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On Humanity

Posted at 6:26 PM

Carl Schmitt, The Concept of the Political, p. 54:

The concept of humanity excludes the concept of the enemy, because the enemy does not cease to be a human being—and hence there is no specific differentiation in that concept. That wars are waged in the name of humanity is not a contradiction of this simple truth; quite on the contrary, it has an especially intensive political meaning. When a state fights its political enemy in the name of humanity, it is not a war for the sake of humanity, but a war wherein a particular state seeks to usurp a universal concept against its military opponent… The concept of humanity is an especially useful ideological instrument of imperialist expansion, and in its ethical-humanitarian form it is a specific vehicle of economic imperialism.

Obama: The Price of Hope

Lenin’s Tomb:

There are many differences between the Iraq and Vietnam Wars. One of the most striking differences is this: the Vietnam War compelled many Americans, especially young people, to question the nature of liberalism in general and the Democratic Party in particular, whereas the Iraq War, far from disillusioning them, has renewed their hope for both.

Medieval Carnival

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Check out Bum Lee’s Medieval Carnival, which you can print and read online in a PDF. He’s always an interesting poet, and this project seems especially interesting.

Remember it’s time for a man in the arena. So by use of extremely complicated deduction… not a “woman” and not a “boy”. It’s both sexist and racist without being explicitly either. Hurrah.

Proposal: Lighter Pockets

Posted at 2:09 AM

Refuse to accept small denominations of currency. Reject them as inconsequential. Start with pennies, work your way up.

Let me know if you attempt this.

Bush, Colombia & Narco-Politics

For all of the MSM’s criticism of Chávez’s government as being hypothetically violent, it’s strange how little we hear about the actual violence perpetrated by the right-wing Colombian government, which is unsurprisingly backed by the Bush administration. At the very least, it’ll be interested to see how the row over FARC will play itself out in the coming weeks.

(Via A Tiny Revolution.)

German Abstract Expressionism Consumes Folk Hero Max Larkin

Posted at 3:00 PM

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Max Larkin is a twenty year old folk musician whose first and latest album, The Relations, is premiering this year. He has granted the Howler the distinguished honor of an exclusive interview in preparation for its release. His MySpace page, which includes a number of tracks from the album, can be found here. If you’re interested in obtaining a copy of the album, you can contact Max through MySpace or shoot him an e-mail at maxlarkintunes@gmail.com.

“Westward Forging,” one of the title songs on The Relations, can be listened to in full below:

What was the first album you ever bought?

TLC’s crazysexycool.

The one with the floating heads?

Right, the red one.

What was the first album you ever stole?

Well, when I was about six or so, I stole some M&Ms from Blockbuster because I always wanted to get them, but my mom would never let me, and then I busted them out in the car on the way home. My mom caught me and took me back and the Blockbuster managed talk to me about why stealing is bad. So I never stole an album, is the point of the story.

So this was sort of a formative experience in your childhood psychological development. Would you say it crucially shaped the direction of your lyrics?

Oh yes, I was young and impressionable, and it certainly might have.

An attempt to give back M&Ms so to speak?

You can definitely read into it like that.

What album have you played so frequently that you can’t listen to it anymore?

Dark Side of the Moon. Well, it’s only partly because I’ve played it so much. It kinda became such a holy album, that I couldn’t just listen to it. There had to always be a reason. The mood had to be just right and I had to be alone. And then after a while, no situation was good enough for the album.

What artist or musician were you thinking about the least when you composed The Relations?

Probably Hans Hofmann.

What prose and poetry writers influenced your songwriting?

Billy Collins, Gary Snyder, Shakespeare’s sonnets, Milan Kundera, and probably Vonnegut, too.

Where’d your band come from?

Chicago. The album is just me and David Johnson. He has a band called Favorite Saints. We recorded it in his studio. Just about everything on the album, save the violin on “Westward Forging” and the female vocal on “Dancing in the Dark Blues” is either me or him.

How’d you meet him?

I found him, so to speak. I was looking for a place to record and he had one, so that’s how it happened.

What’s your favorite track?

I’m pretty content with a few of the tracks. I think “End of the Line” came out well. We recorded that one at a barn party in Salem, IL.

A barn party?

Yeah, it’s a party. In a barn.

Was the song “Westward Forging” in any way inspired by the presidency of James Polk?

In a way it was. It’s really about all those blonde sun-kissed kids and how their ancestors just kinda ripped the land away from the natives, and now it’s their home. But I mean, it’s my home, too. So the question is, do I feel guilty saying that?

You’re from California originally?

Yeah. Born and raised.

Can you tell us more about yourself… all of the dirty details?

I definitely have mixed feelings about my writings being taught in high schools. Although, I know one of my professor’s freshman year uses an essay I wrote as an example.

What was it about?

It was about The Phantom of the Opera becoming the longest running musical in broadway history, for a class on the New Yorker magazine. We had to write our own “Talk of the Town” piece.

Was that essay written at 6 in the morning and aided by a bottle of Jim Beam, perchance?

All my essays were that way. But I think the one you’re referring to was about Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr., and how their speeches inspired young people.

Are any of your songs written this way?

I find when I am in a rut and need to write because nothing has come to me, I usually settle down with some whiskey late at night and try to hammer something out. I say to myself, “Okay, this song is gonna suck, but you haven’t written in a while and you need to.” That’s how “Early Summer Night” came about.

One of the notes I wrote about the album was that it was devoid of cities and seemed apart from the east coast. Can you elaborate on that at all?

That’s an interesting point, I hadn’t really thought about that.

You took a year off of college to prepare yourself for… the album or maybe something else? What was that all about?

Yeah, I wasn’t enjoying life at American University, so I took this year off. I’ve been living in Chicago. At the beginning of April I’m going backpacking from Japan to India.

An “Eastward Forging”?

I’ve thought of that, the “Eastward Forging” thing. I’m kinda starting in the ultimate east, and heading west. We’ll see what happens. I’ll be maintaing a blog, too.

I read an interview with Leonard Cohen where he spoke of a conversation he had with Bob Dylan.

That must’ve been one hell of a conversation.

He mentioned in passing that it had taken him four years to write “Hallelujah,” which made Dylan fall off of his chair. And Cohen asked him how long it took him to write “I and I,” to which he responded, ‘fifteen minutes.’ So the question here is, how much revision and work goes into your songs? Is it about the same for each song?

That’s a good question. Basically, some people have it and some people don’t. You can tell when you’re listening to Dylan that he’s just operating in his literary realm where everything is at his fingertips. There’s kinda this rolodex where you plug in how you feel and the right words come up.

But would you argue that Cohen didn’t have “it”?

Cohen is incredible, but I’m not positive he had that. Well, he may have.

It’s scary to think that if you had the right fifteen minutes you might be able to write “I and I” and maybe you don’t have a pen.

Quite.

So here’s an easy column question: What are your musical influences, from current to classic, obscure to top 40?

John Hartford. He was a folkie. Greatest folkie ever, I believe. His album Aereo-Plain is one of the best ever. Mark Knopfler, too. He’s just a master of control and it’s hugely impressive. My father’s songwriting has been a big influence on my own. And of course, The Beatles and Jackson Browne.

Okay, so your dad is a songwriter, too. Do you try to write like him, differently than him, or do you try not to think about it?

I think I came with this style innately. He was always sorta singing these little ditties around the house all my childhood about anything and nothing. There was a little song he’d sing when my brothers and I were little and he’d shampoo our hair in the bathtub, for example.

How’d it go?

I love to wash my hair / over here and over there / when you’re wearing no underwear / I love to wash my hair. So there were tons of little songs like that. My brothers and I came to call it the “suburban songbook.”

Do you put on a particular voice when you sing? For example, Mick Jagger usually sang in an American accent.

Well, Mick Jagger is the devil, because I believe in american pie.

What does that make Keith Richards?

Hell’s Angel.

Max, assuming you’ve heard of Advanced Theory, has it had any real influence on your music at all? Would you consider yourself either Advanced or Overt, or perhaps neither?

I don’t know much about this advanced theory, care to explain?

You should watch this and read this. I wonder if Rolling Stone asks Kanye West about obscure internet theories and then has him research them. Interviewees have had it easy for way too long.

I don’t really see myself too overt, but it seems like I’ll never be advanced without being overt first. I’m appreciating this, and I think Sickboy is right. I think the poet gets a decade.

If he’s lucky.

Yeah. Well, the poet gets a decade, but he could fuck it up during that decade. He could be blocking his entry to access “it.” It’s there, but he can’t get it. After that decade, it’s not there. It’s gone. Moved to someone else.

Do you see a difference between poetry and songwriting?

The best songwriting is poetry.

What’s a good example?

The best songs can be printed next to the best poems in textbooks. “Desolation Row,” for example. Aside from being a great song, it’s also a great poem.

Was there a concept behind your latest album? Is it a collection of songs or is there a unifying theme(s)?

There’s a loose concept. All the songs deal with people interacting with one another, and how they relate.

Could you talk about the title. The Relations, in case you forgot.

It’s not a great title, but it suffices and covers every song, as they are all about how people relate. The collection became the relations.

Can you say anything about where you think your music is headed, what we might be seeing in the future, and perhaps maybe present or future performance dates?

Well, I just played a few shows in California.

How did that go?

Pretty interesting. Fun on the whole.

What’s your live setup?

A Dean Markley acoustic pickup clamped on my guitar.

So it’s just you, no backup? Did you have to change the songs at all?

Not really, it isn’t as filled out, which is a bummer. I’d play with a band, but I don’t have one, though I’m not anti.

If you had a band, what would you call it?

George Carlin had a book in which there was a part called “Punk Bands I’ve Known.” I liked “The Sewer Transaction.”

I like it. It makes me think of shit. It might also help you get overt.

Yeah, then I could be on my way to getting advanced.

Well, I’m out of questions.

And I’m pretty hungry, too.

Bless us O Lord, for this interview which we just received. Amen.

Werd.

Ecology: A New Opium for the Masses

Article versions of this Zizek lecture were released on Lacan.com about a month ago (with a bit of a kerfluffle over at I cite), but for those interested in the video lectures (aka lazy bastards), the Lacan.com blog just posted them today, broken down into a four part series. They come highly recommended. The other amazing part is that Zizek admits (at 1:00m in Video II) that they’re working on “The Pervert’s Guide to Ideology.” Needless to say, I’m really excited about it.

OBEY!

This is one of the best sites I’ve yet to find on the net. I feel like their opening quote accurately summarizes my own goal with The Velvet Howler. Venture inside for great artwork, such as this excellent Social Realist piece featuring a portrait of Obama.

Hillary and Font Choice

Wonkette has some great (and perhaps Advanced) remarks about Hillary’s new attack ad:

Now this is a peculiar strategy for the Clinton campaign. They seem to be eschewing their central Obama attacks — his kindergarten record, horrific plagiarism, being a Negro — for a criticism of his foreign policy judgment, and they’re using “solid evidence” from his Senate career to support it. Isn’t that mean and unfair of Hillary Clinton?

You can view the ad for yourself here. It’s still pretty reprehensible, but what political attack ad isn’t? Nevertheless, a lot has been written about Obama’s excellent taste in fonts, but one thing that stuck out for me was that this new ad uses a fairly popular Web 2.0 font called Interstate, and it doesn’t look half bad. How this will play it for the crucial “typographer” swing vote, nobody really knows.

It is as though primal man had the habit, when he came in contact with fire, of satisfying an infantile desire connected with it, by putting it out with a stream of his urine… Putting out fire by micturating… was therefore a kind of sexual act with a male, an enjoyment of sexual potency in a homosexual competition. The first person to renounce this desire and spare the fire was able to carry it off with him and subdue it to his own use… Further, it is as though woman had been appointed guardian of the fire which was held captive on the domestic hearth, because her anatomy made it impossible for her to yield to the temptation of this desire.

—Sigmund Freud, Das Unbehagen in der Kultur, pp. 42-43

Proposal: Personalized Grocery Shopping

Posted at 6:41 PM

When in a grocery store, ask one of the stock-persons what item they recommend for the informed consumer. If they seem hesitant to make a recommendation, tell them about your self and explain your current mood. If you do not find their suggestion satisfactory, ask for a second opinion.

If you attempt this, please let me know.

366 Songs: January EP

Posted at 5:58 PM

I’m releasing a “best of January” compilation today from my project 366 Songs. If you haven’t listened yet, give this a shot and see what you think.

The month of January was about 30 days ago so I took some time to pick out my favorite tracks. Hopefully some time passing has allowed me to be more objective.

You can download the entire EP here.

The tracklist:

  1. Voodoo Sasha– I was going for a Keith Richards vibe and also questioning some recurrent themes…

  2. My Little Donkey– This was my favorite track of that month, and one of my favorites so far. It was pretty effortless and originally started out as a Christmas song.

  3. Camera Man News is a little twelve-bar blues I put together, and it’s fairly straightforward. I was working on hooks with this one.

  4. Roman Holiday– This is an alternative music imitation. I made it on my sister’s computer as mine was broken at the time. And no, it’s not about Mitt Romney.

  5. Retire– This is a song about regret. It has a wistful melody. I particularly enjoy the line “I used to be a Ballerino,” which almost seems to make sense.

  6. Freight Elevator– This is based on an old precarious freight elevator in my apartment in Pittsburgh. I was stuck in that a few times. I had to use it to do the laundry.

Terrific!

Iggy:

Bowie (featuring Henry Winkler):