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[personal profile] imomus
I'm spending the day on ICE trains, getting from Berlin to Holland, then performing in the evening, wearing funny clothes and making stuff up.



I planned to give Click Opera a holiday today, but at the last minute I thought I'd post this photo and ask you, dear reader, to make stuff up yourself: a short (fifty words or so?) narrative related in some way to the picture.

I won't say anything at this stage about what the photo is, who took it, who's in it, where or why it came about. Think of it as a Rorschach onto which you can project whatever you like -- a rumination, a story about the characters, a joke, a piece of philosophising, a weather forecast, a sci-fi scenario, a haiku, a fashion report. Be creative, be kind, give me something interesting to read when my iPod crackles to life in the Dutch wifi!
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(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-27 11:44 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
"go fishing willy,todays a good day... we caught one each".said jeanny cruickshank, peterheads fish and reindeer specialist.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-27 11:54 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Grandmother could not believe what the reindeer had done.
Normally the beasts would not fish with their antlers in the estuaries,
but it was mushroom season on the taiga, and
even the children knew what magic that might bring.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-28 01:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] subalpine.livejournal.com
Welcome to the Low Steppes, Nick! The thought once struck us to move our own herd out there, but I must report that we have some doubts remaining about this Double Density (http://imomus.com/doubledensity.html) you have written of. Please patiently await our forthcoming response on the merits of One-Thousandth Density, and by all means leave us a comment!

And do thank Hisae for her new blog suggestions! We are still enjoying the Ojiisan/Obaasan blog she recommended previously, and this leads to the photo we enclose for you today.

Ever since we saw Obaa-chan's post (http://sesenta.exblog.jp/3654623/) on ayu fish:
Image
our mouths have been watering!

Well, it occurred to me that the name of this Japanese fish sounded curiously familiar.... Could it be that this Japanese word (http://starling.rinet.ru/cgi-bin/response.cgi?single=1&basename=/data/alt/japet&text_number=+709&root=config) is cognate with an Altaic form, as suggested (http://starling.rinet.ru/cgi-bin/response.cgi?single=1&basename=/data/alt/altet&text_number=++58&root=config) by Professor Starostin? I wondered.
Could this could be the same fish known to our Evenki friends as the aǯin and to the Nanai as aǯị?

Well, as you can see from the photo, we have secured one of the ingredients already. Tomorrow we head across the steppe and into pine forests searching for a tree bearing apples as delicious in appearance as Obaa-chan's! Do wish us luck!

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-28 02:08 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
A giant high-rise apartment building shaped like a cake. Every other floor is apartments, with outdoor terraces. The bottom floors are the Jungle floors, and then it gets increasingly colder and more arid the farther up it gets. Here we are closing in on the top. These people are hardly aware of the existence of ground floors, nor the people living in it. The top of the building is all arctic.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-28 02:25 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
---"Finally, the conbini comes to the consumer."

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-28 02:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ebony-sphynx.livejournal.com

The reindeer were always so soft. I liked their smell best though. The smell of their warmth and sweat after pulling the sleds was a musk my senses craved as I grew older and went away to school.

It’s funny what I missed.

Looking at this old photo brings me back to the smells and the feel of the raw wind tossing my hair around and the joy of tramping in those over-sized Wellingtons. Grass that’s gone brown in the cold and is soggy with melted snow takes on such a thick aroma that some days that was all I could experience: the smell of the wet, dead grass. It was a comforting smell. The smell of home, where the reindeer grazed and my siblings cavorted and the wind never stopped.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-28 03:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Many of these are incredibly evocative and imaginative, I'm reading them at 4am in my Eindhoven hotel room (with NHK on the TV, which makes me feel like I'm in Japan rather than Holland) and enjoying them very much.

The image is a still from a 2004 documentary called Autumn on the Ob River. I can't link right now, but you can google the title. The director is Norwegian, and the film is set in northwestern Siberia. It's an anthropology film, not really for general entertainment.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-28 03:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Ah, ok, the director is Janno Simm, and the film shows the Tobolko family -- Khanty people of north-western Siberia -- and their efforts to live by fishing in the austerity that resulted from the break-up of the Soviet Union.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-28 03:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zazie-metro.livejournal.com
Forty wet toes and eight amber eyes. Crusty fingernails with yak butter pies. Straw-filled cushions in reindeer pelts. Soaring licks of flames for fish liver melts.

Interview with Eno (yet another side note)

Date: 2009-02-28 06:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] endoftheseason.livejournal.com
Here it is:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/4838918/Brian-Eno---interview-with-the-producer-of-U2s-No-Line-On-The-Horizon.html

I have a question for Momus regarding one bit of the interview and an assertion regarding a second bit:

1.) Question

"Yet for all the millions who line up to feel that Irish embrace, U2--and in particular Bono--also attract a lot of vilification. Why does he think this is? 'Snobbery, primarily,' he says, smiling to reveal a solid gold incisor worthy of a rap star. 'It's most pronounced in England. There's a tendency for people who are in the business of art--critics, writers, people who consider themselves insiders--to distrust anything that is easy to like. There's an assumption underlying this that people are quite stupid, and if a lot of them like something then it too must be quite stupid.'"

Do you find this to be true (the part about English sorts in the business of art, not the part about the gold incisor) and do you agree that it's a Bad Thing?

2.) Assertion

"'I try to close down possibilities early on. I limit choices. I confine people to a small area of manoeuvre. There's a reason that guitar players invariably produce more interesting music than synthesizer players: you can go through the options on a guitar in about a minute, after that you have to start making aesthetic and stylistic decisions.'"

This business about the superior creativity of guitar players is colossally true. There can be no argument.

Re: Interview with Eno (yet another side note)

Date: 2009-02-28 10:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
I love Eno, but I disagree with these points on populism and guitars.

Creativity is platform independent, and to say that it depends on having few options is the same kind of argument as saying it depends on having many options. It also supposes that creativity is what happens when you're not making aesthetic choices (like choosing sounds).

There are fewer differences between synths and guitars than Eno is allowing here. If you want limitation, synths got it -- that's why many of us like 8-bit sounds and use them almost exclusively. And if you want complexity, guitars got it, if you include all the electronic processing required to make them sound the way they do on records. The Edge's trademark sound is 10% guitar (plink, plink, it goes, unamplified) and 90% electronic processing, amplification, feedback, etc. Once you include that in the definition of "guitar", you have to admit that the instrument does not escape the supposedly-bad "mire of options".

I think Eno's views contain the very idea he's condemning in art critics -- the idea that people are stupid -- but he just applies it to musicians. They must be given fewer opportunities to be stupid (ie, according to Eno, making choices) and more to be creative (ie playing, per Eno). But it is also creative to make choices.

Out of Eno's ambient records, the least satisfying, for me, is Apollo, and that's because it uses guitars prominently. They take the record to a place of sentimentality, and reduce its power.

On the populism question, the art world very much needs to question populism, because contemporary art is frontier cultural research. Things will sound and look wrong, be difficult, be disturbing, be underwhelming, boring, absurd, ugly. Things will alienate most average viewers and listeners, for whom impact happens in already-established ways. Art needs to keep revaluing, reinventing and reassessing everything, and that requires it to be emotionally and intellectually difficult.

I'd add that a dilettante has to be more than a pop singer who also champions political causes. The "Scaramouche of the Synthesiser" knows this, deep down.

Re: Interview with Eno (yet another side note)

Date: 2009-03-01 10:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] subalpine.livejournal.com
i've just been thinking about the first eno i ever heard, 'lanzarote' from 'the shutov assembly' played on a late-night radio program, and what an impact the cluster of electr.tones at about 0:07 in the video had on my conceptions of music at the time:


after that, the first eno album i bought was 'apollo', and the overtly sentimental tone of a lot of the playing really took me by surprise (and again now hearing it for the first time in 10+ yrs)


i haven't read the whole quote in context yet, but this guitar players invariably produce more interesting music than synthesizer players idea really strikes me as remarkably off the mark, and especially so in the context of supposedly limiting options..

Re: Interview with Eno (yet another side note)

Date: 2009-03-01 10:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] subalpine.livejournal.com
> you can go through the options on a guitar in about a minute, after that you have to start making aesthetic and stylistic decisions

Having exhausted in a minute (& eight seconds) the sound options his guitar was capable of producing, Otomo san was ready to get creative,

right?

khanty

Date: 2009-03-01 01:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] subalpine.livejournal.com
nice deep-toned mouthharp:


slideshow with hungarian(?) narration:


khanty singing:


khanty children:
Image

selling blueberries & stuffed animals:
Image

(no subject)

Date: 2009-03-01 05:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowshark.livejournal.com
Wow--this photo (from the same documentary) is pretty intense.
http://www.folklore.ee/khanty/picture.html

photo rorschach

Date: 2009-03-02 10:22 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
When I was trudging the sibirian tundra just the other day I came across this familiy and stopped to ask the time. "It's lunchtime!", the old woman replied. "Want some fish?", she asked, "special price for you, you my friend!"

Re: photo rorschach

Date: 2009-03-02 10:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] craig-pulsar.livejournal.com
Hello! Somebody told me you people have fifty different words for being drunk. That's nothing. You should hear all our different words for moss. Here are just some: Buot, olbuot, leat, olmmošárvvu, olmmošvuoigatvuoðaid, dáfus dássásažžab, Sudhuude, addibsudhuude, huervnu, ianedivdym, vyigjat, gakjat, neabbyhuude, gyunnuudeaset, vuoiŋŋain. And that is just the ones the reindeer like to eat!

Rorschach

Date: 2009-03-02 02:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] solarperplexus.livejournal.com
I met a strange lady, she made me nervous, she offered fish for breakfast and she said: "Do you come from a land down under...?"
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