manjula martin

Posts Tagged ‘the 00s’

Rock Action

In rawk on June 21, 2011 at 6:55 pm

Matador/Southpaw, 2001

In the record I hear a scraping sound of my speakers or of something in the mix.

A quiet slow start of piano and …. it’s drums – cymbals or snares or the subway beneath the street.

Guitar that sounds like keyboard, then a keyboard.

The background full, a pointillist puncture in sonic gaps. Everything in space is not space. They fill it.

The sound that seemed like the speakers is now the snare shaking in the wake of us.

Break clean with the real beat, now, young men. And now sing.

*

At the concert you stand and feel as others do, that the mornings of forgetting and the nights of redress are joys. If you were to speak the words would fall from you in the shape of yellow sunrises, pink sunset slints. You feel a bass inside where your organs touch each other, flesh, shaking the room; feel the press of people behind and aside and in front; feel the drizzle of sweat creep down your thigh; feel the one small breeze that breaks into your face every few minutes as though someone has opened a door and let in a slice of the non-rock atmosphere from outside. Shut it again and press closer to the stage.

*

When the pressure of guitars is relieved there is a lightness to the notes, of falcons released, only from atop some tallest canopied peak. They hit the ground with all this weight now, strong now, waves wash us away now and we break,

clean,

into the new force of whatever we need when we stand, close, in darks, noses pressed to the air to hear this circle, around, again.

*

They dive and rise, and do it again.



Abandoned Meander

In friends on April 14, 2011 at 9:06 pm

Peaking Mandala, 2006

Today I start slow. Writing through the desire to not-write is hard. Writing every day, whether you feel like it or “feel it” or not—no matter if it’s beautiful poetry or heartbreaking prose or Dear Diary or a somewhat uneven pop culture blog—is very, very hard. Writers learn this if and when we set out to create a daily practice. I relearn this every time my schedule shifts, or my habits or my jobs, and my writing work falls by the wayside. My guitar over there in the corner, all dusty, learns it every day courtesy of my myriad other artistic pursuits and the time they take up. There are only so many hours. Dinner must be eaten. Friends and lovers connected with. The posts start coming later and later in the day.

You know who else writes every day? Musicians. Even if they don’t play every day, they’re hearing the sounds of nascent songs in their heads when they’re walking to walk or doing the dishes or whatever it is they have to do all day in order to make doing music possible. They see pretty paintings or landscapes or horizons and they are on fire with sound. They hear everything. And they write it, every day, inside their heads, whether it gets outside their heads that day or not. For this I admire them, and in this practice I empathize with them.

My friend Andy is a musician. He’s fairly quiet about it – quiet yet intense. He’ll talk about music, whenever and wherever, but he’s not one of those I’m-A-Rock-Star dudes who drive me crazy with their perceived artfulness and their dreams of unlikely fame. Andy used to be in some pretty good, pretty popular bands – Slaves, VSS, Pleasure Forever. But in recent years he’s segued into more solo work, less interested in touring and performing and more interested in just… writing and playing and recording. Making a narrative of songs. Most days.

For a couple years, he was working on an album. I would hang out with Michele, his partner and a close friend of mine, and she would mention gently, “Oh, Andy’s recording something now” and I’d say, “Oh, cool,” and then forget about it. After a couple years, in 2006, on one of our hangouts, perhaps having tea in their kitchen in the Haight Ashbury or catching up for a walk on a windy Bay Area weekend, Michele finally handed me a DVR and said, “This is from Andy.” The first in a projected quintet of albums about places and sounds and sensations and whatever else Andy writes about all day long, every day.

Whenever I listen to a record made by someone I know, I feel as though I am (hopefully) allowed a greater understanding of that person and their perspective on the world. It’s a terrific and sometimes odd feeling. But usually when I sample my friends’ art, I’m not all that surprised. I kind of already knew what it might be like and could basically guess where they were going with it while they were on the way there.

When I listened to this album Abandoned Meander, by someone named Andrew Douglas Rothbard, I had no idea who this recording was made by. It blew my mind. And yet, as soon as I heard it I also knew instinctively that it was so completely in line with what I would expect from my friend’s personality and artistic preferences, so totally Andy, it thrilled me in a new and unusually profound way. Because when you realize that all along, this person who you love and know somewhat well and are friends with but don’t really interact with all that profoundly, is a fucking closet genius? That’s a nice day.

There are contemporaries you can place Andy’s records next to. He doesn’t listen to them. Young guys, often white, often really well-educated in pre-1980s music. Guys who like to layer guitar loops on top of one another with those cool pedals that let people sample themselves. These guys, and Andy, too, often contain endless musical and trivial points of reference that speak to sixties psych, current-day experimental music, and other vintage sounds.

I wouldn’t say talking about the West Coast Experimental Pop Band or some farther-out late-60s acid folk pop is out of place here. I also wouldn’t say the cacauphonic spirit of experimental groups like the Boredoms or the skills of contemporary low-fi guitar acts like Six Degrees of Admittance are unrelated to this work. But because I know the person who made it, and I know the apartment in which he made it and the tape loops which he used to make it and I’ve seen that laptop open so many times on his desk–because I know how perceptive a student of music he is and how insightful his taste—I don’t even feel a need to spend too much time comparing Abandoned Meander to its sonic peers (which is, usually, the way most of us write about music).

This is a record I would buy on CD and vinyl and repeat, even if I didn’t know the person who made it. This is a record I’d blog rapturously about. It loops you in from the start, a true meander across a constantly expanding and imploding landscape that seems to only to climax only to come back around. It assaults the senses with highs and lows and cycles that mirror the violent, tender march of the fog that so famously barrels in to San Francisco from the Pacific, drawing a dividing line of wet grey across the city right about where Andy and Michele’s apartment sits. There are layers that never end. Guitars and vowel sounds and trip upon trip. If I were doing that record review thing where I compare music to other things, I might try to talk about this record in reference to a Buddhist mandala or a Russian doll set: ever unfolding, re-manifesting, rolling through sonic movements, and—oh, yes—rocking.

So have a listen. Then buy it and its cyclic sequel, Exodusarabesque, and wait, like me, for numbers three, four, and five of Anrew Douglas Rothbard’s closet opus. In the meantime, drink some tea, listen to some vinyl, and let the fog wrap around you in the middle of the day. It’s so worth it.

Things We Lost in the Fire

In weird shit on April 11, 2011 at 7:18 pm

Kranky, 2001

And sometimes, a band writes a record that is the soundtrack to your actual dreams. Nightmares included.

Some albums become bedtime albums for me. Long before this album, R.E.M.’s Automatic for the People. A bit after, for at least a year: Sparklehorse‘s It’s a Wonderful Life. I listened to Things We Lost in the Fire every night at bedtime for six months straight. Every night. Even when that night had already turned to morning. Even when I didn’t make it past the first “sunflower.”

side four, engraved

Some nights, dark pressured in like that heartbeat in “Embrace” and slipped me under the pulse of my own subconscious, twitching and inexpressable. When you kick out as you’re falling past the edge of

awake, our bodies are as the instruments of us. The wall of these soundings sneaks in beneath the beat of sleep: I dreamed to this album. A lot. A lot about death, and the frailty of the human form, and the ineffability of being vulnerable. Being made of elements. Like water. Like this, like here we go again off the edge of something, like

oh!

i wake into air, blue metal rusts the horizon above the riverbed under the fact of this

every thing that hurts, hurts more in water

oh, roll off the freeway the wrong way we turn into sky see the snake thread of the river’s patience brace and curl then land, like a bird, safe not in water

where every thing still hurts that hurts more in water

oh this as a dance of

words that is made, we never can move enough we swim too much

and every thing that moves hurts water hurts water

or this as yes, for i will bind your chain in cloth and thread it through your heart to help you breathe

i am dancing in the room with you, i am.

Is This It

In rawk on April 6, 2011 at 4:16 pm

Rough Trade, 2001

Some records are not about the things they make you remember.

Portland, Oregon. September 12, 2001.

The fall of the sun sweeps the backyard fence. Our picnic table nestles the remains of the chips and salsa. Shaking the dregs of empty Pabst cans, looking for a place to extinguish the joint, my friend’s friend from college debates a classic flick: “It’s not misogynistic, it’s about the plight of man.”

I want to touch him, his summer-labor shoulders. I don’t care about the plights of men, or Samuel Fuller’s war movies. What I want to know is: How to tap this violently musclebound fuck god? How to cash in on the fear of this day? How could I possibly be alone when the sky is falling?

And although he’s wrong, I feel for him. And for Fuller, too.

It’s like, no matter what amazing and radical intentions he has, no matter what fuck-shit-up rebellious instinct, what strong single mother raised him up, what depths of poetry lurk beneath those abs—no matter what—in the end, a man makes a war. What can he do?

When he leaves, lengthening shadows are cooling the wooden seats on which we sit. A Volvo station wagon pulls up and he strides through the gate to get in it. Out of the window behind the steering wheel, a pixie haircut and sunglasses reflect us.

He opens the car door to the amplified sound of a clipped electric guitar, fuzzy but clean like it came from a city bigger than here. His girlfriend has been repeating it for a month in the car. We all have. Defending it. This little disc in a little sleeve painted to look like a vinyl record. The Modern Age. Shades of: Velvet Underground, The Cars, someone at the table says “is that Rick Springfield?” or something else undeniably tinged with sudden nostalgia.

The past separates itself from today. The old car drives away. In its engine’s noisy wake I hear the beat. A deeper fuzz.

A fighter-plane’s patrol loop blots out the sunset for only 2.5 seconds, but it’s enough. Dresden, Sarajevo. Baghdad.  New York.

We’re done.

Mass Romantic

In rawk on April 5, 2011 at 11:17 am

Mint Records, 2000

Come on, workers of the world. I know you’re listening. You know who you are. If you’ve ever had sore feet at the end of the day. If you’re ever hated your small-minded manager. If you know the term “in the weeds” in a non-wilderness capacity. If you have cleaned, served, rung out, scrubbed, and pounded until your fingers develop callouses, and then gone home at the end of the day to realize you may not be able to make your rent. You know what I’m talking about. Waiters, clerks, janitors, cooks, housecleaners … you do the dirty work of keeping our society functioning, of keeping the consumers consuming or the kids playing or pretty much anything people ask you to do while you’re at work. Are you listening? I want to remind you of something.

I want to talk about the good part of having a low-wage service job. The fun part. Because there are moments of glory in these jobs. There are many moments of glory—these are in fact honorable jobs—but what I mean is there are actual moments where you have fun. When you and your coworkers are the only people in the place, or can act as though you are, and you’re doing the hard physical work of whatever it is you do to maintain someone else’s lifestyle: you’re sweeping, or mopping, or cleaning the shit-stained toilet. You’re telling off your stupid manager, or strategizing with your coworkers about how to do that without getting fired. You’re filling the ketchups or pushing your trash cart down the corridor or fixing the goddamn cash register receipt feeder again. You’re catching up on gossip and flipping off clients when their backs are turned and you’re sweating—you’re working, and hard—but you’re also having a moment in which it’s you (and us) against the world, and you and us are proud of ourselves and know we are whole people despite what the world says. And you and us just want to jump up on the counter and dance.

But you can’t, so instead you put on some music. It’s the “closing-up” album, in retail and restaurant work; it’s the Mexican-language radio blaring from behind the kitchen doors of every restaurant in every city. In other service work, it might have to remain in your head or headphones, or else at least wait to be unleashed until the walk or bus ride home. But there are albums that encapsulate that feeling—that tired, exploited, defiant, jump-on-the-countertops-anyway- feeling. They are best enjoyed with coworkers you trust. They can be literal rebellion anthems—Superchunk’s “Slack Motherfucker” is one of mine, with its refrain of “I’m working, but I’m not working for you”—or they can simply be good loud danceable fun. They can be slow— sweeping up to Portishead after the 2am rush— or fast— Cypress Hill in the early morning when you’re hung over— or offensive— Japanese noise music as an effort to drive customers out at closing time. Or they can be sweet, sweet, sugary pop— the kind of rock that is nothing but hook upon hook upon hook, and yet you love it still.

And this album is one of them. It’s not about work, it’s not about struggle per se. But it’s perfect for jumping up and down to when your feet hurt so much you can’t stand anymore.

Go ahead. Put it on. Love the witty and irreverent band name: the New Pornographers. Feel the jaunty electric guitar that keeps coming at you yet never quite annoys you with its insistency. Marvel at Neko Case’s register on “Letter from an Occupant.” Wonder how this band can just keep hitting us with chorus after perfect chorus. Hook upon hook. Smile about it. Jump up and down. Jump up and down. Where have all sensations gone? They’ve gone for the day. There’s nothing left to take. So put away your attitude, forget about the bills today. Just get up on your aching feet and lift your broom in the air and dance with me.

Also:

While I’ve had lots of crappy service jobs in my life, and you probably have too, I think it’s important to acknowledge that for a lot of people those jobs aren’t jobs you grow out of, high school jobs or retail work while in college on the way to more lucrative and stable professional careers. A lot of people, especially immigrants, have to try and raise families and come up with places to live on “crappy” hourly-wage service jobs, with no benefits and no promise of anything better coming around the corner. Most people who work very, very hard in our country receive very, very little compensation or options.

Take some folks I know who work at a country club in Pleasanton, California. The country club – a private club to which people pay upwards of $25,000 a year just to join, and more to hang out there and eat and play golf – has been trying to make their low-wage food service workers contribute $750 a month for health insurance coverage—an amount that some of these people barely make in a month, let alone have to spare. This happened in 2010. The workers fought it, and as a result the Castlewood Country Club actually locked them out of their jobs. For the past year. But they’re still there, every day, picketing outside the lush green drives and the pristine white buildings. They’re fighting and dancing and getting up in these rich jerks faces while the jerks show up to play freakin’ golf while real people are standing there next to them, on the side of the golf course, fighting to just survive.

I’m joining the workers of the Castlewood for a celebration of their remarkable fight, and a fundraiser to help them keep going, this Friday in Oakland. Wanna come with me? Baile y luche!

Go here for details and to pre-register, so they know how many enchiladas to make. And trust me when I tell you: the enchiladas are good.

End the Lockout