SOUNDTRACK: PRIMUS-June 2010 Rehearsal (2010).
Just when I was convinced that Primus were a done deal, I learned that they were not only touring but had just released a free downloadable EP of their recent rehearsals. It’s got 4 songs: two super oldies, 1 pretty oldie and one not terribly old one (these designations are in terms of albums releases, not length of time ago, as they would all be old ones by that reckoning).
The two oldies are my favorites: “Pudding Time” sounds wonderful–a few updates, and slight improv things, but basically that’s the song that introduced me to Primus. “Harold of the Rocks” is the other one. I love Harold, because it is such a weird, crazy song (even by Primus standards). Lyrically, it’s about some guys who meet the fabled Harold of the Rocks. Sometime later the narrator meets Harold again. Harold is currently lit up like an old Christmas Tree and he tells the narrator that he doesn’t remember much about what happened that night. And that’s pretty much it. It even mentions Schooly D! Great stuff.
The other two songs are “American Life” which comes from Sailing the Seas of Cheese. It’s a deep cut as opposed to the more obvious single, “Jerry was a Race Car Driver.” It’s nice to hear that song again, as it wasn’t very high-profile, although it is surprising to me that it’s 3 minutes longer than the original. “Duchess and the Proverbial Mind Spread” is from The Brown Album, an album I don’t know all that well. It’s got some good stuff in it, including a pretty good solo from Ler.
This EP features the drumming of Jay Lane, who was in Primus even before “Herb” (who I miss very much) and was in Sausage. “Herb” by the way, was in A Perfect Circle and THE BLUE MAN GROUP! Holy cowboys!
Primus sucks!
[READ: July 25, 2011] “Last Night”
This is an excerpt from Zone One, a book Colson Whitehead signed for me at BEA (I really must read it one of these days).
The story opens with something happening on Last Night. It’s a little confusing, and since no context is provided, it doesn’t make all that much sense until the very end of the excerpt which (the end) blew my mind.
The story concerns Mark Spitz–not Mark Spitz the swimmer (or maybe it is Mark Spitz the swimmer–again, no context), –a teenager who goes to Atlantic City with his friend Kyle. And for the most part, the story is pretty tame, almost dull (but Whitehead is a great writer and he invigorates what could have been a pretty typical Atlantic City gambling weekend). The boys gamble, get comped and basically don’t leave the casino for the duration of their stay.
What I love about the story is that little things, meaningless sentences like, “They did not watch the news nor receive news from the outside” [when you are on a casino weekend with buddies you do not check the news] seem innocuous–like little details that would fill out any story. It’s only later that…
Well, it’s later, on the way home that things seem normal–the traffic is horrendous “drivers and their passengers misbehaved, steering onto the shoulder and jetting past the stalled unlucky.” Pretty normal bad traffic behavior. They figure there’s a game or a concert that night.
But little things, when you read closely, show that everything is not alright. Like, “The house looked normal from the outside.” And then you get the shocking news about his parents (which I can’t in good conscience spoil, even if it is only an excerpt).
Whitehead ends this except in a brilliance scene: a flashback to a disturbing incident with Mark’s parents which flashes to the present in which a similar but very different scene is happening. And suddenly everything changes. In ways I never ever expected from Whitehead.
I cannot wait to read this book now.

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