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11011040656?profile=original

@Fender: We’re excited to host Ed O’Brien for an AMA (Ask Me Anything) today! Ed designed the EOB Sustainer Strat, alongside playing guitar in @radiohead, and just released his debut album “Earth” as @EOBOfficial. Drop your questions below and he’ll answer some over the next hour!

1.
@SandraTello: Hey, ED... I speak for myself but I know that I also speak for many people when I say that I hope in the near future a collaboration between you and Johnny Marr. (And a lot of exchange of opinions about Manchester United and City).

@EOBOfficial: Aside from obvious football tension, it would be an absolute joy and honour to collaborate with Johnny again, as we did for the seven worlds collide project...

2.
@SaurioBellamy_:Hi Ed! Congrats on this new album, it's great! Are you familiar with your bandmates' solo stuff? (Thom, Phil, Jonny...) What are your favourite tracks by them? And what's your favourite track on your own album? Thank you :)

@EOBOfficial: Yes of course .. I love what they do .. suspiria is such an extraordinarily beautiful piece of music

3.
@kspicknell: Have you thoughts about the forthcoming Hologram Electronics Microcosm?

@EOBOfficial: Crikey

4.
@Chrisx5x5: Ed, what type of bass did you play on EARTH, and on which tracks?

@EOBOfficial:
I played bass on Shangri-La, Deep Days... the easy bit on Olympik... and the bass that I played was a 1964 P Bass

5.
@Chrisx5x5: Dear Ed, We were lucky enough to see you at the Poisson Rouge in February. You told a story about the checkout line at Whole Foods and I'd love for you to tell it again so more fans can hear it. The new record is beautiful from front to back and I can't wait for what's next.

@EOBOfficial: It's the morning of my first solo show in NYC... I'm nervous.. The lady at the checkout at Whole Foods looked up at me and said out of the blue... didn't know who I was, you're a musician and you need to fully express yourself. A very deep and profound moment for me

6.
@pablohonky: Hello, kind sir, thank you for doing this. What would you say the most important messages of your debut album are?

@EOBOfficial: It’s about emerging out of the darkness into the light

7.
@gatitotonto: Hey, Ed. When do you decide to add special and ambient sounds to a song? And also, what do you think it was the most difficult thing to create on this album?

@EOBOfficial: In Radiohead, whenever I'm allowed! ... then for me, it's all about whether I feel the song needs it

8.
@MandlDA: Now that Earth is out, have you felt any urge to create more solo material? Or is that difficult to measure while you're still (hoping to) tour the record? Also, how aware are you of the in-joke among RH fans that some of your backup vocals sound like you're singing "EEEDDD"?

@EOBOfficial:
YES I feel ready to move on musically... and I'm hoping that this time can be inspiring... And I wasn't aware of this up to a month ago but it has been drawn to my attention quite a lot and now I understand the Weird Fishes moment in the gig

9.
@loudaldairni: I'm so into your guitar sound design, and i wonder: What is your best advice for making ambient with guitar? Which guitar pedal is your favorite for it? What is your guitar tunning? Do you use a pick or fingers?

@EOBOfficial:
Ambient guitar parts always use fingers, essential guitar pedal deluxe memory man.. kind of essential EOB Strat... whatever tuning you want... and then just do it

10.
@sortedforwizz: Hi, Ed. I hope you're well. Been trying to learn to play the guitar for quite sometime now. Even purchased a 3/4 sized one, thinking it'd make it easier. But it doesn't. What the h*** is wrong here, Ed? How do I get my fingers to cooperate? Getting desperate here. Cheers tho!

@EOBOfficial:
:D :D :D It's all about putting the time in... patience and tenacity... young apprentice

11.
@SandraTello: The other day I saw a post by Brian May playing an EOB Sustainer Strat and I thought how wonderful it is that geniuses like him play your guitar and discover the possibility of wonderful new sounds. How does it make you feel?

@EOBOfficial:
Very warm and very surreal... Brian May is a legend and a wonderful player... I love his guitar sound

12.
@PensineMutine: Hi Ed! Was wondering whether the inverted open triangle/pyramid on the cover of your album which happens to be the symbol of the divine feminine was actually intended or purely coincidental? Same as EARTH being the anagram of HEART (if you move the 'h' to the other end) ?

@EOBOfficial: It is intentional!! And that sign is also the sign for Earth

13.
@TheSquidreview: What are your favorite parts you've written for both Earth and A Moon Shaped Pool?

@EOBOfficial: Daydreaming in A Moon Shaped Pool, and Olympik in Earth

14.
@JCahill5150: Which musician or band has had the greatest influence on the music you create? I love the new album by the way

@EOBOfficial: There is no single musician, but I've always been open about my influences... from Johnny Marr to Brian Eno to Bill Withers

15.
@bacon4lyf: Hi Ed! The burning question all of us have is are those your dogs in the vids you’ve been recently. posting and what are their names?

@EOBOfficial:  one is our dog... and one isn't! the dog with the hose is called Rizzo and she's a guest, the other dog is ours and she's called Ziggy.. but she doesn't like Twitter

16.
@edobriengod: hello ed!! first i just want to thank you for making me interested in learning how to play guitar! secondly would you consider coming to pittsburgh,pa after everything dies down and concerts are able to happen? much love xx

@EOBOfficial:  Thank you! Of course, whenever this ends I would love to come to Pittsburgh... as part of an extensive and joyful tour

17.
@captain_wow: Hello Ed! Two part question if you could condense your guitar rig to 4 pedals, 2 guitars, and 1 amp. What would you choose to keep/dispose of? Do you wait until a song is completely realized to make executive decisions on it, or do you gradually change things as you go?

@EOBOfficial:  The guitars... EOB strat and a Rickenbacker 360 One amp... Fender Vibro-King Four pedals.. whammy, deluxe memory man, Hudson sidecar, MXR flanger

18.
@benindaplace: Hi Ed, have you ever visited France ? Which parts did you enjoy the most ?

@EOBOfficial:  I love the Ardeches.....

19.
@KcurmanJ: Hey Ed, why did you choose olympic white for your signature Stratocaster? Btw absolutely loooove your new record. It gives me peace.

@EOBOfficial:  so thankful that you feel the record .. Olympic white is just right .. don’t know but love white guitars

20.
@DrawMyDissolver: Hi Ed! I want to ask you about tinnitus. Do you suffer from it? I have had it for three weeks now and it has been impossible to enjoy music ever since this started. I'm feeling very hopeless and would love some advice on how to deal. I have read meditation works for some. Love.

@EOBOfficial: Really important question, and yes I have suffered from tinnitus... but what you have to remember about it is, it is caused not just from overexposure to loud music and sounds... there are often medical reasons so it's important to get medical advice and speak to people who've had similar experiences. In my experience it's totally treatable, but patience is required... good luck!

21.
@GiganticLyingM: Hi! I havent seen you use the sustainer strat in the shows and tv appearances promoting Earth. Is it a radiohead only guitar, or did you use it on the solo record too? Love the album and love radiohead and lOve the strat

@EOBOfficial: It's all over EARTH but I've handed over sustainer duties to Ross Chapman my other guitarist... I can't sing and sustain at the same time

22.
@OK_Ideoteque: Hi Ed, I saw an interview where you said Radiohead only use a backing track on one song. Which song is it?

@EOBOfficial: You’re half right .. Colin triggers a backing track with his keyboard but the rest of us are playing live .. and that’s the only song live that is like that [The Gloaming]

23.
@manu_marr: Hi Ed. I hope you’re well and healthy. What are your thought about the Telecaster? And as a good fan of Andy Summer you are, do you like to use the flanger pedal too? What’s your favorite setting for your MXR? Many thanks and stay safe.

@EOBOfficial: Obviously a huge fan of teles... I've got a lovely Paul Waller custom tele. I don't use the flanger much these days but there's always one on the shelf. Thank you 

24.
@virtualjaaames: do you ever look at a big pile of pedals and cables and think "ugh not today"

@EOBOfficial:
Yes, every day at the moment... Since lockdown I haven't been inspired to pick up a guitar and I don't know why but I'm going with it... 

25.
@aleluvskp: You said that in order to be inspired, you need to be in nature, I'm very much the same. How would you become inspired if you couldn't be in nature, especially in lockdown? Any creative ways to achieve a similar calm feeling and an earthly connection? Lots of love.

@EOBOfficial!: Through reading the right books and watching great films... good luck!

26.
@Laurynaldredx: hello ed, i am starting to get into the pixies, please recommend me a song or an album to listen to!! also when this is all over please come to either liverpool or manchester,i am dying to see you live!!

@EOBOfficial:
Doolittle... no 13 baby is king

27.
@kutzkj3774: Hi Ed! Since this is the guitar channel, will ask guitar question. I have "The" Strat (God I'm in love with it), and I'm curious about how you use the sustainer- are you usually muting the volume, engaging the string and then swelling it up?

@EOBOfficial:
I use the sustainer in any number of ways.. there is no right way, whatever feels good

28.
@manshar_: I read somewhere you said singing solo was the most difficult part. How did you eventually get comfortable/confident enough?I struggle with confidence in my singing (and hating my voice) as well. How did you get over those fears? Does it just come as you get better with practice?

@EOBOfficial: I haven't got there yet...but as with everything it's repetition and just doing it

29.
@hahayoufoundme: Hi Ed, thanks for completely changing my view on the guitar's capability. Just wondering, how are you? and what would you consider a good beginner pedal if I'm into texturey sounds like you've said on That Pedal Show? Hope you're doing well and thanks for everything you've done!

@EOBOfficial: Deluxe memory man... or any analogue delay pedal

30.
@brandonle9992: Ed, love the new album it is incredibly wholesome and genuine. Wondering how the music and culture of Brazil inspired the writing process and production process of the album?

@EOBOfficial:
Firstly thank you so much.. Brasil is a colourful, warm, open hearted country and that's central to the record

31.
@ninestonecowboy: Hi Ed, fancy a pint down The Horse and Jockey?

@EOBOfficial:
:D :D :D that would be a brilliant and wonderful way to spend some time with you my old friend!! X

32.
@DrawMyDissolver: 3rd question: Is there a specific string gauge you feel works especially well with the EOB strat? I have read that thicker means more effect on the sustain but do you find that to be true? Or conversely, is there such a thing as too much sustain?

@EOBOfficial: Shamefully I’ve stuck to 10’s ... need to diversify.. although

33.
@TheMarkJameson: What new guitars have you acquired recently and how are they inspiring you?

@EOBOfficial: Bought a ‘79 rickenbacker 330 but im@not sure it’s inspiring me at the moment

@EOBOfficial: Thank you everyone, thank you Fender.. great questions .. stay safe and well .. Big love EOBX

Read more…

SINCE YOU ASK

SINCE YOU ASK

1.

Much that is sad, hurt, beautiful must be disregarded
like the gray faces of Negroes in the blast furnace be-
ginning at the end of our sentences, which out of the
tearful coliseum beg repeating in the slaveful climate
that fostered them. Meanwhile, the town does not
exist for the drowned woman. But the fence makes it
our own. At the beginning of March. I waited like a
broken diving board, butterfly and overall kick-drum
target as their sons grew suicidally beautiful and galloped
terribly, alone and desperate as sour pumpkins in the
patch with the train-rustling of stadium coils and thunder
in the bushes, high above the city where, in fact, the sand-
spur promise of learning is quite simply an objective de-
lusion solid with reality: masks and faces for your next carnival

plus plenty of those formal facts and kisses; notwithstanding
heroic acts of the penguin and pawn and pelican for princes
who easily could be cast like frogs. Some day. To go ribbit
into the sewer and out of time’s great expansive emulsion,
though nothing conforms to the new rules that living in a
yellow u-haul has made of flossing. Better, you said, to wait
around, brush your teeth and stay cowering n the crooked
charity of hard moments for which the Angels mix their joyful
sirens with those of the police squadron, desiring ‘Monuments’
from the thoughtless shore where (will you remember already)
Alas!–I died accepting their long beers & bearded caresses
with so many attitudes that left me much with depths and passions
as beautiful as this here ripe, gentle corpse. I look down. Hardly
anything grows here though the boughs hang heavy, dividing

2.
the indifferent blue you have placed under the sun, which now leaves
bare and brown no blade of grass, no skein of star that might set against
the black April clay of eternity where the ships congregate on the waxing

ebb of nothingness, shining their metals and million eyes of polished boots

without decent expressions for their three-personed God of the Fly.
Outside the open window, vivid as delirium, the lacquered soul of
American Pie hovers like a stain beneath the sap of Yggdrasil,
the gout of mistletoe, the old moon’s dark corpus awash with tree-

shapes and angels flying in switch of place, keeping their dark habits
of difficult balance unmarked by terrible speeds of the unnameable
gentle voyage, riding high or low ahead, where most days I cannot

remember walking back in cheerful fear and loathing even though

I’ve nothing against life as it drools out its mouthful orifice of panting earth.
In the crooked sight of heaven: rows of green-glass bottles with nothing
but a key inside for the mind’s skull puzzle. However, it was more than that

if all the great power assumes itself and forms the one landscape, a secret

system of caves and conduits carving out of limestone the silent springs
that spurt out everywhere that death is once and for-all a fact that makes

no further point.

Read more…

Ed's Listening Party On Spotify 23rd April 2020

11011048466?profile=original

Ed definitely wants to uplift our moods during these quarantine days and set up a last-minute listening party chat on Spotify yesterday evening before dinner (for those in Europe). I would also like to thank him for being my technical saviour on Instagram where I couldn't figure out how to join the event. Actually I was looking for it in my desktop app where I was supposed to open the link in my browser. OK Computer Not OK :D

As you can see, Ed was in a mischievous mood (mischievous also happens to be the name of my Pensieve blog). I hope you appreciate my effort to make the whole lot available and more convenient to read for you and also (and most importantly) that you ENJOY it.

EOB Official
I'm in Guys.. who is in the house? Trying to get sound..

EOB Official
Hey Sebastian in Peru.. I love Peru.. Cusco X

• EOB can you get on with the second album, will expect it in 6 years time ;)

EOB Official
I promise I will be on time next time

• this song has a sneaky George Harrison vibe to it.

EOB Official
Loved the dark horse...

EOB Official
I can't get any audio!! Mind you I've heard it a few times..

• Hello from the Scottish Borders!!

EOB Official
Hello my Celtic cousin.. how's the weather up there?

• Hello! Dominique from Montreal, will your tour be rescheduled? Thank you :/

EOB Official
As long as I can come to Montreal <3

• Love when you say "change" in Shangri-La. Whole song just opens up from there

EOB Official
That's the moment.. well felt

• when the bass hits

EOB Official
Yeah baby .. it's all about the bass!!

• Favourite Man U player currently?

EOB Official
Rashford

• HI, ed! I'm from Brazil and i love so much your album

EOB Official
Thank you my friend and I love your country.. the people are amazing.. I'm sorry that you have Bolsonaro..

• You should get some samba dancers on stage for this part

EOB Official
Now you are talking.. maybe when we come to Brasil

• dude this is dope

EOB Official
thank you

• Ed if you could move to any country where would you move to? <3

EOB Official
Somewhere in S America.. Peru maybe..<3

• Hi Ed, I'm loving these Q&As. I can't wait to see you live. I have a Radiohead question though: why has the band never played Cuttooth live? It would be fantastic. x

EOB Official
it's a good question.. maybe because there wasn't enough collective love for the song.. I enjoyed it though :D

• Ed, where is that beautiful park you always show in your instagram stories?

EOB Official
it's near our home in Wales.. this place is so special and magic.. hope you can feel it on insta... <3

• deep days is fantastic!

EOB Official
when we did a playback in Mexico, Deep days resonated even more .. love Mexico

• Deep Days and Long Time Coming are my favorites of the album, both are such perfect songs that couldn't have been made by any other artist

EOB Official
You are really kind to say that .. thank you <3

• Fiancé is taking an online grad course through Falmouth - hoping to visit there next year for graduation

EOB Official
It's a great place ... Love my trips down there and visiting the students.. so inspiring

• Have you ever visited Ireland? X

EOB Official
With a surname like O'Brien.. take a wild guess??!!

• Really stoked for the Istanbul show this summer. I hope it won’t be cancelled. Are you excited about it, Ed?

EOB Official
Of course.. I SO want to come to Istanbul but I'd be very surprised if the festival goes ahead... :/

• Did you use you’re White Stratocaster to record parts of this album?

EOB Official
of course.. plus a lovely custom shop tele.. a custom shop les Paul and my trusted Martin OOO-18

• Ever play a 12 string guitar Ed?

EOB Official
I've got a beautiful 60's Rickenbacker 12 which will hopefully make it to the next record...

• your voice is very calming <3

EOB Official
I'm a calm person.. are you?

• What artist would you love to collaborate with in the future?

EOB Official
I don't know yet.. it depends on what the music is like next.. I'd love to work with everyone again who played on EARTH.. because they really are the best...

• It is funny how long the Radiohead fans spent without realising the true capacity for beauty Ed's voice really has.

EOB Official
Well... I haven't sang backing vocals on a RH album since weird fishes.. EEEEEEEEDDDDDDD bit

• Ed Have you ever danced with the devil in the pale moonlight?

EOB Official
No but it sounds intriguing..... ;)

• Reading interviews makes the album even more personal for me. You sound like the confidant, strong and honest man I want to be and the music shows the same

EOB Official
Be the truth and be the change you want.. once you get on that path.. life starts to get better...

• What is your least favourite track on "Earth"

EOB Official
er .. the one I struggle most with is this one... banksters

• Ed why a dance track and a calm track in between?

EOB Official
Light and shade my friend

• How is it being a frontman on stage? Love the album and cheers from Sweden

EOB Official
hello you in Sweden.. it's all new being at the front ... but I enjoyed it and want to do it more.. become better at it..

• Love "Banksters" so much. Such a banger

EOB Official
Thank you.. appreciate the positivity .. I struggle with this one sometimes

• Hey Ed was it weird not playing with your Radiohead peeps in an album?

EOB Official
not really because I've spent my whole life playing with my Brothers

• Do you plan to ever come back to argentina? We love you way too much

EOB Official
It would make me so happy to come and play right now in Argentina.. to get on a plane and to be playing in your beautiful country.. <3<3

• What is it about it you struggle with? Gonna watch the Radiohead stream with us later?

EOB Official
going to clap our NHS first.. not tonight.. I joined you guys last week..

• Ed, approximately how many unreleased Radiohead songs are there?

EOB Official
432

• ed, do you know Milton Nascimento? sail on reminds me of his music

EOB Official
Of course.. he's the man.. LOVE Jorge Ben though!

• Ed, would you ever revisit Brasil? Taking another long vacation there?

EOB Official
My wife and I were talking the other night that we's like to do a big trip and drive from Mexico City down to Tierra del Fuego... that's the dream

• Sail On is an amazing song ,please tell me more about it.

EOB Official
It's about death and what happens after the physical body dies.. our soul lives on .. so we do.. it's just that our physical body dies..

• Do you normally write about personal experiences or do you role play in your songs?

EOB Official
It has to be personal.. I have to feel it otherwise I can't do it.. no role play :)

EOB Official
Olympik is my favourite track .. it's a live take with a few overdubs .. hail to Omar, Nathan and David.. what a band <3<3<3

• Your spirituality is really contagious, Ed :)

EOB Official
it's real though.. right?

• bucket list item: to hear olympik live

EOB Official
we'll make that come true.. I miss my live band.. Alvin on drums.. Dish on bass.. Hinako on keys and Ross on guitar.. love those guys.. <3

• Favourite Pink Floyd album ?

EOB Official
wish you were here

• Ed have you been on a vipassana retreat?

EOB Official
no would love to.. I fast though.. need to do one soon

• Are you still in Wales or have you come back home?

EOB Official
I am at home here in Wales

• God that bass is so DIRTY

EOB Official
Nathan East .. he's the man

• Ed, how are you finding your Fender Acoustasonics?

EOB Official
it's pretty good.. couple of teething issues with taking it out on the road.. but yes .. very cool

• sgt peppers or pet sounds?????

EOB Official
ooh .. well it was always pet sounds for me but I really got into Sgt peppers back in 2017 when they remastered it.. she's leaving home.. omg!

• Why "olympik" ? what does it mean

EOB Official
good question.. don't know how to explain it writing it.. when we meet I will explain..

• ed i wanna meet you and have a whole conversation with you ur so interesting

EOB Official
let's do it.. :D

• TE AMOOOOO

EOB Official
Beautiful words.. Je t'aime I love you Te Amo.. anyone got some other ways of saying this?

• Do you have a guitar practice routine ?

EOB Official
no not at the moment.. want to concentrate on writing

• the Italian is ti amo which is slightly different

EOB Official
love these.. let's get as many I love yous in different languages..

• Volim te. Greetings from Croatia<3

EOB Official
That's wicked.. Croatia in the house.. German ... Spanish.. dutch .. French

EOB Official
Thank you lovely people .. I cannot thank you enough for your support .. it really means so much to me and gives me strength for the next body of work

• seni seviyorum Ed (in turkish)

EOB Official
++

• Only language I speak is English, unfortunately, so I'm just gonna be straight with you and say that I love you, and meeting you after your show at Lincoln Hall was the best moment in all my fifteen years of life. You're doing amazing, and we love you so much, king; THANK YOU FOR EARTH! <3<3<3<3<3<3

EOB Official
I remember you.. you be kind to yourself <3

• Doustet daram, in Persian

EOB Official
wow .. love that

• A luv you ya cunt (Scottish)

EOB Official
:D :D :D

• Thank you for the art! It's pure.

EOB Official
<3<3<3

• French here, first of all, merci for your music, it makes me so happy, and also merci for this thing, few artists are that close to their community you are amazing

EOB Official
it's all about community...

• Greetings from Bolivia Ed, love the album!

EOB Official
Hi there .. Bolivia <3

• You're so sexy when you clap that 5/4 rythm during 15 step. oh god it turns me on.

EOB Official
:)

• ME : Going out in a blaze of glory remember that ?

EOB Official
:D:D

• Do you know any French words ?

EOB Official
mais bien sur

• in k’aatech. mayan

EOB Official
ok.. that is seriously wonderful ...

• Any advice for the world in this time of chaos?

EOB Official
Be kind to yourself.. be kind to others, the planet and all her animals.. X

• Tonight we have in youtube the concert in Bs As 2009 where you talked about people who disappear during the military government. Do you still remember that moment?

EOB Official
Of course.. it was a really important moment for us to acknowledge what you Argentinians went through under the Junta..

EOB Official
OK I'm going to go and have some supper now.. do you know what we are having? I'll tell you.. veggie curry, daal , salad and quinoa...

• say something to people who have big dreams but are afraid to make them come true

EOB Official
Dream big and go for it.. you will never regret going for it.. follow your heart and you never know where you will end up but it will be quite a journey!!

• Hey Ed! I’m writing you from a small town here in Chile. I’m very high right now, but I just wanted you to know that I love you and hope that you come back soon to Chile

EOB Official
Love you too but take it easy on the grass!! Don't overdo it.. moderation ;)

Read more…

11011047456?profile=original

A million thanks to Ed for his time and kindness, replying to many questions including the most trivial ones for nearly 2 hours. I've compiled the whole lot to make it more readable for your convenience. You can get the original stuff from Indiehead's AMA archives here.


1.

petra_tetris 
Do you manage all of your social media accounts or do you have someone doing it for you?

EOB_Official 
Bit of both.. I do most of the instagram and actually enjoying.. someone else does twitter and I try to stay away from it as it seems to be a load of angry men being abusive to one another..

2.
WannaTalkAboutKanye
Hello Ed, I'm interested in your views on kindness and being humble in general as a personality trait. How do you go through everyday life without losing that sentiment, given that our society is pushing these ideals of 'selfishness or else you will get walked over'... There's so much negativity in the world... I struggle with this in everyday life. Any tips on how to maintain that balance without slipping to the sides?

EOB_Official 
Be the change you want.. not always easy.. but it's interesting the more you walk the path of humility and kindness, the more of it you experience.. don't watch the news the whole time.. and don't let the bastards get you down!!

3.
Drag0nBinder
Hi! Ed, I would like to know which is your favorite song to play live with Radiohead? and also the least favourite?

EOB_Official
Favourite = Let Down or Weird Fishes Least favourite = Bangers and mash

4.

trashypanini
Hi, Ed!! Thanks for doing this. Since listening to EARTH (and feeling such an uplifting sensation in all the tracks—similar to what I felt in part of In Rainbows, even in the more punchy tracks) I was wondering if Radiohead’s “In Rainbows” served as a sonic template (intentionally or not) for EARTH in any way? Or if the “In Rainbows” era inspired you to put pen to paper and craft? As you can tell I love In Rainbows lol.

EOB_Official
In rainbows wasn't an influence but I really love that record.. possibly my favourite RH album..

5.
jacobn28
How did Cuttooth not make it onto Amnesiac?

EOB_Official:
Now you're speaking my language .. agree

6.
FredSamK
Hi Ed! Who is your favourite film director? What is your favourite horror film?

 EOB_Official
Christopher Nolan.. Interstellar is the greatest.. don't watch horror anymore but I loved the Omen trilogy back in the day

7.

no-more-loneliness (that's me!)
Hi Ed! Another question probably more interesting than my previous one: Reading/listening to your many interviews recently and before that, I was under the impression you had some interest in quantum physics. Am I right? If so, what's your view on the morphic/source field (also called unified field of consciousness)?
I'm half-way throught this book, The Source Fields Investigations by David Wilcock. It's fascinating. Explains a lot of things and help me cope with my mental blocks, you know, rationality vs intuition and stuff.

EOB_Official:
I'm really interested in a lot of this stuff.. the place where science meets spirituality.. quantum physics is fascinating.. I'm basically interested in anything that tries to explain this extraordinary thing called life and living on a sphere rotating around the a central Sun.. I mean when you pull out.. how extraordinary is this??!!

8.

zootndoot
Hey Ed, cheers for doing this and hope you are doing well! I was wondering how your time at Manchester University influenced and inspired your music?
My girlfriend is currently studying there and whenever I visit it’s hard not to become completely enamoured by the music scene up there. Definitely something in the air to this day. Thanks mate!

EOB_Official
Hey... loved going to Manchester ..was there from '87-90.. right in the epicentre of Madchester.. I wanted to go to Uni in a great music city.. there's no finer.. learnt a lot.. DJ'd, put on gigs, ran a club .. all sorts..

9.

BeholaUnbanned
Hi Ed. Was it a conscious nod to Dark Side of the Moon that the second side of Earth (which has a prism on its cover) opens with a song in 7/4 about money, or was that just a coincidence?

EOB_Official
Oh man.. is that true? Complete coincidence.. I know Nick Mason a bit.. such a lovely man.. he wrote a not for Philip saying we (Radiohead) were his favourite Floyd tribute band.. cheeky bugger

10.

gsheedy
Hi Ed, thanks for doing this! I love your work, Radiohead or otherwise. It is truly inspiring. For my question, I'll go a little pedal-nerd on ya: tell me why I should or shouldn't acquire an older, big-box Electro-Harmonix Deluxe Memory Man like yours. Pros and cons? What do you like/dislike about it? I've wanted one forever, largely inspired by your usage in Radiohead and demonstrated on That Pedal Show, but I've never had the chance to try one to see if it lives up to the hype/expense. Thanks so much! :)

EOB_Official
Buy one .. deluxe mem man.. you will never regret it young apprentice!

11.

yfnchn
Ed, this might be a more personal question, but I’ve been reading your new interviews lately, and I’ve found a lot of things you said to be very wise and inspiring.
What do you do when you’re feeling down? How do you mange to have faith in yourself? To focus more on the bright side? I know these happens to every human, and I’d really love to hear your experiences and thoughts.

EOB_Official
Thank you .. great question.. the most important thing that helps me is my daily meditation .. I taught myself about 18 years ago... it's such a profoundly important exercise for me.. and others..

12.

Roofy11
Hi Ed hope you're feeling better!
Firstly I want to ask (if it hasn't been asked of you already of course) what inspired you to do a solo album in the first place? Was it feeling that you couldn't fully express your ideas and potential through Radiohead alone or something completely different? Also second less serious question. Are you aware of the whole "Eeeeeed" thing where many people compare your backing vocals in Radiohead to be you essentially singing your name. Especially on songs such as Weird Fishes and Lift. I read somewhere that you said you had noticed that crowds were singing your part on Weird Fishes and thought it was sweet. Just thought it would be interesting to know what the subject thinks. Also thank you for doing this AMA!

EOB_Official
I was unaware of the EEEDDDDD thing in weird fishes.. like you wrote, I thought everyone liked singing along.. it's such a lovely moment in the show.. love playing that song..

13.

halseykale
Hi Ed! I'd like to know something more about Let Down, my favourite song. I always cry at the end, no matter what. So, how was it like to write Let Down? How much "Ed O'Brien" is there in the song? Who came up with the basic core of Let Down for the first time? And whatever else you want to add about the song will be greatly appreciated. That song speaks to my soul. Thank you for everything you did.

EOB_Official
It's probably my favourite RH song along with weird fishes.. when we recorded it, it was essentially live and it felt like as Quincey Jones would say that God just walked through the room.. it was an incredibly spiritual moment... so happy that you feel it too

14.

carohope
Hi Ed, You’ve been talking about the music of Earth like in a way like you view it almost as a spiritual healing ritual. Is that a new found realization or so,etching you’ve been always been feeling about your music. I’ve always recognized that element at Radiohead concerts. I’d really appreciate any of your thoughts on this. Also I wanted to say that while at first I thought it terrible that just as you were rolling out your first tour ever you got shit down by coronavirus, but now it almost seems uncannily like I really need your album RIGHT NOW because I find it so soothing and healing. Which circles round back to ,y original question. Thanks for being yourself always.

EOB_Official
Thank you for your question.. for me, great music has a spiritual dimension.. a magic.. and that's one of the things I love about music is that it can tap into that mysterious part of one's life... Thank you for the lovely words.. hope you are doing ok..

15.

Obtuse_1
Ed, the album is amazing and the cover-art is especially beautiful. I can tell that this album will be timeless. I have two questions: What are some influences that went into the artwork? Also, do you have any favorite novels you can recommend? I am relieved that you are feeling better. Thank you for doing this. Mitakuye Oyasin.

EOB_Official
Thank you Mitakuye.. The artwork was done by Andeas Brooks and we were really influenced by the artwork of Johannes Itten.. he taught at the Bauhaus and was a Mazdaznian.. a branch of Zoroastrianism .. really interesting man

16.

jpnny
Hi Ed! Congratulations on the new album. Will the dates for the second half of your tour be postponed or rescheduled with everything going on the world? I couldn’t make it to the first Toronto show so I’m hoping I don’t miss you again! Hope you’re doing well xo Ps. Treefingers is my most played song from Radiohead’s entire discography

EOB_Official
good man .. like your style..

17.

prosecuted-hamburger
Is man good or evil by nature?

EOB_Official
That is a question that has been asked by Philosophers for hundreds of years... I think basically kind .. 90% wants to basically co-exist, respect and get by with others.. it's the 10% that cause the shit.. But what I will say is that I think one of the fascinating aspects to walking this planet is that the seeds of destruction and potential for good are within each of us.. and that's the question, which path or choices ae you going to make.. thanks for the question

18.

In_Amnesiac
Hi Ed! Just wanted to say I’m so grateful for your ability to connect with your audience at Radiohead concerts. It means so much to share the physical expression of the music with you and makes me feel like I’m a part of the band. All the best, Lonnie

EOB_Official
I love that connection with the audience.. it means the world to me..

19.

shadowsinthemist
Hey Ed. Been a fan since 1997! Just wanted to say the album is fantastic, and what did you have for tea tonight?! Mike

EOB_Official
nice one Mike.. veggie curry..

20.

LarksTongues1974
Hello Ed. I wanted to know more about the live at the MTV beach house performance you did with Radiohead back in 93 where Thom screams at the camera and jumps into a pool. Was any of that planned or was that just a spur of the moment thing. Thank you and much love

EOB_Official
spur of the moment.. Thom was getting more and more pissed off with Kennedy the presenter... I don't think she understood his animosity!

21.

no452
Ed, I read your somewhat dismissive response to a question regarding a Kid A / Amnesiac box set recently. The OKC Minidisc leak as well as the OKNOTOK release were a heaven send. I am also a big fan of your diary entries from around that time. Please tell me that this project is not cancelled or shelved indefinitely.
Also, what happened to that Minidisc version of Lift? Seems way more fleshed out than the single cut. I bet there's an interesting story about that.
Really enjoying the new tracks. Keep on being awesome and get well soon.

EOB_Official
Never liked that version of Lift.. at one stage it was one of the best songs we had ever done.. it was killer, but too much pressure and expectation in the studio neutered it.. I'm sure that there will be KidA Amnesiac stuff.. all I said is that I find it hard to get excited by old stuff.. realise it's different for a fan of those records.. but when you've lived those moments it's a bit like going back in time..

22.

Shushisha
Ed, I read that when Robert Plant saw you playing exclusively with yours pedals with Radiohead he understood that what defined a good guitarists evolved from « guitar skills » to « play and create new sound ». What do you think about that ?

EOB_Official
I love Robert.. the one time we met, he was very lovely and he said when he saw us performing live, he realised that the days of virtuosos in bands was over!! Hilarious ..

23.

KasaiUchu_Stardust
Hi Ed! First of all thank you for doing this AMA, I’m a huge fan and this is a great chance! Secondly, I would like to hear your view on the possible contradiction between the artists intent and the listener’s personal experience. When you make a song, do you want people to feel a certain way or do you want it to be open to interpretation, and is it important to you? (An example for this situation would be someone feeling happy while listening to a song which is generally considered -maybe even by the creator himself- sad, but not necessarily as ‘’on the surface’’ as this) PS: I was really worried when you said you’ve contacted with the virus but I’m really really glad you are doing well now! Stay Safe Please <3 ! Also, I was really excited for the concert you’ve announced for Istanbul in July and got my tickets ASAP (long before all the crisis)... Do you think that concert will happen (not necessarily in July) at all? Thank You VERY Much!!!

EOB_Official
Thank you for asking.. the day you release a record is the day the songs kind of stop being yours.. you've done the work and I LOVE it when someone personalises a song and makes their own interpretation.. Thanks .. feeling better now although it hangs around for a while.. stay well

24.

SquealToTheCops
Hi Ed. I know during the recording of other albums, books have been important to you - for example, Wild by Jay Griffiths. I was wondering what you were reading during the gestation and recording of Earth, and what influence that had on you? Love, Ben

EOB_Official
hey Ben.. yes I read a lot.. love reading .. well I've been reading Thoreau's Walden and as I've had. a lot of things to sign I've been listening to the audiobook ME by Elton John.. what a story and what a lovely man...

25.

Ubir1234
Hey Edward, In early letters to fans - You mentioned being a Manchester United fan - Do you still follow football and the red devils in particular ?

EOB_Official
Yes love Manchester United.. but My son and I are season ticket holders at the mighty Brentford in West London.. he's an Arsenal fan and I'm united ... we bond over the Bees!

26.

Roivon
Hi Ed! Will you consider making an appearance on Tailenders to promote your album to fellow cricket lovers out there?

EOB_Official
yes .. imminently...

27.

Sandra_Tello
Edward, which song from "Earth" makes you feel like it represents you the most, the one that you identify with the most? That song that you can say: it's very Ed O'Brien...

EOB_Official
Olympik .. it's the Mother song on the record..

28.

skalathamus
Hey Ed! I heard you on Ezra Koenig's show Time Crisis recently, it was truly one of the most validating moments of my life to hear you both profess your love for the band Phish. VW and Radiohead have long been two of my all time favorite bands and to hear your appreciation for Phish, an unfairly stigmatized band that everyone loves to hate, was so, so surreal. Since discovering them five years ago, Phish has truly changed everything for me in such a positive way.
My question (related to above): Prior to the pandemic when you were touring with EOB, in what ways has Phish and the jam band sub-genre affected the band's playing on stage? Have you found yourself more willing to take chances and venture into uncharted territories with certain songs? Which songs do you feel allow the most room for improvisation on the new record?

EOB_Official
For me .. I wanted to take the songs into uncharted territory so that it changed each night.. that's what Phish do.. so brave and so musical.. class act

29.

Honeyb1024
Hi Ed, love your album! Would u ever consider doing a Pixies cover at a show? Would love to hear u do something like Wave of Mutilation.

EOB_Official
Thank you NO. 13 Baby .. LOVE that tune


30.

charliehartdrums
Yo Ed! What's your favourite Smiths song?

EOB_Official
This charming man or Headmaster ritual or stop me if you think you've heard this one before

31.

michaelschoenblum
Hi Ed, any wild tour stories from the early days? Much love and respect for doing an AMA, fingers crossed for more radiohead soon.

EOB_Official
not for public consumption!

32.

no-more-loneliness (that's me again!)
What do you think of music tuned to 432hz? A friend of mine who is a musician tried it and he really felt a differently mostly to his singing (easier) and some sort of comfort. You don't really hear it, you feel it. I couldn't tell myself as I have a hearing impairment and I can't hear some frequencies.

EOB_Official
Its really profound.. Sail On is in 432.. so is cloak of the night.. the whole next album will be in 432 and 444... it's deep stuff

33.

HawkTheHatchet
Hi Ed! OK Computer blew my mind and changed my life when I first heard it as a naive but impressionable youth, and I’ve been a huge fan ever since. This thread is a thrill to follow, so thank you for doing this. If Radiohead lost its damn mind and spent one full tour as a glorified tribute band in bizarro world, what other band/artist would you all cover? Either because you’d most enjoy playing their catalog, because it’s the only one you’d all agree on, or however you want to answer it. Thanks!

EOB_Official
maybe the Smiths or REM?

34.

Mrs_Lecter
Hey, Ed! Me again!
I see you as a very down-to-earth and spiritual kind of guy... As a student of the Occult, Qabalah and Hermeticism, I very much enjoyed that reference to the Emerald Tablet in Brasil (one of my favourite songs from Earth): "as above and so below". So, I'd like to know... What is your relation to these matters? Do you like to read about these philosophies and magickal practices? Thank you for doing this, by the way!

EOB_Official
I'm fascinated by this old knowledge.. Manly P Hall's the secret teachings of all ages.. there's magic out there..

35.

michaelscottpaperco-
Hey Ed, longtime fan. This may be a dumb question, but why did you decide to adopt the EOB moniker when you could've perhaps had more name recognition using Ed O'Brien? (I actually quite like EOB though, so don't think this is me advising against it haha)

EOB_Official
I didn't want to go out under my name .. EOB felt right

36.

nheim/">schlagenheim
Favourite UK band at the moment?

EOB_Official
Foals.. the mighty men from Oxford

37.

Sandra_Tello
What advice can you give to someone who struggles day by day against depression and anxiety?

EOB_Official
Thank you Sandra.. you always write such beautiful words... bravo to you for the work you do being a Nurse.. I hope you are ok... Sending you love and light ..

50.
champ10n0fthew0rld
Hi, Ed! My question is, if you had to describe your album Earth in one word, what would it be and why? I hope you're doing amazing. I love you so much!! -Lilayna

EOB_Official
LOVE....

51.
mixedracecouple
Hey Ed! First I wanna thank you so much for doing this. Radiohead is probably my favorite band ever so I think this is pretty cool. I’m an aspiring guitarist my self and you’ve been a huge inspiration to me. Anyways my question is, if you could have just one guitar pedal, what would you pick and why?

EOB_Official
echoplex ep-3 .. great tape delay with an amazing preamp

52.
helpmeplzzzzzz
Hey Ed, do you like to smoke cannabis? What's your favorite strain you have tried?

EOB_Official
not any more but there was a time....

53.
Thomberi
Hi Ed, Feels amazing writing this to you... Good to hear your are better now. Me and my wife both loved Earth - somehow makes me proud that a Radiohead member is making his own personal way in music industry (and I bet this album will be in many people's mouth (and ears)). I'm particularly interested in getting to know how was your experience in Brazil, what are the things you miss from living there and, on the opposite, what was the things you missed from UK when living there.
By the way, I'm from Argentina, but now living in Ireland for 2 1/2 years (interested in your answer as might be kind of the specular-reflection of my experience. Anyway, hope once this shit is over, you will be presenting Earth in Dublin :)

EOB_Official
So want to come to Dublin... I miss the time with my family living in a different culture.. it was an amazing adventure .. nit all good.. out landlord was a Narcissist and turned against us.. he wasn't Brasilian but a fellow European trying to live like a colonial master!

54.
Dawson79
Hey Ed. You and Jonny usually start Let Down and Weird Fishes standing close together. Is there a story to why? It’s such a nice moment in the shows and nice a connection between you two as musicians/guitarists. Love the new album, we’re lucky enough to see you in Toronto!

EOB_Official
he often says something to me when we stand close to one another for weird fishes in an attempt to make me make a mistake.. I usually tell him to fuck off.. I love this moments when our guitars intertwine.. What's your favourite Foals album and song?

55.
2runamok
He loves Holy Fire

EOB_Official
yes

56.
Brahmblebee
My daughter's a composer and musician, vegetarian, spiritual, incorporates into her pieces everything she's learning from you. What would it take to make you consider producing her first album?

EOB_Official
it would take more time than I currently have.. but she sounds just fine .. well done her

57.
no-more-loneliness (that's me once again!)
Trivial question: I read somewhere in some teen magazine Q&A from the 90's Thom describing you as a 'secret Alarm fan'. Did he mean you liked The Alarm but were ashamed of that or something? Or did he mean something else. Come on, I want to know because I have been an Alarm fan. Mike Peters is a lovely person.

EOB_Official
they always take the piss out of me cause I went to see the Alarm in Oxford in May '85.. such a great gig.. seats got thrown.. Mike Peters is a lovely man and a United fan

58.
sebastianbazaes0110
hi ed, What is your favorite drink? greetings from Chile

EOB_Official
organic pai mu tan white tea

59.
RADIOBOT
Hello There. How do you/Radiohead approach creating a setlist for each night? Thanks :)

EOB_Official
Philip, Thom and I sit down at about 2.30pm on the day of the gig and write the setlist, just before soundcheck...

60.
??? (question must have been deleted)


EOB_Official
Kiwanuka by Michael Kiwanuka and Grey area by Little Simz.. thank you for the kind words

EOB_Official
Hey Lovely people .. I'm going to love you and leave you.. thank you for your lovely words about EARTH.. I hope you all stay safe and well during this time.. Be kind to yourself, to others and our beautiful planet.. See you soon .. Big love EOBX

Read more…

EOB - Earth

Excellent album Ed... 

Many musical influences to be heard here including Radiohead.. Maybe you listen to them perhaps.. :-) 

Great to hear your voice out front and not from within the shadows. 

Brasil is a stand out which should hit the airwaves big time. 

Looking forward to more albums from you..

Stay healthy and safe all... 

Read more…
11011045278?profile=original
@ST_Culture  Hi! @jonathandean_ here on the official channel - I met Ed O’Brien (@EOBOfficial) on Skype - https://thetimes.co.uk/article/ed-obrien-interview-the-radiohead-guitarist-on-his-first-solo-album-self-doubt-and-battling-depression-jf50b85pt- and he agreed to take YOUR questions for half an hour.


1.  @dcMissaci Will there be more songs like Santa Teresa?


ED SAYS:
“Santa Teresa is my ambient side. It comes very naturally. I’m definitely in an ambient mood right now.”


2.  @ExitMusicAr Tell us a bit about the cover songs you're playing live. Why did you choose them?

 
ED SAYS: “We’ve been playing Ulrich Schnaus “On my own”, cause it’s a banger and Labi Siffre ‘I got the..’ The latter is an extraordinary soul song. I’ve got a band who can play this and deep down I’ve always felt there was a soul singer within me. I know, big statement, but I’m just being honest.. but much work to do on that front and it helps me stretch my wings that song.”
 

3. @pensinemutine Do you believe that, as Edgar Cayce once said, sound will be the medicine of tomorrow?

ED SAYS:
“Totally. Music is frequency. Look at the physics of it all. Everything operates at a frequential level. All diseases have their frequency. Discover what that
frequency is and you then have your way in. Bio resonance does this I believe. Very interesting. My dentist did bio resonance in my mouth after extracting a tooth. No blood and no pain!”

4. 
@saaaaa12am What is the most memorable thing that happened while you were performing onstage?

ED SAYS:
“Probably Glastonbury ’97…”

5.  @manu_marr What would be the order of your guitar pedals in your pedalboard? Why? Cheers and thanks!

ED SAYS:
“EQ pedal into Kingsley page boost pedal into Hudson sidecar distortion, into whammy pedal, into mar flanger into catalinbread belle époque delay pedal
into electro harmonic memory man pedal… Minimal at the moment, unlike my Radiohead pedalboards”

6.  @yolilondon EOB sounds great live! Please tell us a bit about the new band members, and how did it feel playing your new songs in front of an audience for the first time

ED SAYS:
“Alvin Ford Jr plays drums and is from New Orleans. Dishan Abrahams is originally from Sri Lanka, raised in Perth, Australia and now lives in London, he plays bass. Hinako Omori plays keyboards and sings, and Ross Chapman plays guitar and sings. They are truly extraordinary musicians. I feel very lucky that we can play together we were definitely having fun before the lockdown."

7. 
@seizenzetsu Which philosophers and authors influence your work? Cheers.

 
ED SAYS: “I really like Jung and people like Aldous Huxley. Jung said at the end of his life, that all his work was contained in the Tao Te Ching. It’s beautiful.I don’t like philosophers with big egos, and who think that we are the centre of the Universe.”

8.  @deadairface Don’t know if you know it, but you’ve played over 1100 concerts with Radiohead over the last 25 years. How surreal was it to play the recent live solo shows without seeing Thom and Jonny to your left? Something missing, or glad to be rid of them for a bit lol
 
ED SAYS: “That’s a lot of shows. Thank you for highlighting. My thing is totally different. When I did my first show in Toronto it felt completely natural to have my new band around me. Strange being in the middle though?!!”


9. 
@ponkermagoo77 Covid19 has forced us to scale back, to family units, and to a national level, at least physically. How do you think our collective consciousness will shift after this period of isolation? And how will it impact the arts if events like tours just cease to be?

 
ED SAYS: “I truly believe that this changes everything and will change everything. There is no going back to how it was. So much to answer here. On a basic level Boris Johnson, our Tory PM, said yesterday that he owes his life to the NHS. He can’t possibly follow the route of his predecessors in the last 12 years by cutting and privatising huge chunks of the NHS. Our society has been turned upside down and our key workers and health workers are finally being valued for what they contribute to society. This will not be forgotten by anybody alive at the moment. Lots more to write about this."
 
10.  @lgnacio07167899 How many hours per day or week you take to play and compose music?

ED SAYS: “Not enough at the moment. After next week and the release, I’m going to get up early and start writing every morning.”
 
11. @stephenkahlig Any favorite EOB tunes from within the band? You know which band I mean...
 
ED SAYS: “No, haven’t heard anything!”
 
12.  @edobriengod Ed, do you support lesbians and if you do can you say “lesbian rights”?
 
ED SAYS: “Take a wild guess??!! Of course I do!! F**k yes. Shout lesbian rights to the rafters!!”

13.
@krysthopher
Any chance of you coming to South America later in the year when, hopefully, this virus goes away?
 
ED SAYS: “Please yes. I need to spend more time on that incredible continent. Magic in the air...”
 
14. @ChieftanMews Edward - first time caller, long time listener. Your new music is luscious. Is it true you invented live music webcasts in the late 20th to early 21st century and do you find they would be useful in these times of calamity?
 
ED SAYS: “Chieftain.. it’s been too long. You know the answer to that. We did live streaming when bandwidth was so narrow. Those webcasts we (Radiohead ) started doing around the time of recording Kid A were such fun.. slightly anarchic throw away and usually assisted by a load of booze and a spliff. They were the antidote to the intensity and focus of our recordings.
 
15. @mikecahpentah I've noticed you seem to gravitate towards positivity and brightness in music more than what Radiohead is traditionally known for. Has this ever brought conflict upon you and your band mates?

ED SAYS: “I’ve worked hard at being positive!! Meditation, going alcohol free.. eating the right stuff.. sorting my emotional shit out. I had an amazing personal trainer on the journey and he said to me, you don’t help anyone by being down.. and I used to hide it. I always hid from the band. Finding peace of mind and happiness is as old as the hills and it’s a journey that has been told for thousands of years.. it’s always internal.. just listen to footage of George Harrison and John Lennon talk about it.”
 
16.  @EcLickBelow  Can you describe a recent standout experience you've had playing your new music live?
 
ED SAYS: “It was playing Brasil at The Roundhouse 5 weeks ago. Last song in the set and when the Bass came in, you could feel the energy in the room shift the whole trance outro was glorious.”
 
17. @bonfanteslade What are 3 traits you discovered about yourself during the songwriting process, positive and negative?

ED SAYS: “I learnt about what my truth is. Sounds grand, but that has to be at the heart of anything creative. What is the truth here? Someone said this there other day and I liked it.. ‘Art is not about perfection, it is about the truth'”
 
18.  @secretorganist1 Hi Ed! Read any good books lately? Looking for lockdown recommendations...

ED SAYS: "Yes... I read 'The Overstory' by Richard Powers at the end of last year.. but is the best book I have read in years.. it's a really important book for us all... I am reading Thoreau's Walden, which feels very apt too.. Also whilst I am doing a lot of signing for the album release I am listening to the audiobook of Elton John's autobiography as read by him and Taron Egerton.. it's brilliant.. what a life and what an amazing man.. self deprecating and obviously a kind soul.. what an incredible musician too.. interestingly I only like his stuff pre his cocaine years.. I never got his music because we grew up with all that Nikita shit, and I was listening to the Smiths.. but in the Summer of 2004 we were on holiday in France.. our son was 6 months old and waking up at 5am.. that was my shift and the only CD they had in the house was the original Elton John's greatest hits.. I put it on out of curiosity and these incredible songs came out of the speaker.. Tiny Dancer is perfection .. incredible.. oozes West Coast golen light freedom..."
Read more…

Sustainability and WASTE

Hello,

I'm currently writing an essay for my university which covers steps companies are taking taking to be more sustainable. I've heard that WASTE is progressive when it comes to ethics and the enironment but I've only heard that through word of mouth.

If there are any articles or blog posts that back this iunformation up I'd greatly appreciate being pointed in the right direction.

Thank you to whoever reads this,

Harry

Read more…

MARCH 6, 2020

from The Blue & Brown Books (or the Second Verse of my Life)

[SIDE-A]

                                                                   1. 

Hell slap it into them. And not without a fury. Right inside
the delicious caption wherein the snail has captured our confidence
as he himself confides to a hedgehog
about his own classified bones, a creature that as he floats mid-

sentence, we sometimes will misidentify if not mistreat,
mistreat like a paper clip bent out of shape or the hovercraft
that, with its projection of blue beams, might as well have taken

one of us up through the central hole of (yes) its toilet.
Yes, they’ll blame it on too much Jim Beam
after handing you a couple orange Tic-Tacs,
while, now, we play another game of paper, rock, scissors,

and try not to confide about those grenades of grim flash-backs,
which still haunt us.
Either way it might have been for five minutes or four hours

when we consider the time for which we didn’t mind the gap,
the gap in which, for four minutes or five hours,
we were taken aboard like two raw appetizers for their ship’s
butcher, baker, and (yes) candlestick maker to distill

what still might drip through the government’s filter
and so land
in your own poisonous cup of tea.

                                                                                                             2. 

It only takes one to two sips for the message to sink down,
down past the candlestick’s other end and hit
at Descartes’ Brain in the Bottle

as its green stain of glass keeps itself adrift
at the bottom of the sea.
Meanwhile, may we gain all of our strength
while we fast

these weeks of Lent after which we may hope on nailing down
the whereabouts of last year and, particularly,
make sense of that serpent-coiled spring.

That serpent-coiled spring when the whole town of lovely Pinehurst thought
it best to tee off
on my head’s jew-dimpled afro-dome,
which, given their old age, they might have mistook for a golfball.

Regardless, it served them well as a means to project me out
of my sickbed
(and again) by catapult

deliver me splat!–
to land
in the ash-bin

of exile.

                                                                                                    3. 

O Father to whom I now pray
for how their miraculous fear
still runs, runs like a single

segregated elementary sink,
both hot and cold.
And with such credulous con-
viction for which like K.

from Kafka’s The Castle
I played both joker
and villain

for their trite village
of bullet-proof
glass
and pall smoke.

                                                                                                                    4. 

I tally up the hours of time and w.a.s.t.e.
from my own love affair with idleness
as the scarab-black ink scuttles
like Stephen Dedalus or Gregor Samsa’s

better half
across my mind’s
wine-soaked page.

A page on which time itself now ushers past
and stretches forward
with a certain scientific temperature
that only a tardigrade or moss piglet

might endure. Tardigrada which means “slow steppers”
for their four pairs of legs,
each impaired with sucking claws or discs.

It was former intelligence officer Luis Elizondo who would shed light
upon the large bright ‘Tic Tac’ that like a Frisbee disc,
without any windshield or porthole, any visible wing or empennage,
would fry any attempt from the scramble of F/A-18F fighter jets

sent to track if not wrangle what, even for the USS Princeton‘s
and Super Hornet’s electro-optical scanners, radars, and classified gears
left only another 'stubborn chem-trail’ of unexplained aerial phenomena.

                                                                                                             5. 

If this is a dream, I haven’t woken up
as, once upon a time, I did after a good-enough stint
of pledging allegiance to some anonymous skulls

and bones for which Elvis Presley is, if not Alien,
an honorary member. If this is a dream, I haven’t woken up,
woken up yet to quote “that there was nothing to save me from the F
that stood, as you may like, not for my grave but the two grades dealt.”

(How much fun.) To keep from moving up with a degree which,
back then, I must have wanted to smear with the mushy dung
of my own bullshit. Nonetheless, that was the year that silently bled

back to the boom of 2006, the year through which you might have watched me like Cosmo Kramer from that sitcom
study abroad and, night after night, episode after episode, trip
with such diligence over cardboard pizza boxes and bottles of gin;

with what was more than a little tar on my heels as now I tug and tug
and (yes) tug one foot, at a time–by and with and at the stuck
lever my own bootstraps, praying for whatever might give.

                                                                                                                          6. 

It was by the blacked-out bootstraps while marching out
from the timber stands of Apache-Sitgreaves Forest
that Travis Walton would find himself trying to add up pieces
for which there was no arithmetic as he walked blindly as Saul

against the few stray head-beam lights. Yes, on the highway
though his nose could still pick up on the lingering stench
left by the clear-plastic mask that–how many times do I have

to say this– an unreliable troop of short, bald, Gollum-like gnomes
had pulled like a pall over his bearded map.
Plus those few men in black fastened with General Patton’s
very own helmet.

After handing the boy a Tic Tac
they’ll blame it all
on too much Jim Beam

even as the blue-to-green afterglow
continues to exhale and radiate
from Walton’s workman’s jacket
with the same brassy phos-

phorescence. The same brassy phosphorescence that first compelled
all six of his crew members to flip back and duck into the single bed
of the truck for which (yes) Walton was Goose.

                                                                            7. 

The goose for which, according to such schemes one sometimes adopts
in mathematics,
‘the man who cries out in pain, or says that he has pain,
doesn’t choose

the mouth which says it. It was for my own scheme to if not duck
then eschew
any conventional plot or storyline

that I derailed on & off the bent-steel switch-back rails to my own (yes) train
of thought, the days and weeks after I first felt
being psychically-drug more than pulled by the vatic leash
of–if not god–what demonic power?

                                                                        8. 

It only took the next dawn before they were blaming 'all this non-sense’
on the orange Tic Tacs that, for over a decade without incident,
I had been taking to combat the many hall-scribbled marks of ADHD.

Nevermind, nevermind, for how even this playful admission plays
into their (yes) Trump-
et of cards for which I now feel quite pinched
between the pages

of Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49
where they still might find me ‘sensually fatigued’
and ‘death-wishful.’ Like Metzger muttering

“possession” as the very means
to lock me back in the trey
of some state vending machine
or county icebox.

                                                                               9. 

Always getting ahead when not away
from myself. Still, I want to go back
to the base of Fort Bragg, off the back
road of some American Highway

to where the leaders of our troop
were patched and stationed
to a building that shot up

8 stories below
to first leave
my stomach
in knots

like the first time I paused
to catch my breath
before the fast rope

that snaked down and out the mock-up frame
of a black hawk hauled back from
some desert storm.

Though it felt more the Raven
for how incredibly I shook
myself like Elvis into the alien
two-step of such awful panic.

                                                    10. 

The muted post-horn, the muted bugle
for which only god might hear
a dog’s blind whistle

I think of saying something like this to Ezra Pound
while leafing through Whitman’s Leaves
of Grass as the Nurse asks me
to recite my ABCs

before I’m given even the thought
of gasping
at the greener grass

that is the blue air outside.

                                                    11. 

I blink then blink then blink,
harder and harder again
through the pilfered salt
of my tears as they drop

and scuttle past my left cheek bone
like Stephen Dedalus’ stunt double
or Gregor Samsa’s better half.

It was Gogo’s better half who,
among a congregation of turnips,
would hold up a carrot
at which Estragon still idly gnaws

to reiterate his (or was it my own) boredom
with pulling up and putting on
a fresh pair of hospital socks.

                                                                    12. 

As when there’s nothing to say, there’s nothing to see.
I think of Pessoa’s I asked for so little from life
and life denied me even that as I make one last
post on the bugle before so muting its horn for good.

It was the grey horns of a stuffed-ram
that I chewed off with the few sharp-
teething incisors of Mr. Edward Scissor-
hands. It was Edward Scissorhands

directed by Tim Burton–who would fall in love
with Winona Ryder eight years or 10 seconds
after Blade Runner hit box-office. I forget which
room it was that felt more the box office, the room in which

despite my many wails of contra I apparently recovered
after the two months of absence for which I might have filled
out more than one absentee ballot and like some Nintendo plumber
or princess run the pink risk of permanently playing the vermin or victim,

which ever comes first as in South Carolina Biden finally strikes a match
after a celebratory dinner of beans and pork dunked in some cheer-wine sauce, which brings us to no point at all for which we now swerve

given
the curve
ball.

                                                                        13. 

It was after trying, again, your very best to unhinge
my white-gloved hand in a stolid
game of Paper, Rock, Scissors
when I thought it might take a whole pail of white-

wash and then some
to dove-coat over
those brilliantly-
strung together posts

that for two consecutive months I ran up and down for only one burned-
out rail
of Christmas-tree light bulbs.

My statement for playing the national lampoon might still ring
and read something out for truth like “and the whole city blew-
out then it was over the white-picket fence for an incredibly dark age.”

                                                     14. 

It is somewhere along the outer banks of North Carolina
when an original Dali woodcut
from Dante’s own Divine Comedy, with its woman
in blue next to its man in red,

would wash itself adrift. Adrift like the severed hand
of Divine Mother Mary–and by some strange rote–
land on the winter dock of Nagg’s Head where, in a crate
of potatoes or cabbages, it would pop up. Yes. Pop up

like some Sour-Patch Kid
at a thrift shop’s back-
door and so serve as

the rare thing that
even you might steal
before anyone nips

the bud and cries wolf.

                                                           15. 

Meanwhile, it’s somewhere off in the Central Pacific Theatre
as we now watch through a Super Hornet pilot’s head camera
and listen for how quietly the pilot swerves at 252 knots
and almost 20,000 feet above the disbelief of our own heads,

as he plays with the switchblade of an AN / ASQ-228 switch
used to toggle and shift his Nintendo Display in and out
of infrared and visual modes.

Notwithstanding that–despite all King David’s Might
which entails all of this classified-government make-up
to add to the pilot’s swollen list of sensory prawns and spark
plugs, the few sprockets and greater gears–the Super Hornet pilot

fails still to lock step with any silver boom or squeamish beam
of light which The New York Post might run still a headline post
as we now may read ‘Blurry, Abominable Tic Tac Kerfuffles Super Hornet

                                          16. 

Just as this hand-carved piece, now, considered a collectible
for how it may have been tagged by DalÍ himself
with aid of one wooden stamp & purple-coloring pencil,
so the scab that runs the size of a scarab beetle,

which, from my left wrist, I now try
to tweeze something out.
It was just beneath my left wrist
where the spud-shaped freckle

would, beneath the skin, first swell
with such an orange ton of wattage
as I soaked in the ketchup of my wounds

and tried to play the Devil’s fiddle
in (yes) my
Washington Height’s studio.

                                                               17. 

It was in that Washington Heights studio
that like Pozzo
I would enjoy a selfish
kosher snack

of some chicken and wine
before soaking my heels
in some tar and picking up
any bones after having rolled

(yeah) some dice.

It was a pair of hand-carved dice
that along with a few snails
I would toss into a well’s bucket
before picking up where I had left off

in Dante’s own Inferno.

                                                          18. 

As here we are sometimes misled
by a few substantive ‘objects of thought’
for which the whole town of even Nags Head
will squelch and squawk and (yes) squeak

for some attention the week the substantives

Cogito, ergo sum, [as Wittgenstein writes
'toothache,’ ‘table,’ ‘chair,’ and ‘leg’]
first touched down like a zebra-spotted ‘Tic-Tac.’

                                                                         19. 

The mouth that says ‘i’ now becomes the hand,
which Hell-raised, wishes to speak, to speak
on a pain for which, now i point towards nothing

at all. Sometimes when there’s something to see,
there’s nothing to, indubitably, say in place
of the pain that we have been inclined
to forget by dint of the grocer handing us

a few pink slips of paper attached
by blue paper clip, the blue paper clip
which now serves to label the illusion
that there then is nothing to mind

if and when we consider the gap.

                                                                        20. 

I was minding that gap of four hours
or five minutes and running my sight
down the rubber-duck barrel of an M-16
in desperate search to point out

what, queerly enough, cannot be seen.
“When I made my solipsist[ic] statement,
I pointed,” but then was robbed of any point

as the hovercraft pops
like a Pop-Tart
out of a toaster oven
and then to the shape

of a Tic Tac
changes
its clothes.

                                                                                     21. 

As for “The Blackbird” I would manage to “Boil the Breakfast Early”
the morning a hawk’s wings
touched down on the rotting beams
of my backyard swing-set that was missing all its swings.

I’m sure there are many ways of saying “turn off the light,”
out in that world of blood and snatters that always works
through lunch, that world where Gallogly only partly holds
a veil to stretch over his foot tracks as he tries again to scale

some cliffside that gives to a patch of waste ground where Alice
provides the cover around a burnt-out heavy-duty tyre
where six, maybe seven, skinheads have [roughly] formed a quorum.

But as for “The Blackbird” I would manage to “Boil
the Breakfast Early” and avoid all collisions.
It was like walking on the head of a drum.

He saw it all as a parable of power, its feeding,
growth and systematic abuse: a loop, a triangle
and trapezoid, thus: we miss another point.

                                       22. 

Another point about the hedgehog and the snail
and their weekly kerfuffles about some paperclip
or hovercraft that could turn itself into (yes) an
orange Tic Tac. Once again Eros, like a black smith,

has struck me with his great axe, and has plunged me
into an icy torrent.. Once again Eros looks at me meltingly
from under his dark eyelids and with all his enchantments

flings me to Aphrodite’s inescapable nets.
It was over a few bubbling jets
of rapid-white water
that the Green Hornet pilot

first trained eyes on the oblong craft
before it took off ‘very rapidly’
from approximately 60,000 feet down

to approximately 50 in a matter of seconds.”

                                          23. 

It might have only been a matter of seconds
for which the blue cassette tape’s recording
blinks in and out of our focus as we tap our ears

to the wooden desk and listen for a bull to rush
out of some pink brush-
stroked bushes.

It was out of a pink-burning
bush that god
delivered Moses from despair.

‘Now that I’ve turned another corner and spent
another coin lets turn off
the TV.’ Then the message plays on

and plays on like Moses carrying the bones of Joseph.

                                             24. 

The Argo, it was a voyage ‘on all men’s tongues.’
The best version comes from the late epic Argonautica
Or was it from Euripedes Medea wherein a cold, dark stall
I tremble, now suddenly worse for my years, at some threshold

like some ‘prize-winning horse’ who is put (yes sir) ‘once again’
in the chariot-yoke. Euripedes Medea was the first to mention
the wooden bows and arrows with which Eros pierces his victims.

                                                                 25. 

Just as with the map of Moses after spending those forty days
and forty nights without a syringed droplet of water or scrap
of bread, my face was radiant when I came back down Grandfather Mountain holding the very map that some craft

of a god left etched in the palm-branched palms of my hands
for which I barely scratched fever as the weeks and days latched
on, as the skin of my face continued to shine like one of Thoth’s
10-cent coins that you place in slot and like a switch turn on Tesla’s coil.

                                                                         26. 

I might have woken up in the home of wild beasts,
somehow already bathed and bedecked
if not ‘decorously draped’ by the Graces’ long
silken robes,

and just as Zeus wields another thunderbolt
and Poseidon his tri-
dented sword at, as Homer calls him,
“the light-bearing Lord

of the Silver Bow.”

It was the ‘Far-shooter,’
that Shining One, Lucifer

Who like Icarus would fall out
the very bottom
of some painting’s impression-
istic sky

and thereupon exemplify
an identification
which (knowing the
shedding skin of himself),

through the years, be-
comes
all the more standard.

                                                    27. 

When Samuel Beckett started scribbling in french
with a black stamp-pad and purple crayon
for the world(s) of Vladimir and (yes) Estragon,
he never referred to them as tramps,

just some voices for which one,
through seven brush-strokes of grass,
tells the other he should have been a poet.

The only thing that Beckett assures us
‘is that they were wearing bowlers"
when under a leafless dead oak
Estragon sits down numerous times

while Vladimir restlessly dozes.
Though the clothe scraps
that Estragon wears might be

shabby, he appears quite the de-
feated aristocrat or genteel
for how he delivers Vladimir
with the blood-stained maps

of the Holy Lands then finds way
to pin-point why exactly he wishes
to blow himself up like a banana-

boat raft and so float the rest
of his honeymoon out on (yes)
the Dead Sea. 'That Estragon
belongs to a stone’ comes with

very little surprise as it now drops
at our feet.‘ Now as I air out my dogs
after a few sleepless days and nights
of hitchhiking back and forth in a city

of light bulbs and overflowing ash trays.
It was one of those overflowing ash bins
or trays that Beckett was known to oc-

casionally empty as he traced out
the text from French to the English
for which it is scarcely known like
that Estragon belongs to a stone.

                                             28. 

The boundless sea boiled terribly 'round
while Cymbals of the Earth crashed
and the brothy curtain of sky trembled
and groaned at the onslaught of (yes) an

orange Tic Tac whose heavy tremors
stretched down to 'gloomy Tartaros,’
with din of the world’s terribly pounding
feet and hard missiles, which–even now,

might reach up to ‘Starry Heaven.’

                            29. 

to elapse, but we know we are no longer same,
and not only know that we are no longer same,
but know in what we are no longer the same,
you wiser but not sadder, and I sadder but not

wiser for how the world with its ‘Daltonic Radar
of visions’ makes us shift the map in our hands
for then another onion and peppermint,

another onion, another peppermint and those
revived prayers for our souls
as we stake out our gigantic beams
and posts

and have another go at blowing up another Carnival
for which you would give not a cent,
being in the know how too many Jokers
will use a hammer and so abuse the pierced hands

of some contestants for which we’ll have to offer
another onion, another peppermint.
Another onion, another peppermint. From this point,

                                                           30. 

one might go on talking about the price of Tic Tacs
as a deer gallops down the blind stretch of Haywood Ave.,
prancing on and off a sidewalk of dog-walking yoyos
leaving us all quite charmed if not quite flummoxed

at the sudden invasion into (yes) the private
epileptic world in which Gallogly is thrown
another crake of sunlight as Thoreau mutters

“Now comes good sails”
before one final croak
of Moose
followed by (yes) Indian.

And so on to the very dust for which the trails
of our dusters are covered in sand and those
higher strands of chalk for which its another neat

double boot-legged glass of
another genie in the bottle
after which the barman

offers me another Tic Tac
to break any ice
as the Dow plunges
slower than the bloody tit

of the Titanic
another 10 percent.
As I prepared myself

to take the icy plunge
I could hear, someone
among the rows, calling

out for ‘more bleach and toilet paper.’

                                     31. 

[HERE WE ARE. WITH YOU TAPPING THE CHARLESTON ON THE DARK SIDE OF, IF NOT THE MOON, THEN GUANTáNAMo’S DARK ZERO BAY WHERE EVEN THE CLOSET’S DUSTBIN AND BROOM ARE KNOWN

TO SNAP THEIR FINGERS IN STEP_OFF SET AS ONE MOVES THE RADIO’s DIAL IN ACCORDANCE WITH NO PLAN (OR SCHEME) FOR WHICH ‘ANOTHER ONION, ANOTHER PEPPERMINT, ANOTHER ORANGE TIC TAC,’

MEANWHILE TWO INTERROGATORS TOSS ANOTHER HORSESHOE AT THE CLOCK’S KILL BOARD AND TAP THEIR FINGERS ON THE PIZZA BOX,
THE PIZZA BOX THAT CONTINUES TO REST JUST BENEATH THE SILVER to RED EXCLAMATION MARK of (YEAH, YEAH, YEAH) THEIR KILL SWITCH ]

                                 32. 

It all boils out after the whitewash as even this boils down
to nothing more (yes sir) discernible than the bug in your
phone as it scans out the tap of a few purple patches and
how they might pan out a scent for Dr. Frankenstein’s few

sack cloths of Myrrh, that gum or resin which even now
hangs its su-
spenseful perfume like some medicine
in a thorny

green branch of sapwood. “On being asked what these pictures
have in common, he is to point to a sample
of red, say, if there is a red patch in both, to green if there is
a green patch in both. This shows

you in what different ways the same answer may be used.”

                                          33. 

ANOTHER ONION, ANOTHER ORANGE PEPPERMINT OR TIC TAC
ANOTHER ONION, ANOTHER ORANGE PEPPERMINT OR TIC TAC
ANOTHER ONION, ANOTHER ORANGE PEPPERMINT OR TIC TAC

FOR WHICH THE PAGES OF PROJECT BLUE BOOK LEAVE SUCH

A BLANK SLATE OF STARES AS I THUMB THE NEXT PAGE OVER
AND SEARCH FOR A PAPERCLIP THAT EVEN NOW MIGHT LEAVE
ITS MARK OF GHOST PAGES RIPPED FROM THE YELLOW PAGES

OF (YES) THIS VERY BOOK. IF ONE WERE TO FLIP ON THE NIGHTSHADE,

THEY WOULD BE SURPRISED TO FIND ANOTHER SET OF BITE MARKS
IN THE PINEAPPLE. NOT THAT FROM THE HIGH BALCONY FULL OF
CHINGAS AND CREAM-PUFFED MARICONES IT’S NOW FEEDING TIME

AT THE ZOO.

                                               34. 

It was at the zoo in the Bronx of New York’s best loved borough
where the New York Post would first run with the story about a Snail
trying its best hand at a game of Paper, Rock, Scissors against

the very Hedgehog we still are more than likely to mistake for an

orange hovercraft that, as it performs its latest chess moves in
yet another Game of Go, again, changes its clothes before dis-
appearing altogether from the Lockheed display of any map.

                                                           35. 

It was Paul Klee’s grandmother, Frau Frick, who taught him
very early one pink to purple dawn to draw with crayons
something which, even now, in the parrot-light, looks like
a cow’s udder. Deep down one might take this for a fib

as I cast my glances through a gap in Mr. Knott’s garden fence
and spy upon the leaves of a friendly flower by which Watt
may again tell Sam’s tale of the old man and weigh absence
in a scale that is characterized by its hypnotic abuse of repetition.

Another onion. Another peppermint. Another onion. Another peppermint
for which there is only ‘fatigue’ and ‘disgust’ as I begin this umpteenth approach to summit with Sisyphus’ boulder that, yet again, finds another way to run me down like a Bulldozer. It was at base camp where I lit

another cigarette and began to choke for all “these painfully gained experiences” that bear less and less fruit notwithstanding being hit

over the head
with a coconut.

                                                            36. 

That we belonged to the fat tire of the workshop
that took little company
and so caused such a shaking of heads,

such a shaking of heads in that old church warehouse
in which the roll call for our unheavenly troop
of painters was said to be overflowing

with veteran pilots. What the consequence
will be for going against the rattlesnake’s rattle
as we boil another page from Thomas Paine’s
Common Sense that we might be ‘led by

a thread’ and ‘governed by a reed,’
keeps itself quite unseasonably up
in the air as Benjamin Franklin tugs
on the skinny floss of his kite’s string,

and waits patiently in silent disquiet beneath (yes)
the electric clap and growl of a thunderhead.

                                                      37. 

One scans for where the next balls of lightning
may strike out another clandestine blimp
for which its black box will be classified and sealed
by four or five tridents.

It was four or five tridents or Navy Seals
who would with the help and detail
of the Army’s own Combative Arms Group
begin to hatch some plan for how to slash

this hedgehog’s sail before like a hovercraft
or Tic Tacked snail it blinks off the read
of our radar

as Trump declares another ‘National Emergency’
over the ‘Corona Virus Pandemic,’ that causes
more than a few Green Hornet pilots to scramble.

                                                         38. 

I was scrambling up some eggs, like Beckett’s Watt,
‘as just an exercise’
to be carefully studied
as we might

near the end to another chapter where there’s no symbols
where none are intended to be read
for Hieroglyphs from The Book of the Dead
for which I’ve scrolled through the w.a.s.t.e.

of many hours. And in the Duat
with what felt
an entire platoon
of priests.

That a number of these great apocryphal spells and curses
of the thrice-great Thoth
kept rolled in the rw nw prt m hrw‘s papyrus
would cast themselves

out of roll call and so paint themselves on tomb walls
and sarcophagi still has me shaking in (yes) my boots.

                                             39. 

The squirrel in the wheel. The fly on the wall
which we would like to cast off the rod’s reel
and into the dead sea on which so much floats

in and out of display as we scan for anything
that might possibly appear (how to put this)
invisible. It was Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man
like the bodiless head you sometimes see

at the circus sideshow surrounded by mirrors
of a dark, reflecting glass–whose intelligent mind
was constantly being 'bumped against by
those of poor vision.’ The very piss-poor, black

and white vision for which you are just another jig-
sawed piece of their sound for anguish as you strike
your fist and begin now with such a flourish to bump

people back, that figure in their nightmares, which
the sleeper tries ‘with all his strength to destroy.’

                                             40. 

It is through a wooden picture frame bought at a flea market stall
that we take our seats for an evening at the theater, waiting for God-
ot to blow up, like Marilyn Monroe, the curtain of his skirt
as Vladimir and Estragon skirt around a country road’s pale-blue ditch–

out of which the same segment of dialogue again loops
itself as if to hang its thirsty-rubber neck
around the leafless elm, or was it a Japanese oak,

where it’s expected they’ll spot this Godot,
whose phantom limbs
scratch into so many of our powdered heads–

as during the first of many intermissions,
we stretch the black and white thumb
of our suspicions and so bite down
on another orange Tic Tac

or (yes) peppermint as the only means to kill
the purple onion that hovers and hovers
just below the Gothic harbor of our breath.

                                                              41. 

It was in my Heaven-sent, Hellfire-proof Tuxedo
and with ash in my brain and blood in my camera’s
technicolor sight that I sat somewhere at the eastern tip
of Washington Heights, in this–my proper hole inside

an Amsterdam basement strung out with approximately
1,369 Christmas lights,
remembering that, like Tesla, ‘I am invisible.’
That Louis Armstrong made poetry

‘out of being invisible’ strengthens my own grasp
to stand at these dark, moon-pocked points
where time leaps ahead of itself like a possessed
deer down the war path of Haywood road

Where at Battle Cat I try not to gasp
through (yes) the chain smoke
as this reindeer hurtles herself
like Rudolph or Prancer over

the taut silver leash
of a golden retriever
and so proceeds
to buck and buckle

on
and off
the side-
walk.

                                                                  42. 

At present, some 192 spells are known,
most beginning
with the ro, which–rolled off the tongue,
can mean “mouth,”

“speech,” “spell,” “utterance,”
“incantation,” or just another “chapter
of a book”
that we find book-

marked with stains from
a few paperclips
marking where a page

or two might have been torn to relinquish what heka
or dark magic had been aimed, through the spit
of some saliva, at controlling the gods themselves

as I scroll down another report that wishes to disclose
the next eyewitness to this latest streak of TicTacs.

                                              43. 

Perhaps they’re merely the boats or life rafts
of the gods themselves as we scratch and sniff
at the few blurry images capturing Oumuamua‘s
spear-point or arrowhead as it boomerangs in and out

                                               of this world.                                                     44. 

'This trystero dies irae… .’ leaves the line nearly as corrupt,
owing to no clear meaning for the word
unless it be a a pseudo-Italianate variant on triste ( = wretched,
depraved).

                                                  45. 

I return to my muted TV set,
which now is showing cartoons,
and wait for Maxwell’s Demon’s
high pitched, comedic voice

of gemlike clues to communicate
as he begins to sort molecules
between hot and cold
as the method ‘to make up

for [Oedipa] having lost the direct
epileptic Word, the cry [or ro]
that,’ having something to do
with a post horn, ‘might abolish

the night’ that the whole
world might have
withdrawn into a vacuum
lit by one 10-watt bulb.

                                                         46. 

When it makes sense to say
“I see this”, or “this is seen”,
pointing to what I see,

it also makes ‘sense’ to say
“I see this”, or “this is seen”,
pointing to something I ‘don’t’

as when Ludwig makes his solipsistic
point of of all this pointing out,
he robs the pointing of its sense

by inseparably connecting
that which points and
that to which it points.

                                                    47. 

As so suddenly it feels by CERN‘s latest reports
that we all have fallen, and quite headfirst,

through the trap of Lewis Carroll’s Behind the Looking Glass
“like gray-haired Saturn, quiet as a stone, [and] still as the silence

round about his lair.” When the Scorpion rises, Orion sets
as still Scorpio is in relentless pursuit of his old enemy.

Marking the tip of the scorpion’s tail are λ Sco (Shaula)
and υ Sco (Lesath), whose names both mean “sting.”

Given how they juxtapose, λ Sco and υ Sco
are sometimes referred to as the Cat’s Eyes [wikipedia].

That from time to time its body disappears, leaving only the rabid-
raccoon-like smile of Lewis Carroll’s Cheshire Cat as he grins

for the Milky Way’s abundance of (yes) milk and cheese for which
crop circles are rumored to center around three dollops of cream

as (I guess) their offering after sapping the reproductive organs
out from 369 moo cows. Nonetheless, when the county sheriff

arrives at the farmer’s field, he’ll need more than a few Tic Tacs.

                                                           48. 

'That August didn’t swim.’ ‘Thinking of those legendary sharks.’
Perhaps because in our big top-
heavy overcoats noon here cooks
too hot on the very dung heap

where we sit like Captain James Cook
on a few broken hooks
and rods,
watching as ‘a sacred dung-beetle

does his [home]work,’
moving back through time with his freshly-sculpted Turkish ball
of what looks to be opium tar

and so on towards
an evening that (through the pall
of all this smoke) is quite ‘worthy of all the music.’

                                                                             49. 

YKCOWREBBAJ

sevot yhtils eht dna,gillirb sawT’
ebaw eht ni elbmig dna eryg diD
,sevogorob eht erew ysmim llA
.ebargtuo shtar emom eht dnA

                                                                               50. 

That reading through a black-mirror’s
stain-work of glass looks very pretty
but, like the Jabberwock’s squawk,

is hard to understand,
leaves my head
like a cabin for which
the roof has been taken off

as this tropical storm’s
lazy eye continues to dump buckets
of cats and dogs, lobster and crawl fish.

Like Alice after the rain gives out, I like the walrus best.
As for the regular bee that turns herself
into an elephant, I’ll need another orange pack
of Tic Tacs.

                                                                    51. 

Hell slap it into them. And not without a fury. Right inside
the delicious caption wherein the snail has captured our confidence
as he himself confides to a hedgehog
about his own classified bones, a creature that floats mid-

show while Estragon vaguely recalls having been beaten the night before.
It was the night before that, like Alice through a mirror’s stained glass,
I entered a fantastical world in which, for four minutes or five hours,

with Tweedledee and Tweedledum, I poked at the writing on a urinal wall
for how like the Torah scroll
each and every tag read, if not backwards then in the reverse.
It was from the Book of Moses dictated by Joseph Smith

that Moses, having gone out the presence of God
and no longer being clothed, would fall back to Earth,
with the thud of a snail’s begotten voice still speaking

of horse latitudes
& (yeah) parallels.

                                                                            52. 

It was with legs crossed and fingers intwined
and while murmuring spells
that Herakles choked-out two snakes
that like slithy [sic] toves

had crawled out the dust and so slithered
into the son of Zeus’ bed
if I accurately recount my favorite bed-
time story for which drifting off

has become such a can of worms.
That I’m still missing the lid
counts for more than a little

lack of sleep as I toss beneath the pall of sheets
then spend my last hand at playing corpse
before, carpe diem, I’m besieged by the god-

forsaken seizure of another day for which
I’ll burn the toast and torch the cheese.

                                                                            53. 

As one might continue to tally up the hours of time and w.a.s.t.e.
I’m struck by the journal entry from Paul Klee
wherein, from the Hefte für schweizerische Volkskunde,
he has traced ‘Tramps’ signs (authentic)‘ and 'Names of devils:

Chrütli, Federwisch, Schuw, Tüntzhart … . To signal = 'pfeifen,’
To beg = ‘jalchen,’ ‘schnuren,’ ‘halunken.’ To confess = ‘brillen.’
Perhaps, to a Priest = ‘galach’ or God [Himself] = Doff-caffer,
(the good man) or great mystery beyond that like an unmoved snail

hovers ‘as still as an orange paperclip’ above (yes)
the hedgefund of our heads for which the CIA
along with that other anonymous agency

might plead the fifth before your eyes find time to blink
into the false report
of being blind or even deaf

as the world continues to blow up and so
build [the] suspense for any judgement.

                                                               54. 

It was a New York judge who, as he prepared to strike his gavel,
would squint a look my way of some aged sort of sympathy
for that Everyone has heard the [Kafkaesque] story
of a strong and beautiful bug which came out of the dry leaf

of [sic] apple-tree wood … .
I can still hear the liberty-bell crack
of his hammer’s blow
that, by wail of ambulance,

would find me strapped back to a gurney.
And so on back it was to the ill-bricked ward
where another month of pink to white Tic Tacs

did nothing more
than make me drip drool and slur
the few fragments that failed to deliver

what, even if dealt clearly enough, provided on-
ly one certainty: that I was speaking in tongues.

                                                    55. 

Because genius decays
as judgement increases
the marching tap of (yes)
their rods and canes,

I’ve stuffed my ears
with such a mouth-
ful of cotton
to fume away

what amounts to empty hisses.
That the venereal breath
of their triumph critically
piles up and amounts

not without ‘another’s pain’
speaks volumes for how
I might still be ‘swallowed
by [their] quicksands’–

notwithstanding how one now plans to extend a
friendly hand, only to dash me upon some rocks.

                                                  56. 

Another big disappointment
as one finds our 45th President
just another ass with a lion’s mane
for whom our nation’s blue-collar

still plays the good shepherd’s
bottomless flock of born-again
Cheetos fanatics bearing fake-
news for which I’ll need to buy

some more Purell and Clorox
before picking up where Klee
reports playing “Liszt’s Faust
Symphony” followed by “an inter-

mezzo from the ballet music
for Prometheus,” whom Hesiod
once again bears witness
to his daily agony of being

chained to a cliff, a cliff on which Trump’s
skin-headed faithful always come flocked
as the same bald-headed eagle
and, with a couple grievous war-hawks,

begin with torture by pecking at their prey
with yet another morning prayer breakfast.

                                          57. 

It for “a very fine cup”
that on a silver plate
still might rest

that often a boomerang
will carve a path
and career back around

with 36 cannons plus a crew of 300 men,
over which the devil himself scans
through Blackbeard’s spy-

glass. Out across the bul-
warks of La Concorde
a Macron Merchant Vessel,

which makes for
another ‘bad meeting.’

                                           58. 

Enough! Here is the punishment:
J'ai avalé une fameuse gorgée
de poison,
 or as Pessoa writes,
having created a cast of characters,

we live them all, all at the same time–
Va, démon! “But what could he want
with my dull, my craven life?”
à présent, je suis au fond du monde.

I saw the whole setting with which in his mind
he surrounded himself: clothing, fabrics, furniture;
I lent him arms, another face. I saw everything
relating to him as he would have liked to create it

for himself. When his mind seemed absent,
I followed him, yes I, in strange and complicated actions,
very far, good or bad: I was certain of never entering his world.
How many hours of the night, beside his dear body I kept watch,

trying to understand why
he escaped reality.

                                                      59. 

Regardless of the sea-current’s level
it is quite the ‘step on the gas’
for the couple of ambulance drivers

as they show up more shaken
than the unhappy fowl
who appears quite disarranged
for being arrested atop

the checkerboard
while the dead janitor
turns to squawk

out from under
his cheeks before
giving up the ghost

and throwing a few darts
at an ash plant
on which a few names

have been carved with a blunt instrument.

                                                 60. 

Meanwhile, Bambi teases her red nose into the road,
scanning both ways inside and ouch!– before jumping
like a kangaroo shipped on a few bad postage stamps

of acid for which one might look out for any cannon balls
as Bambi becomes Alice as Alice begins to recite her ABCs
on the greenest patch of grass in town. So it’s been told.

Having almost crossed the road,
this snail now practices flight maneuvers
which might come in handy as his homemade
hovercraft turns with the drag of your avg. orange

TicTac. Now that it’s time to flip over the sketch
and kill another fly with the duct-taped wand
or lemon switch by which all the warehouse lights

still flicker on
and
off.

                                                      61. 

It is something like a handsaw or battle axe
that this hedgehog now turns into the snail
that maneuvers like a hovercraft in and out
of space and also sea water like an orange

Tic Tac or Piraña foreseen by Peter Higgs,
himself as I flashback to wearing an eye patch
to capture some gold before catching my hand
in another tub of pop-corn from one of those raffles

of crayons, gift wrap, the few rusty blue and red paperclips
that Elvis used to thump touchdowns with his ‘foot-
ball finger’ into one of those w.a.s.t.e. cans or baskets.
It was through a sawed-through peach basket that the first

free-throw sunk down the hatch like a cough drop for which
no one is drinking Corona or going on any cruise
that declares the same pointless pine-box of microphones
and coffin nails, horseshoes and hammers.

                                                                     62. 

It was Durs Grünbein’s Descartes’ Devil
and specifically the arousal of what René
calls esprit animaux; for ‘animal spirits’
read ‘flesh and blood’ for which John

Donne, Andrew Marvell, John Milton all
are writing intellectual meditations
in the same verse form that always lodges
itself between a few cooling rods and coils;

the spare parts for which I find my-
self on the same pair of crutches
still playing the part of Gogo or Estra-

gon as Didi dreams of sacking Rome
into one plastic bag that one ties
to a stick before hedging out on a limb

within something like a race for
which we’ll surely run out
of (yes) toilet paper.

                                           63. 

For what it’s worth
it was the 23rd chapter
and ninth verse
of this, that, or something

entirely out of this world
for which notice the svbtle
pause before we have cataloged

and framed ourselves about the tenth word
strolling out of some Torah for which again
one pleads the fifth and counts the seventh
day that he’s waded farther out into the pan-

demic for which no one is
readily playing their reed
pipes & flutes.

                         64. 

It is through the flight consul
of a Nintendo 64 remote cntrl

that I swipe right across the pink-
clouded screen in which for lack

of a screen saver this chimp
inches her neck closer to a pink

& green-spotted caterpillar
as he wades out on a branch

of beech wood under which
one might stop to take a bath.

                                               65. 

Like Beckett pining for the low-
down on Pozzo, his home ad-
dress and curriculum vitae,

I still count myself Lucky
on Pozzo’s pink-spotted
leash as Lucky utters forth

in the public works of Puncher
and Wattmann of a personal God
quaquaquaqua with white goatee

qua-qua_qua-qua. It was for
a personal god that one keeps
a book of remembrance

like a long-winded and disjointed monologue
for which a Croatan belts out from his ruby-
red throat with one more quaquaquaqua
before, like a Sasquatch, coming to naught.

                                               66. 

That is to say–like the ash-tinged canvas wing
of a sacrilegious moth plunged in torment
of an ash-bin fire–this rag of scarlet cloth

embroidered with another capital offence
provides reason enough to wipe my brow
and just enough time to adjust my footing

in the crow’s nest, wherein I tilt Blackbeard’s
spyglass from port to starboard while attempting
to adjust the cardboard laurel of my Burger King crown
for which there is no sign of a whopper or white filet of fish

that still might turn into (yes) the headline for the Sea’s
Sasquatch by which we may have heard of Billy Budd
by dent of Herman Melville’s nom de guerre
for whom the capital A stands not for Artichoke

but the Albatross for which this storybook now hangs out
by a hook which, tied to copper string, now walks plank.

                                                  67. 

When in all capital letters the very APOCOLYPSE
comes with a milk-white unicorn opening up
one of our Navy’s sealed scroll books, leaving
Wittgenstein to swipe majestically all his ker-

fuffling recipes and letters down with a blue-to-light-
brwn penfeather for which the Fountain of Youth
is dry as a long-leaf cone; notwithstanding, as I
swipe away on your well-placed swivel of oak,

at the pine sap of my own tears and try to rake
some bones wherein, like Lewis Carroll, Read
the Capital Letters, for how the mere mesh-
work of cartilage scans somehow for this phantom’s

limb wherein Titanium has by some hat trick spliced
with first-Tier A-Level Plutonium for which
Lucifer picks another pink and green-spotted apple
from the Tree for which so much floats through Pan-

dora’s satellite dish: as she floats with ‘such credulous conviction.’
Now if we are to pick off from where we might have gathered
the glimpse of Alice Z reading from the apocryphal Book
of Revelation for which Big A or Little a, m stands for

someone like MO*MUS (/ˈmoʊməs*/) as this Jester or Sphinx
lifts up his mask’s ibis beak-wand and sends one last swig of bourbon
down the hatch before taking off with a rusty-swing-set whistle
for which one might hang his head in disgrace, blame, reproach

from tyranny for which like Sisyphus beneath his ball
of stone or then even Icarus, ‘so much falls as it burns.’

                                      68. 

So much falls as this Viking’s funereal ship drifts about in a dodge
as the mast timber tilts and burns
over this fuming green-lit swath, which now boils out
of harbor, not-

withstanding how all this wax keeps dripping off
a dove’s white plume
while Icarus floats according to Brueghel
quite insignificantly out of frame–

and into our den
to take a bite
from (yes) the

micr vv a vv es
of your TV dinner.
Meanwhile, it is just

another spring off the coast. Beside this Little Red Light House
by which a farmer sloughs in the bloody pageantry of his field.

                                                              69. 

“Why thus perplexed,–and cogitating,
among” a sea otter’s hypothesis
for how to weather the storm;
for how now this purloined letter

might serve as one of those knot-
ted ornaments that
the white man still may use

to dial back into the brave blue eye
of a Cherokee Chieftain.
That I happen by coffin nail to play taps
and so tack on this capital letter

like a bloody rag of crumbs and snot
to my blue and orange breast
before presenting myself as ‘a new

kind of lo-
cust plague.’

                                              70. 

That it is a first-tier misfit or marine
mounted on a black & tan special-
ops horse for whom the government
finds, still, so much use for how they’ve

stationed this horse marine in the green
lagoon where the first pair of binoculars
broke after spotting first sight of this snail
moving like a blimp or pill-shaped hover-

craft before pulling not a rabbit but this hedge-
hog out of (yes) its top hat for which an orange
piss stain presumes this snail to be higher rank

over those who unquenchably yearn about for
knowledge which no longer fits the latest advance
from those who do not know that they do not know.

                                          71. 

That fragments have confounded most frameworks–
for how they’ve panned out in the dark fallout shelters
of Berlin, Paris, Vienna, Florence, Copenhagen
and New Haven–builds upon the shapeless mound

of an old hypothesis made by Watt himself
that the Book of Thoth is at Koptos
dragging like a lobster trap in this river’s quick
polestar of bull’s eyes and pivot points

quite like a Russian Doll might entail one gold box
held within one of silver that is sealed itself
by an ebony and ivory coffer, which then is capped

off inside a trap of keté-wood.
A bronze trap of keté-wood
that, at last, gives to the bay

and so the harbor of this little
sarcophagus or casket of iron.

                                                     72. 

It’s for a game of 52 points with the Ka
of Nefrekeptah that a spell-bound Set-
na continues to cry out to his personal god

with one of Lucky’s quaquaquaquas
beseeching for some Amulet of Ptah–
that might spring this game of draughts
from out of the ever-widening maw

of earth as now we look at the brass tacks
that only the sprouting bulb foreclosing
along with Setna’s mouth remains
undelivered upon that riverboat of Styx–

where in the Duat the ferryman sticks
a fork in your tongue and frying pan
up your ass as the necessary price

to forget that one might be gone if not dead.

                                               73. 

Meanwhile, the Prince of Darkness
is playing “Patty Cake, Patty Cake
in Lindsey Graham’s pigsty, patting

and pricking and then marking his stake
not with the capital *A but B for Baal
as we wade further into this pandemic’s

Twilight Zone which, for the start
of another week, informs its citizens
through a virtual Fox News chat box

whereby President Donald J. Trump
obsessively cites and adverts, charges
and credits as his only means to reference

the annual death count from influenza
before swerving blindly upon the subject
of his Cabinet ‘patting another patriot cake’

after which the country will be raring
to go fast for Easter’s resurrection.

                                           74. 

As madness will often gaze upon the quip
of its own reflection as an effective gag
to prevent any little gasp from reason,

I now tap my knuckles against this looking glass’
stained mirror and press my ear near-enough-by
to pause for any hollow skein of fog and surf
beneath the speculum’s surface of echo and smoke;

notwithstanding the silt and dross of left-
over soap and shaving cream
for which the whole world’s a close
shave once considering, minute after minute,

nothing lets up or develops
from ‘drinking the sea’
when we’ve all developed

the same submarine cough, being sequestered to the same rock on which it’s only matter of tick-tick | tick-tock before we start eating glass stones.

                                                            75. 

With one last little worm gnawing
through my eardrum, I gradually fall
asleep to the tired whistling
of a train’s bullet and so then depart

for the gap of dreams where inside
the ‘skull of an idiot’ the rain never tires
in its drumming to death a dead thing
while, like Keats, “I […] clamber through

the Clouds and exist,” nearer myself ‘to hear’
the immortal wings of ‘your Christ being tinted’
by Beauty’s trembling, delicate snail-horn,

(yes) Beauty’s trembling, delicate snail-horn
for which so much ineffably floats in air
and out of our Rat-trap’s brown to purple depth–

as if to ease the burden of mystery
as you again try from memory’s sewer
to trace the arrow-like flash from ‘a TicTac’
that, among constellations, would shift for

your Dragon, Whale, Southern Cross.

                                                                         76. 

It’s in Plymouth County,
Massachusetts
that ‘a skeleton key’
with the tail of (yes)

a caterpillar poises parallel,
if not paranormal, in the sky’s
blue blank of a vault as if picking

at some wraithlike lock,
which for the duration
of the You*T*ube recording
remains quite invisible

over the tilt of S‘s head
that, for what it is worth,
like a Jack-in-the-Box

is just about to 'go pop.’

                                                                        77. 

Like the scarlet letter tacked
upon Hester Prynne’s breast
the camera-eye of my memo-

ry’s bosom ‘is too deeply branded’
if not scorched–as now the mind
hath become a seaplane’s single
engine as it whispers, chokes

and begins to whimper through such
a clouded squeeze: over the ocean’s
roughhewn sleeve of terra-cotta cays

and reefs, bars and enclaves, an entire
isle of skeleton keys for which I dwell quite
unavailingly upon the lurid gleam
of an orangeTicTac’s beam, calling up how

such an emblem would split itself to thirds
before fusing about and back to the pirated
face of some hooligan’s snail-like craft, allied

if not akin to (yes) Sonic the Hedgehog.

                                                                       78. 

That they’ll blame it all on too much Jim Beam
as the seamless way to close this most recent x-
file case finely suits the infinite jest of your onion
breath for which, like WATT, it’s another pepper-
mint or Tic Tac doing its best version of a

NIKE SWOOSH:

and so down the hatch
while the mind sharpens
its dullest hatchets

and blades, getting ready
to parley’ with a few
interlocutors from that
satanic school for which

one enters a chocolate lab and sits
on a blueberry couch, reciting from
the hush-hush pages of Crow and (yes)

WODWO … .

                                                          78. 

In a kingdom of brick
walls and glass houses
where one lets the wind

out for how against a lab
cow’s pink rubber-band-
ed tongue, an egg

of blackness marks
where a thistle’s spike
came with blades and

splinters of (yes) summer air.

                                                           79. 

That Houses and rooms are full
of perfumes, the shelves
are crowded with perfumes
and silent castles of toilet paper.

I breath the fragrance
of death myself it is for
the shopping aisles of
my mouth forever, (yes)

I am in love with it
as I witter ‘on
about Nabokov,’
connecting on the punch

that agonies are one of
my changes of garments.

                                                  80. 

It was beneath the beaten bough,
in the ruins of an old Elm
that–as I in-

gressed into the ever-
receding ground,
you etched ‘unicorn,’

‘timberwolf,’
‘caribou,’
‘gumball,’

waiting for
‘a scarab
beetle,’

to appear from some portal of pine-smoke and the
tar for which Achilles might have dipped his own

heels.

[SIDE-B]

                                                             81. 

It was Achilles’ heels that Thetis neglected to dip
and so wash
in the aqua-saliva of River Styx,

making for a nasty,
life-long sentence:
as it is either his h

eel, ankle, or t
orso that, after tipping
his hat, Paris pierces

with the poisoned-tip
of an arrowhead mixed
of a rose & smoky-quartz.

It was after calling some of Wagner’s music ‘the greatest
masterpiece of the sublime I know’, [that] Nietzsche claims
Wagner wrote ‘perhaps the worst music ever written’.
Meanwhile, still in quarantine one feels to determine what ‘is’,

what it’s ‘like’, appears unutterably higher and more serious
than any ‘it ought to be’ … .


The quote (section 7) was taken from Ludwig Wittgenstein’s
The Blue Book, (Blackwell, 68.)

The words borrowed for adaptation here (section 8) were taken from Thomas Pynchon’s novella, The Crying of Lot 49
(HarperPerennial ModernClassics, 48-49).

ABCs (section 10) beyond the alphabet is in reference to Ezra Pound’s The ABCs of Writing.

The quote (section 20) was gained from Ludwig Wittgenstein’s
The Blue Book, (Blackwell, 71.)

The highlighted text (section 21) comes from respectively Paul Muldoon’s sonnet series, The More a Man Has the More a Man Wants (QUOOF, Wake Forest University Press) and Thomas Pynchon’s novella,
The Crying of Lot 49.

The highlighted text (section 22) borrows from
The Penguin Book of Classical Myths.

The highlighted text (section 29) borrows, and quite zealously, from the Tesla-coiled Wattage of Samuel Beckett’s WATT

The quoted text (section 32) borrows from Ludwig Wittgenstein’s
The Brown Book, (Blackwell, 135).

The highlighted material of section 35 (either in the confines of a quote or italicized) borrows from The Diaries of Paul Klee, while also jabbing a little at the thematic punches and left hooks of Samuel Beckett’s second novel, WATT.

rw nw prt m hrw [Book of Emerging Forth into the Light] The original (uncircumcised) title for the apocryphal The Book of the Dead. (This refers to section 38.)

The quoted text (section 39) borrows from the opening text of Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man.

The quoted text (section 41) borrows from the opening chapter of Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man.

The first quatrain (section 44) is taken (word for word) from
The Crying of Lot 49, (HarperPerennial ModernClassics, 82).

The highlighted text (section 45) borrows from The Crying of Lot 49, (HarperPerennial ModernClassics, 95).

The quote (section 46) was gained from Ludwig Wittgenstein’s
The Blue Book, (Blackwell, 71).

The highlighted text (section 47) is gained from
The Penguin Book of Classical Myths (42; 45).

The highlighted material of section 48 (shown within the confines of quotes) borrows from The Diaries of Paul Klee (University of California Press, 290-91).

The Quatrain of section 49 borrows directly, word for word, from Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass.

The highlighted material of section 53 (either in the confines of a quote or italicized) borrows from The Diaries of Paul Klee
(University of California Press, 139).

The highlighted text (section 54) comes from respectively Paul Muldoon’s sonnet series, The More a Man Has the More a Man Wants (QUOOF, Wake Forest University Press, 55).

The highlighted text (either contained by quotes or (because of length italicized) borrows from
Samuel Johnson, The Major Works {including Rasselas} (OXFORD, 290-91, 130).

The highlighted material of section 56 (shown within the confines of quotes) borrows from The Diaries of Paul Klee (University of California Press, 137).

The highlighted text of section 58 borrows from Fernando Pessoa’s
The Book of Disquiet (New Directions, 63).

The long strand of italics nearing the end of section 58 borrows from Arthur Rimbaud’s A Season in Hell (New Directions, 43; 41).

The opening lines of section 59 borrows from Nathaniel Hawthorne’s
The Scarlet Letter (Barnes & Noble Classics, 5).

From section 69, the opening text borrows from Nathaniel Hawthorne’s
The Scarlet Letter (Barnes & Noble Classics, 28).

The final lines of section 69 borrow (by confinement of the quote) from
The Diaries of Paul Klee (University of California Press, 27).

The final line of section 70 borrows (kept by italics) borrows from
The Diaries of Paul Klee (University of California Press, 147).

The opening lines of section 73 (specifically, the Prince of Darkness turning Patty Cakes in a Pigsty) refers to The Black Lips song “Hooker Jon,” track 1 off their country LP, The Black Lips Sing … In a World that Is Falling Apart.

The quoted ‘skull of an idiot’ of section 75’s second stanza borrows from Ted Hughes’ poem, “Heptonstall” collected in WODWO
(Faber & Faber Limited).

Following “like Keats” the following fragments of quoted material found in section 75 borrow from John Keats’ Selected Poems & Letters
(Riverside Editions, 270).

The phrase highlighted in italics from section 75’s last line borrows from
Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49,
(HarperPerennial ModernClassics, 65).

Within section 76, S, in accordance with epistemological case studies, is shorthand for ‘Subject.’

From section 77, the quoted text of line 4 borrows from Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter (Barnes & Noble Classics, 58).

The italicized text found within section 79 borrows from Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself (1881).

The quoted portion (‘on about Nabokov’) borrows from Paul Muldoon’s poem “The Destroying Angel,” collected in QUOOF

(Wake Forest University Press, 37)

Section 81. The italicized portion of the penultimate and ultimate stanzas borrows from Derek Parfit’s On What Matters: Vol II
(Oxford University Press, 588).

Read more…

Ed's sixth solo show in Paris (10th March 2020)

11011042687?profile=originalIf I remember well, the setlist went as follows:

  1. Mass
  2. Olympik
  3. Sail On
  4. Shangri-La
  5. Brasil


All artists had a 30-35 minute set and were accessing the stage from the audience. I got Ed climbing onstage passing just before me as I had chosen the best spot right in front of his mike though I had to leave room to the hand cameraman and the set photographer who were both lovely people and ketp apologising for the inconvenience (so amazing how everyone was so considerate and kind during this evening — it was really like being in another dimension where everyone would care for one another  and artists and audience were treated with equal respect).

All three artists were chosen for being from a different generation and the sets were filmed starting from the youngest generation that was Black Country, New Road to the last, Kim Gordon (of Sonic Youth's fame), Ed being in the middle. I expected more people would have come for Ed, but actually most had come for Kim. Roughly there were about 300 people but only about 50 for the talk show.

After the sets, they had an hour talk show hosted by Jehnny Beth who is a French singer of international fame (actually I had never heard of her before) and also an actress as I've heard.  Honestly, it would have been a bit stale had it been for our Ed saving the silences and taking over from Jehnny. All this will be broadcasted on ARTE channel but so far I have no date. I expected it for the end of this month but apparently it will be for the end of April. Going by the previous shows, it should be cut out and interwined with bits of interviews and the talk show but the entire live sets should be available seperately on the channel's website.

If anyone who was there took pictures (we were requested not to for the cameras that were filming), you're welcome to post them here I'd love to see them. I didn't take any because I was in direct line with the cameras. The only one I took was of Ed right before they started shooting the talk but they're not very good and you can find them in my album. The top picture is by Sabrina who was also standing a bit further on my right.

Honestly, if I didn't have all these pictures I'm on, I'd think it was a dream. And considering what happened two days after, it's even weirder. I

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