Showing posts with label Heathcote Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heathcote Williams. Show all posts

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Lord Buckley

























[Richard Buckley Lord Buckley (1906-1960) - Photograph by Charles Campbell]

M'lords, m'ladies of the Royal Court" - Fifty-five years since the passing of the great Lord Buckley.  Just re-released by City Lights this year - what Buckley scholar, Oliver Trager has called, "this sacred artifact, this holy talisman" - Hiporama of the Classics - "First published in 1960, this new expanded edition contains, in addition to Buckley's hip-semantic raps, a new foreward by Al Young and photographs by legendary music photographers, Jim MarshallJerry Stoll, and others"




















Lord Buckley.com is a pretty good place to go for more. Not the least, for its transcriptions of the routines - 
Not the least for the immortal "Nazz" (Buckley's routine on Jesus of Nazareth)
- Ah! but there are so many!


["...And a great love came on his face and he noticed the power and beauty all of a sudden -"Oh great swingin' flowers of the fields!" - And they said "Oh great natural song of the stomp of beauty!". And he said, "Stomp upon the terra!" - They hit it. He said "Lift your hands from the body" -  The body went up - He said, "Straighten your arms!" - The arms went up. He said "Higher! - They went higher. He said "Dig Infinity" -  And they dug it!"]

Here's a few of our favorites

- The Nazz (complete) 
Hipsters Flipsters And Finger-Poppin' Daddies  (Mark Anthony's oration in hip-semantic)
Subconscious Mind
The Gettysburg Address  (likewise rendered in hip-semantic)
Cabenza De Gasca, The Gasser 
His version of  Edgar Allan Poe - The Raven  

"And now because I think rhythm is the key to everything, rhythm in attitude, rhythm in attention, rhythm in execution, rhythm in consummation, rhythm, rhythm, rhythm. Rhythm runs the whole swinging gate.."
Martin's Horse



Not so much extant footage of Buckley but here's two rare early treats.

First, from, circa 1949, an appearance on the tv show "Club 7" (he's seen doing an impression of "a great American and great artist, Mr Louis Armstrong", performing "When The Saints Go Marching In"
followed by a Lord Buckley parable - "The Lord and the Sinner" ("The great master was sitting in his rosy rockin' chair one Hallelujah morning…")
 - "Take a little and leave a little", that's what the Lord said"


The second clip is an historic combination. "Mr R.M.Buckley" appears on Groucho Marx's tv show, You Bet Your Life  (Buckley comes on about two minutes in)



Here's the legendary interview with Studs Terkel


Here's an interview with Allen's cousin Oscar Janiger (remembering him and pioneering research)

Here's the notorious police transcript 

(censored, like Lenny Bruce, on account of draconian cabaret laws)  

Oliver Trager's Dig Infinity is an essential book (if you can find it). Here's him talking about the book and about Buckley -  here and here

He recently just brought it to the stage, performing this year at the New York International Fringe FestivalHere's Hilton Als preview of that.



Heathcote Williams spreads the word about His Lordship in the International Times  


"“Did I say all?”, said Lord Richard Buckley before he died”  (Jack Kerouac from Desolation Angels


[People, people are the true flowers of life, and it has been a most precious pleasure to have temporarily strolled in your garden"]

Friday, February 21, 2014

Friday's Weekly Round Up - 165



[Allen Ginsberg, 1954 - oil on canvas - painting by Robert LaVigne]

Two weeks since the last round-up, so let's get right to it.

lavigne.jpg (39580 bytes)
[Robert LaVigne - Photograph by Myles Aronowitz]

Robert LavigneThe troubling case of Robert LaVigne and the allegedly stolen paintings.

Newspaper reports last year noted a court case involving LaVigne and his former assistant George Chebanyuk - ("Chebanyuk is alleged to have tried to sell off six works created by LaVigne, including a nude presumably depicting Beat Generation poet Allen Ginsberg"). 

A jury deliberated for four hours, on February 4, and returned a not-guilty verdict
A civil lawsuit remains outstanding (in May, Chebanyuk sued the Seattle Police Department for the return of the artwork). 

Over all this in-fighting and bickering sits the sad, dwindling, spectre of the artist (seminal artist of the Beat Generation), "in declining health".   

[sad update - we've just heard today (Friday February 21) of the death, yesterday in Seattle, following a stroke and brief hospitalization, of Robert LaVigne - he'd been, as we say, ailing for some time -  he was 85 - more news when we get it - he's, of course, very much in our thoughts]


Allen Ginsberg - Ginsberg's Thing - album cover

Vintage Ginsberg audio - Ginsberg reads (Giuseppe) Ungaretti - Thanks to Guilherme Ziggy for putting up on Soundcloud Allen's July 1967 reading, at the Festival of The Two Worlds in Spoleto, from "Il Taccuino Del Vecchio" ( Ungaretti's "The Old Man's Notebook").
Plenty more Ginsberg on Soundcloud. See, for example here - and here - and, most interestingly and curiously, here.



More Burroughs materials.  (Burroughs, of course, is, likewise amply featured on Soundcloud).  We don't think we've mentioned the University of Delaware Library's show - "Nothing Is True, Everything Is Permitted - William S Burroughs at 100" on view until June 13. We did mention the Lawrence Art Museum's William S. Burroughs - Creative Observer (up for a week or so more, until March 2nd). Curator Yuri Zupancic can be seen speaking of that show, and of Burroughs' art work in general, here

Recommended reading - Chal Ravens' piece, "The Priest And The Wild Boys - William Burroughs As Musician", in The Quietus - on "the rise and fall of (his, Burroughs') musical legacy".
William, having been commissioned by the magazine Crawdaddy, on attending a Led Zepplin concert in 1975: "I declined ear-plugs. I am used to loud drum and horn music from Morocco, and it always has, if skillfully performed, an exhilarating and energizing effect on me".
(The rest of that piece (including Burroughs' interview with Led Zepplin's Jimmy Page) may be read here).

Iggy Pop "reflects on Burroughs' extraordinary life with close friends and artists who felt his influence", on BBC's Radio 4, here.

Here's Heathcote Williams' recollections, (looking back over almost five decades), of Burroughs in London.



Jaap Van Der Bent's judicious review of  Hilary Holladay's American Hipster (Herbert Huncke biography) on the European Beat Studies Network may be found here 

Check out also Estíbaliz Encarnación-Pinedo's review (both in English and Spanish) 0n Bob Kaufman

and Thomas Antonic's conversation with the extraordinary ruth weiss, on the same site, is also well worth perusing.

The European Beat Studies Network next conference will be in Tangier, Morocco in November (November 17-19). For more details on that - see here 



Maggie Estep
[Maggie Estep (1963-2014)]

New York East Village stories - Poet/performer Maggie Estep died last week - a little too soon, a little too suddenly. An alumnae of the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at  Naropa (she memorably studied there in the mid 1980's, taking classes with, amongst others, Allen and Burroughs)

Here's a little memoir/note she wrote on Allen, on the occasion of  last year's Tompkins Square Park "Howl" Festival:
"His was an excellent spirit. He gave me very useful critiques when I was starting out, and I also had the honor of opening for him at NYU [New York University] not too long before he died. Best part of it was coming off the stage and Allen standing there beaming, then giving me a bear hug and saying, "That was magnificent". It meant the world to me - 
Also, one time, my kid brother Chris was visiting me at my hovel on East 5th Street in the mid 1990's. He casually asked me for Allen's street address and then said, "I'm going for a walk". Chris came back several hours later to report that he had randomly rung Allen Ginsberg's bell, said, "I just want to shake your hand" into the intercom, then was buzzed up. Allen showed him his library (really, his library) and made him some oatmeal".