The following artists are represented in The White City ::
Amiri Baraka, Paul Blackburn, Khem Caigan, Edward Dorn, Celia Farber, Thorpe Feidt, Michael Harold, Gary Hill, Mikhail Horowitz, Kenneth Irby, Robert Kelly, Gerrit Lansing, Eric Malone, Ju Ming, Michael G. Moore, Z.K. Oloruntoba, Paulina Wellensberg-Olsson, Leopoldo Marテュa Panero, George Quasha, Dorothy Rubin, Ed Sanders, Harry Smith, Jack Spicer, Charles Stein, Twins 77, Dirk Vekemans, John Wieners, Doug Youvan, Lionel Ziprin
Typing a name in Google "Search bialy/s" will direct you to the work
one of the earliest conjurations {it is grtypitxtl on Jupiter today} was inspired by and made for, the late great and one and only never to be repeated Harry Smith, in the form of a one minute slideshow.
the resolution is not terrific, but it can be safely (at least safe for your computer's operating system...no promises regarding your own) viewed here.
This comment relates to many of your images: I guess what I am asking about your images is whether one or more of the Photoshop algos introduces randomness that involves a random number generator wherein you do not control the seed number. If you do control
the seed, there is some RAND algo that works in some particular way. If Adobe does not give out their algos underlying their tools, then we don't know exactly what is happening even if you had a complete history. That does not matter for art, but some of your images have sort of a 'perfect' fractal appearance - as if you hit on the right seed numbers to produce something beautiful. I assume most seeds would produce something ugly. That's a lot like the difference between reproduction and procreation.
Perhaps some nice person from Adobe can follow up on this comment.
yes. there is some random algorithim that works in particular ways,
but i do not control the seed, although certain symbols &syllables do resonate with it. a close approximation of the basic formulae can be obtained from The Smith in the the middle panel of the dark magus suite above.
but from what basic biology i still remember, i think seeds have to be fertilized to produce anything. and as far as i know, no fertilized seed ever gave rise to an unbeautiful being.
In 1985, Harry was living at the Breslin Hotel, a short distance from the (Nature) Bio/Technology offices, and that turned out to be the best perk that came with the cushy scientific editor job.
Among other things, i could bring Harry as many back issues of nature as he wanted, as well as review copies of expensive, unreadable (by anybody but him and the copy editors) scientific tomes on astrophysics, seismic activities, aboriginal weaving patterns, etc. During that time, i befriended the young editor of Grove's Dictionaries (a sister Macmillian pub that had offices in the same building), and through him i was able to obtain over the course of two years a complete Groves classical in which each volume is only very slightly, cosmetically defaced, or has a mislabed spine, and so was returned. Jonathan thought i was 'odd, but nice'. (Years later, the greatest office manager in the universe, Angie Rice, managed me a new edition, two volume (bright red) Groves jazz.
But neither of these two wonderful perks come even close to the one from Harry. In return for these arcanic journals and books, which i would deliver once a week, Harry would play a 90 minute cassette he had recorded especially to educate me about the astounding varieties of music in the world from his really big library. He would command me to sit and not move and not say aaaaanything and would proceed to put the tape in his quality deck. After we would smoke and talk, and before i left he would give me the cassette.
I will place in this comments box, from time to time, pieces that even today with all the music available to almost anybody are still rare, or still remain the finest examples of the type being illustrated.
The first of these is lithophones from Togo (Harry never gave the exact recording details...anyone who might know is more than welcome to supply the missing data)
More paranormal music communicated to the world via the Dark Magus Smith:
In this instance, the rarity is a sample from recordings made by Harry in 1952/53 of the last Abulafia rabbi, Zvi Margolis.
A click here will take you directly to the sample as played originally by Doug Schulkind over WFMU in NJ a few years ago. Poking around his Archives will uncover many treasures as he is the finest purveyor of real music over the aether waves that i know.
and this time guaranteed to be heard Nowhere else.
i will mail a cd of the entire concert to anyone (who i do not personally know) that will post a comment here correctly identifying the country (or countries) of origin of the musicians.
Brought to you by Harry Smith, Lionel Ziprin and Lionel's grandfather, the last Abulafia Rabbi, Zvi Margolies (from The Rabbi's Basement Tapes, NYC 1953)
The object in the photograph was given to my son, Ezra Thelonious Edet, by Harry in 1985. Harry received it from the individual in the photograph at the time the object appeared to commemorate a certain cover of Time magazine that elicited the famoso "I'm famous, ain't that a bitch" when it was shown to him.
Ezra gave it to me some years ago for safe-keeping
A very, very Nutty and Misterioso 23rd birthday to Ezra Thelonious Edet
This musical felicidades appeared top-center on yesterday's homepage. It is the most proximal impetus for the piece immediately above that i can discern and reproduce.
The composite photograph of this poem of Harry's (written in 1976 and revised in 1977) is from a xerox of page proofs marked by our very dear friend, William Breeze, in 1985 for The Equinox, III/10 that he edited.
Although The Equinox did appear, Harry's poem was not, for reasons you do not wish to know, included.
The title of the poem, Think of the Self Speaking was used after Harry's passing as the title of a slim book of selected interviews published by Cityful Press a few years ago and that is now out of print and expensive.
One thing does lead to another, and i just received from the most estimado of senors, Eric Malone, editor of the always-changing-its-name journal of post-Olsonion pata-pata-physics, and first incarnated as Hornswoggle, the following transcript he made of a tape recording of Harry interacting with students at Naropa in a film class in the summer of 1990, and which appeared in the journal's first number.
[somewhere about 2/3 thru, harry sings a few bars from the shel silverstein song above that i titled i know she's going to get around to me (with some deliberate, or not, changes)
覧-Original Message覧-
From: Bialy, Harvey
To: 'Eric Malone '
Sent: 09/05/2005 03:52 p.m.
Subject: i say you mas re my late crazy uncle ray
it is because of ray that i have my name, harvey. this is the story.
ray golden married my father's only sister, babs, against the wishes of my grandfather and mother who did not think him a proper match for a good, first generation post-ellis is. jewish girl (especially a looker like babs was). this was mostly because ray was a show biz person, and such types, even of ray's ethnic persuasion, almost never made a dime.
not so uncle ray...he invested what little he and babs had saved in 'harvey' and made a bundle about the time i was born. my parents named me for the gin-soaked pookah and the luck of the one financial succcess that had befallen the family.
uncle ray took all the money and put it into a show he produced, directed and wrote (script, lyrics and a good part of the tunes as well). the show was a musical comedy abt the united nations
building...the building, not the un itself...it was a musical comedy abt the building of a building.
i remember my parent's coming home from the opening and my father loudly wailing oy vey what a schmuck my sister married and then bursting into guffaws with my mother. the show closed the same night.
a few months ago, i was telling charles stein this story and realized i remembered the lyrics (in part) to the show's title song ...There's a Building Going Up
it goes like this
there's a building going up
going up
going up
going up
and it looks like the others east and west
same old lumber same old steel
but you look at it and feel
like a glory drum
is pounding in your chest
o the chrysler and the state may be high even higher
but hallelujah how can they compare
with that building
going up
going up
going up
where the flags of all nations are unfurled
hey you rubbernecker there
take your hat off as you stare
at the most important building in the world
and goes on like that for a while.
i used to perform it in grade school talent shows and un day assemblys.
覧覧覧
[should anybody be so foolish as to request it, i will place an mp3 of me performing these few bars in my best broadway.
i went down to the river to see what i could see
i saw a crowd of people standing round
just leaning on a railing
and looking down like me
at another excavation in the ground
...
it is maybe not without a little interest to note that mel brook's famous play, the producers, not only features a character named max bialystock made immortal almost by zero mostel, but max's partner is named bloom.
my mother's maiden name was bloom. her parents came from moscow, and her father was a violin maker named max.
while waiting for a transitory local dns problem to resolve itself in what i am coming to understand are extremely chaotic electronic worlds collectively called theinternet, i decided to check the veracity of this wild story of my name.
when Ezra Thelonious Edet was four or five, he began referring to me as Captain Froggy (i have since been self-promoted to the highest rank in the froggy corps, colonel).
this versionof Frog Went a' Courting from The Hotel Breslin Tapes, was a favorite when he was little. we laughed at the ending, ezra possessing, even then, a very acute sense of humor in addition to many other fine qualities.
-------
[here is an inside the camera double exposure i made in 1987 shortly after returning from a trip to thailand (remembered in Thai Sweet). he was three, and very angry.
According to Harry, there are exactly 19 versions (and approximately 35 variations of them) of the most famous Scottish ballad ever to become a quintessential American folksong, Barbra Allen.
All 19 (from The Hotel Breslin Tapes) can be heard here. Number 3 is by the same unforgettable voice that so entertained Ezra and me (and i hope you) with her froggy song. Number 11 is the closest to the version made popular by Joan Baez, and which was the first one that most people of my generation heard in the late 1950s.
From: Bialy, Harvey
To: 'doug@wfmu.org'
Subject: how things happen
Sent: 29/05/2005 11:41 a.m.
1. thinks: have not checked your playlists for a while
2. does so: sees twins
3. 'needle-noddle-nu' ...noooooobody plays twins 77 records ! not even doug
4. this has got to go in african elements
5. michael harold is all over that place
6. he writes me abt vedas yesterday / his vedas come from my writing chuck "accoding to one dr. j. needham, sometime master of gonville and caius college, cambridge, vol. 5/2 of science & civilization in china (a birthday present), 'one g. h. wasson, has thrown the problem into a completely new perspective with his investigations'. and the golden flower, accordingly is none other than our old pal somahaoma, with the translation into metallurgical metaphor coming later." (and copying michael) -- chuck and i visited wasson once at his hse in conn in 1972...very, very kind man....we did not know of course that he was at the time, along with the bell of bell helicopters, harry's biggest patron
7. there is one really crazy veda on the breslin tapes
Yesterday was not, in Mexico, a national holiday and reason for picnics in graveyards (that is Nov. 1), and the post office delivered five privately issued cds from the Marsupial Sonogram label containing assorted audio works by Eric "Hornswoggle" Malone. When i questioned him about the one that can be heard above, he wrote:
The Cage reading of the first paragraph of FINNEGAN'S WAKE from "Was You Ever Bit by a Dead Bee?" comes from a Giorno Systems "Nova Convention" LP from 1978. Cage read that Joyce & then his Mesostics on Joyce's name.
I play all of the instruments: assorted reeds, a little trumpet, guitars, drums & percussion, and also use assorted sound sources, many of which I transform in simple ways, via tape speed, EQ-ing, & the like. And I have a special coupled oscillator that was built for me by a wonderful guy named Tim Adams who lives in the peanut dust wilds of Akworth, GA.
On that particular piece you ask about I played a nylon string guitar into a very cheap keyboard triggered sampler (since gone kaput, sigh) & gradually altered it so that it wasn't just an ongoing repetitious loop. There's some light percussion and I took some field recordings of public places--restaurant ambient chatter,etc.--& mixed those in.
Harry sometimes included sounds from nature in the Breslin Tapes. He recorded the brief selection below on side B of the 19 Versions of Barbra Allen for reasons that will be clear when you listen to it.
HARRY SMITH TAPE, Naropa 1989 from Absquatulate #2
Eeeuuuh, I'm supposed to give a lecture on whatever was announced, which I've made a point not to pay any attention to. Are there any revolutionaries present, will you raise your hands? No?
Joseph Stalin couldn't boil an egg, butュュ does anyone know ュュhe invented a children's game called Simon Says, apparently stolen from the British [prolonged coughing]. The British invented the bagpipe and then gave it to the Scots, telling them it was, apparently, a musical instrument...
Uuuh, I've been accused all week long now, of "saying things for effect." It seems to me I'm surrounded by people who have endless questions about the kaballah, without even having read Gershom Sholem. Now, wouldn't the questions be more interesting if Sholem were at least looked at? [Inaudible, from audience]. That's just [a] terrible [question]ュュdid you get dressed by yourself this morning? I... No more questions until I talk for a while, come on!
Since this is a very stuffy room, with low ceilings and no windows, I'm going to light a cigarette, in this case a particularly stale one...
Alice Roosevelt Longworth ュュanyone? I didn't think so. Alice Roosevelt Longworth was one of, if not the first woman, to smoke in public. She was the first child of Theodore Roosevelt, actually she was an only child by his first marriage... She was on very good terms with Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Her husband, Nicholas Longworth, was a U.S. Representative, serving two terms, and he was also Speaker of the House. The... IF YOU'RE NOT GOING TO LISTEN, GO TO ALLEN GINSBERG'S CLASS AND TALK, HE LIKES THAT! [prolonged coughing fit]. I should be wearing a gas mask, and this ashtray should be amplified [stabs cigarette in ashtray, lights another]. In her day, the press called Alice Roosevelt Longworth "Princess Alice." Now, all of you have been, eeuuuhh, doing your own thing an awful lot, being freakish, not ironing your clothing, and so forth, so I want you to attempt to imagine what it must have been like for someone such as Alice Roosevelt Longworth, to be seen in public, smoking. Coco Channel hadn't done it yet. You'll have to do a lot of work to appreciate the effect. ュュFranklin Roosevelt was the 5th cousin of Alice Roosevelt Longworth. ュュWhen we went off the gold standard, Princess Alice appeared at the White House wearing a gold necklace and a pair of gold earrings that were shaped like coal scuttles! Being asked about this, days later, Princess Alice told the press such things as [imitates her voice] "When you have a good time, you really don't remember details." She was thought to be the unofficial leader of the Republican party, the most knowledgeable person in Washington... During Prohibition, she publicly referred to Congress as "incipient drunkards." She said various things about the plight of Native Americans, which just wasn't done at the time. Well, Will Rogers was the only other person who could... If youケre not going to read Gershom Sholem, at least look at Princess Alice's book, itケs called Crowded Hours... She wrote it for money, after her husband died. If you're going to talk or think about what you call revolutionaries, this is a good book to do it with. I can tell by looking at all of you ュュwhen I have toュュ that you've had plenty of experience, eeuuuh, doing it with [laughter].
The successful revolutionary would be someone that no one has ever heard of. In other words, a "cult following" means, not enough people to constitute a minority. Obviously, you have to go through the bad poets, who you'll have to read first, to get to the better ones, who you won't much hear about at all, until you find them. If you find them. In this respect, I hope you all remember that Allen Ginsberg, before he was really a poet, was a pretty good market researcher.
Anne Hutchinson is interesting... her trial transcripts have survived. You should all remember that Anne Hutchinson studied scripture and attended sermons like all of you listen to popular singer-songwriters and go out to the movies. Find a copy of The History of the Colony and Province of Massachusetts Bay, by Thomas Hutchinson. It's two volumes, published in 1767
[break in tape]
[When] Captain John Cooke landed, on the Pacific Northwest, he happened upon an elaborate native culture adapted to a mild, rainy climate, abounding in timber, fish, sea otters, whales... Some 200,000 population didn't have to develop horticulture... They were divided into six language groups, and probably a few hundred villages, all of which shared complex social hierarchies, elaborate ceremonies, and very highly stylized wood carving traditions. Trees were a great part of the native poetry. There were a great deal of Douglas Fir [tape blanks-out].... [the] tools were stone axes, chisels, [used] to fell, split, and work tree trunks. Solid plank houses were built from this, as well as food trays, storage boxes [inaudible]... All the so-called religious art developed from carved masks, house ridgepoles, totem poles... Also, the, eeeuuuh... all the clothing came from the inner bark of spruce and cypress trees, combined with wool, the wool of mountain goats. In those days of Cooke, very strict economic trade existed; the whole notion of "culture" as not your own, but someone else's that you compare to your own or do whatever withュュ this developed very much along lines of, eeuuuuh, it's called, economic determinism... "Culture" [inaudible] a kind of indoctrination within which it was, and is, permissible, to say the least, to superimpose your own by way of even being aware of others'...
Historical, eeuuuh, surveys of the revolutionary, are, uuuuuh, if you're going to have some sort of context for what you might agree on as revolutionaryュュyou have to pinpoint, somewhere, and tease out, all of the elements, and [then] go forward and backward maybe a couple of hundred years...
[Inaudible question from audience:] I wouldn't suggest copping out on the Black Panthers or the Symbionese Liberation Army just yet, ok?
Early,ュュ early Virginia was settled mainly by bachelors. New England Puritans would not permit single persons to live as bachelors. Puritan New England was settled by families, and you had to live within a family... Eeeuuuuh, and from there, you had to live within a specified distance of the church. This will give you some idea of the uproar, what a terrible pain in the ass was Anne Hutchinson, she just wouldn't shut up! [laughter]. She came from a very prominent family, which is why John Winthrop didn't put her in the catapult with a sack of rocks and shoot her off immediately... [inaudible][laughter]
The revolutionary can be identified, there are certain things: B.O., halitosis, [inaudible] fingernails [laughter]... Eeeuuuh, pretending to know less, or more, than one really does... Mao never brushed his teeth, he just gargled with green tea in the morning. He didn't much care to wear underwear. He was responsible for spreading a great strain of syphilis about the provinces. He made very good soup. Not a great deal is known about it. [laughter]
If any of you happen to go for the Alice Roosevelt Longworth book, you might want to look into Agnes Surriage [and] how she became Lady Frankland. It was a great scandal in Boston in the 1740s. Legend has it she rescued Sir Henry Frankland from an earthquake in Lisbon, having gone there with him as his mistress ュュhe met her when she was a sixteen year old barefoot servant, at a Tavern in Marblehead. She became a darling in Boston society, being [as] witty, clever [and] just as well-liked, as Princess Alice. Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote a ballad about her. Sir Henry built her a mansion. This relates to aspects of indentured servitude which I've decided not to discuss. I don't want to hurt anyoneケs feelings. Naropa doesn't pay much, and all the food tends to be mashed, and has too much raw garlic, raw bean sprouts, and lemon juice in it [laughter].
[Inaudible question from audience] Artists, generally, will sell [?] anything to get attention. It's a mistake, to be underwhelmed by Grandma Moses, or Mardsden Hartley... If we do this all over again, maybe I'll begin with James Joyce. No one asked any decent questions, so, that's it. Will someone buy me a coca-cola? I just like to hold the [cold?] can, maybe I'll open it next week...
The selection hyperlinked here is from the well-known recording of James Joyce reading the end of Book I of The Wake segued into two selections by The Chieftans that Harry put on the B side of the Shel Silverstein Songs for Children, and which i think must have been recorded at about the same time (ca. 1962) as he marked them modern Irish.
The ones here are from another Hotel Breslin Tape, and are also chieftans, tho' not Irish ones. The harp-lute is a kora and the chiefs are Mandinka from Gambia.
The piece of music and the scientific paper hyperlinked below are two things that like the Hotel Breslin Tapes came my way because of Bio/Technology.
In the late 1980s, we had a representative of Kenkyusha Publishers in Japan, named Tetsuo Kuroshima, working out of the Bleecker Street offices.
Tetsuo and i became friendly, and one day he asked me if i would be kind enough to look at a manuscript by his university professor, and if i would fix the English syntax and grammar so that it could be submitted to nature.
i did, and about a year later, a Fed Ex. package arrived at my house with all 100 of the JVC CD World Sounds collection, which was compiled, recorded and annotated by the remarkable professor (now retired) of Japan's National Institute for Multimedia Education and the Department of KANSEI Brain Science, ATR Human Information Processing Research Laboratories, Kyoto.
The paper was predictably rejected by nature, but was eventually published pretty much as i edited it in the much better Journal of Neurophysiology just a few years ago.
Its abstract is reproduced below, and the hyperlink above will produce a pdf of the complete paper.
Although it is generally accepted that humans cannot perceive sounds in the frequency range above 20 kHz, the question of whether the existence of such "inaudible" high-frequency components may affect the acoustic perception of audible sounds remains unanswered. In this study, we used noninvasive physiological measurements of brain responses to provide evidence that sounds containing high-frequency components (HFCs) above the audible range significantly affect the brain activity of listeners. We used the gamelan music of Bali, which is extremely rich in HFCs with a nonstationary structure, as a natural sound source, dividing it into two components: an audible low-frequency component (LFC) below 22 kHz and an HFC above 22 kHz. Brain electrical activity and regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) were measured as markers of neuronal activity while subjects were exposed to sounds with various combinations of LFCs and HFCs. None of the subjects recognized the HFC as sound when it was presented alone. Nevertheless, the power spectra of the alpha frequency range of the spontaneous electroencephalogram (alpha-EEG) recorded from the occipital region increased with statistical significance when the subjects were exposed to sound containing both an HFC and an LFC, compared with an otherwise identical sound from which the HFC was removed (i.e., LFC alone). In contrast, compared with the baseline, no enhancement of alpha-EEG was evident when either an HFC or an LFC was presented separately. Positron emission tomography measurements revealed that, when an HFC and an LFC were presented together, the rCBF in the brain stem and the left thalamus increased significantly compared with a sound lacking the HFC above 22 kHz but that was otherwise identical. Simultaneous EEG measurements showed that the power of occipital alpha-EEGs correlated significantly with the rCBF in the left thalamus. Psychological evaluation indicated that the subjects felt the sound containing an HFC to be more pleasant than the same sound lacking an HFC. These results suggest the existence of a previously unrecognized response to complex sound containing particular types of high frequencies above the audible range. We term this phenomenon the "hypersonic effect."
Of the 100 volumes in the JVC World Sounds collection, gamelan music is not surprisingly over-represented, accounting for 9 separate cds.
Two are Jegog - bamboo as distinct from the more familiar metal gamelan orchestras. Even Harry did not know they existed, although he said that the neurophysiological results were to be expected.
For many years, Harry kept a quasi-clonal, uncaged parakeet called Birdie. Once he removed a tray from the freezer in his expansive room in the Breslin to show me a collection of Birdies.
Yesterday, Simon Pettet (who is well acquainted with our parrot, an Amazonian named Attila) sent me an email that had some information about African Greys and the concept of nothing, and i remembered the two pieces hyperlinked below. Attila was one year old at the time. Shortly after the recording session he began to say Om Mani Peme Hung.
The piece in the photograph hyperlinked below is entitled "A Birthday Present from Harry, (2001)", and was made very soon after i obtained my first digital camera (a Kyocera 1.1 megapixel device). The original inkjet print is an apparently paradoxical "one of a kind digital image" because the colored bands, emanting from either Harry's palm or third eye, were caused by a never before (nor since) millisecond glitch in the printer.
Hereis a photograph of the piece, and here is its musical accompaniment recorded in NYC in 1957.
'Black Annie' at Parchman Prison Farm, Mississippi
from "Worse than Slavery: Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice", by David M. Oshinsky, New York Free Press, c.1996
www.corpun.com : Regulations : US prisons MS 20th c.
There was more. The true symbol of authority and discipline at Parchman was a leather strap, three feet long and six inches wide, known as "Black Annie," which hung from the driver's belt. Whipping had a long history in the South, of course, and not only on the slave plantations. It had been legally, often publicly, employed against white criminals for a host of minor crimes, and it had survived long after other forms of corporal punishment, such as branding and ear cropping, had been abolished.
Yet whipping had strong racial overtones because it had been used so frequently against slaves. "Punishment on the plantation was, essentially, physical punishment," wrote one historian. And the lash "was the correctional instrument of all purpose." When ex-slaves recalled their experiences, whipping was rarely overlooked. "Ole Marse was good, but when yo' made him mad he wud hay' yo whupped," a Mississippi freedman recalled. "He would come out in the mornin' an' want to whup everything he seen," said another. One ex-slave remembered the whipping of his mother and the retribution he had planned: "I sed to myself 'iffen I eber get free I wus gwine to whup dat overseer. His name wus Silas Jacobs. But he died not long afte' de war an' I neber got to whup him."
By 1900, corporal punishment for prisoners had been abandoned -- in law, if not in practice -- by most states outside the South. (The glaring exception was Delaware, a border state, where thousands of public whippings were inflicted upon lawbreakers well into the 1950s.) Arkansas, Texas, Florida, and Louisiana all used the lash on their convicts without serious public opposition. It was part of the regional culture, and most prisoners were black.
At Parchman, formal punishment meant a whipping in front of the men. It was done by the sergeant, with the victim stripped to the waist and spread-eagled on the floor. What convicts most remembered were the sounds of Black Annie: the "whistlin'" air, the crack on bare flesh, the convict's painful grunt.
J.S. They whupped us with big wide strops. They didn't whup no clothes. They whupped your naked butt. And they had two men to hold you.
WB. Four!
J.S. As many as they need...
A.L. Did they ever injure anybody that way?
J.S. Wooo!
WB. Yeah!
J.S. Kill um! Kill um!
WB. They'd kill um like that."
The most common offenses -- fighting, stealing, "disrespect" to an officer, and failure to meet work quotas -- were punishable by five to fifteen lashes. Escape attempts carried an unspeakable penalty: a whipping without limits. One superintendent recalled a mass breakout in the 1930s in which a trusty-shooter was killed. "To get confessions," he said, "I had whippings given to the eight we caught who weren't wounded. Before the young ringleader confessed, I had him lashed on the buttocks, calves, and palms, then gave him fifteen lashes on the soles of his feet. This cleared his mind."
The number and severity of whippings depended on the sergeant in charge. "Book rules" meant little in the field camps, which were fiefdoms unto themselves. The sergeants worked in relative isolation. Some of them were alcoholics; a few were sadists. "They beat hell out of you for any reason or no reason," an inmate remarked. "It's the greatest pleasure of their lives." Above all, the sergeants were under pressure to make a good crop, and that meant pushing the men. "What can you expect in the way of judgment at fifty dollars a month?" asked one prison official. "What kind of foreman on the outside [is] employed at fifty dollars a month?" They usually pay foremen more than anybody else, the man who works the men, but that's what they pay here -- fifty dollars a month!"
There were sergeants who saved the lash for serious infractions, and sergeants who whipped all the time. There was little supervision, despite the pompous claims of the superintendents, because whippings were viewed as the best way to keep the men working -- and afraid. It was not unusual for a convict to be lashed for breaking his shovel in the fields, or for several dozen convicts to be whipped for the theft of a single postage stamp. "There is no telling what punishment will be used in this prison," said a gunman in the 1930s, "It all depends on how mad the sergeant is, as to whether you get 15 or fifty lashes."
When asked to defend Black Annie, Parchman officials did so with pride. The lash was effective punishment, they insisted, and it did not keep men from the fields. "You spank a fellow right," claimed a superintendent, "and he'll be able to work on." Most of all, Black Annie seemed the perfect instrument of discipline in a prison populated by the wayward children of former slaves. There simply was no better way "of punishing [this] class of criminals," said Dr. A. M. M'Callum, Parchman's first physician, "and keeping them at the labor required of them."
Public opinion in Mississippi strongly supported the lash. Prison officials and sheriffs, politicians and judges, church groups and newspapers -- most seemed to favor its use. "The whip makes no appeal to hidden virtue," said The Jackson Clarion-Ledger," but it is a sure and effective means of planting fear ... in the hearts of [criminals]. It is retribution, and retribution hurts."
No one knew this better than the convicts who had felt Black Annie's clout. Their fear and pain were heard across the fields.
Ridin' in a hurry
Great Godamighty!
Ridin' like he's angry
Great Godamighty!
Well, I wonder whut's de matter?
Great Godamighty!
Bull whip in one han', cowhide in de udder.
Great Godamighty!
Well, de Cap'n went to talkin',
Great Godamighty!
'Well, come on here an' hol' him!'
Great Godamighty!
'Cap'n let me off, suh?'
Great Godamighty!
'Woncha 'low me a chance, suh?'
Great Godamighty!
'Bully, low' down yo' britches!'
Great Godamighty!
De Bully went to pleadin',
Great Godamighty!
De Bully went to hollerin',
Great Godamighty!
. . .
White convicts were said to work less and complain more than black convicts, and to consciously reject their lot. "When I tell one of these young [whites] to take a hoe and join the field squad, I am often met with a haughty refusal . . .," said Tann. "We have tried the dark cell, a bread-and-water-diet, standing them on a barrel. Such methods don't work. I've tried them all. When persuasion fails, I order the rebel stripped and whipped. Then I give him a day to think it over. The second morning . . . he is whipped again. Perhaps the third day, the same program must be followed, but not often does the man hold out longer than that."
this shel silverstein (from the Hotel BreslinTapes) was prompted by the contemporaneous, stream of consciousness, autobiographical writing more or less about my professional association with bio/technology and nature biotechnology from 83/4 until just a few years ago. these and other writings, endorsed by michael harold to give you a headache and a few belly laughs, can be found here. and if you search the page for the time signature that appears in the lower right of each post for times close to this, you will enter the stream at the place mentioned above.
This gothic transformation of the ballad of Barbra Allen, complete with necrophiliac and vampirish over and undertones is of course from the Hotel Breslin Tapes, and is rendered by the same unforgettable voice from Arkansas that is featured in version 3 of the 19 versions of the classic above.
This one of a kind photograph is from Jim Marshall's remarkable collection entitled Jazz (Chronicle Books, 2005.) i found it in the Tattered Cover bookstore in Denver last week and when i came to the photograph above, i was compelled to lay out the measley 40 bucks this beautiful book sells for in the stores. i hope Mr. Marshall will not send me an email demanding money for enshrining it in Harry's gallery.
Yesterday Jon Kalish sent me a link to the following 7 wonderful minutes that contain (as far as i know) the only available recordings of the rabbi's grandson, Lionel Ziprin (now 81), discoursing in his inimitable style on the history of these legendary recordings.
A 30 min CD of the piece as it aired over NPR this past Sunday can be had for a small sum by writing Mr. Kalish at jonkalish@earthlink.net
Selections from the tapes have previously appeared in this string ( 1/ 2 ), and a third can be heard here.
just in case you might have thought that was all there was, here are a group guranteed to make you think (almost) everything i might think to write about them apart from their titles
the resolution is not terrific, but it can be safely (at least safe for your computer's operating system...no promises regarding your own) viewed here.
This comment relates to many of your images: I guess what I am asking about your images is whether one or more of the Photoshop algos introduces randomness that involves a random number generator wherein you do not control the seed number. If you do control
the seed, there is some RAND algo that works in some particular way. If Adobe does not give out their algos underlying their tools, then we don't know exactly what is happening even if you had a complete history. That does not matter for art, but some of your images have sort of a 'perfect' fractal appearance - as if you hit on the right seed numbers to produce something beautiful. I assume most seeds would produce something ugly. That's a lot like the difference between reproduction and procreation.
Perhaps some nice person from Adobe can follow up on this comment.
Doug
yes. there is some random algorithim that works in particular ways,
but i do not control the seed, although certain symbols &syllables do resonate with it. a close approximation of the basic formulae can be obtained from The Smith in the the middle panel of the dark magus suite above.
but from what basic biology i still remember, i think seeds have to be fertilized to produce anything. and as far as i know, no fertilized seed ever gave rise to an unbeautiful being.
harvey
P a r t i c u l a r l y as it induces paroxysms of new-age sounding mush.
you told everybody everybody else's, including your own, your whole life.
anyway, i have nooooooooooooooo idea what mine are. i spilled all my beans in dean's world in january, as you well know.
the paracrystalline is not.
the object of the original photograph and the photongrapher are densely connected
therefore the photongraph that 'develops' is likely to be one that no one else could have made
[one takes a photograph and makes a photongraph
[photographs capture, photongraphs map, etc
[poetry has its roots in the greek for making - poesis
-------------
then
the self that speaks with beings who are where harry is takes over
Among other things, i could bring Harry as many back issues of nature as he wanted, as well as review copies of expensive, unreadable (by anybody but him and the copy editors) scientific tomes on astrophysics, seismic activities, aboriginal weaving patterns, etc. During that time, i befriended the young editor of Grove's Dictionaries (a sister Macmillian pub that had offices in the same building), and through him i was able to obtain over the course of two years a complete Groves classical in which each volume is only very slightly, cosmetically defaced, or has a mislabed spine, and so was returned. Jonathan thought i was 'odd, but nice'. (Years later, the greatest office manager in the universe, Angie Rice, managed me a new edition, two volume (bright red) Groves jazz.
But neither of these two wonderful perks come even close to the one from Harry. In return for these arcanic journals and books, which i would deliver once a week, Harry would play a 90 minute cassette he had recorded especially to educate me about the astounding varieties of music in the world from his really big library. He would command me to sit and not move and not say aaaaanything and would proceed to put the tape in his quality deck. After we would smoke and talk, and before i left he would give me the cassette.
I will place in this comments box, from time to time, pieces that even today with all the music available to almost anybody are still rare, or still remain the finest examples of the type being illustrated.
The first of these is lithophones from Togo (Harry never gave the exact recording details...anyone who might know is more than welcome to supply the missing data)
In this instance, the rarity is a sample from recordings made by Harry in 1952/53 of the last Abulafia rabbi, Zvi Margolis.
A click here will take you directly to the sample as played originally by Doug Schulkind over WFMU in NJ a few years ago. Poking around his Archives will uncover many treasures as he is the finest purveyor of real music over the aether waves that i know.
and this time guaranteed to be heard Nowhere else.
i will mail a cd of the entire concert to anyone (who i do not personally know) that will post a comment here correctly identifying the country (or countries) of origin of the musicians.
Brought to you by Harry Smith, Lionel Ziprin and Lionel's grandfather, the last Abulafia Rabbi, Zvi Margolies (from The Rabbi's Basement Tapes, NYC 1953)
The object in the photograph was given to my son, Ezra Thelonious Edet, by Harry in 1985. Harry received it from the individual in the photograph at the time the object appeared to commemorate a certain cover of Time magazine that elicited the famoso "I'm famous, ain't that a bitch" when it was shown to him.
Ezra gave it to me some years ago for safe-keeping
This musical felicidades appeared top-center on yesterday's homepage. It is the most proximal impetus for the piece immediately above that i can discern and reproduce.
The Ballad of the Dying Beatnik
I know she's going to get around to me
Same tune, different verse. [i was one of the youths it sings abt]
Another kind of story-song for children of all ages from The Hotel Breslin Tapes
This one is a version of the hare and the tortoise from the Shona of South Africa
Although The Equinox did appear, Harry's poem was not, for reasons you do not wish to know, included.
The title of the poem, Think of the Self Speaking was used after Harry's passing as the title of a slim book of selected interviews published by Cityful Press a few years ago and that is now out of print and expensive.
[somewhere about 2/3 thru, harry sings a few bars from the shel silverstein song above that i titled i know she's going to get around to me (with some deliberate, or not, changes)
not long after sending the transcipt above, eric sent this Imaginary Dialog Between Oscar Wilde and Denis Diderot, thinking i "might enjoy it".
i think (almost) everybody will, especially harry to whom i have dedicated it, as i imagine the interplanetary traveller senor malone intended.
覧-Original Message覧-
From: Bialy, Harvey
To: 'Eric Malone '
Sent: 09/05/2005 03:52 p.m.
Subject: i say you mas re my late crazy uncle ray
it is because of ray that i have my name, harvey. this is the story.
ray golden married my father's only sister, babs, against the wishes of my grandfather and mother who did not think him a proper match for a good, first generation post-ellis is. jewish girl (especially a looker like babs was). this was mostly because ray was a show biz person, and such types, even of ray's ethnic persuasion, almost never made a dime.
not so uncle ray...he invested what little he and babs had saved in 'harvey' and made a bundle about the time i was born. my parents named me for the gin-soaked pookah and the luck of the one financial succcess that had befallen the family.
uncle ray took all the money and put it into a show he produced, directed and wrote (script, lyrics and a good part of the tunes as well). the show was a musical comedy abt the united nations
building...the building, not the un itself...it was a musical comedy abt the building of a building.
i remember my parent's coming home from the opening and my father loudly wailing oy vey what a schmuck my sister married and then bursting into guffaws with my mother. the show closed the same night.
a few months ago, i was telling charles stein this story and realized i remembered the lyrics (in part) to the show's title song ...There's a Building Going Up
it goes like this
and goes on like that for a while.
i used to perform it in grade school talent shows and un day assemblys.
覧覧覧
[should anybody be so foolish as to request it, i will place an mp3 of me performing these few bars in my best broadway.
the rest is tatters
my mother's maiden name was bloom. her parents came from moscow, and her father was a violin maker named max.
while waiting for a transitory local dns problem to resolve itself in what i am coming to understand are extremely chaotic electronic worlds collectively called theinternet, i decided to check the veracity of this wild story of my name.
this link proves it could be true.
Well, I wanna hear it.
not sure you qualify as an "anybody", but because of you, there's a song in my heart. so here it is.
now here is something from The Hotel Breslin Tapes you definitely do want to hear, and that i might have when i was a baby.
[it originally arrived via radio waves in 1945.
this version of Frog Went a' Courting from The Hotel Breslin Tapes, was a favorite when he was little. we laughed at the ending, ezra possessing, even then, a very acute sense of humor in addition to many other fine qualities.
-------
[here is an inside the camera double exposure i made in 1987 shortly after returning from a trip to thailand (remembered in Thai Sweet). he was three, and very angry.
although he was the one who made me a frog, it is ezra who jumps like one as can be discovered by typing ezra bialy into google.
probably everyone reading this has read at one time or another Mark Twain's The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County.
fewer i suspect know the amazing Private History.
Another Harry transcipt from Boulder courtesy of Eric Malone and the transmuted Hornswoggle 1 aka Whooskow #7
According to Harry, there are exactly 19 versions (and approximately 35 variations of them) of the most famous Scottish ballad ever to become a quintessential American folksong, Barbra Allen.
All 19 (from The Hotel Breslin Tapes) can be heard here. Number 3 is by the same unforgettable voice that so entertained Ezra and me (and i hope you) with her froggy song. Number 11 is the closest to the version made popular by Joan Baez, and which was the first one that most people of my generation heard in the late 1950s.
Barbra Allen 1 Barbra Allen 2 Barbra Allen 3 Barbra Allen 4
Barbra Allen 5 Barbra Allen 6 Barbra Allen 7 Barbra Allen 8
Barbra Allen 9 Barbra Allen 10 Barbra Allen 11 Barbra Allen 12
Barbra Allen 13 Barbra Allen 14 Barbra Allen 15 Barbra Allen 16
Barbra Allen 17 Barbra Allen 18 Barbra Allen 19
A Veda of the Black Yagur from The Hotel Breslin Tapes
From: Doug Schulkind
To: Bialy, Harvey
Sent: 29/05/2005 09:57 a.m.
Subject: Re: re :: twins 77
And I was 44 yesterday, so hooray to us! I will check out the B-Stocker tomorrow at work on my high-speed thingamjig.
DS
On Sun, 29 May 2005, Bialy, Harvey wrote:
doug
look at
http://bialystocker.net/posts/1113211722.shtml
i was 60 on the 23rd.
keep well
harvey
------------------------------------------------------
From: Bialy, Harvey
To: 'doug@wfmu.org'
Subject: how things happen
Sent: 29/05/2005 11:41 a.m.
1. thinks: have not checked your playlists for a while
2. does so: sees twins
3. 'needle-noddle-nu' ...noooooobody plays twins 77 records ! not even doug
4. this has got to go in african elements
5. michael harold is all over that place
6. he writes me abt vedas yesterday / his vedas come from my writing chuck "accoding to one dr. j. needham, sometime master of gonville and caius college, cambridge, vol. 5/2 of science & civilization in china (a birthday present), 'one g. h. wasson, has thrown the problem into a completely new perspective with his investigations'. and the golden flower, accordingly is none other than our old pal somahaoma, with the translation into metallurgical metaphor coming later." (and copying michael) -- chuck and i visited wasson once at his hse in conn in 1972...very, very kind man....we did not know of course that he was at the time, along with the bell of bell helicopters, harry's biggest patron
7. there is one really crazy veda on the breslin tapes
Yesterday was not, in Mexico, a national holiday and reason for picnics in graveyards (that is Nov. 1), and the post office delivered five privately issued cds from the Marsupial Sonogram label containing assorted audio works by Eric "Hornswoggle" Malone. When i questioned him about the one that can be heard above, he wrote:
Harry sometimes included sounds from nature in the Breslin Tapes. He recorded the brief selection below on side B of the 19 Versions of Barbra Allen for reasons that will be clear when you listen to it.
The selection above (from The Hotel Breslin Tapes) originates in the Georgia Coast Islands.
Eeeuuuh, I'm supposed to give a lecture on whatever was announced, which I've made a point not to pay any attention to. Are there any revolutionaries present, will you raise your hands? No?
Joseph Stalin couldn't boil an egg, butュュ does anyone know ュュhe invented a children's game called Simon Says, apparently stolen from the British [prolonged coughing]. The British invented the bagpipe and then gave it to the Scots, telling them it was, apparently, a musical instrument...
Uuuh, I've been accused all week long now, of "saying things for effect." It seems to me I'm surrounded by people who have endless questions about the kaballah, without even having read Gershom Sholem. Now, wouldn't the questions be more interesting if Sholem were at least looked at? [Inaudible, from audience]. That's just [a] terrible [question]ュュdid you get dressed by yourself this morning? I... No more questions until I talk for a while, come on!
Since this is a very stuffy room, with low ceilings and no windows, I'm going to light a cigarette, in this case a particularly stale one...
Alice Roosevelt Longworth ュュanyone? I didn't think so. Alice Roosevelt Longworth was one of, if not the first woman, to smoke in public. She was the first child of Theodore Roosevelt, actually she was an only child by his first marriage... She was on very good terms with Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Her husband, Nicholas Longworth, was a U.S. Representative, serving two terms, and he was also Speaker of the House. The... IF YOU'RE NOT GOING TO LISTEN, GO TO ALLEN GINSBERG'S CLASS AND TALK, HE LIKES THAT! [prolonged coughing fit]. I should be wearing a gas mask, and this ashtray should be amplified [stabs cigarette in ashtray, lights another]. In her day, the press called Alice Roosevelt Longworth "Princess Alice." Now, all of you have been, eeuuuhh, doing your own thing an awful lot, being freakish, not ironing your clothing, and so forth, so I want you to attempt to imagine what it must have been like for someone such as Alice Roosevelt Longworth, to be seen in public, smoking. Coco Channel hadn't done it yet. You'll have to do a lot of work to appreciate the effect. ュュFranklin Roosevelt was the 5th cousin of Alice Roosevelt Longworth. ュュWhen we went off the gold standard, Princess Alice appeared at the White House wearing a gold necklace and a pair of gold earrings that were shaped like coal scuttles! Being asked about this, days later, Princess Alice told the press such things as [imitates her voice] "When you have a good time, you really don't remember details." She was thought to be the unofficial leader of the Republican party, the most knowledgeable person in Washington... During Prohibition, she publicly referred to Congress as "incipient drunkards." She said various things about the plight of Native Americans, which just wasn't done at the time. Well, Will Rogers was the only other person who could... If youケre not going to read Gershom Sholem, at least look at Princess Alice's book, itケs called Crowded Hours... She wrote it for money, after her husband died. If you're going to talk or think about what you call revolutionaries, this is a good book to do it with. I can tell by looking at all of you ュュwhen I have toュュ that you've had plenty of experience, eeuuuh, doing it with [laughter].
The successful revolutionary would be someone that no one has ever heard of. In other words, a "cult following" means, not enough people to constitute a minority. Obviously, you have to go through the bad poets, who you'll have to read first, to get to the better ones, who you won't much hear about at all, until you find them. If you find them. In this respect, I hope you all remember that Allen Ginsberg, before he was really a poet, was a pretty good market researcher.
Anne Hutchinson is interesting... her trial transcripts have survived. You should all remember that Anne Hutchinson studied scripture and attended sermons like all of you listen to popular singer-songwriters and go out to the movies. Find a copy of The History of the Colony and Province of Massachusetts Bay, by Thomas Hutchinson. It's two volumes, published in 1767
[break in tape]
[When] Captain John Cooke landed, on the Pacific Northwest, he happened upon an elaborate native culture adapted to a mild, rainy climate, abounding in timber, fish, sea otters, whales... Some 200,000 population didn't have to develop horticulture... They were divided into six language groups, and probably a few hundred villages, all of which shared complex social hierarchies, elaborate ceremonies, and very highly stylized wood carving traditions. Trees were a great part of the native poetry. There were a great deal of Douglas Fir [tape blanks-out].... [the] tools were stone axes, chisels, [used] to fell, split, and work tree trunks. Solid plank houses were built from this, as well as food trays, storage boxes [inaudible]... All the so-called religious art developed from carved masks, house ridgepoles, totem poles... Also, the, eeeuuuh... all the clothing came from the inner bark of spruce and cypress trees, combined with wool, the wool of mountain goats. In those days of Cooke, very strict economic trade existed; the whole notion of "culture" as not your own, but someone else's that you compare to your own or do whatever withュュ this developed very much along lines of, eeuuuuh, it's called, economic determinism... "Culture" [inaudible] a kind of indoctrination within which it was, and is, permissible, to say the least, to superimpose your own by way of even being aware of others'...
Historical, eeuuuh, surveys of the revolutionary, are, uuuuuh, if you're going to have some sort of context for what you might agree on as revolutionaryュュyou have to pinpoint, somewhere, and tease out, all of the elements, and [then] go forward and backward maybe a couple of hundred years...
[Inaudible question from audience:] I wouldn't suggest copping out on the Black Panthers or the Symbionese Liberation Army just yet, ok?
Early,ュュ early Virginia was settled mainly by bachelors. New England Puritans would not permit single persons to live as bachelors. Puritan New England was settled by families, and you had to live within a family... Eeeuuuuh, and from there, you had to live within a specified distance of the church. This will give you some idea of the uproar, what a terrible pain in the ass was Anne Hutchinson, she just wouldn't shut up! [laughter]. She came from a very prominent family, which is why John Winthrop didn't put her in the catapult with a sack of rocks and shoot her off immediately... [inaudible][laughter]
The revolutionary can be identified, there are certain things: B.O., halitosis, [inaudible] fingernails [laughter]... Eeeuuuh, pretending to know less, or more, than one really does... Mao never brushed his teeth, he just gargled with green tea in the morning. He didn't much care to wear underwear. He was responsible for spreading a great strain of syphilis about the provinces. He made very good soup. Not a great deal is known about it. [laughter]
If any of you happen to go for the Alice Roosevelt Longworth book, you might want to look into Agnes Surriage [and] how she became Lady Frankland. It was a great scandal in Boston in the 1740s. Legend has it she rescued Sir Henry Frankland from an earthquake in Lisbon, having gone there with him as his mistress ュュhe met her when she was a sixteen year old barefoot servant, at a Tavern in Marblehead. She became a darling in Boston society, being [as] witty, clever [and] just as well-liked, as Princess Alice. Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote a ballad about her. Sir Henry built her a mansion. This relates to aspects of indentured servitude which I've decided not to discuss. I don't want to hurt anyoneケs feelings. Naropa doesn't pay much, and all the food tends to be mashed, and has too much raw garlic, raw bean sprouts, and lemon juice in it [laughter].
[Inaudible question from audience] Artists, generally, will sell [?] anything to get attention. It's a mistake, to be underwhelmed by Grandma Moses, or Mardsden Hartley... If we do this all over again, maybe I'll begin with James Joyce. No one asked any decent questions, so, that's it. Will someone buy me a coca-cola? I just like to hold the [cold?] can, maybe I'll open it next week...
Perhaps you would be so kind as to provide a bit more information about the circumstances surrounding the recording and transcription above?
"Curious minds want to know".
Thanks.
harvey
The tape from which I made the transcription is labelled in small letters on the back - "Otis B. Driftwood, in homage to Harry Smith"
Hope this helps.
The selection hyperlinked here is from the well-known recording of James Joyce reading the end of Book I of The Wake segued into two selections by The Chieftans that Harry put on the B side of the Shel Silverstein Songs for Children, and which i think must have been recorded at about the same time (ca. 1962) as he marked them modern Irish.
The ones here are from another Hotel Breslin Tape, and are also chieftans, tho' not Irish ones. The harp-lute is a kora and the chiefs are Mandinka from Gambia.
The piece of music and the scientific paper hyperlinked below are two things that like the Hotel Breslin Tapes came my way because of Bio/Technology.
In the late 1980s, we had a representative of Kenkyusha Publishers in Japan, named Tetsuo Kuroshima, working out of the Bleecker Street offices.
Tetsuo and i became friendly, and one day he asked me if i would be kind enough to look at a manuscript by his university professor, and if i would fix the English syntax and grammar so that it could be submitted to nature.
i did, and about a year later, a Fed Ex. package arrived at my house with all 100 of the JVC CD World Sounds collection, which was compiled, recorded and annotated by the remarkable professor (now retired) of Japan's National Institute for Multimedia Education and the Department of KANSEI Brain Science, ATR Human Information Processing Research Laboratories, Kyoto.
The paper was predictably rejected by nature, but was eventually published pretty much as i edited it in the much better Journal of Neurophysiology just a few years ago.
Its abstract is reproduced below, and the hyperlink above will produce a pdf of the complete paper.
Of the 100 volumes in the JVC World Sounds collection, gamelan music is not surprisingly over-represented, accounting for 9 separate cds.
Two are Jegog - bamboo as distinct from the more familiar metal gamelan orchestras. Even Harry did not know they existed, although he said that the neurophysiological results were to be expected.
Here are seven + minutes of The Bamboo Ensemble of Sangkat Agung Village (JVC C321, recorded 1984)
For many years, Harry kept a quasi-clonal, uncaged parakeet called Birdie. Once he removed a tray from the freezer in his expansive room in the Breslin to show me a collection of Birdies.
Yesterday, Simon Pettet (who is well acquainted with our parrot, an Amazonian named Attila) sent me an email that had some information about African Greys and the concept of nothing, and i remembered the two pieces hyperlinked below. Attila was one year old at the time. Shortly after the recording session he began to say Om Mani Peme Hung.
Oddbird and Yardbird (25.07.02)
Birdfeathers (25.07.02) (the fractal feathers are by Khem Kaigan)
The piece in the photograph hyperlinked below is entitled "A Birthday Present from Harry, (2001)", and was made very soon after i obtained my first digital camera (a Kyocera 1.1 megapixel device). The original inkjet print is an apparently paradoxical "one of a kind digital image" because the colored bands, emanting from either Harry's palm or third eye, were caused by a never before (nor since) millisecond glitch in the printer.
Here is a photograph of the piece, and here is its musical accompaniment recorded in NYC in 1957.
An introductory composite from "The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians" (1980). The highlighted text did not have the dark connotations that it does today.
Example 1.
Example 2.
1.
2.
3.
---------------------------------------------------------
'Black Annie' at Parchman Prison Farm, Mississippi
from "Worse than Slavery: Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice", by David M. Oshinsky, New York Free Press, c.1996
www.corpun.com : Regulations : US prisons MS 20th c.
There was more. The true symbol of authority and discipline at Parchman was a leather strap, three feet long and six inches wide, known as "Black Annie," which hung from the driver's belt. Whipping had a long history in the South, of course, and not only on the slave plantations. It had been legally, often publicly, employed against white criminals for a host of minor crimes, and it had survived long after other forms of corporal punishment, such as branding and ear cropping, had been abolished.
Yet whipping had strong racial overtones because it had been used so frequently against slaves. "Punishment on the plantation was, essentially, physical punishment," wrote one historian. And the lash "was the correctional instrument of all purpose." When ex-slaves recalled their experiences, whipping was rarely overlooked. "Ole Marse was good, but when yo' made him mad he wud hay' yo whupped," a Mississippi freedman recalled. "He would come out in the mornin' an' want to whup everything he seen," said another. One ex-slave remembered the whipping of his mother and the retribution he had planned: "I sed to myself 'iffen I eber get free I wus gwine to whup dat overseer. His name wus Silas Jacobs. But he died not long afte' de war an' I neber got to whup him."
By 1900, corporal punishment for prisoners had been abandoned -- in law, if not in practice -- by most states outside the South. (The glaring exception was Delaware, a border state, where thousands of public whippings were inflicted upon lawbreakers well into the 1950s.) Arkansas, Texas, Florida, and Louisiana all used the lash on their convicts without serious public opposition. It was part of the regional culture, and most prisoners were black.
At Parchman, formal punishment meant a whipping in front of the men. It was done by the sergeant, with the victim stripped to the waist and spread-eagled on the floor. What convicts most remembered were the sounds of Black Annie: the "whistlin'" air, the crack on bare flesh, the convict's painful grunt.
J.S. They whupped us with big wide strops. They didn't whup no clothes. They whupped your naked butt. And they had two men to hold you.
WB. Four!
J.S. As many as they need...
A.L. Did they ever injure anybody that way?
J.S. Wooo!
WB. Yeah!
J.S. Kill um! Kill um!
WB. They'd kill um like that."
The most common offenses -- fighting, stealing, "disrespect" to an officer, and failure to meet work quotas -- were punishable by five to fifteen lashes. Escape attempts carried an unspeakable penalty: a whipping without limits. One superintendent recalled a mass breakout in the 1930s in which a trusty-shooter was killed. "To get confessions," he said, "I had whippings given to the eight we caught who weren't wounded. Before the young ringleader confessed, I had him lashed on the buttocks, calves, and palms, then gave him fifteen lashes on the soles of his feet. This cleared his mind."
The number and severity of whippings depended on the sergeant in charge. "Book rules" meant little in the field camps, which were fiefdoms unto themselves. The sergeants worked in relative isolation. Some of them were alcoholics; a few were sadists. "They beat hell out of you for any reason or no reason," an inmate remarked. "It's the greatest pleasure of their lives." Above all, the sergeants were under pressure to make a good crop, and that meant pushing the men. "What can you expect in the way of judgment at fifty dollars a month?" asked one prison official. "What kind of foreman on the outside [is] employed at fifty dollars a month?" They usually pay foremen more than anybody else, the man who works the men, but that's what they pay here -- fifty dollars a month!"
There were sergeants who saved the lash for serious infractions, and sergeants who whipped all the time. There was little supervision, despite the pompous claims of the superintendents, because whippings were viewed as the best way to keep the men working -- and afraid. It was not unusual for a convict to be lashed for breaking his shovel in the fields, or for several dozen convicts to be whipped for the theft of a single postage stamp. "There is no telling what punishment will be used in this prison," said a gunman in the 1930s, "It all depends on how mad the sergeant is, as to whether you get 15 or fifty lashes."
When asked to defend Black Annie, Parchman officials did so with pride. The lash was effective punishment, they insisted, and it did not keep men from the fields. "You spank a fellow right," claimed a superintendent, "and he'll be able to work on." Most of all, Black Annie seemed the perfect instrument of discipline in a prison populated by the wayward children of former slaves. There simply was no better way "of punishing [this] class of criminals," said Dr. A. M. M'Callum, Parchman's first physician, "and keeping them at the labor required of them."
Public opinion in Mississippi strongly supported the lash. Prison officials and sheriffs, politicians and judges, church groups and newspapers -- most seemed to favor its use. "The whip makes no appeal to hidden virtue," said The Jackson Clarion-Ledger," but it is a sure and effective means of planting fear ... in the hearts of [criminals]. It is retribution, and retribution hurts."
No one knew this better than the convicts who had felt Black Annie's clout. Their fear and pain were heard across the fields.
Ridin' in a hurry
Great Godamighty!
Ridin' like he's angry
Great Godamighty!
Well, I wonder whut's de matter?
Great Godamighty!
Bull whip in one han', cowhide in de udder.
Great Godamighty!
Well, de Cap'n went to talkin',
Great Godamighty!
'Well, come on here an' hol' him!'
Great Godamighty!
'Cap'n let me off, suh?'
Great Godamighty!
'Woncha 'low me a chance, suh?'
Great Godamighty!
'Bully, low' down yo' britches!'
Great Godamighty!
De Bully went to pleadin',
Great Godamighty!
De Bully went to hollerin',
Great Godamighty!
. . .
White convicts were said to work less and complain more than black convicts, and to consciously reject their lot. "When I tell one of these young [whites] to take a hoe and join the field squad, I am often met with a haughty refusal . . .," said Tann. "We have tried the dark cell, a bread-and-water-diet, standing them on a barrel. Such methods don't work. I've tried them all. When persuasion fails, I order the rebel stripped and whipped. Then I give him a day to think it over. The second morning . . . he is whipped again. Perhaps the third day, the same program must be followed, but not often does the man hold out longer than that."
this shel silverstein (from the Hotel BreslinTapes) was prompted by the contemporaneous, stream of consciousness, autobiographical writing more or less about my professional association with bio/technology and nature biotechnology from 83/4 until just a few years ago. these and other writings, endorsed by michael harold to give you a headache and a few belly laughs, can be found here. and if you search the page for the time signature that appears in the lower right of each post for times close to this, you will enter the stream at the place mentioned above.
Barbra Allen / Inverted
This gothic transformation of the ballad of Barbra Allen, complete with necrophiliac and vampirish over and undertones is of course from the Hotel Breslin Tapes, and is rendered by the same unforgettable voice from Arkansas that is featured in version 3 of the 19 versions of the classic above.
This one of a kind photograph is from Jim Marshall's remarkable collection entitled Jazz (Chronicle Books, 2005.) i found it in the Tattered Cover bookstore in Denver last week and when i came to the photograph above, i was compelled to lay out the measley 40 bucks this beautiful book sells for in the stores. i hope Mr. Marshall will not send me an email demanding money for enshrining it in Harry's gallery.
Yesterday Jon Kalish sent me a link to the following 7 wonderful minutes that contain (as far as i know) the only available recordings of the rabbi's grandson, Lionel Ziprin (now 81), discoursing in his inimitable style on the history of these legendary recordings.
A 30 min CD of the piece as it aired over NPR this past Sunday can be had for a small sum by writing Mr. Kalish at jonkalish@earthlink.net
Selections from the tapes have previously appeared in this string ( 1/ 2 ), and a third can be heard here.
(Harry recorded their First LP)
Swiss Alps :: :: Gabon Rain Forest
just in case you might have thought that was all there was, here are a group guranteed to make you think (almost) everything i might think to write about them apart from their titles
Alps
Alps II
Gabon
Gabon II
Gabon III