June 22nd, 2011 · Comments Off on Keyboard Music 1

You can get 49 pages of my keyboard music in this photocopied dossier. Let me know if you want one.
It contains excerpts from dance and theater scores, examples from lectures, harmonizations, Solrésol translations, occasional pieces, gags, and experiments.
The pieces are:
Stumbling Block
Rameau’s Nephew
Spang
Aubade
Rousseau’s Three-Note Tune
The Party Next Door
Quickstep
Music for Piano-Zither
Guesstimate
Honorificabilitudinitatibus
Infix
Dip
Aretino in Solrésol
On a Theme by Lewis Carroll
Ineffervescence
It All Went Pfft
Clot
The Underground Mountain Concert in Norway
Tags: *Music · K
June 22nd, 2011 · Comments Off on Janus
A round to see in a new year. It’s palindromic, except for that flickering F and F#.

Tags: *Music · J

I drew Charles Fort for the cover of the 72nd issue of the INFO Journal, published by the International Fortean Organization. The drawing has also been reproduced on a tee-shirt, and a few other places. Whenever it’s reprinted, I add a few more scraps of paper.
Tags: *Cartoons · I
“A Grim Reckoning” is one of my more gothic offerings. It began its life as incidental organ music for “Misguiding Lights,” a dance/theater piece by Pam Quinn and Michael O’Connor. I reworked it for viola and electronic organ, and performed it on the “No Soap Radio” series at Dance Theater Workshop, in NYC, in 1996, with David Gold on viola.
Here’s the first page.

Tags: *Music · G
June 20th, 2011 · Comments Off on Fort and Those Damned Books of His

On the occasion of Jim Steinmeyer’s biography of Charles Fort, I contributed an article to Fate on Fort’s books: his style, models, and reception. Among other things, I pointed out his Pyrrhonist and Bohemian tendencies; and compared his comic and speculative use of science with Jarry’s ‘pataphysics. Here’s the first page.

Tags: *Words · F
June 19th, 2011 · Comments Off on Walter and Benny Hunt the Elusive Batworm
That gentleman of the pen, Danny Hellman, published this comic strip in his anthology Typhon, in 2008. I originally drew it for performance, which is why the dialogue is not contained within the balloons. Here’s how it begins.

Tags: *Cartoons · W
June 19th, 2011 · Comments Off on Crocodile Dundee II

How did I ever end up in a movie? I don’t even watch movies.
However — I was appearing, yet again, in Bill Irwin’s show The Regard of Flight, and casting agents noticed me. I auditioned for a movie called Three Men and a Baby (as one of the three men, not as the baby). I didn’t get that part, but was eventually assigned a small part in Crocodile Dundee II. I emerged from a toilet stall during a tense moment, retreated, and then emerged again to say “He’s gone.”
I have no idea if the movie was nice, since I never got around to watching it.
The curious thing is that friends and family (especially family) saw the fact that I delivered one line in a movie as much more important and interesting than anything else I did. For me, it was just a lark, a chance to earn a few bucks. My fellow citizens often mystify me.
Tags: *Other · C
June 18th, 2011 · Comments Off on Election Day
A round on a trenchant scrap of Yeats. Hear, hear!

Tags: *Music · E
June 17th, 2011 · Comments Off on Dirgette

A funereal snippet, to illustrate a point of physical comedy in a performance with Bill Irwin, at the Walter Reade Theater (NYC) in 1999.
Tags: *Music · D
June 17th, 2011 · Comments Off on What’s This? A Shaver Revival?

Having long been a fan of both Richard Shaver and Fate magazine, I was happy to play a part in putting him on the cover. My article for this issue, “What’s This? A Shaver Revival?” can be found here. Or, to be more precise, the beginning of the article: you have to buy the issue to read the whole thing, as is only proper.
Tags: *Words · W