Merely the Mocs

On the Way to the Peak of Normal | Posted by jmoore
Jan 27 2012

merely-the-mocsOn January 26, 2012, local indie-folk outfit Merely the Mocs joined me in the WAIF studios to play a few songs and talk about their new CDEP A Cynics Prayer. I also delved into some of my recent remixes for the ongoing Dr. Whollucinogen feature. And of course I played a variety of other music. Full set list below:

 
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1. I Hear A New World - Joe Meek
2. Seasons In the Sun - Terry Jack
3. Dumb Am I -Nina Nastasia- from On Leaving
4. Adieu to All Judges and Juries -Shirley Collins -from Anthems in Eden
5. Teenie Weenie Boppie - France Gall - from Poupee de Son compilation.
6. On Another Shore - The Legendary Pink Dots - from Farewell Milkyway
mixed with 7. Drane2- Autechre- from LP5 mixing in with
8. Drone - Autechre - Peel Sessions (1)
9.  My Favorite Things - John Zorn- from Filmworks VII
10. December -Merely the Mocs -live in studio
11. Good Friends -Merely the Mocs -live in studio
12. A Cynics Prayer -Merely the Mocs -live in studio
13. Chaostrophy (Demo) -Coil- from Love’s Secret Demise
14. a bit of Karlheinz Stockhausen from Hymnen fading into
15. Dr. Whollucinogen ep. 1: Attack of the Weed Creature
16. RU 486 - The Pain Teens- from Destroy Me, Lover
17. Aegian Sea -Aphrodites Child- from Babylon the Great
18. Japanese for Yes (Dan Bitney Remix) - Male - from German for Shark
19. Tell Me How -Merely the Mocs- from A Cynics Prayer
20. Untitled -Merely the Mocs- from A Cynics Prayer
21. A Cynics Prayer -Merely the Mocs- from A Cynics Prayer
22.
Ode to Marmaele -Kentin Jivek- from Ode to Marmaele
23. Long Distance Lullaby - Stornoway -from Beachcomber’s Windowsill
24. I Feel Mysterious Today -Wire- from On Returning

Background music for this evening was the song Badinerie by the Swingle Singers.

http://merelythemocs.bandcamp.com/

A Night with Thriftstore Leather from Hot August

On the Way to the Peak of Normal | Posted by jmoore
Jan 10 2012

liquid-eyes-waif

 
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1. Joe Meek - I Hear A New World

2. John’s Children - Strange Affair

3. The Sandwitches- Lightfoot

4. Lights- World Falls Down

5. Unknown Mortal Orchestra

6. Motorcycle Boy- Big Rock Candy Mountain

7. Warpaint- Ashes To Ashes

8. Lords Of The New Church- Russian Roulette

9. Lene Lovich- I Think We’re Alone Now

10. Mechanical Bride- Art Decade

11. Raincoats- Lola

12.The Sandwitches - In The Garden

13. Roxy Music- Editions Of You

14. Mrs. Miller- These boots are Made For Walking

15. (From Man Of La Mancha)- Little Bird Little Bird

16. This Immortal Coil- You And Your Sister

17. Eternal Summers- Eternal

18. Jacques Brel- Fils De

19. Sun Ra- Rocket #9 Take Off For The Planet Venus

20. United States Of America- Hard Coming Love

21. Queen- Don’t Stop Me Now

22. Ramones- I Want You Around

23. B52’s- Lava

24. Shudder To Think- Photographic Ectasy

25. Brian Eno- Seedpods

26. T-Rex- Lofty Sky’s

27. Iggy Pop- Pretty Flamingo’s

28. Jane Birkin- Di Doo Dah

Russian Readings

Textuality | Posted by jmoore
Jan 09 2012

As a writer who keeps a long hand journal, and who still does a lot of preliminary work by hand, I accumulate a lot of papers, in addition to  printouts of various drafts.  And I tend to let things pile up around me in my library/studio room for months at a time before reorganizing.  I should do that more often because it is nice to have a clean desk to work on.  I like my desk.

theflyingwitchI always make interesting discoveries in these periodic cleanups.  In this case I found a loose page that should have been in the oversized binder collecting my dreams and other journalings from 201o.  The dream was about finding some books by fantastist and folklorist Jane Yolen, books about Russian mythology and folktales. This was synchronistic to me because I was deep in the middle of reading Reinventing Collapse: The Soviet Example and American Prospects by Dmitry Orlov.reinventingcollapse

Orlov’s book is a highly humorous read of what would otherwise be a glum subject: the collapse of the United States as a superpower.  While those who believe the U.S. is morally as well as financially bankrupt may welcome such a collapse, the way it is playing out  -yes, now-  imposes immense difficulties on many people, including the proverbial at risk: young, old, and those already immobilized.

Orlov was born in Russia and livd there until age 12 before emigrating to the U.S. with his parents.  He was an eyewitness to the Soviet Collapse, over many extended visits.  As such the parallels he draws between the two superpowers is fascinating.  What is more helpful on the downward slope of peak oil and Western civilization, are the ideas he draws from people’s experience in the former Soviet union. After building up the picutre for us Orlov focus’s in on three areas we can all work on: collapse mitigation, adaptation, and new opportunities. Within these he tightens the focus onto areas of housing, transportation, employment, and food.  One of the more interesting sections are the ideas for types of jobs and work  -most outside of the official economy-  that people took up in Russia, and how those may be adapted to the states.  A truly fascinating read and one that has me doing more to Be Prepared.  I was a Boy Scout after all.

theseakingThe next day though, after seeing the page from my dream journal about the Jane Yolen Russian mythology books, I was down stairs at the library in the Children’s stacks pulling holds. I thought of the paper and then looked at the shelf in front of me. Lo and behold, I found in that very section three titles by Yolen where she retold traditional Russian stories.  I took them with me to read later.

smallkillingThen, I was down in the fiction stacks later, pulling some graphic novel holds. I saw a few titles from Alan Moore. I’d recently read his amazing essay Fossil Angels, originally published online, and reprinted in Abraxas 2. (More about Abraxas 2 in a coming review.) The essay blew away my understanding of magic, while touching on so much else that I’d personally felt to be true as well. I highly recommend reading the essay, itself an amazing work of art. It inspired me to read some more of Alan’s graphic works. I’d read his graphic novel, From Hell some years before and loved it. It remains the only graphic work I’ve read which has been so meticulously researched containing footnootes and bibliography.  This time I picked up A Small Killing. Why this particular graphic novel by Alan Moore? Because I was on a Russian kick and the story concerned a wayward advertising agent during the Soviet collapse who was on his way to Russia to work on an advertising campaign for a soft drink. It was a good read, and also inspired me to listen to  Negativland’s Time Zones Exchange Project, again, a classic piece of radio art.

firebird1When I finally got around to reading the Yolen childrens books I learned a number of things. In The Sea King, I learned that the “morning is wiser than the evening” perhaps because in the morning we awake with fresh dreams.  In The Flying Witch, a tale of Baba Yaga, I was shown that if you are going to have an encounter with this witch it pays to be feisty -and to know how to cook turnips, a truly underrated vegetable. In the Firebird, I learned how the ballet was taken from traditional Russian tales. While not a huge fan of the Neo-romanticism exemplified by Stravinsky, I did find the story enjoyable. More importantly Yolen shared all her source material, and I got an insight into her working methods: reading countless versions of the myth, until, at last the story becomes ones own.

David Tibet receives Brainwashed’s Lifetime Achievement Award

Musick | Posted by jmoore
Jan 02 2012

 The results are in from Brainwashed’s annual readers poll. It should come as no surprise that Tim Hecker won the album of the year position with his excellent Ravedeath 1971 out on Kranky. For anyone who hasn’t heard it, do yourself a favor and go pick up this record of austere piano noise heaven.

David TibetThe staff at Brainwashed this year have given the lifetime achievement award to David Tibet. Here is what I have to say about one of my own personal heros:

David Tibet expanded not only my musical universe but my literary life as well. When I started delving into the albums of Current 93, I looked up as many the references as I could find and read the books that he loved, from Russell Hoban’s Riddley Walker (a big influence on one of my favorite Current 93 albums, Of Ruine Or Some Blazing Star) to Lautreamont’s Maldoror and the dark joys of Thomas Ligotti. The same is true for his musical tastes. I can’t hardly imagine what my own musical life as a listener would be like if I hadn’t been turned on by Tibet to the wonders of Shirley and Dolly Collins, to Comus, the Incredible String Band, and so many others. Tibet simply has excellent taste.

Tibet has always pursued a very personal vision. In the course of sharing that vision though he has championed the work of so many other musicians and artists I can’t count them on my fingers and toes. In doing so he has alleviated much of the worlds audio poverty.

I also continue to be excited about his work. I’m very much looking forward to reading the collected works of Eric Count Stenbock which Tibet has poured so much energy into collecting and editing. I am also always eager to learn more about his Coptic studies and his contributions in that field. David’s hypnagogic visual art, all the tiny scribblings of many moons and thieves ascending from crosses, is also stunning. It is obvious that he works hard with no signs of slowing down.

 

Read the rest of the Brainwashed writer’s comments and see the rest of the results of the 2011 Brainwashed Readers Poll.

Silver Star Radio 8: Interview with Taylor Ellwood & Solstice Musick

On the Way to the Peak of Normal | Posted by jmoore
Dec 31 2011

Silver Solstice Winter Star Radio
Originally Broadcast on December 22, 2011 between 10PM and Midnight EST on 88.3 FM, Cincinnati.

For this episode of Silver Star Radio I was joined on the phone by Taylor Ellwood to talk about his forthcoming book Magical Identity.

Taylor EllwoodTaylor Ellwood is the Managing Non-Fiction Editor of Immanion Press, which publishes cutting edge esoteric and occult books. He’s also the author of Pop Culture Magick, Space/Time Magic, Inner Alchemy and Multi-Media Magic, and the forthcoming book Magical Identity. Visit him online at http://www.magicalexperiments.com

Magical Identity is Taylor’s latest book, due out in March 2012. Magical Identity explores the role of identity within magical work, using themes of neuroscience, space, time, and definitions to understand where identity fits into the magical process as well as how we can use it to enhance our magical process.

 
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Winter StarWe also featured a lot of musick from fabulous artists on this episode. Here is the full set list:
1. I Hear A New World - Joe Meek
2.  Winter Solstice - Ralph Towener- from the album Solstice.
3. Saturn - Jah Wobbles Invaders of the Heart- from The Celtic Poets.
4. Phone Interview with Taylor
5. Chemical Adjustment - Babalith- from The Doors of Misconception
6. Scorpion Tears - Stone Breath- from The Aetheric Lamp split 12″ with Mike Seed and the Language of Light on Anticlock Records.
7. The Final Solstice - Sorrow - from The Final Solstice II
8. Rough Old Night - Mike Seed and the Language of Light- from The Aetheric Lamp split 12″ (see 5 above).
9. Geronimo - Language of Shapes - (no official release as of yet)
10.  Babaziryelle - The Hermaphroditic ChAOrder of the Silver Dusk -from 156 = Musick = Babalon = Kaos on the Zoharum label.
11. Perception Is the Only Reality - Throbbing Gristle - from The Third Mind Movements.
Om Sarasvati Namaha (Cosmic Version) - The Magic Carpathians - from Sonic Suicide.
12. fade out with a bit of the soundtrack from Kenneth Anger’s Lucifer Rising by Bobby Beausoleil.

Weird Questionnaire

Textuality | Posted by jmoore
Dec 22 2011

weirdeyeAnne & Jeff Vandermeer have been providing a lot of really good fiction, nonfiction, and other miscellaneous goodies over at weirdfictionreview.com including stories by Caitlin R. Kiernan, appreciations of Leonora Carrington, China Mieville’s thoughts on the Weird and a great interview with Thomas Ligotti. And also this fun Weird Questionnaire of sixty questions to be answered in sixty minutes transliterated from the French of Eric Poindron by  Edward Gauvin.

My answers to the Weird Questionnaire are below. (Jeff Vandermeer also blogged his .) [Note: I hadn't read anyone else's answers to this questionnaire at the time of my own writing.]

1 – Write the first sentence of a novel, short story, or book of the weird yet to be written.

Moths emerged from the mummified cat  corpse in an eruption of dancing dust.

2 – Without looking at your watch: what time is it?

2:49 PM Eastern Standard Time

3 – Look at your watch. What time is it?

2:52 PM Transtemporal Understated Time

4 – How do you explain this — or these — discrepancy(ies) in time?

In this case I explain the time discrepancies due to interruptions. Or it could be the malleable plasticity of time.

5 – Do you believe in meteorological predictions?

Yes I do. Let’s bring back the art form of the almanack. We can throw some fantastical stories in as well, and a few recipes of cookery aiming at mutation upon ingestion.

6 – Do you believe in astrological predictions?

To a degree, of Full Moon in Aquarius.

7 – Do you gaze at the sky and stars by night?

When I am out in the country I do, or when the city starlight isn’t otherwise obscuring them and I happen to be outside. Something that should happen more often.

8 – What do you think of the sky and stars by night?

I think the sky and stars by night -though I love the sight of the moon in waning afternoon daylight, over the converted can building that now houses gentrifying yuppies (but hey, maybe my property value will go up) - I think they remind me that my worldly concerns are such a small amount of time, and one day the universe will collapse again into the big crunch, from which will spring another big bang, on to another big crunch. Over and over again. Ylem.

9 – What were you looking at before starting this questionnaire?

Just reading Jeff Vandermeer’s blog is all.

10 – What do cathedrals, churches, mosques, shrines, synagogues, and other religious monuments inspire in you?

The flip answer: a fear of being sacrificed.

A thoughtful answer: In the monotheistic religions: an inspiration towards wondrous plainchant, the organ as played by Charlemagne Palestine, a lust for long sonorous drones. In polytheistic religions with more outdoor shrines, standing stones, pyramids & the like: a zeal for new ancient rituals to assist in communicating with the goddesses and gods -a feeling of working towards a steady state society (”sustainable” in the more fashionable parlance), of connection to land, kin, and cosmos.

11 – What would you have “seen” if you’d been blind?

The invisible landscape. Jorge Luis Borges & John Milton speaking of poetry over a game of chess.

12 – What would you want to see if you were blind?

Chartreuse flamingos dancing in a south Florida trailer park.

13 – Are you afraid?

Not of this questionnaire. Not right now.

14 – What of?

Yes, of some things. Like being forced to divulge my fears. Well, not really. In the past I’d been afraid of things like botulism. My anxieties shift, but I’ve found focusing on “doing something” (like writing, radio, housework…) eases the feeling and I return to abnormality.

15 – What is the last weird film you’ve seen?

Tough question. Inland Empire by David Lynch is probably the weirdest thing I’ve watched in awhile, as being very inexplicable to me, but full of mystery and wonder. Julian Donkey Boy and Gummo by Harmony Korine always come to mind though. As does Gumbo, perhaps by alliterative association, but it was weird. I know the question only asked for one, but I like to elaborate.  Especially when drinking good Kentucky bourbon.

16 – Whom are you afraid of?

It’s not so much that I’m afraid of authority figures -managers, bosses, administrators, board members- as it is they hold my livelihood in their hands to some degree (not that I don’t take personal responsibility for getting paid work done). The System. Plutocrats & beauracrats.

17 – Have you ever been lost?

Yes. But I always like to remember a saying attributed to Daniel Boone: “I’m not lost, I just don’t know exactly where I am right now.”

18 – Do you believe in ghosts?

Yes.

19 – What is a ghost?

The spirit of a person -animal or human animal- that has chosen to remain close to the Earth after the physical body has died.  Places could also be “haunted” by the bad memories and experiences of people who spent time there. They could be psychic impressions left by previous inhabitants, amalgamated into some newfangled astral construct.

20 – At this very moment, what sound(s) can you here, apart from the computer?

Pierre Boulez, Deuxieme Sonate, as played by Idil Biret, on a CD player.

21 – What is the most terrifying sound you’ve ever heard – for example, “the night was like the cry of a wolf”?

A ringing in my ears, a loud buzzing moving from left to right, that somehow meant I was receiving a transmission from another realm, and when coupled with deja vu, invoked anxiety.

22 – Have you done something weird today or in the last few days?

Not by my standards. I sit down at my desk and tune the 15 transistor, 5 band, Aircastle radio on the Shortwave band up and down the dial and listen for telemetry or whatever foreign stations I can pick up, or any aesthetically interesting static. But that isn’t weird is it?

23 – Have you ever been to confession?

24 – You’re at confession, so confess the unspeakable.

The unspeakable is also unwritable -and better left alone.

25 –Without cheating: what is a “cabinet of curiosities”?

A gathering of dusty unicorn horns, phials of alchymical elixir, naughty toys apprehended from vagrant youth, unsent letters, fragments of text, found objects, ready mades.

26 –Do you believe in redemption?

Only in the sense that people can redeem themselves from the wrongs they have done and hurts they have made in the past. I do believe in forgiveness. I also believe in forgiveness. It need not be mystical or Christian.

27 – Have you dreamed tonight?

I haven’t slept yet tonight, so not in that sense. I did have some hypnagogic experiences while slightly dozing on the bus. About not watering things down. Let it all be full and bright and pure.

28 – Do you remember your dreams?

Yes. And I make a habit of writing down as much as I can remember of them.

29 – What was your last dream?

My last dream was about going to the store Bizzare Bazzar to do some Christmas shopping for my wife.  I was looking at green sweaters.

30 – What does fog make you think of?

The fog makes me think of the Celtic Otherworld in most instances.  And of Narnia, of seeing a gaslamp and stepping into another world.

31 – Do you believe in animals that don’t exist?

But they do exist.

32 – What do you see on the walls of the room where you are?

Concrete. Pneumatic tubes. A dumbwaiter. Shelves full of classical music CDs. (It’s the next day after drinking some Bulleit. I’m having to answer this in segments. Otherwise I would have seen my own bookshelves, records, turntable.)

33 – If you became a magician, what would be the first thing you’d do?

But I am a magician. Only I practice ritual magic and not parlour tricks. Theurgy is much more a concern for me these days, though I enjoy the thaumaturgical side effects. Currently I’m working with Apollo, Asclepius, Mnemosyne and the Nine Muses.

34 – What is a madman?

A madman is a person who is perhaps haunted by malicious or otherwise unruly entities. Or a madman is a genius, cracked to let in the light, but incapable of conforming to life in the system as we know it. They could also be people who have suffered soul loss from various traumatic events -there is the possibility of being cured.

35 – Are you mad?

I should think not.

36 – Do you believe in the existence of secret societies?

I don’t have to believe. I know of the existence of secret societies.

37 – What was the last weird book you read?

I read all kinds of stuff. The last novel I read was The Great Bay: Chronicles of the Collapse by Dale Pendell. Nothing weird about it really, though it did have a high proportion of cannibalism. Excellent book. The last short story I read was by Caitlin R. Kiernan, entitled “In the Water Works (Birmingham, Alabama 1888)” in Tales of Pain and Wonder. Currently I’m reading the excellent John Cage biography Begin Again by Kenneth Silverman.

38 – Would you like to live in a castle?

No. It would probably be too cold and drafty.

39 - Have You Seen Something Weird Today?

Yes. I was looking at a doll a man gave to my department at the library. A curious bit of folk art made from sewn felt and cloth, kind of like an Abe Lincoln with a handkerchief over his face and an amputated arm and leg.

40 - What is the Weirdest film you’ve ever seen?

Gummo is still at the top of the list.

41 - Would you like to live in an abandoned train station?

No. But I probably know someone who would. Besides, if I lived there it would no longer be abandoned now would it?

42 - Can you see the future?

Sometimes I can make out where one branch forks off from another deeper into the garden.

43 - Have you considered living abroad?

I’d like to stay in Iceland for awhile.

44 - Where?

Iceland.

45 - Why?

It’s a country whose culture I am fascinated with.

46 - What is the weirdest film I’ve ever owned?

Blood Sucking Freaks…

47 - Would you have liked to live in a vicarage?

Only if I am a vicar who also doubles as a mystery detective.

48 – What is the weirdest book you’ve ever read?

Riddley Walker by Russell Hoban stands out. Les Chants de Maldoror another classic.

49 – Which do you like better, globes or hourglasses?

Hourglasses.

50 – Which do you like better, antique magnifying glasses or bladed weapons?

A knife with a compass on the end.

51 – What, in all likelihood, lies in the depths of Loch Ness?

Protean goop from recent antiquity.

52 – Do you like taxidermied animals?

Only when they are Labrador Ducks.

53 – Do you like walking in the rain?

Yes.

54 – What goes on in tunnels?

Transportation -an other unspeakable acts of depravity.

55 – What do you look at when you look away from this questionnaire?

My shortwave radio or the carved frog figure sitting on my altar.

56 – What does this famous line inspire in you: “And when he had crossed the bridge, the phantoms came to meet him.”?

A sense of being close to my ancestors on the Other Side.

57 – Without cheating: where is that famous line from?

I have no idea.

58 – Do you like walking in graveyards or the woods by night?

Yes.

58 – Write the last line of a novel, short story, or book of the weird yet to be written.

Once again awash with glittering snail slime.

59 – Without looking at your watch: what time is it?

8:57 PM -nearly a week after I started my piecemeal work on this questionairre.

60 – Look at your watch. What time is it?

9:00 PM …

almost time for:

Silver Star Radio Episode 8 airs on the Winter Solstice, December 22nd and features a phone interview with special guest Taylor Ellwood:

Taylor Ellwood is the Managing Non-Fiction Editor of Immanion Press, which publishes cutting edge esoteric and occult books. He’s also the author of Pop Culture Magick, Space/Time Magic, Inner Alchemy and Multi-Media Magic, and the forthcoming book Magical Identity. Visit him online at http://www.magicalexperiments.com

Magical Identity is Taylor’s latest book, due out in March 2012. Magical Identity explores the role of identity within magical work, using themes of neuroscience, space, time, and definitions to understand where identity fits into the magical process as well as how we can use it to enhance our magical process.

This episode will also feature a variety of magickal musick including material fro Stone Breath and Mike Seed w/ The Language of Light from a recent limited twelve inch record put out by R. Loftiss and the good folks at Anticlock Records ( http://www.anticlock.net/ )

Tune in locally on 88.3FM Cincinnati or translocally at http://www.ustream.tv/channel/waif-cincinnati
The show airs from 10PM to Midnight Eastern Standard Tribe, Thursday, December 22nd.
Expect the podcast to be up sometime before the first day of 2012. As usual, I’ll send out the link when it is ready…

The Art of Free Cooperation

Events | Posted by jmoore
Nov 15 2011

collectivateDear friends and fellow Anarcho-Americans,

It has been a week since election day. That means it is time to stop waiting for those in office, or those in the corporate office, to get a start on the projects we’d like to see remake and re-enchant this world. It is time to get the ball rolling on making changes for ourselves, our families and our communities. It is within our power to do so. Often times these types of projects and community initiatives that aim at being in it for the long haul have an initial burst of steam that kicks things in to gear, but like carbon based fuels, energy and resources are quickly depleted. With the vast external pressures and seemingly endless distractions of our techno-consumerist culture it is also easy to feel pulled in many different directions at once. So after an initiative is started, say a community radio station, a bicycle co-op, community garden, hacker space, local small press, or non-profit dedicated to noise music and the avant-garde, what strategies exist to help these groups reach a level of sustainability that also allows them to have a continuing beneficial effect in our culture? And how can these collaborative efforts be made more resilient in face of the eroding power of capital?

Enter The Art of Free Cooperation. Many of us were told as kids, as kindergärtners, to cooperate with adults, with teachers, and with other kids. To get along and behave. Cooperation however, should only be given freely, otherwise it becomes co-option. If there are things we don’t like in life we have the choice to not cooperate with those things. So it is that free cooperation is intimately tied to free association. But these free associations and cooperatives don’t always go easy. As with any other part of life conflicts turn up. There are skill sets and tools that can help groups to prepare for the challenges of collaboration.

The DVD I’ll be showing came with the book, The Art of Free Coopeartion. The book is a collection of papers that grew out of the Free Cooperation Conference held by the State University of New York. The book examines the politics, technologies, and semiotics of Free Cooperation. This film explores the ideas and principles through the language of science fiction films, edited into a humorous collage. This collage is narrated in part by Tony Conrad. Tony is an experimental video artist and filmmaker and musician among many other things. In the realm of music, as an improviser collaborating with the likes of Faust (as Outside the Dream Syndicate) Charlemagne Palestine and many others he has put into practice many of the themes running through the Art of Free Coopeation.

This film will be screened today, November 15, at 6PM in the basement of the Northside Library (4219 Hamilton Ave.).

For more along these lines check out:

The Institute of Network Cultures

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Haunted Air by Ossian Brown

Textuality | Posted by jmoore
Nov 14 2011

osssian_brown-haunted_air1 The dream of time travel has been achieved with the spectral photographs presented in this book, a collection of anonymous Hallowe’en pictures from America circa the years 1875 through 1955. Bound in soft black cloth the pages inside are windows onto the ghost memories of America, captured in the twilight years before the Hallowe’en had become fodder for a Hallmark industry churning out cards, candy and plastic decorations. This assemblage of photos portraying kids and adults dressed up as ghosts, witches, scarecrows, skeletons, animals, monsters, and stranger inexplicable beings shows unequivocally the thin line between life and death, reverence and revelry the day is known for. In bringing them all together some of Hallowe’ens primal atavism is restored.

    cover image

Each of these photographs tells a story. When I look into any one of them I feel I have become a witness to a way of life that is at once dying, and in certain corners of society, is being born again. Here the old life of the holiday is preserved. It looks very different from the Halloween I grew up with, which was in the process of removing itself from being a festival of death to a festival of pop culture. Few are the ghosts and ghouls who trick or treat these days. Most of the costumes that kids wear now are culled from a lexicon of cartoons and hollywood movies. While these do have their origin in the imagination (someone gave birth to the plethora of characters emerging from screen after all) in my mind it is an imagination that has been tainted. The costumes come prepackaged like so much else in our contemporary world, ready to be pulled off the shelf. These pictures are populated by spirits from the collective imagination of the Celtic folk who brought the holiday over to the New World. In his historic note at the end of the book Ossian writes, “Fleeing Ireland’s Great Famine of 1845, many thousands crossed the Atlantic to America. The haunted tradition they carried with them would quickly take root and flourish in the fertile soil of the New World. Feeding hungrily on fresh lore, consuming half-remembered tales of its own shadowy origins and rituals, Hallowe’en was reborn. New blood—Scandinavian, Germanic, African, Native-American—flowed in its veins spawning a host of hybrid phantoms to consult, to confront, to placate.” These phantoms from other cultures have certainly enriched the holiday.

…Read the rest on Brainwashed.com…

Film Screening: The Art of Free Cooperation

Events | Posted by jmoore
Nov 08 2011

artoffreecooperationMy Fellow Anarcho-Americans,
 
Forget about election day and mark your calendar for Tuesday, November 15, for the screening of feature length film collage “The Art of Free Cooperation” starting at 6PM at the Northside Branch Library. The film, a collage old scifi movies, is narrated by Tony Conrad (Theatre of Eternal Music, Outside the Dream Syndicate, collaborations with Charlegmagne Palestine & many others…). It illustrates the principles of free cooperation: “buisness has a mad crush on collaboration - witness the billions spent on social networking sites, or all the hype around ‘collaboration studies’. But beneath all the flirtation, buisness needs to remain the boss. As long as the process of collaboration is controlled and monetized, the relationship will always be one of forced cooperation. This film argues for Free Cooperation -an alternative way of doing things together, from parenting and the workplace to event organization and cultural prdocution.”
 
Check it out! Meet the others and share with your collective! Starts 6PM Tuesday Nov 15 @ the Northside Library 4219 Hamilton Ave.

Ciao,

Justin

A Champion of the Soul

Dream | Posted by jmoore
Nov 04 2011

jameshillmanI thought the readers of this blog would want to know of the passing of psychologist James Hillman, who died on October 27 at 85 from complications with bone cancer.

Just the little I’ve read of his amazing work has had a profound and long term effect on me. Perhaps the most influential was when I was at Antioch college. I was in crisis mode. I was telling a counselor that I wanted to go into Psychology, except I was having issues with the head of the department who was a big behaviorist with a picture of B.F. Skinner hanging above his desk. The school counselor suggested I read Hillman’s book “We’ve Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy - and the World is Getting Worse” written in conversation with Michael Ventura. I never did read that one, and I never did study psychology in academic setting.  The teacher was very hostile towards Wilhelm Reich and Carl Jung, even at a radical school like Antioch. I dropped out after the term.
 
Later I did read “The Souls Code: In Search of Character and Calling” by Hillman which is basically his thoughts about the Daemon, or Holy Guardian Angel if that’s your preference of terms. It was excellent. In it he talked about various well known individuals early lifes, and how by looking into them, the pattern, as set out by the daemon, for a persons life work could be seen in these early experiences. I still have “The Dream and the Underworld” sitting on one of my bookshelves awaiting attention. I’m sure it is essential reading for aspiring Oneiromancers.
 
In the New York Times obituary of Hillman they quoted him from 1976:
“Some people in desperation have turned to witchcraft, magic and occultism, to drugs and madness, anything to rekindle imagination and find a world ensouled. But these reactions are not enough. What is needed is a revisioning, a fundamental shift of perspective out of that soulless predicament we call modern consciousness.” 
 
Gyrus wrote of this, over on his Dreamflesh blog, “However else Hillman has inspired me—and he’s inspired me very deeply—I just have to admire someone for whom witchcraft, magic, occultism, drugs and madness are ‘not enough’. Obviously he didn’t take the path of trying all of these and going through the other side. And obviously I don’t agree with him if he’s dismissing them outright (I don’t think he is). But it’s an important message for all of us mad druggie occultists. Something more is necessary.” 

Eric Clarke and I had a good chat about James Hillman at the Esoteric Book Conference after party. Eric emphasized how James Hillman wasn’t into the “victimization” that is part of so much modern day therapy and New Age fluff. In a review of “One Hundred Years of Psychotherapy…” the Library Journal wrote that Hillman “contend(s) that therapy encourages self-preoccupation, leaving no attention or energy for the woes of the outside world. Similarly, the ‘inner child’ movement has created a population of self-centered, juvenile adults who feel they have little power. Political apathy, a dying environment, and an inability to form real relationships are among the ills resulting from this solipsism.” Rather than fall back on endless hours of therapy and introspection people can pick themselves up and set about doing the real work, based on the call of their daemon, that will change themselves and this world. By writing this I’m not dismissing the validity of soul retrieval and our inner young ones. These aspects need to get reintegrated. Health is the goal -and a return to meaningful work and life, not an endless round of sessions delving into troubled pasts, which in many instances seems to prevent people from moving forward. A good therapist would be one you don’t need to see forever.
James was also an adept dream teacher. His most famous words for dream interpretation were “Stick with the image”. Don’t over-interpret the image. Carry the image with you. It has its own energy and is its own interpretation.

James Hillman was a champion of the imagination and the soul. His tireless work aimed at the reenchantment of this world.