Tag Archives: David Lynch

Lynch’s strange formula.

Hey, the Ultraísta remix album is out right now, which makes it a good time to revisit David Lynch’s fantastic remix of “Strange Formula”. [via YouTube]

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Rojak: Commercial.

Rojak is a regular collection of assorted links as well as a bulletin summarising the week (or thereabouts) on this blog.

Assorted

Do you remember when David Lynch did a PlayStation 2 commercial? [via YouTube]

On Where There’s Love, There’s Hate, by Adolfo Bioy Casares and Silvina Ocampo. [via Words Without Borders]

A review of Hitting the Streets, by Raymond Queneau. [via The Guardian]

Scott Esposito draws attention to Halls of Uselessness, a new collection of essays by Simon Leys. [via Conversational Reading]

More about it here. [via The Mookse and The Gripes]

Abandoned Walmart becomes massive library. [via The Paris Review]

The Field will be releasing a new album (Cupid’s Head) soon. [via Consequence of Sound]

The new Doctor will be announced very, very soon. [via The Telegraph]

Daft Punk will be appearing on The Colbert Report. [via Pitchfork]

Bulletin

This week, I had the For Your Consideration feature up for the month. Also:

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For Your Consideration: August 2013.

For Your Consideration is a regular feature published on the first of each month (published on the preceding Saturday if the first is a Sunday) that lists some of my “picks of the month” in reading, music, moving pictures, and something random. These aren’t necessarily new or trendy picks, but they will be things that I hope you will find worth your time!

Another month, full of new possibilities. Let’s go!

Read This: Dark Times Filled With Light, by Juan Gelman.

The Argentinian poet Juan Gelman is one of the most famous and acclaimed poets in the Spanish language still at work today, and I doubt that there’s very much else I can add to this conversation, so I’ll simply do an advertisement paragraph. (Forgive me!) This collection translated by the late Hardie St. Martin serves as an excellent introduction to the poet, tracing his artistic development by presenting a selection of his work from 1956 up to 1992 in a chronological fashion. What immediately becomes clear is that it is a book, and a career, characterised by and even obsessed with themes of disappearance, loss, and yearning. It is also a poetry of great mastery. While the development of Gelman’s poetry (in terms of language use, technical ambition, and thematic interests) is clearly represented in the collection, what remains constant throughout the collection is his ability to tease out the senses of affinity, synergy, complicity, and opposition between beauty and anger, despair and hope, the political and the personal, and indeed the dark and the light.

[More on Juan Gelman and this collection via Words Without Borders]

Listen to This: The Tain by the Decemberists (perhaps best alongside a version of the text).

[via YouTube]

The Tain is an adaptation of the cattle-raid story Táin Bó Cúailnge from the Ulster Cycle of early Irish literature. It’s certainly not the first modern adaptation of this story, or even the first music-based one, but it certainly stands out in the way that it brings an electric vitality to a story so well-established and so canonical. The Tain is fairly enormous for a song and yet rather compact for an adaptation, running through five parts in 18.5 minutes. It bristles with a kind of electric energy, the kind of combustible chemistry and creative energy of a band yet to get comfortable in their skin. (This EP would lay the foundations for their subsequent efforts in The Hazards of Love and, perhaps still their best work, The Crane Wife.) The Decemberists are not in their finest hour here, still exploring ideas, still sometimes lacking in confidence, but this is also how The Tain musters a most useful contrast against its canonical source text. Its unwieldiness works to its advantage: it lurches and lumbers through the cycle in a manner that betrays its sense of artistic discovery. Sure, it’s at times inelegant, but you take the bite. The uncertainty and brashness that characterise the piece, coupled with moments of beauty, create a strange juxtaposition that breathed a strange new life to my imagination of the Irish epic tale.

Watch This: Inland Empire, directed by David Lynch.

[via YouTube]

I’ve always tended to see Inland Empire as the last in something of a spiritual trilogy (preceded by Lost Highway and Mulholland Drive). It’s a further entry into Lynch’s metafilmic and existential enterprise, but goes further down the rabbit hole than any of his other pictures ever have. It’s strange to write about Inland Empire now: I cannot remember events as well as I can remember images, sounds, moments. Yet, it is too easy to suggest that Inland Empire is part of a cinema of sensations rather than narratives. With its non-linear structure, sketching of impossible spaces, narrative loops, quasi-improvised script, and surrealistic or grotesque imagery, Inland Empire combines the surrealism of Lost Highway and the metafilmic theme of Mulholland Drive into a labyrinthine spectacle that challenges the language of film. That is to say, it challenges the ways in which we understand narratives in film, the pliability of the moving image, and the processes of signification as they occur in the vast majority of film, often pushing these aspects of representation to the brink of collapse. There’s no question I love my metafilmic or metacinematic movies, but rare is the film that takes an approach so extreme.

[Further reading via Cahiers du Cinema]

Bonus of the Month: Shadow of the Colossus, by Team ICO.

Something has happened to this girl in your arms, and it is clear that you’re the only one who can save her. You come to an old building, perhaps a temple, and a voice instructs you on your task. You are the hero. It’s what you have to live up to. Armed with a sword and a bow, travelling on horseback, you explore a fairly wide expanse in search of giant creatures that you will have to slay. There is no narrative explanation for their presence. They will receive no explanation of your violence towards them either. You are a hero. It’s what you do.

The first colossus that you encounter plunges you into wonder. Surrounded by trees, hills, and blankets of sand, it minds its own business. Nature, you think. You intrude on its space, charging on horseback, eager to make things right in your own life. If you wanted to, you could walk away. Explore the land. It’s a legitimate choice, if not an entirely fair one. You’ve paid good money for a game. You’ve got to see all it has to offer. So you climb up the creature, struggling as you do so. It doesn’t want you on its skin. Who would? Maybe it finds it ticklish. Maybe it feels threatened. Maybe it is simply angry. A glowing symbol marks a spot of weakness. It makes sense. A gameplay convenience, a sign from the heavens, it doesn’t matter. You stab it. It bleeds, a spurt of blood validating your logic. You are the hero. Not a hero. There is nothing heroic in what you are doing. After a back-and-forth battle, you finally bring the creature to its knees. With gathering pace, it dissolves into a darkness, a darkness that eventually catches onto you. You try to wrest yourself free, until it swallows you, and then you wake as if from a dream.

Then you meet another colossus. And another. Each act of violence is also an act of validation. This is a story of a man and his destiny. If you stop now, it would all be for nothing. So you don’t stop, until it’s too late.

But then again, it was already too late right from the start.

[An essay (obvious but obligatory spoiler warning) via berfrois]

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Rojak: Action figures.

Rojak is a regular collection of assorted links as well as a bulletin summarising the week (or thereabouts) on this blog.

Assorted

“For now, I’m content to conclude that there cannot be a unica because human beings are incapable of making things that don’t retain some spark of being.” On The Letters of William Gaddis. [via The American Reader]

David Lynch unveils “I’m Waiting Here”, a track off of his upcoming album The Big Dream, featuring Lykke Li. [via YouTube]

Daft Punk action figures: Bangalter and Guy-Man.

An interview with Renata Adler. [via The Guardian]

David Cronenberg’s influences. [via A Piece of Monologue]

Also at A Piece of Monologue, a Samuel Beckett chess set. [via A Piece of Monologue]

Beck performs Song Reader with a host of other famous people, including Jarvis Cocker, Charlotte Gainsbourg, and Franz Ferdinand. [via Consequence of Sound]

Finally, an interview with Paul Muldoon. [via The White Review]

Bulletin

This week:

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Rojak: Piano version.

Rojak is a regular collection of assorted links as well as a bulletin summarising the week (or thereabouts) on this blog.

Assorted

Patti Smith writes an introduction to a new edition of Albertine Sarrazin’s Astragal from New Directions, and you can read the introduction over at Slate. [via Slate]

Tips for writing from Walter Benjamin. [via Brain Pickings]

There is a new Atoms For Peace song called “Magic Beanz” just “floating around”. [via Consequence of Sound]

In related news, Thom Yorke appears on the Jonathan Ross show and plays “Karma Police” and “Ingenue” with a piano. [via Consequence of Sound] Of note, the version (yes, a piano version) of “Ingenue” is quite gorgeous. [via YouTube]

Here’s an article about Twin Peaks and the video game Deadly Premonition. [via Kill Screen]

Part one of an interview with Alan Moore. [via The Beat]

Pitchfork reviews Deerhunter’s Monomania. [via Pitchfork]

They also ran a somewhat lengthy article on the band. [via Pitchfork]

Bulletin

This week:

The third edition of For Your Consideration went up. Have a gander.

Also:

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Rojak: The sporting life.

Rojak is a regular collection of assorted links as well as a bulletin summarising the week (or thereabouts) on this blog.

Assorted

Paul Auster and Coetzee exchange letters about watching sports. [via The New Yorker]

David Lynch remixes another Ultraísta song, and it’s accompanied by a video too. [via Nowness]

Review of The Men’s New Moon. [via Consequence of Sound]

Mikhail Shishkin pulls out of Book Expo America. [via The Guardian]

Not sure if I’ve posted this (I think I have!) but I guess a revisit wouldn’t hurt: On the design of the packaging for David Bowie’s The Next Day CD. [via Barnbrook Blog]

Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich debut an unreleased Radiohead track along with two Yorke songs in a two-hour BBC programme that also included stuff from the likes of Aphex Twin and Steve Reich. The link to the stream is through here: [via Consequence of Sound]

Fiction longlist for the 2013 Best Translated Book Award. [via Three Percent]

“Avant-Garde is a game where you play as an artist in 19th century Paris. Create paintings, meet artists like Monet, Picasso and Dali, participate in artistic movements such as impressionism and surrealism or even create your own movement.” [via Rock, Paper, Shotgun]

Bulletin

And this week:

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It was David Lynch’s birthday!

[via YouTube]

No, really, it was David’s birthday yesterday.

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David Lynch documentaries.

Over at Cinephilia & Beyond, a collection of David Lynch documentaries. [via Cinephilia & Beyond]

An example interview:

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Rojak: Strange formula.

Rojak is a regular collection of assorted links as well as a bulletin summarising the week (or thereabouts) on this blog.

Assorted

Andy Williams dies. [via The Telegraph]

Wittgenstein quote. [via A Piece of Monologue]

“If you were born after 1970, I think it is nearly impossible to imagine how it felt to open up The New York Times Magazine on a Sunday morning in January 1971 to discover ‘What it Means to be a Homosexual,’ a deeply personal and beautifully written piece in defense of homosexuality.” [via New York Review of Books]

Feist wins the Polaris Prize for her latest album, Metals. [via Pitchfork]

Atoms For Peace will release a 12″ of their single “Default”. [via Consequence of Sound]

New Brian Eno: LUX. [via Consequence of Sound] Coming 13 November.

Staying on music news, the Beatles remasters are finally coming to vinyl. [via The Beatles]

Why can’t I be in Chicago (and catch this Vivian Maier exhibition) right now? [via The Online Photographer]

Bookclub in a Box. [via The Tin House] This is a wonderful idea.

David Lynch remixes Ultraísta’s “Strange Formula” and it is fantastic. [via NOWNESS]

Bulletin

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More mail.

self-bought presents

Hey, something appeared in my mailbox today and happily joins Love This Giant on the shelf…

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