A very quick and visually oriented post catching up on various things - it's
been a busy time and I'm currently involved in moving house to somewhere hopefully
a little more permanent. It's very quiet place that should suit the babies for
at least a couple of years…
My copy of Waning Moon's edition of
Consecrated
Little Book of Black Venus arrived a couple of weeks ago. More images
presently, but I must say I'm very impressed by the book's construction - quality
printing and paper with great materials, sensitively brought together. As someone
previously commented, my chapter is somewhat contradictory compared to the more
overarching speculations on either side of it, but I am thankful to Terri and
John for giving me the opportunity to submit my opinions on a text that has
held sway over various aspects of my life since one fateful day in 1998.
Shortly to be released on
Ikuisuus is
XETB's The Crooked Pool. It's a double CDr, around an hour and twenty
minutes in total. It could have been a single proper CD (which would have been
my first) but I don't really agree with the trend for filling CDs with as much
material as possible. 40-minute sections are perfect to my mind and ears. One
CD is very modal, static and acoustic, the other a bit more experimental.
To follow up my post on
Lenkiewicz'
book binding: I've adapted this technique with some success. I made a prototype
of the kind of thing that could be coming out of
Larkfall
Press later this year:
Abital, the follow up to
Psychogeographia
Ruralis, will definitely be in this kind of format - an A6 hardcover
book, roughly and rustically bound. The final part of the trilogy concerning
the urban genii locorum will most likely be similar in feel to old stapled &
photocopied anarcho-punk zines.
Andrew Sharp's essay on Wyrd in Poetry, Theory and Praxis will be
a joint collaboration with English Heretic and incorporate supplementary material
putting Sharp's
original
lecture in context, along with supplementary material from other contributors.
More soon - a post about the influence of
John
Dee on XETB and a considered review of R.J. Stewart's
Music
and the Elemental Psyche already on the cards, along with some belated
Heydoniana.
While you wait, why not listen to Melvyn Brag, Peter Forshaw, Angela Voss and
Jim Bennett discuss my favourite subject:
The
Music of the Spheres?