A dream

Nov. 20th, 2004 07:02 am
imomus: (Default)
[personal profile] imomus
In almost a year of entries in Click Opera, I don't think I've ever mentioned or transcribed a dream. So here's one I just had.

I wake up in the middle of the night with a headache, the kind that happens to me if I don't eat well enough and my blind right eye loses pressure. So I eat some food, take three aspirin and go back to sleep. I dream I'm at a big nightclub with some London friends from the early 90s, the people I used to have 'Twin Peaks' parties with. One of them is Douglas Benford, who now runs the Sprawl Club. We're in a rather chintzy nightclub full of different rooms, all open plan and on different levels. I'm standing between two of these rooms when security staff tell me I have to make up my mind, and stand in one or the other. This annoys me and I decide to leave. In a long corridor a bit like the one at the ICA I'm walking with Douglas, and it seems he needs to crash at my apartment, which is closer than his. Next thing you know we're in the same bed. Douglas is talking about a female artist who'd been at the club with us, and who might resemble Georgina Starr in some way. 'Ah, you're in love with Georgina!' I exclaim. 'I suppose I am,' says Douglas. 'In fact, I'm surprised you aren't as well.' I tell him the idea has never occurred to me. I like her, but not in that way.



Still in the dream, I wake up in the same apartment and it's the next day. I'm with Shizu and Karin and a bunch of mostly Japanese friends I knew in the late 90s. There's some sort of reality TV show going on, which rather surreally involves us driving around on a big tabletop in little blue open-topped dodgem cars. Some of the collisions are violent, and the drivers are bleeding. Shizu is mopping up nosebleeds with loo paper. I know that the car causing the most violent collisions is being driven by a robot ghost character, so I arrange for a huge crash in which the robot ghost car is completely destroyed and thrown off the tabletop. It lands upside down and scrunched up in a pile of bloody tissues on the floor. Several players round on me and accuse me of murder, but I protest my innocence. 'Go and check the wreckage, you'll find no body!' I tell them. With some trepidation and horror this is done, and indeed there's no body there. The robot ghost has evaporated into thin air. I am vindicated.



Next we're all on the balcony of a Tokyo apartment overlooking a university campus that's a cross between the village in 'The Prisoner' and some scene from the Monkees film 'Head'. It has the feel of a very pleasant yet paranoid 1960s film set, in other words, where nothing is real and everybody might be an agent or an actor. We're sipping cocktails and the evening sun is golden and warm. Down below there are lots of people standing around selling things. The actor-agents are playing the role of students in a campus theme park. There's a projection onto a mid-air plasma screen of a line of Asian adventurer-mercenaries, strong handsome bearded men in bearskins. It's a roll-call, and they're checking to see if they're all present. This is related to the robot-ghost. If everyone's present, then I definitely haven't killed anyone. The roll-call ends and a trumpet clarion sounds to indicate that nobody is missing. I catch the eye of a woman down below who looks like a taller version of my first girlfriend, Helen Hintjens. Shizu and Karin move inside because it's getting too hot out on the balcony. I decide to move inside too, but before I go I witness two emissaries being dispatched to a remote province with the good news that nobody has been killed. They both wear silver armour, buskins, and uniform with black trimming. One of them has a ludicrous and somewhat fascist-looking helmet that incorporates a large flying crow.

Inside I pass the sprawled, cooling girls and go into the bedroom where I'm staying. I'm carrying a small gadget I have to put away, but it occurs to me that this isn't my apartment and that I'm just a guest here, so I should put the gadget into my suitcase or one of my bags, which are dotted around the room between pieces of furniture. Otherwise I'll forget it when I leave the apartment and move on to the next place.

At that point I wake up. My headache has gone, but I'm pretty hungry. It's six am. I walk through my apartment, which is lit by floor-level fluorescent lights, and make a cup of yogi chai in the kitchen.

That was no dream, man.

Date: 2004-11-20 09:23 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
That wasn't a dream, Momus. Tokyo really does look like a mix between Head and The Prisoner.

marxy

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 10:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sarmoung.livejournal.com
I came home last night after playing a gig. Thanks to your entries on the subject of late, I now often find myself muttering darkly about rockism at such events, not with any particular insight, more that the term is handy put-down to express my disdain. Decide that inability of the sound engineer in producing a decent banjo sound to balance against the laptop is certainly evidence of rockism, as is the two hours spent soundchecking the mainband to ensure their sound loses any distinction and becomes as soup-like as possible. In the dressing room, that's a nice instrument, when was it made, they ask. 1931, I answer. Nods of approval. The strange thing I find, I say, is that just sometimes it releases this musty smell of old varnish and I take that to be the instrument's approval of what I'm playing. God, I'm sounding rockist now, or is it just superstitious? Maybe Shinto... The Mac's a 2003 model, I add.

I once was physically threatened by a very nerdy computer engineer at a venue I was DJing. The music I was playing at this event was all old-time, early blues and similar. The music that those there would hold to be authentic according to the official canon of folkism and I'm a regular at Cecil Sharpe House (http://www.efdss.org/) and know this argument of authenticity well enough avec barbe. Of course, I enjoyed the wind-up of playing scratchy old recordings on a laptop. I go to the bar, "Why are you using that?" I mention that it makes life easier, no boxes to lug around, I can carry more music with me. "No" he says "Why are you using that?" "Err?" "The Mac?" I then get a lengthy lecture about various forms of audio encoding and his disgust at the Mac OS. Well, it's easy to use and it hardly ever crashes on me, I say. Easy to use seems to be the issue that sparks him off and he starts jabbing my chest with his finger as he goes "Listen, it's people like you that deserve to be using those pieces of crap." "I don't suppose you're a Linux user are you?" "Well..." he nods, calming a little. "Do you actually like the music I'm playing?" Nods again. "So what is your problem?" Nick, I'm not sure about PCs being the rockist computer, I'm sure Linux, and open source and even Apple to some extent, are far more to do with the authentic in a rockist sense. As little M'soft as possible please on the hard drive, please. I built this here computer myself from two old Acorns and a door bell.

Okay, so that irrelevance maybe belongs to yesterday's post, but I'm thinking about all this on my return home and when I sleep, I dream that I'm in Taliban Afghanistan and I'm on my way to the football stadium to watch some public execution. I stop off to buy some almonds from a market stall and fall into conversation with the owner who insists that I take his daughters with him, who turn out to be Lena and Yulia from Tatu. The executions warm up with one of those Madame Mao/North Korean choreographed sign-flipping and ribbon-waving extravaganzas and I'm growing increasingly uncomfortable as I realise that the two girls are still dressed in those schoolgirl outfits. We must be breaking some law. A toothless man behind us fiddles beneath his cloak and points at me. I tell the girls it's time to leave and I lead them by the hand out of the stadium, except we become lost in a maze of ever-contracting tunnels, until I'm alone in an Alice-size compartment and moaning their disappearance as I hear the raised voices of approaching guards.

The point at which Tatu demanded to be taking seriously as singers was the point at which they lost it. It was going so well, girls, but then you had to think about it. I'm not sure I've enjoyed any band in the last ten years as much I enjoyed Tatu. I find myself coming to them again and again... Did I really just say that?!

Old Banjos

Date: 2004-11-20 07:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hateforblayne.livejournal.com
I also have an old banjo that I think has a little life on it's own. It's a slingerland nite hawk from the 1920's and it sound like it's been around for 80 years. how many more qualifications do we need to start a cult? (in a non- my god is the only god and he is spiteful of the non rock believer-kind-of way?)

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-24 08:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] w-e-quimby.livejournal.com
Perhaps you read too much into things and put meaning where none previously existed. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 11:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] backmasked.livejournal.com
good stuff

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 03:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] klasensjo.livejournal.com
so I arrange for a huge crash in which the robot ghost car is completely destroyed and thrown off the tabletop.

Ha ha. This wasn't really a nightmare,was it? Sometimes it's hard to tell. I find some of the most interesting seductive dreams involve a little pain and suffering but also feverish love. I tend to remember the nightmarish ones. Suppose sleep is lighter and you remember the one right before you wake up. The only evidence of some of the other ones is an erection. But they may not have been worth remembering(?)
Interesting dreams often occur in the most bizarre places...hmmm.
I want to highly recommend the book "Experiment with dreams" (http://user.tninet.se/~pwo942f/experim.html) by Leif Elggren and Thomas Liljenberg.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 03:37 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
O my gawd momus, what a dream; you only went and killed that metafuckinphysical bugbear, GOD! The Cat Upstairs Himself! Keep up the constant stream of recieved concepts and positions (a lexicon of PHOWOOOOOOHGH if you will), you will be vindicated in the end (you megolamaniac nitwit)(you're old and you don't know how we are thinking these days, dialectical materialist blah blah blah relic! YOU are mr jones!).
Rockism - yeah, whatever grandad. I suppose you have read Lorca's 'Play and Theory of the Duende'. If not, do, therein is all ye need for a MODERN (WHA?) theory of art. And let me tell ya mr man, you ain't got it (the duende). Sour grapes? I not a big fan, but nick cave s got it ('love letter' off his last album so achingly gorgeous i REALLY wept).
Oh just fuck off you twat

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 03:45 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Sorry, I take that last sentence back. You're a tiresome pompous prick. The day you trick me is the day I say goodnight to all that is beautiful, tender, sacred, powerful and true. And that isn't going to happen, piss ant.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 03:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Wow, if that's what happens when you're a Nick Cave fan, I thank Big Jesus Traaaaaaaashcan that I'm no longer one.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 03:49 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I will keep reading your journal though, if you don't mind. It's well written and informative, that I'll ge yer. Gruesomely compulsive.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 03:50 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Wait a mo dear fellow, I'm not a Cave fan. As I said.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 04:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Well, thanks for the Lorca tip anyway. I will read it (http://www.tonykline.co.uk/Browsepages/Spanish/LorcaDuende.htm) to learn what I lack.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 04:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
I'm getting my computer to read out that lecture about 'the it factor' or duende in its computer voice. And I can tell already that my computer very much likes this idea of the duende and will, when it's corporealised as a robot, talk about it very much of its own accord, slightly altering Lorca's thesis to make it fit artificial lifeforms:

'The duende I mean, secret and shuddering, is descended from that blithe daemon, all marble and salt, of Dr Frankenstein, whom it scratched at indignantly on the day when he made his monster, and that other melancholy demon of Babbage, diminutive as an abacus, that, tired of lines and beads, fled along the canals to listen to the singing of drunken sailors.'

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 04:21 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Yeah.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 04:22 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Right.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 04:23 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
You can fuck your computer for all I care. I don't think it's against the law.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 04:26 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
You'll be too old to fuck soon though, won't you? Whether it's computers, beautiful jap girls in synthesis or anything else.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 04:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Yes. Now go and do something productive with what's left of your Saturday.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 04:31 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Oh, I think I already have.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 04:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Well, if this gratuitous abuse is the best thing you've done today, I think Lorca would be entitled to feel a bit disappointed in his disciple.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 04:56 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I have never so much as blown on an ant since I was 8. But I am licked on dope and it doesn't agree with me. Nor I with you, though I certainly wouldn't normally be so horrible. I apologise, as sincerely as my mother is sweet. But remember Momus, the world is full of beauty and ugliness, decay and generation, and you are part of the whole - and it is a good whole. Goodnight to you goodly sir. One day we shall drink from shoes together and you shall proclaim the only shiboleth.

An Ant

Date: 2004-11-20 07:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hateforblayne.livejournal.com
I am holding a funeral for the ant blown-upon by Mr. Anonymous. I will do my best to find the body, but otherwise a memorial will be held this coming monday at 8 (pm or am). Please do your best to attend, as your presence will be appreciated.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 09:22 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Yo Mo! You tell the MoFo! (What a Grumpy Bugger!!!!!)

Avi (Tel Aviv, Israel!!)

wow!

Date: 2004-11-21 02:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] theilybinilwys.livejournal.com
How narrow do these columns get? This is awesome and gorgeous!

Channing

is momus invincible?

Date: 2004-11-20 11:13 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
You think you can defeat Momus that easily?

Momus is the end game boss!

go level up your intelligence some and then try again...

-tomas

p.s. i tried casting a Confuse spell on him a few weeks ago but he was undeterred!

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 05:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] turkishb.livejournal.com
I had a dream with you in it recently. I was at some kind of party. I think it might have been an art premiere. You were wearing a scarf and sitting with a Japanese woman, but she claimed to be Italian. Between you two was some sort of geometric work of art involving wood that I only vaguely recall. It was meant to represent something about Japan. The Italian beside you commented the wood was not a Japanese color.

I got somehow offended at that, and pointed out it seemed a very Japanese color. She spoke a long incoprehensible sentence in Japanese, and then said, "so I think I'd know what color is Japanese and what isn't." I looked over at you and asked plantively, "what do you think is a Japanese color? Are they dull pastels and greys -- or are they bright sharp vermillions and ceruleans?"

You adjusted your scarf thoughtfully and turned your hand over so the palm faced up.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 06:43 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
;)

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 08:54 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Hi Momus, I was just wondering whether you had any contact with toko (the "japanize" girl), or if you know where the right place to find it would be.
Cheers :)

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 09:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
No, I bought the comics in the 90s in London, but I don't know who she is or how to get in touch with her.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 09:46 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
(Me too)
Too bad, she's lost forever then :(

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-20 11:26 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
It has the feel of a very pleasant yet paranoid 1960s film set, in other words, where nothing is real and everybody might be an agent or an actor. We're sipping cocktails and the evening sun is golden and warm.

are you thinking of a particular film?

is helen hintjens researching something in africa?

-tomas

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-21 06:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
are you thinking of a particular film?

Not really. But isn't every 60s film a bit like that, from James Bond to 'The President's Analyst'?

is helen hintjens researching something in africa?

She might be, she was raised in Africa and lectures in Politics.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-22 07:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sgulp-cadet-54.livejournal.com
the foto from the prisoner is wonderful

..but you already knew that

(no subject)

Date: 2004-11-22 08:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vinylboy20.livejournal.com
The part about standing in two rooms at the same time is begging for interpretations, but the robot ghost car could be part of an awesome action movie.

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