weeknight sound track
Monday 1am-3am

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It's 1am. Late. You really should go to bed.

But not yet. Should check your email.


No email.


Well, since you're here, might as well check E2.......




"Lost in the Funhouse" - Prickly

The New Pornographers - "The Slow Descent Into Alcoholism"

"Disseminated" - Soul Coughing

Promise Ring - "B is for Bethlehem"

"Teen Death" - Syrup USA

The Breeders - "Huffer"

"The Operation" - Thinking Fellers Union Local 282

Heavenly - "Nous Ne Sommes Des Anges"

"Only in the Movies" - Plumtree

Dolly Mixture - "Side Street Walker"

"By The Way" - Built To Spill

Dear Nora - "Everyone's The Same"

"The Way You Look" - Damien Jurado and Gathered in Song

Jale - "Ali"

"Cars and Parties" - Edith Frost

Gillian Welch - "Elvis Presley Blues"


You rub your eyes. You watch as the minute hand nestles itself between the 1 and the 2. It's gotten later. You'll just finish the writeup you're reading. Then bed.

"Losing End" - Fuzzy

Broadcast - "Message From Home"

"Amelia Earhart Vs. The Dancing Bear" - The Handsome Family

Barbara Manning - "Stain on the Sun"

"Sermon of the 12 Acknowledgements" - The Badger King

Sissy Bar - "Mello 73"

"Girl in a Box" - Blake Babies

Papas Fritas - "People Say"

"Wedding Day" - Rosie Thomas

Jason Loewenstein - "Let Yr Guard Down"

"Off You" - The Breeders

Amoebic Ensemble - "UubU"

"My Dreamgirl Don't Exist" - Neutral Milk Hotel

Yo La Tengo - "Autumn Sweater"

"The Piston and the Shaft" - Thinking Fellers Union Local 282

The Verlaines - "Death and the Maiden"


Holy monkey's bottom. It's 3. How did that happen? You blinkingly stand. Gaze at the screen. Turn the computer off. Shuffle off to bed.


Sleep.

Lost in the Funhouse is a collection of short stories by noted author John Barth. It is surreal, postmodern and absolutely absurd, at the same time as it is down-to-earth, realistic and steeped in mythology.

A blurb on the back cover of my edition summarizes the majority of the stories very nicely. It (the Washington Post, no less) says basically that Barth elevates daily life to the level of mythology and brings mythology down to the level of daily life. A cursory glance at the table of contents:

  1. Frame-Tale
  2. Night-Sea Journey
  3. Ambrose His Mark
  4. Autobiography
  5. Water-Message
  6. Petition
  7. Lost in the Funhouse
  8. Echo
  9. Two Meditations
  10. Title
  11. Glossolalia
  12. Life-Story
  13. Menelaiad
  14. Anonymiad

"Frame-Tale" is just that--a story which, along with a few others, forms the backbone of the stories (they are mostly unrelated otherwise). Though this is not explicit or obvious, Barth seems to be presenting the stories as being told within the context of the Frame-Tale.

These stories deal with unusual concepts; it is hard to give examples without compromising plot. The strangest thing about the collection is that it is designed as a sort of cyborg audiobook. Barth, in his foreword, explains that some of these stories are best listened to on tape as reenactments, some best conveyed by a "Read by the author" style, and some best read directly from the page. He has a good point--the auditory "imagery" here is very strong, especially in (unsurprisingly) "Glossolalia."

A very interesting collection; I would highly recommend it to anyone who is interested in the roots of postmodernism (before it became a lifeless, soulless shell).

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