Art
Mensa Cat Monday: Kylo Ren and Stimpy
Wordless Wednesday: Gowanus Canal (NYC)
Mensa Cat Monday: Higgs’ Boson
By J.B. of Vacuum Tree Head. You can read more about the Higgs’ Boson and the Standard Model of elementary particle physics here.
Wordless Wednesday: City in the Mist (Seattle)
Mensa Cat Monday: Columns
Wordless Wednesday: ƎSAHƆ (New York)
Wordless Wednesday: Century and Harbor Freeway Interchange, Los Angeles
Wordless Wednesday: Port Dynamism (San Francisco)
Boulez and Bowie
In the span of just one week at the start of this new year, we lost two musical heroes (whose names, coincidentally, both begin with “B”). Pierre Boulez and David Bowie may seem worlds apart musically and stylistically, but they both had strong influences on where my own music and performance has gone especially in the last few years.
![By Joost Evers / Anefo (Nationaal Archief) [CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons](https://54.69.204.231/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Pierre_Boulez_1968-225x300.jpg)
By Joost Evers / Anefo (Nationaal Archief) [CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons
![By k_tjaaa (Flickr: David Bowie Mural) [<a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0">CC BY 2.0</a>], <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ADavid_Bowie_Mural.jpg">via Wikimedia Commons</a>](https://54.69.204.231/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/David_Bowie_Mural-300x274.jpg)
By k_tjaaa (Flickr: David Bowie Mural) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons
But David Bowie was himself a talented musician and writer. In the same ferment of the 1970s in which he developed his personae, he also pushed the use of synthesizers and electronics in music that was still referred to as “Rock”. His song Subterraneans is a prime example of both technology (ARP synthesizers, backwards bass guitar) and theatrics in his music, as illustrated in this tribute video.
The album that includes this song, Low, was preceded by Station to Station, one of my favorites for its funk influence, including the song Stay. The funk and soul sound of this album, along with his more unambiguously masculine persona in the album art (at least to my sensibilities), exemplify his ability to change and reinvent quickly from one project to the next. It’s the album I have returned to primarily after the announcement of his death on Sunday night. But I do want to close with one if his most hauntingly beautiful songs: Drowned Girl is one again something different altogether.