Penance for his Pentagon work…

“Located in the Cathedral, the Great Stalacpipe Organ is the world’s largest musical instrument.
Stalactites covering 3 1/2 acres of the surrounding caverns produce tones of symphonic quality when electronically tapped by rubber-tipped mallets. This most unique, one-of-a-kind instrument was invented in 1954 by Mr. Leland W. Sprinkle of Springfield, Virginia, a mathematician and electronic scientist at the Pentagon. He began his monumental 3 year project by searching the vast chambers of the caverns selecting stalactites to precisely match a musical scale. Electronic mallets were wired throughout the caverns and connected to a large four-manual console. When a key is depressed, a tone occurs as the rubber-tipped plunger strikes the stalactite tuned to concert pitch.
“Today, the organ is played by activating an automated system which works in a manner similar to a child’s music box. The organ is also fully capable of being played manually from the console, as Leland Sprinkle did for many years.”

COURTESY PETER R.!

Spiritualism and art…

The Spiritual in Art: Abstract Painting, 1890-1985
Edited by Maurice Tuchman

Around 1910, groups of artists moved away from representational art toward abstraction, preferring symbolism. They made an effort to draw upon deeper and more varied levels of meaning, the most pervasive being spiritualism. This book demonstrates that the genesis and development of abstract art were inextricably tied to spiritual ideas current in Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Sixteen essays explore such topics as music, romanticism, mysticism, and the occult and their relationship to abstract art. Among the many artists discussed are Kandinsky, Munch, Redon, Arp, Klee, O’Keeffe, Mondrian, and Marsden Hartley.

1986, 436 pages, 523 illustrations (122 in full color), 10 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches.
Paper, ISBN: 0875871305

Paradise on earth.

From Robert Fripp’s online diary:

In this morning’s e-box, a letter from Jason Elliot. Jason is the author of An Unexpected Light, on his journeying in Afghanistan. We [recently] discussed a building Jason has discovered in Persia (ie Iran) while researching his current book.

“A note on the theme of the monument I mentioned.

“This ‘discovery’, along with one or two others, fills me with a private kind of excitement, but I am not at all sure who I may be able to usefully share it with, or to what purpose.

“But in brief: in northern Iran stands a celebrated tower, built entirely from brick and dating from the twelfth century, which commemorates the rule of a local monarch. It is generally thought of as a sort of folly, and indeed rather resembles an English one, though it is far more ancient and generally held up as an architectural marvel and something of an anomaly, if not a work of genius. I attach a photo I took. But that is about all, conventionally. It is publicly accessible but, being empty inside, is not used for anything at present.

“However… even from the exterior, the configuration of the structure reveals an advanced understanding of acoustics. At a distinct point about twenty metres from the entrance, one’s voice is unmistakably reflected to one’s ears, as though amplified, in a most disturbing (to me!) fashion; and inside – well, yes, it’s empty, but what an emptiness! I’d often wondered, from a distance as it were, what the place might have been for. And last year, when I was visiting for the second time, out of curiosity I sang the lines from La Boheme when Rodolfo seizes Mimi’s freezing hand in the darkness… and it knocked my socks off.

“The sound generated was truly extraordinary. I might have been Pavarotti. My voice was taken upwards, swirled around, and returned, resonant and purified. I was with two friends; we froze on the spot. I had never heard such sound. It is very hard to describe; a real voice would have sounded heavenly. It really went into our bones, and left us stunned. Nothing I have heard came close to it. The latest digital mixer couldn’t have done a more sublime job. It dawned on me then that such acoustic genius could not have been accidentally created, and I am convinced that the building was used for musical sessions long ago. There is nothing inside but a circular stone platform at the base, where people used to sit; and suddenly it took on new meaning.

“So, my experience there confirms what I have encountered in writing about Iran and aspects of Persian culture; namely that in essence Persian music is all connected with the idea of Paradise and its intimations here on Earth; and they knew how to make you feel you’ve died and gone to Heaven. Until recently there was no such thing as ‘popular’ Persian music as this was confined to the (formerly) royal and intellectual elite. But to mention the very word ‘music’ is problematic in the sense of what music is designed to achieve, since we are mostly trained to think of music as a sort of recreation.

“Iranian music and poetry are closely allied; purely instrumental music is very specific, and, traditionally at least, all melodies are associated with the different seasons, human temperaments, and times of day or night. A kind of mathematical correspondence links these genres. You could say that in traditional music there are three fundamental variations: orderly melodic progressions; single note-centred music that orbits as it were around a single source and eventually returns to it; and astonishingly complex rythmic or arhythmic compositions designed to overwhelm the mind by their intensity. If I had another lifetime I would investigate the geometry of these tonal systems. Until virtually yesterday I believed there was only one: ie european diatonic…

“But the goal is all the same: to coax the soul into a state of longing for the Real.

“And it strikes me as likely that the building in question was used as a musical forum. The only comparable site I know personally is Thoronet Abbey near Provence, which demonstrates exceptional resonance. Such things are seldom accidental; but the European dimension has been competently investigated already.

“There is another structure in Isfahan where the elaborate, hollowed out spaces in the walls have been put forward as resonating chambers, again for royal musical sessions. The point is that the people of the era knew what they were doing.

“I am sure one day the tower’s acoustic/harmonic properties will be rediscovered, and people will flock there. But not quite yet. Meantime, everyone from Caruso to Sting can eat their hearts out because for a moment I sounded better than all of them………”

THE ARTHUR MAILING LIST BULLETIN No. 0013

“COMMAND PERFORMANCE” -THE ARTHUR MAILING LIST BULLETIN

No. 0013

MONDAY FEBRUARY 7, 2005

title: Money isn’t an issue.

Hello friends and future-friends,

From an AP piece… Did you know that last summer, Ricky Williams, 27, who led the NFL in 2002 with 1,853 yards rushing and broke nine team records, abruptly retired from the Miami Dolphins prior to the 2004 season?

Money wasn’t an issue. Williams, who is single but has three young children, was to make at least $3.6 million this season, with incentives possibly pushing that as high as $6 million.

After winning the Heisman Trophy at Texas in 1998, Williams joined the New Orleans Saints when coach Mike Ditka used all of his draft picks to acquire the standout running back. Ditka said after Williams’ announcement that he hasn’t spoken with Williams in about six months and was taken aback by the retirement news.

“I’d love to talk to him and try to talk him out of it,” Ditka said from Chicago. “It seems kind of foolish to me, but I don’t know what’s on his mind. You’re just destroying a great career. He’s a talent. To let that all go to waste doesn’t make a lot of sense.”

Williams dropped out of sight after his retirement in July. He has resurfaced recently in Nevada County as a student of the ancient Indian medical system system known as Ayurveda.

“I realized a while back that I have an innate ability to be compassionate,” he told the San Francisco Chronicle after Thanksgiving 2004, “and I saw that the strength of compassion is something that healers have and healers use.”

Williams is now about a month into a 17-month course at the California College of Ayurveda in Grass Valley, about 45 miles northeast of Sacramento.

“Ayurveda deals with using your environment to put yourself in balance,” he said. “I’ve realized, both on a psychological and physical level, that the things we do in football don’t bring more harmony to your life. They just bring more disharmony.”

Although he wouldn’t rule out a return to football (“I’m not a fortune- teller”), he indicated the game was far from his mind.

The 5-foot-10 Williams weighs 210 pounds, about 25 fewer than his playing weight. He looks healthy and happy. As part of his Ayurveda studies, he said, “I try to give foods and herbs attributes and find out which ones balance me out.”

He wore sandals, black trousers and a light blue T-shirt silk-screened with the message: “My home is in my head.” His beard is somewhat scraggly. His distinctive dreadlocks have given way to a short haircut.

“I loved playing football, but the reasons I loved football were just to feed my ego,” Williams said. “And any time you feed your ego, it’s a one-way street. … There were so many things I had to deal with that erased the positives I got from playing the game that it wasn’t worth it. It’s like eating a Big Mac and drinking a Diet Coke.”

He’s renting a one-bedroom cottage in nearby Nevada City. A couple of months earlier, he was planning to buy a 165-acre farm in Australia. Those plans have been shelved.

“As human beings we have a tendency when we like something to tie it up and make sure it’s there for a long time. I’ve been working on being able to let things go. I don’t think I ever want to buy property again.”

He seems to have overcome his social anxiety disorder. “I don’t know what it was,” he said. “I definitely have come out of my shell a lot more. When you question who you are, you can’t be proud of who you are. Now that I’m trying to peel off those layers and really understand who I am, I don’t have anything to be shy about.”

He was evasive on the question of his drug use. A recent article in Esquire magazine by a writer who found him in Australia described him as sharing a joint that was “sturdy enough to prop open a door.” Shortly after retiring, he told the Miami Herald that one of the many reasons he quit was that he wanted to smoke marijuana without incurring the wrath of the NFL. The Herald said he faced a four-game suspension and a $876,000 fine by the league for a third violation of its substance abuse policy. He said at the time that he used a masking agent called Extra Clean for two years in Miami to conceal his marijuana use.

As for the idea that he quit because he wanted to be free to smoke dope, he laughed.

“I think it’s funny,” he said.

We’re laughing here too, Ricky, as we imagine how many football fans’ minds you have blown with your courageous public re-setting of priorities. Wonderful!

Here’s some other things that make us feel good:

Arthur No. 15, starring Six Organs of Admittance, J.G. Ballard, Douglas Rushkoff, Jessica Yu (director of the Henry Darger documentary), a piece on meditation as a subversive activity, James Parker on the spawn of Godflesh and Sleep and more more more, is due out on February 15. It’s FREE as always. It’s also the first issue in Arthur’s exciting new format, with a 25%-increased printrun of 50,000 copies. Details about the issue are available now at

http://www.arthurmag.com

The RZA’s book is finally out.

Arik Moonhawk Roper has designed the new Arthur t-shirt, starring a two-fisted tough wizard for our times. We’ll have ’em available soon for as cheap as we can from the arthurmag.com website.

Listening to Alan Moore’s half-hour interview with Brian Eno on BBC4:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/aod/genres/comedy/aod.shtml?radio4/chainreaction

What a hoot and a half it was to hear the confusing labyrinth that is “The Air Itself” by Sunburned Hand of the Man from their recent album (on Arthur’s Bastet label) on WFMU last week. Less form, more matter, sez he? We agree. The all-new, all-life album, “No Magic Man,” is now shipping from us for the low-as-we-can-do-it price of $12 US/$14 Can/$17 world, postpaid. Find out what all the fuzz is about at

http://www.arthurmag.com/store/bastet_cds.php

A special FREE screening of filmmaker MAYA DEREN’s seminal 1948 16mm movement study “Meditation on Violence” will be held Sunday, February 20, 2005, 18.00 – 18.30pm, in Los Angeles as part of a program called “Films with music from China Haiti Jamaica North America.” Directors Guild of America / Theater 2, 7920 West Sunset Boulevar, Los Angeles, CA 90046. RSVP, information and directions. tel +323.965.5578, tellesfineart@earthlink.net

And so on, strolling on….

We’ll see you there,

Arthur Wellness Center Staff Director

Los Angeles, California

"It was the house that changed me from the cheerleader to the hippie."

Frank Zappa’s notorious home in Laurel Canyon goes up for sale after 30 years. Alice Cooper, Eric Burdon, John Mayall, Pamela Des Barres, and members of the Mothers of Invention remember the days.

The Rock and Roll Treehouse
by Jack Boulware

It‚Äôs 1968, at the Laurel Canyon Country Store in the Hollywood hills. Drummer Ansley Dunbar meets a 15-year-old hippie chick named Pattie and asks if she wants to go to a party at Frank Zappa?جø¬?s house. They pull into a driveway of an old log cabin. People are wandering in and out of an enormous 70-foot living room. In the basement, musicians take turns bowling on a Day-Glo painted bowling alley. The adjoining guest house sports a duck pond and two trees growing out of the living room. Couples are huddled in artificial caves built into the hillside. Someone tells her the cabin was once the house of movie cowboy Tom Mix, and that Harry Houdini used to live across the street. Pattie looks around at the outrageously dressed girls, taking care of a baby named Moon Unit, and the cute young guys playing guitars, and realizes she‚Äôs inside the epicenter of the Laurel Canyon music scene.

“Mick Jagger was there,” she now recalls. “A couple guys from the Animals. Mark Lindsay from Paul Revere and the Raiders. Alice Cooper. Janis Joplin. Roger McGuinn and Mike Clarke from the Byrds. Brian McLain and Arthur Lee, who were in Love. Another band in L.A. called the Seeds. Andy Summers. Sam Andrew was there, from Big Brother. John Mayall. Mick Taylor—he was the only one my age.”

Pattie O’Neal pauses to think back. “The Cowsills, the prototype wholesome family? One or two of the older Cowsill guys were there,” she says. “They were really stoned, they looked terrible!”

In the late 60s, this house was the premier stop of Los Angeles rock and roll. After 35 years, the log cabin is long gone, but amazingly, the treehouse is newly renovated and on the real estate market. For a cool $2.4 million someone can own a slightly fuzzy slice of history.

As a caretaker gives me a tour, pointing out such erroneous information as the spot where gunfighter Wyatt Earp supposedly died, I am reminded of the Hollywood dance between fact and rumor. It isn?جø¬?t unusual for an address to have a rich lineage. Every third house seems to be once owned by somebody with screen credits, even if it was only the second unit director on ‚ÄúLand of the Pharoahs.‚Äù The Canyon is singular in this regard. Since the 1920s, the nouveau riche have scurried up into the hills to hide, from Bugsy Siegel to W.C. Fields, Robert Mitchum, Robert Heinlein, Harry Houdini, and current celebrities like Julian Lennon and Julianne Moore. It‚Äôs quiet, woodsy, and less than a mile from Sunset Boulevard.

But 2401 Laurel Canyon Boulevard in particular has retained an unusual fondness. According to Tom Mix historian Boyd Magers, the log cabin was constructed back in 1915, as a masculine retreat for wealthy men to escape their women and smoke and drink in peace. Its highlight was an 80-foot living room, with floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace. Tom Mix lived here briefly, a fun-loving movie cowboy who for a time cashed Hollywood’s biggest checks. After Mix moved to Beverly Hills, the cabin was rented for several decades.

As the 1960s washed over Los Angeles, the ripple of fuck-you new money began seeping into the canyon, young people with record contracts and reefer smirks. When architect Robert Byrd needed a place to live between marriages, his son Gary helped him build a small house just behind the Tom Mix log cabin, then vacant. Gary Byrd recalls when clearing the property, the father and son discovered “one of the Barrymore kids” living inside a shack. The following year, a communal family of weirdos moved into the cabin and treehouse, centered around two underground hipsters named Vito Paluekas and Carl Franzoni, organizers of freeform dance troupes at clubs along Sunset Strip. The dancers wore freaky clothing, and flopped and pogoed alongside bands like the Byrds and the Mothers of Invention.

One night a young Pamela Des Barres followed the so-called “Zappa dancers” to a party at the Log Cabin. In those days, Franzoni was known as Captain Fuck. “He wanted to fuck everybody,” remembers Des Barres, now the elder spokeswoman of rock groupies. “He had this long tongue, and wore a cape with a big “F” on the back. He was standing in the doorway, with big pink curlers clamped in his pubic hair.”

“We had dances there,” says Carl Franzoni, still chasing young girls in northern California. “We had lots of rehearsals.” He adds slyly, “It was a fuck scene, too.”

In 1967 the Zappa dancers split their rent with staff from the hippie publication The Oracle. Retired journalist John Bilby recalls at least 36 people living and partying at the Log Cabin and treehouse, including the band Fraternity of Man. “Tim Leary was definitely there, George Harrison and Ravi Shankar were there,” Bilby says. “The psychedelics that were being taken. They were fucking right out there on the grounds, a thousand miles from civilization.”

In the spring of 1968, The Oracle moved out, and Frank Zappa moved in, fresh from an extended gig in New York. His bizarre, satirical synthesis of Spike Jones and Edgar Varese, combined with a guitar virtuosity and serious business acumen, attracted a parade of curious visitors like Paul Butterfield, Eric Clapton, and Jimi Hendrix. Among Zappa’s many projects was producing the GTOs, a band made up of groupies hanging around the cabin.

“We were sitting in the living room,” remembers Des Barres. “I remember Frank telling us ‘You should be a band. How would you girls like to be in a band?’ He sat us down in the basement. We made lists of the rock stars we wanted to meet, and wrote the album down there.”

One house guest was John Mayall, who had just broken up the Bluesbreakers and was taking in the Los Angeles scene. The strange-looking GTO girls made a lasting impression. “Obviously flamboyant comes to mind,” Mayall chuckles. “Quite a shock to see for a person visiting from England.” Mayall recovered sufficiently to record songs both about Zappa’s cabin and the rigors of venereal disease.

Between guests, Zappa held auditions for his Bizarre and Straight record labels. One band from Phoenix, Alice Cooper, had been turned down by every record company and was going nowhere in a hurry. Fortunately, Cooper was dating Zappa‚Äôs babysitter, and so Zappa agreed to hear Cooper‚Äôs band at the cabin at 7 o’clock.

“We were so excited we got there at seven in the morning,” says Cooper. “We set up in the living room and started playing our set. Frank came down the stairs with a cup of coffee, and he goes, ‘What the hell are you doing?’ You said seven. ‘Seven at NIGHT.’ So he listened to about four songs and he’s, ‘Okay okay, you’re signed, I’ll sign you.’”

A young guitarist named Bill Harkleroad, aka Zoot Horn Rollo, showed up to audition for Captain Beefheart, and saw members of the Stones, the Who, the Mothers, studio musicians and about 25 others all wandering about. ‚ÄúWithin a few minutes I’m in a jam session with Frank, Don Vliet, Mick Jagger, Art Tripp,‚Äù says Harkleroad. ‚ÄúFrank and Don were my rock world heroes.‚Äù He was so nervous he could only play a few notes.

Alice Cooper recalls another Jagger visit, when the Stone showed up inebriated with girlfriend Marianne Faithfull, and the straight-edge Zappa kicked them both out of the house.

“I was sitting there, just a kid hanging out to record,” says Cooper. “And I went, ‘Frank Zappa just threw Mick Jagger out of his house—because he’s drunk.’ To me, thats so far in another universe that I couldnt even believe it.”

One of Zappa’s canyon neighbors was Eric Burdon, whose first memory of the house concerns borrowing a motorcycle from Jimmy Carl Black of the Mothers of Invention. Black threw in a bonus: a few lines of speed. Burdon says, “I was so stoned that I was heading north on Pacific Coast Highway before I remembered you have to put gas in the machine, and I ran out of gas and was stranded. I spent the night on the beach, freezing cold. I got back and saw Jimmy and he said, “Good stuff?”

The word was out: Laurel Canyon was where it was at. Groovy scenes blossomed at the homes of Joni Mitchell, the Byrds, the Monkees, Mama Cass. Passers-by gawked at the Log Cabin out of car windows. “It was omnipresent,” says former Mothers drummer Denny Bruce. “If you lived in the valley and came into Hollywood, you’re coming over Laurel Canyon, so every jerk from the valley—‘Heyyy mannn, there’s Frank Zappa’s pad.’”

Tired of the attention, the Zappas moved out after just six months. Log Cabin parties continued with new tenants. But the canyon was experiencing a seismic shift in music and drugs du jour. Along with ‘70s blue-jean millionaires like Fleetwood Mac and the Eagles came an underbelly of junkies and squatters. The Cabin and treehouse scene grew creepy. “They were kind of rave parties,” recalls DJ Rodney Bingenheimer. “Weird black lights, stuff like that. People were stoned and out of it.”

The darkness coalesced on Halloween morning 1981, when the Log Cabin mysteriously caught fire. Some said it started from a banjo player’s cigarette, other claimed it was a drug lab explosion. As helicopters hovered over the blaze, police roped off the property and a crowd watched it burn to the ground. Only the treehouse was saved. Some, like Pamela Des Barres, poked through the rubble. Others simply drove past, like Alice Cooper, not wanting to think about it.

When music producer Bob Crosby rented the property in 1984, he discovered drums and drumsticks stuffed into the cabin’s still standing fireplace chimney. “Down in the basement, one of the walls had signatures from the Stones, Eric Burdon and the Animals, John Sebastian and the Loving Spoonful,” he says. Hundreds of people still dropped by each Halloween, expecting a raging party. Crosby said no parties, and raised his family.

In 1999 the property was purchased by Mike Slarve, owner of a fleet of rock tour buses, and manager of Black Sabbath drummer Bill Ward. Slarve has spent the past three years renovating the treehouse and grounds, and has seen dozens of characters wandering over to tell their stories. Between Captain Fuck, Harry Houdini, and the Manson Family, Slarve has heard just about everything. ‚ÄúYou don‚Äôt know if they’re completely insane or they‚Äôre telling the truth,‚Äù he says. ‚ÄúIt kind of lights up everybody‚Äôs imagination.‚Äù

Pattie O’Neal now lives a block from the treehouse, and drives by each day on her way home. “It’s so bizarre,” she says. “I don’t think a day goes by that I don’t turn there and think about it. It was the house that changed me from the cheerleader to the hippie.”

(First published in Mojo magazine)

SOUND MIRRORS.

“Sound Mirrors or reflectors were first built in the 1920’s as an early warning system that listened for the sound of airplane engines. A concrete bowl shaped reflector focused the sound waves onto a microphone at the focus of the bowl in much the same way that a satellite dish works with radio waves. Many different sizes and types were tried in an attempt to get that vital early warning of attack by enemy planes, but the system was rendered obsolete by the advent of Radar.
“The pictures above were taken at various times and locations, mostly on the South Kent Coast.”

COURTESY JOHN C>!

Not knowing your rights.

From the Jan 31, 2005 USA TODAY:

U.S. students say press freedoms go too far
By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY

One in three U.S. high school students say the press ought to be more restricted, and even more say the government should approve newspaper stories before readers see them, according to a survey being released today.

The survey of 112,003 students finds that 36% believe newspapers should get “government approval” of stories before publishing; 51% say they should be able to publish freely; 13% have no opinion.

Asked whether the press enjoys “too much freedom,” not enough or about the right amount, 32% say “too much,” and 37% say it has the right amount. Ten percent say it has too little.

The survey of First Amendment rights was commissioned by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and conducted last spring by the University of Connecticut. It also questioned 327 principals and 7,889 teachers.

The findings aren’t surprising to Jack Dvorak, director of the High School Journalism Institute at Indiana University in Bloomington. “Even professional journalists are often unaware of a lot of the freedoms that might be associated with the First Amendment,” he says.

The survey “confirms what a lot of people who are interested in this area have known for a long time,” he says: Kids aren’t learning enough about the First Amendment in history, civics or English classes. It also tracks closely with recent findings of adults’ attitudes.

“It’s part of our Constitution, so this should be part of a formal education,” says Dvorak, who has worked with student journalists since 1968.

Although a large majority of students surveyed say musicians and others should be allowed to express “unpopular opinions,” 74% say people shouldn’t be able to burn or deface an American flag as a political statement; 75% mistakenly believe it is illegal.

The U.S. Supreme Court in 1989 ruled that burning or defacing a flag is protected free speech. Congress has debated flag-burning amendments regularly since then; none has passed both the House and Senate.