Now incorporating The Sudbury Hill Harrow and Wherever End Times

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Heat ray shock: Blair quits

Bugs Levy nabbed

Just prepare this story, Feargal. Don't post it yet. The Willie will be first with this scoop, even if we have to make it up. It seems that the Met have got hold of that Yankee heat ray thing and are firing it at Blair. He's decided to make a run for it. Suggest headline: "If I go down, you go down" Levy to Blair? (Don't forget the question mark.) Delete this email. Repeat: don't post this!

Red

Monday, January 29, 2007

Classical music on MySpace

Chopin: The Raindrop Prelude, plus Fantasie Impromtu (you may recognise the tune of "I'm always chasing rainbows" part way through), The Revolutionary Etude (a very familiar piece) and Nocturne in E minor. Unfortunately we're not told the artist, though no doubt the cognoscienti will recognise. Excellent, whoever.

Jascha Heifetz: Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D, plus Bach Chaconne, Paganini Caprice 24 (the basis for Julian Lloyd Webber's theme for the South Bank Show) and Le Ronde Des Lutins.

Mahler: Adagietto (from the 5th Symphony?). A crackly recording. You may remember this from Visconti's magnificent film of Thomas Mann's "Death in Venice".

Schubert: Impromptu No. 3, Orchestral version of Serenade, Death and the Maiden. Search for "Franz Schubert" to find many more links.

Enrico Caruso: L'Elisir d'Amore (mis-labelled as the next one and vice-versa), Una Furtiva Lagrima, O Figli, O Figli Miei. Vesti la Giubba ("Cloco's Theme", according to Grandad, who is looking over my shoulder—I don't know if he's winding me up) and 3 others. Libiamo, Libiamo plus Torna a Sorrento and two more.

Beniamino Gigli: Toselli Serenade and others. (Grandad looking over my shoulder says to say "the gohlden voice of Beniamino Gigli", in just that way; apparently it makes scratchy old recordings sound better when you say that, and some voices are silver and others gold and others brass. Who knew?)

If you search for Schumann, there is some lieder there. (No, no, don't say "Take me to your lieder".) Of course all of this is deplorable. No credits, no royalties. But it's there for a short while anyway and, as sins go, listening to it is perhaps one of the lesser venial ones. Check back for updates.

Jacintha Pucka

An evening with author Stella Duffy

Free!

Willesden Green Library Centre
Thursday 15th February, 7.30 - 9.00 p.m.

"Stella Duffy has written ten novels, five of them are literary novels including State of Happiness which was long-listed listed for the Orange prize in 2004. Her other five books are the Saz Martin crime series. Stella's latest novel The Room of Lost Things will be published by Virago in 2008. She has also written over thirty short stories and eight plays. Join Stella for an evening talking about and reading from her works, there will be a chance to ask questions and she will be signing copies of her book at the end of the evening."

It's not often you get an offer like this, an evening with a brilliant woman and all the refreshments you can guzzle, gratis. Need I say more?

Feargal Mooney

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Some more music links on MySpace and YouTube

Billie Holiday: The Very Thought of You, I'll Be Seeing You, Strange Fruit, God Bless the Child. (Strange Fruit is one of the most solemn and unforgettable songs, could be a theme tune for Going to Meet the Man by James Baldwin. The other tracks here are also outstanding like all of Billie's recordings.)

Bessie Smith: Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out plus Give Me a Pigfoot (one of her last recordings, when "rediscovered" by Benny Goodman etc), Backwater Blues

Charles & Eddie: Would I Lie to You? (can't get this brilliant one-hit-wonder on iTunes, but it's here on MySpace)

Francoise Hardy: J'Ai Jete Mon Coeur (just a very sweet old record found on somebody's profile, a great way to hear excellent and unusual music, singled out by each MySpace user. I'm a sucker for this sound and mood, even "All Over the World" - no link for that yet.)

Jacques Brel: Ne Me Quitte Pas, La Fanette, Les Desesperes. (I wish I could find Au Suivant and a couple of others.)

Leonard Cohen: Hey That's No Way to Say Goodbye, One of Us Cannot Be Wrong, Suzanne

I was going to post a link to The Stranger Song, but it's been removed (a hazard of this kind of bootleg access). There are several more Leonard Cohen tracks on there. Click Music, enter Leonard Cohen and click Search. You can find all sorts of things this way.

Christy Moore: Ride On (notable for the most sublime bit of slide guitar ever at the end), Don't Forget Your Shovel, Biko Drum, Delirium Tremens.

By the way, here's Christy singing Viva la Quinta Brigada on YouTube, with some interesting newsreel and fleeting pictures of some of the Irish volunteers for the International Brigade etc. "The bishops blessed the blueshirts at Dunleary".

That's Donal Lunny on the bouzouki and Declan Sinnott on the other guitar. Donal Lunny and Christy Moore were in Planxty almost at the start of the Irish folk revival. Here's Donal Lunny duelling bouzouki vs. mandolin with Andy Irvine in a great old clip of Planxty on the Late Late Show, with Liam O'Flynn on uileann pipes. (Andy forgets the words and almost doesn't restart, till Donal gives him a prompt: still brilliant/live/exciting.)

Jacintha Pucka

Friday, January 26, 2007

Series of Dreams

Bob Dylan on Music Box

Forget YouTube, if you have broadband, get yourself a sherbet, click that link and put your feet up. It's real proper video. Some beautiful pictures, especially on "When the Deal Goes Down". I've been listening to Modern Times for a while, and though he sounds very old, it makes good listening. It's a pity they haven't got Rolling and Tumbling, The Levees Gonna Break, Nettie Moore, etc.

Quotes I like: "More frailer than the flowers / These precious hours" (When the Deal Goes Down, sounding wonderfully like some old comedian singer / George Burns / Ken Dodd / music hall act), "I've already confessed, don't need to confess again" (Thunder on the Mountain), "I'd already gone the distance, just thinking of a series of dreams" (Series of Dreams).

Jacintha Pucka

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Message to the blogosphere: we know you're up there



George W. Bush's "State of the Union" address and the Democratic response

Willesden International Affairs

Friday, January 19, 2007

There was a storm



Francis Bacon's studio, archaeologically relocated from 7 Reece Mews, South Kensington to the municipal gallery, Dublin



Back in London, here he is alive in black and white in his studio, hardly imagining that one day it would fly to Dublin, talking about futility and saying that art is a game. What a game, though.

Harry Lemon

Tao Lin to be published by Melville House

"Sasquatch", which was short-listed for the 2006 Willesden Herald short story competition, will be included in Tao Lin's collection "Bed" to be published by Melville House this April. (More)

Kiri O'Hara

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Look We Have Coming to Dover!

The bard of Dollis Hill

"[Daljit] Nagra is that rare thing: an unknown poet whose debut collection is being published by Faber, Britain's leading poetry house. [...] When he performs poems such as Singh Song!, he says he tends to read them with 'an Indian voice, black it up, minstrelise it'." (Guardian Books)

This opens a new world of possibilities for poetry. I wouldn't mind going into the poetry biz, myself. How does this grab you?: "The Willesden Poetry Minstrels". With a few high-kicking soubrettes and a troupe of lads done up in burnt cork, we could go touring the provinces, knocking people dead every night with a medley of "Four Quartets" and "Rockabye Your Baby to a Dixie Melody". It will be the new Riverdance. We'll close on an arrangement of Gray's "Elegy in a Country Churchyard" in an up-tempo, semi-rap style, segueing into Kipling's "If" and finally bring the house down with "The Swanee River". All for the price of a few banjoes.

Red Woodward

Friday, January 12, 2007

Climate change? London lemons



Lemon tree with about 50 large lemons spotted in a garden near Highbury on new year's night

Picture courtesy of Harry Lemon

Shadows in Cafe Gigi, continued: Writers' ruin



I see an addlepated debauchee. I'm getting early promise not fulfilled. I'm sensing bloated flesh and pomposity. It's not Ken Russell, is it?

Mystic Mavis

And finally

Video (SkyNews)

Amazing scene as a lion hugs his rescuer. She rescued him from a travelling circus.

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Suzi

Local report

"In an interview with the Nuneaton Telegraph in 1999, she said: 'I love my writing - like God, I start with nothing and create something."

Ossian

Monday, January 08, 2007

Willesden short story prize 2007: Result

Short list

"Born Again" by Shakti Bhatt
"Charles Magezi-Akiiki" by Olesya Mishechkina
"Felipe and the Sea" by Jonathan Attrill
"Jolt" by James Lawless
"Kid in a Well" by Willie Davis
"Mrs Nakamoto Takes a Vacation" by Steve Finbow
"Paradise" by Nicholas Hogg
"The Dead Don't Do That Kind of Thing" by Wes Lee
"Vaselino" by Lee Joans
"Words from a Glass Bubble" by Tobias Williams

Winner

And the winner of the Willesden short story prize 2007, as chosen by Zadie Smith, is "Kid in a Well" by Willie Davis.

Willie Davis is a native of Whitesburg, Kentucky who currently teaches English at The University of Maryland. "Kid in a Well" is a chapter from The Darktown Strut, his recently completed novel about contemporary Appalachian life.

Many thanks to everyone who took part and to formerly famous poet Rockwell "Rocky" Rollins and WH media correspondent Amanda Saxonheart for hazarding their eyesight over the strange fonts submitted. Thanks to Zadie Smith for adjudicating.

Judge's report

"Amongst many high concept competitors, 'Kid in a Well' stood out for me for its relative simplicity, neat characterisation, and laconic, relaxed structure. It's a story genuinely interested in its characters rather than fascinated with its own form, and offers the reader humour over authorial hubris. I really enjoyed it. Congratulations, Willie, and enjoy your mug! I have one and I love it." Zadie Smith

Anthology

The forthcoming anthology "New Short Stories 1" (Pretend Genius, 2007) will feature the winning story together with all but one of the short list and a selection of other stories commended by the editorial team, including (confirmed):

"Alternative Medicine" by Laura Solomon
"Atlantic Drift" by Arthur Allan
"Avoiding the Issue" by Laura Heggie

It will also feature more of the virtuosic series Microworld by 19-year-old Olesya Mishechkina, from which "Charles Magezi-Akiiki" is taken.

Update (Feb '07)

Also including "Dodie's Gift", last year's joint-winner by Vanessa Gebbie

Ed

Syndication: Wreuters / Sphagnum

Short story competition: "White smoke seen"

...breaking news...breaking news...

There are unconfirmed reports that white smoke has been seen coming from the special chimney above Willesden Herald house. More to follow.

Update

The short-listed writers have been notified by email. Full details to be announced.

Wreuters / Agence Sphagnum

Sunday, January 07, 2007

Mirror mirror

whiskey river

Ask yourself: Who am I? Invariably the internal answer will be autobiographical - an identity based on the past. It will be a description of a continuity from childhood through adolescence to adulthood which is all past memories and no longer exists. Memory is the mirror and we live on the wrong side. Seldom will anyone answer the question of Who am I? with: I appear to be the process of reading this page. (Yatri)

Ossian

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Squalid end of Bush's and Blair's schemes

BBC

"Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott has described the circumstances of Saddam Hussein's execution as 'deplorable'."

A hole-and-corner judicial murder, indistinguishable from those committed by Saddam himself. It might just as well have been Bush, Rumsfeld, Cheney and Blair in hoods and leather jackets, conducting this act of squalor and barbarity. Make your own cartoons.

Zoz