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  • June 20, 2005

    Read more: untitled post 3437
  • June 17, 2005

    milk shit/shit milk

    While examining dildos and butt plugs and books on the female orgasm at Adam and Eve’s, I met a colon cleansing salesman. He claimed a lot for his kit. The price was steep. The colon was an obsession growing up.…

    Read more: milk shit/shit milk
  • June 17, 2005

    The New GutCult

    A message from Aaron McCollough: Dear Kind Hearted Readers of GutCult: I’m pleased to announce the release of the Summer 2005 issue of GutCult (www.gutcult.com). I hope you will come by and spend some of your psychic capital on getting…

    Read more: The New GutCult
  • June 14, 2005

    The New Shampoo

    This just in from Del Ray Cross: SHAMPOO issue 24, the FIVE YEAR ANNIVERSARY EXTRAVAGANZA, is now hot off the shelf and ready for your shower. Rinse and repeat and repeat with poetry by Alli Warren, Amanda Laughtland, Anselm Berrigan,…

    Read more: The New Shampoo
  • June 13, 2005

    WHAT IS POLYURETHANE FOAM?

    Polyurethane vs. Ester 1. Greater stability in humid environments. Dampness promotes ester foam disintegration. 2. The different raw materials used to manufacture Polyurethane foam usually cost less than those used to manufacture Ester foam. 3. Ester foam’s rough, scratchy surface…

    Read more: WHAT IS POLYURETHANE FOAM?
  • June 10, 2005

    “In-between”

    I know one of the arguments against avant garde (and post-avant) poetics is when it’s disjointed or fragmented or mucks with syntax it’s all surface or the poet is a misunderstood genius. I’ve thought it was a silly argument. I…

    Read more: “In-between”
  • June 7, 2005

    which romantic poet are you?

    You are Percy Bysshe Shelley! Famous for yourdreamy abstraction and your quirky verse,you’re the model “sensitive poet.” Avegetarian socialist with great personal charmand a definite way with the love poem, youremain an idol for female readers. There aredozens of cute…

    Read more: which romantic poet are you?
  • June 7, 2005

    The long theme

    Doing a three step process with a new ms (with the tentative title of Narcoleptic Lawn). 1st step: Moleskin notes. Phrasings. collages, diagrams, and quotes 2nd step: organizing the notes, fragments into tentative lines on an old PC laptop 3rd…

    Read more: The long theme
  • May 31, 2005

    electronic ink

    Electronic ink is a new material that will have far-reaching impact on how society receives its information. Electronic ink is a proprietary material that is processed into a film for integration into electronic displays. Although revolutionary in concept, electronic ink…

    Read more: electronic ink
  • May 23, 2005

    Still spinning

    Three Cheers for Patrick Hero(n), The Internationalist, Carrboro parks and Recreation, Open Eye Cafe etc. So amazing people at THE poetry Festival. Philip Nikolayev was funny and gorgeous. Lyric in an interesting and strange way. It was really nice to…

    Read more: Still spinning
  • May 19, 2005

    Carrboro Poetry Festival

    Here’s a nice little write-up about the NC poetry scene by Ken Rumble. Although there is an inaccurate lumping of: Black Mountain poets, Randell Jarrell, UNC Greensboro’s MFA program, Jargon Society. I think the rhetorical strategy of the piece is…

    Read more: Carrboro Poetry Festival
  • May 14, 2005

    Spectacle Versus Performance Art?

    When does the use of advertising language, for example, simply reinforce the advertising culture? Or, to go back a bit, did our man Andy W. challenge the status of low/high art via soup cans etc. or reinforce those distinctions? Performance…

    Read more: Spectacle Versus Performance Art?
  • May 14, 2005

    anyone want to hang out in South Devon, England?

    This program looks amazing. Just what interests me: writing in the context of the arts (mixed media, performance etc.) check out the quicktime video: Performance Writing

    Read more: anyone want to hang out in South Devon, England?
  • May 13, 2005

    disappearing ETC. . .

    Reading some great essays on Tom Raworth (Removed for Further Study from The Gig) and some really amazing performance/sound/shamanistic poems of Maggie O’Sullivan (Palace of Reptiles also from The Gig). Recently heard Redell Olsen on the Penn Sound site. I…

    Read more: disappearing ETC. . .
  • May 8, 2005

    History of mother’s day?

    Historians claim that the holiday of Mother’s Day emerged from the ancient festivals dedicated to mother goddess. In the ancient Greek empire, Rhea, the wife of Cronus, and mother of Gods and Goddesses, was worshipped. In Rome too, Cybele, a…

    Read more: History of mother’s day?
  • May 6, 2005

    Durham goodies

    Just got back from Durham with some goodies. Picked up: 1) Ed Dorn’s Gunslinger Book III The Winterbook (Frontier Press) 2) Rodrigo Toscano’s The Disparities (Green Integer) 3) Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s Dictee 4) Lauren Fairbanks’ Muzzle Thyself (Dalkey Archive…

    Read more: Durham goodies
  • May 2, 2005

    Nomadic dispossessions

    Before I went home to Ireland last Christmas I had a recurring dream/nightmare that Ireland had been coopted by Las Vegas. All the green fields changed into a desert of neon lights. While the dream was certainly personal in its…

    Read more: Nomadic dispossessions
  • May 1, 2005

    Why Write (part two)

    I’ve been thinking over my thoughts about why writing matters. Publication and ego boosts and smoozing are all part of it. But perhaps, at least for me, not the core. The large claims of syntactic disruption advocated by some of…

    Read more: Why Write (part two)
  • May 1, 2005

    final desert city reading (for 2005!)

    Lee Ann Brown and Carl Martin read last night to wrap the 2005 Desert City reading series. Carl Martin read first: rich sounds, density, surrealist touches, a head well squared on the body. I am was really impressed with the…

    Read more: final desert city reading (for 2005!)
  • April 29, 2005

    Ego ergo letgo my ego

    I am really fascinated by the intense relationship between Olson/Creeley and how they created an institution for the reception of their work. Not quite traditional marketing but perhaps marketing nonetheless. In thinking about why I write (poetry or whatever) I’ve…

    Read more: Ego ergo letgo my ego
  • April 27, 2005

    sausage parties

    I am reading a book right now called _Career Moves_ by Libbie Rifkin. Rifkin analyzes the making of an American Avant Garde community via Creeley, Olson, Berrigan, and Zukofsky. I am only a little ways into the book, but it…

    Read more: sausage parties
  • April 26, 2005

    input and output

    I am really amazed by the output of Clark Coolidge. I read Own Face, Alien Tatters and I just finished The Crystal Text. I loved these books so much I want to read everything Coolidge has ever written. But that’s…

    Read more: input and output
  • April 23, 2005

    Lisa Jarnot got my juices

    The soon to be knighted Sir Rumble braught Lisa Jarnot to my intro to poetry class yesterday. The class was standing room only (word got around) and most of the students were a tad shy. Lisa was friendly and intimate.…

    Read more: Lisa Jarnot got my juices
  • April 21, 2005

    judge wars

    My friend Adam sent me this link (we need more of this reporting): Bedtime Story

    Read more: judge wars
  • April 19, 2005

    Another Ireland by Robert Archambeau

    This review really hit it for me. I recently read Maurice Scully’s _Livelihood_ and Geofrey Squires _Untitled and Other Poems_ is on deck (I love that baseball term. It is baseball, right?) I think this is from The Nortre Dame…

    Read more: Another Ireland by Robert Archambeau
  • April 17, 2005

    The Importance of Source Texts?

    I’ve been reading Poetry On & Off The Page by Marjorie Perloff and I am really enjoying it. Perloff is so lucid and engaging. One of the essays in her book, The Music of Verbal Space, really got me thinking…

    Read more: The Importance of Source Texts?
  • April 15, 2005

    Carrboro International Poetry Festival

    Announcing the Second Carrboro (International) Poetry Festival May 21 & 22 The 2005 Carrboro Poetry Festival will feature readings from 40 poets during the two day event Saturday May 21 and Sunday May 22. Hundreds of people attended the first…

    Read more: Carrboro International Poetry Festival
  • April 15, 2005

    s+7

    some interesting experiments with s+7 in my intro to poetry class: intro to poetry

    Read more: s+7
  • April 14, 2005

    How can we sleep when the beds are burning?

    Lester sent a great link to a music video celebrating the wonders of America. Check it out: America You Must Go ON Lester also sent this quote: “Of course we welcome, and I welcome, dissent and debate,” [CondosleezaRice] added.  “I…

    Read more: How can we sleep when the beds are burning?
  • April 11, 2005

    A very ambitious new journal coming soon

    This hot new journal sounds very very promising. A focused eclectic (much needed as opposed to so many unfocused eclectics like Fence etc.) Here’s the notice (and open call) from editor Tony Tost: Here’s an open call I’m hoping to…

    Read more: A very ambitious new journal coming soon
  • April 11, 2005

    stella and cod

    some really fresh cod and cold Stella last night at Fishbones. A nice little birthday celebration with some Greensboro buddies. My good friend Dan got me a gift certificate to Gate City Noise and returned from AWP with some books…

    Read more: stella and cod
  • April 8, 2005

    Poetry on the Radio (Sunday 4PM-6PM PST)

    The second airing of My Vocabulary this Sunday. Last week’s show was great. Some wonderful Robert Creeley poems and tributes. Check it out this Sunday. Here’s the message from one of the hosts Matthew Shindell: This Sunday on My Vocabulary…

    Read more: Poetry on the Radio (Sunday 4PM-6PM PST)
  • April 6, 2005

    I got an ipod

    Wow. Tiffany surprised me with a 20gb ipod for my birthday today. I’ve never used an ipod. It’s charging right now. Can’t wait to load it up with some tunes (and maybe a few pics). Those things are bloody expensive.…

    Read more: I got an ipod
  • April 5, 2005

    Alien Tatters

    so I am turning 31 tomorrow. it’s a strange number. the only significance being 10 years older than 21 (the age of drinking in the U.S.). In other news, I am fully enjoying Alien Tatters by Clark Coolidge. I tried…

    Read more: Alien Tatters
  • April 1, 2005

    banned by the feds

    Patrick Heron sent this link to the Lucipo folks recently. A really well done music video. Here’s the synopsis: Protesting U.S. foreign policy, the Norwegian rap group Gatas Parlament created this video entitled “Kill Him Now.” Under pressure from the…

    Read more: banned by the feds
  • April 1, 2005

    Robert Creeley

    re-read _Pieces_ last night and it moved me greatly. There’s so much packed into the book. Philosophical meditation on the “I” and death and the world body. This book really enacts the old “form is never more than an extension…

    Read more: Robert Creeley
  • April 1, 2005

    Jessica Stockholder at Weatherspoon Art Gallery (UNCG)

    I am excited to check out Stockholder’s work at the Weatherspoon. Just came across this brief interview and it perked (peaked) my interest: Klaus Ottmann: What are the most important issues in your work? Jessica Stockholder: My work developed through…

    Read more: Jessica Stockholder at Weatherspoon Art Gallery (UNCG)
  • March 26, 2005

    still breathing

    A very intense dream the other night. don’t know if any of you out there ever feels a bit of despair over becoming wormfood, but lately the cycle has been a bit on the downside. Hence a dream to release…

    Read more: still breathing
  • March 24, 2005

    Your Black Eye

    In case you don’t know already there’s a great new mag in town. Adam Good (of DC poet fame) has organized a very impressive first issue. Editorial vision (this is not a Fence mag) check it out: YOUR BLACK EYE

    Read more: Your Black Eye
  • March 23, 2005

    Bernadette Mayer and psychosexual dreamscapes

    I am laughing and gasping and all in all envious of Mayer’s Midwinter Day. The “NY School” has so much boundless and boldness. What generation is Bernadette Mayer anyway? She mentions Ted and Alice so I am assume that’s Ted…

    Read more: Bernadette Mayer and psychosexual dreamscapes
  • March 18, 2005

    behold the home

    Read more: behold the home
  • March 18, 2005

    the gates

    Read more: the gates
  • March 18, 2005

    nose and hair and lips and teeth

    Read more: nose and hair and lips and teeth
  • March 18, 2005

    a nose

    Read more: a nose
  • March 18, 2005

    here’s to the mouth and nose

    great st. paddy’s day party last night. some pics of noses and mouths. soon I will get inside the ear.

    Read more: here’s to the mouth and nose
  • March 17, 2005

    intimate and available versus accessible

    The idea of audience and language has been on my mind for quite a few years (perhaps always but I talking consciously here). Quite a few of my professors over the years have spoken of “limiting your audience” via the…

    Read more: intimate and available versus accessible
  • March 12, 2005

    open and closed conceptions of writing

    Chris Vitiello instigated a great discussion on the Lucipo listserv. He asked about our conception of open/closed text while composing/writing. His bloghas some fascinating talk of late (audience, plays etc.) I am still thinking through this issue. But here is…

    Read more: open and closed conceptions of writing
  • March 10, 2005

    Good music. Good books.

    Just picked up Medeski Martin and Wood’s Notes From The Underground. I am liking it a lot so far. What a range! I have found music without words works best when I am writing. Or perhaps words in another language…

    Read more: Good music. Good books.
  • March 8, 2005

    thank god the switch has been flipped!

    Dry spells hurt. Resurrections are good (poetry doesn’t want immortality but ressurection) or insurrection? It’s good to plug back in. Listening to Jazz contemplating, dancing, and writing with IT. I really dig Brian Parker’s All That Jazz. Really gets me…

    Read more: thank god the switch has been flipped!
  • March 6, 2005

    British Library Sound Archive

    If you like sound (birds, dialects, Princess Elizabeth talking to children during WWII) check outThe British Library Sound Archive

    Read more: British Library Sound Archive
  • March 5, 2005

    The Bookshop is still # 1

    If you’re ever in Chapel Hill, NC you must visit The Bookshop. I have yet to find a better used bookshop for poetry. Turned in a small box of poetry books and got $86 in credit. Picked up: 1) North…

    Read more: The Bookshop is still # 1
  • March 4, 2005

    Red Juice by Hoa Nguyen

    Red Juice by Hoa Nguyen Originally uploaded by postpran. Handsome, well-made chap. Demotic and personal and eliptical and chiseled. Music that stays fresh all year. Lot’s of interesting poems about/around motherhood. I now know about FAM and I want to…

    Read more: Red Juice by Hoa Nguyen
  • March 3, 2005

    Etruscan Reader VI

    Etruscan Reader VI Originally uploaded by postpran. These Etruscan Readers really rock. I want them all!

    Read more: Etruscan Reader VI
  • March 3, 2005

    tom raworth essays

    tom raworth essays Originally uploaded by postpran. Ordering this soon from The Gig Editions.

    Read more: tom raworth essays
  • March 3, 2005

    tom raworth’s collected

    tom raworth’s collected Originally uploaded by postpran. This is my true reading project. He is in my top five poets of all time.

    Read more: tom raworth’s collected
  • March 3, 2005

    lew daly’s nemesis

    lew daly’s nemesis Originally uploaded by postpran. about to try and read this Apex of the M fella again. I’ve read parts and put it away.

    Read more: lew daly’s nemesis
  • March 3, 2005

    maggie o’sullivan’s palace of reptiles

    maggie o’sullivan’s palace of reptiles Originally uploaded by postpran. Can’t wait to get this in the mail

    Read more: maggie o’sullivan’s palace of reptiles
  • March 3, 2005

    interesting article on Ashbery from The New Republic Online

    This article makes me want to re-read some Ashbery. I often give up on him. I didn’t make it through Three Poems or Flow Chart. There is so much Ashbery. I need someone to recommend certain books. Or perhaps I…

    Read more: interesting article on Ashbery from The New Republic Online
  • February 28, 2005

    where do you stand?

    1) when is the new commodified: a) at the moment of its conception b) when air enters its lungs c) after it leaves the hospital 2) which best describes your view of the sun: a) there is nothing new under…

    Read more: where do you stand?
  • February 28, 2005

    reclaiming agency and thinking language

    PART ONE: HOW TO RECLAIM AGENCY IN LANGUAGE? 1) break the language to see what’s underneath. Allow for paradox and competing representations. 2) speak clearly and efficiently. Less clouded than political speech. less abstract than academic discourse. While both propositions…

    Read more: reclaiming agency and thinking language
  • February 23, 2005

    Kamu Brathwaite

    I taught a little Kamu Brathwaite in my intro to poetry class today. Mostly we listened to to Kamu Brathwaite on Leonard Schwartz’s Cross Cultural Poetics. I was especially fascinated in hearing words as percussive. Some notes from listening: –…

    Read more: Kamu Brathwaite
  • February 21, 2005

    upcoming exhibition in Durham

    My good friend Jake DeCola will be showing fifteen new sculptures in steel and bronze at the Durham Art Guild (120 Morris Street, Durham, NC) beginning this Thursday, February 24. The opening at the gallery is from 5-7 this Thursday.…

    Read more: upcoming exhibition in Durham
  • February 20, 2005

    chris’ fish reminded me of this

    Hugo Ball

    Read more: chris’ fish reminded me of this
  • February 20, 2005

    Cole Swensen and Joe Donahue

    Cole Swensen and Joe Donahue Originally uploaded by postpran. Joe reads to Cole from his palm (reopen pic with a photo editing program. zoom/isolate Joe’s palm to read his poem)

    Read more: Cole Swensen and Joe Donahue
  • February 20, 2005

    Laura and kathryn

    Laura and kathryn Originally uploaded by postpran. At the Blue Door. Smiles all around.

    Read more: Laura and kathryn
  • February 20, 2005

    fish projected, light, hands, more light, gardens, more light, and passionate politics

    Another very interesting reading last night at the Internationalist. Chris Vitiello projected live fish swimming on an overhead projector and slides and ran a text loop with a film projector. In other words, a collage with real live animals. He…

    Read more: fish projected, light, hands, more light, gardens, more light, and passionate politics
  • February 19, 2005

    cole swenson reading tonight

    Ken Rumble’s Desert City Reading Series kicks ass! Here’s the annoucement from Mr. Rumble: Cole Swensen & Chris Vitiello This Saturday, February 19th Please spread far and wide……… Who: Cole Swensen, Finalist for the 2004 National Book Award in Poetry…

    Read more: cole swenson reading tonight
  • February 16, 2005

    how to measure the energy of words?

    while the energy of words are difficult to measure, I do find myself drawn toward the fast-paced, high energy performances of Miles Champion, Rod Smith, and most of all Tom Raworth. I just ordered Tom Raworth’s collected poems. I am…

    Read more: how to measure the energy of words?
  • February 15, 2005

    todd and laura

    todd and laura Originally uploaded by postpran.

    Read more: todd and laura
  • February 15, 2005

    todd at the Irish monument in Philly

    todd at the Irish monument in Philly Originally uploaded by postpran.

    Read more: todd at the Irish monument in Philly
  • February 14, 2005

    unofficial Lucipo weekend readings

    1) Ken Rumble dropped Tessa Joseph on her head three times. However, he is one hell of a swing dancer. Tessa didn’t mind. It was part of the dance. 2) Ken Rumble took us well into the night sampling Philly…

    Read more: unofficial Lucipo weekend readings
  • February 12, 2005

    so this is life

    fab time last night. fun lucipo (lucifer poetics) reading at the flea last night. Todd sold some Lucifer Poetics t-shirts. 3 sets of 3 readers with two breaks after… The reading went like this, near as I can recall… After…

    Read more: so this is life
  • February 10, 2005

    verse press sold

    Publishing venture to seek profit in poetry By Sheila Farr Seattle Times art critic Charlie Wright, son of art patrons Virginia and Bagley Wright, is starting a new venture. Seattleites already know Wright as chairman of the family business: timber…

    Read more: verse press sold
  • February 7, 2005

    old stomping grounds

    Read more: old stomping grounds
  • February 7, 2005

    a little meeting for New Yorkers

    *** INSTITUTE FOR ANARCHIST STUDIES’ SOAPBOX SOCIAL *** Dear Friends and Supporters, old and new, The Institute for Anarchist Studies warmly invites you to our Soapbox Social, to be held at the al-Alwan Center for the Arts, just a stone’s…

    Read more: a little meeting for New Yorkers
  • February 1, 2005

    Antidotes for an Alibi by Amy King

    Just finished reading Antidotes for an Alibi by Amy King. Lots of surprising twists and turns that often reminded me of Tomaz Salamun. Certainly there are a lot of young poets influenced by Tomaz Salamun (just look at all those…

    Read more: Antidotes for an Alibi by Amy King
  • January 27, 2005

    person+ al+hood=?

    when people say personal in relation to poetry they often say: “the use of the personal” how can we know if the personal is using us? By this I mean to make a distinction between the personal and us. or…

    Read more: person+ al+hood=?
  • January 24, 2005

    more work in progress from campanology

    ( +speaking+) a voice reading neither film nor mirror. the lake a question. the gift a symbol. among the sparks. with thick eyes descending. fascination for fools. of dried apples. a sack in the woods. with thick eyes descending. on…

    Read more: more work in progress from campanology
  • January 23, 2005

    intro to poetry class

    a good start to the semester. Some interesting and intelligent responses to Mallarme on the class blog. check it out: intro to poetry blog

    Read more: intro to poetry class
  • January 21, 2005

    II. SHEMSHAM “It is only a few who reach the edge of the world where its mirror /image begins” (Peter O’Leary) “shem was a sham and a low sham and his lowness creeped out first via foodstuffs” the sniffers were…

    Read more: untitled post 3516
  • January 17, 2005

    great kick off to 2005

    Another great Desert City reading on Saturday. Poems by Marcos Canteli (read in Spanish then translated by Rachel Price into English). A very refreshing bestiary from Mr. Standard Schaefer. Great intros by Ken Rumble. Blue door reading/performance by Tanya Olsen.…

    Read more: great kick off to 2005
  • January 17, 2005

    Standard Schaefer and Kathryn Standard read some great bestiary poems. In this pic, he is saying some very naughty things to poor wee Kathryn. Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3518
  • January 17, 2005

    some bloody drink Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3519
  • January 17, 2005

    patrick Heron LOOK INTO MY EYES!!!!! Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3520
  • January 17, 2005

    three of the evenings readers/performers Rachel Price, Marcos Canteli, and Tanya Olson Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3521
  • January 17, 2005

    the rumble Mr. Rumble's own private disco after some great desert city and blue door readings Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3522
  • January 15, 2005

    a few more pages from Campanology

    at Belfast city hall the cold alters the relation between rain and puddle.the heart fills with hellium. voice a soggy pitch. in this place the pattern is meager but the means whistle. a three-legged dog chasing its tail.and therefore memory…

    Read more: a few more pages from Campanology
  • January 15, 2005

    of note

    I just received my copies of Backwards City Review. Some cool poems and comics (I haven’t looked at the fiction yet). Tony Tost does some complex sleep, Kent Jonhson does some strangeness with “poetry blogs in Zurich,” Kasey Mohammad does…

    Read more: of note
  • January 13, 2005

    loyalist mural in Portadown

    Most people are tired of paramilitaries. And the militaries. Us versus them everywhere. In Portadown. In Belfast. The murals are everywhere. How about a new story now.

    Read more: loyalist mural in Portadown
  • January 13, 2005

    self-expression

    I received some genuine sheepskin slippers in the mail today. I just wish it were cold around these parts. Ah well, it does make me feel cozy. It’ll be damp sheepskin most of the time with the humidy around here.…

    Read more: self-expression
  • January 9, 2005

    From Campanology

    at the Buffs in Belfast. after twenty-four years. no ark for flood. no balm for ear. (liquid filling into liquid). horses on the telly. lust of memory. and the larynx of that place. at the table his hand on my…

    Read more: From Campanology
  • January 6, 2005

    Read more: untitled post 3528
  • January 6, 2005

    An Ulster Fry

    Read more: An Ulster Fry
  • January 6, 2005

    settling back in

    Picked up some Peter Riley while I was in London. Haven’t read much of him except Untitled Sequence (a chapbook from Wild Honey Press) It’s strange being back. It took me ten years to get back to Ireland for a…

    Read more: settling back in
  • January 3, 2005

    The Spectrum of Abstraction

    Reading a little James Monaco for the class I will be teaching on film a week from today. He has a little chart. The spectrum from least abstraction to most: 1) practical: design 2)Environmental:architecture, sculpture 3) Pictoral: painting, drawing, graphics…

    Read more: The Spectrum of Abstraction
  • December 29, 2004

    my Grandad

    Read more: my Grandad
  • December 29, 2004

    me and reggie (my biological father)

    Read more: me and reggie (my biological father)
  • December 29, 2004

    back in America

    strange being back in America. Got back late last night. My body says it’s 1:38AM and I want to sleep, but must push through the jet lag. Great time in Dublin, London, and Belfast. Met my biological father (Reggie). Haven’t…

    Read more: back in America
  • December 16, 2004

    here we go . . .here we go . . .here we go… here we go o

    leaving in 1 hour to fly to Boston then on to Dublin. 5 hour layover in the Boston airport however. Printed out Silliman’s Demo and Rod Smith’s Protective Immediacy to read. Also some Art in America mags and a lots…

    Read more: here we go . . .here we go . . .here we go… here we go o
  • December 13, 2004

    matmos the civil war

    never listened to Matmos before. really working me good this morning. sounds of old elizabeth with some serious drums and creative electronica (an eerie base giving me the chills) These fellas are the cream all right: Matmos is M.C. Schmidt…

    Read more: matmos the civil war
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