Fire Rose

31-8-7

I feel the earth – move,” she sings
under my feet – I feel the sky come-a-tumbalan’ down

and she is Irish whiskey;
no better anaesthetic…

The day before the contract between Carnegie Steel and the Amalgamated Iron and Steel Workers expired, and the decision by Pennsylvania’s governor to send all 8,500 members of the state’s National Guard to occupy the town of Homestead, workers fought a pitched battle with a “private army” hired by Carnegie’s partner, Henry Clay Frick. The “army” consisted of 300 Pinkerton detectives, heavily armed, who travelled the seven miles from Pittsburgh on barges early on the morning of July 6. Workers lined the shore and opened fire as the barges came within range. The battle lasted twelve hours before the company’s force finally surrendered. The Pinkertons, often used as strikebreakers, had tried to surrender twice before. The workers, however, refused to acknowledge their white flag and continued to shoot round after round at the barges. The workers located an old cannon with which they also tried, without success, to sink the barges. Their attempts to set them on fire also failed.

Roosevelt meets Mr Pinkerton

I am U.S.A.

USA USA USA all the way!

and she is smootha silk.

She owns me;

happy that way,

living within her.

I watched the men as they stirred the deeps beneath. I could not help admiring the swift and splendid action of their bodies. They had the silence and certainty one admires in the tiger’s action.

these are the depths

A journalist was here:

Trust me, OK?

Since when did you speak for the nation?

It doesn’t have to be this way…

This is my country.

Hamlin and Julian have only one leg each

Hamlin & Julian; Jules leaning on his sword:

Rose, y’know?

*This* is where they killed her; here

Yea, Rose…

“Come to the starting point,” she said. I followed her timidly far up toward the other end, my eyes fixed on the beautiful glow of a redhot bloom of a woman soaring high in the air. She lit the interior with a glorious light.

Fire Rose

fire rose

Tonight, the ambulance needs me

together, we can achieve Great Thangs

As night fell the scene became still more grandiose and frightful. I hardly dared move without direction. The rosy ingots, looking like stumps of trees reduced to coals of living fire, rose from their pits of flame and dropped upon the tables, and galloped head on against the rollers, sending off flakes of rosy scale. As they went through, the giant engine thundered fin, reversing with a sound like a nearby cannon; and everywhere the jarring clang of great beams fell upon the ear. Wherever the saw was set at work, great wheels of fire rose out of the obscure murk of lower shadow.

Rose has a Secret Fire

Published in: on August 31, 2007 at 12:18 PM Comments Off

Mia Dyson

27-8-7

Greetings, Parishioners,

Mia Dyson has a new album Struck Down & she’s touring it hard!
She also has a MySpace
dedicated to her the new album & the tour

The following year, 2006 Mia toured the USA and Canada, joined Frank Zappa’s band The Mothers of Invention

I caught an interview with her on The Music Show on Saturday 25-8-7
There are two live songs in the podcast -
River’s Wide and With the Blue Sky

but be warned, there is also some Paul Kelly…

Mia Dyson - rock chick!

In her praise, I give you my old article,

slightly updated:

Chicks with Guitars II- Mia Dyson
27-5-6

Yauwz!

Just caught Rockwiz -

with James Reyne

and

Mia Dyson!

Whoa! Go see the photos!

Parishioners know of my love of Chicks with Guitars
but she was magnificent!!!

A Jim Dyson Strat,
strings of rope & shit™ ’round her neck
like she was Mick Tyler or someone,

Mia Dyson - rock chick!

and a voice like Janis,

and the ‘tude of Keef!

At the end, for the customary duet,
she & James rocked Joni’s Woodstock!

He sang the high parts

she scowled & growled & made it rock,

they traded solos,

and it was great -

I beheld this -

and saw that it was Good!

Video interviews here,

mp3s here and

Q&A on her (latest – oops, not any more!) album Parking Lots here.

Links from The ABC Blues Festival (when was this?)

Mia Dyson - rock chick!

Methinks the lady doth rock!

Published in: on August 30, 2007 at 9:16 AM Comments (2)

Die Hard

27-8-7

Brother J dropped off a DVD of Die Hard on the weekend.

Die Hard 4.0
Die Hard 4
Die Hard 4: Die Hardest
Die Hard: Reset
Die Hard: Tears of the Sun
Live Free or Die Hard

I just caught a snatch of it…

Now, Parishioners are aware of my love of pixies

and who is that *lovely*
little pixie playing Lucy McClane?

mirror_mary_elizabeth_winstead.jpg

Why, it’s Mary Elizabeth Winstead!

finaldestination3_mary_elizabeth_winstead.gif
She has been called a scream queen, à la Jamie Lee Curtis

Seen on TV shows like CBS drama Touched by an Angel and its spin-off, Promised Land

pixie_mary_elizabeth_winstead.jpg

Ranked #92 on Maxim’s Hot list 2007

Isn’t she lovely?

gallery_mary_elizabeth_winstead.png

And what else do I now have to run out & see?

Grindhouse, apparently

Jesu!

Directed by Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez!

rose_mcgowan_flames.jpg

and starring Rose McGowan!

rose_mcgowan_rifle_peg-leg.jpg

And here’s my sexy pixie:

sexy_pixie_mary_elizabeth_winstead1.jpg

Published in: on August 27, 2007 at 11:57 AM Leave a Comment

August 22

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Events

1910Japan illicitly annexes Korea with the signing of the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty. The name Korea was abolished and replaced with the ancient name Joseon.

2-stor-jk-nr4-1985_small.gif

Births

1917John Lee Hooker, American guitarist and singer (d. 2001)

photo0006.jpg

Deaths

1978Jomo Kenyatta, first Prime Minister of Kenya (b. c. 1892)

ladokort_small.gif

Published in: on August 22, 2007 at 11:37 AM Leave a Comment

Vale Elvis

16-8-7

It was thirty years ago today, Parishioners

(a nod to another deceased member of royalty)

The Night The King died…

SO; moving things gradually to this new blog
I allow Seth to cut & paste from the old one.

Here is a photo:

The Warthog and The King

and here is some news:

76 Qld babies named after Elvis Presley

Thursday Aug 16 17:56 AEST

Queenslanders have named 76 newborn babies after Elvis Presley in the 30 years since his death, Queensland Attorney-General Kerry Shine says.
Mr Shine, whose portfolio responsibilities include the Births, Deaths and Marriages Registry, said it was obvious Queenslanders had not forgotten the man dubbed “the King”.
“Interestingly, the number of newborns named Elvis spiked in the 1990s with 35 sharing the name,” Mr Shine said.
“However, a more modest 21 newborns have been named Elvis this decade, with four of those last year.”
“Elvis Presley is an icon and obviously some parents have thought so highly of him to name their children Elvis,” he said.

and here is the old post:

Happy Birthday Elvis
8-1-7

It’s today, Parishioners, January 8th.

I remember The Day The King Died.

My buddy Macca brought in a black armband for me.

What’s this for?

Elvis Presley died.

We wore them all day
& everyone asked what they were for.

The King is dead we replied…

Some time earlier, my father had come back from the Big City
& brought me a present – an Elvis Presley double album.

Years ahead of Phil Lynott,
we went back to my place
& listened to the whole thing from beginning to end
(no wine, no gin in those days…)

acoustic Elvis

Here are some interesting facts from Wikipedia:

Elvis Aron Presley (January 8, 1935 – August 16, 1977), often known simply as Elvis and also called The King of Rock ‘n’ Roll or simply The King, was an American singer, musician and actor. He remains a pop icon and is regarded by some to be the most important, original entertainer of the last fifty years.

***

He was teased by his fellow classmates who threw “things at him – rotten fruit and stuff – because he was different, because he was quiet and he stuttered and he was a mama’s boy.”

…all the citizens’ councils in the South called Elvis ‘nigger music’ and were terribly afraid that Elvis, white as he was, being ambiguously raced just by being working-class, was going to corrupt the youth of America.
Elvis became “a symbol of all that was oppressive to the black experience in the Western Hemisphere”

The Roman Catholic Church denounced him in its weekly magazine in an article headlined “Beware Elvis Presley.”

Adult programmers announced they would not play Presley’s music on their radio stations due to religious convictions that his music was “devil music” and to racist beliefs that it was “nigger music.” Many of Presley’s records were condemned as wicked by Pentecostal preachers, warning congregations to keep heathen rock and roll music out of their homes and away from their children’s ears (especially the music of “that backslidden Pentecostal pup.”)

In August, 1956 in Jacksonville, Florida a local Juvenile Court judge called Presley a “savage” and threatened to arrest him if he shook his body while performing at Jacksonville’s Florida Theatre, justifying the restrictions by saying his music was undermining the youth of America.

John Lennon later observed, “Before Elvis, there was nothing.”

Elvis calling

Presley began his movie career with Love Me Tender which opened on November 15, 1956. The movies Jailhouse Rock (1957) and King Creole (1958) are regarded as among his best early films.
Altogether, Presley had made 27 movies during the 1960s, “which had grossed about $130 million, and he had sold a hundred million records, which had made $150 million.” Overall, he was one of the highest paid Hollywood actors during the 1960s. However, during the later sixties, “the Elvis Presley film was becoming passé. Young people were tuning in, dropping out and doing acid.

cowboy Elvis

After his divorce in 1973 Presley became increasingly isolated, overweight, and was battling an addiction to prescription drugs which took a heavy toll on his appearance, health, and performances. According to Anna Paterson, “binge eating led him to gain large amounts of weight. It wasn’t just the quantity of food that he was eating which caused the problems.
Elvis frequently consumed very high fat foods. His favourite meal was reportedly peanut butter and banana sandwiches grilled in butter. Another famous meal he enjoyed was ‘Fool’s Gold Loaf’. This was a hollowed out white loaf, drenched in butter and then stuffed with peanut butter, jam and bacon.
Coupled with a heavy prescription drug problem, this harmful behaviour caused Elvis to die at the age of only 42.”

Presley made his last live concert appearance in Indianapolis at the Market Square Arena on June 26, 1977.

On August 16, 1977, at his Graceland mansion in Memphis, Tennessee, Presley was found lying on the floor of his bedroom’s bathroom by his fiancee, Ginger Alden, who had been asleep. A stain on the bathroom carpeting was found that indicated “where Elvis had thrown up after being stricken, apparently while seated on the toilet. It looked to the medical investigator as if he had “stumbled or crawled several feet before he died.”" He was taken to Baptist Memorial Hospital, where at 3:30 P.M. doctors pronounced him dead. Presley was 42 years old.

At a press conference following his death, one of the medical examiners declared that he had died of a cardiac arrhythmia from an intake of a large amount of drugs.
In 1977 alone, his personal physician Dr. George Constantine Nichopoulos (usually referred to as Dr Nick) had prescribed 10,000 hits of amphetamines, barbiturates, narcotics, tranquilizers, sleeping pills, laxatives, and hormones.

When he died on August 16, 1977, it was a huge shock to his fans. However, it soon became clear that a combination of over-work, obesity, depression, bad diet and severe abuse of prescription drugs, accelerated his premature departure. However, much confusion, conflict, contradictions and general controversy still surrounds his death.

There is a belief in some quarters that Presley did not die in 1977. Many fans persist in claiming he is still alive, that he went into hiding for various reasons. This claim is allegedly backed up by thousands of so-called Elvis sightings that have occurred in the years since his death.

Two main reasons are given in support of the belief that Presley faked his death:

On his grave, his middle name Aron is misspelled as Aaron. Presley’s parents went to great lengths to remove the double ‘A’ on his official birth certificate after his twin brother Jesse Garon was stillborn

Hours after Presley’s death was announced, a man by the name of Jon Burrows (Presley’s traveling alias) purchased a one way ticket with cash to Buenos Aires.

…after his death, Presley had been seen by fans as Other Jesus or Saint Elvis.

Golden Elvis

In 1970 he wrote to J. Edgar Hoover requesting to join the FBI at the height of its campaign against political activism. In a letter that Presley wrote to Nixon, requesting that they should meet, Presley told the President he was a huge admirer of everything he was doing, and asked to be made a “Federal Agent at Large” in order to help get the country off drugs. Nixon duly made Presley a “Federal Agent at large” in the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, presenting him with the appropriate badge.

***

…a parallel industry, mostly kitsch, continues to grow around his memory, chronicling his dietary and chemical predilections along with the trappings of his wide celebrity. Many impersonators still sing his songs. “While some of the impersonators perform a whole range of Presley music, the raw 1950s Elvis and the kitschy 1970s Elvis are the favorites.”

check out my hunka hunka burnin’ package

According to the American Demographics magazine, 84% of the US people say that their lives have been touched by Elvis Presley in some way, 70% have watched a movie starring Presley, 44% have danced to one of his songs, 31% have bought an Elvis record, CD or video, 10% have visited Graceland, 9% have bought Elvis memorabilia, 9% have read a book about Presley, and 5% have seen the singer in concert. Not all of these people are Presley fans.

***

In her autobiographical article, Sexing Elvis (1984), Sue Wise even describes “how she came to terms with her lesbianism through a close identification with the feminine side of the King.” “Elvis’s ‘effect’ on young girls threatened those men who assumed that young girls needed to be protected both from sex in general and from its expression in questionable characters like Elvis in particular.” However, there were not only female fantasies directed at the star. According to Reina Lewis and Peter Horne, “prints of Elvis Presley appeared to speak directly to the gay community.”

According to Robert A. Segal, Elvis was “a consummate mamma’s boy, who lived his last twenty years as a recluse in a womblike, infantile world in which all of his wishes were immediately satisfied yet who deemed himself entirely normal, in fact ‘all-American.’”

However, one of the most frequent points of criticism is the overweight and androgyny of the late Las Vegas Presley. Time Out says that, “As Elvis got fatter, his shows got glammier.” It has been said that the star, when he “returned to Las Vegas, heavier, in pancake makeup, wearing a white jumpsuit with an elaborate jeweled belt and cape, crooning pop songs to a microphone … had become Liberace.

According to several modern gender studies, the singer had, like Liberace, presented “variations of the drag queen figure” in his final stages in Las Vegas, when he excessively used eye shadow, gold lamé suits and jumpsuits.
Although described as a male sex symbol, Elvis was “insistently and paradoxically read by the culture as a boy, a eunuch, or a ‘woman’ – anything but a man,” and in his Las Vegas white “Eagle” jumpsuit, designed by costumer Bill Belew, he appeared like “a transvestite successor to Marlene Dietrich.”

There are many, many Elvis sites
but these are a good start:

The Official Site

Elvis at IMDB

The Elvispedia

Honourable Mention to The Flying Elvi!

Long live The King!

Amen!

Published in: on August 16, 2007 at 1:18 PM Comments (3)

Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Lawrence anymore…

20-8-7

The Luvvery Interwebs
is a luvverly place indeed

One of my favourite sites is A Softer World

like she asked me to…

I signed up for the Notify List
and received this:

I can’t reread The Story of the Eye without wanting to write something
dirty. Have you read it? I found a PDF! You can get it here:
http://supervert.com/elibrary/georges_bataille

So I duteously went to Supervert and, in addition to TSotE
[haven't finished it yet - it's nice in small shots],
found Reality Studio!

I am talking to you…

August 2nd 2007 marks the 10th anniversary of the death of William S. Burroughs. In honor of the occasion, Lawrence.com offers an excellent commemorative edition of interviews, memoirs, and articles commemorating Lawrence’s most famous man of letters. (Where else can you read an anecdote like this one by Mr. Grauerholz? “In 1974, I went to some of these classroom meetings at CCNY, a creative writing class. And one of the students asked him: ‘Mr. Burroughs, how does it feel to be a genius?’ And he said: ‘You get used to it.’

Dead City Radio

In commemoration of Burroughs, you might also want to read about the 1997 memorial service, Timothy Miller’s eulogy, and Jim McCrary’s Remembering William Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg at George Laughead’s comprehensive Beats in Kansas.

I know it’s a little overdue, Parishioners,
but drop an Aspro&#trade; into your communion wine

and spare a thought for Wild Bull Lee

I shall be trawling these links until I am well sated.

Doctor Benway

Published in: on August 13, 2007 at 11:41 AM Leave a Comment

Genbaku

10-8-7

That, Parishioners, is Japanese.

The Celestial Bride
has departed

This So-Called Life™
has begun anew

It is dull -

but there are more important things:

The Hiroshima Experiment
Hiroshima – 6 August 1945


Nagasaki – 9 August 1945

Nagasaki - before

Lest We Forget

 

The Atomic bombings of_Hiroshima and Nagasaki

In the history of warfare, nuclear weapons have been used twice, both during the closing days of World War II. The first event occurred on the morning of 6 August 1945, when the United States dropped a uranium gun-type device code-named “Little Boy” on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The second event occurred three days later when, again, the United States dropped a plutonium implosion-type device code-named “Fat Man” on the city of Nagasaki. These bombings resulted in the immediate deaths of around 120,000 people and even more over time.

people melted

 

Plans for more atomic attacks on Japan

The United States expected to have another atomic bomb ready for use in the third week of August, with three more in September and a further three in October. On August 10, Major General Leslie Groves, military director of the Manhattan Project, sent a memorandum to General of the Army George Marshall, Chief of Staff of the United States Army, in which he wrote that “the next bomb . . . should be ready for delivery on the first suitable weather after 17 or 18 August.”

 

On the same day, Marshall endorsed the memo. “The problem now [13 August] is whether or not, assuming the Japanese do not capitulate, to continue dropping them every time one is made and shipped out there or whether to hold them . . . and then pour them all on in a reasonably short time. Not all in one day, but over a short period. And that also takes into consideration the target that we are after. In other words, should we not concentrate on targets that will be of the greatest assistance to an invasion rather than industry, morale, psychology, and the like? Nearer the tactical use rather than other use.”

Nagasaki - after

 

Now let’s spare a though for those hippocrites that made the whole thing possible

Einstein & Oppenheimer

then felt bad…

we who stay at home have our duties to perform

 

 

This guy is in a heap of shit!

A-bombings “couldn’t be helped” – Defense Minister Fumio Kyuma

Defense Minister Fumio Kyuma deserved to resign, survivors said Tuesday

kimono pattern burned into her flesh

 

 

that’s all there is to it…

 

The genbaku Dome

 

I wasn’t there then

 

 

one of the most beautiful buildings in Hiroshima Teh Whirl

 

But I have had a few beers here…

Published in: on August 10, 2007 at 2:42 PM Leave a Comment