Showing posts sorted by relevance for query william Burroughs. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query william Burroughs. Sort by date Show all posts

Sunday, June 19, 2005

ARCHIVE: MEETING WITH BURROUGHS AT THE CHELSEA


 



















This is the first publication of a [slightly amended] piece that was commissioned by the Sunday Times for publication on October 3rd, 1982. The story was 'spiked'. The internet links have been added as an exercise in what I'm calling 'expanded journalism.' The original text for this piece was typed on flimsy paper on a IBM golfball typewriter.

"We're in for a bad time," says William Burroughs in his slow drawl, giving one of his unnerving dry laughs. He's sitting in an armchair next to an old roll-top desk on a small private balcony above the snooker room and bar at the Chelsea Arts Club in London.

Neatly dressed in suit and tie with a fairisle jumper of bloodless shades of brown and grey, he's never still. He tweaks his trousers, pulling specks of imaginary dirt from the seams, constantly changing his position, his mouth twitching in a series of grimaces which [appear to] signal disgust, irritation, impatience and anger at the alien world he finds himself in. Polite but distant, he has hard eyes and the ability to appear as if he's not really there.

He's in Britain to give a series of readings from his latest as yet unpublished work ' The Place of Dead Roads,' which begins as a Western but is basically about outer space. The way he croaks the title springs images of catus, mesas and dried-up river beds instantly to mind.

An enormous cultural revolution has taken place since Burroughs sprang to notoriety with 'The Naked Lunch', still a wellspring of inspiration and he is now considered by many to be America's greatest living writer, an accolade he finds "gratifying." Such dry understatement suits a man whose life and work have become legendary and whose influence can be traced throughout post-war culture.

William Seward Burroughs was born on February 5th, 1914 in St Louis, Missouri. Grandson of the man who invented the hydraulic device on which the adding machine is based, he and his brother Mortimer grew up in comfotable circumstances. His father owned and ran a glass business, his mother a gift and art shop; she once wrote a book on flower arranging for the Coca-Cola Company.

A shy and awkward boy who always felt alien, he was sure he wanted to be a writer from the age of eight because "writers were rich and famous." His first literary essay was called 'Autobiography of a Wolf.'

At the age of 15, he was sent to Los Alamos Ranch School where he discovered gay sex, writers like Gide and Wilde, and petty crime before heading for Harvard, where he majored in English literature " for lack of interest in any other subject."

He visited Europe in the 1930s, studied psychology and married to get his wife Ilse out of Nazi-occupied Europe. Back in the US, he held down a variety of colourful jobs (including private detective and cockroach exterminator, and became the mentor and companion of Beat writers Kerouac and Ginsberg, with whom he experimented with a wide variety of drugs.

On September 7th, 1951, while living in Mexico City, he accidentally shot and killed his second wife Joan Vollmer, while attempting a William Tell-style stunt. Although he spent some time in jail, his lawyer managed to get him out and he left for Tangiers. Here he became heavily addicted to injectable methadone, necessitating a 10-day apomorphine cure by Dr Dent in London. (Keith Richard recently took the same cure with the late Dr Dent's assistant Smitty).

During the Sixties, Burroughs was in and out of London but had no contact with the 'Swinging London' scene. In fact he began to have less and less contact with the outside world at all and became a virtual recluse. It was old friend Allen Ginsberg who came to London in 1973 and arranged for him to give a course of lectures on writing at the City College of New York. His spirits and reputation revived, Burroughs has said: 'If you're still there after the fear, then you've got courage, baby, that's all. If you're not, then you're dead.'

Until recently he lived in the Bunker, a converted YMCA locker room in New York's Bowery district but has now moved to Lawrence, Kansas, where he intends to stay. "The days of the expatriate writer are over", he claims. Here he plays with guns (he thinks the gun control lobby are 'nuts') and steadily adds to the impressive and strange body of work he has produced over the last thirty years.

Genet and Beckett are the writers he most admires, along with Conrad who, like Burroughs, didn't begin writing until he was 35.

But it's Denton Welch, an obscure writer and "original punk", that Burroughs rates as the "single greatest influence on my work." He immortalised him as Audrey Carson in his novel 'The Wild Boys.'

[Welch was knocked off his bike by a car at the age of 20 and factured his spine. According to Wikipedia: 'Although he was not paralyzed, he suffered severe pain and complications, including spinal tuberculosis.' This led to his untimely death in 1948 at the age of 35. He wrote three novels, 200,000 words of Journals, some sixty short stories and a large number of poems. He was also a prolific artist.

Burroughs biographer Ted Nelson comments: 'Burroughs identified with Denton Welch, thinking of him almost as an alter ego, and memorising passages of his books. Both Burroughs and Welch had become writers as the result of a terrible accident.']

[This photo is taken from 'Denton Welch: The Making of a Writer' (Penguin Books. 1986) by Michael De-la-Noy, his longtime companion.]

Burroughs says: "If I have any politics, I'm definately an elitist. Very few people are good at anything. Politics seems to be the one area in which stupidity and ignorance are brazenly advanced as qualifications for office. It's very much a political convention in America.'

Precision is important in the world of William Burroughs. He hates imprecision in language and claims that, if he hadn't gone into writing he would have worked in medicine or as a CIA agent. The challenge for him is "the fact of doing something that demands you be there all the way."

This willingness to boldly step outside society's established rules and social mores has led him in strange pathways. His major themes encompass time travel, dreams and hallucinations, ritual murder and piracy, alien life and Mayan culture, gay boys and psychic science, viruses and weaponry, junk and addiction, conspiracy and control.

He sits at the centre of a vast web of connections, transmuting and experimenting wiuth language and with himself, drawing together scattered influences from all branches of art and science. "I think science and technology are a very considerable major influence on my work and I feel it would be a good thing. If writers became more scientific and scientists more imaginative. There shouldn't be this dichtomy here at all which, in point of fact, doesn't exist."

William Burroughs is a cat-man who likes wild dogs, who believes biological warfare is probable and that space is the only place where we have a future. He is the real thing.

Footnotes to this story:
1. The interview actually took place on September 28th, confirmed by the date in the signed copy of 'Junky' [above]. The original tape was burnt to a crisp in an office fire but fortunately there is a more or less complete written transcript by Tanya Seton in the files. Just debating whether to put up the whole interview on this blog. Here is an extract from the start:

JM: I was interested in this thing that John Calder wrote in his introduction to 'A William Burroughs Reader' [Picador, 1982] about the influence of T.S. Eliot on you, your fascination with his work and the fact that you'd been born in the same town as him. [Calder wrote: 'T.S. Eliot was teaching at Harvard at the time and Burroughs' fascination with the poet, who was to influence his style, method and subject matter, stems from those years.' See Calder's Obituary of Burroughs.

WB: I was very impressed with 'The Waste Land.' He was a very, very great poet and that, in a sense, was an early cut-up, very successful. I never met him personally.

JM: Didn't he teach you at Harvard?

WB: He gave a seminar at Harvard. I heard him talk once - a very good speaker.
[Nelson writes: T.S. Eliot gave the Charles Eliot Norton lectures that year [1932/33], one of which Billy attended. It was on the Romantic poets, whose excesses Eliot found deplorable...Although disgreeing with his thesis, Billy found Eliot's talk humorous and well presented. Eliot gave weekly teas which Billy passed up. having heard that they were awkward affairs, with noone knowing what to say, while Eliot was polite and donnish.'

JM: Did his ideas on writing influence you in any way ?

WB: I wouldn't say so, just the writing itself. What were his ideas on writing ?

JM: I'm not sure but 'The Waste Land'....

WB: That was terrifically important - not only significant but also intrinsically beautiful piece of work. I often find myself sort of quoting it or using it in my work in one way or other.

2. In The Archive are two letters, both dated 10 May 1983. One was to Roger Ely, one of the organisers of the Final Academy (see below). It was sent with an edited partial transcript of my interview. The second was to Burroughs in Kansas: '

Last October when you were in London, I came to interview you for the Sunday Times. I enjoyed our meeting and I wrote what I considered to be a reasonable piece, I was met with dumb excuses as to why they wouldn't use it (the usual sad story at that paper) and the piece never appeared.
Happily, through the B2 people - Roger Ely - I have written up the interview in a different form, for publication as part of a book to be published in Europe. (Further details I do not know but it sounded good at the time)
For your own interest/archives I am enclosing a copy. Hope this letter finds you in good health and that the writing continues to continue.
I never got a response. The book never happened as far as I am aware.

3. Burroughs was in England for an event called The Final Academy. I went to launch party which I believe was at the B2 Gallery, Wapping Wall, London E1. Here is an account by Paul Tickeil in The Face [No.29, September 1982]:

'Whether you like William Burroughs or not is an irrelevance: he's simply there, a cultural presence, a massive influence not just on the prose of the Sixties, Seventies and Eighties but on over two decades of performance art, experimental film and music, and pop culture - the Beats to Bowie to punk and beyond.

The scope of this achievement should be represented in a forthcoming festival/event, The Final Academy. One of its organisers Roger Ely hopes that, by using artists who've been inspired by Burroughs' work, the affair will move beyond backward-looking homage to a vital assessment of future cultural developments.

Although, then, the meat of four evenings at the Ritzy cinema in Brixton (Sept 29 & 30, Oct 1 & 2) will be readings by the man himself and longtime friends and collaborators Brion Gysin and John Giorno, there'll also be contributions from Jeft Nuttall, performance artists like Paul Burwell, and groups like 23 Skidoo and Cabaret Voltaire. There'll also be the first outing of Genesis P-Orridge's Psychic TV, not to mention films by the late Anthony Balch.

Footage which Balch shot in Tangiers, New York, and London (Burroughs lived off Piccadilly in the early Seventies) will be shown continuously at the B2 gallery in Wapping (Sept 27 to Oct 24) as a further component of The Final Academy. Video installations will be accompanied by Gysin's Dream Machine kinetic sculpture, all sorts of visual material, manuscripts and first editions etc. The exhibition will also be accompanied by a 60-page catalogue - the contributors ranging from poet and academic Eric Mottram to Face writer Jon Savage.

The Final Academy has been largely financed by publishers and plenty of material is being released to coincide with it, including Victor Bockris' With William Burroughs: A Report From The Bunker (Hutchinson) and The William Burroughs Reader (Picador) edited and introduced by John Calder, whose own company has done so much to promote the writer. Ely is sure that the whole event will shake off any shackles of artiness and turn into a substantive engagement with many of the themes in Burroughs' work and those that take their cue from him.
http://www.brainwashed.com/axis/burroughs/academy.htm
See also: Denise Murray. Vox 13, October 1982
Have discovered in the Archive the original press release for this event.


4. There is amusing story connected with this interview. On that day, arriving slightly ahead of time, I decided to sink a pint in the pub at the end of the road for some dutch courage, if nothing else. While I sayt there reviewing my questions, a friend of mine journalist Mick Brown swung in the bar with a worried look on his face and ordered himself a pint. When he sptted me he came over looking like a man in trouble. What's wrong, I said. Seems his interview with Burroughs was a disaster. Burroughs had stolidly refused to answer questions or responded in monosyllables and Mick had a big assignment for The Guardian and had no idea what he was going to do. This, as you can imagine, made me slightly nervous about the prospect ahead. The irony of this was that Mick, being the consummate pro that he is, managed to fashion and excellent piece which ran over three-quarters of a broadsheet page in The Guardian soon afterwards. My interview went like a dream but my story got spiked.

5. Note to young journalists: Rereading this piece all these years later, there's three fatal flaws about it. The ideal interview profile piece manages to blend three elements: biographical back story, as much original quotes as possible (this is what makes your piece exclusive) both melded together with enough mis-en-scene material to make you feel that you were in the room. This piece fails on all of these counts. The facts are not all correct (see below), there are very few original quotes and a lot of the ones that are used are too short. If you're going to quote, concentrate on complete sentences rather than one or two words in quotes. Apart from the opening para, there is no sense of atmosphere. For me it was a singular and magic experience but I didn't manage to communicate that on the page. I was 32 at the time and still learning.

6. Spent sometime checking facts with Ted Morgan's hefty biography 'Literary Outlaw: The Life and Times of William Burroughs,' written in 1988 and first published in the UK in 1991 [The Bodley Head]. According to Matthew Levi Stevens: 'Ted Morgan' is the pen-name of one Comte St. Charles Armand Gabriel de Gramont - a Yale educated, Pulitzer Prize winning son of a French nobleman who fought with the Resistance in WWII, later becoming a diplomat. Apparently he was a fixture of the expat community in Tangier - I think a friend of John Hopkins, of 'Tangier Diaries' fame - and through him met William & Brion Gysin. He'd previously written a biography of Winston Churchill, apparently well regarded.'

a) Burroughs was named William Seward Burroughs II to distinguish him from his grandfather of the same name (1857-1898). Seward was the name of Lincoln's far-sighted Secrtary of State, says Nelson, who bought Alaska from the Russians. W.S. Burroughs was the father of the adding machine as a whole.
See: Nelson and also Michael Hancock's 'Burroughs Adding Machine Company: Glimpses into the Past History - 1857-1953

b) Burroughs spent 13 days in jail over the accidental shooting of Joan. He spent the next two years wandering through Mexico and Columbia before arriving in Tangier in 1954 on or around his 40th birthday.



Other Links:
Struggles with the Ugly Spirit by James Campbell (August 4, 1997)
The Last European Interview with William Burroughs by Philippe Mikriammos (pub. Spring 1984. Originally conducted 4 July 1974)

Sunday, May 08, 2016

MENTORED BY A MADMAN: THE WILLIAM BURROUGHS EXPERIMENT by ANDREW LEES + THE YAGE LETTERS and THE AYAHUASCA BOOM

It would be hard to overpraise this remarkable and intriguing book and difficult to know where to begin to explain why.

Neurologist Andrew Lees is one of the most respected leading world experts on Parkison's, a condition which he has devoted much if not most of his adult life to, trying to understand its weird particularities and discover new healing strategies to dampen, if not cure, its most disruptive effects.

We follow the events that led him to choose neurology and he, in turn, leads us into the intimate, finest details of the human brain and how Parkinson's works its destructive force.

A deep drinker of experience and knowledge, he is advised by a senior neurology professor to study the thinking and working practices of Sherlock Holmes and to read Proust. 


Lees' training involved intense and detailed observations and reports on patients - every reflex and gesture, use of language, part of body - monitored and documented. Parkinson's is very personal and requires a complete holisitic approach as it manifests itself in a myriad of forms and conditions. 

Parkinson’s disease is caused by a loss of nerve cells in part of the brain called the substantia nigra. This leads to a reduction in a chemical called dopamine in the brain. Dopamine plays a vital role in regulating the movement of the body and a reduction in dopamine is responsible for many of the symptoms of Parkinson's disease.

Lees was great friends with the late Oliver Sachs whose book 'Awakenings' documented the discovery and use of L-DOPA - the first breakthrough treatment which increased dopamine concentration in the brain with dramatic results. It seemed at first to be a miracle cure but, over time, it proved to have peaks and troughs (on/off cycles) and to lose its initial potency. A better way had to be found to continuously stimulate the dopamine system.


Lees did study Holmes and gained from the experience but where does William Burroughs come into it the story. Spookily, Ginsberg, Kerouac and others likened 'Old Bull Lee' (Burroughs) to a real-life Sherlock Holmes. Lees documents the similarities in appearance and lifestyle and the obvious differences:

'Burroughs was peripatetic, addicted to narcotics and more anarchic. Holmes preferred chemistry whereas Burroughs' forensic investigations embraced telepathy and extra-sensory perception. I now saw Burroughs more as a freelance investigator researching anthropology, psychology,l biology, sociology and neuroscience in an attempt to accurately inform his fiction.'

It was Burroughs that, time and again in Lees' life, provided him with deep truths, uncanny tactics and fresh thinking as he wrestled to a deeper understanding of the puzzle of Parkinson's. After all, Burroughs had tried a bewildering range of mind altering and enhancing drugs, had been a full blown junky, and had survived to become a leading documenter of strange worlds and dimensions. He understood addiction and he was able, in highly crafted language to communicate his visions and experiences.

Burroughs had been cured of his junk addiction by a doctor in London who administered a cure involving a drug called apomorphine.

Lees writes: 'Sometimes in my dreams I was in the belly of a whale, watching three dimensional vibrating plankton glide by. One night sitting on the sea bed with a telescope, a diatom with a familiar benzene ring and two hydroxyl groups and a rigid side chain supported by thee carbon rings, unfurled before my very eyes. This was apomorphine and I was convinced it has appeared as a direct consequence of my re-reading of 'Naked Lunch'. 

Lees experimented with a volunteer group of  patients and apomorphine proved to be a powerful remedy for the complications of advanced Parkinson's sufferers. Despite this, says Lees, 'it failed to capture the public imagination or interest the scientific press'.

Burroughs fascination with the natural pharmacopoeia of the Amazon jungle, in particular Yage (now much better known as ayahuasca) led Lees at the age of 66 to make his own journey to the Amazon. He writes: 

'Hallucinogenic molecules could open up frightening new vistas of exploration and, if Burroughs was right, my trip to the Amazon would lead me to unimagined cures. I wanted to see whether yage could infuse my monochromatic research canvas and open up vivid new scientific perspectives.'

Here in the Amazonian port of Leticia in the far south of Colombia, he imbibed the dark liquid:
'As I lurch from bedroom to the bathroom my body seems to be creating lurid serpentine tints that zip across the wall like electric storms. I feel invisible raindrops on my arms as I am propelled on a beautiful aquamarine tide. In the gleaming of day I now know that rational consciousness is parted by the thinnest of films from illusion and dream. Seeing things that are not there can occur in the blind, the bereaved and even in waking dreams. The innate knowledge of the Amazon Indian assisted by the ritual use of sacred plants has given me second sight.  I understood for the first time how during hurricanes, chairbound victims of Parkinson's disease can magically override the poltergeist and escape to safety. The plant teachers...had shifted my understanding of reality. I could now see into my own mind.'
Burroughs was interested at one point in being a doctor and his writings are populated by scary medical types including the uber-figure of the dreaded Doctor Benway. Lees shares his distrust of short-sighted governing bodies, medical authorities and pharmaceutical companies who have, it is plain, blocked many areas of valuable research. 

Burroughs, he writes, 'realised that science was blinding medicine and healthcare was ripping off its customers. I shared his view that the blunt rationalisation of society's control mechanisms was arresting human development and had started to cause self-harm and destruction of the environment.'

This shining gem of a book is irradiated with a deep-seated love and care for humanity. Andrew Lees thoughts, musings, investigations and adventures will touch your heart and open your mind. He has succeeded in erasing the purely arbitrary line between literature and science, has provided convincing evidence of Burroughs seminal influence in so many fields, and has created a classic work that will resonate and excite enquiring minds for decades if not centuries to come. Respect!

FOOTNOTE:


This book is, incidentally, beautifully produced - creamy paper, graceful typography, stylish red and black text -  something that is true of all Notting Hill Editions, a bespoke publisher devoted to the Essay form. Their website contains a valuable and accessible Essay Library which contains 100 examples free  to view. As to what constitutes an essay, Ophelia Field writes:
'The essays vary considerably in length, from one-and-a-half to over a hundred pages. Rather than setting a word limit, we think of Michael Holroyd’s definition of essays as ‘non-fiction short stories’ and so identify an essay in the same spirit as a publisher distinguishes short story from novella. Some cases, certainly, are debatable.'




BURROUGHS & GINSBERG: THE YAGE LETTERS



An original copy of 'The Yage Letters' documenting the correspondence between Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs re their journeys and experiments with yage - as documented in the back cover notes (above). This is a a City Lights book [2nd printing/May 1965] in the Beat section of The Generalist Archive. I sat on a bench in the sun and more or less devoured it in one sitting (68pp), It is a wonderful ride. The main part of the book are Burroughs letters as he scampers across Latin America in search of the real yage and the secrets it holds. He must have had a remarkable constitution judging by the number of illnesses he picks up, strange meat he imbibes, his diet of various forms of native alcohol and substances, He survives incarcerations in police cells, violent bistros and dangerous muggers, taking all in his stride, This is 1953 in frontier towns in which death hovers round every tree and corner.
Seven years later, in 1960, Ginsberg writes to Burroughs after imbibing yage  (Ayahuasca) in Peru. never one to mess around, Ginsberg has a full-blown series of revelations in which he faces Death and says he 'felt like a snake vomiting out the universe.' After, later, he writes to Bill: 'I don't know if I'm going mad or not and it's difficult to face more - tho' I suppose I will be able to protect myself by treating that consciousness as a temporary illusion and return to temporary consciousness when the effects wear off.'.

Burroughs responds: 'There is no such thing a fear....You are following in my steps. I know thee way. And yes know the area better than you think. Tried more than once to tell you to communicate what I know. You did not or could not listen. 'You can not show to anyone what he has not see.'

Significantly he also introduces him to Brion Gysin's idea of bringing collage to the written composition, thus ushering in Burroughs 'cut-ups' which underpins his seminal work 'Naked Lunch'. He writes: 'You want 'Help'. here it is. Pick it up on it. And always remembere: 'Nothing is True. Everything is permitted.' Last Words of Hassan Sabbah The Old Man of the Mountains.'

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I had tea with William Burroughs at the Chelsea Arts Club in London [28th September 1982] and met Allen Ginsberg at Barry Miles' flat in London [25th April 1985], the same week I read a biography of Walt Whitman.


SEE PREVIOUS POSTS: 
Both Posted 19th June 2005]




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AYAHUASCA TODAY



Since those pioneering days, the taking of Ayahuasca has become a worldwide phenomenon.

Ayahuasca, also known as yage, is a blend of two plants - the ayahuasca vine (Banisteriopsis caapi) and a shrub called chacruna (Psychotria viridis), which contains the hallucinogenic drug dimethyltryptamine (DMT). DMT - and therefore ayahuasca - is illegal in the UK, the US and many other countries.

Ayahuasca: The South American shamanic brew which creates out-of-body experiences

Ayahuasca is most commonly consumed as part of rituals designed to communicate with celestial supernatural forces



Why do people take ayahuasca?

British student Henry Miller, 19, died in Colombia after apparently consuming the traditional hallucinogenic drink ayahuasca, or yage. Emma Thelwell, who took the drug herself, explains why it has become a rite of passage for some backpackers.[Excellent piece from BBC online magazine/ 29th April 2014]

A shamanic detox in Sussex
You may not see strange visions of celebs, but an ayahuasca shamanic healing session can leave you mentally and physically rebooted. Stephanie Theobald/The Guardian Friday 12 August 2011

Monday, November 28, 2011

THE HISTORY OF THE BEATS

BEATS1006
I have Neil to thank for, out of the blue, arriving at my house and giving me this book. As regular readers will know, I have a deep-seated love for the writers and poets of the Beat Generation, forged in my teen years. I was privileged to meet and interview Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs and to engineer (with my son Al) a live internet link-up with Lawrence Ferlinghetti from San Francisco to the Komedia club in Brighton. The many and varied beat posts on this blog are summarised below. I have a big library of beat literature and have read extensively and religiously much beat and beat-inspired texts, biographies and historical accounts. So…
For my money, this is the single best history of the Beat Generation that I have ever read and I will explain why. The story of the Beats – both the main characters and an extremely large supporting cast – is complex. They were, apart from everything else, almost constantly on the move. They were restless souls and tormented ones – constantly falling in and out of relationships. Many of them were bisexual and slept with each other in between or at the same time as maintaining relationships with women.
Out of this emotional maelstrom, out of their wanderings, missions and adventures not only on the highways of America but also in the jungles of Mexico, the medinas of Morocco,  the Beat Hotel in Paris, the Buddhist monasteries of Japan and the streets of Varanasi, allied with their almost constant experimentation with drugs of varying descriptions and illegality, flowed a body of work that continues to inflame minds and spirits and has great relevance in our own times.
BEATS1010
BEATS2011 BEATS3012
BEATS4013
Treasures from the Beat Library of The Generalist Archive: ‘Beatitude Anthology’ [City Lights. 1960]; first issue of the ‘City Lights Journal’ [City Lights.1963]; First edition UK paperback of ‘The Subterraneans’ by Jack Kerouac [Panther. 1982]; First edition of' ‘The Last Words of Dutch Shultz’ by William Burroughs. [Cape Goliard Press. 1970]
This book will rearrange your understanding not only of the Beat movement but also of the times and politics they moved through. One book, Big Sky Mind, argues that the Beats were the transmission apparatus for introducing Buddhism and eastern thinking into America. The beats in their own time were vilified by the mainstream media, arrested and imprisoned, often deported.
Bill Morgan has done a really wonderful job of integrating all this ferment  into a seamless readable narrative, formidably well-informed and beautifully written. He brings out the humanity of these characters as they battled with their demons and is, by and large, non-judgmental. He has given shape and context to the Beat Generation story and communicates it in a way that makes sense to succeeding generations. These were the pioneers of a revolution in poetics, politics, social mores, activism, communal living, backpacking, altered states of consciousness. Their collective work is like a deep well of inspiration that has great resonance in these troubled times.
Bill Morgan is the American author and editor of more than a dozen books about the Beat writers and has worked as an editor and archival consultant for nearly every member of the Beat Generation.
BEATS2008 His UK equivalent is Barry Miles, who was close with both Burroughs and Ginsberg and has written biographies of both them and Kerouac. He has also acted as an archivist  and in 2003, co-edited the revised text edition of Naked Lunch. His latest book ‘In The Seventies’ (following on from his excellent ‘In The Sixties’ a period during which he was close with Paul McCartney, ran the Indica Bookshop and was one of the founders of International Times) adds more to his Beat reminiscences.
Particularly good are his accounts of Ginsberg’s upstate New York commune and adventures on the West Coast plus Burroughs’ early ‘70s sojourn in London (seriously weird). Miles was sound-editing Ginsberg’s tape archive in the Chelsea Hotel and there’s an interesting chapter on another of the Hotel’s residents, the strange and wonderful genius Harry Smith. Also learnt a lot from the chapter on Wilhelm Reich, inventor of the orgone box.
The Typewriter Is Holy by Ted Morgan [Free Press 2010]
In The Seventies by Barry Miles [Serpent’s Tail 2011]
SEE ALSO:
The Sea Is My Brother: The Lost Novel by Jack Kerouac
See IMDB details of the cast and production credits for the ‘On The Road’ movie, directed by Walter Sallis, due for release 2012.
PREVIOUS POSTS
2011
2008
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The Beat Library [New additions]
2005

  • ARCHIVE: MEETING ALLEN GINSBERG
  • ARCHIVE: MEETING WITH BURROUGHS AT THE CHELSEA
  • W illiam Burroughs & T.S. Eliot Fighting in the Ca...
  • Saturday, February 09, 2013

    BEAT NEWS

    A long time coming, ‘On The Road’ the movie has flashed through the cinema screens and is due out on DVD at the end of this month. Caught one screening but as yet not able to study in detail. So first impressions: much better than I expected. I liked the main players –  Sam Riley as Sal Paradise (Kerouac) and Garrett Hedlund as Dean Moriarty (Neal Cassady). They have style and guts and are the best portrayals of these two beat characters to date. In many ways the film is a companion piece to ‘The Motorcycle Diaries’, director Walter Salles’ previous film on Che Guevara. As in that film you have two main male characters off on the adventure of a lifetime. There’s lots of road travel and stunning landscapes. One character is quite bookish, the other is obsessed with girls (and guys). There’s loads of cafes, restaurants and bars shot lovingly in warm tones and the movie is full of great cars and period details. If I knew nothing about The Beats i don’t know how much I would grasp. Vigo Mortenson turns up as William Burroughs but who he you might wonder if you didn’t know. As you are probably aware, the version of On The Road that was first published was heavily censored. It is only in recent years that the full uncut scroll version of the book has been generally available. The film seems to stem from that as there is lots of sex and drugs in this. Its a long ride (perhaps overlong) with a lot to take in. The film is beautifully shot but perhaps it has too much of a rosy glow and not enough stark grittiness. Look forward to a second viewing. See more here on the film’s website.

    There is a good Wikipedia entry on the long history of attempts to make this movie. I was unaware that Kerouac wrote a letter to Brando suggesting he play Dean Moriarty with Kerouac playing himself. Now that would have been a stunner. I knew Coppola had held the rights since 1979 but didn’t know he had Ethan Hawke and Brad Pitt initially lined up for it. Apparently, as preparation for the film, Salles made a documentary Searching for On the Road, in which he took the same road trip as the lead character in the novel and talked to Beat poets who knew Kerouac. That would be great to see. The movie got mixed reviews although most were unanimous in praising Hedlund’s full-on performance.

    *

    As chance would have it, just received a rental of ‘Gang of Souls: A Generation of Beat Poets’, directed in 1989 by Maria Beatty. The whole film consists simply of interviews and readings by the following: William S. Burroughs, Gregory Corso,  Allen Ginsberg, Diane Di Prima, Anne Waldman, John Giorno, Richard Hell, Marianne Faithfull,Lydia Lunch, Henry Rollins and Jim Carroll

    The filming is largely very unflattering to the individuals concerned. The lighting is harsh and many of the participants do not look at their best. The editing is very basic. But the film is still of real interest. Its rare to see Corso, Di Prima and Ed Sanders and Jim Carroll (of ‘The Basketball Diaries’ fame). Richard Hell looks and sounds great but Lydia Lunch, Anne Waldman and John Giorno just make me wince. Its stretching the term Beat Poets to include  Marianne Faithfull but what the hell.

    *

    GINSBERG1031

    Left: Sketch for Presspop figurine, designed by Archer Prewitt, sculpted by Kei Hinotani.

    A new biography of Allen Ginsberg by Steve Finbow has recently been published by Reaktion Books in their series ‘Critical Lives’. [see Previous Post review of Charles Bukowski bio in the same series]

    Finbow, who is apparently an ‘Extraordinary Senior Lecturer’ at North-West University in South Africa, has fashioned a fast-paced highly condensed chronological narrative of Ginsberg’s Life and Works in some 200pp.

    An achievement in itself given the vast ocean of material that Ginsberg himself produced – not only his poems but also his journals, correspondence, photos etc – documenting himself and his colleagues in intense detail. Add to that another oceanic outpouring of writings about GInsberg which includes several extensive biographies by Barry Miles, Michael Schumacher and Bill Morgan that Finbow fulsomely acknowledges.

    Its an exhausting read. Ginsberg was a restless spirit, constantly working and travelling the globe, lecturing and weaving a vast network of contacts. Finbow does an efficient job of documentation with a list of referenced sources and an extensive bibliography and the book serves a useful role of providing a introductory overview of his extraordinary life. From the books intro:

    ‘Ed Sanders writes that it ‘might be interesting to do a Total Biography of Ginsberg….perhaps a day-to-day bio, maybe 25,000 pages long’….in the belief that sometimes ‘an eight-hundred-page biography is nothing more than dead conjecture’ [a quote from Don DeLillo], I offer you one a quarter of that size in the hope of re-animating, for a time, a complicated, passionate and ebullient life.’

    The book is a useful complement to two others:

    GINSBERG2032 GINSBERG3033

    ‘Screaming With Joy: The Life of Allen Ginsberg by Graham Caveney [Broadway Books/New York. 1999] provides a shorter skate through AG’s achievements and adventures accompanied by a wealth of great images.

    ‘The Poetry and Life of Allen Ginsberg: A Narrative Poem’ by Edward Sanders [ The Overlook Press. Woodstock. 2000] is what it says – a remarkable book-length documentary poem. I love this book.

    *

    BEAT CINEMA1034

    BEAT CINEMA2035

    Whilst researching the above, came across this copy of The ‘Naked Lens: An Illustrated History of Beat Cinema’ by Jack Sargeant [Creation Books. 1997] A revised edition (2009) is now available from Soft Skull Press. Its a true cult classic containing much undocumented material and original interviews.

    The book was launched with a showcase of Beat movies, selected by Jack, as part of a brilliant Lewes Live Literature event ‘The Savage God’, organised by Mark Hewitt, which ran from June 26th to July 10th 1999. I was asked to give an introductory talk on Sunday July 4th appropriately. Jack was present and, as I recall, talked about each film before it was shown.

    The programme which ran through afternoon and evening featured the Robert Frank film ‘Pull My Daisy’, a Ginsberg documentary, Peter Whitehead’s famous ‘Wholly Communion’ about the 1965 Albert Hall poetry event, two of the legendary short films of Anthony Balch featuring William Burroughs, and the cult movie ‘Chappaqua’ by Conrad Rooks which was fascinating.

    *

    STOP PRESS

    News of what sounds like a really great documentary on Lawrence Ferlinghetti. Entitled Ferlinghetti: A Rebirth of Wonder’, directed by Christopher Felver. Read article here and see trailer here. Thanks to BIGFUG for the tip-off.

    A complete list of all Previous Posts on Beat Culture, including my original interviews with William Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg can be found summarised here.

    THE HISTORY OF THE BEATS

    Wednesday, July 25, 2012

    BEAT CULTURE: BRION GYSIN

     Brion Gysin

    Regular readers of The Generalist will know that one of the consistent features of this blog over the last seven years has been Beat Culture. I was fortunate in the 1980s to interview both William Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg but I was entranced by the Beats from my late teens onward and remain to this day a beat aficionado. 


    So naturally I know about Brion Gysin or at least I thought I knew until, thanks to Matthew Levi Stevens, I was turned on to this remarkable 72-minute documentary by Nick Sheehan on Gysin's life and times entitled 'FLicKeR' on the UBUWEB site - a truly amazing repository of arcane/occult/cult material in which its easy to get lost for hours - be warned.
     Gysin's reputation has always been overshadowed by Burroughs all-pervasive presence and achievements yet it was he who invented the 'cut-up' technique that Burroughs made his own. 

    Brion Gysin staring into the Dreammachine. Photo entitled 'Flicker' was taken by Ian Somerville in Olympia, Paris in 1962.
     He also invented the Dreammachine (with the help of Ian Somerville), the first work of art designed to be experienced with your eyes closed - a radical piece of art technology capable of giving you a drugless high by stimulating the brain's alpha waves. 

    He also discovered the Master Musicians of Jojouka in Morocco, running a nightclub where they played regularly, and enabled Brian Jones to make a legendary recording of them. [I have a rare if slightly battered copy of the original 1971 vinyl release on Rolling Stones Records - now a collector's item. Just discovered it was rereleased in a deluxe package in 1995.


    Trailer for a film enitled 'The Master Musicians of Joujouka Brian Jones 40th Anniversary Festival 2008', directed by Daragh McCarthy. Not clear wjhether it has been released yet.


    What I didn't realise before was his accomplishments as an artist. At the of 17 he joined the Surrealists but his work, which was inclued in a major Surrealist show that also featured work by Picasso, was withdrawn at the last minute after Andre Breton expelled the young man from brotherhood. His in-depth study of Japanese calligraphy and Islamic art lie at the roots of his visual expression.


    The film includes contribution from such luminaries as Iggy Pop, Marianne Faithful, Kenneth Anger, Genesis P. Orridge, Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth, and John Giorno amongst numerous others, and contains remarkable archive footage. Its a stunning production but - be warned - this is not for the faint-hearted or for those prone to a reaction from flickering lights.


    Extraordinary to discover that a) at one point Phillips the electronics company were interested in the Dream Machine and that b) W. Grey Walter, the cybernetics pioneer, was also interested in the 'flicker effect' and its stimulation of the brain waves.


    As if this film was not enough to take on-board, Gysin's work is further illuminated by a wonderful website that provides a valuable showcase of his life and achievements: http://briongysin.com/


    So I now understand Gysin in a larger way I think that we are only now beginning to really grasp what an important figure he was - or rather is  - because his work continues to have a huge influence.


    Fire-damaged front cover of Gysin's Moroccan-based 
    novel, a hardbacked 1st edition copy which I bought
    in a Harrod's book sale in 1971. I strated re-reading
    it this morning and its recpatured my imagination.

     Gysin remains an illusory figure with many identities and personnas who operated at the meeting point between science and art, the occult and the arcane, blending cultures, exploring other dimensions. In the same way that Marcel Duchamp influenced developments in modern art, Gysin's thoughts, artworks, projects and ideas permeate the networks of our electronic culture. He and Burroughs anticipated the Age of Control we live in and devised tools and methods to subvert it and gain true enlightenment.

     

    The work of Matthew Levi Stevens and his partner Emma Doeve can be found at http://whollybooks.wordpress.com/ 

    Stevens' booklet 'The Forgotten Agent & The Magical Universe of William S. Burroughs', describing his own experiences in the 'Chaos Magic' scene of the 1980s and his meetings with Burroughs and Gysin, is available for purchase from the site.




    FOOTNOTE:


    A major documentary on The Beat Hotel is due for release at the end of this year. More details on the Gysin site and here: http://www.thebeathotelmovie.com/



    For the full list of Previous Posts on the Beats, see The History of The Beats. This post is also tagged under Beats.

    Monday, May 30, 2011

    IRA COHEN: IN MEMORIAM

    image 

    The Legacy, Ira Cohen (1935-2011)

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    William Burroughs captured in 1966 by Ira Cohen in his Mylar Chamber built in his New York loft

    Ira Levin was a prolific multimedia artist and traveller who created a constellation of connections between The Beats, underground artists, writers, theatre people, filmmakers, occultists, poets. There is some wonderful material on him in this collection of links:

    Psychedelic Photography by Ira Cohen on chillipaprika , an excellent showcase of his wide-ranging photographic work.

    October Gallery. Photo showcase of the work exhibited there from 29 November 2007 to 26 January 2008

    Chris Salewicz’s obituary in The Independent

    cohen.jpg

    Ira Cohen (1979) by Gerard Malanga. Source: John Coulthart’s wonderful blog Feuilleton

    View Cohen ‘s short psychedelic, avant garde film “The Invasion of Thunder Bolt Pagoda” here.

    ‘Ira Cohen made phantasmagorical films that became cult classics. He developed a way of taking photographs in mesmerizing, twisting colors, including a famous one of Jimi Hendrix. He published works by authors like William Burroughs and the poet Gregory Corso. He wrote thousands of poems himself. He wrote “The Hashish Cookbook” under the name Panama Rose. He called himself “the conscience of Planet Earth.” But his most amazing work of art was inarguably Mr. Cohen himself’

    Ira Cohen, an Artist and a Touchstone, Dies at 76. Obituary/New York Times

    Ira Cohen: The story of a Storyteller

    Ira Cohen remembered on The Allen Ginsberg Project

    image

    Image from Ira Cohen’s film ‘King of Straw Mats. See more of his varied work at bigbridge.org

    Friday, June 10, 2005

    The Second Coming of Terry Southern

    Rediscovering TS has been one of the surprises of this year so far, triggered off by finding Lee Hill’s ‘A Grand Guy: The Art And Life of Terry Southern’ [Harper Collins 2001]

    Once upon a time Terry Southern was the coolest of the cool, the hepcap of the hips, the Grand Guy. Novelist, screenwriter, first-class raconteur, by all accounts Terry was one of the funniest men you’d ever wish to meet. For a time he ruled, networking with a number of stellar groups of movers and shakers on several continents during the 50s and especially the 60s, Terry helped define the times and then fell from grace. No more Chateaux Marmont. He couldn’t get hired. He died broke in 1995 and now if you bring his name up in conversation people, depending on their age, will either look wistful or blank. Who he? Hence the need for the Second Coming of Terry Southern.

    In brief: Born in 1926 in Texas, a state of mind he never completely shrugged off, Terry fought in the Battle of the Bulge, then enrolled at the University of Chicago and later Northwestern before moving to Paris in the 1950s where he wrote his first novel ‘Flash and Filigree’ (1958) followed by the infamous ‘Candy’ with Mason Hoffenberg (1960), later made into ‘The Erotic Adventures of Candy’ in 1978. Then came London in the Swinging Sixties and Big Bad Hollywood.

    Terry S. wrote the screenplay for ‘Barbarella’ and co-wrote ‘Doctor Strangelove’ with Stanley Kubrick and ‘Easy Rider’ with Dennis Hopper and Peter Fonda (which he also named). How about that for credentials. He also co-wrote The Loved One with Christopher Isherwood and The Cincinnati Kid with Ring Lardner Jr (starring Steve McQueen).

    He turned his novel The Magic Christian into a screenplay for a movie that starred Peter Sellers and Ringo. His novel Blue Movie has proved as yet unfilmable but it’s vision of a mainstream porno film is slowly coming to pass. Later he worked on the legendary US tv series ‘Saturday Night Live’.

    You can find him wearing sunglasses (in the second to back row at left, just above Tom Mix’s big white cowboy hat) on the cover of ‘Sergeant Pepper’ (Interesting article on the cover at http://www.occultebooks.com/essays/fb/fb2.htm)

    He was a first class journalist for Esquire, covering the 1968 Chicago Riots alongside William Burroughs, John Genet and Norman Mailer. A collection of fiction and reportage is contained in ‘Red-Dirt Marijuana and Other Tastes’.

    Perhaps the best single introduction to his work, apart from the novels themselves, which are all now back in print, is ‘Now Dig This: The Unspeakable Writings of Terry Southern’, an excellent anthology edited by his son Nile Southern and Josh Alan Friedman, which contains one of the best pieces on William Burroughs I have ever read.

    It is easy to see now that TS was one of the great experimenters and stylists who anticipated New Journalism before there was such a term. He certainly anticipated the gonzo of Hunter S. Thompson. he has also been termed The Father of Contemporary Black Comedy, which is also true. He was way ahead on many levels.

    His humour was refined but saturated with lurid and unacceptable thoughts which he expressed in a manner that is completely politically unacceptable. If you want to experience it raw then try and get hold of ‘Give Me Your Hump: The Unspeakable Terry Southern Record’ which features, amongst other things, a bravura reading of an extract from ‘Blue Movie’ by Marianne Faithful. [2001. Paris Records. KOC-CD-8299]

    Hope this inadequate summary gives you some sense of the man and intrigues you enough to check him out. You won't be disappointed.

    LINKS

    Check Terry’s full movie credentials at:
    http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0816143/

    One of the single best sites on TS and his work Don’t miss in particular the long essay by Charles Zigman ‘Adventures of an Ultra Fab Prof: Terry Southern at Columbia University.
    http://www.terrysouthern.com/

    An excellent collection of articles on his life and work from the ‘New York Times’
    http://www.nytimes.com/books/01/06/17/specials/southern.html

    Interesting review of the two biographies from The Texas Observer
    http://www.texasobserver.org/showArticle.asp?ArticleFileName=010803_dimming_the_southern_star.htm