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GUY DAROL [rien ne te soit inconnu] - Page 33

  • JIMMY CARL BLACK 1938-2008

     

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    Jimmy Carl Black
    Par le Grand Manitou !
    Je l'entends qui galope sur les grandes plaines de la Black Page.
    Les pas de son mustang résonnent sur l'air de King Kong.
    De ses cheveux fous s'envolent les notes de Burnt Weeny Sandwich.
    Sa voix éraillée est transportée par le vent des Grands-Esprits.
    La pluie amère se transforme en douce bière.
    La Terre-Mère libère du poids de la misère.
    Par le Grand Sachem !
    Il va enfin retrouver son presque sosie, chevelu à foison, Crin Noir et Cheval Fou unis par la Big Black Moustache.
    Le tonnerre va gronder. Ça va faire du bruit Là-Haut.
    YaHozna
    VOIR
    JIMMY CARL BLACK - THE INDIAN OF THE GROUP

     

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    Frank Zappa sous Jimmy Carl Black

     

     

  • LUMPY MONEY ❘ FRANK ZAPPA

     

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    Pour célébrer le 40ème anniversaire de la publication de Lumpy Gravy et de We're Only In It For The Money la Zappa Family Trust annonce, sans bugle ni marimba, l'édition d'un coffret 3 CD restituant les pistes originales de ces deux opus magnum.

    Les notes de pochettes seront de David Fricke.

    Sortie le 25 novembre.

    Il est plus que jamais utile de guetter l'événement sur The Real Frank Zappa Page, soit www.zappa.com

     


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    GAIL ZAPPA REPOND A VANITY FAIR EN OCTOBRE 2008

    VF Daily: How would you explain these two albums to somebody who isn’t all that familiar with Frank Zappa?

    Gail Zappa: Lumpy Gravy and We’re Only in it for the Money are part of what Frank called his master work. For him, every album was just part of the same composition and everything was all one big piece of music. But the three particular pieces that he considered his absolute masterwork were Lumpy Gravy, We’re Only in it for the Money, and Civilization Phase 3, the last album that he actually finished. They’re constructed in a similar way.

    Lumpy Gravy is Frank’s first outing on his own as an artist, and We’re Only in it for the Money is his first outing as a producer. It was supposed to also be his first outing as a rock ’n’ roll artist, but the record company insisted on it being a Mothers album, for marketing reasons. [The Mothers of Invention were Zappa’s band.] But technically these are both Frank’s first ventures as rock ’n’ roll artist and also as a classical composer.

    How does this fit in with the rest of the re-release series you’re working on?

    We want to honor all the re-releases in the 40th anniversary. But the exception is these two, because they are also part of the masterwork. Because they belong withCivilization to be seen properly. So in this particular case what we’re going to try to do is to be more focused on the process on Frank’s work, as opposed to [including alternate] versions [of individual songs]. If you look at a score, sometimes you’ll see sketches of what’s going to be in the score before the score is written. That’s kind of what we’re going for with this record. Little sketches of it, as opposed to completely other versions that didn’t “make it to the record.”

    Will Civilization be sold separately?

    Yeah. Although we are going to do a special edition of these three records, shortly. We didn’t announce that because we thought it would be too confusing. And it already is confusing. I’m going to be really surprised if I manage to get through this alive.

    If you don’t like confusion you should probably step away from the Frank Zappa discography. That’s part of the fun of it, don’t you think?

    Confusion I’m not fond of. But chaos I thrive on.

    You’re very conscientious about protecting Frank Zappa’s legacy. What’s the thing that worries you the most about that legacy and how it’s being treated?

    Identity theft. I’m glad you asked me. No one has asked that before. And that’s what it is: Identity theft. Because everybody imagines who Frank Zappa is. And then they go on, some of them, to imagine, I could make some money if I reinvent Frank Zappa in my own image. Which may suck, by the way. So people write books and they make records and they do this stuff. So every day my job is to protect and serve, like the L.A.P.D. Protect the integrity of the work itself. And serve the intent of the composer.

    How does that work out, pragmatically speaking?

    It’s a lot of squabbling over copyright issues. The real reason why I do this is because it’s just my obligation to Frank Zappa, who really believed in the Constitution of the United States of America, and one of its provisions covers copyright. And I don’t like people fucking with Frank’s last word, and his last word is his music.

    I know that you’ve had some issues with iTunes, and that you object to the MP3 format because it requires music files to be so compressed. Do you ever worry that if people can’t get MP3 downloads, you’re going to miss a chance to reach new fans?

    Well, you know, I’m of two minds there. First of all, this is a concept that Frank thought up in 1983 and published a copyrighted document on, that was filed with the copyright office. The idea was to deliver music over phone lines. As usual, he’s prescient. I don’t know how it would be different had Frank lived. Or how he would necessarily feel about it. But I do know his intention was that his music should not be massively compressed. And for that reason he insisted that his masters be sold in a specific format; anything less than that format was not permitted under the agreement. And iTunes was way below 16-bit technology [when Rykodisc, which had the rights to the Zappa catalogue, made it available there]. So I’m not having an argument with iTunes. I was always having the argument with the delivery by Ryko of something that they weren’t entitled to do, which is the digital download of less than 16-bit technology.

    I don’t want to fault delivery systems. Really what is happening with music—because people steal it more and more, I think they just want to have it. They don’t want to listen to it. Because if they wanted to listen to it, they wouldn’t buy it that way.

    You mean compressed?

    Yeah. It’s like you want a knock-off of something. You just say that you have it. To appear as if you’re hip or cool, whatever it is. You want to hear the musical idea. But you don’t want to hear the music.

    Frank makes fun of hippie culture a lot in We’re Only in it for the Money.What do you think he’d be making fun of today?

    Well, anybody who takes themselves seriously. Nobody was spared, including himself. He was certainly relegated to that sort of—it’s hard for you to imagine, because you sound like you’re about 12.

    I’m 33.

    Very close, from my perspective. I have a son your age. When these records were made, everything in the media was about them and not us. We were excluded. And if we were talked about at all, they pointed the finger: those are them and they’re dangerous. So we were a little separate community, everybody under the age of 25 in 1965. It’s hard to imagine for people now, especially your age, that your whole country, your parents and everybody, would be against you if you behaved or looked a certain way. It’s so pervasive now that no one cares anymore.

    The mainstream culture has also become very adept at co-opting anything that’s at all creative or “edgy.”

    Absolutely. That’s absolutely true. Frank never intended to be psychedelic or avant-garde or any of those titles that have been visited upon him by everybody else in retrospect. That wasn’t what he was trying to do at all. He was just saying, This is what I think about that, and this is how I’m going to show you what I think.

    Speaking of your children, I caught one of Dweezil’s performances of the Frank Zappa catalogue a year or two ago at the Jammies.

    You have to see it now! It’s nothing like that now. That was when they first started out. And there was so much pressure for them to have original members that played in Frank’s band. And it was just so heartbreaking for all of us—especially the family—that we had to do that. Because we just believe in the music and that it’s alive and well, and that it doesn’t need those guys to hold it up anymore. Or to participate in any way. If it can’t be played by people of your generation, then what’s the point?

     

  • ALBERT MARCOEUR ❘ CAFE DE LA DANSE

     

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    Albert Marcoeur, ah !

    Albert Marcoeur, ah ! ah !

    Ah ! Marcoeur

    Albert, ah ! ah !

    Longtemps, cela fait longtemps que je suis l'homme et ses oeuvres

    Depuis 1974, il faut dire

    depuis qu'au Théâtre des Arts, je la trouvai bien belle,

    belle cette scène champêtre

    beau l'instrumentarium camouflé dans du bois

    bois de fût

    bois des celliers où le vin repose avant qu'on le gouleye.

    Octobre 2008, je fus au Café de la Danse, boire ses mots, voir le show

    c'était rien beau

    sourires et larmes qui pianotent aux paupières

    aux commissures aussi

    sûr j'étais ému

    j'étais ému.

     

    C'est pas terrible le son, hein ?
    mais c'est mieux que rien, non ?

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • FRANK ZAPPA ❘ LIBRAIRIE DIALOGUES/BREST

     

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    A l'occasion de la publication de FZ/ONE SIZE FITS ALL/COSMOGONIE DU SOFA, je serais heureux de vous rencontrer à la librairie Dialogues de Brest, le vendredi 31 octobre à 18h.

    Librairie Dialogues
    Forum Roull
    29200 Brest
    Tel :
    02 98 44 32 01
    Web : www.librairiedialogues.fr

     

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  • ANDRE LAUDE ❘ IMAGE ET SON

     

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    Le mirobolifique Christian Ducasse attire mon attention sur ce film rare capturé en 1995. Les lecteurs d'André Laude, ceux qui attendent l'édition des Oeuvres Complètes, sauront apprécier. Les autres découvriront toute la puissance du mot poésie en des temps où le manque persiste.

     

    Vient de paraître :

    Oeuvre Poétique d'André Laude (1936 -1995)

    aux Editions de la Différence

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    Œuvre poétique d'André Laude

    752 p., 49 euros

    Cahier photo

    Collection : Œuvres complètes.

    ISBN : 978-2-7291-1782-5.

    Editions de la Différence

    30, rue Ramponeau,

    75020 Paris


     

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    André Laude photographié par Christian Ducasse

     

  • ONE SIZE FITS ALL/COSMOGONIE DU SOFA ❘ GUY DAROL

    FRANK ZAPPA ❘ ONE SIZE FITS ALL/COSMOGONIE DU SOFA

    EN LIBRAIRIE DEPUIS LE 24 SEPTEMBRE

     

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    LE MOT ET LE RESTE

    35, traverse de Carthage

    13008 Marseille

    mail : ed.mr@wanadoo.fr

    www.atheles.org/lemotetlereste

    LIRE LA PRESENTATION DU LIVRE

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  • GERARD LAVALETTE PHOTOGRAPHE

     

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    Gérard Lavalette suspend le temps. Ses images conjuguent le Paris des années 1960 et la ville d'aujourd'hui. Sans doute sait-il capter l'éternité des visages, l'invariable des émotions, toujours refusant de se plier aux ordres de jamais plus ? Les photographies de Gérard Lavalette sont une affirmation du piéton, le flâneur des rues au parfum d'asphalte.

    Bibliothèque Faidherbe

    18, rue de Faidherbe 75011 Paris

    jusqu'au 30 octobre.

    Quelques liens pour partager le butin de Gérard Lavalette :

    http://www.parisfaubourg.com/galerie/picture.php?cat=1&image_id=407&expand=12,1

    http://www.parisfaubourg.com/

    http://www.pariscool.com/index.html

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/gerard_lavalette/sets/

  • PRESENCE D'ANDRE HARDELLET

     

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    En préparation depuis plusieurs années, cet hommage à André Hardellet est publié Au Signe de la Licorne, enseigne dirigée par Pascal Sigoda.

    Présence d'André Hardellet sera présent dans quelques librairies. Tiré à 300 exemplaires, le volume ne sera pas réimprimé. Il est prudent par conséquent d'en passer commande dès maintenant.

    André Hardellet (1911-1974) a été il y a trente cinq ans, sous Raymond Marcellin, l'objet d'une condamnation pour outrages aux bonnes mœurs par la 17ème Chambre correctionnelle de Paris. L'auteur du Bal chez Temporel, salué par André Breton et Julien Gracq avait en effet écrit un beau livre érotique, Lourdes, lentes…, un des rares qui soit lisible dans cette catégorie…

    Au Signe de la Licorne a décidé de le saluer par un ouvrage collectif et une importante bibliographie.

     

    SORTIE DECEMBRE 2008

    BULLETIN DE SOUSCRIPTION

    Je soussigné(e) Nom-Prénom :……………………………………………………………

    Désire recevoir : Présence d'André Hardellet (I.S.B.N. :978-2-913034-10-5), 268 pages
    …………………….exemplaires à 27 €
    Total : ……………..€uros

    Ci-joint mon chèque à l'ordre d'Au Signe de la Licorne

    L'envoi doit parvenir à l'adresse suivante :

    ……………………………………………………………………………………………….
    ……………………………………………………………………………………………….

    J'envoie cette commande et mon règlement à :

    Au Signe de la Licorne

    36 avenue Carnot 63000 Clermont-Ferrand

    Téléphone : 04 73 90 15 46

    courriel : ausignedelalicorne@yahoo.fr

    Site internet : www.ausignedelalicorne.com

     

     

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    AU SOMMAIRE

    La Promenade imaginaire :

    Patrick Cloux : Les effets secondaires

    Hervé Carn : La grammaire des émotions

    Georges-Olivier Châteaureynaud : Le seuil du jardin

    André Vers : Le temps du Vecchio

    John Taylor : Neuf petites proses

    Louis Nucera : L'enchanteur

    Guy Darol : Tête en l'air

    Lectures :

    Alexis Constant : Marge et périphérie

    Olivier Houbert : Le grand stupéfiant

    Eleonore Real : L'Ecriture du secret

    Michel Lamart : Le fantastique d'André Hardellet : un réalisme poétique ?

    Françoise Demougin : Enfances de l'écriture

    John Taylor : Traces des jours disparus

    Philippe Claudel : Vers l'Ile au trésor

    Joël Vernet : En marchant entre les pages d'Hardellet

    Guy Dupré : Le rêveur éveillé

    Dossier :

    Françoise Demougin : Florilège critique

    Françoise Demougin : Bibliographie - Notice biographique

    Olivier Houbert - Notices biographiques des auteurs

     

     


     

  • HECTOR ZAZOU 1948-2008

     

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    A quelques jours de la parution de son nouvel album (In The House Of Mirrors), Hector Zazou, l'un des premiers aventuriers des musiques électroniques, vient de refermer son parapluie.

    Pour s'en convaincre, il suffit simplement de tendre son oreille du côté de Joseph Racaille, de Bony Bikaye, de Björk, de Ryuichi Sakamoto ou de John Cale.

    Musicien très estimé, Hector Zazou collabora avec Lisa Gerrard, Brian Eno, David Sylvian, Nils Petter Molvaer, Laurie Anderson ...

    Son onzième album, édité par Crammed Discs paraîtra le 6 octobre.

    www.crammed.be

     

  • ARTAUD ❘ DJ SPOOKY ❘ IMBROGLIO

     

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    Artaud boutefeu, Artaud brouté. Sous haute surveillance le Mômo. La voix d'Artaud sur Pour en finir avec le jugement de Dieu ayant bien inspiré Paul D. Miller alias DJ Spooky That Subliminal Kid revoici de l'imbroglio. Aux dernières nouvelles Serge Malausséna cherche poux. Et ce sont l'éditeur de Sound Unbound/Audio Companion/Excerpts And Allegories From The Sub Rosa Archives (soit le label Sub Rosa) ainsi que le distributeur de l'album (soit Orkhêstra International) qui risque bonbon pour une affaire de "sonic collage".

    Affaire à suivre sachant la dégelée financière qui menace l'un de nos meilleurs éditeurs phonographiques et le plus littéraire des distributeurs de musique impérative.

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    www.subrosa.net

    www.orkhestra.fr