William Burroughs knew what was happening before it happened. He sensed the fragmentation, the fissures spreading from some cultural San Andreas Fault, and he did his best to express it with the tools he had - typewriter and scissors. Teens hearing God in rock n' roll didn't wait for salvation, they punched the car radio buttons, cutting up the narrative - we want the world and we want it now. TV remotes enabled the visual equivalent, an optic restlessness mirrored in avant-garde film editing. The phenomenon coincided with the fractured vision of LSD. The confluence, the crucible, the fractal fringe of the fun zone®, was LA pop culture, an alchemical fusion of art and commerce not seen before or since. Maybe the people would be the times.
Three albums reflected and created the times; Van Dyke Parks' Song Cycle, Brian Wilson's SMiLE, and Zappa's Lumpy Gravy. Recorded simultaneously, each explored new studio techniques to break the flow, to shuffle and reshuffle the familiar into the unexpected, the bizarre, and the beautiful. And the funny. That's something often forgotten. Jokes are the first to the wall in the kultural putsch - you can see it happening now - woke is no joke. Smile is not a frown. Song Cycle's best gag is that it contains no songs at all. Lumpy Gravy is both a broken mirror reflecting LA, and an extended pants-down snork at its pretensions.
It's also worth noting that none of these albums was inspired by, or referred to, or needed, the "British Invasion," and that the over-regarded Beatles were already several steps behind the West Coast. Pepper, played after these, sounds like what it is, a Hallmark greeting card from a week in Hashbury. A little patchouli scenting the toytown vaudeville, but essentially business as usual. These three revolutionary albums blew the business model apart, a new American Gothic, a stained glass window constantly shattering into multi-colored shards.
Song Cycle was originally to be called Looney Tunes, a title that reflects its cartoonish playfulness, and I've given it a cover which combines LA's high society with its low humor.
Mono and stereo Song Cycle re-upped by request.
Van sheepishly recounts his daughter's quip after hearing his born-before-her masterpiece: "More like 'Song Psycho', Pops"
ReplyDeleteVDP: When I played the album for Joe Smith, the president of the label, there was a stunned silence. Joe looked up and said, "Song Cycle"? I said, "Yes," and he said, "So, where are the songs?"
DeleteOver-produced, plastic music made by rich white men, looked at one way. Fantastic music, looked at another.
ReplyDeleteApart from Song Cycle and some production and arrangement for others, VDP loses me completely. But Song Cycle is now woven seamlessly into in my genome string. Did you know it uses Farking?
ReplyDeleteA long, long time ago, I posted a fake VDP lyric to a Beach Boys forum, claiming it was genuine. Someone actually managed to get it to him, and asked him if he wrote it. VDP thought about it and said, "I think I did." I got his email address and wrote saying I did it as a hommage. We exchanged a couple of emails, I sent him my book, and that was it. I don't remember the lyric, except for the "tag", which was the thing that convinced VDP he'd written it:
"Adobe, ado, adobe, ado ..."
And there was some stuff about carriages crossing the dimming hall, but it's all lost, lost ...
great story...
DeleteDear FT3/4-5 guys:
ReplyDeleteMay I aks yr opinion/s
Am i onto something here in this i think unique song finishing approach
[other than potential legal bills?] One's perennial obscurity helps dispel such fear haha...
-this quick albeit 'you cant do that!' solution to needing lyrics when th' instrumental output exceeds the notebook's jottings?
https://georgeelliott.bandcamp.com/track/lets-spend-some-time-together
https://georgeelliott.bandcamp.com/track/dmc
https://georgeelliott.bandcamp.com/track/kick-2
Th-th-thanks 4ne feedback
[i searched vainly for sending personal private message to FT to aks if this ok to post...] hit delete if not
the VDP connection holds a possible relevance, considering my current output kinda him-esque/Dykey!
I dink 2-3 listens may get a ripe listener hummin the tunes a new way jose
I've always thought of Van Dyke Parks as more of a martial artist than as a musician. His style is one of broken rhythm and meter and he is a master of both. That eventuality only made him seem quirky and fuddy duddy but he is the only guy doing it and he is formidable. Perhaps his mentor was Carl Stalling. The three links in your comment do sound as if you've got (VD)Parks and recreation in your system. Don't fight it. Be the gentle breeze that calms the violent wave! The connection is already there.
DeletePerefctly fine and welcome to post your own music here, ge! I like the earworm melodies, but I've never been a fan of the keyboard sounds you use. As to the lyrics - what you're doing is fun, harmless, and maybe makes you hear them in a new way, so why not?
DeleteThanks KC & FT! yr comments sent to our appreciation society for review.
DeleteI hate to say it, but WHAT the heck were they doing up in Laurel Canyon?
ReplyDeleteDid Augustus Owsley live up there and keep all the best stuff for his neighbors? Those 3 albums might just be the Lookout Mountain Rosetta Stone Triumvirate. To complicate matters, I was always partial to VDP Disc Over America and MOI Absolutely Free...while trying to figure out Brian Wilson's legend from McCartney's love of Pet Sounds. Regardless, it was obvious that the hub was somewhere near Los Angeles. Unlikely threesome with unlikely wisdom that went over the heads of most...but for a few unlikely listeners. What's going on up there?
Technical Trivia:
ReplyDeleteThe Eagle And Me(Track 13 on Stereo version of Song Cycle) is a bonus track which only appeared on the Ryko edition of the album.
An acquaintance of mine, who is a pianist, was approached by VDP out of the blue, who offered to curate sort of a greatest hits album for him, that featured various choro songs that the pianist had already recorded across several different albums. Tom McDermott, the pianist, thought it was an imposter pulling a prank at first, but it turned out to really be Parks and they did release the album, Bamboula.
ReplyDeleteHaving never met VDP, I know that he looks unassuming...
Deletebut, in conversation, he would be easily identified!
That is a COOL footnote for two cool dudes and their pianos!
I'm not sophisticated--or really even literate enough, despite being a proud product of the Louisiana public education system--to get VDP or cool enough for the Laurel Canyon crowd (though lawdy, lawdy my 85 year old mother adores them yet), but I gotta cop I tried one time to teach Burroughs in my Secret History class heavy on rhizomes and TAZs and it was simultaneously a hoot, a disaster, and tbh passing brillag. One of those kids--a West Texas Amarillo Republican boy who ended up a lawyer in NOLA--wrote me a few years ago to say that 15 years later Burroughs was still fucking with his head.
ReplyDeleteIt's this-type comment that makes today's homes so different, so compelling.
DeleteYour Secret History class?
Honestly kinda hard to know where to even begin....maybe I could submit the summer letter I send them as one your sites vaunted pieces of prose.
DeleteAcademia is a weird place when you can get away with it....
Not sure, but I don't think I ever received this?
DeleteThis oughta' be fun!
ReplyDeleteIt's fun all right. But try explaining what fun is to someone who wasn't around to have it while it was there to be had.
DeleteHello, and might this be the subject of a re-post, if files are still available? Thanks in advance!
ReplyDeleteD in California
Four-album BlisterPak™ here:
Deletehttps://workupload.com/file/q2Vu3wf9GSu
(VDP only)
DeleteAny chance of re-up of the BlisterPak? Thank You for your work? It makes my day easier.
Deletehttps://workupload.com/file/NBjrwVFhSSe
ReplyDelete(mono/stereo Song Cycle - go elsewhere for Lumpy Gravy/SMiLE)
Howdy pardner,
ReplyDeleteWonderful - dare I say one one wonderful opine on Mr. Parks among others in that golden time period of 66 to 68, when anything seemed possible sonically. When I was a little feller I remember thinking that Sargent Pepper was the be all to end all, and then through a way longer story I was introduced to We're Only In It For The Money, The Electric Prunes first long player, and Silver Apple's Contact. I'm not sure what was played first as the rest of that Easter Sunday is a little hazy. After that evening any hopes of being a captain of industry were pretty much shot. Also, that next day I kinda' started to figure out The Beatles were a rip, I didn't like them but I liked the sound of Sargent Pepper. Years later as my exposure to other interesting music grew I came to regard SP as Kiddie Concrète with elements of Martin Denny (you call it Indian music, George? I call it Quiet Village).
The Miss,' ever the tacit one, looked up from her Choctaw knitting and said while Palm Desert was playing; "You know, he's saying 'fuck you' to Brian here". And now that she pointed that out, I can't get it out of my head. I guess Columnated ruins domino ain't just speed induced lyrics after all...
Anyhow - thank you again and the mono version really is the way to go.
As ever,
Billy Gates of the Doubble X Ranch.
I keep mono copies of everything in case I get one ear torn off in a fight with a rottweiler.
DeleteVDP more or less gave up writing lyrics shortly after, getting "Fred Martin" or Martyn Kibbee in.
ReplyDeletejust passing by and your opening salvo made me stop cold old man burroughs and farquhar combined
ReplyDeleteit's an interesting blend of intelligence and humor which is what drew me to music and the arts in the first place...it certainly wasn't taught and it wasn't inherited i had to step outside my comfit zone and seek them out
i'm still searching and finding both .occasionally i find it here when i stop long enough to look
the woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.
woody
I had this, back in the 80s. Can't recall a thing about it, so I'll give it a chance. At the time, I thought the high point of western civilization was Flipper's 45 version of "Sex Bomb" (not the overly complex LP version). Time change, so do I.
ReplyDeleteMy private connections with VDP.
ReplyDelete1. I Bought "Song Cycle" red wax Japanese Original LP when it's released (they say sold only 25 copies)
2. I saw him live at McCabe's in Santa Monica (audience included Eric Idle and Bette Midler).|
3. I met him and interviewed in 2001(?) in L.A. he was kind and easy-going.
4. Met him again at Beachwood Market, he was chatting with Cathy Bates.