"Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana." An extract from the book Faust: Stretch Out Time 1970-1975. This was originally a chapter in the book I wrote about the group Faust. I suspect that few Faust fans read it, since it deals with the nature of time in music, rather than with the group. It was first published in 2006, and I wouldn’t write it the same way now.
I got a lot out of this essay, thank you! I really need to go back and do some intense listening (and dancing! The secret is in the dancing!) to some of the artists you mention - Cecil Taylor has already been on my mind lately, so I guess I'll start there 😊
Interestingly, the photo you used of Zappa yawning was taken by a former friend of mine, who used to spend all of his precious time scouring the internet for instances of people "stealing" this particular photo, and sending them legal threats. For the most part, this seemed to involve harassing Zappa fans posing the photo on discussion forums (this was long before the days of social media) - it's interesting to see that the version you use is pinched from somebody's deviant art tribute. I sometimes wonder whether Phil is still performing this Sisyphean task. You can see the original photo, and read the story behind it, here:
Sometimes rock bands name themselves after works of literature. Steppenwolf is named after Hesse's novel. Faust, too, could be named after Thomas Mann's 1947 novel: Doctor Faustus: The Life of the German Composer Adrian Leverkuhn As Told by a Friend. The novel is steeped in the musical vocabulary of Celil Forsyth's Orchestration (1935), and intense descriptions of the creative process. Do you think Faust is named after Mann's novel? I will recommend the novel as brilliant but I hate the ending (which is stolen from Hesse's short book Rosshalde). It's like a perfect gymnast's performance with a bad dismount.
I believe (but am going to go away and check) that Faust were named after Goethe's Faust... but that still leaves a connection with Mann since that's also where he got his title, so they both go back to the same source. I'm a huge fan of Dr Faustus, of course:
“It seems to me… that despite the logical, moral rigor music may appear to display, it belongs to a world of spirits, for whose absolute reliability in matters of human reason and dignity I would not exactly want to put my hand in the fire. That I am nevertheless devoted to it with all my heart is one of those contradictions which, whether a cause for joy or regret, are inseparable from human nature.”
I got a lot out of this essay, thank you! I really need to go back and do some intense listening (and dancing! The secret is in the dancing!) to some of the artists you mention - Cecil Taylor has already been on my mind lately, so I guess I'll start there 😊
Interestingly, the photo you used of Zappa yawning was taken by a former friend of mine, who used to spend all of his precious time scouring the internet for instances of people "stealing" this particular photo, and sending them legal threats. For the most part, this seemed to involve harassing Zappa fans posing the photo on discussion forums (this was long before the days of social media) - it's interesting to see that the version you use is pinched from somebody's deviant art tribute. I sometimes wonder whether Phil is still performing this Sisyphean task. You can see the original photo, and read the story behind it, here:
https://www.ibiblio.org/mal/MO/philm/zappa/
I wonder if Gail would admire that sort of dedication.
Sometimes rock bands name themselves after works of literature. Steppenwolf is named after Hesse's novel. Faust, too, could be named after Thomas Mann's 1947 novel: Doctor Faustus: The Life of the German Composer Adrian Leverkuhn As Told by a Friend. The novel is steeped in the musical vocabulary of Celil Forsyth's Orchestration (1935), and intense descriptions of the creative process. Do you think Faust is named after Mann's novel? I will recommend the novel as brilliant but I hate the ending (which is stolen from Hesse's short book Rosshalde). It's like a perfect gymnast's performance with a bad dismount.
I believe (but am going to go away and check) that Faust were named after Goethe's Faust... but that still leaves a connection with Mann since that's also where he got his title, so they both go back to the same source. I'm a huge fan of Dr Faustus, of course:
“It seems to me… that despite the logical, moral rigor music may appear to display, it belongs to a world of spirits, for whose absolute reliability in matters of human reason and dignity I would not exactly want to put my hand in the fire. That I am nevertheless devoted to it with all my heart is one of those contradictions which, whether a cause for joy or regret, are inseparable from human nature.”
Thomas Mann, Dr Faustus
I enjoyed this essay. I'm into literature about music. Thanks.