06.25.2006, 12:40 PM | #21 |
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gary at northsix.com
gary at northsix in NY on July 5th!!!!! |
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06.25.2006, 01:20 PM | #22 |
the end of the ugly
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I just had a freudian slip in the mind of previous thoughts pushing important meaning. What did it mean? Why did it mean? 'Does it' to 'was it' care? I care.? No, I don't care(?) I do care? O care-ry on luggage makes the mind sluggish much sooner than outter pollution. Often a matter of confusion can be seen in those who make that mistake. They take it out and around your neck and in the yer ears! They're shouting all the this that bleh blatatat they can. You can't hear though cuz a string of complaints runs right through your brain... massage.
Out. Out. Congratulations. You're in. (A little high stream of concious)
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Duran Duran's 1995 covers album Thank You was recently voted the worst album of all time by a Q magazine poll. Although we respectfully disagree (Sonic Youth's NYC Ghosts & Flowers is clearly the worst album of all time) -Pitchfork (hahahah!) Here's a myspace of my music and 4-track ramblings the electric kites--the jamz of me n my friends |
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06.25.2006, 01:34 PM | #23 |
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come back sugar, outdo me socially. what makes you so
good? i listen to everyword you say and attach meaning to it. i wanted you and i fucked up your guitar on purpose just so that you would take notice. still got your voice on tape. saw people fucking in alleys. when the key turned in the lock my heart sank. i spoke your name when i came. i was there and no one knows. i saw it all, i did it to and no one knows. it was my ritual to think about it always, take it away. i still see the room, the sofa, t-shirt. blood on my eyes. what do you like? what do you want to see? from pretend i am someone else magazine. |
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07.06.2006, 11:50 AM | #24 |
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A Gift to the Viewer
Oh, quivery river, you so smeared Upon a cold canvas of poorly painted sun In first blush of summer, then a duller time, Then the bottoms of peaches, of a pear, of cream— Or are you merely shadows in bold dissolve— A monstrous color falls Alongside her where she was In expensive glasses so dark and posing Questions: Have you written impressionistically of a river? Have you figured a while on the truth? Have you thought of investing in a pair of glasses? The sun’s so hard on one’s expressionistic tendencies! How the afternoon light descends upon the stampede of strokes And through the transparency of the plastic bag How the jar of mineral spirits contains a faint intimation of the sun— To make like philosophical delay or a deeper understanding, a turn Of promise dependent, vermilion nudes In a primitive paradise. Doubt, the numbing And unresponsive formlessness, redoubtable realism Run amok becoming the form and the dark Pigment of summer, pink-boned femme fatale Peering into her face asleep: like A frog’s brain in a jar, some thing Marvelous yet potentially explosive, e.g., “What have you Been dreaming (of), my love?” I don’t know When or where or how this might happen, but this was My independent film, my love, my love, I, I, I, who have not caught your essence all afternoon. |
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07.06.2006, 11:51 AM | #25 |
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who's that by?
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07.06.2006, 11:54 AM | #26 |
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moi
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07.06.2006, 11:55 AM | #27 |
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i like it especially because you use the word vermillion.
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07.06.2006, 11:57 AM | #28 | |
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Quote:
Thanks. A favorite word of mine, too! This is like a lot of my later poems where I mostly like the sound of phrases and words strung together. It's sort of about a young woman, a painter, I knew and had an unrequited crush a few summers ago, but it's mostly about the sounds of that summer. |
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07.06.2006, 12:02 PM | #29 |
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im not posting any copyrighted material here you bitches unless you pay me
as for other 'writing', isn't that all we do around here? except for porkmarras who specializes in pictures |
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07.06.2006, 12:05 PM | #30 |
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Har...
Yeah, I actually had that one get published, in a Louisiana university lit review, of all places. I'm kinda proud of that one, but I don't think they have any copyright issues with me posting it. |
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07.06.2006, 12:08 PM | #31 |
expwy. to yr skull
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I am so in love,
I fly like a dove. But they complain cause he's a dog, So what's my problem?
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07.06.2006, 12:30 PM | #32 |
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Repeat Echo
My weakness: /mark /weight affliction /specificity /place affected action /identify /name affection shunned /produce /help after action /undertake /resilient though I’m not sure which one I’m asking for /distortion /line another friction /snake anti-fiction Our different skins become seamless. not right // not right for one another confront somehow I got lost this is where we were last time this mess happened and how could you let this happen again whose idea was this anyway? I forget too many things like, I’m not supposed to be here, stay here, love x, break x, make x stay, leave without x again find your way here now look where we are where are we? Seems like a silly idea anyway. “Our different skins become seamless.” I wish I could forget this whole thing A. but it took too long to get here, When: B. and I’d like to be able to remember, how will I remember it, I’d like to know how will I find it? X told me I had a fear of Failure being left willing to leave |
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07.06.2006, 12:32 PM | #33 |
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On paper, there are parts of this scattered on the page. I also thought of putting this in a painting, but I never developed that idea.
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07.06.2006, 12:37 PM | #34 |
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Once upon a time,
There was a guy, who got raped by a hairy old man, and he is going to die.
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07.06.2006, 12:44 PM | #35 |
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here is a song I wrote. If anyone wants to use it to set it to music go ahead. let me hear it. I wrote this years ago during a particularly leak and angry period.
I MET A GIRL NAMED MALNUTRITION her knee-caps were wider than her calves almost as wide as her thighs her waist I could wrap my hands around break her in half without trying she can barely take my meat as her shoulder blades protrude with her ribs expanding there's just enough room for my cock all the organs malnourished get pressed together like tuna causing more damage if she would just eat something if she would just eat something there's little calories in my sperm feed her pork and pasta see if she's bigger next month if she would just eat something i might learn the joys of a soft butt and breast instead of beef jerky on her ass and chest but I still want her she's sex on a stick literally she's sex on a stick literally everything is better on a stick
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07.06.2006, 12:50 PM | #36 |
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No, thanks!
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07.06.2006, 12:51 PM | #37 | |
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Quote:
there's a lot of potential there. I'm hearing... 2, maybe 3 chords, fast tempo, hardcore guitar squall... hmm... Let me see what I can put together. |
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07.06.2006, 12:57 PM | #38 |
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My Life With Music - Part I
by Roberto Instigator In all the years that I have been buying music I have progressed in a steady direction. I have no idea where I am headed with it, or whether I will one day stop and find myself with no urge to purchase anything new. I hope that never happens. What I am sure of is that there is an almost unbroken chain of bands that can be traced easily, with minor deviations into what were, at the time, curious new sounds or groups. Let me start at the beginning. Besides the many kiddie records that were bought for me by my folks, I grew up listening to the music of my parents. My mother had what could best be called a love of bland, innocuous music. Not that it wasn’t good, but it was inoffensive and middle-of-the-road She grew up with eight older brothers and sisters in Puerto Rico who handed down their records and singles as they got married or “outgrew” collecting music. Her favorites were acts like Paul Anka or The Platters. Of course she also listened to the local Puerto Rican Salsa and Merengue music. The earliest memories I have are of Saturday mornings in Puerto Rico listening to my mom’s vacuum drowning out whatever BeeGee’s, or Tony Croato (Puerto Rican folk singer famous for his nationalistic cries for Puerto Rican independence, and soft folk ballads) record was on the turntable. My parents had a lot of music. My dad loved music too but he was more into the Puerto Rican stuff than the pop stuff my mom liked. My mom thinks the Beatle’s best work was done before Revolver. Dig? Those early days of music blaring from my parent’s stereo ingrained music into me. I can sincerely say that I owe my love of music (as well as books, and arguing) to my parents. When we moved to Houston, Texas in 1981 my folks had to leave behind many of their records. In essence they started from scratch. Me too. The first of the milestones in my love of music occurred just a few months after moving to the United States. We were living in a brand new apartment complex called Brookstone. The place was so new that half of the buildings had not yet been finished. Around August of 1982 a friend of ours came running up to us from his apartment. Xavier, my brother, and I were busy trying to pull up a sewer drain so we could see what was inside. This little kid came over and started talking about some guy who had gone into his apartment and put something on the television. It turned out to be a cable box, the kind that no one has anymore. It consisted of a brown and black unit with rows of black buttons. We had no idea what Cable Television was, but it seemed that they were going to install these in all the apartments. This little kid told us there was music on the TV. We ran home hoping to see the new Cable. You gotta realize that at this point my little brother and I knew very little English, and were, respectively, 6 and 8 years old. Of course the cable-man had not yet gotten to our apartment, but within the week we had our very own cable box. The first thing I discovered was MTV. This was back when MTV used actual disc jockeys they had hired from across the nation to host as VJ’s. In other words, these guys knew how to talk about music and knew of the musicians without having to be fed every single line like the idiot talking dolls they have now. There were five Video Jockeys: J.J. Johnson, the only black on-air personality on MTV for years and the one VJ I found funny most often, who looked like the oldest of the bunch, Nina Blackwood, a bleach blonde who was stuck doing mostly late-night shifts, Mark Goodman, a guy who looked kind of like Juan Epstein’s older brother and seemed to know the most about music and the bands, Alan Hunter, a skinny blonde guy that was the original host for the first heavy metal segment on MTV, “Hard 30”, and Martha Quinn, the VJ who lasted the longest on MTV, and the one I had a crush on. These five VJ’s were IT. They had to take long shifts on a sparse set, just talking about the bands and music, and introducing the videos. I feel MTV doesn’t give enough credit to these five dudes who put MTV on the map. Many other shows had music videos through the years, Night Flight and Friday Night Videos for example, but those lacked the personalities of these 5 guys. I would sit and watch the videos one after another. The earliest videos I remember include The Buggles “Video Killed The Radio Star,” which happened to be the very first video aired on MTV. I loved that video. The song kicked ass and seemed to me very strange with its weird sounds and new wave tone. Another one I remember vividly from the first few months of watching was the Art of Noise video for “Fish Heads.” That video actually creeped me out, because those damn fish heads were so dirty and stank-looking. The videos they showed in that first year on the air were a mix of hard rock, classic rock, disco, and new wave clips. I would watch them whenever I managed to get control of the Cable box. It was the best. There was always a new video and they were all so strange. From Missing Person’s and their whitewashed clip of “Words” to The Talking Heads and their fantastic videos for “Burning Down the House” and “Once in a Lifetime,” it was a time of inventiveness. Bands who wanted to make a video had little choice since the record labels were not going to lay down a lot of cash on an untested medium. It was almost naïve, since videos were, and always have been, intended as commercials for the albums, and there was very little attempt at creating “art.” The best they could hope for was that it showed the band in a favorable light and somehow reflected the theme of the song. At that time I was just soaking it all in, but I was drawn to the new wave and hard rock videos the most. I sucked up the music for a couple of years straight from the MTV and without buying any actual recordings. So, when my bro and I found ourselves at the Wal-Mart with our dad, and heard him ask if we wanted to buy a cassette, I first felt that giddy rush of possibilities and choices that I love to this day. I looked for one of the bands I had heard on MTV. After browsing for a bit, I grabbed the first Def Leppard album, “On Through The Night,” even though I had never heard any of the songs on it. At that age, 10, I couldn’t tell the difference between that album and “Pyromania,” which was the new one at the time and the one which contained the songs I HAD heard. Xavier had grabbed Twisted Sister’s “Stay Hungry,” mostly because Dee Snider looked so damn crazy (to an eight and ten year old) holding that giant, meat-covered bone and dressed in hot pink and black tatters. This was my second musical epiphany. I realized I could buy music and listen to it for myself whenever I felt like. No more waiting for the videos! When we got home I was disappointed by my purchase. I didn’t realize why it sounded so different from the “Rock of Ages” and “Photograph” I had heard on MTV. (poor production, derivative riffs, monotonous singing yell) I still listened to it every day though. It was MINE. My brother seemed to have gotten the better deal. His cassette contained “I Wanna Rock” and “We’re Not Gonna Take It.” I had heard these songs and liked them because I understood their simple message and they Rawked. I can say honestly that neither of these albums is an exemplary choice or worthy of pride, but they were the first two albums we had picked ourselves and we listened to them like they were “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” and “Daydream Nation” combined. They constituted my tentative first steps into what would become my main music for the next few years, dumb Heavy Metal, and also set in motion my love for music collecting. By that time, my family had moved to a rented house a few blocks away from our first apartment.
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07.06.2006, 12:58 PM | #39 |
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The day we moved something happened which forever altered my life, and helped to guide it to this very day, both musically and personally. My mother, brother and I were being driven to the new house in a van that belonged to a friend of my father. When we arrived and opened the side door of the van I saw a lady and two kids coming out of the house next door. The kids were our age and they ran up to my brother. I didn’t understand what was happening. It turns out that, since my brother had to be held back a year due to his poor English, he had been in first grade first with one of the kids and then with his younger brother. Their names are Claudio and Jaime, and they are my best friends to this day. Actually, they are my brothers.
For the next few years our collective musical interests coalesced. Together we had a small collection of music that we would listen to endlessly, and play air guitar, air drums, and air bass to (although none of us at the time understood what the difference was between the bass and the guitar). One of our favorite albums to listen to was Quiet Riot’s ”Metal Health.” Quiet Riot had videos that were especially suited to pre-pubescent boy’s minds. They were all in-your-face and the songs were simple and loud. Quiet Riot was my favorite band, until I hit 5th grade. I couldn’t get enough of them. When I was in 5th grade a guy in my class would bring in Van Halen’s “1984” and Motley Crue’s “Shout at the Devil.” I immediately wanted to buy these two albums because the music teacher wouldn’t play them. The Van Halen album had an angel smoking a cigarette and the Motley Crue album was just plain satanic looking, with its giant pentagram and devil imagery. It was all quite cheesy and tongue-in-cheek but to a 10 year old it looked DAMN COOL! “Shout at the Devil” became my favorite album then. I would play it constantly. My favorite songs on it were the title track, “Looks that Kill,” and “Helter Skelter,” which, at the time, I didn’t know was a Beatle’s cover. It all seemed so damn important to me. Having grown up Episcopalian I had none of the automatic aversion to the whole Satan, hell, devil thing that the Roman Catholics talk about so much. The Episcopalians never talked much of Hell, or Satan. Good for them! Too much attention is given to the bit players in religions. The funny thing was that, with my father being an Episcopal priest, I was never chastised for listening to the music I chose. They were very open to letting me buy what I wanted. I think they knew that no band or music would make me become a bad kid. I would do that on my own. The Van Halen record, “1984”, would also become very important to me. I would rock out and remember the hilarious videos for “Jump,” “Panama” and “Hot For Teacher.” Especially “Hot for Teacher.” That video had kids that were my age in it, and a hot-assed teacher nonetheless! While I would eventually lose interest in the records I owned then, I would actually grow to love “1984” more and more. It was the first record that I owned where I liked the non-single songs as much as the singles. I am forgetting what was then my all-time favorite album. Def Leppard’s “Pyromania” was on my parent’s turntable constantly. I played that sucker religiously and loved every second. I got to admit I really liked the whole “set stuff on fire” thing. When you listen to music at a young age, everything seems so meaningful. I would analyze the lyrics, the cover, the liner notes, the pictures of the band, the label on the actual L.P., all to see if I could gain any insight into the bands I liked. I used to know the names of every single member of all the bands whose records I owned. I knew the song lists, and the brands of guitars or drums the musicians used. Whenever I would buy a new album would pore over the sleeve or the cassette cover looking for whatever the band had decided to put there for me. I don’t do that anymore. Maybe it is because I buy more records now or maybe it is because I realized that the stuff written on the album matters very little when it comes to the enjoyment of the music itself. Maybe I am just lazy. I used to love astounding the other kids who were into music with my knowledge of song titles, musician’s names, and the like. I still do that but it gets harder since the number of people who have heard of the bands I listen to now have shrunk to just one. His name is Michael, and even he sometimes goes, “Bozart? You made that one up. That’s not a band.”
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07.06.2006, 01:06 PM | #40 |
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I wrote that a while ago, years ago. I am going to keep on it and see if I can make a lengthy thing out of it.
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