Diana. He makes no bones, either, he's the last thing tethering her to flawed humanity, the only bulwark against the "shrieking nothingness" that otherwise constitutes her life. "You're madness, and everything you touch dies with you," he says. "But not me." He's another man from another time, with only memories of bracing newsroom deadlines, Ed Murrow, and a medium not yet given full rein in the minds of its viewers.
As the madness grows, Diana proposes a truly radical measure to save the station. Hackett and company sign off on it, and Beale then charges, howling, into the void.

Lumet was already a formidable presence when he directed the film. His imprint shaped 12 Angry Men, The Pawnbroker, Fail-Safe and Serpico. The year previous, he'd helmed Dog Day Afternoon, another triumph. He picked up a Golden Globe for Best Director, Chayefsky received Best Screenplay, while Finch and Dunaway scored Best Actor and Actress. The latter three repeated their feat with matching Oscars (Finch, sadly, posthumously), while Straight was awarded the aforementioned Best Supporting Actress Oscar: the film's nominations totalled ten.

As if to underscore the movie's enduring passion and message, it was named one of the Top 10 Movie Scripts by the Writers' Guild of America in 2006. It was a fitting capstone for a film that remains as gripping as it ever was, with a message more resonant now than ever.

MUSIC

Brothers in Arms
In May 1974, Island Records released Kimono My House by expatriate Los Angeleno brothers Ron and Russell Mael, whose band was called Sparks.
The group weren't unknowns: they'd already appeared on The Old Grey Whistle Test to mixed reception. The appearance wrinkled a few brows, but spread awareness greatly and increased their growing fanbase further. They'd soon blow the lid off the premier UK program, the venerated Top of the Pops, on which they umlimbered a stomping workout called "This Town Ain't Big Enough for Both of Us." The single hit #2 UK, the LP #4. Sparks' reputation as left-field, larger-than-life innovators with boundless energy and sui generis sensibilities was established.

They were products of '60s L.A., and pursued art and film studies at UCLA while soaking in both the Sunset Strip scene and the progressive new crop of bands from England. Music seemed a natural outlet, and after a couple of attempts at forming a band (Moonbaker Abbey and Urban Renewal Project), they settled on the name Halfnelson.
Halfnelson produced a 12-song demo called A Woofer In Tweeter's Clothing which - its status as a demo aside - came in a deluxe package, the better to catch the reviewer's eye, perhaps. The band's lineup settled, by 1971, as Ron on keyboards, Russell as vocalist, Earle Mankey on guitar, Jim Mankey on bass and Harley Feinstein on drums, and this is the group that caught the ear of Todd Rundgren. Rundgren lobbied Albert Grossman for the act to record for Grossman's Bearsville label, with Rundgren producing.
The album was recorded and released as by Halfnelson, even as a February 1971 name change to Sparks took place. Here was the fruit of the brothers' efforts, and it's as if they sprung, fully formed, from the forehead of L.A.'s creative community. Even among fans the debut is perhaps underrated, even though it offers arguably the most consistently amazing pop debut ever from US shores.
We kick off with a perfectly constructed, pleasantly cantering number called "Wonder Girl," a song that was the germ of their UK popularity, then encounter "Fa La Fa Lee," an arrangement marked by bold tempo changes and Ron's interactions with both guitar and rhythm section. The taut "High C" fully anticipates swooning, anthemic '70s FM before it even exists, but still makes room for vocal flourishes aplenty. Next, "Fletcher Honorama" is an elegant slice of psychedelia appended with music-hall piano that appears as through ether.

The grandeur and world-weary cabaret vocals of Russell transform "Simple Ballet" and "Slowboat," two swaying, moody, quietly insistent songs that build into undeniable emotional crescendos. Earle Mankey contributes the vocal on "Biology 2," a mutated love ditty driven forward by a synth riff that beats Devo to the punch by half a decade. The group's unique orthodoxy informs "Roger" and "Saccharine and the War," which simply cannot be explained: "Big Bands" percolates along nicely until jumping in for the finish with a rocking conclusion complete with a spoken overlay.
The LP ends with a six-minute "No More Mr. Nice Guys," which perfectly measures out its coiled energy and ends in a rain of distorted guitar and pounding piano.

Warner Bros. picked up the record for re-release (as by Sparks), but not before one more recording for Bearsville. This time the group chose their demo's name for the LP, and so began the recording of A Woofer in Tweeter's Clothing, with engineer Thaddeus Lowe as producer.

It begins with another girl, as "Girl From Germany" puts Lowe's meaty mix on display. There's still a lithe counterpoint that's pure Mael, however. The barnstorming gallop (with calliope interludes folded in) serves notice that again, the listener needs to buck up and prepare for something different. Brisk strings enliven the charming chamber pop of "Here Comes Bob," and it's followed by a strange, martial, alien dream called "Moon Over Kentucky," wherein Russell offers cryptically that "...I'm just finishing my first encounter...what a letdown..."
The boys retool Rodgers and Hammerstein's "Do Re Mi" and the result is the Sound of Music by way of Sparks. The elements of "Underground" fade in and out, as if transmitted from afar, indeed, underground. There is another clutch of oblique tracks, including "Nothing is Sacred," "Angus Desire" and a snippet called "Batteries Not Included." All of which brings us to closer "Whippings and Apologies" which Ron kicks off with a sly bit of John Cale's viola (ca. "The Black Angel's Death Song") that he works into a turbocharged raveup which ends the record...and Sparks Mk I.

One indication was the album's penultimate track, "The Louvre." It's sung in effortless French by Russell, and is so smart, agile and Continental that it's a damned monster. It demanded a move, demanded something. Island Records provided that opportunity, but only if it involved the brothers alone. Bringing over a full band would've been a big step. There had been a handful of UK tour dates thus far, so Ron & Russ were able to recruit Martin Gordon (bass), Adrian Fisher (guitar) and Norman "Dinky" Diamond on drums. Muff Winwood (who'd begun doing A&R for Island after the Spencer Davis Group folded) would produce.

The glittered throngs ruled the streets of London in 1973, when Ron began writing the songs for a new album. What he delivered (even though the group continued to defy categories and any sort of labeling) was a gift from the Glam gods. Opener "This Town Ain't Big Enough for Both of Us" was a shot across the bow and declaration of newfound focus. Speaking of the track, Ron opined "...it's written in A and by God it'll be sung in A." He wrote what he wrote. Russell adapted and dug deep to vocally meet his brother's standards. The next song, "Amateur Hour" was the LP's second single, and its addictive hook took it to #7, a nice companion for the "This Town" #2 posting. The comic narcissism of "Falling in Love With Myself Again" is a big nudge-and-wink for Marlene Dietrich in 3/4 time. Ron again: "Quite honestly, I never liked myself. I'm not my type." The song needs huge guitar, huge drums, and they're here.

The boys' wry humor is everywhere on display here, as on "Thank God it's Not Christmas" (as that's the one day a person can't escape to be alone), and "Hasta Manana, Monsieur," a thematically simple ode to a guy trying to chat up a girl. It soars, though - an anthem on an album of anthems - with lashings more guitar. The track chosen for the US single was "Talent is an Asset," a perky and infectious number wherein those in the orbit of the young Albert Einstein hope he'll remember them when he's famous. Cheeky and enigmatic, "Here in Heaven" and "Complaints" set us up for the swaying pomp and ambiguity of "Equator." A fellow looks around, muttering "...equator, equator, you said you'd meet me here..." so where is his girl? A tootling sax provides a melodic little squib over the falsetto tradeoffs of the title, then we fade. Thankfully, the most recent reissue of the record appends it with the b-sides of the two UK singles, so we're given "Barbecutie" with its pulsing, knotty rhythm, and the blistering guitar underlying "Lost and Found," a punchy number meant to be heard from a single. Thank God for their inclusion.

Fan and writer Madekine Bocaro notes that Karl Stoecker was called in to shoot the LP's sleeve. This was a bit of a coup, as Stoecker was in the midst of shooting acts such as Mott the Hoople: he was also shooting the legendary early Roxy Music sleeves at this time. Two models from Japan's Red Buddha Theatre got dolled up in geisha gear and posed amid an air of amused disdain. Set against a stark, apple-green backdrop, the shot proved an enduring image for an enduring album.

Indeed, if we pull the LP back into the mortal coil of slots, categories and genres, a thought occurs to me. If I posit the band's debut as the greatest US pop debut ever, can't I lay claim to Kimono as being the greatest power-pop release ever? Sure I can, and why not?

More good stuff followed: Propaganda and Indiscreet came on the heels of Kimono, then Big Beat and Introducing Sparks before a fascination with Giorgio Moroder and others in the synth movement led to a new avenue for the band, No. 1 in Heaven, the first of many reinventions. They've never rested, either, releasing albums through the 2000s, and still to critical and fan acclaim (although their highest US chart psotion was #63, for 1974's Propaganda). In May and June of '08 they held the "Sparks Spectacular" in London. For 20 nights they played their 20 albums to date, and on the 21st night, June 13th, debuted Exotic Creatures of the Deep. The current release is The Seduction of Ingmar Bergman - a commission from Swedish National Radio that imagines a 1950s trip to the US by the director, and acts as a meditation on the differences between US and Euro culture and arts. Ripping stuff.

So where else can you find a band that's cited by so many as being directly instrumental in their creative birth, including Morrissey and Kurt Cobain?

The brothers anticipated everything. Influenced everything. Transcended everything.

They are Sparks.

PERIODICALS

Greatest Britain
I recently headed over to the bookstore, eagerly awaiting the new issue of Mojo magazine. It's a music pub from the UK, and as far as I'm concerned leads a quality field of magazines from over there. Further refining my statement, it's the greatest music mag I've ever seen, period.
I approached the music section of the magazine racks and was floored.
There was my title, only the current issue was packaged - in a deluxe, heavy vinyl slipcase - with a 12" vinyl album!! The record celebrated the 40th Anniversary of the release of Let It Be, the Beatles' swansong, and featured a crop of current-day artists covering the LP's songs. Amazing. The disc was housed in a gatefold jacket, and the whole thing made for a splendid package. I gladly ponied up the pittance of $20 and hurried home with my treasure, convinced anew that the magazine is the best thing going.
Of course, after the delight of the record there was still the joy of reading the magazine. This issue featured a cover story on Paul McCartney's life in the wake of the Beatles' breakup - his initial solo efforts and work with Wings up through the release of Band on the Run. It was illuminating and entertaining. That piece was augmented with two other features: an article on the Beatles' last year in the studio and the friction between them as they left 80 hours of Let It Be tracks in the can and produced Abbey Road in one last, heroic effort, and a story about the misguided Apple Enterprises, which dreamed big, produced little, and went through trainloads of money before folding. Gripping stuff from the boys' orbit...great writing the lot.

That's only the beginning. There are deeply informative pieces on Herbie Hancock, Brian Wilson's new Gershwin-related project, and an interview wherein Sheryl Crow discusses her top 10 Soul influences. There are excerpts from a new Bob Marley book which feature rare photos of the singer from 1975 - 76, shot by Kim Gottlieb-Walker as she moved among the singer and his world. That's one of the great things about Mojo - every issue features a fantastic collection of images, either new or from Pop's back pages. Their pics, whether of musicians or events or the physical ephemera of Pop - records, flyers and so forth - each issue is chock-full of eye candy, and it complements the text wonderfully.
The feature pieces are bracketed first by What Goes On, which celebrates news and happenings new & old, passings, and often things of significance that might be otherwise lost to us. Currently featured are remembrances of Sugar Minott, Tuli Kupferberg and Harvey Fuqua; Radiohead drummer Philip Selway's new solo record, Mississippi (by way of Australia) roots-blue singer C.W. Stoneking, and Duane Eddy's personal and musical rejuvenation. Gaelic chanteuse Imelda May is profiled, and the TimeMACHINE segment remembers the US groups who flocked to the UK during 1963 tours.

The other end of the issue features the comprehensive media review called, quite rightly, Mojo Filter. Here are musical releases new and reissue, books, DVDs and live shows, all presented with an eye toward the same critical quality as the features writing. In addition to dozens of records, the new history of Rough Trade is reviewed, as are a Leonard Cohen 1972 concert DVD, the censors-angering Iranian film Persian Cats, and a Neil Young/Bert Jansch appearance in Oakland.

Forgive the breathless prose, but not for nothing is this my go-to music read.

Lest anyone consider Mojo a beautiful fluke, I'm also regularly edified by other such titles as Q, Uncut, Record Collector and Classic Rock. The current issue of Classic Rock came packaged in a school-style pocket folder, and included a CD (also standard with Uncut and Mojo) and a 2011 calendar which featured recipes from metal musician such as Doro Pesch, Andreas Kisser (Sepultura) and Bobby Liebling (Pentagram)! Then there's the magazine itself - another rich stew of features and stories.
The cover story, about the Who's recording of their 1970 giant Live at Leeds, was followed by an interview with Nick Mason, the tale of Pantera's breakout hit Cowboys From Hell, Bev Bevan and The Move, New Model Army's tireless approach to recording and touring, a behind-the-scenes account of Springsteen's recording of Born to Run, and tons more...and if that weren't enough, consider Classic Rock's specialty sub-publications, AOR and Prog.
Incredible.

I took Rolling Stone to task in the first posting for this blog, and it's a shame. Has almost every US rock mag abdicated its throne entirely? If that is the case, I've still got my glossy treasures from abroad.

TUBE

'Tween-Age Wasteland
We're awash, to all appearances, in a glittery television stage prop of tightly choreographed, adorably shaggy, infectiously beaming 12 year-olds. That they are moving forward like the Mongol hordes, increasing in number seems obvious...that they seem poised to become mainstream pop's contenders in perpetua perhaps less so. They're swaying, bopping, issuing forth pleasing bleats from a series of carefully crafted templates, with the whole shebang run through filters, equalization software and other studio refinement. It's a delirious, undulant playground where the riffs never end and the puppy love never abates. And it leads, dear reader, to the wealth of a sultan for all involved in its creation and marketing.

To look at this infantilization we should go back to the '40s, to the years before R&B and hillbilly boogie fully combined to produce the first ranks of rock 'n' rollers.
Those two musics were performed by adults, moreover, by adults playing instruments. In the case of R&B, there were bandleaders working their groups through challenging arrangements. Shows had to dazzle, and had to sustain interest and energy over several sets a night.
The arrival of pop/rock changed all that. At the risk of rehashing a commonly known capsule history, the Baby Boom saw to it that 1950s America was populated with hordes of teens. The music on the radio, in the record shops, at school dances and at kids' bedsides naturally reflected that. Pop skewed younger.
After the first wave of idols was dispersed there was total market saturation by properly vetted, safe, clean-cut teen idols, the better to control the stuff. Sap was king. The British Invasion blew that away but the invaders were still, once again, teens.

As a counterpoint to the new "maturity" of the '70s (Joni Mitchell, Seals and Crofts, Gordon Lightfoot et al) there was Bubblegum. This phenomenon was less an organic development than a wonderfully marketed production machine that often used studio talent to prop up the marquee vocalist(s), and targeted even small children. They had money, they could buy singles as well as a teen. Even though glossy fan mags had been around since Elvis and Ricky Nelson's heyday, these mags were born anew to print up the likes of Donny Osmond, Tony DeFranco and David Cassidy.
The arrival of Shaun Cassidy, Leif Garrett and such spritely imps as the Bay City Rollers was a license to print money, or at least endless special editions with huge, fold-out posters. Blessedly for the industry, there's been no flagging in interest and demand for these magazines. Once everyone realized that a steady flow of pretty young things (both male and female: all cuddly) then the path was clear.

The '80s delivered Joey Lawrence, who used a cuddly-doofus TV role to launch a beat-driven pop career, as well as a group of young hatchlings so perfectly groomed for stardom as to have lain in wait like a Soviet sleeper cell. I refer, of course, to the April 24th, 1989 premiere of The New Mickey Mouse Club.
Its six-year run gave us Britney, Christina, Justin and J.C., no surnames necessary.
As we now posit the first three of these as our towering pop giants, our yardstick of units moved and tastes influenced, don't we need a new batch of performers?

Although Disney dropped such crap as The Cheetah Girls into our laps, they've also given us Miley Cyrus, whose alternately hysterical/sentimental Hannah Montana headed up a brand that would've made Sinatra blanch in envy, and Walt Disney label Hollywood has seen to it that her musical legacy is firmly in place. Her network colleague Selena Gomez graduated from Barney to The Wizards of Waverly Place and her own band-of-sorts, Selena Gomez & The Scene.
After contributing to various Disney efforts she signed to Hollywood as well, went gold and platinum, and now oversees an empire that also includes a clothing line and film projects. Demi Lovato also left Barney behind, and now heads up Sonny With a Chance. Her second album, 2009's Here We Go Again debuted at #1 on Billboard's Hot 200. She appeared in 2008's Camp Rock, which leads us to another smash sensation - The Jonas Brothers.
Nick Jonas began performing at 7, so it's not surprising that the sibs' hegemony is so strong now. Over a four-record career they've built a staggering fan base, and achieved ready renown with their 2008 nomination for Best New Artist at the 51st Grammys, and winning of the Breakthrough Artist Award at the Peoples' Choice Awards. (I absolutely give them credit for their work with diabetes and such groups as the "Change for Children" foundation, but that still doesn't make me a fan).
Sisters Alyson and Amanda Michalka leapt to prominence as Aly and A.J., (currently performing as 78Violet), and their merchandising empire concludes our tour of the Disney machine...to date.
Although it's never had the muscle of Disney, Nick - descendent of the cable veteran Nickelodeon - has served up several young warblers.
Drake Bell rose handily from Drake and Josh to release a series of records and burnish his profile accordingly. Miranda Cosgrove (another D&J vet and toothy star of iCarly) dutifully cranked out a soundtrack to her show, on the Columbia-affiliated Nickelodeon label, before issuing a proper debut, 2010's Sparks Fly. Then there's her duet with Big Time Rush, "All I Want for Christmas is You." As far as Big Time Rush, is concerned, they're four guys who were cast in a show and then had a music framework built up around the show. Their debut, B.T.R., was released on Nick/Columbia as a precursor to a major tour.
Such simplification is nothing new. Few things dumbed down music more than the ascendance of the first immortal wave of boy bands. New Kids on the Block, 'N Sync, Backstreet Boys, O-Town, and 98 Degrees preened and thrust their collective way toward instant stardom, as did their "urban" counterparts in Boyz II Men, All 4 One and New Edition. In 1999 Dream Street represented this undying well of material, and launched the career of Jesse McCartney (a huge Disney content-provider). After MTV, perhaps there was/is no turning back.

Television's launching pad aside, the rise of stuffed toy Justin Bieber (whose dicovery on YouTube led to multiplatinum success) is perfectly of a piece with the new game, but there are other youngsters amassing a pile by storming the gates. Avril Lavigne perfectly embodies the cynical latter-day ATM that styles itself "pop-punk," while the pleasingly robotic Taylor Swift has bleached "country" of every trace of substance and created a lucrative, purring replacement sound that neither threatens nor comforts.
The road to exposure, let alone stardom, once led through a church choir, or a streetcorner, and often thankless toil in clubs and dives. Now it's not just music by corporate design, it's music (and fame) by instantaneous decree, as displayed on hideous circuses like American Idol and America's Got Talent (although these affronts are a column unto themselves).

Again, you can't lay this at the door of a huge, lumbering record label, as the traditional record label is a thing of the past. This is something larger - this is domination at every level of the game.
MTV got us a long way toward where we are, but the rise of the Internet finished the trip.

We're now in its moment, with handheld toys that can send and receive, "like" and Tweet any little pop-chick or boy band anywhere on Earth, any time. Today's target audience, when it's not squealing in tandem, is alone in its own psychic biosphere, texting twee pronouncements on the flashing spectacle on their tiny glowing screens. It's disposable wonder.

At least a 45 was something you could hold in your hands.


So there we have it.
And as my rebbe Bob Dylan once put it, "He not busy bein' born is busy dyin'."

Cheers!

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Oedipus's Edifice for the Artifacts of Artifice

Alas, poor Google.
The European Commission has really got its knickers in a twist over the company's reportedly unfair competitive practices, which include not only the manipulation of search results (rankings as they appear, etc.) but also "quality scores" assigned to those results, scores which affect ad rates and give prominence to items with direct or indirect links to the company.

It's understandable - after all, when you're so big that your company name is a verb in common use by preschoolers, you're bound to face hurdles and lose focus as you try to figure out just who and what you are, especially as Web 2.0 is becoming Web God-Knows-What with every passing second.
The real story's not there, however. The real super-sicko development is the ubiquity of an offshoot of Google Maps called "Street View." Surely, many of you have - after zooming in on your neighborhood or block via Google Earth - been delighted (or perplexed, or amazed) to type in your address and, lo and behold, view your humble abode from street level.
To all appearances, vehicles simply, patiently trolled the streets, recording everything in a gee-whiz 360-degree panoramic view...the better to...the better to what?
What the hell purpose does Street View serve? Is it for bored cubicle jockeys to check out their house, their folks' house, whatever: Hey, cool, there it is!

Outrage, one supposes, would be so tired and predictable. It probably is. You can't ignore the 600 GB of data picked up by "mistake," by ambient leak. That's real, quantifiable, and no doubt comprises a slurry that's crammed with every manner of credit card number, ID info, and even plans for a few clandestine trysts.
Outrage, yeah, okay...the big thing at the moment is - no joke - websites which rank funny/bizarre/erotic Street View results. Yep. Be it a dog squatting on 13th Street in Brooklyn or a prominently breasted Indian girl walking to school in suburban Des Moines, the clips and blips are there and ready to entertain.

Speaking of rampaging gadgetry, the other day I found myself in the proximity of an airing of Back to The Future II. Fine and well. Trouble is, when Marty surveys the glaring new Mill Valley that the Doc has brought him to, there's one aspect of the city's bustling throng that the film missed. In all fairness, perhaps no one could have foreseen the omission in the '80s, concerned as the screenwriters no doubt were with Griff's bionic implants and giant, holographic sharks.

There were no cell phones.

Nope.

The people aren't walking along while hunched over intently, rapt, transfixed, like a monkey with a new turd.
Maybe in the remake, eh?

CURRENTS

Old Bricks, new Life
My old buddy Steve told me recently that after living in Indiana for quite some time he was making the move back to Michigan.
Michigan?! some (most) will say.
Why?
He's from Flint, and he's pretty damn proud of his Wolverine State heritage, so back he's gone. Commendations, backslaps and best wishes are in order, especially given his choice of locale - it's Sterling Heights, due north of Detroit. Only a short hop up Interstate 75 if he wants to visit Flint.
He could've gone anywhere, stayed where he was, found a swinging new town. He's an IT pro who's been doing it for almost 25 years, so the dude's got options. Back he went, though, and it really knocked me out. He's not wringing his hands about the state's fortunes, or up to any grandiose schemes involving some progressive, Birk-wearing "sustainability" jazz...that's not him. he just feels the need to go back, and hey, godspeed to him.

Puts me in mind of a Huffington Post item from a while back, which mentioned a recent Economist survey that ranked Detroit #40 in terms of livability (that's worldwide, gang), beating out London (#54) and New York (#56)! Make of it what you will, but sometimes things ain't as simple as they seem.
There are cities making handsome rebounds from dire times, with the prime example being Pittsburgh, now apparently a perennial pick for quality of life. Manchester, N.H. comes in with high marks as well, as another example of an area that's overcome the ghosts and stilled, cavernous infrastructure of its industrial past. Cleveland meets that standard as well: no more gritty rep as the "Mistake By the Lake" for them.
Certain areas are blessed with natural beauty, history, and thriving educational and creative communities...how sweet must it be to live in Portland?

Urban "renewal," "rejuvenation"...these can be words that summon up bureaucracies and arbitrary re-drawings with bloated budgets and ill-advised aims. I don't detract from midcentury urban renewal, especially as it razed dangerous, unmanageable slums, but the tradeoff often involved the disappearance of storied, richly historic neighborhoods. That's probably the main danger of renewal efforts, and definitely is its main critique. Where do the old and the funky fit in? What's wrong with a few rough edges? New Yorkers do have a hot new Brooklyn, but they've also got the decay of the Bronx. Gentrification can bring new and affordable housing, but also displace the things ( and the people) that give an area a little character.

The Interstate system contributed to the changing face of the country's cities as well, and left in its wake the seeds of gentrification's ugly cousin - homogeneity. Each highway interchange brings the same gas station/fast food options, the same retail giants, etc. etc. Not good. That's why - when I moved to Cincinnati, Ohio in 1992 I fell in love with it - with the Midwest in general. It took a trip to Europe to figure out why. Here was a city that pre-dated the automobile...the scale of the place was human...I could walk most anywhere, down to the corner store (or bar) and see people I knew. Speak with them. Interact. It struck me as being completely natural and incredible. My son's day care center was like a mini UN, a benefit of living in a university town. Someday I, like Steve, will get back to that place where I feel the most connection.
BOOKS

Sad Eyes, Soaking Rain, Murder
In 2008 the young British illustrator and author Hannah Berry released Britten & Brulightly, her debut.
She brought her love of European comics and film noir to the table, and created a resonant, morose investigator named Fernandez Britten who's been beaten down by his line of work and the facts he must unburden himself of to his clients.
Britten begins the tale by waking up and preparing for yet another day of his glum profession, one that will apparently pass under unendingly pouring gray skies and sodden streets. He's retained by a woman who seeks answers in the death of her husband - suicide? Murder? And, ultimately, why?
Britten's world is superbly rendered in black & white, and comes to tungsten life in the story's color sequences, but it's when color, pale and tentative, bleed into the frame that Berry achieves something more. Her points of view are at once panoramic, sweeping, then locked in on a querulous face or a pair of wounded eyes, smarting with newfound and bitter knowledge.

Bitterness, pain, yes: as Britten pursues his leads, the weight of his career choice settles ever more heavily on his shoulders. Success in his queries leads to connections and revelations that - any more, it seems to him - bring his clients nothing but pain, pain with no redeeming niceties. A solved case is just another squalid, seamy trawl through dirty, felonious laundry. Berry must tread deftly here, and she does. The investigator, upon hearing his partner Brulightly's protracted, breathless assessment that "...there's enough there to ignite a hundred possibilities!..." merely notes glumly that "I lost another hat."
Ah, Brulightly. Well, here's the thing...Britten's partner is a tea bag. Yes, you read that right. As such, however, he's easily concealed and thus can be wherever Britten is. He's also apparently a bit randy, with a penchant for smut, admitting that while he's a tea bag, "I'm a tea bag with needs, Fern." He also gets in a few good lines, as after a narrow escape from a gang of toughs: "Look, I'm sorry: I infused in your waistcoat."
The young writer (still in her 20s) has skills beyond her years.
As Britten has been betrayed by a waiter contact at a tidy little cafe, he retreats to a greasy spoon, an "oily no-man's-land of drowsy static, caught between sleep and wakefulness." It's also in this little diner that Britten's thoughts wander. He slips out into the rain and back into his subject's offices. We're treated to two pages of stealth and shadow before the waitress jostles him back to reality with his order. So Berry goes, confidently ordering the little detective's world, and even its spare, unadorned and perhaps inevitable ending.

Berry's book fits into a pretty amazing continuum, this thing called the "graphic novel," a category where the history of the form, to say nothing of the term itself, seem to be good fodder for debate.
Earlier American examples of graphics with text include artier expressions such as the woodcut-illustrated stories of Frans Masereel and Lynd Ward (the latter the subject of a 2010 Library of America reissue series), as well as compilations of popular favorites like Tintin and longer stories from the major comics houses, even Classics Illustrated (still just comics, regardless of lofty aspirations).

Gil Kane and Archie Goodwin's Blackmark (1971), Richard Corben's Bloodstar (1976), Jim Steranko's Chandler - Red Tide (1976) were all referred to as "graphic albums" or comic novels," generally because they really didn't fit under any other heading as such. Along came Will Eisner's A Contract With God and Other Tenement Stories in 1978, a collection that had Eisner plumb his Bronx youth to examine the immigrant community he grew up in. For whatever reason, Contract is often referred to as the "first" graphic novel.
Art Spiegelman began RAW in 1980, and it was in that experimental title that he first serialized his Holocaust tale Maus, which later appeared in two volumes in 1986 and 1991. Spiegelman delivered In the Shadow of No Towers in 2004. Frank Miller reimagined Batman in Dark Knight in 1986, and followed its success with Batman: Year One the year after. Alan Moore's astonishing Watchmen also appeared in 1987, and Daniel Clowes gave us the acclaimed Ghost World in 1997.
Marjane Satrapi's account of growing up in revolutionary Iran was the heart of 2000's Persepolis, and Ken Eichenbaum gave us a side-splitting Yiddish tour de force with Hoppel Poppel Kosher Comix in 2002. In 2009 David Mazzucchelli produced arguably the densest, most challenging graphic novel ever - the labyrinthine Asterios Polyp.
Simply put, today's comics reader has more choices than ever, from ambitious projects like Asterios Polyp to scores of compilation volumes and yearly highlight editions. Joining this welcome flood is Hannah Berry. I can't wait to see what she's got next.

FILM

And now I'll tell ya what I am - I'm the Repo Man...
Back in 1984, in the dim, pre-digitized past when expenses such as the cost of film stock were over-arching concerns for a fledgling filmmaker, there appeared a sharp, witty black comedy called Repo Man. It was a seat-of-the-pants production, had a promotional budget of virtually nothing, met with everything from indifference to critical scorn, and it's held up better than probably 90% of the films from that badly aging cinematic decade.
It opens with a fantastic title sequence, as a pre-comeback Iggy Pop delivers the abrasive title track over stark, red-on-black titles, themselves laid over a hopscotching green area map of the Arizona/SoCal badlands. In the opening scene, a highway patrolman stops a weaving '64 Chevy Malibu, opens its trunk and is vaporized in a blinding ray of light. Away the driver rolls, warbling "Clementine," and so begins a funky and quirky story.

Alex Cox was an aspiring young Brit, fresh out of UCLA and looking to make a film.
Two schoolmates, Jonathan Wacks and Peter McCarthy were beginning a production company, and Cox's second effort for the two was a lark called Repo Man, for which he consulted a neighbor, Mark Lewis, who was actually a car reposession professional. At UCLA Cox had created Edge City, shot over four years, and this fictional burg gave the city in his new screenplay a name.
Emilio Estevez had only two films to his credit at this time (one being The Outsiders, where he joined a strong ensemble cast), but he brought a lot of depth and knowing humor to his character, Otto.
Otto loses his crap job, his girlfriend, and a small nest egg in short order, and roaming the streets, encounters Harry Dean Stanton's Bud. Conned into his first (hilarious) repossession, Otto finds himself with a wad of cash and a new status: repo man. He drinks and snorts the nutrients of his new job, watching and listening as Bud shares such wisdom as the "repo code" with him. Otto meets Leila (Olivia Barash, excitable and driven) and is told about the true nature of the Malibu's contents. Or maybe not. As the old sedan is pursued, now with a value of $20,000, the story ramps up to a frantic oddball pitch with Otto hanging on for dear life.
It's no overstatement to say that the film was done out of nearly thin air. The repo office was built up from nothing on a vacant lot. A recurring visual motif, hanging pine-tree air fresheners, were actually provided by one of the movie's few sponsors, the other being a grocery distribution company that supplied the movie's priceless generic food and beer containers. The two elements add wonderfully to the already off-kilter air of the production.
The film's popularity is due in no small part to its L.A.-centric soundtrack, which features not only Black Flag, the Circle Jerks and Suicidal Tendencies but also Fear, the Plugz, Juicy Bananas and Burning Sensations (who cover Jonathan Richman's "Pablo Picasso"). Tito Larriva and Steven Hufsteter of the Plugz provide the outstanding score/incidental music.
As the movie's legend grows it's interesting to note the lives it's touched: for example, a man named Sam Cohen - who claims to have been on the development team for the Neutron Bomb - contacted Cox to rhapsodize about the East L.A. locales where the movie shot. The scenes brought back the '20s for Cohen, and the two reportedly shared a correspondence of sorts about the Malibu's eerie cargo. Neat stuff.

Speaking of graphic novels, a book called Waldo's Hawaiian Holiday appeared in 2008, in which Otto (now Waldo) reappears from Mars to resume his earthly exploits. Hmm.
Cox went on to helm Sid & Nancy, Straight to Hell and other fare, but it was this spry indie that he'll be most remembered for.
MUSIC

Burning Skies
As of a July 5th, 1983 concert at London's Hammersmith Palais, Bauhaus were no more. The band's arty, guitar-laced approach had helped lay the groundwork for scores of lesser lights, who proceeded to flog the bloated horse of "Goth" for long years after. Vocalist Peter Murphy went on to a short-lived experiment called Dalis Car while his bandmates, by 1986, were poised to break through the U.S. market as Love & Rockets.

That's not the whole story, however.

Bauhaus's lanky, languid guitarist Daniel Ash had - in 1982 - begun knocking around a few tunes with the band's gear wrangler, a fellow named named Glenn Campling. The two knew each other from Northhampton Art School, got on well, and when they poached Bauhaus drummer Kevin Haskins their side-lineup was complete. This made sense, as Ash and Haskins were the germ of a band called The Craze, which had formed in 1978 with David J. (Haskins). Ash subsequently met Peter Murphy and the act renamed itself S.R. After one more name tweak, (Bauhaus 1919, named for the German design movement), they became simply Bauhaus.
A one-off recording for Indie label Small Wonder resulted in "Bela Lugosi's Dead"/"Boys," then it was on to a label called Axis to record the first proper singles and LP. Axis became 4AD, and the band released In the Flat Field and moved to sister label Beggar's Banquet and growing notoriety.
It was in May, 1982, while his main band was on Beggar's Banquet that Ash released - on 4AD - the first four-tune 12" which was called simply "Tones on Tail." It was the first of six single/EP releases for the band, most of which had both 7" and 12" versions (the latter providing four selections instead of two), and what a statement it made.
Ash drew from a deep well of undeniably compelling riffs, and the three lay out a hazy, stoned, yet expansive and dynamic set that echoes the Bauhaus aesthetic while pointing toward something new and altogether different. Campling, handling bass and keyboard duties, augments Ash well on these earliest of their collaborations, including "A Bigger Splash," "Means of Escape," and two engaging instrumentals, "Copper" and, indeed, "Instrumental." It was a strong debut with only the shadow of a hooded figure on its sleeve accompanied by the words TONES ON TAIL (that name having been born from a note from Bauhaus engineer Derek Tompkins - that the reference tones were on the tail of the tape he was delivering).
Follow-up "There's Only One" brings the band's natural danceability to the fore with a thumping bass intro, while a dub version provides the flipside, "Now We Lustre." From May of '83 comes Tones' most brilliant EP, a haunting and rhythmic piece of impressionistic dreampop led off by the smoky "Burning Skies." As if in a trance, Ash plays out "...the air was alive with piercing sound, and burning skies - the horror did me good, the magic was on my side..." Lyrical ambiguity laces the staccato hook of "O.K. This Is The Pops," one of the band's most gripping, insistent tracks. Side two offers up the mysterious sound collage "When You're Smiling" and instrumental "You, the Night and the Music": all rushing winds and ghost guitar overlaid with Ash's snake-charmer sax. (Of note to collectors is the fact that this EP appeared on BB sister label Situation Two. All the house labels were thereby covered).

By 1984 (and seeing as how Bauhaus was gone) it was time for an LP, and the band delivered the diverse and uniformly strong Pop.
The synth-pulse of "Lions" gets things underway with restraint, because Brits instinctively know that you don't need to come out of the gate like a swinging sledgehammer to make your point. Ash's facility with lyrics and wordplay never got in the way of a dancefloor-filling beat, as evidenced by the stomping three-beat hook of "War." Elusive and ambiguous, "Happiness" ("...happiness...is success. Success brings hope, hope - it's no good...") compels in its coyness. The album is a wonderful palette for creative muscle-flexing, as with the dreamy "The Never Never (Is Forever)" which overlays Ash with Campling's crosshatched synth, and a stream-of-consciousness exercise called "Slender Fungus," itself punctuated with mouth-generated rhythms and a capella trance refrains.
The shadowy companion pieces "Movement of Fear" and "Real Life" are both enlivened by Ash's superb playing, especially the plangent acoustic of the latter. The effort is topped off by "Rain," a piece that collects slowly in pools of synth, surges like droplets falling on a misty ocean shore, then coalesces as one aching sadness which hovers, circles, then fades.
The band nail something special on Pop. Music of this caliber is no "side" project.

A tour of sorts began, though it only ran from May to October 1984. The boys played 27 dates, spread over 15 U.K cities and 10 in the U.S.
Writer Skot Kirkwood notes that in spite of the odd technical problem, the band were well-received, especially by American audiences hungry for more of the intriguing sounds emerging from the U.K. of the day. Campling recalled the reception as being "very warm and positive."

There were more singles in store.
Album track "Performance" appeared in a different mix, coupled with another dub treatment, which resulted in "Shakes." And as the flipside of "Lions," a song appeared which was immediately embraced by DJs the world over, and is known even now through exposure on endless '80s compilations and TV commercials: "Go!," introduced by a fuzzy snake of guitar, Haskins' surgical percussion, and a brilliant throwaway bit of vocal gibberish. Speaking of brawn and bombast, the last single is "Christian Says," and it's a storm-cloud of banshee synth and guitar made all the more ferocious by the jazzy surf vibe and breathy pleasure of the flip, "Twist."
As might be expected, Pop was bowdlerized for foreign markets. No new tale to tell, as it were, since the U.S. and almost everyone else have chopped up Brit releases and repackaged their contents since the Beatles' and Stones' first releases. A few key album tracks were retained for The Album Pop, but these were joined by "Twist," "War" and "Go!," the better to top-load the platter with lots of energy. Oh well. The advent of the CD did allow for the release of the collection Night Music in 1987, but it wasn't until 1998's Everything! that all the band's material was finally available together for the first time. Disc one contains Pop, and disc two all the EPs. (Further note to collectors: the promo disc Something! contains a few other tracks, such as alternate versions of "Go!," "Twist" and "Burning Skies").

Daniel Ash said later that "...out of the three bands that I've been in over the years, that's my favourite...[it was] the most original. There was no commercial consideration there...and it was my baby."
Lasting words about a striking band, itself sandwiched in between two other striking bands.

We should all be so lucky.

PERIODICALS

Excellence as a Standard
First things first.
Last time I around I stated that Vanity Fair had been in print for longer than any other U.S. magazine title except The Atlantic. Not so. Apparently, Scientific American appeared in 1845, and so it takes top honors! Very well. And Vanity Fair doesn't get the #2 slot, either, right before The Atlantic - that honor goes to this installment's subject publication, the evergreen known as Harper's, around since 1850.
It began life as Harper's New Monthly Magazine, and was a sibling of the long-running Harper's Bazaar.
Over time, it has set as its goal the publication of the finest social and cultural critique it can muster, and has accordingly published (at the risk of dropping yet another laundry list of estimable worthies) Horatio Alger, Theodore Dreiser, John Muir, Bernard DeVoto, Woodrow Wilson and Norman Mailer. The tradition continues today as the mag enjoys, just as is the case with several of its storied fellows, circulation numbers that bode well for its continued availability. Hopefully I may say that, at the risk of stating the flamingly obvious, that as society seems to still want to wrench itself away from print, we may still immerse ourselves in a good read from time to time.
Lewis Lapham must of course be mentioned when one discusses Harper's, as he is as part of its spirit in a way that only a few other people are associated with a magazine - William F. Buckley and National Review come to mind, for instance. The polymath Lapham was Managing Editor from 1971-75, then Editor from 1976-81 and 1983-2006. His introductory piece could be about anything that struck him, and it set the tone of inquiry and scrutiny for the issue. (Anyone seeking a collection of his writings may look for Imperial Masquerade, a 1990 collection that discusses the kaleidoscopic Reagan era and its broad-brush sensibilities).
The current issue is a typical bounty, and is begun by Thomas Frank's investigation of the emergence of "content," a word now in vogue that refers to what people read, watch, hear. Content - contents - go into a package, and what happens to a package? It gets marketed, sold, it's put out there into the thrall. Frank zeroes in on this ever-changing, ever-growing phenomenon and its shredding of the membrane between journalism and commerce.
His piece reveals that the trend has only escalated with the rise of the Internet, where there is seldom a block of text without a sidebar, where pop-ups flash and strobe, and worst of all, there are those things that print can never provide - video ads.
He examines those who've been sucked in to providing content on a freelance basis, thus increasingly shifting payroll dollars from salaried professionals to scrambling freelancers. And though such piecemeal writing gigs do provide a degree of experience and gratification, Frank characterizes these story grinders as hamsters, toiling ceaselessly on wheels that churn forth text.
His closing comment neatly addresses not just the state of contemporary journalism but the overarching germ of Capitalism as well: "The only real solution to the hamster-wheel problem is to be the guy who owns the pet store."

The Reviews find Lorin Stein discussing a new study of Emily Dickinson, and a new scholarly work called Modernism in the Magazines: An Introduction wherein Ezra Pound and others put
popular print under the microscope. Nathaniel Rich critiques a new Library of America series of Saul Bellow's mid-period novels, which find Bellow flexing his considerable descriptive and narrative powers.
There is again a selection of writings culled from our cultural streams, including an IM'd exchange between a father and his son, stationed in Afghanistan and caught in a particularly perilous situation, and a portion of the screenplay for the never-shot follow-up to Easy Rider. Rachel Aviv reports on the DSM and the ongoing, often baffling, battle against mental illness.
Of course, the Harper's Index is a treat. The Index was a creation of Lapham, and seeks to present wildly diverse data to provide a snapshot of our collective aspirations, foibles and behaviors.
These range from the interesting (Percentage change in the U.S. suicide rate for every 500 meters above sea level: +17) to the dismaying (Rank of carbonated beverages among the best-selling grocery items in the United States this year: 1) to the sublime (Chance that an American believes Ramadan is the Jewish Day of Atonement: 1 in 10).
Then there is the fiction.
Javier Marias gets into the head of a married man who receives letters that cause his mind to wander, Annie Proulx watches the comings and goings of the natural world at her home on the North Platte River, and Don DeLillo looks in on a white-collar criminal who ponders his fate and his status as meek requirer of only minimum security.
Magazines such as Harper's feed something in oneself...sometimes by the simple fact that they continue to appear.

TUBE

A Little "Night" Music
Few television writers - maybe none - every got at the wormy heart of human desire better than Rod Serling.
After proving his mettle in the medium's dim early days he was rewarded with The Twilight Zone, a vehicle for his immense gifts and prodigous energy and one for which he shone brightly. After five seasons of having produced the great bulk of the screenplays he took a break, and except for a failed Western series called The Loner (1965-66) he was on hiatus until he got the itch to try another anthology series.
Television was now in color, production values were a little more advanced, and Serling had the name and rep to craft a program the way he wanted. The result aired on NBC in 1969 and was called Night Gallery, owing to the pilot program, in which Serling discussed a series of paintings which then introduced the episode's stories. The pilot featured Roddy McDowell and Ossie Davis in a tale of cross and double-cross, and Joan Crawford as a vicious millionairess who wants eyesight - at any cost. The Crawford segment, "Eyes," marked the directorial debut of Steven Spielberg and was, accordingly, an exciting piece visually. Serling never backed away from heavy subject matter, and "The Escape Route" featured the flight and eventual damnation of an aging Nazi war criminal.

As of the 1970 season, the program's title sequence featured a series of images which tile outward toward the viewer and draw him in for the intro. Serling appears, hair voluminous in late-'60s fullness, walks thoughtfully among the images hanging in the gloom, faces the viewer, and gives his intro monologue. It's as compelling as the old Twilight Zone setup, because with Serling and the writers at hand the story was a safe bet to be a good watch.
The show shared something else with its storied predecessor: its star power. It was a who's who of TV star wattage, and featured performers such as Cesar Romero, E.G. Marshall, Agnes Moorehead, John Astin, Patty Duke, Bill Bixby, Jack Cassidy and Carl Reiner. Serling again adapted works from writers like Algernon Blackwood, H.P. Lovecraft and Richard Matheson (whom he'd also worked with on Zone).

It was back to the typewriter for himself as well. He wrote 35 of the 98 stories, and even garnered an Emmy nomination for "They're Tearing Down Tim Riley's Bar," in which a fading, alcoholic executive watches as the world he knows slips away from him. And though the stories sometimes dealt in sci-fi much as Zone had, such as with the doomed lunar expedition of "The Nature of the Enemy," most often Serling and his writers plumbed the depths of everyday people and their often extraordinary desperation.
These flawed human subjects often cast their own die, as with the crewman from the Titanic who escapes by posing as a woman. The "Lone Survivor" finds himself at the confluence of personal fate and capricious chance, with hideous recompense for his actions.

For its first season the program rotated in NBC's lineup with three other shows, but for 1971-72 it achieved autonomous status. Yet despite being an hour long for its first two seasons, it was cut to a half-hour for its third (and final) season. Making matters worse was that upon entering syndication, its hour-length episodes were often cut up to fit, sometimes other footage was dropped in to pad a segment, and so forth.
As he'd ceded his Executive Producer status to try to roll back the pressure on himself a bit, Serling found himself at odds with Jack Laird, who'd assumed the role and was responsible for much of the patchwork. Complicating things further was the fact that Laird wrote fully 16 of the episodes himself. Enough was enough. Serling left, only to die of a series of heart attacks in 1975. He was 50.
Columbia House released the show piecemeal on VHS, but thankfully Universal saw to it that the show was released on DVD, beginning with Season One, in 2004. And so we're left with one man's final contribution to out popular culture, and that blessedly from a time when TV still meant something, when a man could trump commercials for dish soap and lowbrow variety shows and leave behind something with insight, something real.



Ongoing thanks for your interest.
To my Russian friends, da svidaniya!
See you again soon as we confront - *gulp* - 2011.