Friday, August 19, 2022

Cheltenham Elegy #702 in Argotist Online Poetry

 

Argotist Online editor Jeffrey Side is up and running again with a poetry section for AO. Here, in the refurbished AO poetry site, is Cheltenham Elegy #702. Thanks again to Jeff. 

Monday, August 15, 2022

Feel (I saw) remix: Two #1s


As of today, the Feel (I saw) remix series produced its second #1. Feel (I saw) remix 2: vocal montage landed at #1 on the Soundclick Minimal Electronic sub-generic chart. Cheers!

P.S. Also worth noting: as of 9-9, Feel 2 landed at #18 on the Electronic Overall chart, too. 

Monday, August 8, 2022

Readings from P.F.S. Post (EP)

 


Selections from P.F.S. Post, taken from its seventeen year life online, read by me. EP length (17 minutes).

Track Listing:

Vlad Pogorelov: No. 32

Christopher Goodrich: Upon Hearing that She and the Man with whom She Cheated are getting Married;

Drinking Together, Li Po and I admire Wang's Garden

Jeremy Eric Tenenbaum: dear gr

Steve Halle: supermarket tabloid tableau

Nick Moudry: High Noon

Chris McCabe: from The True History of the Working Class (March 26, 2008)

Cheers!


Monday, August 1, 2022

Feel (I saw) remix: Matt Stevenson


And here's a picture of Matt Stevenson, in all his resplendent glory, though not at Eris Temple. This shot of Matt was taken during his tenure at Webster Street Studios, on Webster Street in South Philadelphia, which directly preceded his tenure at Eris Temple in North/West Philly, which began in 2005. 

Feel (I saw) remix: Eris Temple


What you see in this picture: me and two cohorts sitting in front of what functioned, for Matt Stevenson, as a console/mixing board at Eris Temple, at 52nd and Cedar in North/West Philly, as of 2006. With the success online of Feel (I saw) remix, I thought seeing this might be of some interest. Up the two steps to my right, in the picture, was a large, carpeted square space, with lines running to Matt, where I sat on the day in early August 2006 when Feel in its entirety was recorded, and did my thing. To our left: another odd rectangle of grungy basement space, leading to a staircase up to the Temple's first floor. Eris Temple Studio was a walk-down model studio, even as the carpeted space had a high window, level with street level, so that claustrophobia wasn't much of an issue. Thanks again, Matt.