TUMBLR

A SCRAPBOOK OF STUFF I'M READING / LISTENING TO / LOOKING AT.



Jan 28, 2012
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As soon as you stop wanting something you get it.

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Fig. 1. Gary Larson, “Now! That should clear up a few things around here!” from The Complete Far Side

Fig. 2. A pickup truck on my street.

Filed under: life imitates art, captions

Jan 27, 2012
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Women…can see what men have up their sleeves… That is why no woman has ever been convinced that her husband is a superman.

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Stephen Colbert interviews Maurice Sendak [part one] [part two]

God, I’m still laughing at this.

Sendak: “Fuck them, I hate those e-books. They cannot be the future. They may well be, I will be dead, I won‘t give a shit.”

Colbert: “Boys wear pants.” Sendak: “Not when they’re dreaming!”

Colbert: “Will you teach me to draw?” Maurice Sendak: “No!”

Stephen Colbert interviews Maurice Sendak [part one] [part two]

God, I’m still laughing at this.

Sendak: “Fuck them, I hate those e-books. They cannot be the future. They may well be, I will be dead, I won‘t give a shit.”

Colbert: “Boys wear pants.” Sendak: “Not when they’re dreaming!”

Colbert: “Will you teach me to draw?” Maurice Sendak: “No!”

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Jonathan Lethem, The Ecstasy of Influence

I tore through this. Lethem’s original 2007 Harper’s essay was a huge influence on Steal Like An Artist and probably a bunch of other people. (Heck, David Shields took the method of the essay and turned it into a whole book, although I’m guessing from Lethem’s acknowledgements, their influence on each other is a two-way street.) I had fun in the book version of the essay, highlighting and annotating the passages from other sources, showing the unmarked passages that Lethem wrote as the glue between them.

It’s such a big book (over 400 pages) that it’s impossible to share all my underlines, but this passage from the intro says a lot:

[I pit myself] compulsively against bogus valorizing notions of originality, authenticity, or naturalism in the arts….For if we consent that what appears natural in art is actually constructed from series of hidden postures, decisions, and influences, etc., we make ourselves eligible to weight the notion that what’s taken as natural in our experience of everyday life could actually be a construction as well.

Other than his writing on other writers and influence, I really loved his pieces about musicians. His piece on Rick James, his profile of James Brown, and interview (!) with Bob Dylan are all very much worth reading.

Again, it’s a huge book, not as tight or as focused as The Disappointment Artist, but not meant to be either.

Recommended.

Lethem

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This is Happening

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

LCD Soundsystem, “All I Want,” off This Is Happening (2010)

Pitchfork:

“Usually I’m pretty purposeful about my grand theft, like stealing the guitar sound from [Robert] Fripp for ‘All I Want’ and stuff like that,” James Murphy told the A.V. Club last June. This comment is the perfect summation of Murphy’s referential aesthetic. It’s the important thing to remember with LCD: Murphy is not writing and recording this stuff hoping that no one notices where he is borrowing from. He’s not living in fear of being discovered. The borrowing, in cases like “All I Want”, is a large part of the point. “There’s all this anxiety that people are going to ‘catch’ you,” he told Joe Colly in a Pitchfork interview. “No one wants to get called out for being derivative or something. It’s like, we’re all making rock. No one’s reinventing the wheel over here. If anything, the balance is struck by not worrying too much about it. So I’m spending my energy trying to make a good song rather than spending my energy trying to cover my tracks.

I love this album. Compare:

“All I Want” vs. “Heroes”

“Drunk Girls” vs. “White Light, White Heat”

“Somebody’s Calling Me” vs. “Nightclubbing”

This Is Happening

(Source: kindlesong, via magnolialucinda)

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Know any creative couples?

Hey friends,

For an upcoming project1, I’m looking for creative2 couples — married or partnered, straight or gay — who make cool things.

Preferably: 1) they are delightful in conversation and 2) they make things together (as in, run a business together) or make things apart (separate careers).

Here are the cities in which I’m looking for recommendations:3

  • Atlanta, GA
  • Austin
  • Ann Arbor
  • Detroit
  • Boston
  • Chicago
  • Cleveland
  • Columbus
  • Denver/Boulder
  • Kansas City
  • LA
  • Madison
  • NYC
  • Philadelphia
  • Pittsburgh
  • Portland
  • Providence
  • San Francisco
  • Seattle
  • St. Louis
  • Washington, D.C.

I’d really appreciate your help!

You can also tweet your recommendations to me @austinkleon

Or shoot me an email.


  1. Hint: it’s related to this tag

  2. I’m sorry about that word, but it works. 

  3. There’s a specific, semi-secret reason I asked for these cities, but by all means, if you know couples in other cities/towns, include them too. And yes, I know a lot of couples in these cities, but I want to hear your recommendations! 

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@fchimero:


  Dream setup care of 101 Dalmatians’ Roger—brownstone in the city, pretty lady, upstairs studio to tinker, lots of dogs.


The good life. Filed under: work spaces

@fchimero:

Dream setup care of 101 Dalmatians’ Roger—brownstone in the city, pretty lady, upstairs studio to tinker, lots of dogs.

The good life. Filed under: work spaces

(Source: revolvver)

Jan 26, 2012
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It’s amazing I’ve lived this long without destroying a person.
— Maurice Sendak to Stephen Colbert

Jan 24, 2012
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The gulp [:] that interlude where the book has quit belonging to you, but doesn’t belong to anyone else yet…
— Jonathan Lethem, “Stops,” collected in The Ecstasy of Influence