Library Late


camus-remixLast Friday, the day after Albert Camus’ 100th birthday, the Scandinavian video art duo ‘Orchid Bite’ performed a piece entitled Library Late at the Atlas Theater on H Street.

And it was amazing.

The centerpiece was long stretches of an audio recording of Camus reading from his first published novel, L’etranger. While there were short passages that were written on the screen in English, as is subtitling the narration, that was infrequent and, what’s more, my limited French was enough to tell me that often the English passages were not those Camus was reading aloud at that moment.

It didn’t so much matter that I could not truly understand what Camus was saying, because the magic was the fact of this voice coming from across time, his voice speaking to us from the grave. Especially since, hundredth birthday aside, Camus has been having a bit of a ‘moment’ these last few years. For me, it started when I read the late Tony Judt’s The Burden of Responsibility: Blum, Camus, Aron, and the French Twentieth Century. But even then, I was catching on to something already fecund in the zeitgeist. Camus was back, baby.

Orchid Bite mixed… not so much music, as sounds and fragments. A piece of a song vaguely familiar, but mostly just evocative tones, mixed with images that directed the mind to Camus’ origins and the setting of the novel: Algeria.

Not an Algeria of camels and orientalist exoticism, but beaches and roads and houses and trains. A place where people lived.

And, again, behind it all, the firm, ghostly, and insistent voice of Camus calling us to… ?

I don’t know.

Weekend Reading – Birth Of The Book


Mallarme and the book. (P.S. – I love Mallarme. I got very offended when, listening to a performance of Debussy’s score for Mallarme’s L’apre midi d’un faun, one of the musicians, a guitarist, the piece having been arranged for guitar and flute, said no one cared about the poem anymore. Then, we saw an exhibit of materials from the Ballet Russe at the National Gallery of Art. Of course, one of their famous pieces, staying none other than Ninjinsky, was that same Debussy piece. So Mallarme is awesome. Read his poetry.)

Proust’s simple plots.

Scholar, theorist, deconstructionist, conman. But that last one doesn’t actually have much to do with the validity of the first three. Even if it does make him icky.

Sixty years, man. Sixty years. Rock on, Dissent!

Weekend Reading – It’s Happening Again


The book is dead. Again. Apparently.

Coffee cars.

DC has a whole lot o’ awesome jazz clubs (Twins Jazz is my personal favorite).

Friday Reading – Arm Yourself With Pens & Books


Fight them with words.

Let the betting begin on the upcoming recipient for the Nobel Prize for Literature!

Classical music’s Vatican II.

#Occupy as a spiritual/religious practice.

Midweek Staff Meeting – Why Ask Why


Why study English? Because it’s awesome.

The Great Oakland Hipster Flight of 2013.

Bach’s great love letter to Christ.

Kickstart for indie bookstores.

Midweek Staff Meeting – The End Of Randomness


So long, serendipity.

On Peter Sloterdijk.

As a matter of fact, I was at the first Lollapalooza.

Weekend Reading – Publish Or Perish


Helping protect the intellectual labors of new PhDs.

Poetry’s public.

Abramson’s dichotomies.

it’s piffle.

Midweek Staff Meeting – Another One Bites The Dust


iPod sound quality sucks.

Attacking outsider art.

The lost art of memorizing poetry.

Tom Friedman is a demented, Ayn Rand wannabe with a veneer pseudo-liberalism.

Who Wants To Live Forever


So, Brian Blessed’s King of the Hawkpeople in Flash Gordon cries out, ‘Who wants to live forever!’

Queen wrote the music for Flash Gordon.

Queen also wrote the music for The Highlander, including the song Who Wants to Live Forever.

Just some trivia for you. Anyway… Flash! He’ll save every one of us!

Just Eric Clapton’s Guitar Work From The Beatles’ ‘While My Guiter Gently Weeps’