Sunday, May 19, 2013

Shakespeare Essay in The Impercipient Lecture Series (ed. Jennifer Moxley & Steven Evans)


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I always loved the look of the Impercipient Lecture Series. Jennifer Moxley and Steve Evans were two of the best editors I ever had. This essay, an excerpt from a much longer chapter, on Much Ado About Nothing, was later republished in my book, Spin Cycle. But this is how it originally looked with the sidebars and footnotes, in 1997.

















Sunday, May 5, 2013

Death of a Ladies Man (excerpt from a piece on Leonard Cohen): for Sylvie Simmons


“I Left A Woman Waiting,” from Death of a Ladies Man: Leonard Cohen (and Phil Spector)----for Sylvie Simmons

After I recorded the “Famous Blue Raincoat” video for PianoVan.Com, I started revisiting the Death of a Ladies’ Man album again for the first time since I performed it with The Greg Ashley Band at Big Sur for Sylvie Simmons’ book party on Leonard Cohen’s 78th birthday. I find myself especially drawn to “I Left A Woman Waiting.”

Of all the tracks on this Cohen album, “I Left A Woman Waiting” is the closest to a gentle love song, especially a middle-aged, “mature” love between weather-beaten veterans of “the war between a man and a woman” (as a song on New Skin For The Old Ceremony puts it). While it’s not as emotionally deep as the one song on the album that makes me cry liberating tears on this record, “Paper-Thin Hotel,” it takes the idealist static constancy of “True Love Leaves No Traces” and puts it in time just enough to make it more convincing to older lovers, or at least to me.

While many of he lyrics of “True Love Leaves No Traces,” had been published as a poem in his early book, The Spice Box Of The Earth (when Cohen was still in his 20s and had not yet released any albums), an earlier version of “I Left A Woman Waiting,” had appeared in Cohen’s 1972 book, The Energy Of Slaves:

I left a woman waiting
I met her sometime later
She said, Your eyes are dead
What happened to you, lover

And since she spoke the truth to me
I tried to answer truly
Whatever happened to my eyes
Happened to your beauty

O go to sleep my faithful wife
I told her rather cruelly
Whatever happened to my eyes
Happened to your beauty

The dynamic is typically “sexist” in the sense that the male is judged on his “eyes” (his desire and lust) while the woman is judged by her “beauty” (when of course, it could go the other way as well). In the Death of A Ladies Man version, however, the third verse and its self-proclaimed cruel speaker disappear and the battle of the sexes in the first two verses becomes a nearly symmetrical tender moment of foreplay. The first verse and second verse go together like plastic surgery, Lasik Surgery, contact lenses and Viagra.

In many ways, the song is the opposite of that, and presents an alternative to plastic surgery and contact lenses (or even leaving your “faithful wife” for a younger woman). The revised third verse gets at this better:

We took ourselves to someone’s room
And there we fell together
Quick as dogs and truly dear were we
And free as running water, free as running water
Free as running water, free as you and me
That’s the way it’s got to be, lover
That’s the way it’s got to be, my lover

This does not feel like mere suspension of tensions to me, a mere brief truce in a war that will never end, but points at a way for both men and women to be honest about what happens when both the burning male (female) youthful lust & beauty fades away: for better and worse, it’s an intimacy song, the most intimate song on Death of A Ladies Man. Spector’s musical setting, with the economical contrast between the talky chorus and the pretty, almost lullaby-like chorus (the musical setting of the now absent words ‘go to sleep’) transforms the poem into a moment of transcendence that sounds like it might be much better sex than one could ever have with a younger lover.

I don’t know if Spector built the melody around the pre-existing poem, or Cohen “set” his poem to a melody Spector was looking for, but as Sylvie Simmons points out in her biography, there was an interesting symbiosis in Cohen and Spector’s collaboration during their fairly harmonious songwriting stage (before Spector went nuts in the recording studio), As Cohen himself puts it in an interview: “When it was just the two of us, it was a really agreeable time” (I’m Your Man, Simmons, pg. 308).

Whatever else one may say about this song (it’s certainly not one of Cohen’s “major compositions”), it’s not a song about loss like so many of his best ones are, and since I have enough of those—whether my own or covers---in my own repertoire, I’m looking for something different; though “Paper Thin Hotel” and “Alexandra Leaving” (with Sharon Robinson) are songs I may want to include in my solo set in the future.

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Image(s)

My interest in Death of A Ladies Man was always more in the companion book, Death of a Lady’s Man—which is even more of a lost classic than the album. For Greg (Ashley), it was the image of “Dirty Old (or at least middle-aged) Man,” that attracted him to this Leonard Cohen album in particular; for me, it was the structured confusion of the book---but maybe the two aren’t all that different. It occurred to me that the horror I feel on seeing my “Famous Blue Raincoat” video (even though I’m happy with the audio performance, as a tribute to Philly band Ruin’s cover of the song) and being aware that to some I am perceived as the “dirty old man,” or hippy or punk (compounded by my homelessness) may not be all that different from the horror that Cohen himself felt almost immediately after recording Death Of A Ladies Man. In fact, that’s one of the reasons he scrambled to rewrite the book---to save him from the album whose image he had let get away from him.

As Cohen puts it, “I think it’s too loud, too aggressive. The arrangements got in my way. I wasn’t able to convey the meaning of the songs” (Simmons, 307). And, more tellingly, “It was just one of those periods where my chops were impaired and I wasn’t in the right kind of condition to resist Phil’s very strong influence on the record and eventual takeover of the record. I’d lost control of my family, of my work and life, and it was a very, very, dark period. I was flipped out at the time and [Spector] was certainly flipped out.” (Simmons, 303). Of course, this may also be the reason why one of the best songs on the album is about learning that “love was beyond [his] control,” and even why the album has become a favorite among many.
As Steven Machat says, “The record was two drunks being no different than any other boys, making an album about picking up girls and getting laid. It was the most honest album Leonard Cohen has ever made.”

Ultimately, it was this feeling of self-loathing that spurred Cohen on more than Phil Spector’s disrespect to him as a person and artist. Cohen knew he really had no one to blame for letting his image get away from his own carefully guarded (some would say, “control freak”) artistic tendencies. He, too, was going through a time in his life where he felt he lost everything, and the book Death of a Lady’s Man tried to bring some of this back. While I find the book a tremendous success, and maybe his best book, it certainly, like the album, didn’t win over new fans at the time.

He took certain tendencies that had been in the early work as far as they could go for him in the book and album, and maybe that’s the only consolation. That’s certainly the only consolation I can take from my “Famous Blue Raincoat” video; creating the record of that moment may allow me to never do it again. That might be the main point of “keeping some kind of record anyway,”—to exteriorize something, and hate (or even love) what you see, and move on.

It’s no excuse that in Leonard Cohen’s next book, Book Of Mercy, he moves beyond what David Berman would call “the lawless rooms where you finally lost your health,” to a desperate confessional collection of prayers and devotions to a God who is one with the Law. While I wouldn’t call Book Of Mercy nearly the aesthetic triumph Death of a Lady’s Man is, and at times even the speaker doesn’t seem convinced that the Law he is praying devotions to is really anything more than an “empty signifier,” at least it allows him to still his mind a little, and out of this came perhaps his most celebrated song, “Hallelujah.”

As for me, I still haven’t entirely given up on the idea of recording and performing a “psychedelic swirly-edgy funk punk dance trance” musical setting (VU, Neu, Flipper, Fall, for instance) to the “prose poem” pieces in Leonard Cohen’s book. This idea occurred before Greg told me he wanted to record the album, and I thought it would be a perfect complement to it, as well my “Leonard Cohen As Moshpit” chapter—but it’s not the burning priority it was when I was rehearsing these pieces with a band featuring bassist Rachel Thoele (Flipper, Frightwig) that could pull this stuff off in 2009/2010.

In the meantime, here’s some videos of Cohen covers:


“Don’t Go Home With Your Hard On,”
Greg Ashley Band @ Big Sur, September 21, 2012

“Iodine” & “Paper-Thin Hotel,” (excerpts)
Greg Ashley & Chris Stroffolino @ Hotel Utah; July 7, 2012:

 “Famous Blue Raincoat”
Chris Stroffolino/Piano Van @ Griffith Park, LA (March 2013):


Chris Stroffolino

"Don't Go Home With Your Hard-On," Greg Ashley Band (Leonard Cohen cover)

“Old home movie footage underlines how much this contrasts with the life Leonard gave up for poetry.” Sylvie Simmons, I'm Your Man: new Leonard Cohen bio (2012)

Saturday, May 4, 2013

My First National Poetry "Hit" (1990) (for Maxine Chernoff & Paul Hoover)


To Keep Meaning From Emerging From The Mesh

We meet like shoelaces
Knotted by a need that likes to act nonchalant
Staring its object straight in the threat I mean face…

Work and play, too, become
Another dualism abstracted from a unified sum
Like digging beneath the tulip
To find its roots in rain…

Work’s like sunglasses
Somebody punched a lens out of:
We see both ways simultaneously.
The parallel lines my double vision saw
Have finally met in a blur…

Some day’s work’s hell
But I’d have to deal with people anyway
The way desire dogs me around
And meaning’s some scummy moralist, witty alien,
Poking his head out from the marriage bed
Charming us to keep our mind off his dissection.

Living, or dying?
Just ‘cause we know the sand’s
Being poured down the drain
Doesn’t mean it doesn’t feel immense,
And cannot, like running, be run away from.

So whether or not you get the job
Has much to do with romance
And whether or not you get to seduce
Depends on whether a job’s the excuse.

New American Writing, 1990; republished in Oops (Pavement Saw Press, 1994)

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Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Hanging Downtown: The Replacements (Piano Van Cover)

Filmed at Von's Hollywood by Jeff Feuerzeig


The Feuerzeig Video Covers Project. Part 3: Hanging Downtown (The Replacements)


I’ll start with an “accidental (quasi-) Limerick”—

The Westerbergian Sublime
Can be summed up in the line
“I suppose your guess
is more or less
Probably as bad as mine.”

There’s a Confidence-By-Default in that line from “Nevermind” (from Pleased To Meet Me). It’s basically the opposite of the “First Thought, Best Thought” dictum so beloved of the Beat Generation. You could even call it The VIA NEGATIVA. Starting from the basic “life sucks,” or “life is shit,” premise, there’s the realization that two negatives might make a third, worse, negative—but they could, maybe just maybe, become a positive. This Westerbergian Sublime (an anti-essentialist essentialism or essentialist anti-essentialism) is evident in so many of the classic mid-80s Replacements songs, but it’s also there even on their 1981 debut, Sorry Mom, I Forgot To Take Out The Trash. Like much punk, Paul puts himself into relationship with a voice of authority, but often the authority is a woman and is respected more than the mere male authorities---“Sorry, Ma” isn’t just a joke.


Take “Customer,” for instance. I’m shy. I’m terribly shy, but since I have to be “nothing but a customer” anyway, I certainly don’t want to be “Lost In The Supermarket.” (The Replacements hated when critics would compare them to The Clash, preferring, say, The Faces and Small Faces), and this cashier is kinda kute, I can at least be theatrical about my inability to make a genuine first move in a pick-up bar (especially, as long as got this sonic force of a rocking band that needs a vocal/verbal image face to complement Bob Stinson’s Lead-guitar face).

This studio recording provides a replacement to video culture (years before they finally broke down and created the seminal ‘nose thumbing,’ yet poignant, “Bastards Of Young” video (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fl9KQ1Mub6Q) by creating its own very theatrical verbal/musical “moving picture”

How about cigarettes?   CHORD CHORD CHORD
I'll take sugarless             CHORD CHORD CHORD
You sell Wombats?        I’m a Customer…..

The call and response between vocal and guitar-lead band could paint a picture of the singer on a rampage back and forth through the store to get these items, but that interpretation is a stretch (though no more than 95% of music videos). It’s probably more accurate to see the beloved cashier rushing around trying to find the Sugarless, The Cigarettes, and The Wombats. He’s not just asking her (though “What’s On Sale?” is delivered with a sexy-coy come-on wink), he’s ordering her around, making her grab all these different items (which he may not even buy!), pushing the envelope of the Customer role so he can feel, uh, Empowered! (I wonder if she ends up calling him “Chief” or “Boss,” well, save that for the answer song).

Nonetheless, in terms of sexual politics, in much of Westerberg, male is gendered consumer and female is gendered producer—which for many women, especially in the 80s, was very refreshing. Most men, even in the underground scene, were still clinging to macho-breadwinner postures without any substance to back them up; here was a male could admit women’s productive power (like a cross between feminism and the blues that understands the woman as “replacement” for G-d—or, more accurately, G-d as replacement for woman).

Still, it’s certainly not a very efficient way to seduce or shop (although the song is very efficient, a nugget, a gem). If there are people behind him in line, they must be getting pissed off (unless they’re too busy moshing). And this is where the hope that the strictly non-verbal aspects of the music can somehow compensate for the social transgression implied in the words, like Jonathan Richman taking his band to the Government Center to “make the secretaries feel better when they put the stamps on the letters” (what I call the Westerbergian Sublime is also very evident on The Modern Lovers’ first album, especially the “confidence-by-default” in the quasi-revenge fantasy of “I’m Straight).”

In “Customer,” Westerberg has it both ways: shy and cocky. It’s a scene more than a story, and there are lots of scene-songs on the first two (“melodic hardcore”) Replacement disks. “Goddamn Job,” is a scene. Or two frames in a short graphic novel with the phrases “I need a goddamn job” and “I need a goddamn girl” in word balloons. It’s even more minimal than “Customer,” but expressed with such urgent conviction that the listener may be convinced that these are the only two basic needs (and maybe they are, if not “bacon and cigarettes” or pictures on the fridge that are never filled with food)—in the consumerist America of the 80s. And then it hits me---well, at least he had a goddamn band!

In “Hanging Downtown,” things don’t get swell until 3AM. Westerberg’s timing is way off. So was mine (college all-nighters). Via Negativa? Another Variation on The Westerbergian Sublime: The singer doesn’t want to do anything, but doesn’t want to do nothing either. If nowhere is home, everywhere could be? Maybe just maybe! My needs tell me that. What the hell: let’s go downtown by default!

At least it’s semi-peopled with pimps and whores and liquor stores, some lonely loner stick figures out of a Beckett set-design by Giacometti. This may make Westerberg feel less lonely than he would in a crowd (unless it’s the ward where he’s the doctor, or front-man) There is a lot of nothing to see, and this “nothing” in the Westerberg sublime could come straight out of Alan Watts!

Despite the quasi-Ashberian heightened ambivalences of the Westerbergian sublime, he still does fall from it, like the boy on “The Ledge,” or at least into mere inversion: “one foot in the door/the other foot in the gutter/the sweet smell you adore/I think I’d rather smother”---is he talking to a goddamn job, like record label (as the cover image to Pleased To Meet Me suggests) or to a woman? It’s probably either at different times, but it changes the meaning of those words.

But crucial to Westerberg is the pain, the cry, in the voice even when he uses the most aggressive vox he can summon. And, yes, all these songs tell us as much about 1980s culture, and even for many “our 2013 culture,” as it does about Westerberg as person and persona. “Customer” was the 1980s, before many cashiers were replaced by machines, or just less cashiers were hired, which caused longer lines and thus more strained relations between workers and customers (as anyone familiar with 19th century social philosophy will understand, alienating the laborer—who is also a consumer—from him or herself)

“Hanging Downtown” feels as true in Downtown Oakland, San Francisco, Philly and the Skid Rowkio (Skid Row meets Little Tokyo) section of LA today (and probably The Twin Cities as well; the only possible exception in the USA is NYC) as it was in the 80s. BLEAK; oh and I forgot to mention the police presence (they’re in other early Westerberg songs); you probably got to be the 20 something kid Westerberg was then to navigate it—not that he really navigates it outside the studio. It’s a short moving picture. At least you get a two-minute song out of it.

The Piano Van version is 2:29, and performed at Von’s Hollywood around 9PM—about as much as a 40-something disabled guy can muster, but I needed to spread the word of The Westerbergian sublime…and appeal to Jeff Feuerzeig’s love of “lost classics” from the 80s, like Richard Hell’s “Time.” And Sorry, Ma is definitely more of an underrated lost classic than Let It Be and Tim are—and, besides, it’s true I, desperately…..need…..a goddamn…..job! (I mean woman!)

Here’s the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSIPdIw-DcY