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Me and a lorikeet (February 24, 2008)

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Jeremy's journal

It must have been a long time before men thought of giving a common name to the manifold objects of their senses, and of placing themselves in opposition to them.

Novalis


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Sunday, March third, 2013

🦋 Bowing and scraping

Was not able to hook up with John this weekend for a Dress Rehearsal Rags session... I tried taping some of my fiddle practice. Pretty pleased with the results.

See what you think -- it is a pretty free-associative groove spinning off from some traditional fiddle tunes.

posted afternoon of March third, 2013: Respond
➳ More posts about Fiddling

Saturday, March second, 2013

🦋 Still life with El arte de la resurrección

posted evening of March second, 2013: Respond
➳ More posts about The Art of Resurrection

🦋 Happy Birthday, Robyn!

He celebrated 60 years in style at the Village Underground last night.

Here he is singing about seafood with Morris and Kimberley and other heavy friends; and about new formations.

Got my tix for The Venus 3's April show at Webster Hall!

posted afternoon of March second, 2013: 1 response
➳ More posts about Birthdays

Wednesday, February 27th, 2013

The narrator himself is just the author,
it's a shorthand, see,
unclothes himself seductively
and cryptically
and hands to you
his heart

posted evening of February 27th, 2013: 1 response
➳ More posts about Poetry

Sunday, February 24th, 2013

🦋 Let's listen to Mountain Station

So I'm hereby formalizing what's been going on for the past couple of weeks -- Every time John and I practice this year I want to tape it and upload some highlights to you tube...

This week's session was a lot of fun, although the placement of the tripod and the lighting arrangement could both have been a little, even a lot, better. A rockin jam -- the best part was when John forgot to bring our gig book -- and I'm getting better at editing the tape.

The title track is from Kimberley Rew's wonderful Tunnel into Summer.

Set listing-

Prodigal Son (take 2)
tuning
Stop Breakin Down
Arms of Love (Robyn Hitchcock)
Harvest Home
My Bonnie jam in D
Little Ditches (Mike Cross)
The Sailor's Hornpipe
tuning
Simple Pleasures (Kimberley Rew)

posted morning of February 24th, 2013: 2 responses
➳ More posts about Mountain Station

Thursday, February 14th, 2013

posted evening of February 14th, 2013: Respond
➳ More posts about Pretty Pictures

Sunday, February 10th, 2013

🦋 Lonesome Nickel

In later years music historians would speak of the Lonesome Nickel tapes as the birthplace of the Mountain Station sound.



Lonesome Nickel:


Circle be unbroken -- traditional
Green Eyes -- Coldplay
The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll -- Bob Dylan
conversation
"ten little monkeys" jam
500 Miles -- traditional
God-damn Lonely Love -- Drive-by Truckers
Lonesome Nickel -- Jeremy Osner
Lonesome Nickel 2:

That's Alright, Mama
Clean Break
Lonesome Nickel

posted afternoon of February 10th, 2013: 6 responses
➳ More posts about Music

Saturday, February 9th, 2013

🦋 What lovely resonance!

Have never played with the capo so high up the neck before -- it is unexpectedly liberating.

posted afternoon of February 9th, 2013: Respond
➳ More posts about Guitar

🦋 Jade Dragon Mountain

Everybody should go listen to this song by Steve Espinola. It is Steve's rendering of the Suicide Lovers' funerary scroll from the Dongba religion:
According to a 1955 assessment of the Library's manuscripts for the Bulletin of the Institute of Ethnology Academia Sinica (Taipei, Taiwan, 1958) by art historian Li Lin-Ts'an, "The Yunnan Province was famous for Yunnan pines. Their wood, after being set on fire, liberates a soot which is easy to collect. This soot, when mixed with some glue and water, forms an excellent ink. During winter, the leisure season for farmers, the [Naxi] sorcerers, without any farming work to do, sat down by their fireplace and using a bamboo pen dipped it into their ink while humming to themselves, and they began to write a Sacred Book for pleasure or for some special festival usage."

Mr. Li wrote: "The books for sacrifices to those who committed suicide from frustrated love are the most romantic and poetic of the [Naxi] people. The [Naxi] youth all believe that at the upper part of the Jade Dragon Mountain, just under the white snow peaks, there is a wonderful land, with thousands of kinds of flowers covering its fields, called 'The Kingdom of the Suicide Lovers.' If any couple, who because of love frustration, climb to this wonderful place and kill themselves, they will never part from each other again and will keep their youth and beauty forever, and will be happy always."

Mr. Li reported that 440 of the volumes in the Library's collection were for funeral ceremonies. "This great number is due to the fact that the [Naxi] people look upon death as an affair of great moment." The Naxis believe the soul goes immediately to hell. One of the Dongbas' primary duties is to lead souls out of hell. Another 74 volumes were used for divination, wrote Li. "The [Naxi] people are a tribe whose members like divination above all other things."

posted morning of February 9th, 2013: Respond

Monday, February 4th, 2013

🦋 Good King Krazy

I picked up Fantagraphics' Krazy and Ignatz (b/w Sunday pages, 1933-34) yesterday evening -- reading along on my commute and I am amazed to see this strip, which I feel just sure is a direct inspiration for Dr. Seuss' Good King Looie story. (Or I will think that absent any evidence to the contrary anyway.)

posted evening of February 4th, 2013: 2 responses
➳ More posts about Comix

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