As a writer, I have two interests. Writing and going to Amoeba Music. Nothing else has a hold on my life. The presence of my writing, which, to be honest, blows me over. To celebrate a perfect sentence or two, I usually go to Amoeba to celebrate my day of work. Or, to be frank, my half-hour work is getting that sentence or two down on paper or computer screen. The fact is right in the middle of the sentence; I’m already thinking about taking the bus to Amoeba. I have the ability to think about two things at once: my writing and the need to get to the record store. I should stay home and finish the paragraph at the very least, but art is calling me, and like the salmon swimming against the river's tide to reproduce, I too have a need to get to the record store in such a manner.
Like my writing, I don’t like to consider what I’m going to write about until the very first sentence is written. So in that spirit, I go into the record store without a thought in my head. Overall I knew what sections the store to go to at first because I started to appreciate classical music. The thing with me is I crave new sounds. But I only like ‘old’ sounds, so what’s older than classical music? Like most people of my generation, I discovered the classics through Stanley Kubrick. If it weren’t for him, I would more likely never heard of Beethoven’s music - although I knew the name and often lay to people that I knew his music as well. The fact is I discovered Beethoven through Wendy Carlos’ soundtrack to “A Clockwork Orange.” At the time of the film's original release, nothing was happening. When you see Alex staring at you from the massive screen at the Cinerama Dome on Sunset Boulevard, one becomes transfixed by that image as well as the music in the background. Often when I write, I always have music in the environment. I avoid music with words or lyrics because that would throw my work on hand, but an excellent drone or classical piece is like putting gasoline in my engine. I’m ready to roar with the appropriate sounds.
I purchased the latest Bob Dylan album “Shadows in the Night” and Glenn Branca’s “Lesson No. 1.” The Dylan is his album of standards, and Branca is one guitar rave-up. On one level, it is just like the last part of a Yardbird’s song, when all the guitars go crazy. Glenn Branca is that part but with no chorus or words. So it’s a very hardcore and right-to-the-point type of music for me. At times, I crave that guitar sound - and when you have at least five electric guitars going at once, well, it is sort of like heaven.
Today being Sunday, I'm not motivated to write a piece. I wouldn’t say I exactly have writer’s block because I did write two outstanding sentences earlier today. No, it’s not the writing, but more of a reflection problem. I look at the window, with the Glenn Branca music blaring behind me, and I look at a tree, and oddly enough, that image of the tree stays the same. I look at it and think of it as a human body made out of wood, but that’s stupid. A tree is a tree. I, of course, start thinking of the tree as a “tree of life.” But no matter how long I look at it, and I even went outside to get another perspective, it is obviously a tree is nothing more than a tree.
I came back in and got in front of my laptop. Slowly sitting here, I realize that a whole world is opening up to me. As I write, I’m in my living room. I’m surrounded by my books as well as a decent but not high-end hi-fi system. I can order food to be delivered through the internet, so there is no reason for me to leave - like ever. I feel a certain amount of content of just being and not thinking about it. My existence is both important and non-important. Suppose I die while writing; more likely, it will take several days for someone to discover my body. Therefore it’s imperative to always dress well, even at home. I must have clean underwear (of course) and make sure I dress like it will be the final day of my life. The things around me, the objects on my work table, must tell the definitive narrative of my life. With that intensity, how can one possibly be ever bored!
Sunday represents a day of rest, but I can’t allow myself that form of thinking. Every day, including Sundays, are to be regarded as time passing, and how one deals with the aspect of a series of moments going by - is the art of living. So yes, that tree outside my window is essentially both critical and not necessary, but what is important is that I notice that tree. And I think of you as well, my dear readers. When and if I die at my table working on my Sunday piece, I think of you till my last dying breath.
I have lived in Los Angeles from 1967 to 1980; The differences in places are the trees in both places, however the NYC trees are more abundant, and different kind of trees. My early life was growing in Springfield, Mass. where the varieties of trees are also very abundant. I live now, just next to Central Park, and obviously the trees are very present and important to share. Some say that trees also have consciousness, and they are obvious and very important in the history of people and planet earth. Trees are our most direct and important living connection to Nature. I am friends with the artist Simone Forti, who now lives in Los Angeles, who also lived for many years on the east coast and in NYC. I once went to a performance of hers at a dance studio downtown near the WTC. She permed her "Locomotion" piece, and described a journey that she made to Washington square park, where she described the movement of a squirrel, and tried to fashion that in her dance moves. She finally surrendered that the movement of the squirrel was so fluid that she could not do justice to the movement of the squirrel, so then she described her vision of one of the great and old trees in the park, and then fashioned her posture in a very settled structure to describe the tree and its branches, and when she fond and settled on the shape of the tree and the branches, she established the form of her body to imitate the tree, and when she settled on that form, Tears began flowing from my eyes. So Simone had in her art married nature, and became Nature in herself and the tree, Of course we and you Tosh are familiar with the image and details of the tree of life, "The Seperoth" one of the most profound examples of Hebrew knowledge and the religion of living. ALSO, I recall seeing some early video pieces by my friend Yoko Ono, when she walked into the Central Park "Imagine" garden, and hugged a big tree like a lover. ALSO, when the attack on the Ukraine began, there was an on-line set of images of older Russian women hugging trees like lovers; and I wondered about that, and Now. Of course the history of Wicca holds a good deal of nature worship; also to say WHY do women so love trees? haha. Us men have things to learn and love from the influence on earth of Woman. PS no edits in this Tosh.
One of your best, Tosh. Helped make my Sunday feel like a Sunday.