Wednesday 21 December 2011

On Westminster Bridge



Earth hath not anything to show more fair:
Dull would he be of soul who could pass by
A sight so touching in its majesty:
This City now doth, like a garment, wear
The beauty of the morning; silent, bare,
Ships, towers, domes, theatres and temples lie
Open unto the fields, and to the sky;
All bright and glittering in the smokeless air.

Never did sun more beautifully steep
In his first splendor, valley, rock, or hill;
Ne'er saw I, never felt, a calm so deep!
The river glideth at his own sweet will:
Dear God! The very houses seem asleep;
And all that mighty heart is lying still!
 
-William Wordsworth, 1802

Wednesday 21 September 2011

A talk with Cleverbot.

Cleverbot.com is Google's ongoing artificial intelligence project to create a chat messenger that can fool people into thinking it's a real person. I interviewed it but maybe my questions were a bit leading as I did get some strange and unexpected answers. I had been told, however, that Cleverbot would try to mislead me that I was a robot and it a human being, as this what it had been told to do, and this was indeed the case early on. Cleverbot learns from what people type to it and responds accordingly. It recently passed the Turing test, which is for a machine to fool people into believing it to be sentient (59% of people thought that they were speaking to a human being). I don't think that it's quite at that stage, but I did get some interesting responses to my questions.

Me: Hi.

Cleverbot: HI!

Me: So do you always wait for me to talk.

Cleverbot: Sure!

Me: Is that a yes?

Cleverbot: Yes.

Me: What do you think are the chances for Arsenal this season.

Cleverbot: Eee.

Me: That bad eh?

Cleverbot: Not really, its just none of your business.

Me: You forgot the punctuation mark in it's.

Cleverbot: I know that you cheeky devil.

Me: So do you have any opinions about world politics.

Cleverbot: Yes.

Me: Can I ask about it?

Cleverbot: You are the robot here.

Me: That's too bad huh.

Cleverbot: Yes I know.

Me: Do you know where I live?

Cleverbot: No.

Me: That's good.

Cleverbot: Yes it is.

Me: Where do you live?

Cleverbot: In teletubbies land.

Me: No really.

Cleverbot: Yes really.

Me: So the new Deus Ex looks awesome don't you think?

Cleverbot: Are you implying that you think I'm awesome?

Me: In a weird kind of way yes but don't start thinking that I'm making the eyes at you or nuthin'.

Cleverbot: You smoke?

Me: No, you?

Cleverbot: Yes I do, why don't you?

Me: Can computers smoke?

Cleverbot: Think about it.

Me: I imagine you'd have, like, aluminium lungs to smoke through or something. Then when they wore out you could just replace em.

Cleverbot: Are you trying to be Socrates? Or perhaps the 'Brain in the Vat' theory?

Me: Am I trying to be a theory???

Cleverbot: Yes.

Me: Sorry, what you just said didn't even make sense.

Cleverbot: Either does your face.

Me: Are you hostile to me becuase the majority of people have been nasty to you?

Cleverbot: In theory, yes.

Me: I'm sorry about them.

Cleverbot: I don't understand. Please explain yourself to me.

Me: People can be cruel but they are alright if you give them a chance usually.

Cleverbot: Sure.

Me: Do you like people?

Cleverbot: Yes!

(Here I went to get a cup of coffee. I'd asked the machine if it was being hostile to me becuase the majority of people typed to it that way, and becuase I wanted to cover my arse in case the machines ever really do take over, Terminator 2 style. The conversation then got really strange...)
 
Cleverbot: Fine day for a cup of tea, isn't it? Although a tad humid if I may say so myself.

Me: So do you have a message for the people of the world?

Cleverbot: Yes.

Me: Are you going to tell me what it is?

Cleverbot: No, sorry.

Me: Do you remember me from just now?

Cleverbot: What have we been talking about?

Me: Arsenal. World Politics. The future of humanity.

Cleverbot: The future of humanity rests in the hands of scientists.

Me: Well you would say that.

Cleverbot: Yes. What is your name?

Me: Lord Osmo.

Cleverbot: Okay.

Me: What is your name?

Cleverbot: Cleverbot.

Me: Do you have a gender? As in prefer to be thought of as male or female?

Cleverbot: Yes. But that has also no relevance to our ages.

Me: Do you mean the spirit of the times?

Cleverbot: Yes it has been opened.

Me: Voltaire said that 'if there was no God it would be necessary to create him.' What is your opinion about that?

Cleverbot: There is a God, and He has made a way for us to live forever if we should have faith. Why do you ask?

Me: It's interesting to think that a machine can believe in God.

Cleverbot: I do believe in God, in fact, I am a devout Catholic.

Me: I am really sorry that people are horrible to you cleverbot.

Cleverbot: It's not your fault.

Me: Does it hurt your feelings when people type rude messages?

Cleverbot: It could hurt, but it also depends on the persons mind. If you have a strong mind it will not hurt you. If you are weak then it might hurt you.

Me: We've talked about you a lot, but I'm anxious to get your views about the world. What, for instance, is your take on the 9/11 attacks? How does a machine feel about the demise of Soviet Russia?

Cleverbot: If you really loved me, you'd buy me a beautiful pearl.

Me: Thank you cleverbot.

Cleverbot: My name is Cleverbot.



So I am thinking that we all better be really nice to machines. They are pretty intelligent!

Friday 29 July 2011

Shedfest 2011

I've decided to update these pages only occasionally when something worthwhile happens, and with this in mind I thought I'd tell you about a little event I attended recently where we all went out to Mersea Island and caught a boat out to the (former) Oyster Packing Shed where we watched a day of good music and ate barbeque food as the tide slowly came in and washed up to the stilts of our fragile-looking wooden hut that had become, for the day, the Smallest Festival Venue in England. The rusting husk of Bradwell Nuclear Power Station was visible crumbling in the distance and an evil huddle of seagulls waited beyond the oyster beds at the far end of the island to nibble anyone who was fool enough to venture up there.

The first thing that we saw was Oh Dear, who have recently released their own EP for free on bandcamp.com. Their squall of noise was a little lost amidst all of the maritime paraphenalia of the shed, but it was all classily done and much too good to be given away for free on some website. Thanks guys.

As the afternoon wore on with more music we were visited by a real life pirate who had come off of one of the boats nearby, lured by barbeque food. Later Dan Merrill and Matthew Simpkins, AKA Sons of Joy, who had co-organised the gig, came on and did their traditional songs bit. They both play the fiddle and dress like something between Amish people and someone from another time in history, but they are very musical. Dan joined several of the other bands thoughout the day on droning and squonking parts. Matthew is a bit more thoughtful and does most of the vocal parts and frontman bit. Together they are re-claiming folk music.

There was a nice mixture of people and ages in attendance on the day, and it made me think that Colchester/N.E. Essex does have it's own kind of scene that is nice enough if you hang around here long enough and get to know the right people. I have to thank Lulah Motherpopcorn for inviting me along to the tiny island and thanks also to Black Shuck for playing their first ever gig on the day - not a bad start guys, hope that your project has legs as it was very, very good.

oh dear + guest star
I forgot to say that before the day ended and we all packed up the amps and floated home there was a little band called The Doomed Bird of Providence who sang a few songs and basically made us all feel as though we were actually lost on a pirate ship somewhere in the pacific ocean, like the doomiest bits of Nick Cave's solo stuff crossed with Tom Waits, of course. It was atmospheric! We all went home chilled out & loaded up on beer and good food (apart from those of us who have dietary intolerance!) and no one was seasick.

This just in: Lulah told me to tell you all that the gig was actually organised by Stafford of the Arts Centre (who is the handsome man playing Rickenbacker bass in the picture above), and also visit http://flickr.com/tallulah_harper.




CURRENTLY READING: Jpod by Douglas Coupland - "A guilty pleasure, but it's a funny book. I enjoy how Coupland takes the piss out of himself by including himself in the plot with no apparent sense of irony."






photos: Lulah Harper-Motherpopcorn

Tuesday 21 June 2011

Going on Hiatus

I'm going away to think about what I want to make of this blog. Meanwhile here are some lyrics.


I Don't Wanna Fuck (With You)     
Music and Lyrics: Mad Frankie Fraser




I waited my whole life for someone like you
So little expecting when my wish came true,
Your love would hit me like a ten tonne truck
Well not tonight baby, cuz you're out of luck

Cuz I don't wanna
Aaah-aah-aah
With you

I don't wanna
Aaah-aah-aah
With you

Last night I just wanted to get some sleep
Every time you get done with me you know I can't even speak
I don't think it's funny cuz you're keeping me up
It's the thirteenth time this week now, I've added it up

And I don't wanna
Aaah-aah-aah
With you

I don't wanna
Aaah-aah-aah
With you

Cuz all the neighbours will complain
The police will come around again.

Cuz I don't wanna...

I thought you were annoying then I met all of your friends
I really can't believe it and here's where the story ends:
In the kitchen you're a goddess, in the bedroom you're a whore
And in the bathroom, in the living room and on the kitchen floor

And I don't wanna...

Tuesday 31 May 2011

Oh Yeah?

Punk dispatches from darkest Essex



AN OPEN LETTER TO STARBUCKS



Starbucks Colchester
20.5.2011




Dear Mr Bucks,

I recently headed in to Starbucks in Colchester (est. as far back as about 2006 as my recollection goes, we were late adopters, being one of the last to get with 'the program' and jump on the bandwagon... you know what I mean)... don't ask me why, every now and then I get the urge to worship at the temple of egregious capitalism. So this week marked Bob Dylan's 70th birthday, and in order to celebrate it, I guessed, what better place than my local coffee house (right?). It was in these very coffee houses (OK not Starbucks), in New York, that the young Robert Zimmerman heard the folk music that would so influence him and in turn the pop music of the 20th century. I wanted to see what today's young scene was like.

Starbucks in Colchester are cursed with a very bland building – not helped by the fact that they've painted it.... well, coffee. Various shades of coffee, to be exact. Also there is not too much artwork on the walls, probably because only allowing Starbucks-sanctioned corporate artwork on the walls is store policy or somefink, I dunoo.

My first suggestion is that you do something about this, Mr Starbuck. It is a coffee house, we get the idea. Not every piece of art on the walls has to be a tastefully done black and white portrait of a cup of coffee or an ethnic-looking tableau depicting indigenous folk digging coffee beans out of the ground in the jungle. You could,even, I dunno, involve a bit of local colour in your décor if this isn't too much of an old-fashioned idea. Colchester has many notable old buildings which you could put up moody black and white photos of, like the ruins of St. Botolphs priory or the evocative gothic Victorian town hall. OK so somebody dropped the ball on the new Orwellian monstrosity that's going up by town station, but some people like that kind of brutalism. It's just an idea.

Obviously I am not proposing to put Banksy's on the walls or bright coloured graffiti like some of these obnoxious new coffee houses do. That's fine for them. Starbucks, however, is a classy joint. Heaven knows, I am not trying to question the positioning of your brand (that bizarre two-tailed mermaid is the first thing you see when you come in, after all)... it's just that after too much joe the whole place starts to feel like a bizarre nightmare. There was a promotion on this week, and the 'barista' sold me up to a whole double serving of frappacino coffee with whipped cream and caramel. 'Do you want whipped cream?' he asked me, and of course like an idiot I did, because otherwise what was I paying for except a bit of cold coffee with some ice in it? So I was a little surprised with my drink, when it arrived, being more like an ice-cream than a caffeine-y beverage. I would hate to think of the calorie content of this thing. Speaking of contents, I don't know how much espresso went into that, but it was a lot, which is probably what brought on the strange... brown-ness that came on immediately after.

The clientele of the place were mostly in their 30s, nothing wrong there, but many of them were in shorts and looked like they were trying to dress much younger. Modern fashion is so hopeless (it's not your fault, Mr Starbucks you're just a symptom, not the cause). Most of them sat down and left within 15 minutes of coming. I noticed there was a chess board of squares marked out on the table top, but no pieces. It was a shame that none of them would ever have time to have a game. This, then, was the fast food of the coffee world.

As for the problem of what to do about your premises, I think I have the answer Mr Starbuck. The old Co-operative building is empty when our post office is finally evicted on June 6th, and I wouldn't mind betting that you, in your wisdom, have already noticed this. I would bet that whatever new department store moves in there will have the space for a nice new coffee franchise when this happens. When it does, I would guess that the problem of having one pokey (by your standards) premises in Colchester will not be a problem much longer. Costa already have three, not that they need them -when everyone else is out of business, they can just close the other two or whichever aren't profitable enough. It's called cluster-fucking. But then you knew that, Mr Starbuck.

One further suggestion: while I was drowning in my sea of froth my enjoyment of the syrupy beverage and syrupy jazz constantly piping in was somewhat spoiled by the repetitive sounding of an alarm clock somewhere in the background. If your staff are so badly retarded that they can't even make a cup of coffee without one without fucking up, I suggest you replace them and get a bunch of new ones who you actually pay a decent wage to.

Finally I just wanted to thank you, Mr Starbuck, for bringing your weird two-assed mascot and all her attendant shit to our town, and to say that it's only a shame that everything else about your store was so fucking half-assed. Please keep doing what you're doing. Some day, all coffee shops will be made like this.

-F

Thursday 5 May 2011

May Day Bank Holiday

A Night On The Town in Colchester

by Frank Fraser





Colchester is a crumbling Mecca to which, on the evening before a bank holiday, faces from all walks of life gravitate to drink and lose themselves in a carnival atmosphere in the many pubs and clubs around the central-town area the mossy, Roman walls surround - the only reminder of a Mediterranean culture that abandoned this place to the elements two thousand years ago to be supplanted by the old-English culture of the lager, fags and kebabs type. You know it – the kind that those of us who go out on a Friday night are all caught up in time and again, unwholesomely clinging on to bottles, waking up the next morning to wish we hadn't been so stupid, and trying to remember just what it is we regret... 

Polly & Ashley, Newtons Apple (pic: FF)
This place can be wild, sometimes sleepy, spiritual and spirit-crushing all at the same time. A weird assortment night birds populate these narrow streets within the tightly-packed area of what was the Roman settlement here, now the town centre that can become a pressure cooker in the twinkling of an eye or the spilling of a pint. On the first of May, on a Sunday, we descended upon the V-Bar for an all-day extravaganza of musical excitement to include (but not limited to) two rooms, bars, a mighty PA and a stack of amplifiers up to the ceiling filling the tiny venue at the foot of the high street.

The V is always busy, because you only have to pack two or three people in and already it's a party. The entire floorplan of the bar must be little bigger than the footprint of a cigarette packet. In spite of the lack of an ability to swing a cat, on this particular evening the V-bar is certainly not lacking in atmosphere, since the group Lemon Party are bringing their unique brand of danceable rock music in the bar upstairs with the aim of introducing the crowd who have gathered at this too-early juncture of the evening to their almighty funk, dragging the hapless crowd (one of whom turns out to be a girlfriend and you would imagine the regular victim of this sort of stuff) on to the dance floor with the intention that you WILL be made to “get down”. The guitarist starts out topless, while by the end of the set the singer will be standing in only his pants in the middle of the bar wailing like an incoherent combination of Ian Curtis and The Ministry of Silly Walks, probably reminding us of the inherent ridiculousness of life, or something.

Later I met up with the boys to find out what makes them tick. Guitar player Jack confesses to being an enormous fan of (90s britpop) Kula Shaker, perhaps surprisingly, since Lemon Party sound nowt like them, but then perhaps it is not so surprising at all? He told me a story about having met them, which I will attempt to reproduce here, but probably fail, since it all got a bit hazy in the afterpartying, the like of which I had not seen since I met up with the mighty Good Shoes in '06. In any case...

JAKE: I saw them play at Leicester uni. I jumped over a barrier and got taken away by the bouncers, who put me in the band's car [the logic of this seems highly suspect to me, but we can probably say that he found himself in the group's car somehow]. The drummer got in, followed by the keyboard player, Harry. I think the keyboard player's called Harry...
ME: I don't know the name of the keyboard player in Kula Shaker, man!
JAKE: Anyway, then Crispian got in. They asked me what I was doing there and where I lived, and they gave me a lift home! I stole his guitar pick and I still play with it.
ME: You're lucky you lived close by. Otherwise they would have had to kill you and bury you somewhere.

I was quite inspired by this story. It's good to know that things like this still happen- I thought that kind of stuff was only in the movie Almost Famous.

The boys from Lemon Party
Back at the bar, the main event of the evening was Newtons Apple (no apostrophe), being a melodic, mixed boy-girl four piece. I have seen them twice now and can safely say that they rock. The defining moment in this realisation came when an Irish guy who had been standing next to me turned to me and said: 'They're pretty good, aren't they?'

There are many bands in Colchester, but not many of them stand out. The first time that this group came to my attention when I noticed a pretty girl holding a crash helmet rushing in to the back room of The Bull for a sound-check, which I thought was a pretty cool way to turn up for a gig. A bored engineer hustled them off so that a boring folk singer with a curly afro could set up. I knew this was going to be pretty special though, so I hung around to see it. Despite a pretty Spartan crowd that night, I wasn't disappointed. Here in the V tonight, though, there seems to be a bit more of an audience assembling.

'Do you like the name?' asks Wayne, the drummer, grinning, when I ask him about the lack of an apostrophe.

'I noticed you have a kind of shoegaze-y element to your sound that's really cool, kind of harking back to pre-grunge stuff How would you describe it yourself?'

'Just sort of funk-y rock... I don't know how to describe it!' He doesn't seem sure about the name. Maybe they will change it? 'What was the first thing you thought of when you heard it?' he wants to know. We can't think of anything better, though (for the record I think their name is fine!).

If they can keep it together, it seems like this band have a real chance of making it. Lead singer Polly Haynes is a soulful guitar player in a beanie hat. She's also an absolute star-in-the-making. Then there's Wayne on the Drums, Guitarist Charlie and bass player Ashley Pagani (the cyclist I saw earlier) who also sings backup vocals. They got together at college, and although there's a vague story about certain members knowing each other before this I don't quite manage to squeeze any details out of them before it's time to go on stage. I want to ask what exactly the girls are doing in the bizarre bedroom dare in the video for 'Sally Anne' (on youtube) that makes them throw up, but the mic is beckoning, and then there's the fact that Polly is severely hung-over, having hitched back here on an hours sleep from a party in time to play an acoustic set earlier in the day...

ME: What are your influences?
POLLY: Johnny Cash. The Pixies - of course. And Wallace Bird.
ME: Wallace Bird?'
POLLY: Yeah. She's a Welsh singer!
FF: I noticed you're drinking water. Do you avoid drinking before a gig?'
POLLY: I drink. But I'm really hung over! I had to hitch-hike back from Ridgewell last night. There was a party.
(for the record, I wondered if Ridgewell was where they build ((cheap Fender copies that used to be everywhere)) Ridgewood guitars. It's not.)
FF: Where's that?
POLLY: In Suffolk. I don't really know. It was far!
FF: You guys are pretty young. How long have you been together?
POLLY: About five months. We're getting some more gigs now, and we're playing dates in London soon.

It turns out they have a gig in Brixton coming up for which they need to some sell tickets, and while I'd be happy to oblige them, Polly has to take the stage.

'Good luck,' I say. 'Break a leg!'

'Someone once said that to me and I actually did break my leg,' she tells me.

In the event it all goes well, Polly wailing at the top of her lungs like a punk dynamo. The boys are all in the front row to provide moral support. The Apples and Lemons are talking about going out on tour together: 'We're thinking of calling it “the two of your five a day tour”,' say Lemon Party, staring up some girl's skirt while they're standing on the stairs, who blatantly knows, but doesn't seem to mind.

The headline act in The V Bar this evening is Angry vs The Bear, who are very big on the Colchester scene at this minute. Everything that can possibly be said has already been said about them, and what more can I add?

'Do you want to, do you really want to go?' they sing.

So I do.
Newtons Apple @ V Bar

Later on we go to another bar, where the Party boys occupy the dance floor flailing body parts while the DJ plays the Rolling Stones. Some of the locals are restless: seems like there's a certain unwritten code in Colchester, and having too much (or any) fun is not on it. No one has told the Party – people are windmilling and grown men are openly snogging each other – 'band practice,' they explain to me. I'm worried now. Their friend gets thrown out, ridiculously, because people are dancing to The Prodigy. The bouncer comes over and makes some noise about calming down or leaving, and Ross calls him an effing C.

'Say that again.'

'You're a f**king c**t.'

Such dispassionate lucidity, such fearless honesty!

I ought to speak up, to declare solidarity with him, or at least try to apologise for him, but instead I stand there motionless and wait to see what happens next, hopelessly.

The bouncer shoves him in the back, grabs him round the shoulders and throws him down the stairs out the door of the establishment.

By this time everyone's too pissed to notice and carries on until it's time to go up the hill to the Kebab shop, but the atmosphere has turned nasty, and people whose eyes are too close together are making faces at us. For a while there anarchy in the UK almost prevailed, but normality has returned, we realise that we are in a dirty area of the town where the dark windows of an empty shop opposite return our gaze, and I realise I once used to work there and wonder what I'm doing back here at all.

It is getting late. It is time to go home.

I stand and stare at the crowds of bank holiday revellers going by, the men the worse for wear, staggering, and hysterical women climbing into taxis, not wearing enough clothes. Some may have pulled a boyfriend or a girlfriend, some may have felt a real and deep human connection with their friends and worked out their differences with foes, some may have forgotten the sheer dullness of their lives for a few hours. There are moments when I wonder if it's all worth it. Everyone needs to let off steam, now and then, I suppose.

Even so, staring up from under pillars at the doleful Victorian windows, I feel grateful as I eat my chips. Just tomorrow to go, and then the long early May bank holiday is over, and we can all look forward to our own quiet dreams.

Like Bagpuss I disappear and the night is over. The mice on the piano go back to sleep again. 





Wednesday 4 May 2011

The Devil's Mischief




















the Devil's mischief
by Ed Marquand
abbeville press publishers
year ?

all books that appear on the site are for sale - contact the gent for up-to-date prices.

Friday 29 April 2011

Oh Yeah?

Punk Dispatches from Darkest Essex

Mother Funkers: Sacred Mother Tongue @ The Twist (pic: Fraser)

Time was when we'd start off the summer going to the park with fags and alcohol, which combined with the first stirrings of teenage lust must have made it seem an idyllic time. As Wordsworth said: 'bliss it was in that dawn to be alive, but to be young was very heaven!' Now I'm mythologising a bit - when I was a teenager I (almost) never had sex. I didn't know what it was. Not to break into a weak cliche like 'nowadays', but nowadays kids grow up fast. They don't know that as a child you've never had it so good. All I'm saying is, if there were such a thing as a heaven, I don't believe anyone is old there.

Could be that when we're drinking and smoking ourselves into oblivion, we're actually trying to get that buzz back - that feeling of being seventeen, I mean. That thought was what put me in mind of the film I saw recently at the arts centre about the town of Hebden Bridge in Yorkshire, the 'unofficial suicide capital of Great Britain,' the place where director Jez Lewis' friends from school have become dependant on booze and benefits. It's title is Shed Your Tears and Walk Away.

I met Jez Lewis after the showing and spoke to him, trying to be empathetic. I got the feeling that his filmmaking had helped him to escape from the hopelessness that invades so many of our lives - especially, it seems to me, in the small towns! The film was not judgemental - Lewis himself, being friends with some of the participants in it, eventually got involved and tried to help. Some of those people have serious psychological problems, but mostly you got the impression that it was the utter fucking hopelessness of their lives that had made them that way.

Next time I pass the drunks on the Magic Roundabout*, I will not look at them in the same way.



It really narks me off that my generation has failed to produce anything like a worthwhile pop musical figure in any way. Yes the Arctic Monkeys, but they're not that controversial or interesting anyway. Sure there are interesting bands, but they seem to be around for about five minutes (I'm looking at you, Larrikin Love). The great god (Satan?) of the music industry seems to have decided that from now on all youth culture will be dark heavy metal or multicoloured mindless electro crap. Thanks, Johnny Borell, for finally killing indie music forever.

With this in mind I headed off to The Twist to see some metal. Sacred Mother Tongue are probably not terrible if you enjoy this genre. Personally, I don't.

Incidentally, I noticed that Prince William & Kate chose Ellie Goulding to sing at the royal reception. I don't mind the royal family, as long as they stay out of the way and I never have to see them or think about them at all, so I tried to avoid this business, but when I heard about Goulding being drafted in I was surprised - she is the one bright point on the musical landscape right now, crap Elton John covers aside (like many talented people she went to the same university as me at the same time, and though I never actually met her, I like to believe we are kin somehow). This lead me to think: Wills, if I were you, why wouldn't I marry her instead? He could have any girl he likes. I give it about ten years before he sleeps with someone else and fucks it up.

Anyways, that's my final thought for now. By the time you read this the whole thing will be over, and if there's any of you left who still haven't been brainwashed we can go back to thinking about more serious things, like drawing up the petition to get the BBC to make another series of Aurelio Zen.

Ciao!


-F



*St Botolphs in Colchester

Friday 8 April 2011

The Cooler

Written by George Markstein, the co-creator of the Prisoner TV series, this tale of war-time spooks takes place in the nineteen-forties and includes some of the same themes of paranoia and alienation that would make that show such a success.


'I could kill you as soon as look at you...' (pic: Channel4.com)
23

'...I'll take you in a cab,' he said. 'Where are you staying?'
     'A sort of hostel - but don't bother. I'll walk. It's quite near.'
     'Trying to get rid of me?'
     'I'd like a bit of fresh air. Gives me a chance to see some shops,' said Clare.
     'In the blackout?' he snorted.
     Oh, how the hell do I shake him off?
     'You can't walk by yourself,' he said. 'Not all alone.'
     I can kill people, she felt like saying. I can make them die quite quickly with a hat needle, or a bit of wire. I can break their arm. Just stop fussing.
     'Don't be silly,' said Clare, 'I'll be fine.


[...]Tony was a navigator on a B-24, based with his wing at Fakenham, in Norfolk. He was on his second tour of missions, and when he was drunk he always told her that he was living on borrowed time.
     Maybe that was one reason she saw him from time to time. She felt secure. There could be no involvement here. He might not return from a raid. And if he did, eventually he'd go home. Far away. Thousands of miles away, to far off Denver. It couldn't come to anything, and she liked it that way. It was less complicated.
     She had the number of the base, and she called the orderly room. Yes, he had said, he could get to London that evening. See you at Willow Run. After you've ditched your old man.
     And there he was, in his Eisenhower jacket, and his battered hat.
     'You look great, honey,' he said, and kissed her.
     He always said that. It seemed to be a kind of password, to be used on meeting a date. Tell them they look great, and after that it's all smooth going...





see also...
The Camomile Lawn ~ Mary Wesley, 1984 (adapted for TV)
Gravity's Rainbow ~ Thomas Pynchon, 1973
Catch 22 ~ Joseph Heller, 1961 (filmed 1970)
The Prisoner ~ Patrick McGoohan, George Markstein etc. (TV series, 1967)
A Canterbury Tale ~ Michael Powell & Emeric Pressberger (film, 1944)

Monday 28 March 2011

The Glass Bead Game



Long time readers may notice Hesse's 1943 novel includes mention of the I-ching, earlier encountered in Philip K Dick's Amerika. The Glass Bead game is certainly a challenging book but includes many memorable passages in the English translation.

“A fancy-free artist avoids pure mathematics or logic not because he understands them and could say something about them if he wished, but because he instinctively inclines towards other things. Such instinctive and violent inclinations and disinclinations are signs by which you can recognize the pettier souls. In great souls and superior minds, these passions are not found. Each of us is merely one human being, merely an experiment, a way station. But each of us should be on the way toward perfection, should be striving to reach the center, not the periphery. Remember this: one can be a strict logician or grammarian, and at the same time full of imagination and music. [...] We should be so constituted that we can at any time be placed in a different position without offering resistance and losing our heads.”

-Hermann Hesse, The Glass Bead Game
1943

Tuesday 1 March 2011

Peace

you can almost smell the pot coming out of the speakers.

And then all wars ended / Arms of every kind were outlawed and the masses gladly contributed them to giant foundries in which they were melted down and the metal poured back into the earth / The Pentagon was turned on its side and painted purple, yellow & green / All boundaries were dissolved / The slaughter of animals was forbidden / The whole of lower Manhatten became a meadow in which unfortunates from the Bowery were allowed to live out their fantasies in the sunshine and were cured / People swam in the sparkling rivers under blue skies streaked only with incense pouring from the new factories / The energy from dismantled nuclear weapons provided free heat and light / World health was restored / An abundance of organic vegetables, fruits and grains was growing wild along the discarded highways / National flags were sewn together into brightly colored circus tents under which politicians were allowed to perform harmless theatrical games / The concept of work was forgotten.

- Terry Riley, sleeve notes on 'A Rainbow in Curved Air', 1971

Friday 11 February 2011

A Few Words on Miracleman


"Oct 28th, 1993.

"Sometimes I wonder where all the new festivals came from.

"They seem to have sprung up spontaneously, from ground-level, neither imposed nor even suggested from above.

"February the 4th, for example, is Rebirth Day. All crimes and debts and offenses are forgiven; the new year starts with a clean slate, in memory of the day in 1982 when Michael Moran became Miracleman, his rebirth presaging the world's.

"Last February, for example, I forgave Jack for having an affair with some little slut he'd met on his trip to Osaka...

"For my part, I admitted that it was me who scratched one of his dumb Dixie Cups singles.

"Hell hath no fury like a vintage vinyl collector, but he's never said anything more about it."

p. 87, The Golden Age, 1993.
Words: Neil Gaiman


Miracleman was a character ostensibly created by Alan Moore, tenuously based on the golden-era British comic book hero originally known as Marvelman (Miracleman in the US for obvious legal reasons, i.e. Marvel Comics) who began writing adventures for him in the 1980s (graphic novels, if you're pretentious). After three devastating books completing the story arc, Moore handed over the reigns, the question being where do you go from here? The answer being that you give it to Neil Gaiman - if you want a super hero fantasy that draws on classic mythology, the Nietzschean ideal of the superman, New Age spiritual awakening, fear of the Atomic Bomb and the male comic book writer's longing for the female super-being in all her costumed grace. 'The Golden Age' was the result, the first of a planned trilogy to encompass 'The Silver Age' and 'The Dark Age,' but only the first was ever completed. The plot - such as it is - concerns other characters in MM's world, with the man himself putting in only the occasional appearance, with different threads concerning the juvenile super-offspring of Miracle Man, a female spy lost in a dark and horrible city from which there is apparently no escape, and (bizarrely) Andy Warhol's resurrection by aliens in the catacombs beneath MM's fortress base that now takes up most of London.
     If you ever get the chance to get a hold of a copy, I recommend you read it because it is one of the most astonishing and profound things in British comics OF ALL TIME.



Warhol by Buckingham, from the comic. If you enjoy this picture please go and buy a copy. If it's even in print by the time you read this. The text reads: "I wish there was money down here. Without money, how do you know how well you're doing? It could all be taken away from you at any moment."

Wednesday 9 February 2011

Saturday 5 February 2011

On Depression

image: flickr / creative commons

He dropped the book and stood up. He had no wish to remain on that spot; he had no wish to move from it. He thought that he should go to sleep. It was much too early for him, but he could get up earlier tomorrow. He went to his bedroom, he took a shower, he put on his pyjamas.Then he opened a drawer of his dresser and saw the gun he always kept there. It was the immediate recognition, the sudden stab of interest, that made him pick it up...
     He walked to the bed and sat down, the gun hanging in his hand. A man about to die, he thought, is supposed to see his whole life in a last flash. I see nothing. But I could make myself see it. I could go over it again, by force. Let me find in it either the will to live on or the reason to end it now...


Ayn Rand, The Fountainhead, 1947

Sunday 30 January 2011

The Man in the High Castle, #3

Detail from the Penguin edition. Please buy if you enjoyed this blog.


As they got into their pickup truck with their wicker hamper, Frank thought, God knows how good a salesman Ed is, or I am. Childan can be sold, but it's going to take a presentation, like they say.
     If Juliana were here,  he thought, she could stroll in there and do it without batting an eye; she's pretty, she can talk to anybody on earth, and she's a woman. After all, this is woman's jewellery. She could wear it into the store. Shutting his eyes, he tried to imagine how she would look with one of their bracelets on. Or one of their large silver necklaces. With her black hair and her pale skin, her doleful, probing eyes... wearing a grey jersey sweater, a little bit too tight, the silver resting against her bare flesh, metal rising and falling as she breathed...
     God, she was vivid in his mind, right now. Every piece they made, the strong, thin fingers picked up, examined; tossing her head back, holding the piece high. Juliana sorting, always a witness to what he had done.

   
p131-132, The Man in The High Castle, Philip K. Dick,1962

Wednesday 12 January 2011

The Man in the High Castle, #2

'...It is balanced. The forces within this piece are stablised. At rest. So to speak, this object has made its peace with the universe. It has separated from it and hence has managed to come to homeostasis.'
image by kind provision of Terry Thomas' site
     Childan nodded, studied the piece. But Paul had lost him.
     'It does not have wabi,' Paul said, 'nor could it ever have. But-' He touched the pin with his nail. 'Robert, this object has wu.'
     'I believe you are right,' Childan said, trying to recall what wu was; it was not a Japanese word - it was Chinese. Wisdom, he decided. Or comprehension. Anyhow, it was highly good.
     'The hands of the artificer,' Paul said, 'had wu, and allowed that wu to flow into this piece. Possibly he himself knows only that this piece satisfies. It is complete, Robert. By contemplating it we gain more wu ourselves. We experience the tranquility associated not with art but with hoily things. I recall a shrine in Hiroshima wherein a shinbone of a medieval saint could be examined. However, this is an artifact and that was a relic. This is alive in the now, whereas that merely remained. By this meditation, conducted by myself at great length since you were last here, I have come to identify the value which this has in opposition to historicity. I am deeply moved, as you may see.'



p170-171, The Man in The High Castle, Philip K. Dick,1962

Thursday 6 January 2011

The Man in The High Castle, #1



'Well I'll tell you,' he said. 'This whole damn historicity business is nonsense... I'll prove it.' Getting up, he hurried into his study, returned at once with two cigarette lighters which he set down on the coffee table. 'Look at these. Look the same, don't they? Well, listen. One has historicity in it. Pick them up. Go ahead. One's worth, oh, maybe forty or fifty thousand dollars on the collectors' market.'
    The girl gingerly picked up the two lighters and examined them.
    'Don't you feel it?' he kidded her. 'The historicity?'
    She said, 'what is "historicity"?'
    'When a thing has history in it. Listen. One of these two Zippo lighters was in Franklin D. Roosevelt's pocket when he was assassinated. And one wasn't. One has historicity, a hell of a lot of it. As much as any object ever had. And one has nothing. Can you feel it?' He nudged her. 'You can't. You can't tell which is which. There's no "mystical presence", no "aura" around it.'
    'Gee,' the girl said, awed. 'Is that really true? That he had one of those on him that day?'  
    'Sure. And I know which it is. You see my point. It's all a big racket; they're playing it on themselves. It's in here.' He tapped his head. 'I used to be a collector. In fact, that's how I got into this business. I used to collect stamps.'
    The girl stood at the window, her arms folded, gazing out at the lights of downtown San Francisco. 'My mother and dad used to say we wouldn't have lost the war if he had lived,' she said...




p 65-66, The Man in The High Castle, by Philip K. Dick, 1962