Monthly Archives: December 2016

Prince (YGtCTO Music #31)

Ronnie, Talk to Russia

Song written and performed by Prince

Let me start by saying that I wrote it first. A motivated librarian in Austintown, Ohio, offered to place my book in the library if I would write it. I was eight or thereabouts and had no idea what to write about. She suggested a favorite place or something else that I liked. (If only she knew what she was starting.) I chose my favorite color. That is how I wrote The Color Purple (apologies to Alice Walker). Needless to say, I was well primed for Prince.

For my entire life, I have been late to every party on the music home-front. That’s all right. I get there eventually. But for a white kid going to school in the Midwest, specifically Appalachia, I got to Prince about as soon as I was going to. Somewhere I got hold of a then current copy of The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll.

While I devoured its contents, it re-enforced a lot of information that I had absorbed from my older brothers and the world around me. The book had chapters on artists the editors felt important. As I recall, only one of those was about someone who had not broken through to major popularity yet (and many were long past their prime). That was this kid from Minneapolis who was making records all by himself and tearing up the stage. The writer said that Prince was as close to Jackie Wilson and Jimi Hendrix as we might ever get. I had recently really gotten into Hendrix and Wilson, so I had to check this dude out.

Controversy by Prince

So I wandered
through the two record stores in our tiny college town and located a copy of Controversy. I liked it, but I was not ready to go where a fair bit of it pointed. This one short song, though- this odd political rant that sounded like Prince had been listening to The Clash– this odd little thing seemed to point to an interesting future. Then I filed the record under “P” and forgot about it.

I don’t know when I heard Little Red Corvette for the first time, but I knew who it was. I worked as a DJ then and I played every track off 1999. My brain and the world were starting to catch up.

Then Prince made a movie. Purple Rain was about a Midwestern kid bringing people of all races together. That’s the movie that I saw then and saw again when I watched it a couple years ago.

More like David Bowie than Michael Jackson, Prince kept making great music and provided less and less fodder for gossip as time passed. He inspired a loyal fan base and seemed to make a lot of good choices.

And now he is dead, which is a very weird thing to write, even though we have all known this for months and months. As all the fans know, Prince created a vault-full of music that has never seen the light of day. He made allusions to releasing sometime, but only when he got around to it. While he lived, this left fans with what is best described as Schrodinger’s music. Does it really exist if no one has mixed it? Or heard it?

That sounds more flippant than intended. The main thing about that vault is that it holds the promise of a future which was supposed to include the artist himself. We move so quickly from adoration to scavenging, but how else can we treat newly discovered art? We feed our most mercenary desires when we profit from the work of the dead without reference to the original artist.

What’s it all about?

You’ve Got to Check This Out is a blog series about music, words, and all sorts of artistic matters. It started with an explanation. 209 more to go.

New additions to You’ve Got to Check This Out release regularly. Also, free humor, short works, and poetry post irregularly. Receive notifications on Facebook by friending or following Craig.

Images may be subject to copyright.

Catharine Opie (YGtCTO #90)

Fine-art photographer

Too often, I find myself trapped in that writerly stereotype that finds me sitting and typing with periodic breaks to sit somewhere else and try to figure out what to go back and type. For excitement, I may try to accomplish some chores. The plain fact is that you have to get out if you want to have any fuel to keep the fire burning.

So, I had the privilege of hearing Catharine Opie speak the other night. I really had no idea what to expect because the lecture related to a showing of her exhibit, 700 Nimes Road.

If you know the artist or her work, then you are probably sitting there going, for shame, Craig- everyone knows this photographer. She is a renowned provocateur who taught at Yale and shown at the Guggenheim and the Whitney and is one of the great lights of modern art. She is famous for her photos of the LGBTQ community and respected for her activism. Her work was recently used on Transparent. In my defense, I don’t know what I knew already or when I knew it. If Catharine Opie is unfamiliar to you, then do some web surfing and maybe visit her work if you can.

Catharine Opie

Opie may be best known for her portraiture,

which has often challenged the status quo. At times, her self-portraits have gone even further by forcing us to confront deep-set feelings. Once you see those, then the wide, wide range of work produced by Opie may surprise you. Notoriety can create blinders.

Opie has worked as a documentary photographer. She has done landscapes of Minnesota ice houses and high school football fields. She has found ways to bring together abstracts, landscapes, and portraits. Her work often references classic works of fine art and photography. In short, she contains multitudes.

I write, but I bore easily (or we could be polite and say that I have wide-ranging interests). It is inspirational to find an artist who uses their accumulated skills and talent to explore so many genres within their chosen field.

More than that, art is work. If we are fortunate, art is work over a long lifetime of struggling with a chosen medium. Looking under the hood and seeing all the work that a lifetime has geberated  is a privilege and a thrill. Stephen King and Andy Warhol are not aberrations. They are working artists who lived long enough and worked every day. The lesson is unrelenting and powerful.

What’s it all about?

You’ve Got to Check This Out is a blog series about music, words, and all sorts of artistic matters. It started with an explanation. 210 more to go.

New additions to You’ve Got to Check This Out release regularly. Also, free humor, short works, and poetry post irregularly. Receive notifications on Facebook by friending or following Craig.

Images may be subject to copyright.

Holiday Gift Giving Deal!

Two books! Signed! $25, including shipping!

Holiday Gift Giving Deal 2

House of Prair, Den of Thieves is due out this weekend, but I wanted to offer this deal with enough time for me to send books out for all your holiday gift giving needs.

Message me that you are interested by end of day, Sunday, December 11, 2016, and I will send you a signed copy of House of Prair, Den of Thieves and a signed copy of The Politician’s Peregrination with all effort put into having them arrive by  December 25.

How this will work:

Message me on Facebook Messenger or via email or whatever other means you have of usually contacting me. Send me $25 by end of day Monday, December 12, 2016, via PayPal. I will give you those details in my reply. (Ask me if PayPal is an issue for you.) Tell me how you want the inscriptions to read in the books.
Holiday Gift Giving Deal

Disclaimers:

Price is good for shipping to continental U.S. Ask if you live elsewhere.
Ordering the books from your favorite internet retailer will run you about the same price, give or take a few pennies, but they will be able to send it to you overnight, which I cannot do at this price.
Both books will be available on ebook readers shortly. The Politician’s Peregrination already is. They cost only $2.99 that way. Once again that is without my signing them. I am happy to sign your ebook reader if you see me about, if that makes you feel any better.
Of course, you can order the books signed from me any time forward, but the price may change. Also, I can’t guarantee future turnaround time.

As a reward for reading all of that, the first person who wants to replace the signed copy of House of Prair, Den of Thieves with the writer’s proof, signed by me, is welcome to it. The only differences from the final published version are: 1) first three pages have a less attractive font; 2) a blank page has been inserted at pp. 202; 3) the back cover copy is reversed top and bottom; and 4) the last page has Proof printed across it.