"A New York Treasure" --Village Voice
Category: Arts and Culture

A Child of the Century

jackrollins

R.I.P. Jack Rollins: showbiz legend.

[Photo Via: Bob Weide]

Afternoon Art

Gullivera

Manara. 

Morning Art


thiebaud-0-640x476

Thiebaud. 

Beat of the Day

fruitbags

Just listen, don’t do it, pay attention…

Picture by Bags

Afternoon Art

beachhopper

“Gloucester Beach, Bass Rocks” By Edward Hopper (1924)

Taster’s Cherce

magnus

Good Lord, yes.

Afternoon Art

zzzzzzzzzlaug

Picture by Zachary Ayotte via Lover of Beauty. 

Beat of the Day

zzzzblondie

Call me. 

Taster’s Cherce

zabar

Dear Ira,

Gluten is good.

Love,

Phyllis.

BGS: Krim!

the-beats

The latest reprint over at the Beast is a rich piece of ’60’s pop culture criticism from the inimitable Seymour Krim. All about Jack Kerouac:

As an Outsider, then, French Canadian, Catholic (“I am a Canuck, I could not speak English till I was 5 or 6, at 16 I spoke with a halting accent and was a big blue baby in school though varsity basketball later and if not for that no one would have noticed I could cope in any way with the world and would have been put in the madhouse for some kind of inadequacy…”), but with the features and build of an all-American prototype growing up in a solid New England manufacturing town, much of Kerouac’s early life seems to have gone into fantasy and daydreams which he acted out. (“At the age of 11 I wrote whole little novels in nickel notebooks, also magazines in imitation of Liberty Magazine and kept extensive horse racing newspapers going.”) He invented complicated games for himself, using the Outsider’s solitude to create a world—many worlds, actually—modeled on the “real” one but extending it far beyond the dull-normal capacities of the other Lowell boys his own age. Games, daydreams, dreams themselves—his Book of Dreams (1961) is unique in our generation’s written expression—fantasies and imaginative speculations are rife throughout all of Kerouac’s grownup works; and the references all hearken back to his Lowell boyhood, to the characteristically American small-city details (Lowell had a population of 100,000 or less during Kerouac’s childhood), and to what we can unblushingly call the American Idea, which the young Jack cultivated as only a yearning and physically vigorous dreamer can.

That is, as a Stranger, a first-generation American who couldn’t speak the tongue until he was in knee pants, the history and raw beauty of the U.S. legend was more crucially important to his imagination than it was to the comparatively well-adjusted runny-noses who took their cokes and movies for granted and fatly basked in the taken-for-granted American customs and consumer goods that young Kerouac made into interior theatricals. It is impossible to forget that behind the 43-year-old Kerouac of today lies a wild total involvement in this country’s folkways, history, small talk, visual delights, music and literature—especially the latter; Twain, Emily Dickinson, Melville, Sherwood Anderson, Whitman, Emerson, Hemingway, Saroyan, Thomas Wolfe, they were all gobbled up or at least tasted by him before his teens were over (along with a biography of Jack London that made him want to be an “adventurer”); he identified with his newfound literary fathers and grandfathers and apparently read omnivorously. As you’ll see, this kind of immersion in the literature of his kinsmen—plunged into with the grateful passion that only the children of immigrants understand—was a necessity before he broke loose stylistically; he had to have sure knowledge and control of his medium after a long apprenticeship in order to chuck so much extraneous tradition in the basket when he finally found his own voice and risked its total rhythm and sound.

 

Beat of the Day

zzmeghan

Bim Bam Boom

[Painting by Meghan Howland via This Isn’t Happiness]

Morning Art

zzbeac

Picture by Linda Christensen via Susan Zweig]

Taster’s Cherce

strawberryjam

Bout that time of year again, ain’t it?

What Becomes a Legend Most?

ornette

R.I.P. Ornette Coleman.

“I was out at [anthropologist] Margaret Mead’s school and was teaching some little kids how to play instantly. I asked the question, ‘How many kids would like to play music and have fun?’ And all the little kids raised up their hands. And I asked, ‘Well, how do you do that?’ And one little girl said, ‘You just apply your feelings to sound.’ And I said, ‘Come and show me.’ When she went to the piano to do it, she tried to show me, but she had forgotten about what she said. So I tried to show her why all of a sudden all her attention span had to go to another level, and after that she went ahead and did it. But she was right: If you apply your feelings to sound, regardless of what instrument you have, you’ll probably make good music.”–Ornette Coleman.

For more, dig thisthis, this and then Go here for a listen. 

[Photo Credit: Roberto Polillo via Jazz in Photo]

Taster’s Cherce

salted

Salted Peanut Caramel Ice Cream Bars.

Beat of the Day

rainbagsbags

Who’s the Boz?

Picture by Bags.

Afternoon Art

spiritthe

Will Eisner.

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"This ain't football. We do this every day."
--Earl Weaver