SOUNDTRACK:
PHISH-The Man Who Stepped Into Yesterday (1987).
This record was created by Trey Anastasio as his senior project at Goddard College. The thesis included an essay piece and this collection of songs (recorded by Phish) relating this epic tale from the band’s fictional land of Gamehendge. It was never officially released, but since Phish is so free with the tape trading, it is pretty widely available online (heck, even Wikipedia has a link to the Lossless SHN download of the album).
This release is legendary in the band’s history because they have played all of the songs from this album many times in their live shows (some much more than others, of course). And while they have more or less played the Gamehendge saga a few times in concert, I’d always wondered what the original story was all about (many songs have since been added to the saga as it grew larger).
So here in all its tape-hissy glory is the original. My first thought is that I guess it was hard to get good sound recording equipment in 1987 (or else this is a multi-generational copy—the “white cassette” from a year earlier sounds better). And there seems to be a few flubs in the narration (which could be from copying). I actually surprised he didn’t use a more authoritarian voice for the narration.
For fans, this is fun to hear because of that narration. Live, the narration varies all the time, not always explaining what is going on the same way (some live narrations are far better and much more interesting). But here you get it straight from the source. The narration is accompanied by rather pretty instrumental music (which varies depending on who he is speaking about). But for those of us who know all of these songs, the biggest surprise is finding out that “AC/DC Bag,” “The Sloth,” and “Possum” were part of the story (or maybe the biggest surprise is learning from the narration what the hell an AC/DC bag is (a robotic, mechanized hangman, of course).
The story is pretty interesting (Wilson and the Helping Friendly Book and all that), although by the end it loses itself a bit. And I’m not really sure that “The Sloth” and “Possum” fit into the story at all. But hey, he was a college senior when he wrote it, one can forgive a little sophomoric nonsense, right?
[READ: June 11, 2012] “The Republic of Empathy”
This is the first fiction I’ve read of the sci-fi issue. I’m not sure if it’s supposed to be sci-fi, because it’s not really, at least not in terms of genre (I’d say sci-fi fans would object to the designation of sci-fi for this). But it is futuristic and neat. I especially enjoyed the humor and the construction of the story—Lipsyte is usually good for both of these.
It begins with William. Williams is married to Peg. Peg wants to have a second child as a gift for their first child (who has just grown out of the new baby smell). William thinks this is crazy, but Peg says it’s a dealbreaker. The next day William, who works for a flip-flop company, smokes a joint with an ex-cop friend, Gregory on the roof of their building. On the roof across from them, they see two men fighting. And then one falls of the roof—splat.
Gregory says he’s seen this before but that William will be traumatized. And he is in his dreams, but he’s even more traumatized when he dreams that his wife is pregnant and they already have two kids. Oh, and that the neighbors, the Lockhorns, masturbate each other in the living room with the windows open.
Section two is from Danny’s point of view. Danny is Gregory’s son. Every few weeks Gregory is dating a new, younger lady. This one is only a few years older than Danny. It’s gross (and Danny feels like a bad YA narrator as he relates the story). This is all before (I assume) Gregory comes out of the closet. Because William knows that he’s gay in the above scene.
The next section jumps to Leon and Fresko, the guys fighting on the roof. They were planning on making a cheap movie with a fight scene on the roof. Not very smart.
Then we jump to Zach, a cocky rich kid. He has more money than he knows what to do with, but he’s having an existential crisis (which he worried might be a fake existential crisis). So he sets off on a quest to interrogate authenticity (there’s a funny (kind of) joke about waterboarding in there). He buys off professor to support his quest. And the first person he meets is Gregory, an artist in a coffee house. (I love the joke that Gregory is scraping off the toppings of his everything bagel making it a nothing bagel (“Typical of an artist to make a conceptual work out of his breakfast”).
The penultimate chapter is devoted to Drone Sister. Drone Sister Reaper 5 is a drone with artificial intelligence. She is communicating with Base Jango and is having an existential crisis about bombing people. Base Jango tells Reaper 5 that she is just a machine and has no feelings. And besides, base camp sets all the controls anyway.
The final section is given to Peg. Peg wraps up most of the story quite well, but I’m not going to give it away. I admit I had to go back and re-read parts of it because I missed who one of the characters was. I was also focusing entirely on something other than what happened, so the ending was a huge surprise. That’s a neat trick.
This story was funny, a little confusing, and oddly satisfying. Even if it wasn’t satisfying in any conventional sense.

Reblogged this on BookRepublic.