>Fleet Foxes, Black Cab Seesions, and Daniel Johnston

>So I missed the local concert a couple of days ago of Fleet Foxes. But once upon a time they rode around in a black British cab and recorded this:

And just for giggles, if you like British black cab music, check out these other sessions (in fact, you must):

Finally, the incomparable Daniel Johnston:

In case you hadn’t guessed already, there’s a whole lot more of those black cab sessions on line.

"Life at War" by Denise Levertov, 1966


Photograph by Chick Harrity, 1973, Vietnam

The disasters numb within us
caught in the chest, rolling
in the brain like pebbles. The feeling
resembles lumps of raw dough

weighing down a child’s stomach on baking day.
Or Rilke said it, ‘My heart. . .
Could I say of it, it overflows
with bitterness . . . but no, as though

its contents were simply balled into
formless lumps, thus
do I carry it about.’
The same war

continues.
We have breathed the grits of it in, all our lives,
our lungs are pocked with it,
the mucous membrane of our dreams
coated with it, the imagination
filmed over with the gray filth of it:

the knowledge that humankind,

delicate Man, whose flesh
responds to a caress, whose eyes
are flowers that perceive the stars,

whose music excels the music of birds,
whose laughter matches the laughter of dogs,
whose understanding manifests designs
fairer than the spider’s most intricate web,

still turns without surprise, with mere regret
to the scheduled breaking open of breasts whose milk
runs out over the entrails of still-alive babies,
transformation of witnessing eyes to pulp-fragments,
implosion of skinned penises into carcass-gulleys.

We are the humans, men who can make;
whose language imagines mercy,
lovingkindness we have believed one another
mirrored forms of a God we felt as good—

who do these acts, who convince ourselves
it is necessary; these acts are done
to our own flesh; burned human flesh
is smelling in Vietnam as I write.

Yes, this is the knowledge that jostles for space
in our bodies along with all we
go on knowing of joy, of love;

our nerve filaments twitch with its presence
day and night,
nothing we say has not the husky phlegm of it in the saying,
nothing we do has the quickness, the sureness,
the deep intelligence living at peace would have.


I post this because this is National Poetry Month.

This poem was featured on Poetry Off the Shelf. You can hear Levertov read the poem, and a discussion about it here.

Thoughts: This poems stabs deep, as great poetry should do much of the time. We see the past too often as a presented and mediated set of ideas, truncated and accepted and reaffirmed. But the war against the Vietnamese people was little different than the current wars against the Iraqi and Afghan peoples, or the war against the Palestinians. They are all raw and ugly. They are all about the human urge for power and security and control. This poem, from 1966, reminds me that the same war continues today.

>Zbigniew Herbert

>Marta Kuczyńska (age 15) presents “The Seventh Angel” by Zbigniew Herbert:

http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docid=1605299038165530167&hl=en&fs=true

Seamus Heaney reads Zbigniew Herbert:

http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docid=-4526079571665894544&hl=en&fs=true

I post this because this is National Poetry Month.

>Queen Anne

>

In the dusk
of a beautiful day
I amble across Queen Anne
on the way to the car.

The night is falling in the most pleasant way
and I know that winter is over.

There will be wine when I get back,
and the excellence of good friends
welcoming us into their orbit
for a couple days.

I have my camera ready
but the light is fading
and I am in a hurry.
What can a picture convey anyway
of this half light
or my uncollected thoughts
and the longings they contain?

I could sail the ocean
or climb to mountain tops
and not see the world
in all its finer lights
as I will when I return
from my errand.

>it’s quite, uh, possible the revolution will not be televised, or entirely coherent… um

>Why do I love this video below? I love how it is so odd (from an American perspective): A famous French philosopher gives a lecture into which a young “revolutionary” storms, creates a scene (and a mess), makes some kind of protest statement, and then the philosopher responds. All along the audience watches and occasionally applauds. It’s like a piece of performance art staged for the chic intellectual cohort.

http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docid=2536229376237496553&hl=en&fs=true

The philosopher is Jacques Lacan. The year is 1972 (not really surprising).

Only in France is all I have to say. And yet, sometimes I wish I lived in a country that would take philosophy, and its philosophers, as seriously. On the other hand, for all his unintended humor, the young radical in this clip may be the more honest of the two.

>Allen Ginsberg reads

>Here is a clip of Allen Ginsberg reading one of his poems, Kraj Majales (King of May). Sitting next to him is Neal Cassady, inspiration for the character Dean Moriarty in Jack Kerouac’s novel On the Road.

I believe they were at the famous City Lights bookstore in San Fransisco. Years ago, when I was on a business trip to the bay area, I drove into San Fran just to find City Lights. I was surprised by how small and quaint it is. But the walls practically ooze beat coolness.

I post this because this is National Poetry Month.

>In the stillness

>wire slipping gently
in the grooves of his crook’d fingers
the dynamite slides slowly
down the well shaft

under the oaks among the tansy
number three has been drying out
now it’s only a trickle
and brackish

we stand beside the half-ton
and feel the silent shattering
through our feet

the dappled tangle of forest
draws us to the moment
and in the stillness
we have felt the earth move
just a little

>Jacques Ellul and The Treachery of Technology

>

>Derek Walcott reads Tiepolo’s Hound

>Poet Derek Walcott, 1992 Nobel Prize winner in literature, reads his poem Tiepolo’s Hound. I have to say, this is stunning.

I post this because this is National Poetry Month.

>Žižek!

>If there is a rock star in the world of contemporary philosophy it might be Slavoj Žižek. But I don’t even know what that means, except that, unlike most philosophers, he seems to engender a kind of rapture amongst his followers. Reviews of his books on Amazon are rarely uniform. They always included raves and pans. There is little neutrality. I think this should be the case with every philosopher.

Here is the documentary Žižek! (2005). Watch it an you will agree with me, there is no one like Žižek.

http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docid=-6597950490592250178&hl=en&fs=true

Okay, I am new to Žižek. I’ve seen his name for a while, but I don’t know his work as much as would like. From what little I do know about him I think he and I are in very different camps ideologically. The video above, though, is one of the more fascinating things I’ve seen lately. What a fascinating character he is.

I have no interest in addressing anything within the video per se, but I am fascinated that a philosopher shows up at a speaking engagement and even the standing room is overflowing. This is an extremely rare kind of happening in the U.S. – maybe with someone like Noam Chomsky, but even then not for his talks on linguistics as much as those on U.S. foreign policy. I also love that he has a sense of humor and love movies.