Thursday, 25 January 2018

Mark E Smith - Poet and satirist of legendary post punk band the Fall R.i.P (5/3/57 - 24/1/17)


Mark E Smith the inimitable poet and frontman of  seminal cult post punk band the Fall , has died aged 60 after an extended period of ill health. Out of all the bands that emerged from mid-70's punk rock the Fall I have always continued to follow.
He formed the Fall after seeing the Sex Pistols at their famous concert at the lesser Free Trade Hall, in June 1976, He assembled the Fall in his home town of Prestwich, citing not only raw energy of the Pistols as influences but also krautrock, art rock ,the Velvet Underground , Captain Beefheart , Smith also had a fondness  for rockabilly and garage rock.
Smith would be the constant mainstay of the band for more than 40 years, that would see constant lineup changes, as his fellow band members fell by the wayside, often not voluntarily. Throughout the groups tenure, Smith  performed with a total of 66 band members.He was known as someone difficult to work with, because of his notoriously confrontational attitude,cantakerous, tyrannical  personality,  acidic tone and deadpan black humour, which was often fueled by copious amounts of alcohol.Not one who cared a fig about commercial success, the Fall still managed to release a total of 31 studio albums and 32 live albums, each one for me has a uniqueness and charm about them.His work simply defied categorisation, combining  elements of satire, social commentary and sheer cunning wordplay that continue to dazzle.
To me he truly was a legend. Smith was born in the north of Manchester, Broughton, Salford, England in 1957 to a working class family, his dad was a plumber. He passed his 11-plus and went to Stand Grammar school, but quit at 16 and took a job as a shipping clerk on Salford docks. At night , he took on a A-level class in literature and numbered Kurt Vonnegut, Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, HP Lovecraft, Phillip K Dick, JG Ballard, Arthur Machen , George Orwell among his favourite authors. Indeed his band was named after Albert Camus novel ' La Chute.' He took an interest in politics, and after a spell as a Labour supporter, went even further left and joined the SWP (The Socialist Workers Party) This did not seem to stop him from sprouting from time rather conservative and illiberal views.
 An outsider, and even though not commercially succesful, his band still band still managed to score high in the independent charts with such  songs as  'Totally Wired' 'How I managed to write Elastic Man ' 'kicker conspiracy' and a wonderful cover of 60's classic ' There's a ghost in  my house.''
The extensive range of albums released under the fall moniker , to numerous to mention, started in 1979 with ' Live at the Witch Trials'  and ' Dragnet.'  leading to 1982's ' Hex induction hour.' 1983's ' Perverted by language.'  1984's ' Bend Sinister' ,1988's ' I am kurious oranj'  94's ' Middle class revolt,' 99's ' The Marshall Suite.'  2006's ' Fall Heads Roll' 2008's ' Imperial Wax Solvent,' to last years ' New facts emerge.'
A central  legendary figure in the Manchester music scene, he was a crucial lyricist who delivered each line with a last-call bluster punctuated with an oratorial certainty, surreal word play  and the use of blistering social commentary, delivered in a deadpan style of talk-rap singing which was instantly identifiable. but much imitated , an influence on many. his bands tense, often abrasive sound would be a key inspiration to bands like Sonic Youth, Pavement, LCD Soundsystem,  to my own country,  Wales's  very own Datblygu.
 Pushing against those that described his work as ' stream of consciousness.' Smith once said "' I put a lot  of hard sweat into them. I think about them. They have an inner logic to me, so I don'r really care who understands them or not." Aross lyrics he directed his ire at everything that rattled him from Nazis, British politicians, magazine editors, music critics  to name a few.Like British poets across the ages , he seemed to understand from an early age that his lifes mission was to create a body of work that would outlive him.
"When I'm dead and gone." he uttered in an early song called "Psychic Dance Hall." my vibrations will live on, in vibes  on vinyl through the years people will dance to my waves."
His career and that of his band would be forever associated with the DJ, the late John Peel , the Fall recorded an aming 24 radio sessions between 1978 and 2004.His first solo album ' The Post Nearly Man," appeared in 1998, and his second in 2002 ' Pander! Pander!Panzer! he also managed throughout his extensive career to find time to collaborate with many  other musicians beyond the remits of the Fall.
Married three times, he  first tied the knot in 1983, to Brix Sith who instantly became a band member. After their divorce he was then briefly married to Safron Prior , who had run the Fall's fan club, befoe meting Elena Poulou in 2000, who sunseguently became the Fall's keyboardist in 2002.
In 2005, BBC4 aired the documentary The Fall ; The Wonderful and Frightening World of Mark E Smith. Three years later, he published an autobiagraphy called ' Renegade; The Lives and Tales of Mark E Smith, written in collaboation with Austin Collins. Around this time I had the personal pleasure to meet him in Hay on Wye, and despite his reputation, he came across to me as a warm hearted kind, generous soul. In later years he would often perform in a wheelchair because of his ill health.
A true inspiration to me, such an iconic force,  his music has been the soundtrack to my life since I first became aware of the Fall, when 13, in 1980, and though rather cliched to say this, there will never be another Mark E Smith , so sharp, clever, uncompromising . unique, a guiding light of stubborn fierce independence, and untouchably cool. Losing also Ursula Le Guin  also this week , its been a hard week for me as I've lost two of my cultural heroes. R. I. P. Mark E Smith.  Currently playing loudly in my home, long live the mighty Fall.

The frightening and wonderful world of the Fall



The Fall  - Lost in music



The Fall - Jerusalem



The Fall - How I wrote ' Elastic man!



The Fall - Totally wired


The Fall - Blindness



The Fall - Eat Y'r self fitter


t
The Fall - Before the Moon falls



The Fall - The Hip Priest



Wednesday, 24 January 2018

Ursula K. Le Guin ( 21/10/29 - 22/1/18) -" We will need writers who rememember freedom"


American literary legend Ursula K. Le Guin who wrote science fiction, fantasy, essays and poetry,who died peacefully on Monday in her Portland, Oregan home at the age of 88 years young.A quote of hers is pemanently embedded on this blog. Here is a link to an earlier post I wrote about her https://teifidancer-teifidancer.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/ursula-k-le-guin-b211029-dispossessed.html
Pehaps best known for her book ' The Left Hand of Darkness' a science fiction novel published in 1969 set in the Hainish universe, Le Guin often used science fiction to transgress normalised conceptions of gender and sexuality.Not content to limit her incisive examinations of society to fiction and allegory, Le Guin spoke and wrote frequently about contemporary politics. She often described fantasy and fiction as a tool for social change, a way of imagining the world not as it  but as it should be. Her criticisms in both fiction and beyond it , often focused on social inequality and the unsustainability of capitalism .
Her novel  ' The Dispossessed' was a thought experiment on how an anarchist society would work. The novel  begins with the journey of the physicist Shevek from the planet Anarres, which was settled by anarchists a century and a half previously, to the planet Urras, a carcature of our own world in the 1970's.


In alternating chapters, it tells the story of Shevek's life on Anarres and its discontents, leading up to his decision to leave, and his adventures on Urras and how grotesque a society based on  power and profit seems in his eyes.
A truly mesmerising read, given us an idea of how a possible anarchist society could function and, more importantly, the moral foundations of such  a society. Anarres is flawd and falls short of its ideas of individual freedom, mutual aid and voluntary coperation, but is still infinitely preferable to the money- hungry, power-hungry nation of Urreas. 
In short my sort of Utopia. It is a society without government, laws, police, courts, corporations, money, salaries, profit, organised religion or private property. Its  people speak an artificial language, a kind of benign Orwellian Newspeak, which lacks words for concepts such as 'debt or 'winner,'
Le Guin would write more than 20 novels, 100 short stories, seven essay collections and more than a dozen books of poetry. Despite many of her protaganists  being men, she always considered herself a feminist, but was always confident in questioning societal conditioning and how it impacted the human perspective on gender and sexuality. 
In 2010 at the age of 81 she arrived in the digital age and started a blog

http://www.ursulakleguin.com/Blog2017.html

and in December published a collection of essays based on her posts called ' No time to spare.' 

http://www.ursulakleguin.com/Index-NoTimeToSpare.html 

It included everything from moving reflections on her cat to wry observations about coming to tems with her advancing age, " If I'm ninety and believe I'm forty five, I'm headed for a very bad time trying to get out of the bathtub."
On November 19, 2014, Le Guin was awarded the National Book Foundation's Medal  for Distinguished Contribution to American letters

 http://www.nationalbook.org/amerletters_2014_uleguin.html#.Wmfeh6hl_IU

This is one of literature's most prestigious honors, recognizing individuals who have made an exceptional impact on the United States' literary heritage. Most in science fiction would extend that to include an exceptional effect on the entire genre. 

" We lIve in capitalism, its power seems inescapable - but then, so did the divine right of kings," she said. "any human power can be resisted and changed  by human beings, resistance and change often begin  in art. Very often in our art, the art of words."

Ursula k.Le Guin Rest in Power you will be deeply missed, may you be reborn on Anarres. .



Here is the transcript of her talk:

Thank you Neil (Gaiman, who introduced her) , and to the givers of this beautiful award, my thanks from the heart. My family, my agent, editors, know that my being here is their doing as well as mine, and that the beautiful reward is theirs as much as mine. And I rejoice at accepting it for, and sharing it with, all the writers who were excluded from literature for so long, my fellow authors of fantasy and science fiction - writers of the imagination, who for the last 50 years watched the beautiful awards go to the so-called realists.
I think hard times are coming when we will be wanting the voices of writers who can see alternatives to how we live now and can see through our fear-stricken society and its obsessive technologies to other ways of being, and even imagine some real grounds for hope. We will need writers who can remember freedom. Poets, visionaries, the realists of a larger reality.
Right now, I think we need writers who know the difference between the production of a market commodity and the practice of an art. Developing written material to suit sales strategies in order to maximize corporate profit and advertising revenue is not quite the same thing as responsible book publishing or authorship. [ad-lib response to audience: ] Thank you, brave applauders.
Yet I see sales departments given control over editorial. I see my own publishers in a silly panic of ignorance and greed, charging public libraries for an ebook six or seven times more than they charge customers. We just saw a profiteer try to punish a publisher for disobedience and writers threatened by corporate fatwa, and I see a lot of us - the producers who write the books, and make the books - accepting this. Letting commodity profiteers sell us like deodorant, and tell us what to publish and what to write. [ad-lib response to audience: ] Well, I love you too, darling.
Books, you know, they're not just commodities. The profit motive often is in conflict with the aims of art. We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings. Resistance and change often begin in art, and very often in our art - the art of words.
I have had a long career and a good one. In good company. Now here, at the end of it, I really don't want to watch American literature get sold down the river. We who live by writing and publishing want - and should demand - our fair share of the proceeds. But the name of our beautiful reward is not profit.
Its name is freedom. Thank you.

" Only in silence the word,
only in dark the light
only in dying life
bright the hawks flight
on the empty sky."

- The Creation of Ea, Ursula K. Le Guin

Tuesday, 23 January 2018

Dreams Money Can Buy - Hans Richter


Hans Richter, painter, graphic artist was one  of the  original members of the Dada movement,  he made  this film in 1947, and it won the best original contribution to the progress of cinematography at the Biennale in Venice.
Richter's goal was to bring the avant -garde out of the museum and into the movie house and the end result in my opinion is utterly fantastic.It's more Surrealist than Dada and deals with the world of dreams. Joe, a young man down on his luck, as he wonders how to pay his rent,  discovers he has the power to create dreams,("if you can look inside yourself, you can look inside anyone!") and sets up a business selling them to others.
The film is broken down into episodes, with  collaborations from a varied cast including  Man Ray, Max Ernst, Marcel Duchamp, Darius Mihaud, Alexander Calder, blues singer Josh White and notorious bisexual torch singer (and black widow suspect) Libby Holman.
The film itself turns playful, hypnotic, satirical, charming and nightmarish, but the musical backing, is simply amazing.
The film was produced by Kenneth MacPherson and Peggy Guggenheim.

Dada as the Antidote to war and Capitalism :-

http://www.wilderutopia.com/performance/film/dada-as-the-antidote-to-war-and-capitalism/

More on Richter and his films here :-

http://thesilverscreensurfer.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/the-dada-films-of-hans-richter.html




Saturday, 20 January 2018

Anger is an energy


( after Carillion)

They try to control us
the old enemy deep outside,
their words are dust
time to brush them away.
The first five years
are always the hardest a headline cries
rubbing salt into milky eyes.
Time to shake, the sleep away
and catch the fire by its throat,
as they feed us lies day after day
hiding our pain behind their laughter.
Sky is angry, wind comes down
launches its bullets, this should be enough,
we are not surrounded yet
we will not be trampled down,
we are still here unrestrained
this is our season too, our time of discontent.
Capitalism is not working
look at the crimes across the globe,
ideological theft for the few, not the many
yet they still make us pay for their greed,
with systematic theft and robbery out of control
don't go to them crawling back on your knees,
remember anger is our energy too
live with fierce passion, take back what's yours.


https://iamnotasilentpoet.wordpress.com/2018/01/20/anger-is-an-energy-by-dave-rendle/

Friday, 19 January 2018

moonshadow


In the distance, high above
her silvery light is shed,
through the shadows of trees
gaps of branches all outspread,
golden moon keeps shining
releasing brilliant light,
far away from our artificial borders
stops the earth from spinning faster,
caressing the land with her powers
beyond the darkness of this land, never cowers,
like an old lover listens to our thoughts
faithful to the end, consumes our desires
lets honour and adore her guiding energy
a shimmering beauty touching our souls.

Tuesday, 16 January 2018

Know your Parasites


Never ever trust the Conservatives, they would eat us alive if they could. They are cowardly,  and absolutely devoid of compassion. Used to think they were bad under Margaret Thatcher, but the latest lot seem even more ruthless and cruel.
When Theresa May first entered No 10, she promised to represent the vulnerable, and in her own words to " think not for the powerful, but you."But this has proved to be a lie as she and her fellow parasites  continue to  strip our country of its  valuable assets, tearing peoples lives apart, this festering  party  delivering conscious cruelty to the downtrodden and underprivileged, delivering nastiness and unfairness to all in their paths. We cannot afford to remain apathetic to their actions or remain silent. I don't believe there is a cure to them, they simply have no moral compass, far worse than bloodsucking leeches. They are simply parasites of the worst  order feeding  merrily on their victims. A landmark study has linked Tory austerity to  120,000 deaths. responsible for callous economic murder  https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/tory-austerity-deaths-study-report-people-die-social-care-government-policy-a8057306.html
They simply lack the capacity to care about the health of the nation, as they destroy our N H.S,  they will continue to infect, suck on all the essential services and resources we depend on, . The only way we to deal with theses these parasites is to destroy them, because they will never stop until there is nothing left to feast on. We have to get rid of them, the Tories must be  eradicated, as soon as possible, for the many not the few.

Sunday, 14 January 2018

Gruff Rhys - A Design for life


Libraries gave us power
Then work came and made us free
What price now for a shallow piece of dignity
We don't talk about love we only want to get drunk
And we are not allowed to spend
As we are told that this is the end
A design for life
A design for life
A design for life
A design for life
I wish I had a bottle
Right here in my pretty face to wear the scars
To show from where I came
We don't talk about love we only want to get drunk
And we are not allowed to spend
As we are told that this is the end
A design for life
A design for life
A design for life
A design for life

Originally created by the Manic Street Preachers, but personally such a beautiful version.

The threat to public libraries is very real, keep defending, this blog would not have existed without them

Songwriters ;James Bradfield/ Sean Moore/ Nicholas Jones