Thursday, October 2, 2014

When the Headlong Light is Loose

When The Headlong Light Is Loose (Poem)


the sodium lights
of pentathletes fall
drifting across moonbeams

a solitary bee lands
upon my windshield

discordant cords
wrap round my soul

"could i have ever been
the man for you?

in a thousand lifetimes
could i have been

the one?"

my love is conviction
my heart can scarcely
contain

it fills me up
with silvery lights
arcing across infinity

a million hungry bellies
cry out

shattered glass
and infamy

trails of starshine
         traces of loss

entropy

plutonium visions

languid, sireless
mares and
storm driven
seas

clashing
   crashing

out beyond
the breakers

where geometric ghosts
manifest themselves
in the dying
light of
seaside
beach blanket
campfires

out to that
place between
seduction
and
death

solace wheels
turn
in the
automatic
night

sentinels and
machinery

zephyrs

legions march

empires fall

bodies lie
strewn
on the shoulders
of decommissioned
highways

abandoned zoos

phantom chimpanzees

starlight
and the
moon...

waxes and wanes

flash floods

decimals
decimals
decimals

and one car
rumbles along
headlong into the night

-majestic-

solitary illumination

"don't it make
my brown eyes blue?"

throw the shoe

through the darkness
of the american night

electrodes and wires
crisscrossed
and sparkling

the cow
stumbledtrip
and fell into doom
as the trumpets
sound and the
seals unravel
and the horsemen
take flight

and all the
technobabble
in the world
won't save us

-save us-

so crank up
your post rock
your sonic youth
and talk talk
and slint

and grab your
cyberpunk
novels
all folded
and sweat stained
with yellowed pages
smelling faintly
of braii or
injera

pour a small
glass of
rosewater

and rejoice
as all the
satellites
fall into
the boiling seas

as fish
throw themselves
mercilessly
upon the banks
of artificial lakes
in gated communities

time lapse
videos
of cap'n crunch
crunchy bits
descending into bowls

like archangels
banished
for insurrection

(splash a little
milk on the
counter)

adjust your
aerial antennas
for a signal
that will
never come...

and when they come
to drag you away

DO NOT GO
QUIETLY

and once they've
shut you up
and filed and
stored you

keep asking the questions


"could i have ever been
the man for you?

in a thousand lifetimes
could i have been

the one?"

L.M. Little
6:50 a.m.
10/2/2014



Friday, August 22, 2014

31 Things To Do In Chicago!

31 Things To Do In Chicago


1. M.O.S.I. - captured WWII German Submarine you can actually go on.


2. The Field Museum - Sue the T-Rex and the Lions from the film "The Ghost & THe Darkness".


3. OZ Park


4. Wrigley Field - Soldier Field

5. Hemingway Birthplace & Museum


6. Haymarket Martyrs Memorial


7. The Sears Tower


8. The Frank Lloyd Wright House

Frank Lloyd Wright

9. The Art Institute of Chicago


10. Hull House


11. Millennium Park - The Bean

Millennium - two L's, two N's

12. Grant Park - (You can definitely feel the ghosts of Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin and Allen Ginsberg
from the 1968 Democratic Convention)


13. Buddy Guy's Blues Legends - if you're lucky you might even catch the man himself.


14. Reckless Records


15. Quimby's Comics

Don't break the glass.

16. Navy Pier - Ride the Ferris Wheel and imagine The White City.

17. Chicago Fire Memorial


18. Goose Island Brewery


19. Billy Goat's Tavern ("Cheeseborger, Cheeseborger...)


20. Catch an improv show at Second City


21. Picasso in Daley Plaza


22. Chicago Pizza & Oven Grinders across the street from The St. Valentine's Massacre site.


23. Biograph Theater where John Dillinger was killed.


24. Uncle Fun


25. The Shedd Aquarium

26. The Adler Planetarium

27. Fireside Bowl


28. Revolution Books - Women & Children First (feminist bookstore)


29. Lou Mitchell's Diner - Beginning point for Route 66.


30. Al's #1 Beef


31. Visit the historic Blackstone Library.


... that would just about cover a nice long weekend I think.

Friday, July 4, 2014

Through the Earwormhole Part II: Progressivo Italiano

THROUGH THE EARWORMHOLE
Part II: PROGRESSIVO ITALIANO

   In the early 70's, three bands were touring extensively in Italy - Genesis, Gentle Giant and Van Der Graaf Generator.  Two of these bands (Genesis and VDGG) were on The Famous Charisma Label.


     Unable to gain ground in their home country, all three found enthusiastic audiences in Italy. Van Der Graaf Generator's 1971 album "Pawn Hearts" was #1 on Italy's charts for 12 weeks, prompting Pete Hammill & crew to tour so exhaustively that they split up. The band did not reform until 1975 when they released "Godbluff"In 1973 Genesis met with Le Orme, one of the seminal bands of the Progressivo Italiano scene.


     It's clear to see what a major influence the masters of British Progressive Rock had on the burgeoning Italian music scene. 
     
     Le Orme was one of the first bands to be received favorably abroad with the release of 1971's "Collage". The scene itself boomed in 1972 and ran dry around 1975. Most bands only released one or two albums before disbanding.  A revival revitalized the scene in the 1990's due, in part, to the advent of the internet and compact disc reissues. A second revival occurred in 2009 when, at the time,  the top 100 contained a total of 14 Prog Rock albums - the biggest number since 1977. Nowadays, with the rise of social media and the uploading of long out of print albums on YouTube - in addition to streaming music sites and the ability to easily purchase import albums - Progressivo Italiano is more accessible than ever.THE GENESIS OF PROGRESSIVO ITALIANO
     
     The trinity of albums that opened the floodgates of Italian Prog all came out in 1971.

Terra in Bocca by iGiganti (Dirt in the Mouth by The Giants)
Collage by Le Orme & Concerto Grosso (Big Concert) by New Trolls

     The Argentinian-Italian composer Luis Bacalov collaborated with New Trolls on Concerto Grosso - as well as working with other Progressivo Italiano bands such as Osanna on their sophomore effort 1972's "Preludio Tema Variazioni e Canzona" & "Il Rovescio della Medaglia" on 1973's genre cornerstone "Contaminazione".


     Luis Bacalov is the other great Spaghetti Western composer in addition to Ennio Morricone. Bacalov composed scores for the 1966 Sergio Corbucci film "Django" as well as 1971's "Lo Chiamavano King" and 1972's "Il Grande Duello".


     Quentin Tarantino used the main themes of "Lo Chiamavano King" and "Django" in his 2012 Spaghetti Western "Django Unchained".


     The same music was used previously in the 2004 videogame "Red Dead Revolver".


The Floodgates
     
     Between 1972 and 1974 there were a flood of releases under the Progressivo Italiano banner. By 1975 the genre was dormant and would not be rediscovered for another fifteen years.
     
     How and why did this happen? Why was such a vibrant and creative music genre so short lived? To answer that we must look at the Spaghetti West - and beyond.
     
     In 1961 a Japanese director named Akira Kurosawa was set to release a film starring Toshiro Mifune.


     The film itself  is based on a novel by the writer Dashiell Hammett. 


     The novel was Hammett's 1929 "Red Harvest" which was inspired by a labor dispute at a Butte, Montana copper mine that erupted in violence on April 21, 1920. 




    The film was "Yojimbo".

 

     "Yojimbo" was seen by Italian director Sergio Leone who was inspired to make his film, 1964's  "A Fistful of Dollars" Sergio Leone's film broke the dam and created a tidal wave of films with a similar sensibility, thus creating the genre known as the Spaghetti Western. 


     The whole scene lasted from 1964 to the mid 1970's. Cinecitta studios in Rome (aka Hollywood on the Tiber) was known for churning out popular movies by creating imitations of hit films in a boom & bust cycle that spawned genres galore. Here's a list of the genres that came and went - the best of which had lasting influential impact, followed by the origin film(s) that created the craze.

Peplum aka Sword & Sandal films - 1958's "Hercules" starring Steve Reeves

Mondo films - 1962's "Mondo Cane"

Giallo - 1963's "The Girl Who Knew Too Much" directed by Mario Bava

Spaghetti Westerns - 1964's "A Fistful of Dollars" starring Clint Eastwood

Subgenres

Zapata Westerns - 1966's "A Bullett for the General" directed by Damiano Damiani
Django films - 1966's "Django" directed by Sergio Corbucci & starring Franco Nero
Sartana Films - 1968's "If You Meet Sartana Pray For Your Death" starring Gianni Garko
Trinity films - 1970's "They Call Me Trinity" starring Bud Spencer & Terence Hill
Twilight films - 1976's "Keoma" directed by Enzo G. Castellari & starring Franco Nero


Eurospy - 1964's "Goldfinger" starring Sean Connery

Macaroni Combat films - 1967's "The Dirty Dozen" & 1968's "Where Eagles Dare"

Poliziotteschi - 1971's "Dirty Harry" & "The French Connection" + 1973's "Serpico"

Exploitation films

Subgenres

Nazisploitation - 1975's "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS" Canadian production
Sharksploitation - 1975's "Jaws" directed by Steven Spielberg
Cannibal films - 1980's "Cannibal Holocaust"
     
     The basic structure here is a hit movie is made - there is a rush to cash in on the craze by making thinly veiled copies - some of these are actually pretty good (such as Enzo G. Castellari's 1981 Sharksploitation film "Great White" starring Vic Morrow) - the market is flooded - the market collapses - then the next craze comes along.
     
     During the period of 1964 -1973, 500+ Spaghetti Westerns were made. Primarily shot in Almeria, Spain. 


     Cinecitta Studios primarily represented the filmmakers of Southern Italy (Mezzogiorno). This region has a generally higher rate of poverty than the industrialized North. Southern Italy has been subjected to invaders and conquerors throughout history and as a result the population tends to reflect the traits of the different cultures that have occupied the region. Whereas people of Northern Italy tend to have fairer skin and lighter hair, the Southern Italians tend to be more "Mediterranean" with darker hair and darker features. This distinction between the two regions of Italy is important - mirroring the complex relationship between the Northern and Southern United States.
     
      Filmmakers out of the North such as Fellini, Passolini & Visconti made films that were accepted more broadly by the intelligentsia - whereas Sergio Leone, Corbucci & Castellari made films for the masses. Passolini referred to the South as "the belching stomach of Italy."
     
     There is quite a bit of competition between artists, musicians and filmmakers in Italy that tends to winnow out gems from the mass of media that is produced. This is thought to be a holdover from artisans of the Renaissance who dueled frequently in order to catch the eye of wealthy patrons. This competition has led Italy to create masterpieces of art, literature, fashion, film and music.


The Years of Lead
     
     The1970's were a watershed period in Italy. Progressive political measures were passed in defiance of the Catholic Church and as a result, the country began to evolve and modernize.
     
     However, when you shake up the status quo there is always an inevitable blowback. The period of violence and corruption that ensued became known as "Anni di Piombo"  (The Years of Lead).

December 12, 1969 Piazza Fontana Bombing

March 26, 1971 Alessandro Floris is Assassinated in Genoa

May 17, 1972 Luigi Calabresi is Assassinated in Milan.

May 31, 1972 Peteano Car Bombing

April 16, 1973 Primavelle Fire

May 17, 1973 Milan Police Headquarters Bombing

May 28, 1974 Piazza Della Loggia Bombing

August 4, 1974 Italicus Express Bombing

May 14, 1977 Shootout With Police - Policeman Antonio Custra killed.

August 2, 1980 Bologna Central Station Bombing - 85 killed, 200 wounded.

Perhaps no two figures epitomize this era better than these two men.

Giulio Andreotti & Aldo Moro

   Giulio Andreotti and Aldo Moro were rivals within Italy's Democrazia Cristiana (Christian Democracy Party).  Andreotti represented the right, and Moro represented the left.  Moro had negotiated a compromise with the Partito Comunista Italiano (Italian Communist Party) to form a coalition government.  He was due to sign the historic agreement amidst rumblings from both the right and the far left.


     
     On the morning of March 16, 1978 Aldo Moro was kidnapped by members of the Brigate Rosse (Red Brigades).


     He was held for 55 days, during which he wrote 86 letters to the leaders of his party, members of his family and the Pope, pleading for negotiation.


    Giulio Andreotti was Prime Minister during this time and his government refused to release prisoners in exchange for Moro.  On May 9, 1978, Aldo Moro's bullet riddled body was found in the trunk of a Renault 4 in the Via Caetani.


     This incident sparked more violence and corruption, the latter of which still plagues Italian government to this day. Allegations of Mafia collusion with political leaders are rampant and ongoing. To say that there is mistrust for authority, especially among the youth in Italy, is a vast understatement. 


     It's important to note that the music of Progressivo Italiano, which is exuberant and inventive and vibrant, was made with these headlines blaring in the background.

The Bands




     Alphataurus hailed from Milan. Under the original lineup Alphataurus released only one album, 1973's "Alphataurus". The band split up in 1973. In 1992 their 2nd album "Dietro l'uragano" was released. In 2009 Alphataurus reformed and is still active today.




     Inspired by progressive rock acts from England's Gentle Giant, Jethro Tull and Emerson, Lake & Palmer, keyboardists Vittorio Nocenzi and his brother Gianni founded Banco del Mutuo Soccorso in Rome, Italy. They later recorded their eponymous debut in 1972, soon to be followed by "Darwin!", and in 1973 "Io sono nato libero".


     The band remained active until February 21, 2014 when singer Francesco di Giacomo died in a car accident, in Zagarolo, at the age of 67.

 

     As CD reissues started appearing and the Internet made information flow easier during the 1990's, the Italian bands were discovered and rediscovered by a number of progressive rock fans internationally. Reissues proved so successful that several recordings which were never released at the time received their first pressings on CD in the 1990's and 2000's. The "discovery" of Italian progressive rock by foreign fans also led to bands such as Celeste being re-evaluated as core bands, despite the fact that they were virtually unknown in Italy at the time.

Cherry Five

    Cherry Five was heavily influenced by Genesis, Yes and King Crimson. The original line-up included three of the musicians who would later found Goblin: Claudio Simonetti (keyboards), Massimo Morante (electric guitar) and Fabio Pignatelli (bass). They released only one eponymous album in 1975.


     They were then called in to compose the soundtrack for the Giallo film "Profondo Rosso" by director Dario Argento. The band changed their name to Goblin, rewriting most of the score, originally written by Giorgio Gaslini.

Giallo


     "Giallo" (yellow) refers to an Italian crime and mystery genre of literature and film which sometimes contained elements of horror and eroticism. The word "giallo" comes from a series of cheap paperback mystery novels with trademark yellow covers.




     Goblin is primarily known for their soundtrack work. They have frequently collaborated with Dario Argento, most notably creating soundtracks for "Profondo Rosso" in 1975 and "Suspiria" in 1977. Goblin returned with a series of live concerts in Europe in 2009 and in North America in 2013.

Goblin and Argento




     Il Balletto di Bronzo (Bronze Ballet) formed in Naples in the mid 1960's, and released two albums, "Sirio 2222" and "Ys" before disbanding in 1973. In the late 90's, vocalist and keyboard player Gianni Leone reformed the band as a trio, recording the live album "Trys". This incarnation of the band is still active as a live ensemble with a rotating roster, Leone being the sole constant.


     "Ys" is their second studio album. It was released in 1972. It's a concept album in which the protagonist is the only man left on Earth, who makes 3 incredible journeys before being swallowed up by the darkness.

     Ys refers to a mythical city that was built on the coast of Brittany and later swallowed by the ocean. Most versions of the legend place the city in the Douarnenez Bay.

Flight of King Gradlon, by E. V. Luminais, 1884




     Jacula was an Italian progressive rock band founded in 1968 in Milan as an experiment by Antonio Bartoccetti, Doris Norton (also known as Fiamma Dello Spirito), organist Charles Tiring and medium Franz Porthenzy.
     
     Jacula's music is innovative, but dark and strange, reminiscent of a gothic horror film in the vein of Mario Bava. The group completed two albums: "In Cauda Semper Stat Venenum" which has a superposition of an organ, piano and other sound effects, and "Tardo Pede in Magiam Versus" which features Doris Norton's vocals.
     
     After nearly four decades, Jacula released their third studio album "Pre Viam" - an anagram of the word "Vampire", in May 2011.

Jacula Fumetti
     
     The singular term fumetto (literally "little puff of smoke") refers to the balloon that contains the dialogue in a comic book or cartoon strip. "Jacula" was a vampire in an Italian fumetti title. 



     A total of 327 issues were produced between 1969 and 1982. "Jacula", along with "Zora" and "Sukia", contained strong sexual themes.




     Le Orme ("The Footprints") is an Italian progressive rock band formed in 1966 in Venice. The band was one of the major groups of the Italian progressive rock scene in the 1970's. They are one of few Italian rock bands to have success outside their own country, having played concerts across North America and Europe, and releasing an album in English at the height of their success.


     In 1973 they released "Felona e Sorona". Commonly named as one of the finest examples of Italian progressive rock, it is a concept album pivoting on the story of two planets which revolve one around the other, without ever coming in contact. While Felona is shiny and flourishing, Sorona is dark and home to plagues and catastrophes: however, in the second part of the suite, the fate of the two planets is inverted.


     This story may reflect the tale of the two great rivers of Egypt - The Tigris & Euphrates. Euphrates translates roughly to "good bountiful one". The Tigris, as a result of its swift current, has a low silt bed and is more prone to flooding. One people saw two rivers very differently and life evolved in disparate directions according to which system you were in proximity. 



    La Locanda delle Fate (The Fairy Inn) is an Italian progressive rock band from the end of the Italian prog rock movement. Despite good reviews, they encountered little success with their first 1977 album "Forse le lucciole non si amano piĆ¹" and disbanded in 1980 after releasing two further singles. The band reunited without their lead vocalist, releasing the album "Homo Homini Lupus" in 1999. 




    Maxophone formed in Milan in 1973. They released one self-titled album in 1975. Maxophone have since acquired a minor cult following that has endured for over three decades, long after their short career had ended. 
     
     However, they released 2 singles in 1977, "Il Fischio del Vapore" (Steam Whistle) and "Cono di Gelato" (Ice Cream Cone.) The 2 single tracks have since been added to some versions of the CD re-issues of their album.  
Gelato


     Gelato is the Italian word for ice cream. Gelato is made with milk, cream, various sugars, and flavoring such as fresh fruit and nut purees. Gelato is a type of soft ice cream containing a relatively small amount of air. By statute, gelato in Italy must have at least 3.5% butterfat, with no upper limit established.




     Metamorfosi are an Italian symphonic rock band from Rome. They have released three albums, "E Fu Il Sesto Giorno" (1972) "Inferno" (1973) and "Paradiso" (2004). The two latter are concept albums based on Dante's "The Divine Comedy". Inferno in particular has received critical acclaim amongst progressive rock fans.




     Murple formed in Rome in 1973. Their first studio album "Io sono Murple" (I am Murple) was released in 1974. 


     The concept album has  2 long suites divided into six movements each that tell the sad story of the penguin Murple that, to escape the unchanging day to day of his life, decides spontaneously to move away from the herd and from his natural habitat. Before Murple has time to enjoy the wonders of the world he is captured by humans ("Nessuna scelta" - No Choice) and forced to perform first in a circus ("Tra i fili" - Between the wires), then in the zoo "Antarplastic" where the adventure concludes with Murple perched inside a small plastic iceberg.



     Museo Rosenbach formed in Bordighera, Italy in 1971. 


     In 1973 they released the album "Zarathustra" based on the philosophy of Nietzsche. In spite of the limited success it scored in the 1970's, it is today considered a cornerstone of the genre.


     In 1884, Claude Monet traveled to Bordighera, a town on the Italian Riviera, close to the border between Italy and France, for a working visit of three weeks that turned into nearly three months.



Osanna - The "Kiss" of Italy.

     Osanna formed in 1970. In 1973 they released "Palepoli" which is widely considered amongst the best in the Italian progressive rock genre. Palepolis was the name of the pre-Greek settlement of Naples, the city from which the band members originated. The album shows a wild mix of progressive and Neapolitan-Mediterranean influences. The lyrics, composed by vocalist Lino Vairetti, mix social themes with mythological and mystic ones. Osanna liked to add an air of  theatricality to their shows, often appearing in costumes and make-up.




     Premiata Forneria Marconi (P.F.M.) (Award-winning Marconi Bakery) formed in Milan in 1970. They were the first Italian group to have success abroad, entering both the British and American charts. Between 1973 and 1977 they released five albums with English lyrics. They also had several successful European and American tours. P.F.M. introduced new sounds, such as the synthesizer, to the Italian musical world. They were also among the first to combine symphonic classical and traditional Italian musical influences in a pop music context. Such innovations and their longevity have made them among the most important bands in the international Progressive rock genre.


     "Chocolate Kings" is P.F.M's  fourth album released in 1975 - and a personal favorite. It was the first album to include Bernardo Lanzetti on lead vocals. It was also the band's first album to be written natively in English. Many Italian Prog bands tried to translate previous albums into English and were largely unsuccessful. Part of the mystique of the genre is in not knowing the language and many aficionados prefer the Italian language version of the albums.

The actual "Award Winning Marconi Bakery" in Chiari, Italy.



       Semiramis formed in 1970 by Maurizio Zarrillo (keyboards) and the two cousins Marcello Reddavide (bass) and Memmo Pulvano (drums). They were all 15-years old. Two years later they were joined by 16 year old Michele Zarrillo who replaced former singer Maurizio Macioce. 


     Their 1973 album "Dedicato a Frazz" was commercially unsuccessful, but later became regarded as a classic of Italian progressive rock. After the band split up, singer and guitarist Michele Zarrillo joined a later incarnation of Il Rovescio della Medaglia. 

This is just the tip of the "Antarplastic" iceberg. There is so much more to discover. Blow the dust from the grooves and check out some of this great music. You never know where it will take you. So crack open a cold Lemonsoda and Buon Ascolto (Good Listening)!