Literary Up

(Literary Up is my new umbrella title for daily reviews of books, audiobooks and comic books here at www.scribblers.us)

Rogue Male

A cultured, suspenseful, lovingly labored reading of Geoffrey Household’s classic thriller Rogue Male can be heard this week on BBC Radio 4 Extra. This 1939 tale of political activism, tireless pursuit, sudden violent transgressions—and lots of anxious downtime—is one of my favorite novels ever.

Like its game-hunter hero, you can’t kill this book with a stick. Beside this reading, Rogue Male has been a film, a TV movie, a 90-minute radio play and an episode of the show Suspense. All are recommended.

The daily broadcast is now several chapters into the book, which has been divided into 15 episodes. BBC Radio 4 keeps shows online for a week following their first broadcast, so if you start listening today you can still catch episodes 7-12.

By Episode 8, we’re well past the hunter hero’s opening assault on the unspecified yet highly Hitlerian despotic world leader. A certain small town murder has also happened. We’re now into my favorite bit, where the protagonist literally goes underground, living in a self-styled rabbit hole, barely keeping ahead of his predators.

Michael Jayston has just the right haughty tone for this adventure. Household’s hero. (The character is never named in the book, though Fritz Lang’s 1941 film version Man Hunt calls him Alan Thorndyke. The star of the 1976 BBC TV version, Peter O’Toole, is credited simply as “Hunter”). The hunter has a self-confidence and air of superiority that would be insufferable were his exploits (told in the first person) not so worth bragging about. Jayston’s delivery maintains that cultured air. He’s never breathless or wild. He’s telling you, calmly and clearly, about that rather interesting time when he was on the run for attempting to assassinate a world leader.

Jayston’s heard as a “station voice” at BBC Essex besides his book readings, also recited a radio version of Household’s Rogue Justice, the years-later sequel to Rogue Male, which first aired in 2009.

Listening to…

JEFF the Brotherhood. We Are the Champions. I missed them live last week at The Space, and I’ll unfortunately miss them again tonight when they play at Eclectic Haus on the Wesleyan campus. This is the kind of album which advertises how wild and fun to watch the band must be live.

The instrumentation’s similar, and both acts are quirky, but JEFF have nothing in common with New Haven’s own long-established drum/guitar pop band The Furors. The Furors have old rock & roll influences, punk insouciance and adorably odd textures, like toy pianos, whistles and tuned metal pipes. JEFF the Brotherhood, plays sparse and heavy, with just three strings on Jake’s guitar countering Jamin’s constantly-in-use trio of cymbals and trio of drums.

At their most raucous, this fraternal guitar/drum duo sounds like Weezer trying to make do after all their instruments have been stolen. Even when they calm down and make room for “ooh-ooh-ooh”s, they’re still just seconds away from a two-man Sabbath-styled flare-up.

I’m going to tire of this quickly, but for now it’s bring me back to all those ‘90s bands like Too Much Joy or They Might Be Giants, having in-joke fun with whatever was close at hand.

Another Five or Ten (More singles from the Christopher Arnott record collection)

Found a bunch more splits in the basement—ten bands for the price of five.

Exit, “Turn Me On, Dead Man”/ 30 Amp, “Punk Virtuoso.” A very impressive West Coast punk split seven-inch, with all the packaging clichés associated with the era: doodles, superhero images, parodies of little ads in the backs of comic books… The sides could scarcely be more dissimilar. Exit’s “Punk Virtuso” is a well-written screed about poseurs, while 30 Amp’s “Turn Me On, Dead Man” uses the famous “Paul is Dead” audio clue as the title for a relentless drone (literally, one long burst of feedback) so rich and scary and well-recorded that it terrified my pet dogs.

Gone Daddy Finch, “Anything Done Tomorrow”/Gravelbed, “Driving High”. Speedy Midwestern indie pop with tinges of rockabilly. Int he ‘90s, it seemed that every other band touring through the poorer clubs in town had this sound. Did the Clinton administration cause it? (Nope. Never had saxophones.)

Eugene Chadbourne with Jello Biafra, “Overpopulation and Art”/ Eugene Chadbourne with Jimmy Carl Black, “Night of the Living Dead”/”Jicarillo Fence Dispute”. Chadbourne was a god to many musicians I respected. This 33 1/3 rpm seven-inch from 1994 is not his finest few minutes, but it certainly demonstrates his diversity, and the range of other artists who stood in awe in him. The Biafra collaboration is a sound collage which begins with a ‘phone message from a nurse telling Chadbourne his semen sample had no sperm in it. Largely spoken-art, with a prevailing theme of misunderstood artists, it ignores Chadbourne’s natural gifts as a musical improviser. That’s what the Jimmy Carl Black side is for—lots of experimental banjo, and not much getting in the way, led off with a variation of Black Uhuru’s anthemic “I am the living dread.”

Black Pig Liberation Front. “The Revolution of Everyday Life, Part Two”/ DOS with Denis Mahoney, The Revolution of Everyday Life, Part One.” Elegantly pressed on mottled vinyl inside a slick art-photo sleeve, this is a souvenir of an adorably pretentious era in sea-coast Connecticut rock. (The two-part, two-band opus is subtitled “a poprocket record of the literary renaissance.”) Gradual, moody, calming yet strident (when the lecturing vocals come in and out), the DOS side is the higher-concept issue-laden soundscape. It’s neatly teamed with Black Pig Liberation Front’s friendlier theory-jam, which sounds like it’s taking place around a hazy bong.

Robin Williams, “I Yam What I Yam”/Shelley Duvall, “He Needs Me.” Harry Nilsson’s songs for Robert Altman’s Popeye movie are so bizarre, you’d think he’d never scored a movie before, let alone written The Point. Having Nilsson’s atypically simple melodies overorchestrated by the brilliant Van Dyke Parks is a multi-styled mindfuck as colossal as was wrought by Thimble Theater, the absurb comic strip melodrama which unleashed Popeye back in 1929. The volatile Williams is actually cowed into submission by the swelling accompaniment, while Duvall shrill wail rises comically above it.

Rock Gods #194: Adventures in Our Little Music Scene

By Artie Capshaw

Modern Madcaps on the college charts! Modern Madcaps on the college charts!

The Abbott Mysteries and A&P Gypsies at the Bullfinch, all spightly and shit… 2000 Plus and (somehow skirting the “no drug references in band names” law) Add a Line

at Hamilton’s… weirdo unplugged folk nite at D’ollaire’s with Accordiana and The Acousticons. Any metalhead sleeping on the pavement for tomorrow night’s Frank Race/The Dick Coles show will be nauseated…

Listening to…

Relaxin’ by G-Side. In honor of Labor Day. Leisurely Southern two-handed rap with lush romantic slow-jams backing. This is, according to the NPR site where I found it, an unreleased track intended by G-Side’s last album, The One… Cohesive, which came out in January.

Sliced Dragon


The girls sculpted this “dragon bread” (with bonus baby lizard spawn), inspired by the old crafts manual Making Things Book 2—A Handbook of Creative Discovery by Ann Wiseman (Little Brown, 1975) which we found in a used book store in Vermont over the summer.
I like how it looks, but, to tell the truth, it doesn’t taste like dragon at all.

Rock Gods #193: Adventures in Our Little Music Scene

By Artie Capshaw

How many gelatin shots can you do?
…while singing?
…a duet?
If your name is Pud Large of The Chocolate Covers, and it was last Friday at the Bullfinch, the answer is five.
The song? “Softie.” The jiggly liquor fixes punctuated the “doo doo doo”s of the chorus.
Next question: How many more songs until the effects of such a public display begin to reveal themselves? By our estimation, two. Unfortunately for all, an opening band hadn’t materialized, so The ChocCos were expected to do an extra-long set, which they were only halfway through.
Did they make it to last call? Barely. Did they maintain the respect and admiration of the crowd? Yes, but only by offering us all gelatin shots of our own so we wouldn’t be jealous.
There were only seven of us there, see. Probably the reason Pud was so loose and sloppy in the first place.
There was a bit of a food fight. Then everybody wobbled home.

The Sheraton Armchairs and The Bannister Backs, an unusually high-end gig at the Bullfinch. The bands were “looking for a comfortable, intimate spot in a dark corner” between stops on massive multi-band supertours… Roy Croft and The Hepplewhites and The Savonarolas, cover bands from an earlier generation, at the cover-band mecca Hamilton’s… The Rohlfs at D’ollaire’s, with Frank, Lloyd & Right opening. Cool booking, but who’ll go with all that wonderment at the Bullfinch?…

Listening to…

These United States, What Lasts. Playing Sept. 21 at BAR. When the band really gets into it with the vocalist, as on the album closing “Water & Wheat,” I dig this a lot. The guitars buzzsaw into the mix, the drums rise atop the clatter, everyone’s pushing towards a spiritual revolt. When the singer’s left to his own devices, I’m turned off.