SOUNDTRACK: DAVID WAX MUSEUM-“Born With a Broken Heart” (Field Recordings, January 12, 2012).
This was the third Field Recording in the series [David Wax Museum: Folk Among The Ruins] and it seems to have started a trend of recording musicians in the ruins at the Newport Folk Festival
The video opens with the band climbing through a broken down house. Then the music starts with David playing the charango and Suz Slezak clapping. It’s a catchy fun song with handclaps, wonderful vocal harmonies and oohs.
Two minutes into the song a tenor horn adds some depth and bass to the music, making it sound much bigger. Around three minutes the whole horn section is playing along with a kind of mariachi feel..
At the end of the song you can hear cheering–presumably for the festival itself and not them, but it seems apt as well.
[READ: November 15, 2017] “The Hotel”
I feel like this is an excerpt. If it’s not an excerpt than I don’t know what.
It’s basically about a woman who lands at an airport. She is discombobulated from all of the flights and transfers (which seems unlikely but whatever). The story starts with no explanation at all as to why the woman has flown from Dublin to New York to Milan. She is now at a layover in Germany or Switzerland or Austria (the signs are all in German).
She can’t read the signs. It’s very late. The airport seems to be closing down. Her next flight is leaving in 5 hours. She figures she will need to be back at the airport in four. So instead of camping out at Gate 19, she decides to go to look for a hotel. By the time she checked in , she would get max three hours sleep. It’s just not worth it in my opinion, but whatever.
She walks through the airport where everything is closed. She sees men with guns and soft Germanic accents. They point her half-assedly towards a hotel or a building or a kind of hangar.
And then she is in a long line with other people who appear to be refugees. Their passports and boarding passes are being checked. The line is endless.
At this point I don;t know why she doesn’t just give up and go back to Gate 19, But she stays
The intense confusion of the protagonist is puzzling. And so is the entire story. It’s Kafka with no enemy.

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