Monday, March 17, 2003

I Thought I Thaw...

The other night, as I stood in the dark backyard, having a piss against the fence by the compost heap, I became aware of a low rushing sound at some distance away. As I tuned out the sound of nearby traffic, the sound clarified like an image coming into focus. I realized I could hear the sound of water flowing.

Well, obviously.

But this was the sound of the river, a half-mile away. The river was running again, and the pond behind it—across which I had walked in heavy boots just weeks ago, over ice a yard thick. Now there's open water, the waterfall is doing just that, and God help us, it is indeed Spring, or near as dammit.

(Hm? Why was I—? Oh, you know: marking territory. Keeps the coyotes away.)
(What's that? There are no coyotes in this neck of the woods? Well, there you go, then: it's obviously working.)

Friday, March 14, 2003

Singing the Goodbye Song

Actress Lynne Thigpen has died at 54. Cause of death is as yet unknown: she was not known to be in ill health.

She was a veteran of stage, screen, and television. You may not have known her name, but you'd know her if you saw her—a compact, no-nonsense black woman who could use her booming voice to either dramatic or comic effect, always eager for a bit of self-parody.

Lately, she was a regular on CBS's The District. But if you had kids in the late 1990s—if you lived in the States and had cable—you probably know her as the voice of a puppet moon, singing with a guy in a bear suit.

As the voice of Luna on Bear in the Big Blue House, Thigpen went soft, in the best possible way: her tone was wise, gentle, eternally patient. Like a force of nature. Like, well, the Moon. It takes one hell of an actress to be able to not only capture the essence of the Moon in performance, but to be the definitive Moon. If the Moon should ever speak, I have no doubt it will sound just like Lynne Thigpen.

So go to the attic tonight, gaze out at her face, just a few days before she comes on full, and sing one last round of The Goodbye Song.

Sunday, March 09, 2003

The Trouble With Normal


This is an article I wrote for the Barbelith zine that was, for one reason or another, never published: had it been, it would've looked something like this...

The Trouble With Normal: Bruce Cockburn's Political Pop

He's had his moments in the limelight, but he's always had more on his mind than fame. Bruce Cockburn spent the Reagan Era singing about Liberation Theology, dirty wars, and the perils of globalization. Jack Fear gives a fresh listen to the finest political pop you've never heard.
The small fact that he's refused to alter his surname to the homophonic "Coburn" evidences a certain unwillingness to compromise: but musician and world traveler Bruce Cockburn's contrarian integrity goes beyond a willingness to repeat oneself for the benefit of hotel clerks and lazy journalists. In his thirty-year, 25-album career, Bruce Cockburn has laid bare his heart—and his politics—in songs of shivery tenderness and searing anger.

Emerging from Toronto in the singer-songwriter boom of the early 1970s, Cockburn gained some small renown for his drawling, unaffected vocals and virtuosic guitar-playing. But as the 1980s approached and the institutionalized wimpery of Dan Fogelberg and Jesse Winchester was ground beneath the boot-heels of Punk, Cockburn plugged in, allied himself with producer/keyboardist Jon Goldsmith, and set about reinventing himself as a pop star.

He tried his best, even though he cut an admittedly odd figure on American Bandstand—a snaggletoothed, bespectacled hulk, his many earrings bristling out like a peacock's fan. But, with typical contrary stubbornness, Cockburn spent the height of the Reagan Eighties composing paeans to the Sandinistas and vilifying the "big, bad scary" United States—and reaped the whirlwind for it: somebody forgot to tell Bruce Cockburn that pop stars are supposed to be, well... popular. The relative obscurity that resulted is undeserved. In driving folk-rock songs splashed with jazz, funk, and (occasionally) C&W, Cockburn has delivered his lyrical broadsides with passion and—rarer still—wit.

cockburn

Most of Cockburn's work falls into four broad songwriting voices (although the lines, as we'll see, often blur):

Travelogue Bruce: Pop music is generally brusque when it comes to atmosphere, but Cockburn will spend a verse or two talking about the birds, or the moon, or light reflected on water. At first you wonder when he's going to get to the point: then you realize that the atmosphere is the point. An avid traveller since dropping out of high school and busking around Europe in the mid-1960s, Cockburn has developed into pop's foremost scene-painter, with a journalist's eye for the telling detail—finding small moments that speak volumes in songs like "Tibetan Side of Town," (from the album Big Circumstance) or this verse from "Berlin Tonight" (1986's World of Wonders), written when the divided city was still at "the front line of the last gasp," when perestroika was just starting to ring the death knells for the USSR...

From the top of a solitary tree like the one on the flag of Lebanon
Unblinking eye of hawk follows traffic on the autobahn
Tank convoy winds down smokestack valley
Proud chemical pennants wave against the sky
Turret gunner laughs when I throw up my hands
I'm all glasses and grins under my "commie" fur hat

Cockburn isn't just narrating his vacation slides here: ramble though he may, he never, ever wanders.

Mystic Bruce: Underpinning nearly everything Cockburn writes, in varying degrees of explicitness, is a sense of immanence, of greater meaning behind mundane events. Though occasionally given to bald pronouncements like "God won't be reduced to an ideology," ("Gospel of Bondage," from Big Circumstance) he's more likely to find the divine in his city scenes, as an extension of Transcendentalist nature writing, as in the title cut from World of Wonders:

There's a rainbow shining in a bead of spittle
Falling diamonds in rattling rain
Light flexed on moving muscle
I stand here dazzled with my heart in flames
That's Blake's "world in a grain of sand" with horn charts and a funky bass.

Romantic Bruce: Cockburn's songs of lust and loneliness tend towards the ecstatic, tinged with pungently sensuous imagery: "There are nine billion mysteries in the naked body," he sings on "One Of The Best Ones" (1991's Nothing But a Burning Light), or these lines from the brooding "Sahara Gold" (1984's Stealing Fire):

Wet limbs striped with silver light
locked together at the center of the night
And your hair tumbles down like Sahara gold

Night bloom filling up the room
With the salt and musk of lovers' rich perfume
And your hair tumbles down like Sahara gold


Political Bruce: From the start, Cockburn (like many folkies) dabbled in a fashionable soft-focus leftism, from the vague antiwar sentiment of the 1979 single "Wondering Where The Lions Are" through early songs like "Stolen Land," which decried the treatment of Native Americans (a subject he's revisited, notably on ...Burning Light's "Indian Wars"). But as he travelled more widely, his causes grew more specific and his anger acquired a keener edge. Mid-80s sojourns to Central America fueled his outrage over US foreign policy, inspiring a string of blistering songs like "People See Through You" (World Of Wonders) and the ferocious "If I Had A Rocket Launcher" (Stealing Fire). Cockburn never peddles easy answers, though: though the climactic final chorus of "Rocket Launcher" ("...some son-of-a-bitch would die!") caused some controversy on its release, the song is largely a comment on how senseless violence simply begets more of the same.

Cockburn's politics have proved prescient: he was writing dispatches from Chiapas as early as 1983, and in 1986, when anti-globalization barely registered as an organized movement, his vitriolic masterpiece "Call It Democracy" (with its "IMF, dirty MF" hook) was the first single for World Of Wonders: poignant, funny (the "MF" is for "motherfucker," of course), and catchy as hell, it deserves to be an anthem.

Cockburn has recorded prolifically, and with mixed results. The production on many of his records sounds rather dated (the synth-heavy World Of Wonders, in particular, has not aged well); the righteousness occasionally grows shrill, and the mysticism woolly; the travel journals sometimes cry out for an editor. But as Cockburn settles into middle age, the missteps have grown fewer: recent records have shaded razor-sharp couplets with a pensive, acoustic sound, as on the exquisite "Pacing The Cage," from 1996's Charity Of Night:

I've proven who I am so many times
The magnetic strip's worn thin
And each time I was someone else
And every one was taken in

And so Bruce Cockburn has come full circle: the one-time would-be pop star has reinvented himself as a troubadour. With the zeitgeist calling out for the grand gesture—and pop radio crammed with songs painted in crude strokes—Bruce Cockburn, contrarian that he is, is sketching intimate moments, integrating his themes into a singular voice that speaks of both the inner and outer life.

All song lyrics written by Bruce Cockburn and published and copyrighted by Golden Mountain Music (SOCAN). Lyrics reproduced here for purposes of review and study only.

Links
The Cockburn Project (lyrics, biography, annotations and more)
Information on Liberation Theology
Buy the CD Stealing Fire Amazon US | Amazon UK
Buy the CD Anything Anytime Anywhere: Singles 1979-2002 Amazon US | Amazon UK
Buy the CD Live Amazon US | Amazon UK

Wednesday, March 05, 2003

20th Century Motherfucker

You'd think this bastard would have no defenders left. You'd be wrong: human beings will let you down every time.

Hope you're frying good, you son of a bitch.

Friday, February 14, 2003

We Also Serve

Lots of folks going to antiwar demos this weekend.

Be safe. Be lucky. I'm praying for you. For all of us.

He Makes the Sign of the Teaspoon, She Makes the Sign of the Wave

It's been a long time since I watched a teen movie, and Blue Crush made clear to me how the rules of the genre have changed (it's been even longer since I was a teen, but let's not get into that now...).

Blue Crush was an odd mix of the calculated and the slapdash. It was edited to within an inch of its life, with slo-mo and replays and multiple angles; the camera work was staggering, bringing you right into the heart of the waves; he colors had been tricked-out in a digital tweak; the omnipresent music was superbly calculated—mostly hip-hop tracks remaking or prominently sampling big hits of the 70s and 80s, which is a genius move: the parents seeing this can nod knowingly along with the kids.

But the acting was loose and improvisational—characters stepped on each other's lines, or repeated themselves, or muttered banalities or non-sequiturs: even when they made big speeches, it seemed less like acting per se than like, well, people making speeches to each other—speeches they've rehearsed a dozen times in their heads. All in all, it resembled nothing so much as a Very Special Episode of Road Rules. And that, right there, brings home the influence of MTV on Yoof Kulcha—not the videos themselves (I'm not even sure MTV still shows videos...), but its "reality" programming. The Real World has become the soap opera: the quasi-documentary, not the conventional drama has become the teen movie's model for presenting itself.

Once I figured that out, I was able to see that this was a pretty good movie. True, it didn't exactly demystify its subject—if possible, I know less about surfing now than I did before watching the film—but it did convey the visceral thrill and the danger of it. And its politics were interesting—not so much its gender politics (though there was the tiniest hint of a lesbian subtext to the Michelle Rodriguez character and the way she lived vicariously through the protagonista), but its class politics: it's set in a resort town, on the wrong side of the service economy, and is unflinching about the poverty, the complete lack of prospects, the resentment and parochialism that breed when your fate is either to serve the tourists directly (as a chambermaid) or indirectly (as "local color"). American movies are usually so reluctant to tackle class issues at all that it was doubly refreshing to see this played out in a Youth Entertainment.

It's probably also the first teen movie to be based on an article by Susan Orlean, so, you know, there's that.

About Michelle Rodriguez, though: I found her disappointing in this movie. She came to her first role, in the interesting little movie Girlfight, completely untrained as an actress but with a slouchy physicality that burned off the screen. Now, several films into her career, she's still playing the same card, bringing to her roles an undeniable presence but very little craft. Apparently, developing her chops as an actress is not high on her list of priorities, and she's choosing roles that don't require her to stretch her instrument. This strikes me as a shame: many actors do eventually slip into self-parody, of course, but it's distressing to see it happen to someone so early in her career.

Wednesday, February 12, 2003

Jesus Gonna Be There


Man requests Jesus for legal help
GAINESVILLE, Missouri (AP) -- A Missouri man is calling on a higher power for his legal representation.

Richard John Adams requested Jesus Christ as his trial attorney during a hearing Wednesday on tampering charges.

Adams, who described himself as a patriot and a Christian, says lawyers are "devils" who are trying to undermine the Constitution.

Ozark County Circuit Judge John Moody told Adams the only person who can speak for him in the courtroom is a lawful attorney.

Where's Christ for the Defense when we need Him?

Fineman Films presents: CHRIST FOR THE DEFENSE

Monday, February 10, 2003

This weekend, I learned...

...that a baby with a fever of 103.3ļ has precisely the same heat signature as clean laundry fresh from the dryer.

Sunday, February 09, 2003

Late For The Sky


Oh, man, where do I start?

Like many of you, perhaps, I spent last Saturday afternoon torn by sobs. That didn't last long, though: by nightfall anger seemed a much better option, anger at the mush-mouthed orthodoxies I was hearing from all sides of the shitstorm that followed, anger against the voices of hagiography on one extreme and of nullification on the other; anger that I could not articulate until days later, when this thread on the Underground squeezed it out of me.

Angry. Angry because I have not got it in me to be sad anymore. The Boston Globe (which, if it wishes to be taken seriously as the world-class newspaper it so insists it is, really should start archiving all its articles online) ran an article with this subhead: How much more can America take? Can't speak for America as a whole, obviously, but I'm pretty fucking fed up, myself.

And it's gotten even uglier as the backlash has set in. I've been frankly horrified by the reactions of some people who really ought to know better—equating the simple human decency to grieve with "quelling free speech in the name of Amerikkkan imperialism," drawing smug, simplistic apples-and-asteroids equivalencies ("How many meals for starving children could have been bought with the immense cost of a shuttle launch?", as if it were an either/or decision), suggesting that it was somehow okay for the astronauts to die because they knew the risks and were well-paid (glad to see the old double standard still at work, guys, if handily inverted to value the lives of the rich less than those of the poor)—every horrible cliché smear against progressive politics and thinking ever concocted by the Right, given bleating, braying life. Ann Coulter couldn't have written this stuff.

In the meantime, I still grieve. For lives lost. For opportunities wasted. For the betrayal of a future of possibilities for a present of expediencies. I grieve. And that's about all I'm gonna say about that.

(Except to say thank you to Dan for the shout-out, and for the new tagline. I don't usually engage in this sort of interblog upsucking, but if you haven't mounted the face of die Venusberg lately, you're really missing out: the once-and-future Tannhauser is in crackin' form lately.)

Saturday, February 01, 2003

Ten Unmediated Pleasures

  1. a wet shave, a process like archaeology, and the bay rum's slap and tickle in the aftermath

  2. turning a corner to surprise a pheasant as it crosses the road

  3. duelling with two-foot-long icicles

  4. a sky black with crows

  5. standing at the range, whisking hot cocoa to foam over open flame

  6. beads—a sandalwood rosary—smooth against my fingertips.

  7. a hot shower on a cold morning

  8. four milk-teeth, a crooked staircase in the baby's grin

  9. trees blurring past the toboggan in squeals of vertigo and delight

  10. woodsmoke and its promises