SOUNDTRACK: INTERIOR DISPOSITION-“Fornix” (2008).
It was challenging to find a related song for this week’s reading, although frankly a band called Interior Disposition would fit with just about any DFW passage. But having a song called “Fornix” paired nicely with the computer problems that the author faced this week.
From the online information, it seems like Interior Disposition is a metal band. And yet when I tracked down their full album and listened to a bit it’s largely trippy outer space noodling, or as one of the sites labels them: dark ambient. There’s bubbling sounds and sounds of what I think of as deep space. It is strangely relaxing and yet with a hint of tension all the way through (so yes, dark ambient is a pretty good sum).
Okay a little more digging tells me that the band is actually a guy, Oleg Hurvatov, who is Russian and also records under several other aliases: the wonderfully named Exploplasmatic Coagulation, and the puzzling Lanceolaria Im Licht Der Laterne
“Fornix” is only 1:46 and is probably a good introduction to the band/album. If you like the 2 minute sound, the rest is pretty darn similar, just much longer.
[READ: August 18, 2014] Pale Summer Week 6 (§35-§45)
This weeks read was mostly a series of smallish sections. some of them are entertaining, some of them provide interesting insights into the organization of the Service and of some of the characters. And some of the sections are just downright funny. The more I read of this book this time, the more bummed I am that it was never finished. I even just wish I knew how much more he had planned. There’s potential for this book to have spiraled out to 800-900 pages, there just seems to be so many things he could have followed up on–the Sylvanshine transformation to mastering RFI; the whole business with the infant, I love it; learning more about Mr. X (although likely there wouldn’t be much more about him); and of course what led to David Wallace leaving the Service and what compelled him now to write about it (which I don’t think is really addressed).
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I like to do things in an orderly fashion when I write about them, but when it comes to Moon Hooch, order simply must go out the window.




