musings, ramblings, observations, all blown out of proportion and mistaken for insights


Tuesday, December 29, 2009

artists that need to come out with new albums:

1. The Black Angels. 'Directions To See A Ghost' was a modern psychedelic masterpiece, an indicator that the groups potential existed beyond their debut 'Passover'. It's about time that they're due to release a new album, and while I remember reading somewhere that they're working on one I've yet to see any further evidence of this. Hopefully I'm not just fantasizing.




2. Boards of Canada. If these two ghostly figures of modern electronic wizardry release a new album I'll probably explode in excitement. While some thought their last effort 'The Campfire Headphase' was disappointing, I saw it as a sign of further sonic exploration to come. However because of their elusive nature I doubt we'll hear very little about their next effort until it finally springs into existence. Until then I'll sit tranced out in my room worshiping Egyptian death gods to Geogaddi.



3. Dead Meadow. I know these guys have been playing shows (nowhere near my own state however, motherfuckers) and blowing minds like always, but it's been quite some time since they graced the world with a new release. Pretty much every album they've released has been noteworthy and unique in it's own way, while still maintaining the sound that seperates from the typical stoner rock herd.



Well, I guess you can say I'm pretty greedy when it comes to music. At least it's something I can get excited about something that's not self destructive.

Monday, December 28, 2009

"why are we sleeping?"




This song, by 1960's psychedelic rock pioneers The Soft Machine, has been a favorite of mine for quite some time. It was written and sung in a narrated style by the ever-so enigmatic Kevin Ayers, a musical personality that I have been often fascinated by. The lyrics are informed by the philosopher Gurdjieff, a Russian philosophy that Ayers credited as an influence.




The lyrics to 'Why Are We Sleeping' are far from typical rock'n'roll subject matter. They carry a heavily esoteric and mysterious mood, existing in a sort of atypical reality (which is common for Ayers' work).

It begins with a blessing, it ends with a curse
Making life easy by making it worse
"My mask is my master", the trumpeter weeps
But his voice is so weak, as he speaks from his sleep

Saying: "Why, why, why... Why are we sleeping?"

People are watching, people who stare
Waiting for something that's already there
"Tomorrow I'll find it", the trumpeter screams
And remembers he's hungry, and drowns in his dreams

Saying: "Why, why, why... Why are we sleeping?"

My head is a nightclub with glasses and wine
The customers dancing or just making time
While Daevid is cursing, the customers scream
Now everyone's shouting, "Get out of my dream!"

Saying: "Why, why, why... Why are we sleeping?"

Gurdjieff's philosophy is one that urges one to take a path of self-enlightenment, which involves the metaphorical removal from the state of 'sleep'. According to Gurdjieff, "Man lives his life in sleep, and in sleep he dies." In this state of sleep we are not conscious, we exist as drones unthinkingly going throughout life, trapped by our own subjective perceptions. If we are able to 'wake up' and escape this state of mind, then we can better understand ourselves and reality.



The path to awakening was described by Gurdjieff as the Fouth Way. It was titled this because other teaches either stressed the importance of the mind, the body or emotions, where Gurdjieff beleived that enlightenment could only be achieved by simultaneously working with the three. Music was an important part of the 'awakening', because it combines the three. Gurdjieff wrote ballets accompanied by sacred dances that were designed to bring participants into a state of transcendence, exiting the realm of sleep and awakening them into a state of self enlightenment.

Gurjieff's philosophy of self enlightenment through the search for higher consciousness speaks to me. To 'awaken' (in my own possibly naive interpretation) is to escape the mundane and passive and reach a state of being that is less ignorant of it's surroundings, thus better understanding one's self through it's relation to the environment.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

cold to the touch

the moon is an instrument,
the sun a conductor,
my senses a disheveled street musician -
making noise and fighting off poverty

and all the patrons and animals who crawl on by are quickly growing old and impatient,
leaving the bars and clubs with a glimmering suspicion
gravity taking them to arid plains of boredom and disease
where god and the internet leave them content

and when this ragtag symphony dissipates i join them,
anonymous and tragic
like the voices in our dreams we effortlessly forget

Monday, August 10, 2009

Monday, August 3, 2009

medicate this madness

...it took a long hour of nothingness to focus on what exactly it was that made me such a motherfucker - why so uptight? why so unnerved by all the pathetic things in life and unmoved by the vast circles of love that often sat right before my eyes.....

...a lot of wandering through aimless trails in a desert where nothing wanted to end, when would the palace come? did I even care if it was a mirage or not? if happiness is all I pursue then why should truth even matter anymore? if I could lie to myself and feel compfort and warmth then why wasn't I just driving myself mad with lies and mental forgery? fuck it,

just move on and close your eyes when it's too hard to drift into sleep, just imagine that everything is ok, trainqulize yourself with your imagination, it could be the difference between misery and ecstasy, just run after the trailing lights and waving thoughts of your desires and think that you've caught them when your gasping for your last breath .

"i'm confused"
"consider yourself enlightened"

maybe it's the confusion that sits around in the bowels of my psyche and waits to reveal itself in it's full glory...cycles of confusion and understanding...understanding coming in disguised as enlightenment, maybe enlightenment was the ultimate scam

i pity the fucker that thinks he's got the world figured out

and you know the type.....wears you down and makes you feel confused if you can't follow - what's should you follow? yourself? your 'self' is the enemy, to rebel against the self is to rebel against a society of finks who think they've got it all in the bag

go chase titans of 'wisdom' in those fields of desolation and think you might eventually catch up - when you do you'll just find yourself diluted (but don't stop the chase - chase as many as you can, and never stop running)

Sartre, Camus, Kierkegarrd - a bunch of old shitheads, they're no better than you and you're no better than them

forget all the books and papers, read them once and move on

forget your 'intellect' and live for sake of living, not impressing the boring neighbors and redundant drones that surround you, take some vice into your life and let it shine, kill god and ressurect him just to confuse yourself, write a new bible and burn and write a new one filled with pornography and give it to the baptist youthgroup

they'll love you for it

Monday, July 20, 2009

the true DADA spirit

Today I read a book called 'The Post-human Dada Guide'. I was relatively short but filled with info and ideas that at some points came to me as revelations. The basis of the book is that Lenin, the communist revolutionary and Tristan Tzara, the dadaist poet and visionary, are in a chess match. Lenin's communist ideas of establishing logic and order stand as opposite to the dada vision of creating chaos and madness, but both are opposed to the same thing - capitalism. For such a short book, there was a lot to it and I highly reccomend reading it.

I have been fascinated with dadaism for a long time and found it very hard to pin down as a movement. The dadaist wanted to unleash the human spirit in it's rawest form and were very nihilist. They were anti-art and anti-future, dedicated to shocking the bourgeois. Societies excessive rationality was what led to the devestation of the first world war, and dadaism was mainly an outcry againist it. However, how could such a nihilistic movement stand for something so humanistic? This is a contradiction, and the dadaist thrived on them.

Throughout my life I have encounters many contradictions within my own life and belief systems. I've talked about them on here before, and one of the things i've learned from the dadaist (though I don't think you're supposed to 'learn' from them) is to embrace these contradictions. The very essense of humanity and existense is full of contradictions, and dada strives to embrace the human spirit in it's most unadulterated and true form.

Friday, July 17, 2009

hello

Inside of their slightly cramped and noisy den filled with pungent smell a small group of youth filled each other heads. It was a rap session in the truest sense. Often 3 or 4 conversations would bounce of each other, occurring at the same time, gliding in divergent paths only to come back together. A genuine lack of ego kept one voice from claiming dominant authority. Some kind of pre-modern tribal conscience had taken form in the room. Often a complete silence would take over, and often the overwhelming laughter noise would fill the room. It was something real, something removed from the consumer centric life that they were raised to live. IT wasn't really anything more than the youth sitting around pining for desire as Blake would say, but at the same time it seemed like something more. There was a feeling that countered the lack of seriousness, a feeling that together with their youth and vitality and willingness to look beyond what they were taught to see that something new could be found, something beyond them and better than them. Maybe it was all an illusion - and it was. But as far as they could tell everything else was an illusion too. Between all their babble and idealism there was a legitimate sense of community. It was a community where everyone was equal yet was allowed to strive for the outer reaches of their desires. It was from this where the true sense of euphoria came from, the sense that they could join together yet be themselves. It was their secret church. They gathered here at the end of a week full of work and mundanity to experience something that stood in stark contrast to what happened before.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

it's night now
the sky is smeared with oil
and occasionally shining
looking through to us
at our vast maze of inconvenience,
boredom, aggravation, and arrogance

the streets are filled with small talk and
wandering loners, who find inspiration
to romanticize despair
mumbling their rants and raps and soliloquies
of accepting the absurd till the edge wears off

some are skeletons waiting to break apart
when the time is right, to leave their heads and flesh
behind and shatter

while the animals of the id scream and moan
in their trances of pleasure, of frenzy and dissociation
mindless and proud of their deathlike freedom

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

is the spirit of our age an ugly spirit?

"According to Hegelian philosophy, all historical change results from dialectics. Everything takes place in what Hegel called geist, a collective spirit or consciousness. The prevailing spirit of a time is called a thesis. As we move through time, the thesis is confronted by something new and different, called an antithesis. As these two currents clash and mingle, the result is synthesis, something still newer which emerges from the conflict. Synthesis is the cutting edge of history, where past meets future and growth occurs; synthesis moves the geist through time."

Some questions I have for those who exist within my generation:
1. What is our culture? What defines us? What is our geist?
2. Are you one with the thesis or the antithesis?
3. When will synthesis occur? Will we know when it's occurring or will only hindsight reveal such a thing?
4. When the counter-culture (antithesis) becomes the prevailing culture (thesis), is it more common for human to degrade to the previous culture or to design an original culture and look forward?



Saturday, July 4, 2009

Aliens: fact or fiction?

This is not a logical look into the UFO phenomenon using a scientific attitude. UFO's and alien encounters are a phenomena that science at this point can't get a grip on. However one cannot deny that it is a phenomena; the question is more about it's explanation that it's actual existence. There is no denying that people see inexplicable lights in the sky and have experience of being kidnapped by cosmic visitors. Many explanations for these various phenomena have been provided by scientist and public officials, but often they seem even more ridiculous than alien phenomena - for example, the explanation of UFO's by the Air Force as being clouds formed by swamp gas, or the unsatisfactory explanation of alien abductions as sleep paralysis. There is something going on, and it's something eerie.

My fascination with the UFO Phenomenon has lasted almost my entire life. At this point I'd say it's at a low, but there are faint traces of it in my thoughts that I feel a need to explain them. Space in general was a topic that I obsessed over as a child, so my particular need to learn about every facet of man's supposed encounter with extraterrestrial beings seems to be expected. Memories of this time period are very disjointed and sparse, but I have certain recollections that still affect me quite a bit.

For example at one point I had thought I was abducted by aliens - an idea that seems ridiculous today, but seemed very real to me as a child. I got out of bed to use the bathroom, saw an alien (of the 'grey' variety) and then woke up the next morning. It was strange, but so long ago I have trouble believing it even happened. Ever since then UFOs were an object of intense fascination. I read everything I could on the internet, which was when I first started to use it. Everything about UFOs, fascinated, yet terrified me.

I read more and more about about alien abductions, close encounters, ancient astronauts, and all kinds of kooky and whacked out phenomena that made my parents think I was a lunatic. I got yelled at by a teacher for talking about Roswell because I was apparently scaring my classmates, and was punished with any mention of 'spacemen' or 'alien invasions'. It was my thing - my obsession, my hobby. I wanted to be an expert on UFOs. This continued for a while. But fear kept me from delving too far.

I was just as terrified by 'the greys' and their craft as I was fascinated. That classic image of their faces - with the cold black slanted eyes and clammy skin - haunted me. Whenever I saw it a jolt of fear would rush down my spine. It made it so that when I watched documentaries on the topic or visited webpages I would have to look in a state of absolute fear.

Nightmares were also clouded with aliens. Sometimes I had to run from them because they lived in my closet, sometimes they were the anchors on news channels, sometimes their crafts parked in my backyard. It was the product of an imagination that wasn't taught restraint. There were occasions when I'd wake up and think the aliens were right by my bed, only to wake up again finding myself rolled in a paranoid fetal position. My subconscious mind was haunted by space aliens. To some extent they still are.

My next period of UFO fixation occurred in the earliest years of my teenage life. I had developed much better logic and reasoning skills and had learned about the scientific method. Questioning religion and god became ordinary things for me to do. And for some strange reason my UFO obsession was returning. I was still terrified, but now I had a grasp on it. The idea of sentient beings from other planets watching over our cities and farms and simple suburban communities didn't seem right. It freaked me out in a philosophical sense. When I was younger, I was more afraid of being the victim of an alien encounter. By now I was just bothered by the very idea that those kind of things even happened.

Essentially I didn't want to believe in aliens. I convinced myself that they were all hoaxes, natural phenomena, the products of minds gone astray. Doing as much research possible, wasting my summer reading books and webpages, I found ways to convince myself that the greys weren't real. It only lasted for so long. Around the same time I stopped believing in god and I started to believe in aliens. For some reason it seemed impossible not to think something beyond Earth was going on. It's hard to explain exactly. I wanted to think god was real, and I wanted to think that Earth was for humans and that no one smarter that us was coming down from the skies and messing around with us.

Now it seems like UFO's are a topic that I rarely devote time and research too. They cross my mind and I think "whoa, that's kinda strange". But I suppose it's because my years of obsessions taught me one thing - in the world of a fringe topic like UFOs, it's impossible to separate the lunatics from those legitimately interested in the truth. They both mingle and often they all come out the same. Sometimes they are the same. With a topic as bizarre and mysterious as UFOs, filled with stories and theories that sit firmly outside the mainstream media as forms of urban legends that have yet to be contested it's hard to tell what is real and what is not.

As of now I don't have a firm stance on UFOs. I don't think there's enough information to know exactly what the saucers over Mexico City were, or what certain police officers reported seeing that one New York City night, or what kind of psychological phenomenon is going on when people report alien abductions. I acknowledge the existence of this phenomena, but I also acknowledge that it's dealing with the unknowable, and one can only venture so far into the unknowable without losing it.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

is humanity doomed?

I feel like humanity is doomed. This doesn't especially mean we're entering apocalyptic times. It just means that humanity, in it's natural state of grace is going to completely disappear.

I'm obviously depressed right now. Maybe it's more and more obvious that I'm completely empty and shallow on the inside and I'm just projecting this insecurity onto the world. As far as I know humanity is progressing and evolving through changes I can't even imagine.

Life is strange, wouldn't yah say?

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

we all love The Beatles, and sometimes we think The Beatles actually love us back

the first musical thing I ever devoted myself too was the soundtrack to 'The Yellow Submarine', an amazing film that basically spawned the psychedelia obsession that has lasted my entire life since then

a lot of people think of it as a sub-par Beatles album, a disc to avoid spending money on, but right now as i listen to it I notice that there's still the magic that I heard as a child contained within in, it's an excellent selection of songs and it contains a lot of great material that you can't get on other Beatles CDs

that's all I have to say about The Beatles, I feel like i'd be saying too much if i said anything more

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

two ghost having a conversation in front of my bathroom mirror

i feel sick, disoriented, like i'm upside down

are you upside down or are you rightsideup?

somewhere between the two

maybe you need a drink, a drink of whisky, that might get your head on straight

i need to puke....

puke in the toilet, not the sink

i feel like i'm going to die

how does it feel to die?

it feels kind of obnoxious, but it's kind of pleasant in a perverted way. You think that every little second of life that you have is so infinite, but it just slips away and then nothingness crawls in and fills up the void that was once a decent and honest or depraved and sickening life. It's a cold feeling, it's icy, and then the hallucinations start.

i don't remember that

i remember nothing, but i have an imagination so it's ok

i remember seeing god and then having him laugh at me for being a dipshit

i need more whisky man and then 300 years ago won't feel that long

long like a highway that just collapses when you get to your destination

yeah, or long like the night sky

*pukes outrageously*

*smiles*

i'm going to learn to play the violin and write songs to resurrect the dead

i'll learn to play the accordion

yes! we'll play in graveyards and morgues

and maybe we'll learn some songs, maybe even write some, maybe we'll make a joyful noise like the bible says to do!

the bible didn't give us shit

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

leave your faith behind!

on dusty street corners of butcher shops and penny arcades,
where young harry slings his guitar and old joseph stumbles with his cane
sits the the puritan preacher who vomits out his diatribe whenever he sees sin
braindead
is where it all began 

Thursday, May 14, 2009

it's oh so disconcerting isn't it?

I have this paranoid fear that the Right is going to start mobilizing with more force than ever. Far Right philosophies are starting to gain more credibility, and they have a perfect target: an administration that aims to help minoritys and those in poverty led by a black man. Watching Fox News at any given moments is more and more frightening. Right Wing gun nuts who think that god is on their side have always scared me, and now I have this creeping feeling that they're going to become more organized and mobilized than ever.

I don't have any real evidence to back these fears up. It's a total paranoid feeling, beyond any type of logical political analyzation. But we're certainly living in historical times and crazy things are capable of happening.


Who knows how things will end up. One thing is for sure; the future is a mysterious thing. 

Saturday, May 2, 2009

six organs of admittance

I can't get enough of Ben Chasny and his mystical guitar explorations. This is some of the most truly psychedelic music i've ever heard. 


Friday, April 24, 2009

the challenge of this life...

is to leave my laziness behind & find something i think is worth doing 

the question is:
will i ever truly dedicate myself to something?

it's not a long time from now 
when i find out 
if i can 




Tuesday, April 21, 2009

My goal for the next 3 months

Read:
1. Ulysses by James Joyce
2. Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
3. Being and Nothingness by Jean-Paul Sartre 

ahahahahahhahahahahaha

 yeah right!

If it works i'll be the happiest man alive though 

Thursday, April 9, 2009

The Century of the Self

You're probably a busy person. Or so you've tricked yourself into thinking. One of the biggest illusions we all have is that our time is constantly occupied by important things. We like to think this because it makes us feel bigger. We feel stress, we organize our lives, we make up reasons to avoid leisure time with awkward friends because of how busy we are. All the pressures put on our lives drive us to do crazy things like take drugs and watch television, but ultimately when we get down to it we have plenty of time. We have time that simply slips by us in the maelstrom of stress. So when I tell you to watch 4 hours of a BBC documentary on how Freud's ideas are used to maintain control democracy you should do it. Why? Because it will probably do more to stimulate your head than your job or your latest social appointment. 

The Century of the Self is certainly one of the best documentaries I've ever seen. It covers a wide spectrum of ideas, all centered around the effect of Freud's ideas on modern society, the consequence of his nephew Edward Bernays, and how our concept of the self has changed as well as consumerism and politics. Pretty heavy stuff, but it's conveniently in documentary rather than book form so it makes for an accessible venture. 

While it's 4 hours long, it's conveniently split into 4 parts so you don't have to devote an entire evening to it. It's certainly a documentary that makes you feel smarter when you finish it, and while it deals with fairly obscure subject matter it doesn't have that paranoid college student who worships Alex Jones feel that documentaries like Esoteric Agenda or Zeitgeist have. It's made by the BBC for crying out loud! It's gotta be legit! 


There! I gave you links, as well as a reason to watch it. What more do you need? 

Sunday, April 5, 2009

pretentious ramblings

Mankind has inner needs, and these inner needs seem to drive history. 

We have have an inner need to create order, to build structure and create societies. Man wants to be controlled. If this wasn't true then there would be no such thing as society. We created and accepted society and live according to it. 

Yet at the same time we have an inner need to revolt. Revolutions and rebellions occur, driven by our idealistic yearnings for a better system or simply an inner need create chaos. 

Both of these drives exist simultaneously it seems. 

We have an inner need for meaning too - we create religions, cults, spiritual movements, and philosophies. Yet we follow these movements dogmatically, closing off ideas from other movements. Yet if we were truly searching for meaning, why would do this? Contradiction after contradiction seems to exist in the human spirit. 

Here's an alternate theory - we have no inner need to be controlled. Instead we have an inner need to control others. We do not willing create society, society creates us and we simply accept it because of all that it does for us, regardless of many of the wrongs that may or may not be apparent. Those who revolt do so because they want control, whether they realize it or not. They believe their ideas are better than the standing order and that society would work better with them, whether their ideas are fascism, communism, or anarchism. 

Yet there is certainly an inner need for order in us. We organize our lives, we devote our lives to order and sensibility. We want to have beliefs that make sense to us and give us peace rather than add to the confusion and senselessness of our lives. 

Then why are there so many atheist, you may ask?

Possibly because the belief in atheism, regardless of it's emptiness and the nihilism it can lead to, creates comfort in us by making us feel better than others. We I tell a Christian that they are leading a life based on outdated beliefs, I feel a sense of superiority. I am aware of the truth, I am more in tune with reality, I have a more logical mind and a more sound grasping of reality. 

It sure beats having an invisible idol to pray to! 

The question is this: if everything than we have created exist because of our pathetic inner drives to be controlled, to control, or to feel superior, then how do we free ourselves from these traps and pursue a truer and less pathetic existence? 

Can we rise above human nature, or this simply making us less human? What if true human nature exist in state where these drives do not exist, and these drives were simply programmed into us by society and actually don't exist in our purest state of natural existence?








Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Superjail = the best

lookin' to fry yah brain kid? take a look at this cosmic mayhem, unleashed to us via stoner television network Adult Swim:


Tuesday, March 31, 2009

tribute to Harry Smith



Harry Smith is probably best known as the man behind the American Anthology of Folk Music. A documentation of American heritage that practically started the folk movement in the East Village, the Harry Smith Anthology is essential listening for anyone who wishes to truly understand the way music in America has developed. 

However Harry Smith has accomplishments beyond that. Smith was an artist, a filmmaker, a magician (yes, a magician) and a counterculture philosopher. He was an eccentric enigma whose hobbies included partaking in Native American Peyote rituals, collecting Ukrainian Easter Eggs and studying parapsychology. It's hard to imagine a moment with this guy getting boring. 

One of Smiths greatest accomplishments was producing the first Fugs album. 



A collection of satirical and irreverent humor mixed with the energy of rock'n'roll music and the production values of early folk recordings, The Fugs first album is arguably the first underground rock album, predating recordings by The Velvet Underground and The Doors. Smith's production helps give the album it's primitive and spontaneous qualities. 

The occult was one of Smith's greatest interest. He was a follow of the philosophy of Thelema, which was based around Aleister Crowley's infamous creed "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law". He even made claims that Crowley was his real father. Other spiritual movements that Smith took interest in were Voodoo and Gnostic Christianity, as well as native American Spirituality. 


(while Aleister Crowley was a bit of a nut job, his championing of individualistic freedom in a spiritual system was very radical, especially in his time)

Smith also was a filmmaker, and a very hallucinatory one at that. His works in this field were essentially animated abstract art. Here's an example of one of his films, 'Heaven and Earth Magic':



Smith's films were very unique and ahead of their time. He was also a painter, creating equally abstract and surreal works like the one below.



Manteca, painted in 1950, almost looks like something you'd buy at a headshop, a product of the psychedelic generation. The painting is supposed to be a transcription of a Dizzy Gillespie piece, with every individual stroke inspired by the trumpet players notes. 

Harry Smith is clearly one of the most important figures in the history of American underground. His contributions of the world of underground film, left-field music, and the beat scene are clearly of great cultural importance. Even the mainstream culture has found it impossible to acknowledge his legacy, as marked by the Grammy he earned in 1991, the ceremony shown in the video below:


so there ya go! This is just a brief sampler of who Harry Smith was, designed to inspire further exploration of his works and his mind. Dig it!

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

movies that aren't bogus volume 3 - Easy Rider




watch this movie NOW

i don't care if your mother's in the hospital or your girlfriend wants sex or you have AP Calculus homework to do or you happen to be in the unfortunate delusional state of mind that has fooled you into thinking whatever bullshit you're occupied with is more important than this movie

just watch it man

i solo on violin until the moon turns to dust




Tuesday, March 24, 2009

political compass



so i decide to let a computer decide my poltical beliefs for me - lets see how it goes:



nice! exactly where I think I am - a libertarian socialist, a anarcho-collectivist, and communist who loves freedom - essentially my beliefs are impossible to put into action.

"Be Reasonable, Demand the Impossible!"

i'm a bit too radical I think

at least i'm not in the opposite corner 

Monday, March 16, 2009

tell me (when it's over)

were sitting here on the shore of this island
zoning out to the sound of industry
like a big metal stomach
being pumped endlessly
and like all the other sundazed children of the myth
i'm daydreaming
about a day
where everything is silent
and I can hear my own thoughts

"and if my thought dreams could be seen
they'd probably put my head in a guillotine
but it's alright ma, it's life, and life only"
- Bob Dylan

Sunday, March 15, 2009

eternally freaked out

i've been staring at this shit for too long, i'm actually starting to worry about my mental health. 

yet at the same time I can't resist coming back to it....


lots of fun to be had at this website. 

and according to High Times Magazine, "Larry Carlson is an artistic mastermind"! 

and that, my friend, is an endorsement.


Friday, March 13, 2009

adventures on youtube

Of all the things the internet has brought us, I think YouTube is the greatest (or at least one of them). To me it truly puts the media in the hands of the people - and for absolutely no price. Sure there's a bit of censorship, but in some ways there's not enough (they should seriously delete all those fucking cat videos that absolutely no one gives a shit about). It helps keep the site from being a porn infested trash pit like limewire. So anyways i'm going to look in my reccomended videos, find something that looks interesting and follow the related videos around for a bit and post what I find. 

I honestly don't know why i'm doing this. 

But here we go!: 





a nice look at Leary's beliefs and ideas



ridiculous 60's exploitation film trailer!



yeah! a positive drug story in the news! i guess the establishment is slowly turning on too.



terrence is a little crazy but sometimes he says really cool things



another rambling acid-head, this time talking about quantum mechanics. lacks the seriousness and boredom that actually scientist tend to have


i got bored
so yeah, youtube rules


Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Deerhunter concert!

Last night I saw Deerhunter at the Backbooth in Orlando. I don't really know what to say; i'm at loss for words really. The walls of noise and the energy of it all was overwhelming.  It was almost like a totally elevated state of consciousness. They played an equal amount of stuff from Cryptograms, Microcastle/Weird Era Continued, and even some new materal. FUCKING BRILLIANT. and fucking loud too! The band was totally stoned out of their minds too. 

The coolest part was that during the encore when they played 'Strange Lights' they let the audience rush on stage and gave them their instruments while the drummer kept on playing. It was true to the punk rock spirit of breaking down the barriers between the band and audience. 

Anyway since Deerhunter are really influenced by Swell Maps, a band that I was pretty obsessed with last year but kind forgot about (which sucks) so I decided to blast Jane From Occupied Europe today, totally disregarding the ringing in my ears. It feels like i've ever truly heard this album before, i'm not going to lie. It makes so much more sense than it did the last time I listened to it. 

So anyway if you ever get a chance to see Deerhunter, do it! just do it! Any ideas you have about all the critical acclaim they getting being mere hype will be squashed in the sea of noise. 



what a wild song!


Tuesday, March 3, 2009

the mind of Sun Ra

Sun Ra

"What I'm dealing with is so vast and great that it can't be called the truth. It's above the truth." 

So yesterday I heard the greatest Sun Ra album i've ever heard for the first time - Nothing Is, released by ESP-Disk (best label ever!) in 1970. It's a compilation of live recordings from 1966 however, and the sound quality is so good you'd think it was just an extremely spirited studio performance if it wasn't for the audience applause. It's on his avant garde side, but it's not obscure to the point of often being unlistenable. Check it out!

Also check out: The Heliocentric Worlds of Sun Ra Volume 1, Atlantis, Magic City, and his countless other interstellar masterpieces. 

And watch this awesome video of Sun Ra playing live in Egypt and Italy:


Monday, March 2, 2009

movies that aren't bogus volume 2 - Weather Underground


This one's a documentary, and an essential documentary at that. 

Remember all that fuss about Obama and his supposed friendship with American terrorist Bill Ayers? This is the story of Ayers' organization, The Weather Underground, presented through the eyes of those involved. It lets us know exactly what kind of mindset the group had and exactly what they did without any right wing bias. 

While it does portray them in a light that might be a little too sympathetic for most right wingers it does remain fairly objective and lets the viewer make up their own mind on if their actions were justified.


Check it out!

and by the way-

my opinion is that Ayers and folk were fighting for a just cause - ending the Vietnam war. While they never actually killed anyone, I think that in some cases they were slightly too radical. However If I had to pick between fighting in Vietnam or joining the Weather Underground, i'd pick the latter. 

I also think it was despicable how the right wing treated Ayers during Obama's campaign and that they dehumanized a decent and respectable man.

There, I said it. 

Sunday, March 1, 2009

tales of Mark E. Smith part 1



"There is no culture is my brag,
Your taste for bullshit reveals a lust for a home of office
THIS IS THE HOME OF THE VAIN!
THIS IS THE HOME OF THE VAIN!
Where are the obligatory niggers?*
HEY THERE FUCKFACE!!
HEY THERE FUCKFACE!!
There are twelve people in the world
The rest are paste
THIS IS THE HOME OF THE VAIN!
THIS IS THE HOME OF THE VAIN!
I just left the Hotel Amnesia, I had to go there
Where it is I can't remember,
But now I can remember...now I can remember
HAFTA! HAFTA!
MESSAGE FOR YER! MESSAGE FOR YER!
Too much reliance on girl here
On girls here, behind every shell-actor
Snobbier Snobbier
Too much romantic here
I destroy romantics, actors,
Kill it!
Kill it!
KILL IT A !
KILL IT!
KILL IT A !"


*Neither Mark E. Smith nor I condone racism. The use of the word 'nigger' in the lyrics for The Fall song 'The Classical' is meant purely for satirical effect. Mark E. Smith is a very abrasiveman who has a knack for offending everyone from the bourgeois to the intellectuals. In fact The Fall played a number of Rock Against Racism gigs. 

I do however condone downloading as many Fall albums as possible and the use of pharmaceutical (as opposed to street) amphetamines. 

Thursday, February 26, 2009

someday i'm going to die

It's going to be sad I guess. I have a feeling it's going to be exciting. But I can't get too interested in death. Life is cool too, it's just such a drag sometimes. Ending your life sometimes sounds like a good idea, sometimes it even sounds logical. It's the ultimate change in consciousness. Some members of the DADA movement killed themselves as an artistic act.

Please don't think i'm going to kill myself. That whole thing "ALL TALK ABOUT SUICIDE IS CAUSE FOR ALARM" they taught you in 9th grade health class is bullshit. They also told us that marijuana was a dangerous drug and we should never be friends with anyone who uses it.

I wouldn't commit suicide and this is why: the ability to witness the universe (or whatever it is) as I can now is a worthy reason to keep consciousness. Reality may be intangible, difficult to understand, or non-existant, but whatever it is has interested me. 

I'm also a coward. 

and at the end of the week, those couple moments of freedom, excitement and brilliance make all the countless letdowns and fuck-ups worth it. 

Read Camus's Myth of Sisyphus. Best answer i've read to the suicide question. 

I understand why people do it. Sometimes it makes too much sense. Too deny this is to be an idiot. Some lives are probably so horrid that suicide really is the best way out. 

Death is the ultimate experience of the unknown and we suffer through our whole lives to get there. But just in case it's another bum trip I wan't to have a nice life behind me. 

End. 


Sunday, February 22, 2009

you see, I truly am a materialist after all

today for my special day I got: 









cool man, cool!





Saturday, February 21, 2009

the sunshine bores the daylights out of me





oh man I never really have realized how much I love this album, after countless nights of staying up as late as possible trying to listen to the whole thing on my mom's walkman trying to figure out what mick meant when he said 'drop your reds, drop your greens and blues'. 


the power of paranoia

Salvador Dali thought paranoia was an artistic tool. William S. Burroughs said "A paranoid is someone who knows a little of what's going on". Robert Anton Wilson says in an interview that paranoids are the most genius storytellers ever, they just didn't realize that their visions were actually fantasies.  Most people think of paranoia as a very negative emotion, and rightly so. There is nothing more terrifying than thinking the world is organized against you while being unaware of how delusional you are. 

The Greek roots of the word paranoia essential mean madness. Paranoia is a state of delusion where one takes the irrational as real. An important part of the art movements of Dada and Surrealism was delving into the irrational. Basking in confusion, escaping rationality, and transcending reality were concepts artist like Duchamp, Dali, Man Ray, Tzara, and Artaud championed. According to Dali, exploring the realm of the paranoid was a way to find inspiration for his works. He called this the Paranoid Critical Method.

"..it makes the world of delirium pass onto the plane of reality"  

What could be more transgressive and threatening to bourgeois values than celebrating paranoia? While Dali has become a staple of High School art rooms and essential, his ideas are very subversive. 

The question is how does one control paranoia? While it's capability for artistic inspiration has been celebrated, one cannot forget that it's a debilitating mental ilness that can consume and destroy the mind. It might just be the most uncompfortable feeling one can experience. To allow oneself to be consumed by paranoia is a self destructive act. One is being opressed by their own mind. 

However opression breeds art, and it takes a truly opressed men like William S. Burroughs or Philip K. Dick to bring us visions of reality that are so twisted and insane yet full of truth about our society and existense. 








Thursday, February 19, 2009

a stream of thoughts

open your eyes
and witness the birth 
of a million tambourines 
all shaking like frenzied insects 

through hallways of thoughts 
corridors of boredom
and manholes of sickness
you walk
and see boundless apparitions

it's time to get born again
says the voice of ginsberg 
and then the sky starts to fall
you accompany it with laughter
like you do to everything else 
and then a madman whispers you a question
"is everything really inconsequential
because we're alive just so we can rot"

you forget it all the next minute and keep roaming on and on

it's true;

life is flashing at your eyes 

like a dying star

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

lord, you have me hypnotized

“Even the wretched and despised have their allotted place. Freed from all conflict we have time now to explore new concepts, new frontiers, charting the space inside our minds as we once did the outer void, with pioneers drawn from the hopelessly addicted; psychonauts prepared to risk their sanity in chemical reconnaissance of new, interior continents. We call them ‘spacemen.’ Every child’s ambition is to be one when they’re grown.” - Alan Moore, Miracleman #16




sunflower sutra

of course Howl is the best poem ever, but Ginsberg's Sunflower Sutra has been meaning a lot to me recently


"I walked on the banks of the tincan banana dock and sat down under the huge shade of a Southern Pacific locomotive to look at the sunset over the box house hills and cry.
Jack Kerouac sat beside me on a busted rusty iron pole, companion, we thought the same thoughts of the soul, bleak and blue and sad-eyed, surrounded by the gnarled steel roots of trees of machinery.
The oily water on the river mirrored the red sky, sun sank on top of final Frisco peaks, no fish in that stream, no hermit in those mounts, just ourselves rheumy-eyed and hung-over like old bums on the riverbank, tired and wily.
Look at the Sunflower, he said, there was a dead gray shadow against the sky, big as a man, sitting dry on top of a pile of ancient sawdust—
—I rushed up enchanted—it was my first sunflower, memories of Blake—my visions—Harlem
and Hells of the Eastern rivers, bridges clanking Joes Greasy Sandwiches, dead baby carriages, black treadless tires forgotten and unretreaded, the poem of the riverbank, condoms & pots, steel knives, nothing stainless, only the dank muck and the razor-sharp artifacts passing into the past—
and the gray Sunflower poised against the sunset, crackly bleak and dusty with the smut and smog and smoke of olden locomotives in its eye—
corolla of bleary spikes pushed down and broken like a battered crown, seeds fallen out of its face, soon-to-be-toothless mouth of sunny air, sunrays obliterated on its hairy head like a dried wire spiderweb,
leaves stuck out like arms out of the stem, gestures from the sawdust root, broke pieces of plaster fallen out of the black twigs, a dead fly in its ear,
Unholy battered old thing you were, my sunflower O my soul, I loved you then!
The grime was no man’s grime but death and human locomotives,
all that dress of dust, that veil of darkened railroad skin, that smog of cheek, that eyelid of black mis’ry, that sooty hand or phallus or protuberance of artificial worse-than-dirt—industrial—modern—all that civilization spotting your crazy golden crown—
and those blear thoughts of death and dusty loveless eyes and ends and withered roots below, in the home-pile of sand and sawdust, rubber dollar bills, skin of machinery, the guts and innards of the weeping coughing car, the empty lonely tincans with their rusty tongues alack, what more could I name, the smoked ashes of some cock cigar, the cunts of wheelbarrows and the milky breasts of cars, wornout asses out of chairs & sphincters of dynamos—all these
entangled in your mummied roots—and you there standing before me in the sunset, all your glory in your form!
A perfect beauty of a sunflower! a perfect excellent lovely sunflower existence! a sweet natural eye to the new hip moon, woke up alive and excited grasping in the sunset shadow sunrise golden monthly breeze!
How many flies buzzed round you innocent of your grime, while you cursed the heavens of the railroad and your flower soul?
Poor dead flower? when did you forget you were a flower? when did you look at your skin and decide you were an impotent dirty old locomotive? the ghost of a locomotive? the specter and shade of a once powerful mad American locomotive?
You were never no locomotive, Sunflower, you were a sunflower!
And you Locomotive, you are a locomotive, forget me not!
So I grabbed up the skeleton thick sunflower and stuck it at my side like a scepter,
and deliver my sermon to my soul, and Jack’s soul too, and anyone who’ll listen,
—We’re not our skin of grime, we’re not dread bleak dusty imageless locomotives, we’re golden sunflowers inside, blessed by our own seed & hairy naked accomplishment-bodies growing into mad black formal sunflowers in the sunset, spied on by our own eyes under the shadow of the mad locomotive riverbank sunset Frisco hilly tincan evening sitdown vision."

Berkeley, 1955

Love

since it's valentines day (or moreso 3 days afterwards) I thought i'd talk about an emotion that's very dear to me

actually i'm joking

Love is the name of a 60's band that was better than The Doors! You better believe it! Love, like The Doors, were a psychedelic band from LA, signed to Elektra records, both had frontmen who were a bit on the edge from a combination of substance abuse and mad genius, and both blew my mind several times. 

except lets get one thing straight - it was Love who got the Doors signed to Elektra, and not only was Arthur Lee a poet genius like Morrison, but he was black! Dig that, Arthur Lee was the first psychelic black man, before Jimi Hendrix, before George Clinton, before Sly Stone, LOVE was an interracial band and because of that along they broke more boundaries than The Doors.


but anyway, we all know it's the music that matter most. Love albums, as a whole, were probably not as even as the best Doors albums, (except for Forever Change which i'll talk about in a sec). However Love's best songs are in my opinion better than the best Doors songs. 

listen to this, one of the greatest punk songs of the 60's:



fuck yeah! what an amazing song! Now go get yourself a copy of Forever Changes, their 67 release
really blew my mind out of the water when I first heard it

it looks like this:



and remember - John Densmore of the Doors said the goal of The Doors was to be as good as Love.
They weren't as good in the long run though they got close, but they did gain waaaaay more popularity.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

songs of atlantis mix

please join me on a journey to the bottom of the sea, where we shall discover the lost city of Atlantis with these wonderful songs:

1. Atlantis - Donovan 
2. Mutilated Lips - Ween
3. Octopus - Syd Barrett 
4. Tropical Fish: Selene (peel sessions) - Gong 
5. Octopus Garden - The Beatles 
6. The Water Song - Incredible String Band 
7. The Oyster and the Flying Fish - Kevin Ayers 
8. Seal Eyeing - Animal Collective 
9. Atlantis - Sun Ra 

it is my belief that with these songs and the aid of certain enlightening substances that one can enter the esoteric realm of Atlantis, a land full of long forgotten knowledge that fell victim to Mother Earth's more destructive habits 

Monday, February 9, 2009

another day in space wasted

an icicle crucifix
a summer day
a manipulated mind
i can feel her staring me down
with pale blue eyes 
and mercury flowers 
sprouting in the fields
of her sadness

Thursday, February 5, 2009

movies that aren't bogus volume 1- Slacker

Not to be confused with the trashy teen comedy 'Slackers', Richard Linklater's 1991 film 'Slacker' is a inventive work of post-modern genius. Plotless, with no main characters or even an obvious message, the film moves us on a tour through the lives of various eccentrics in Austin Texas. We meet a chick whose trying to sell Madonnas pubic hairs, an Old Anarchist, and a couple conspiracy theorist. Don't expect high-brow hollywood entertainment - this is one of the most boring (yet fascinating) movies ever made. And you can watch it for free on youtube!

Dig it baby:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jB4xlYKAVCQ

Richard Linklater is also responsible for Dazed and Confused, Waking Life, and A Scanner Darkly, which are all amazing and should be required viewing.

Monday, February 2, 2009

A rare dose of truth


Do I even need so say anything? 

Sunday, February 1, 2009

R. Crumb = artistic genius

This summer I visited the Art Institute in Chicago and I'm gonna lie, large parts of it were extremely boring. However I think it was on the first floor in the same section that contained much of the surrealist and dadaist works I've grown to love over the years that I encountered a couple R. Crumb works. I got extremely excited - HEAD CULTURE HAS INFILTRATED THE ART INSTITUTE! Even funnier is that I joked about Crumb being in the art institute before we left. You can only imagine how much my mind had been blown after walking around for two hours looking at pictures of Jesus and Mary. So Crumb went from being the kind of artist you could only buy in head shops to being worthy of taking up space in the Art Institute of Chicago. It was great.

Above is one of the pieces I saw at the art institute. His fascination with the grotesque and the perverse overtaking American culture is evident as he makes jabs at the whole idea of fashion. He also takes a stab that whole self absorbed and 'decant' punk-rock style of dress that was popular at the time (you know, all that bondage gear and mohawk bullshit!) . 



Crumb was very popular with drug taking hippies in the 60's. Crumb himself took many drugs during his period in the 60's where he wrote in Zap Comix!, an important part of the counterculture of it's time. Often Crumb would simply get as high as possible on lsd and marijuana and just draw and draw, often resulting in pure genius. However when Crumb quit getting stoned in the 70's he found "a certain clarity of thought I'd never known before". However his creativity did not suffer at all, proving that he was not reliant on drugs to create his masterworks. 




Crumb was often accused of being racist, unafraid to explore african american stereotypes in his work. However it's obvious he wasn't a true racist from his massive amount of respect towards  black blues and jazz musicians that he often expresses. Rather than simply condemning racism or pretending it didn't exist, Crumb dealt with the issue in a hillarious and transgressive way. 




Bad Trips are just as interesting and the good ones. The side of head culture that was burned out, fried in the brain and bummed out were some of Crumb's favorite topics. Asshole cops, white corporate men and crushing come-downs showed us the darker side of mankinds inner-space. 


While often sick and perverted, depressed and bleak his work could often raise a smile of zen-like wonder. Stoned revelations about the universe were as common as fucking in the 60's, and Crumb expressed them perfectly. 


Here's Mr. Natural, our guru and god, dispensing the kind of casual nihilism that makes me laugh with glee. Mr. Natural was the true guru of the 60's, who parodied the whole concept of hippy spirituality while embracing it at the same time. Mr. Natural was a perfect human being though - as often as he spoke words of love and peace he would end up in jail for molesting children or creating headless female robots. Maybe Crumb was attacking the whole idea of the guru by creating this kind of genius who would speak words of wisdom that his wide eyed hippy audience would glaze over one issue, only to turn him into a pervert next, just to fuck with their heads? 


SEXISM. "The only burning passion I'm sure I have is the passion for sex." When it came to sex this man was certainly a creep. Be blamed the sexism in his work on a fear of women rather than a hate and said the only way he deal with his problems was through his drawings. It seems like Crumbs most perverted works are a type of therapy, which isn't far from the truth. While I'm never one to condone any type of sexism, it seems like Crumbs solution to his innermost subconscious problems is a lot more moral and honest about the sick and depraved things we all think but keep bottled up. Note that he basically went from being the most pathetic nerd ever in High School who couldn't get a girl to even look at him to a famous underground artist that was craved by women - maybe that's part of his complex? 
I really like Phillip K. Dick so seeing Crumb do a strip on his imfamous 'religious experience' really made me feel good. 



His most acid fried moments are probably my favorite. I love the way he draws the aliens and the overall feeling of confusion this one relays. 


Crumb was a very tortured individual, which should be evident by now. "I felt so painfully isolated that I vowed I would get revenge on the world by becoming a famous cartoonist." he said. Much of Crumbs work is just as a much a product of an overactive imagination as it is a tortured soul. However out of all his pain and suffering essentially came the invention of Alternative Comix - comics that dealt with anti-heroes rather than superheroes, where everyday can be torture rather than adventure, where acid induced visions replace traditional American values of justice and sexually explicit content is a hallmark rather than a reason for censorship. Because of his brutal honesty, his twisted mind and his limitless creativity Crumb is an artist that need to be explored by all.  


Tuesday, January 27, 2009

why does my blog have this name?

'Slip Inside This House' is the first track on the second 13th Floor Elevators album 'Easter Everywhere'. It's an 8 minute long ode to psychedelic drugs, based around a hypnotizing riff and lyrics full of dense philosophical poetry that sounds cleary inspired by Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde. The feeling that this song gives me is very similar to the feeling of a peak in a psychedelic experience, the feeling of a grand philosophical breakthrough that's on the edge of exploding and revealing itself.  In other words this song is a total trip, yet it dosn't rely on dated sound effects. Forget White Rabbit - this is the true anthem of mind expansion, certainly music to 'feed your head' with. 

Primal Scream covered this song, which is also worth hearing but no one can beat Roky Erickson's frenzied vocal delivery. 

It's an awesome song. And you should hear it for yourself:



Bedoin tribes ascending
From the egg into the flower,
Alpha information sending
State within the heaven shower
From disciples the unending
Subtleties of river power
They slip inside this house as they pass by

If your limbs begin dissolving
In the water that you tread
All surroundings are evolving
In the stream that clears your head
Find yourself a caravan
Like Noah must have led
And slip inside this house as you pass by.
Slip inside this house as you pass by.

True conception, knowing why
Brings even more than meets the eye
Slip inside this house as you pass by.

In this dark we call creation
We can be and feel and know
From an effort, comfort station
That's surviving on the go
There's infinite survival in
The high baptismal glow.
Slip inside this house as you pass by.

There is no season when you are grown
You are always risen from the seeds you've sown
There is no reason to rise alone
Other stories given have sages of their own.

Live where your heart can be given
And your life starts to unfold
In the forms you envision
In this dream that's ages old
On the river layer is the only sayer
You receive all you can hold
Like you've been told.

Every day's another dawning
Give the morning winds a chance
Always catch your thunder yawning
Lift your mind into the dance
Sweep the shadows from your awning
Shrink the fourfold circumstance
That lies outside this house don't pass it by.

Higher worlds that you uncover
Light the path you want to roam
You compare there and discover
You won't need a shell of foam
Twice born gypsies care and keep
The nowhere of their former home
They slip inside this house as they pass by.
Slip inside this house as you pass by.

You think you can't, you wish you could
I know you can, I wish you would
Slip inside this house as you pass by.

Four and twenty birds of Maya
Baked into an atom you
Polarized into existence
Magnet heart from red to blue
To such extent the realm of dark
Within the picture it seems true
But slip inside this house and then decide.

All your lightning waits inside you
Travel it along your spine
Seven stars receive your visit
Seven seals remain divine
Seven churches filled with spirit,
Treasure from the angels' mine
Slip inside this house as you pass by.
Slip inside this house as you pass by.

The space you make has your own laws
No longer human gods are cause
The center of this house will never die.

There is no season when you are grown
You are always risen from the seeds you've sown
There is no reason to rise alone
Other stories given have sages of their own.

Draw from the well of unchanging
Its union nourishes on
In the right re-arranging
Till the last confusion is gone
Water-brothers trust in the ultimust
Of the always singing song they pass along.

One-eyed men aren't really reigning
They just march in place until
Two-eyed men with mystery training
Finally feel the power fill
Three-eyed men are not complaining.
They can yo-yo where they will
They slip inside this house as they pass by.
Don't pass it by.



Sunday, January 25, 2009

into the white

this is what i'm thinking about: 



this is who I would hang out with if I could:



this is some socialist propaganda I thought was clever: 



this is just plain awesome: 



this is the practice space I wish my band had:



this is what I do on weekends: 




this is something that might have been made by aliens:




what my computer speakers are currently spewing:

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