Unauthorised item in the bagging area
Showing posts with label charles bukowski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charles bukowski. Show all posts

Friday, 17 October 2025

Outside Another Yellow Moon

A conversation about Tom Waits last weekend directed me to this track by Akira The Don, a track with a borrowed vocal, Tom Waits reading Charles Bukowski's The Laughing Heart, a poem about existence, fulfillment and finding light among the darkness- 'Your life is your life/ Don't let it be clubbed into dank submission/ Be on the watch/ There are ways out/ There is light somewhere...'

I read Bukowski's Ham On Rye in the summer, a semi- autobiographical novel based partly on his own teenage and young adulthood in Los Angeles in the 1930s and 40s- it's a grim read in many ways, the young Henry Chinaski not fitting in at school or the private college his father sends him to, and he pulls no punches in his first person description of school brutality, domestic violence, masturbation, alcohol, terrible acne and indifferent doctors and the growing misanthropy of Chinaski (a thinly veiled Bukowski). That Bukowski wrote an existential poem that concludes there is light somewhere is remarkable given how dark much of his writing is. 

The Laughing Heart

Akira The Don adds piano, a jazz club feel and some very lazy hip hop drums, all very sympathetic to Mr. Waits. I then remembered that 100 Poems used the Waits vocal for Song For Claire (Your Life Is Your Life) on their 2024 album Balearic As A System Of Belief. 

It got me looking through my collection for more Tom Waits. I've posted this before but it's always worth a re- post, Tom Waits' Closing Time spliced with Allen Ginsberg reading his poem America, a Ginsberg peak, the young Allen looking around at the nation and his life- 'America/ I've given you all and now I'm nothing'. 

America features the use of a racial slur which was part of Ginsberg's America and very much not acceptable now. 

America (Closing Time)

Tom Waits is in a way one of the last links to the Beats, an artist in the Kerouac, Ginsberg and Burroughs tradition. His bohemian life and scenes from the underworld/ underbelly of American society street poetry seems very 20th century now, a dying art form in some ways. I can't think of many artists existing in the same milieu- those that do, Jim Jarmusch say or Bob Dylan (also a Beat inspired writer), won't be around forever. David Lynch departed earlier this year- his music fitted into a Waitsian world. 

I don't have a huge amount of Tom Waits, I never committed to going the full hog. I used to have Swordfishtrombones on cassette but I didn't replace it after my cassette collection got slimmed down in the 90s, probably something I should rectify. I had a copy of Mule Variations too but can't find it now. Mule Variations came out in 1999- I was amazed it's that long ago. I always loved this piece of weirdness and neighbourly paranoia, What's He Building?

I do have Rain Dogs, Tom's 1985 album, often lauded as one of his best. It's got the full Waits range of carnival music, Weimar oompah, jazz, experimental rock and blues, New Orleans funeral marches, various styles of outsider music stitched into a whole. Rain Dogs was written by Waits in a basement room in Lower Manhattan in a two month period in the mid- 80s. He wandered round the city with a tape recorder taping sounds and noises which he then layered guitars, marimba, trombone, piano, accordion and banjo on top of and made drumbeats out of banging pieces of furniture, drawers from cupboards and cabinets. Sometimes the album's madness, variation and cacophony is too much- I have to be in the mood for it. But peppered among the underbelly pieces and bursts of chaotic noise are some of his best loved songs too- Time, Hang Down Your Head, Downtown Train. 

Clap Hands is the second song on Rain Dogs, with uneven pots and pans percussion and Tom narrating the lives of New York's dispossessed.

Clap Hands

Hang Down Your Head was released as a single, a song with a proper structure that nodded to his earlier work, Waits at his most direct and songwriterly, that gravel voice accompanied by electric guitar. 

Hang Down Your Head

9th And Hennepin finds itself in the gutter with broken umbrellas and dead birds, a girl with a tattooed tear and the train going by, an NYC Beat Generation blues poem. 

9th And Hennepin

Downtown Train is one of his most famous songs, covered by Bob Seger, Rod Stewart and Everything But The Girl. Tom's song has Robert Quine playing a wonderful electric guitar part (Quine turned up at Bagging Area last week playing guitar on Lou Reed's The Blue Mask). Downtown Train has become a classic and for good reason.

Downtown Train

Friday, 6 December 2024

Music For Warmer Climes

Friday 6th December. It doesn't get much less Balearic than northern England in early December, the same awful Christmas songs on rotation in every shop, pub and public place, dark all day and wet or cold- or wet and cold. Thankfully there are people out there releasing music to transport us from our wintry festive hell to somewhere much warmer. A Mediterranean round up for today, a trio of late 2024 Balearica transmissions.

We'll start with Cantoma and a single that came out at the end of November that has become a proper earworm for me. There were 250 hand numbered 7"  singles but alas they've all gone so it's digital only. First Nothing (Noche Espanola Remix) rumbles in with warm prodding bass and then some clipped, muted guitar notes, fluttering synths, long washes of synth chords, piano... It's a mid- tempo sundowner, the perfect shuffling, head nodding groove. On the flip Phil Mison provides an ambient mix, a gorgeous stripped back version. You can get both at Bandcamp

Over at Apiento's Bandcamp there's a new remix of his 2010 classic The Orange Place- it came out on vinyl in late November, the original version paired with Castro's Cosmic Orange Dub. You can get both digitally here. Castro's Cosmic Orange Dub is eight and a half minutes of downtempo Balearic splendour, ideal for home listening, a dubbed out version that gets quite intense, the rhythms picking up, FX swirling around and the eastern melody lines drifting in and out. The original mix is a much loved and much played track round these parts and was one I think I first heard on Andrew Weatherall's 2012 compilation Masterpiece (which hasn't featured in the Bagging Area V.A. Saturday slot yet but really should).

Lastly Mike Wilson's 100 Poems has lit up 2024 three times with a triptych of albums, all of which have featured at this blog. Today there's another new 100 Poems album, this one called Love because as Mike says 'love is what the world needs more than anything'. The album is out at Bandcamp today, a live album recorded at a showcase gig in Dublin in October. Mike released Song For Claire (Your Life Is Your Life) onto Soundcloud a few days ago- you can listen here. The song has taken on a new life for Mike since he recorded it as a tribute to a friend, Claire, who sadly died earlier this year. The words are from a Charles Bukowski poem called The Laughing Heart- 'Your life is your life/ Don't let it be clubbed into dank submission/ Be on the watch/ There are ways out/ There is light somewhere/ It may not be much light but/ It beats the darkness'. At this point in darkest December we could all do with a little light.  

Thursday, 26 September 2024

Balearic As A System Of Belief

Mike Wilson's Dublin based 100 Poems has already released two albums this year- Everything's Balearic When You Believe and Everything's Possible When You Balearic. Last week he released a third, Balearic As A System Of Belief. Mike shared one of the tracks with me in an unfinished form a couple of months ago but the work he's done since then and the music he's created for this third album is something else, going beyond the day- glo, downtempo, feelgood, anything goes songs from the first two and heading off in new directions. 

Mike's in love with the creative process- the empty page, the blank track- and the sense that anything is possible, the process of sitting down and starting with nothing but ending with something a little while later. Balearic As A System Of Belief covers the range of human emotion, from love and euphoria to grief and sorrow with Mike's irrepressible love of life shining through on each and every one of the seven tracks. The opener, In This Cosmos Everything Has A Place, takes the words of Sadhguru and a speech about the interconnectedness of nature, insects, worms, people and animals, the planet's survival, the solar system, the smallness of the human race, and the entire cosmos, and sets them against some widescreen acid house, throbbing and whooshing synths, piano, big drums, sirens, timpani, rattling hi hats, and a dozen more elements besides. 

The second song, Elonna, She Brings The Sun is blissed out and wide eyed, with sunshine dappled acoustic guitars, sweeping strings and ecstatic, deeply in love vocals. It's followed by Song For Claire (Your Life Is Your Life), a song dedicated to and named after a recently lost friend, Claire, and borrows Tom Waits reading Charles Bukowski's The Laughing Heart- 'Your life is your life/ Don't let it be clubbed into dank submission/ Be on the watch/ There are ways out/ There is light somewhere'. Strings and guitars, synths and horns, whispers and tears, and 'a tiny piece of acid house has gone to heaven...'

The use of sampled voices continues with the next two songs. On Come, Hear Me Now, rumbling rhythms and the hiss of hi- hat bring a different feel to the album, some darkness and moodiness thunder in- until a flute breaks in and suddenly we're off again, up in the blue skies, a guitar line singing the lead. The voice, when it arrives, is that of Mikey Dread (from Break Down The Walls in 1980), bringing the reggae toasting and Jamaican vibes. Dubmobalearicswithmybreaksman moves us from Jamaica to Los Angeles and Jim Morrison in 1969, discussing blues and folk and American music, with a skittering drum beat, chopped up sounds, and distorted guitar. 'Rock is kind of dying out', says Jim, 'soon, they might be relying heavily on electronics and machines' (an interview and sample that made an appearance coincidentally earlier this year on Jezebell's Weekend Machines EP).

From the heavy sounds of Dubmobalearicswithmybreaksman Mike changes gear again on Peace, Love And Dancing, straight ahead party music, Sly And The Family Stone style, with big analogue bottom end, clipped guitar and 70s funk horns. Balearic As A System Of Belief comes to a close with Until Next Summer, acoustic guitar and the pitter- patter of a drum machine, echo and an angelic vocal, ending with the fading sound of a lone trumpet. 

The pair of albums 100 Poems released earlier this year both had loads of highpoints, with tunes to enjoy and a feelgood vibe. This latest album moves Mike's sound on again, with a wider range of sounds and a different feel, the sonic and emotional net being cast wider and further. 

Balearic As A System Of Belief is at Bandcamp where you can pay what you want- as Mike says, 'give what you can afford, if you can't afford anything, no problem please download and enjoy this album and I wish you better times'. Any monies raised will be donated to Women's Aid and The Suzy Lamplugh Trust