Showing posts with label Hollywood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hollywood. Show all posts

Friday, February 17, 2012

Dan Fante - Fante A Memoir



This is one of the most powerful books I've read in years. An autobiographical masterpiece of brutal no-punches-pulled-confessional­-honesty that raises the bar when it comes to how far a writer will go to tell it exactly as it happened, warts and all, and in graphic detail.

Those wishing to find out more about the life of John Fante will be amply rewarded by his son's candid account of the great writer's life. But this book gives us far more than that. It awakens something somewhere deep.

Dan Fante on WorldStreams


First 10 minutes of an hour interview with author and playwright, Dan Fante on WorldStreams,
February 17, 2010. Listen to the complete interview a thttp://www.worldstreams.org/past.html

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Jailhouse Tattoo Billy Cook John Gilmore and Hard Luck, Two Fisted Writing NOT for the Faint (or Kindle)

Every picture tells a story, but this one didn't have one for me. I found it at a flea market. It is a small original glossy press photograph dated on the reverse 1951, with a brief note that the hand belonged to one William E. Cook. I never tried to find out who Mr. Cook was, nor why his apparent jail number was written in the margin of the photo. Obviously, his jailhouse tattoo had been embellished with a pen before publication to make the letters, and the drama, more clear...I knew I could find out who he was when I needed to.
Imagine my surprise a few years later coming across a different picture of THE SAME HAND in a book by John Gilmore! John Gilmore is one of those guys who seems to have been everywhere. I mean, everywhere. Name me anyone with a sleazy Hollywood connection from the last 50 years and I'll bet you Gilmore either met them at a party, slept with them or knew their murderer. He met Kerouac. He met Bettie Page. He met James Dean and may have even boffed him. He knew Hank Williams, Janis Joplin, Jack Nicholson, Dennis Hopper, Brigette Bardot, Jean Seberg and Jayne Mansfield. I can't even begin to describe him to you, but if you think James Ellroy is tough, if you thought Hunter S. Thompson had a pair, if you imagine Charles Bukowski let his hang low on the pavement and scrape it a bit with each step... get a load of Gilmore. There are a half-dozen books and I have read them all. Real books though...his work is too good and graphic for Kindle.
Gilmore's Wiki entry calls him a Gonzo Journalist. True, but you might find his official website a bit more entertaining. This is some dark stuff, my friends.
By the way, the hand gets its own page on Gilmore's site, it was indeed Billy Cook's claw and he was a no good drifter. The site has an excerpt...and leads you to Gilmore's other books. You are warned.

Anonymous Press Photograph, embellished by hand, 1951 Collection Jim Linderman
Read more at dulltooldimbulb.blogspot.com
 

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Jon Savage On Black Hole & Why The Brits Don't Own Punk

Amplify’d from thequietus.com
The Quietus - A new rock music and pop culture website
A Quietus Interview

Jon Savage On Black Hole & Why The Brits Don't Own Punk


Jamie Thomson
, November 9th, 2010 07:57

Jamie Thomson talks to Jon Savage about his new punk compilation on Domino and opening up music

With England's Dreaming, Jon Savage gave us the authoritative, benchmark account of the rise of the Sex Pistols and British punk in general – no mean feat given the vast amount of column inches and talking heads that have sought to define that era. Now, with the curation of the Black Hole: Californian Punk 1977-1980 comp, he has moved his focus to a punk explosion that by comparison, received no coverage whatsoever – particularly in the short-sighted UK music press of the time. From Crime to the Weirdos to The Germs, this was a scene no less intense than their forebears in New York or rivals across the Atlantic, but –shielded from the kind of tabloid sensationalism that followed the Pistols – arguably purer in their aesthetic and musical vision. Some, such as Black Randy and The Middle Class, would remain the preserve of bootleggers and record nerds. The Germs, however, would receive the kind of after-the-event cult adulation that saw them become the subject of a Hollywood biopic, 2008's What We Do Is Secret. Their guitarist Pat Smear would of course go on to work with Nirvana, who, according to Savage, were the band that brought US punk into the mainstream, thus bringing the whole cycle to a neat conclusion. The Quietus spoke with Savage last week in the run-up to the release of Black Hole.

What was the idea behind compilation?

Jon Savage: The whole point of doing compilations is: "Hey, I really like this stuff – maybe you will." But I first heard it all back in the day because I was a punk rock journalist working for Sounds. And I also developed connections with two magazines on the west coast, which were Search and Destroy, out of Los Angeles run by V Vale, and Slash out of Los Angeles, which was run Claude Bessy. I thought they were fabulous magazines. I was very against the idea that the Brits owned punk, and always thought that punk was an international phenomenon, and I sought to encourage that. So I got in touch with those guys, and did work for them. They didn't pay me money but they sent me local singles. I was probably one of the very few people in the UK who got these records when they came out because they weren't very well distributed. Places like Rough Trade didn't really carry them. And I never thought they got the attention they deserved, because I thought they were terrific.

Aside from the lack of distribution, why do you think they never received that acknowledgment?

JS: Well, I went to LA in 1978 and it was completely fascinating. It was my first visit to the States anyway, but with LA, you couldn't get further from Europe, and so it's really fucking weird - you feel like you're on a completely different planet. I landed there and the first thing I saw was a replicant punk looking exactly like something you'd see on the Kings Road, except she had a suntan. So that was pretty weird. And so I hung out with a few of these groups. I was like a visiting dignitary because I came from England. But I hung out with the Screamers, the Weirdos, the Dils and the Avengers, and saw some of them play and I thought they were great.

Some idiot's reviewed the album and said that I say that California bands are better then English ones. But I'd never say that, because you can't rank punk like that. It's just – is it good or not? I wasn't interested in one scene being better than the other, because that's the kind of crap that people in England were coming out with. "Oh they're just copyists!" Well, who's copying who? People still think of it all in a very cliched way. But I liked these groups because they had a swing that a lot of English groups didn't. And by the time I went there, which was late summer of 78, British punk was boring, except for very few acts, like Crass. Punk had burned itself out in the UK by then. But in LA it was like going back 18 months, and it was great. The groups were very energetic. They all had something individual to offer. They weren't complete clones – and they rocked. And opposed to British groups they had a swing — they weren't stiff. It was quite physical music; it made you want to move around rather than just jump up and down.

I always found that American punk had an intensity that wasn't equalled by the British groups.

JS: Well, I'd never say that. Obviously in the history of punk rock there's a lot of tit for tat. "Oh the Brits copied it all from New York." I've had all these arguments with Legs McNeill, who I really like by the way. And it's just not interesting to me. I was just interested in what was good. And it was just that this was different – it was Los Angeles. It was a world away from the UK – and New York! It was amusing that there was a lot of hostility to New York. 'Let's Get Rid Of New York' by The Randoms, for example. And the Yes LA compilation, which was done as an answer to the No New York record. Then the Bags recorded 'We Don't Need the English' so there was a lot of healthy backbiting going on.

And in a way they challenge the orthodoxy that the Sex Pistols were the Year Zero of punk.

JS: Well, they were the Year Zero of British punk, but the first time I heard the sound that would become known as punk was the Ramones, and I thought that first album was just incredible. The Pistols were pretty much the only band that in the UK that weren't influenced by the Ramones, and the rest were. But the interesting thing here is that the one British group that had the biggest influence on the LA scene was The Damned. Because they were the first proper English punk group to go and play there. People forget how good The Damned were – they were great for about six or nine months. And they played in LA in April 77, and there's interviews with people saying, "We went to see The Damned, and everyone went home and sped up their songs", which is the effect the Ramones had on the UK.

So this dismissal of California punk – was this just among journalists, or was it among the bands and fans as well?

JS: I don't think it was even on the radar of most Brits, apart from the journalists. The journalists who could have exposed it didn't. A lot of journalists aren't very good, or weren't very good. As a writer it's my job to open things up – and I think journalists can be divided into those who want to open things up, and those who want to close things down. And there were a lot of people in 78 who wanted to close things down.

Even under the auspices of punk?

JS: Sure – big style. And that's why I like Paul Morley, because he always tried to open things up. But then you've got people like Ian Penman, who are always trying to close things down.

On the subject of opening things up, or closing things down, I think its interesting that the compilation ends in 1980...

JS: [Laughs] Well, yeah — I don't like hardcore. It's too 'boy' for me. I was into the idea of punk being made for and by outsiders. And that meant outsiders of every hue, and that meant weird boys, hopeless boys, strong women, and gay men and women. As soon as it starts to get a machismo, and this happened in UK punk, too – I'm out of there.

At the end of the Arena documentary Punk and the Pistols, Siouxsie Sioux says something very similar. And presumably she's talking about Oi! – are you saying there's a parallel?

JS: No. I have to be very careful what I say here. There are fascist overtones to Oi, whether or not they were actually fascist or not! I don't think there were many dodgy overtones to hardcore. It's just very simple – I'd been hearing that sound since April 76. And I was tired of it, and I wanted to hear something new. That's what I liked about the LA bands, but within about two or three years, it had changed, and became hardcore, and it just didn't interest me.

It strikes me though, for those people who weren't able to be swept along by that first wave of punk, it's dismissive of something that's no less interesting to them, or they are no less passionate about.

JS: Yeah, I know – but it's pop music, come on! [Laughs] I don't mind being dismissive. I'm not saying it's shit; I'm just saying I don't like it. I've had this discussion a lot. I've had it with Steven Wells, who said: "You've completely ignored British punk since 1978, but it was great." And I said: "Fine – go and write your own book." My attitude is not: "This is it." I don't own punk. Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't care. For somebody looking at the history of punk, this is a good start. If they want to go onto hardcore, they can do it. I don't see a problem. Part of the great thing about music is having the discussion about what's shit and what's not, because in the end nobody's right. But I always say, I'm sorry I was around in 76 liking punk. If I came to punk in 1980 I would have liked that ... yeah, right.

I had a feeling that might be the case due to The Middle Class tracks you chose, because for me the title track from their EP is the pick of the bunch, but that doesn't appear.

JS: Which one is that?

'Out of Vogue' – it's basically the blueprint for hardcore.

JS: Oh, I could have used any of them. I love that record, and 'Out Of Vogue' is a great song. And it wasn't hardcore when it came out. It was just part of a great record.

Well that's my conspiracy theory dashed.

JS: Noooooo. There's no conspiracy. I'd admit it if there was. But I saw The Middle Class play — I mean, there's not many bands with two songs on the comp, but they're one of them, and the Sleepers, because I think they're fabulous, too.

And The Germs, of course.

And The Germs, who were also fabulous.

I did raise my eyebrows that you chose 'Forming' as the opening track – if I was making a mix tape for someone, I don't know if that's the track I'd choose to try and lure them in.

JS: Ha. Start as you mean to go on — with abrasive noise. But Forming was the first LA punk record I heard, and historically it was one of the first to be made. And I really love it. When I went to see Claude Bessy in Barcelona just before he died in 1999. I really liked Claude and I visited him because I knew he was dying. So he put on 'Forming' by The Germs very loud and we just sat there headbanging like Beavis and Butthead. Then at the end he said: "Well, you still like the same old shit." I love that song, I won't hear anything against it. It's just perfect.

Have you seen The Germs movie?

JS: No. I would like to. I read the Lexicon Devil book, which I thought was really good [Lexicon Devil: The Fast Times And Short Life of Darby Crash And The Germs]. But it's a fascinating sad story, and from my point of view as a gay man, it's very interesting to read about the fact that [The Germs singer] Darby Crash was gay, but everyone was very closeted about it. It's not something you talked about back in the day. I hung out with The Screamers, two of whom were gay, but we never spoke about it, which is kind of weird in retrospect. But that's the way things were then.

And it could very well have contributed to how Darby went out the way he did. [Crash committed suicide by a drug overdose in December, 1980.]

JS: Well, if you're completely unhappy about yourself and see no way about being true and honest about yourself, and if you're in that kind of public position, then it's pretty bad. And there were a lot of the dark aesthetics in punk rock, and all that 'live fast die young' bullshit, so it was very easy to get sucked into that, and then you factor heroin into the equation, then you've really got problems. But punk went into the dark side with a certain amount of recklessness, so it's hardly surprising that people got hurt and died.

There's a certain amount of irony that Darby is one of the great punk icons, but he couldn't express himself the way he wanted.

JS: Well, no he couldn't; I couldn't; The Screamers couldn't. I think about it a lot now, but when I spent that day with The Screamers, we were just horrible to each other. Of course, I didn't mind. I was used to people being horrible to me in that period. People were horrible to each other in punk; it was part of the thing. But The Screamers were horrible, and I was so horrible back that we actually ended up getting on quite well.

In terms of the cultural background of the LA scene, did you see any similarities with UK punk?

JS: In an even more extreme way than in the UK, they really were shut out. They really were outcast, and that gave them a certain freedom in that none of them had record companies telling them what to do. No record company was interested. It was a real outsider culture; a real folk culture, and that was very exciting. I remember interviewing The Dils – they were sharp and funny and interesting, and they had the political thing right down. Then I started asking them: "Well, what are you going to do when you get a record contract? What about when you appear on TV?", and they just looked at me blankly, and I thought: "Oh, they're not going to get on telly. It's not like the UK." And in the end, the only group that got a major-label contract of any substance was X, which is pretty amazing when a lot of the Brit groups were on Top of the Pops as soon as they got a single out.

It seems that the main difference between America and Britain is that in the US if you're an outsider, you're off the chart completely, whereas it doesn't take much for underground culture to bleed through to the mainstream in the UK.

JS: Well, yes. At the time, I was writing for Sounds which had a circulation of 150,000 a week. and the NME sold more, and they were read by up to five or six kids each, so you had the capacity to reach up to a million kids a week, which is incredible. So it was very easy for bands to get attention and record contracts, which they all did, But that meant the cycle burned itself out quicker.

They also had a ringleader in a certain Mr McLaren, and there was probably no equivalent to him in the US.

JS: Malcolm was right, in that he was a true impresario, and he realised that punk needed a big stage. And if British punk hadn't had a big stage, it would have been very different. For all everyone moans about Malcolm – and he did have some unpleasant sides to his character – if you had to point to one person that was the architect of it all, it was Malcolm. That's not to denigrate any of the musicians, and I'm very glad that the Pistols have been able to present themselves as British archetypes, and make good money from touring in recent years, because its the musicians that always get ripped off.

Like you say, punk burned out more quickly here than in the US. Is that a consequence of it being so tied in with fashion in the UK?

JS: Yes, absolutely. And of course, as everyone understands, punk didn't go mainstream in the US until Nirvana, who I also adored, and that's what so exciting about them. I don't think any rock band has been as powerful as Nirvana since.

Do you see a scenario where bands will make that sort of impact again?

JS: All I can say is I hope so. I'm not a teenager anymore – I'm 57. I don't listen to, or need, rock music in the same way as I did when I was in my 20s. Rock music is all about generational identification, and I'm simply too old for that now. I don't need that to construct my identity around, and neither do I like heritage rock – it's dreary. I like historical archetypes, but that's different.

In terms of the compilation – and historical archetypes in general – who do you want to hear this music?

JS: Probably to my detriment, I don't think in marketing terms. I just think: "This shit's good. People should get the chance to hear The Germs doing 'Forming'." It's as simple as that, really. But I'm always pleased when people respond and when young people respond. That's the idea. Punk was very inspirational to me when I was young, and when you're young it's very important to get inspiration. It's so exciting.

I don't want to get too fogeyish here, but I find difficult to see where young folk would draw their inspiration from these days.

JS: It seems to me that, it's not that kids these days don't have problems, as some of them have quite severe problems. But punk was a product of scarcity and focus. There's so much material available on the internet, there's so much stuff out there, so how do you make it mean more than a few people writing something on a blog? How do you concentrate it? How do you bring people together? How do you create scene or something greater than just a few groups or whatever?

And it seems that the download culture has largely devalued music and made it utterly disposable.

JS: Well yes, it is a huge problem. Pop music has become a victim of its own success. When I started writing about pop music, it wasn't really seen as a very good thing to do. My parents were appalled. But now its a viable career option. When I worked at Sounds, pop was very much in the margins, and we could do whatever we wanted, and we threw together a magazine that nobody upstairs really cared about as long as we made money, and that's what was great about it. But now everything is niche marketed and strategised. And that's what I like about the records on the comp. It's not like a stylist has told the Weirdos what to wear. They're putting something together. They've got things to say, and they're saying it in a very powerful, concentrated form. And that's part of what music's about, certainly if you're talking about punk rock. State your point clearly; make a big bad noise and fuck off.

Read more at thequietus.com
 

Saturday, October 2, 2010

PSN: Sharing the raw and gritty world of Charles Bukowski

Amplify’d from www.pasadenastarnews.com

Sharing the raw and gritty world of Charles Bukowski

By Michelle J. Mills, Staff Writer
Postcard featuring Charles Bukowski at his typewriter in 1988. Photo
by Joan Levine Gannij, published by Island International Bookstore,
Amsterdam. Courtesy of the Huntington Library, Art Collections and
Botanical Gardens. (Courtesy Photo)

Charles Bukowski as a literary figure - and as a man - inspires extremes. Love him, or hate him, Bukowski is a link to life in Los Angeles none can discount, whether it is his raw and often raunchy writings or the stories told about him and the places he visited.


The Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens in San Marino will explore our mixed feelings in a new exhibit, "Charles Bukowski: Poet on the Edge," which opens Oct. 9.


"Bukowski is one of the most unusual and original voices in 20th century American literature," said Sara "Sue" Hodson, the Huntington's curator of literary manuscripts. "He was not one of the establishment. He was out on the edge."


Hodson has pulled together the show about








Bukowski from materials the Huntington has received from his widow, Linda Lee Bukowski, over the past four years. Other items are on loan.


Bukowski was born Aug. 16, 1920 and died in 1994. His works spoke to the downtrodden and those on the fringes of society. His writing explored the gritty side of life, an approach shared by notables in classic literature, such as Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Miller's Tale" and Shakespeare's use of fools who spew bawdy jokes, Hodson said.


"Great writers, great artists, they capture a place in time," said John Dullaghan, the director of "Born Into This," a documentary on Bukowski and an expert on the writer. He assisted Hodson with some of her research.


Bukowski's poetry was somewhat free

form; he wrote about common everyday life in common language, which made it accessible to a range of readers, Dullaghan said. Bukowski wrote about the Los Angeles in which he lived, which connected with people then, as it does now.


Bukowski's early life was painful. He had a physically and verbally abusive father and a passive mother. As a teen, he suffered from acne vulgaris, which resulted in boils on his face and torso and severe scarring. This caused him to withdraw from others. He








drowned his misery in alcohol; his writing served as a sort of therapy.


"He took the challenges and problems and the dramas in his life and, through his writing, turned them around in a way that helps others who have gone through the same thing reflect and feel less alone for being who they are," Dullaghan said.


In his early writing days, Bukowski traveled extensively.


"He loved to get off the Greyhound bus at night" in a city he didn't know, Hodson said. "He would walk until he found a rooming house. He would rent a cheap room and try to write. He would almost always have to take on some menial dead-end job to pay the rent and, if he was lucky, there was enough to buy food."


Bukowski submitted his stories to all








the big magazines - New Yorker, Atlantic Monthly, Harper's - but his work was consistently rejected. He started writing for the "little magazines," publications that were often cranked out on a mimeograph machine in someone's garage. They didn't make much money and the writers were poorly paid, if at all. But little by little, Bukowski was making a name for himself.


"People who were real aficionados of edgy stuff recognized this amazing voice and wanted to be a part of it," Hodson said. "He developed a small cult following that grew and grew."


Bukowski took a job at the post office in downtown Los Angeles and worked there for 12 years. It was a physically demanding job, which he said later killed his spirit.


One day








during this period, John Martin, founder of Black Sparrow Press in Santa Barbara, arrived on his doorstep. He offered the writer $100 per month for the rest of his life if he would devote himself to his craft. Bukowski accepted with a little trepidation and produced the book, "Post Office." It wasn't all roses after that, as Bukowski had to make ends meet by writing for skin magazines; but he was well on his way.


The biggest success for Bukowski was seeing his work, "Barfly," turned into a film starring Mickey Rourke and Faye Dunaway. He wasn't entirely pleased with his experience in the movie industry, nor with the film, but it put his work firmly in the spotlight, adding to his recognition and fan base.


In "Charles Bukowski:









Poet on the Edge" are childhood photos of the author and his family, early printings of his work and some of his drawings. There is a first edition of "Ham on Rye," the autobiographical novel recounting Bukowski's early years.


"It's one of the finest books that he wrote," Hodson said. "It tells you so much about where he came from and a little bit of how he got to be the Bukowski that we know."


He wrote that work late in his life; it wasn't published until 1982. Linda Lee Bukowski said he put it off because it was too hard a story to tell.


Another highlight of the display is an issue of Oui magazine bearing one of his stories. This is the first time a pornographic publication has been put on exhibit at the venue, Hodson said.


There also are letters and photographs from his fans around the world, including some from women who hoped to get to know Bukowski personally.


"He had a charisma," Hodson said. "He also had that sense of self that is, I am who I am, take me or leave me; if you're interested, then come at me. He was a little aloof, and I think that pulled some people in. But there was a charisma, a raw sensuality, a real macho attitude as well."


One of Hodson's favorite pieces in the show is the last manual typewriter Bukowski owned. The writer loved typewriters and computer keyboards.


"He never wrote by hand, absolutely never," Hodson said. "He would correct and make changes by hand, but he always wrote on a keyboard," Hodson said.


It is thought that Bukowski needed the noise of typing to bring his thoughts to paper.


Since the announcement of "Charles Bukowski: Poet on the Edge," Hodson has been flooded with phone calls and e-mails from people sharing how the author has touched their lives.


"His writings have a remarkable ability to reach out to people who are troubled, who are not happy, who are at a crossroads in their lives and they don't know what they're going to do next," Hodson said.


Bukowski strived to be a great writer. In his day, the recognition of his talent would have been akin to the attention we give to celebrities today. Dullaghan said the writer would have been pleased with the exhibit.


"He didn't like academia," Dullaghan said. "He resented it, he didn't feel like they embraced him. He wasn't the typical Huntington type of person, but to be included in this, he would have just been tickled."


The Huntington will be offering free readings and film screenings in conjunction with "Charles Bukowski: Poet on the Edge." You can also get a daily dose of Bukowski at www.twitter.com/thehuntington


michelle.mills@sgvn.com


(626) 962-8811 Ext. 2128


CHARLES BUKOWSKI: POET ON THE EDGE


Noon-4:30 p.m. Wednesday-Monday and 10:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Saturday, Sunday and holiday Mondays, Saturday, Oct. 9 through Feb. 14, Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens, 1151 Oxford Road, San Marino


$15 weekdays, and $20 weekends. There are discounts for seniors and students. Admission is free the first Thursday of the month, but tickets must be acquired in advance.


626-405-2100


www.huntington.org


HAUNTS OF A DIRTY OLD MAN: CHARLES BUKOWSKI'S LOS ANGELES
Noon-4 p.m. Nov. 13
The tour departs from Philippe's the Original, 1001 N. Alameda St., Los Angeles
$58; reservations are required
323-223-2767
www.esotouric.com

Esotouric offers a range of crime, literary and architectural tours, including “Haunts of a Dirty Old Man: Charles Bukowski's Los Angeles.” The outing was developed by company owner and tour guide Richard Shave with the assistance of John Dullaghan.



“The thesis of the Bukowski tour is to show the process by which Charles Bukowski — or anyone who's a writer— finds the voice within him that is great,” Shave said.


Among its stops, “Haunts” visits the Los Angeles Central Library, where Bukowski discovered John Fante's “Ask the Dusk.” He identified with the book's main character, Arturo Bandini, and brought about a Fante revival by mentioning him in his own writings.


Another stop is the Postal Terminal Annex, where Bukowski worked for 12 years, and his former bungalow on De Longpre, which is now an official cultural-historic landmark.


Shave's favorite part of the tour is the stop at Royal Palms. Built in the 1920s as a Jewish social club, the structure was an SRO (single room occupancy) hotel during Bukowski's time. In the early ‘50s, the author lived there with his girlfriend, Jane Cooney Baker. This is recounted in the film, “Barfly,” in which Baker is called Wanda.


“Jane is probably the biggest person in his emotional half acre,” Shave said. “She was this older woman who taught him how to have sex, taught him how to drink, taught him how to be poorly behaved. She took him by the hand and led him down the road to all the things he desperately wanted.”


A few years after Bukowski and Baker were evicted from the Royal Palms, it became a Mary Lind Recovery Center, providing residential substance abuse recovery service to homeless men and women. It seems ironic to Shave that a place so linked with Bukowski's drunken debauchery has helped substance abusers regain their lives for more than 50 years.


Structurally, though, the Royal Palms has remained unchanged and is a great example of old Los Angeles.
“The first half of the tour really looks at a part of his life that is poorly documented because he doesn't write about it very much,” Shave said. "It's before he became famous.”


Bukowski's life downtown was integral to his career;  it primed and prodded him and provided fodder for the writing that made him a vital part of American literature.

Read more at www.pasadenastarnews.com
 

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Ebay: The Loafin' Hyenas : self-titled (CD-1990)

 

http://cgi.ebay.com/LOAFIN-HYENAS-S-T-CD-NEW-SEALED-PSYCHOBILLY-GARAGE-/12057...

THE LOAFIN' HYENAS S/T CD NEW SEALED PSYCHOBILLY GARAGE

 
Item condition: Brand New
 
Time left:

4d 22h (May 30, 201010:00:38 PDT)

 

THIS IS A HARD TO FIND CD STILL SEALED (SOME OF THE SEAL IS COMING OFF), CRACK IN SPINE.

The Loafin' Hyenas : self-titled (CD-1990)
Can't find the doorknob / Boot in the toilet / Bonehusker stomp / Goin' south / Scatter / Way of the world / Scratchin' fleas / Move it / Klawhammer krunch / Forbidden see / Diablo devil / If looks could kill / Things must change / What goes on

 


 

Posted via web from ttexed's posterous

Monday, November 9, 2009

13 Images, Hopefully Lucky, Definitely Good & Borrowed, Returned with Thanks...

From: http://community.livejournal.com/adski_kafeteri/1445968.html

Vikki Dougan - Nicknamed "The Back" because of her dresses that were more than backless - they were cut down to just above the gluteal cleft, causing quite a commotion. The Limeliters wrote a song titled "Vikki Dougan" to commemorate this phenomenon, in which they sing of her "callipygian cleft" ("callipygian" meaning "having shapely buttocks") and beg her, "Vikki, turn your back on me". Measurements: 36-20-36 (Source: Celebrity Sleuth magazine)



From: http://lpcoverlover.com/2009/11/01/time-and-space/

Sun Ra and his Arkestra featurig John Gilmore on Tenor Sax I don’t have any information about this as I don’t have the disc, just the cover, which is “homemade.” The back is all pasted over with gold foil and the front has hand-coloring and some stickers. I think that this covered one of Sun Ra’s records on Saturn. Any Sun Ra followers out there that can shine some light here?
#1 philipp says:
November 1st, 2009 at 7:10 am
It’s Super-Sonic Jazz, Sun Ra’s first record on his Saturn label. The title has been covered by the blue tape in your scan. The record originally came out in 1957 with a different cover. This one is the 1968 edition. Details, plus lots more Sun Ra minutiae, found here — http://hubcap.clemson.edu/~campber/sunra.html. Look about half-way down the page for a minty fresh scan of this record cover.
#2 Carl Howard says:
November 1st, 2009 at 7:42 am
All of that is right, and this is also a fairly early release on El Saturn, with the band still in Chicago. For most of his career, Ra favored private releases and even favored raw, primitive recording conditions – even though, being the consummate jazz outsider, these conditions were as frequently motivated by finances as by design.
Because records like this were sold by The Arkestra at shows, and because they were hand covered like this, copies and track lists varied widely for years, making documentation sometimes quite difficult.
#3 lpcoverlover says:
November 1st, 2009 at 9:17 am
Fantastic! Thanks Phillipp and Carl. Carl, so perhaps the hand-crafted cover with the foil and stickers was sold this was at a concert? (Vs. the god-forbid thought that some kid at home defaced his dad’s valuable record?



From: http://violaviolet.tumblr.com/post/237199027





From: http://wfmuichiban.blogspot.com/2009/10/apes-in-bikinis.html

MOST BEAUTIFUL APE? -- Dominique Green, contestant No. 2, won the title of Most Beautiful Ape and a role in "Battle for the Planet of the Apes," the 5th "Apes" film for 20th. Gary Owens crowned the winner at Century City ceremony. (1972)



From: http://www.lostateminor.com/2009/10/07/geordan-moore/

I don’t really have a preoccupation with death, but for some reason I am endlessly compelled by the image of a skull. That said, most artistic renderings of skulls can be quite cliched. Illustrator Geordan Moore is the first person in a while who I’ve seen draw a skull in a way that I’ve never seen before.



From: http://kvetchlandia.tumblr.com/post/221266548/robert-mapplethorpe-grace-jones-1984

Robert Mapplethorpe - Grace Jones - 1984



From: http://nickdrake.tumblr.com/post/232020625/verushka

verushka.



From: http://tartanspartan.tumblr.com/post/234780101/robert-crumb-baron-wolman-1969

Robert Crumb — Baron Wolman, 1969



From: http://txwldflower2.tumblr.com/post/233538308/incredible-shadow-art-created-from-junk

Incredible Shadow Art Created From Junk - More art/photos at: http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/featured/incredible-shadow-art-created-from-junk/12265



From: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/picture-galleries/6514909/Science-Photo-Library-photos-of-the-week.html?image=9

Human tongue surface, coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM). The tongue is covered in many backward facing projections called filiform papillae, which sense pressure
Picture: SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY



From: http://lacontessa.tumblr.com/post/235096059/wrestling-ladies

Wrestling ladies.



From: http://crappytaxidermy.com/post/237037833/rat-kings-are-phenomena-said-to-arise-when-a

Rat kings are phenomena said to arise when a number of rats become intertwined at their tails, which become stuck together with blood, dirt, ice, excrement or simply knotted. The animals reputedly grow together while joined at the tails. The numbers of rats that are joined together can vary, but naturally rat kings formed from a larger number of rats are rarer. The phenomenon is particularly associated with Germany, where the majority of instances have been reported. Historically, rat kings were seen as an extremely bad omen, particularly associated with plagues. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rat_king_(folklore)



From: http://benjaminhilts.tumblr.com/post/237653880/personality-manifestations-in-psychosomatic

Personality Manifestations in Psychosomatic Illness - Heart: Emotions can affect heart rate and rhythm. (via Kroninger)

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Ian Fleming interviews Raymond Chandler plus a great L.A. 1930's crime documentary

In 1958, Ian Fleming interviewed Raymond Chandler for the BBC in London, here in 4 parts. Plus a great documentary that includes lots of 1930's street scenes and news footage, in 3 parts. Thanks to David B. Metcalfe for the referral...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zj6cc0T1z7I


Interview with Raymond Chandler [1 of 4]


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxJJo79e00o


Interview with Raymond Chandler [2 of 4]


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-sS2DBBrOY8


Interview with Raymond Chandler [3 of 4]


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R9i00flBWuQ


Interview with Raymond Chandler [4 of 4]


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIbFzcdOKUo


Los Angeles History 1930's Crime Raymond Chandler Pt 1 of 3


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bSizY0Pul8Y


Los Angeles History 1930's Crime Raymond Chandler Pt 2 of 3


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ppopg39jKTY


Los Angeles History 1930's Crime Raymond Chandler Pt 3 of 3

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

15 Brand Spanking New (At least, to here) Few Good Borrowed Images

From: http://tsutpen.blogspot.com/2009/08/joints-21.html

Joints #21-Ben Frank's



From: http://meowkitties.tumblr.com/post/177415848/pumpmylove-mick-jagger-in-drag-and-jerry-hall

Mick Jagger and ex-wife Jerry Hall. Copyright © Brigitte LaCombe



From: http://visualguidanceltd.blogspot.com/2009/09/are-you-jerry-lee-lewis-overheated.html





From: http://karlahoney.tumblr.com/post/203127080





From: http://janitoroflunacy.tumblr.com/post/210934205/raphael-delorme-1930

Raphael Delorme 1930



From: http://kvetchlandia.tumblr.com/post/209935208/masao-yamamoto-untitled-1256-undated

Masao Yamamoto Untitled #1256 Undated



From: http://tsutpen.blogspot.com/2009/10/when-legends-gather-552.html

When Legends Gather #552-Martha Raye, Johnny Mathis, Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland



From: http://janitoroflunacy.tumblr.com/post/215049436/eugene-grasset-morphine

Eugene Grasset ~ Morphine



From: http://www.iwasabducted.com/schroeder/satan.htm

This photograph of a creature resembling Satan was photographed by a friend of Paul Schroeder's wife while vacationing in the Middle East. Mrs. Schroeder's friend claims to have photographed an object of light in a cave, and did not see this creature until after the film was developed. For more information about this photo, please refer to the last paragraph of Alarm Clock Demons by Paul Schroeder at: http://www.iwasabducted.com/schroeder/demons.htm



From: http://lpcoverlover.com/2009/10/19/no-room-for-mirth-or-trifling-here/

Born to DieThe Rodeheavers They look to be in some kind of sick, cult-of-the-damned, death pact. Born to Die is also a 1976 album by Grand Funk Railroad. And a 1763 poem by Charles Wesley:

And am I only born to die?
And must I suddenly comply
With nature’s stern decree?
What after death for me remains?
Celestial joys, or hellish pains,
To all eternity?

How then ought I on earth to live,
While God prolongs the kind reprieve
And props the house of clay?
My sole concern, my single care,
To watch, and tremble, and prepare
Against the fatal day.

No room for mirth or trifling here,
For worldly hope, or worldly fear,
If life so soon is gone:
If now the Judge is at the door,
And all mankind must stand before
The inexorable throne!

No matter which my thoughts employ,
A moment’s misery, or joy;
But O! when both shall end,
Where shall I find my destined place?
Shall I my everlasting days
With fiends, or angels spend?



From: http://sonoforigins.tumblr.com/post/213042188/via-www-anythinggauche-com

(VIA WWW.ANYTHINGGAUCHE.COM)



From: http://brainsteakbikini.blogspot.com/2009/10/dolls.html

January, 2001. "Una de las muñecas favoritas de Ivy es esta bonita reproducciôn en miniatura de Kim Novak, inspirada de su personaje del film "The Legend Of Lylah Claire".
Popular 1 Magazine.



From: http://nickdrake.tumblr.com/post/216791542/1912

1912



From: http://badbanana.typepad.com/weblog/2009/10/microbe-killer.html

William Radam was one of the most notorious 19th century snake oil salesmen in America. This distinctive logo, as well as his ambitious tagline "Cures All Diseases," makes his Microbe Killer tonic bottles a favorite of collectors today. (Via Morbid Anatomy.)



From: http://nickdrake.tumblr.com/post/217185286/bowie

Bowie