The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Spotlight on … Claude Ollier The Mise-en-Scène (1958)

 

It is not impossible to imagine … a novel whose fiction would be exciting enough so that the reader intensely felt the desire to know its last word which precisely, at the last minute, would be denied to him, the text pointing to itself and towards a rereading. The book would be thus, a second time, given to the reader who could then while rereading it, discover everything in it which in his first mad fever he had been unable to find. — Benoit Peeters

The photo is still famous. Signed Mario Dondero, it shows the writers of the Nouveau Roman, taken in 1959 on rue Bernard Palissy, before the offices of Editions de Minuit. Claude Ollier, who died Saturday, October 18, 2014 at the age of 91, was the last survivor of the team of eight authors immortalized that day — the movement itself is now left entirely in the hands of its two surviving proponents, Michel Butor and Jean Ricardou.

However Ollier’s unclassifiable work, having been nourished by an exploration of many different genres, must not be reduced or completely assimilated to this literary trend.

A year before the famous photograph was taken, in 1958, Claude Ollier had published his first novel, Mise-en-Scene. It was immediately awarded the Prix Médicis, which had just been created: the story of a French engineer sent to France for the care of the construction of a road in the Moroccan Atlas, who discovers the mysterious disappearance of several of his predecessors.

The context was inspired by Ollier’s stay in Morocco, in 1950, as an official of the administration Sharifian in the High Atlas and in Casablanca, where he kept a diary and began to write short stories, and where his dream vocation as a writer was affirmed.

Born in Paris in 1922, the writer Claude Ollier had studied at the Lycee Carnot prewar, and he received a philosophy degree in Montlucon in 1940. Then followed law studies and a management position at the École des Hautes Études Commerciales.

Sent to Germany by the STO in 1943, he fled before being taken hostage near Lake Constance and shipped in Swabia. After the war, he worked in insurance, then as official. After 1958, he finally left public service to devote himself to writing.

Ollier’s second book, Le Maintien de l’ordre, was rejected by publisher Jérôme Lindon in 1960 and was published a year later by Gallimard. In 1963, he published Été indien, with Minuit. He then wrote radio plays, and the respected novel cycle of Jeu d’enfant, whose four books were published from 1972 to 1975. In 1967, he published with Gallimard L’Échec de Nolan et Navettes, and Mon Double in 1979-81, inspired by a trip to Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia in 1977.

Car trips were a central part and major inspiration of Ollier’s life and work: United States, Germany, Quebec, and Marrakech in the 1960s and 1970s; Europe and Morocco still in the 1980s; Australia and New Zealand in 1990; and finally Jordan. Also beginning in the late 1960s, Ollier for a short time worked as an actor in films, most famously in Robert Bresson’s masterwork Un Femme Douce (1969).

In December 1997 he was elected into Écrivains à Paris, and a symposium in honor of his work, which at that point numbered nearly fifty books, was held in Paris. He subsequently launched into writing the novel cycle “quatre récits de couleur mythologique”, which was published by Editions POL between the years 2000 and 2007. A tireless traveler, Claude Ollier lived in Provence and Marrakech before settling in Maule in the Yvelines, where he lived until his death. In 2013, he published his last book book, Cinq contes fantastiques (POL), which was nicely subtitled: “Choses vues de ma fenêtre au deuxième étage de la maison.” –– Sabine Audrerie

 

_____
Further

Claude Ollier @ Wikipedia
‘Claude Ollier (1922-2014), écrivain’
Claude Ollier @ France Culture
‘L’écrivain Claude Ollier s’est définitivement évadé’
Claude Ollier @ goodreads
‘Claude Ollier, le roman toujours renouvelé’
‘POUR CLAUDE OLLIER par Christian Rosset’
Audio: ‘Un avant-goût de “Régression” de Claude Ollier’
‘Claude Ollier, fracas de l’existence’
Book: ‘LES PARTITIONS DE CLAUDE OLLIER’
Buy Claude Ollier’s ‘Mise-en-Scene’

 

____
Extras


Claude OLLIER et Le Nouveau Roman


Claude Ollier- Der neue Zyklus (SDR 1973)


Claude Ollier, Réminiscence

 

______
Interview
from The Review of Contemporary Fiction

 

Cecile Lindsay: I have always been struck by the absence of the Second World War and the Algerian War in your fictions.

Claude Ollier: If we exempt the fleeting and marginal “return” to European soil in L’Echec de Nolan, as phantomlike, muffled, nocturnal, and haunted by bad memories and nightmares, then all the other books are situated outside of Europe and far from Europe, farther and farther. On the one hand, it became almost impossible to “think” lucidly about what had been that sort of self-destruction of Europe between 1930 and 1945; on the other hand, it is clear that what is important in the evolution of the world since then is no longer taking place there. The obstinate and persevering hero of Le Jeu d’enfant senses and knows it from the beginning; it is the terrible knowledge acquired in adolescence, an admitted, outmoded fact of which he will never speak; the Second World War destroyed all he had been taught, humanism included, along with his whole inherited childhood universe. He is trying bravely, ingenuously perhaps, to take everything back to zero, in the beginning of La Mise en scene just as the book’s author tries, by a sort of narrative tabula rasa, to take back to square one all the elements of narration: observation of a country, a civilization, a foreign language, an unknown story. And all the primordial questions are asked there in a single movement: what is seeing, hearing, interpreting, exploring, reflecting, remembering, dreaming, writing, speaking? His instruction begins again, his life is reeducated elsewhere, on an “exotic” soil, extra-muros, far from the ruins of his childhood and his native land, far from the other side of the walls of a Europe whose Second World War culminated in a sort of cultural suicide. This war was for him the equivalent of that inaugural catastrophe that the hero of so many science fiction tales has trouble remembering or measuring but that conditions the entirety of his new universe. For him, it is as though this catastrophe “upstream” could not be recounted. And he tries anew to see, to tell, to write, having come into contact with foreign languages unknown to him—languages which, by their difference from his own, will allow him to look upon his mother tongue differently and to use it anew.

CL: A strong current in American literary criticism and critical theory of recent years has been a call for a more “political” approach to both writing literature and writing about literature. Experimental fiction has often been critiqued for what is seen as its “hyperformalism.” Were this charge to be made about your writing, how would you respond?

CO: I would answer that this accusation, which is superficial and banal, rests upon a regrettable lack of reflection on the question of language and of its relation to the body; upon the question of form and of the evolution of forms; and, more generally, upon any question that is epistemological, philosophical, or aesthetic in nature. Or I would answer, more simply, that those who make this charge have probably not read the books of which they claim to speak. For to use the term experimental is to misconstrue completely the very nature and practice of the act of writing such as they are manifested in books like mine. My work has absolutely nothing to do with “experimentation.” In the exact, scientific sense of the term, experimentation consists of isolating certain elements and conducting upon them duly controlled experiments, systematic manipulations, skillful alterations. I have nothing against this kind of work, and some of its results can be interesting and instructive. But my kind of intervention in respect to language and narrative forms has nothing to do with that. You could even say that it is the opposite: indeed, genuine experimentation necessarily tries as much as possible to eliminate chance, while my whole practice consists in provoking, in narrative invention, the greatest possible degree of chance, soliciting at every moment the irruption of elements which are more or less diffuse, forgotten, or firmly buried within the unconscious. I can only write, can only feel the pleasure of writing, if I reconnect with past emotions. I have an absolute need in the beginning for a precise setting, a setting in which I have lived; I need it so that the sensations, perceptions, and emotions can flow. Even on an “imaginary” planet, my writing can function only if it is plugged into memories, dreams, and intuitions. The phantasmic scenes of Epsilon and Enigma are closely derived from lived scenes from the recent or distant past. This is what I call the anchorage of a fiction. Everything in my texts arrives there by way of this anchorage in a place, by way of the paths, the journeys, the adventures, the dramas linked to this place. This is the source of the elan which allows for the development of a story: this story is launched on emotional traces, that is, on the reviviscence of the body’s displacements in a space known and forgotten, and on linkings of synesthetic, kinesthetic sensations whose recall and inscription in adequate terms regroup all the other sensations—visual, auditory, tactile. And for me the auditory sensations are much more important than the visual ones; the sounds connected with a place evoke that place for me, years later, much better than images: the tape recording is by far superior to photography. The tracing of lines is linked up to this play of recall and resurgences; the words, sentences, paragraphs, and blanks between lines must be fused by the permanence of this elan.

Each day, I start out on an impulse of this sort, which may only last a few minutes or can sometimes stretch out into several hours, but when I no longer feel its action within me, I know there is no point in insisting because there is no longer any vital necessity to continue, and it is only for that that I write. This necessity must be inscribed in each word, between the words, palpably. Only then can the reader feel an emotion of the same nature and force. If a sentence fails to transmit the emotion, it’s no good, it must be rejected or transformed. This work of palpable re-creation thus takes place through work upon forms: of vocabulary, of syntax, of typical and coded narrative formulas. This implies a putting into form of assonances, of relations of sonority, of rhythms, of silences, of the tempo intended for each piece. Here it is principally a question of music, a music of the text which is composed a bit like a musical score; I listen to it, I play it to myself, play it again, modify it, listen again, until the “musical phrase” is perfect, untouchable. If this work upon forms is called “hyperformalism,” then Bach, Schubert, Cervantes, Debussy, Rabelais, Flaubert, Bartok, Henry James, Proust and many others are remarkable hyperformalists.

It could be added that the necessity of an evolution of forms is inscribed within the exhaustion resulting from the prolonged use of these forms. By dint of being endlessly repeated, such forms become cliches, forms emptied of emotion. It is in order to reactivate emotive reactions (which form the basis of all the others— argumentative, critical, ethical) and to produce new ones that writers, musicians, and painters periodically “disconnect” from an ambient academicism diffused and lauded by the media, and compose works which appear to be completely apart, completely marginal and unassimilable. But these works create, there, a new poetics, and I would willingly speak of poetics in relation to my books, which are not novels. Finally, this necessity of disconnection and upheaval always rejoins at a certain point a sort of irrepressible curiosity, submitted to a mysterious logic of plastic transformations, and linked to meaning, to the relation of the body to meaning and form. All this, which should be developed point by point, clearly has nothing to do with the activity of some experimental laboratory.

CL: What are the “politics of fiction” in France in recent years? Why do we see a resurgence of more conventional novelistic forms and a rejection, from some quarters, of experimentation in fiction?

CO: I’m not sure I understand what you mean by “politics of fiction.” Who enunciates, advocates, or applies this “politics”? What I know of are fashions, which are launched or sustained by the modem media and which are in a state of constant disjunction in respect to stages of creation such as they are lived by writers. By disjunction I mean a delay. I think that there was a remarkable series of narrative innovations in France after the end of the Second World War. One can study this series historically and formally, analyzing its currents, works, filiations, and influences. One can also, if one has the taste for it, study its echo (if there is one) in the media of the same period. One will note that the delay in providing information, to say nothing of analysis and criticism, is between two and ten years. And the principal objective of the accumulated power of the media is, today, to blur and confuse the paths, to tend to efface them, retaining only one slim trace for show, while awaiting the next show. This volatilization of reality takes place on a large scale and is motivated by the quest for quick sales and high ratings. All of this could give the impression of a “resurgence” of the traditional novel. But it has no more “resurged” now than it had foundered in the era of the New Novel, from 1955 to 1960. It has been in good health for the last forty years, and that’s perfectly normal. Every era is marked by a very major conservative current and a very minor innovative current. What characterizes a given era is the particular difference, the singular gap that it reveals between these two currents. The gap can be rather minimal in certain eras and considerable in others. It has tended to grow, in my opinion, over the last half-century, to a great extent because of the Second World War, all of whose consequences in the cultural domain have not yet been weighed by most of our contemporaries. And also because of the fact that in all the compartments of social life, evolution since the beginning of the century has been extremely sudden and rapid and unexpected, surprising everyone, creating in every domain—technological, military, political, ethical- enormous simultaneous upheavals which could not have been avoided, abated, attenuated. One submitted to them and continues to submit to their full force; one is obliged to adapt, and one adapts badly. So our Western society today strives to preserve intact the cultural sector and, above all, that of the narrative: it is absolutely imperative that this vital activity—the auto narrativity of a society, the “representation,” if you will, or the “recitation” of this society to itself—remain sheltered from this wave of questioning. And this sector can be stabilized; mastery over it can be maintained (it may well be the only one today). All that need be done is to uniformly marginalize any innovation, especially threatening manifestations of rupture. Thus it can be confirmed, curiously, in this fin de siecle, that any social change is finally admitted quite soon, even if it constitutes a break with secular customs, except in the narrative domain. Everything else can “blow”—the atom, the family, ideology—but literary genres must hold! Thus the novelistic still shines today as the enduring quietude of consciences, the glowing repose of the citizen who is buffeted on all other sides and who is frightened. The major media, plus computerization, in the service of generalized literary academicism: this is the burlesque cultural project in which we have been engaged for quite a while. This will function for a certain time. For a long time perhaps, longer than we think. And then, one fine day, the gap will resurface, in broad daylight, in all its violence.

CL: At the end of your essay “French Version,” you signal the need for a new reading, a different way of approaching the kind of texts you and others have written. Can you elaborate further on what specific directions or forms this new reading might take? How could this new kind of reading translate into literary criticism? How does this proposed accent on “le biographique,” on the person of the writer, differ from standard biographical criticism?

CO: When I suggested “new gestures of reading, ones which are attentive to metamorphoses,” at the end of “French Version,” I meant something like this: to place oneself in the movement of the text, that is, in its creative movement, in the same path that the text’s inventor was in the process of opening up, of clearing away, of exploring when he chose his words, cadences, punctuation marks, silences. In other words, to listen to the music of the text attentively enough to perceive its assonances, its resonances, its close or distant rhymes, its allusions, and at the same time the tensions, the differences between the passages that came easily (one can sense it) and those where the phrase nearly broke or hesitated or went off in an unexpected direction (one can sense this, too, in any finished text). Or again: to “get inside the skin” of the author, to adopt his apprehensions, successes, pleasures, doubts. This is the only way to feel the words vibrate fully and to deliver them of all their meaning—their manifest meaning as well as their hidden, yet perceptible meaning. This is not a new attitude, you will say, and that’s true: it holds for any truly organized text. I therefore linked “gestures of reading” to “metamorphoses.” And there I wanted to make reference to two contemporary events of extreme importance: the insistence of psychoanalysis on the play of the signifier, on the one hand, and on the other, the breakdown of European cultural ethnocentrism. There is no time to develop these two points in detail here. I will simply say that all my books, on the whole, call for an opening onto the Other, and this Other is as much the unconscious, the “double,” as it is the Other repressed by European writing for centuries—the Islamic civilization, for example. My books in which this aspect is most manifest are Marrakch Medine and Mon Double a Malacca, both subsequent to Le Jeu d’enfant. But in all of Le Jeu d’enfant the purpose is the same, the aim is identical. These books thus call for readers who will also be open and capable of abandoning, if only for a time, their prejudices and presuppositions-not only those about reading (the “character,” the “story,” pre-Freudian psychology, the taste for tragedy, etc.) but also the ideological ones, that is, all the customary cliches prevalent in the culture. This is not so easy. For example, it is significant that most of the French readers of Marrakch Medine, who claimed to be sensitive to a certain poetic quality of the text, did not, however, feel themselves mobilized by the text’s effort toward Islam; they thus recuperated for themselves, under the iridescent colors of exoticism, all that this book tried to do in order to break down the wall of exoticism and specifically of “orientalism. ” The Moroccan readers, on the other hand, judged the book to be important in this connection.

As for the critic, he is a reader like any other, even if he is overwhelmed by his readings. What I just said is valid for him as well, neither more nor less. A literary criticism applied to these books must exhibit the same openness, the same availability, which clearly requires a rupture with certain modes of behavior, too, imprinted with Eurocentric ideology.

Finally, I think I stressed that “le biographique” in “French Version” is intended as “symbolized,” rather than directly enunciated. This is to say that it is a “biographique” which is filtered and transposed by the author, the “instance” which organizes, chooses, and writes, and which is representative of a place, a period, and of the currents, intersections, practices, feelings, ideas, and voices which make themselves heard there. It is not a “biographique” which simply incorporates events in the life of the citizen who bears the same name as the writer. And these are, really, two distinct characters-another reality that the “media” fiercely deny and repress. This duality is difficult to explain and analyze, and is the source of many misunderstandings. I really should have thought, back then, of taking a pseudonym.

CL: How are other media—radio and film—related to writing fiction for you?

CO: First, allow me an objection: for me, radio and cinema are no more “media” than are language or the book. They are materials, ones that are different from those on which is exercised the writing of a book: sounds, noises, music, spoken or sung dialogues, fixed or mobile images, etc. For several years radio and cinema accompanied the writing of my books: in radio, in the form of “radiophonic pieces” composed at the request of French or German stations and broadcast all over Europe; in cinema, in the form of f
ilm critiques published in La Nouvelle Revue francaise, Le Mercure de France, and Les Cahiers du cinema (a selection of these articles was published in 1981 by Gallimard-Cahiers du Cinema as Souvenirs ecran); and also in the form of film scenarios, two of which have been produced. Writing for radio or cinema is something entirely different from writing a text of literary fiction. The former are more social, more sociable activities. I practiced them with pleasure, as a welcome diversion from the absorbing work of writing—even a pleasant recreation. Most of my radio pieces are developments or “enlargements” of the short texts collected in Nebules and Navettes. Having said this, I don’t think that these exercises effected upon composite materials have ever had any influence on my writing. They are different domains.

 

__
Book

Claude Ollier The Mise-en-Scene
Dalkey Archive Press

‘First published in France in 1958 and winner of the prestigious Prix Medecis, The Mise-en-Scene takes place in the mountains of Morocco when the French still controlled North Africa. An engineer named Lassalle has been sent from France to plan a road through the mountains. Although Lassalle seems to be successful, he finds out that another engineer, Lessing, has preceded him, and that Lessing, as well as others, may have been murdered. In part a detective novel and in part an investigation into the nature of knowledge, The Mise-en-Scene is controlled by a tone and style that are truly remarkable.’ — Dalkey Archive Press

____
Excerpt










 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. I’ve heard that. ** Steve Erickson, Hi. Fripp can be a total a wizard. Oh, yeah, I understand re: ‘sober’. I guess I know people who refer to themselves as sober who’ve never drank alcohol or used drugs, so the term’s hazy to me. No, I haven’t heard the new Ozkharp & Manthe Ribane LP. Hm, when music is described as eclectic that’s often a warning sign to me for some reason, but I’m also intrigued now, and I’ll have a listen. Thank you. I know Coloured Balls, but maybe not that track. On it. ** Jamie, Thanks, man! Yeah, a slew of good news recently on PGL, so we’re, yes, chuffed is the right word. Ha ha, no, I ultimately don’t care who wins the World Cup really. I just thought it was odd that some part of me had a second-long ‘hey wait’ moment re: your elbow towards ‘our’ team. I think I mostly want them to win because it’ll get really exciting and joyously apocalyptic in the streets of Paris if they do, and all that much happiness is very beautiful to sideswipe. Mm, I think Z and G, like me, are trying to psyche themselves into a state of productive optimism while tamping down the feeling of ‘rescue me from this relentlessly hungry script’. Oh, Jarret Kobek is putting out a Baal book, that is very interesting and a big lure. Huh. Okay, I’m even more on it. I don’t know the Creepers version of ‘BoF’. The first Feelies album, that’s a really good call, yeah. And Television, of course. Those are really structured solos. I like that kind. I guess I was mostly thinking of show-offy ‘look at my mastery’ kind of guitar soloing or the ‘jamming’ kind of Grateful Dead and billion offshoots type of meandering groove-maintaining play or something. I don’t know. Yeah, the Brussels thing sounds quite complicated for totally rational reasons. Very good luck with the weighing and sorting. Thursday was … okay. I had to draft up some TV script revision notes for Z and G and I to discuss at a meeting today, so I did that for a fair amount. Z and I have to select the film that will close out the first evening of the Lincoln Center event, a film that ‘resonates’ with PGL, by Monday, and I hunted my memory for ideas because he and I are going to spend a day talking and watching possible films and deciding this weekend. Not much else. It wasn’t overly hot outside, which was a boon. Did you de-gliutch the software? And what did you do during this day tagged Friday? I hope it put its money where your heart is. Peanut saucy love, Dennis. ** _Black_Acrylic, Thanks a lot, Ben! The Deller film sounds very promising indeed. I can’t imagine it won’t flood some corner the net. Gucci and Frieze … why does that marriage both spook me and constitute no surprise whatsoever? ** Misanthrope, I don’t know if she knows Kessler’s work, actually. I’m seeing her shortly. I’ll ask. I think she would. Like it. Eek, ugh, shit, car trouble. I think when cars fuck up, it’s very disrespectful to their owners. So I guess I would be a master rather than a slave if I were one or the other. Man, hoping for the best for it/you. And for your oven. And for your novel even if it doesn’t need my god damned hoping. ** H, Hi. I’m glad you had fun! And thank you about the posts! Take care. ** Bill, It’s true I had pre-pegged you as a possible co-interested party re: Kessler’s work. Right again! I wish your work was fun. I wish my work of the moment was fun. Why is work being such a prick to us at the moment? (That’s a rhetorical question). ** Right. Need an interesting book to read? How about the one up above? Claude Ollier is the least known and most under-celebrated writer/member of the Nouveau Roman, and that book up above is one of the very few novels of his that has been translated into English, and, yeah, I recommend it. See you tomorrow.

14 Comments

  1. Steve Erickson

    I know people who swear by the ’80s incarnation of King Crimson, but Adrian Belew’s voice irritates me. I think RED is KC’s masterpiece, but I really like THRAKATTAK (from their third incarnation), which oddly seems influenced by the prog-metal and math-rock bands inspired by albums by RED & STARLESS AND BIBLE BLACK.

    MAMMA MIA! HERE WE GO AGAIN! is coming soon to American theaters, and I got a press release about it, with several video links. I was not exactly expecting these to be good, but the idea of Cher and Andy Garcia duetting on “Fernando” was intriguing in a WTF way. However, I could only hear Cher on the song; Garcia seems to be doing distant backing vocals. There’s also a version of “Dancing Queen” sung by 6 actors, including Stellan Skarsgard. I was curious what his singing voice sounds like, but it’s just group vocals where I can’t make out anyone’s individual voice. And if the backing tracks aren’t the exact ABBA instrumentals (which are great, but I’d like to hear an ABBA-inspired musical not literally copy them), they are new recordings designed to be soundalikes. Anyway, I’m obviously not the audience for this.

    Last night, I discovered Illuminati-themed ASMR videos. Amazingly, no commenters thought they were real documents of Illuminati recruitment etc.!

  2. Tosh Berman

    The Claude Ollier novel looks intriguing and will locate a copy. I have this thing for novels written in the 1950s, French, and unknown to the English language. So, this follows my formula for an interesting read! Speaking which, and I’m asking you Dennis, but also anyone who reads the commentary on your blog. I’m looking for a French publisher for my memoir “Tosh.” Do you have any recommendations for a French publisher? I do have a translator who is French and is interested in bringing the work to the French language. For those who do not know, my book is a childhood / teenage memoir of being with my family (of course) but in the world of the Beats in Los Angeles/San Francisco and a bit of London in the summer of love, 1967. My dad is Wallace Berman. So, I’m thinking that there may be a French reading audience for my book. Or, then again, maybe it’s all of a fantasy! My book is coming out in the United States/UK this coming January and published by City Lights. Any recommendations, I will take seriously. And Claude Ollier is an author I’m going to seek out! Thanks Dennis, for the blog today. And congrats on the film!

  3. David Ehrenstein

    Claude Ollier is not only a great novelist he’s a great film critic. A number of years back “Cahiers” put out a collection of his film writings including a marvelous “King Kong” piece (“Un Roi a New York”) and an article comparing Godard’s then-just-released “Contempt” to Gregory Markopulos’ then just-released “Twice a Man.”

  4. David Ehrenstein

    Testing

  5. Corey Heiferman

    Just found this buried in a notebook, thought I’d put it out there:

    There’s often talk of conforming on the outside but not conforming on the inside. But what about the opposite? What if the best way to reach a mental state conducive to making non-conformist art is to practice NPR TED Thought as a meditative discipline?

  6. Dóra Grőber

    Hi!!

    I just caught up with the p.s.’s (how do you spell this?) to learn how the ARTE/producer situation is evolving. I think I belong to the mildly shocked group too because I believed (hoped) that ARTE will be more open-minded towards your original ideas and goals and all in all vision. I look up to you, though, for staying as optimistic about the situation as possible. Any news on this front or producer-wise?
    And how are things apart from the T.V. series? How are you?

    I was at the mini festival yesterday and I saw Iceage for the first time. I was in the first row and god! They were fascinating! It was also crazy how Elias seemed to evoke this very aggressive and raw mood in the audience simply by his stage presence/persona. I’m full of bruises and swellings, there was a real brutal moshpit, I literally had to fight for my place but as frightening as it was sometimes (I’m a small and skinny person, haha), it was also exhilarating. And after the show, I got to talk to Elias a little which was such an honor and a dream come true, really. He’s extremely charismatic and totally different off-stage than on – as I’m sure you also know. He recognized me from the first row and he was very kind. The whole show and especially meeting him gave me so much. I couldn’t be happier. I got home in the morning (after seeing some Hungarian bands I didn’t know before, some goodish, some not for me, and dancing a LOT) and now I keep falling asleep only to wake up 20 minutes later totally disoriented, haha.

    Have an amazing weekend, Dennis!!

  7. David Ehrenstein

    Claude Ollier is a great film critic too.

  8. Chris Cochrane

    Great Dora description of Iceage. Hope to see them someday. All good news for PGL. Dancing in the street in Paris sounds almost ecstatic, no matter the occasion, even if it’s only the World Cup, which I’ve barely paid attention too. Looks like a couple of things my be bubbling for THEM, we’ll have to wait and see. Val and I definitely done for a good while, bad blow out, painful, sad, yet for the better. Time to move on, various music projects and some possible offers of working on other shows. Weather mostly ok over here. Hope the tv script revisions don’t kill you. best to Zac. lot’s of love

  9. _Black_Acrylic

    The Mise-en-Scene is available for an emminently reasonable price so think I’ll actually spring for this. I’m about ready for some Nouveau Roman fun right now.

    As you doubtless know all about, the UK had some big news today in the form of Trump’s absolute clusterfuck of a visit. But the other major story this week is the announcement that the Glasgow School of Art is to be entirely rebuilt according to Mackintosh’s original plans. That won’t be cheap but it’s surely a positive thing.

  10. Steve Erickson

    Remember that record store in the West Village I mentioned that still stocks CD bootlegs? I went there today and got Can’s MOTHER SKY, a 1971 live CD with 5 songs, two of which they don’t seem to have recorded in the studio. Good sound quality too.

    Here’s the first single from Armand Hammer’s new, currently vinyl-only album: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNmIJJ8Gk9U&feature=youtu.be

  11. Caitie

    Dennis!

    The past couple of weeks have been a wee bit hectic for me – I’ve been reading your posts but I haven’t had the mental space to right/write a comment until now. I hope that recently you’ve had just the right/write amount of mental space to do what you’ve wanted to do, and it sounds like you have.

    1. Your syllables are lovely. The two act like a breath (in and out.) The deee is the pull of the air into the mouth with lips parted and tense and waiting – this action is closed with the nnn which starts the exhalation with the (h)iss, which has heaps of the pizazz because the sound comes full circle! With the sss our mouth are open but slack and relieved. Say it to yourself, it’s a good name. Claude is also a good name because it pushes itself beyond the natural stopping point, post-orgasm play, the “de” in Claude feels like a stutttttter and the “clau” becomes like sharp sharp claws.

    2. There are probably other Caities.

    3. I was named Olivia for two reasons! Do you want to hear the more romantic spiritual one or the superficial one? Got ya! I’ll tell you both (but I wont let you know what order) 😉 I was named Olivia because my mother thought it was a prettier name than Olive but still retained the meaning of peace – or peace bringing. My mother is religious and after the flood massacre Noah sent a dove out to see if it was safe, the dove brought back an Olivia branch.
    I was also named Olivia because my mother was girlcrushing on Olivia Newton John! She looked up to her because of her voice and singing was/is very important to her.

    4. Probably a really good thing that you can’t sleep during the day – excited is good because it means you want things. Want want want want want – keep wanting, Dennis.

    5. The other day I was going back through old posts (mainly to revisit the Flanagan one but I kept going after that) and in one post ages ago you mentioned in the P.S about readers of your blog skipping your posts to comment/read the comments. I just wanted to address this with the question because I’ve been thinking about it quite a bit, how do you feel about people skipping the post for the P.S? does it disappoint you? does it tire you? or does it excite you? (is it what you want?)

    That’s all from me today, it’s lovely to be back here typing away. I hope you receive me well, and never stop wanting 🙂 – Caitie

  12. Bill

    Hey Dennis, I think I can usually settle for work being just mildly annoying, not sucking.

    Went to the John Zorn/Bill Laswell show; amusing, but hardly essential.

    A friend introduced me to this fun local band; you may enjoy:
    https://thebrankas.bandcamp.com

    Yeah, it’s a reference to Branca, but I was told they got the spelling wrong!

    Bill

  13. JM

    hi dennis
    im a bit confused about when this post popped up
    im having a tough night and kind of week so this is just a drive by but i thought i saw another post earlier oday and was pretty sure id commented on it anyways now im just confused
    and a little bit ??? about my entire experience of the day and memory and stuff

    anyways
    hope things are all fab on your end
    moby dick is keeping me going at the moment, so if you ever have the time and inclination for 600 pages of whales and warbles u know where to go

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2024 DC's

Theme by Anders NorénUp ↑