Randy Roark's Mona Lisa's Veil: Selected Poems 1979-2001 will be
released in December 2001 by Baksun Books.
Tamra Spivey is lead singer of Lucid Nation, an ever-changing
ensemble who most recently included drummer Patty Schemel of Hole
and bassist Greta Brinkman of Moby's band.
Tamra: I learned from your note about Kerouac and Ginsberg's
"practiced" improvisation, and felt less guilty about recording extra
vocal tracks for tracks I felt needed them.
Randy: This is what I think is the essence of improvisation:
It's a form of practicing your instrument along with your mind/senses.
Then later, even when you're "revising" your work, you can re-write
it or re-play it with that same spontaneous mind. Or you can make
room for improvisation within a structure-like Miles Davis. What you
can never do is go back to the deadness and dullness of something
over-produced, or produced poorly. It's like having a great cup of
coffee and then trying to go back to instant. Yeats said it was "to
make an hour's work seem a moment's thought." Or as I say, it ultimately
doesn't matter whether it's improvised or not, but the closer to the
truth something seems, the more powerful it is experienced by an audience.
Or, as Gregory Corso told Kerouac, "I don't want to deny any part
of mind, including the part that rereads a poem and knows why it sucks."
Tamra: I'm with Corso, the rigidity of restricting improvisation
to its "purest" definition usurps spontaneity.
Randy: It's also important to remember that Allen and Jack
were talking of a highly specialized kind of improvisation, like great
jazz (which is what they listened to). But Kerouac had already written
a million words (by Burroughs' estimate) before he began writing The
Town and the City. It's not just improvisation and spontaneity-it's
skilled improvisation and spontaneity. Check out the new Dylan CD-reportedly
(like with "Blonde on Blonde") he'd write a song, teach it to the
band, they'd run through it once, then he'd go write another song
and the band would go back to playing cards. That's what some people
consider improvisation and spontaneity. When you've been successful
working with spontaneity and improvisation a couple of times, you
learn how to do it, and what works and what doesn't ... or you stop
doing it. And if you like it, you get bored and embarrassed by anything
else. It's not real somehow, and you're just repeating something-there's
no edge or liveliness to it. It's dead and you're dead because you're
the one who's wasting your time doing it.
They were opening a tour a couple of years ago in Boulder and they'd
booked two weeks of rehearsal. For the first time in 30 years of doing
this, Fripp and the members of the band had absolutely nothing to
show by the end of rehearsals. They had to open in front of an audience
the next night and fourteen days of rehearsals had been a complete
and total disaster. They didn't have a rhythm, a melody, or even a
structure to use. So they walked out on stage without anything in
mind and this guy said it was the best performance he'd ever seen
one of Fripp's bands give-and he goes all the way back to the original
King Crimson line-up.
Tamra: Yes, the million words, but another factor is native
intelligence and appreciation of some form of technique. For example,
our keyboardist on the sessions, Diane, only had piano lessons ten
years ago, had never played with a band, and had never played synthesizer,
but she played beautifully. She was easily able to enter that space
we old whore musicians went, crafting in the moment. Being a big music
fan of course helped, but so did her skills as a designer and her
love for art history.
There's a certain proportion or blend of "weights/waits" or elements,
did the Taoists call it li? I forget. Whatever, it's that common flow
in all things: fire, fingerprint, agate. I think when you start to
see/feel that, you can do remarkable things in arts you're not as
familiar with. Like Woody Guthrie's paintings, that remind me of early
Japanese Zen painting. Randy: "Fire, fingerprint, agate." That's a
cool line. Interesting flight of mind. I'll probably steal that one.
Don't be surprised if it turns up in one of my poems. In fact, I'll
make sure of it now. That'll be the title. The dadaists actually insisted
that no real artist could possibly restrict themselves to one means
of expression. If you were a painter, well then who would compose
more interesting music than a painter, and who could write a more
interesting poem than a sculptor, etc. etc. It made for some really
interesting art too. But very few artists were good enough to be taken
seriously in more than one medium. Ginsberg and photos. Cocteau's
visual art and films (although his visual art's reputation has suffered
somewhat lately, it was once considered on par with Picasso's), that
Maine poet/painter who got famous for his paintings but is now known
as much for his poetry, Michelangelo's paintings and sculptures. I'm
sure there are more, but most are like Ferlinghetti and painting,
or Ginsberg and music.
Tamra: It's very odd how our celebrity cult culture wants
people to be famous for just one thing. I never knew about the Guthrie
paintings till I saw the exhibit the Smithsonian put on at the museum
in Tacoma, Washington.
Randy: That's so cool about your keyboardist. When Bowie and
Eno were recording what would become "Heroes," Bowie had an extraordinary
recording budget and didn't want to work with very many musicians,
so they spent all their money on studio time, and Eno would order
all these new electronic instruments and throw the manuals away. Everything
was new. The designers weren't musicians, they were engineers and
so all they could imagine was to make fake violin sounds and stuff-or
what they thought fake violins would sound like. Well, the last thing
a musician's going to be interested in is something designed to sound
like fake violins, so they'd fool around and find out what the instruments
could sound like. Everything's an instrument, I think Bowie said,
you just have to figure out how to make music with it. Do you realize
that (I just realized) Brian Eno's name is an anagram of One Brain?
Tamra: That is so weird you mentioned that about Bowie because
Diane read that story in an issue of "Q" during our sessions and it
encouraged her!
Randy: Those kind of coincidences happen all the time in my
life. In fact, I began reading an article on Las Vegas in the current
issue of "National Geographic Traveler" magazine the moment I first
heard you sing the words "Let's go to Las Vegas."
Tamra: I think of synchronicities as a sort of guidance system.
Randy: Yeah, but I can never figure out what they're telling
me. Like the Las Vegas thing. What, I'm supposed to go to Las Vegas?
Not likely. They happen so frequently to me that I call them my "coincidences
of the day." I counted a string about two weeks ago in a series of
e-mails to a friend and I ended up with about seven weird synchronicities
in a five-hour period.
Tamra: When I do zines it's amazing how often the right illustration
or quote falls into my hands. There were times I felt I couldn't open
my eyes or reach for something without it belonging in the zine I
was working on.
Randy: Yeah, that always happens in art, I think. In fact,
if that isn't happening, it usually isn't art it's advertising.
Tamra: Recording and mixing at Uptone went well. Many eerie
September 11 foreshadowings in the lyrics. We finished mixing September
10 and were supposed to fly home September 11. Wound up in Tacoma
for an extra week. Thirty-five out of 48 tracks got mixed: some shining
moments, but it was all somehow awkward and gravitized, if you know
what I mean.
Randy: Not really, unless you mean that you ended up with
less than you thought you would. I think that's always the case when
you're working with art that's still being realized. You shoot for
something and you end up somewhere interesting, but it's not exactly
what you hoped for. As Pound put it, there are two kinds of geniuses
in the world: There are the ones who are curious about everything
and their legacy is a mess made up of 100 half-finished projects and
beginning explorations in several directions. And then there are those
who come along later and bring things to perfection. They scavenge
around, can identify the cool bits and put them all together in their
perfect form and basically kill that line of exploration by bringing
it to its end (Joyce with Ulysses and Eliot with "The Wasteland").
I think it's important to know which kind you are and then live accordingly.
And I've also learned to put something away until I've forgotten I've
written it before I take it out and reread it. If you have that kind
of room, that might be something to do. Or just put it out-I'm sure
it's fine.
Tamra: I'd like to be Pound's finishing genius, but I definitely
fall in the explorer category. I feel very helpless to direct my inspiration.
It's like a fever that comes over me. When it says paint, I can't
write a song!
Randy: Yeah, I keep relearning this. Do whatever interests
you at the moment and don't stop until it stops interesting you and
then find out what interests you next. Believe me (being one) the
explorer has much more fun, and less success, and less of the drag
that follows success. They stay very fashionable and respected well
past the point of the finishing geniuses because they keep moving
and interesting themselves, whereas the others end up chewing themselves
up and being, on the whole, completely miserable (in my experience).
Tamra: Yes, that makes sense. the explorer is dealing with
the anxieties of beginnings and the finisher the doom of endings.
I always wondered if it was both a melancholy and exhilarating feeling,
completing a masterpiece. Anyway, we got enough that I feel it's my
first truly great record.
Randy: I always feel that way too! Every time I finish a new
book I think this is the best thing I've ever written! Every time
I give a reading I always end up reading the last thing I've finished,
sometimes on the way to the gig or even in the audience waiting my
turn. That's why putting books out is such a drag, because that's
what people think of you and you're somewhere else now. And being
in a band you know what's that like more than I do.
Tamra: I may go to New York City to start a new band. Randy:
Wow. Now that's courage. You're gutsy.
Tamra: You think? I think the death-rebirth there, the historically
unique (for the moment) penetration of American complacency … it seems
to me the river of inspiration is going to flow fresh and fast there.
I'd like to feel that, be a part of it. Plus stuff is cheap now!
Randy: Oh, yeah, I'm sure that's true. Or ... I wonder. I
think the decades of New York City being a huge city are over. Like
Beirut.
Tamra: But of course Beirut was not the world center New
York City is. And New York City's whole mythology is about having
heart in the face of crisis. As an artist I just feel I need to see
and smell and hear it for myself.
Randy: Well, I'm just glad we'll have a poet reporting from
the trenches.
Tamra: Also we have more fans and friends in New York City
than L.A. L.A. has proven herself somewhat indifferent to experimental
rock since the days the Velvet Underground ran aground here, leaving
Jim Morrison's acid-addled Gerard Malanga impersonation in their wake.
Randy: You know Gerard? That's much more hip than either the
VU or Morrison. I published some of Gerard's photos in "FRICTION"
magazine-his photo of the manuscript of On the Road was on the cover
of the Jack Kerouac issue (1983). It's the only issue that's sold
out, but I'm putting up a website now and the cover will definitely
be on it. And he introduced me to Ira Cohen, who took the photo on
the cover of the "Doctor Sardonicus" LP for Spirit-a sixties Southern
California psychedelic band. One of Ira's photos is going to be on
the cover of my selected. Ira took some really cool photos of Hendrix
shot onto Mylar (like the Spirit LP cover-that distorted effect).
Tamra: The only Warhol graduate I've met is Holly Woodlawn.
The earliest trio version of Lucid Nation backed her up live and recorded
with her once. We would play ethnic instruments, flutes, thumb pianos,
maybe an acoustic guitar, while she would stream of consciousness
about those days. Some of it was amazing. She was raving about the
goddess Ishtar and we were coming on like a Babylonian harem band.
But after when we listened back we realized none of it was usable
because she so expertly insults everyone she mentions!
Randy: Do you have any tapes?!
Tamra: I have to dig up the masters.
Randy: I like Jim Morrison in moderation. He was definitely
the start of something big-as big as Elvis. I just wish the songs
(and LPs) were better. But I have dozens of live versions of "The
End" and "When the Music's Over" and each and every one is terrific
and interesting. What he had was real. And I get the feeling from
watching videos of his live shows what it must have been like staring
at him as he was standing at the mike staring into the audience, wondering
who you were and what this was all about and what the fuck were you
doing at a Doors concert in 1969 anyway? How sometimes it seems like
he's just this transparent hologram on stage and he's actually being
beamed down from some other world, just visiting. That'd change you.
Tamra: He had a way with words, as Patricia Keneally Morrison
told my guitarist Ronnie. Jim could pack a whole lot of meaning into
very few words.
Randy: I've heard Lucid Nation's latest CD and it's fucking
terrific. Let me know when it's about ready to come out for real and
I'll write a rave review for the Patti Smith list and also if you
offer it on Amazon it could go there as well. I find that reviews
are best when the object is available-if not, people look around and
then forget about it by the time it's finally out. If you want I'll
send the review to you early ... it's pretty much ready. It'll take
me half an hour or so to write it up from my notes. But I'd like to
hear the other two first before I write something, so I have a wider
base of information, which'll probably take me two days or so. By
the way, I looked up your site today and I heard your bass player
when she toured with Moby two summers ago I think-she looks familiar
anyway. That black net outfit and the way she plays the bass off her
hip. Oh, by the way, it was so good to suddenly realize I was listening
to "Heart of Darkness" after so long. It's almost as if the Cleveland
that David Thomas was singing about in 1977 is the world we're all
living in now.
Tamra: Yeah, that's Greta! I actually prefer David's original
version with Peter Laughner's Rocket from the Tomb.
Randy: See, that's another one-I'm a huge Pere Ubu fan and
yet I'd never heard of Rocket from the Tomb until last night when
I was paging through a psych magazine I bought a couple of days ago
because it had a CD with tracks by Bevis Frond and I'm a fan. And
there was also a variety of psych artists from the sixties to the
late nineties, including Japanese psych bands from the late sixties!
I mean, imagine! I used to do a psychedelic radio show in the mid-eighties
and I'm a real collector of that stuff and I had never heard of any
of it. Anyway, when I bought the magazine the 18-year-old tattoed
dyed-black-haired kid who called me "Sir" was caught off-guard when
I asked if he had a vinyl copy of the Strokes LP and then handed him
two White Stripes CDs and an Apples in Stereo CD. Anyway, he started
and said, "Wow, we've had that magazine in the store for over two
years now and it's never sold." So I was reading it last night and
they had this really cool thing in the magazine-they had punch-out
trading cards for "damaged guitar gods"-about fifty of them for people
like Peter Green and Skip Spence. And I'm reading along and I come
to the first guitarist for Pere Ubu (and Rocket from the Crypt). And
what's playing on the stereo? "Heart of Darkness"! And, in addition,
I only gradually came to realize that that's what you're singing,
like a camera coming into focus ... like, "Wake up!" That's what I
mostly use those moments for now, because I can't really figure them
out. When I tell other people, they have all these explanations, but
I still don't understand any of it. I never get any hard information.
Tamra: I think of them as more a proof that your life is right
where it should be. So you get magic sparkle synchronicities, cat
treats.
Randy: By the way, you're not suggesting with this improvisation
thing that you're improvising your lyrics, are you? Even if not, the
performance is, obviously, improvised with the band. King Crimson
during their 1973-1974 tour were the second rock band I know of to
actually schedule improvisations in every show. Each night they'd
trade off who'd begin and the others would fall in or not. And there's
at least one performance called "Trio" that's absolutely amazing.
The band had had a collective breakdown during a difficult tour and
everyone thought that they were the only ones having problems. Drummer
Bill Bruford was so depressed he sat out the whole song with his drumsticks
crossed over his chest and the band essentially became a chamber trio-violin,
guitar, and bass. Their recordings from this tour are very easily
available, I think, if you like that sort of thing. "The Great Deceiver,"
a 4CD set from this tour, is the best. If you can't find them or want
tapes let me know. Your band is very, very good and the CDs are very
well engineered (especially the last one). The one with the cool shoes
is my favorite thus far but I have to go back to the latest one again
now that I've heard everything else. The latest one is so uncompromising
and unrelenting and the sneakers one had the mixture of softer tracks
that I'm more accustomed to. But I know I'll prefer the new one in
about two weeks. It's got that halo around it.
Tamra: Let's see, "Suburban Legends" is 100% improvised lyrics.
Randy: That's unfuckingbelievable. Why don't you advertise that somewhere
on the CD? Why aren't you on the poetry circuit? Man, you need a manager!
Tamra: We suck at self-promotion. Anyway, "Nonpoetic Rain," the live
on KXLU CD is about 2/3 improv. And on the newest recordings we did
in Tacoma, Washington, any song with backing vocals was sketched out,
a couple lines, a chorus, but all the rest are total improv.
Randy: Wow. I am so impressed. I do improv speeches but that's
a lot easier-you just get your thoughts together in public. So what's
the deal with "Heart of Darkness" and "Run through the Jungle"-they
just popped into your head? There's another cover I almost recognize-it's
an AC/DC song or something? I could be wrong.
Tamra: "Night Prowler" by AC/DC, the Richie Ramirez murder
anthem. I'm always trying to redeem it. It started when I had a gig
at PCH-Pacific Coast Highway Club in San Pedro, a tiny, scary all-ages
space visible only by kids, in a bleak landscape of warehouses and
train tracks. I went there to check it out a week before and freaked
out in the car on the way home. I was just sure the car would stall,
we would die, total anxiety. My guitarist Ronnie realized how closely
this place resembled the place I was taken to and beaten after being
abducted on my way to school in tenth grade. The resemblance triggered
post-traumatic stress. He wanted to cancel but I wanted to face it,
so for that gig we did a jam on "Night Prowler" and Sonic Youth's
predator song "Pacific Coast Highway." I wore a black sweatshirt with
hood up, on the back was written "terror worldwide" and when I sang
"Night Prowler" I imagined it was me stalking the guy who abducted
me. The catharsis was so intense people said I was glowing after.
None of the scenester mod kids so proud of their indie credentials
even knew Sonic Youth did a song called "Pacific Coast Highway," standing
in PCH Club. The roadie for Red Monkey won the free CD. Since then
I've been really partial to the song.
Randy: I'm a father with a 17-year-old daughter. Your story
sets off all my panic alarms ... I started to cry. It's like I told
a friend about the difficulties I have at being a pacifist: If you
push me around, fine. If you touch my girlfriend or my daughter I'll
fucking kill you. I heard a funny saying today: that being a pacifist
except during wartime is like being a vegetarian between meals.
Tamra: Rape is epidemic in this country. It's one of our biggest
dirty secrets. And this country isn't as bad as other parts of the
world. Still, when a woman gets paid 75% less when she works late,
then has to face the empty parking garage, that is a kind of terrorism.
Randy: I've produced some tapesets with Peter Levine on PTSD.
We have tapes and such where he tries to get you to release it. Are
you interested? It can get pretty intense. He also has a book about
it called Waking the Tiger. He lives up in Lyons, a few miles from
Boulder, but he travels a lot and has a useful website, if you want
to look him up-there's stuff on there for free. Peter believes that
energy is stored in the body and you have to transform it via movement,
not mental stuff. He talks about animals in the jungle, how they "shake
off" fear-running in circles, jumping into the air-and how if you
freeze it in the body it'll remain there until you release it physically-that
therapy will never get to that part of it. That seems true to my experience.
Sounds like you instinctively tapped into that with "Night Prowler."
Tamra: That's why I've experienced so much transformation
through yoga, then the martial arts.
Randy: About your lyrics: I especially liked the way the meaning
of the words changed over time. It reminded me very much of Gertrude
Stein from Lectures in America, the one about repetition-how if you
say, jelly, jelly, jelly, jelly, jelly, jelly, jelly, jelly ... that
the eighth "jelly" is not the same as the first one, and the difference
is that the eighth one is preceded by the other seven. It's a form
of insistence. It's like you're trying to get your dog to sit. Sit.
Sit! SIT! SIT!!!! I also think there's an element of incantation and
shamanic magic in your form of repetition. You do that with "friends
don't let friends drive drunk" and something else, I've forgotten
now. The first time I realized you were singing "friends don't let
friends drive drunk" was different from the next four times. It's
like a mini-novel, really. And it's not in the words-you've stripped
the words of meaning by repeating them and what people are listening
to is you breathing through the words ... do you know what I mean?
Tamra: Rimbaud's derangement of the senses happens when you
repeat a word. It's the basis of all mantra.
Randy: I've had this weird experience where when I look at a word
too long it looks weird too. Like "that."
Tamra: First it shimmers with extra meanings, then it's just a sound.
Then it can be made to convey an opposite meaning with a different
intonation.
Randy: But the sound is being made by someone, so it's actually a
different kind of language-not word language but beingness language.
As if that's the epitome of language, and when you're trying to use
language to get there you realize at a certain point that language
itself is preventing you from reaching it. That's why the dadaists
said that it'd be healthier if language didn't exist-or at least that
life would be broader and more interesting without it. That's what
you're doing with your band. I learned something similar hanging around
deaf people. I grew up near the Eugene O'Neill Theatre of the Deaf
so it wasn't unusual to be at parties in conversation with a deaf
person. They don't get fooled by what you're saying and you realize
it's because they're actually reading your whole body, so it's like
waking up from a language dream. Some people start crying the first
time they communicate like that. It's ironic to me now that I used
to argue with Allen [Ginsberg] when he used to read from his notebooks
or be in one of his improvisational phases. I told him he was being
self-indulgent. That this might be the only time some teenage kid
in Nebraska gets to hear him and he should deliver the real transmission.
Certain of Allen's poems are undeniably liberating and have definite
transmission power-thousands of people have testified to that-so Allen
had a responsibility to change as many people as possible. Reading
from his journals and his improvisations were fun in a classroom or
perhaps in a small venue. But for a performance, people took the night
off, they were excited. Maybe this was the only time they'd ever get
to see Ginsberg-this would become their "Allen Ginsberg story." But
Allen argued that he had to keep himself interested, that he read
more than 50 times a year all over the world. He said "I don't want
to think that the only poems I have worth reading were written thirty
years ago. And if I'm not really there, if I'm only faking it, it'd
be much worse. The people who can appreciate what I'm doing are appreciating
what I'm doing. I can't be responsible for everyone."
Tamra: I have that discussion in a musical context. People say I
need songs that crystalize my strong points and I need to play them
over and over again for people because you can't just make stuff up.
They don't get the whole Zen one stroke circle painting of it. We're
not just stupidly jamming. We're experienced artists intently crafting
in the moment a spiritual challenge. Yet I'm hearing more about the
freestyle approach. I think it suits the internet.
Randy: Hmmm. But no matter, it's what you're interested in. You're
stuck with it now. If you believe in it 100%, it's unarguable that
it'll be the best work that you can possibly do in this lifetime.
And, all things being equal, wouldn't that be great to look back on
when you're old and grey? Wouldn't anything less be a loss? So we
do it and who knows if it's important or if it'll last? But if you
act like it is important and that it'll last, that's your best chance
at getting there. Allen tape recorded himself every time he spoke
in public for the last thirty years of his life. I saw how that made
Allen choose his words very carefully, knowing that they'd probably
last a long, long time.
Okay, here's your poem: fire, fingerprint, agate (for T)