Satantic Rerecorder? Roach Tweetface

1. @ Ubu, an MP3 broadcast on hidden and satanic messages in music.

2. If anyone happened to record Zach Schomburg’s Live Giant reading last month, would you drop me a line? Someone had recorded Heather Christle’s, and Zach’s failed to record over here. Would be big help.

3. Trailer has emerged for Mary Roach’s new forthcoming book, Packing for Mars: The Curious Science of Life in the Void, coming August 2 from Norton.

4. Kanye West still sucks.

Roundup / 36 Comments
July 29th, 2010 / 12:39 pm

Reminder: Mairéad Byrne TONIGHT, 9pm EASTERN

Tune in tonight for the seventh installment of Live Giants. The reader will be Mairéad Byrne.

Her latest book, The Best of (What’s Left of) Heaven is a 208-page opus just released by Publishing Genius. Purchases made between now and midnight tonight get a reduced $10 price and free shipping. It was reviewed yesterday at JMWW by Ashlie Kauffman.

Tonight, 9pm EASTERN, come here.

Events / Comments Off on Reminder: Mairéad Byrne TONIGHT, 9pm EASTERN
July 29th, 2010 / 10:04 am

Jackie Corley, publisher and editor of Word Riot, offers sound advice for would-be publishers.

27 Years (plus a few days) of (this recording of) 42 Years

via Nathan Salsburg‘s facebook page- the above was shot on 7/26/1983, or 27 years and 2 days ago. Some of you might recall that I really liked I Want to Go Where Things are Beautiful, a Nimrod Workman album made from recordings done by Mike Seeger, and released through Twos & Fews, the Drag City imprint that Salsburg runs. What you may not know is that Salsburg is also the driving force behind Face a Frowning World: An E.C. Ball Memorial Album, which is one of the most spectacular comps I’ve acquired in I don’t know how long–years. Even if you don’t have a clue who E.C. Ball was, you’ll find plenty to love about this record. Oh, and while we’re on the subject, the newest Twos & Fews release is called The Good Old-Fashioned Way; it is a collection of recordings by a man named Hamper McBee.

Music / 10 Comments
July 28th, 2010 / 10:15 pm

Seventh Mess Section

1. GIVE HER DRUGS / LET HER GO

2. “Watching porn’s usually like watching a melancholy documentary to me, a documentary about sex as a failed utopia or something, I don’t know.” –Dennis Cooper

3. Similarly, identity becomes fluid: Weems is Ellen is Caden is Weems etc. –an excellent sound-guided review of Synecdoche, NY in a great all-sound issue of Reverse Shot

4. They pierced the envelope of the earth. Or at least found some exit. –from Thy Son Liveth

5. But here’s the real kicker: as Poplawski says, we may not be living in our universe at all; we might be living inside a rebounded black hole that exists in a different universe.

6. What we call deflation, an earlier culture might have called, “God abandoning the world.” –Sacred Economics, by Charles Eisenstein

Roundup / 2 Comments
July 28th, 2010 / 8:52 pm


Have you been reading Kate Zambreno’s selections this month over at Everyday Genius? Fuck-an-A, they’ve been great! All women and all language badassery!  I mean, I’m accustomed to EG consistently bringing the awesome, but I think July has been my most favorite month so far. Highlights: Rebecca Loudon, Vanessa Place, Danielle Dutton, Janice Lee, but seriously, all month it has been one great piece after another. You should check out the backlog. Good job Kate. Good job Adam.

Uncategorized / 20 Comments
July 28th, 2010 / 7:04 pm

“Published in the future.” (“A screaming comes across the sky,” translated 56 times. Here.) Also, hey. I’m reading Against the Day.

Mad Magazine Rejection Letter

[via Magic Molly]

Behind the Scenes / 24 Comments
July 28th, 2010 / 3:05 pm

Linguistic Darwinism: Can a brand name kill the thing it was named after?

Before Facebook, there were facebooks. When I was in college, “the facebook” was one name for the (ink and paper) Pomona student handbook’s most-perused section, the photo directory of incoming freshman. Other designations were the lookbook and, more crudely but most aptly, the menu. Plenty of schools had them and many also called them the facebook. Facebook corporate mythology has it that founder Mark Zuckerberg got the idea for Facebook from the facebook issued by his high school alma mater, Phillips-Exeter. In any case, this kind of directory is surely what the company was named after.

Presumably, college students don’t need facebooks anymore because they have Facebook. I doubt they’ve been totally phased out, but I do wonder if they are still colloquially referred to as facebooks. Wouldn’t that be too confusing?

There are plenty of cases when a brand name became the de-facto generic name for something, like Kleenex or Coke (at least here in Atlanta) or Oreo. But this is a different phenomenon, wherein the brand name takes a generic thing’s name and applies it to a new form of that thing, thereby making the generic name and thing obsolete.

My father frequently uses the construction “all a-twitter.” Twitter is, after all, a verb meaning to make successive chirping noises (hence the Twitter bird icon) or  to tremble with excitement (my dad’s usage is somewhat of an amalgam). Surely, much as people don’t say “gay” to mean “happy” anymore, uses of the generic verb twitter–when not in reference to micro-blogging–will diminish to nothing. But this still isn’t as extreme as the Facebook example, in that people are no less happy for not being called gay, and birds cheep no less for not being described as twittering, whereas colleges really might stop printing their own facebooks now that there is one big Facebook.

I’d love to hear if anyone can think of any other examples of this phenomenon, especially older examples–or was Facebook the first to murder its forebears?

Random / 35 Comments
July 28th, 2010 / 2:09 pm

Cage on Judgment

“Judge in a state of disinterest as to the effects of the judging.” John Cage, Lecture on Something

Power Quote / 7 Comments
July 28th, 2010 / 1:38 pm