Zaireeka! (Or, Why We Need Art)

ZaireekaCover

Young Bill Young here. So many thoughts are spinning in my head, and it’s all because of this little book by Pitchfork editor Mark Richardson, part of the 33 1/3 book series on groundbreaking music albums. After reading this little tome, what can I say? I could write about the joys of reading about a favorite rock album (Zaireeka) or a favorite rock band (The Flaming Lips). I could write about the impact this album (if you can call it an album) has on the ongoing conversation about how music is experienced in our highly technological world. I could write about the seeds of creativity, and how Oklahoma’s own Flaming Lips charted a new path under adverse circumstances. I could write about music as art; music as a catalyst for change and discovery; music as event versus music as solitary entertainment. All of these issues and more are covered in Richardson’s amazing take on this unusual masterpiece of sound.

If you’re not familiar with Zaireeka, let’s start with Richardson’s own words:

“The Flaming Lips‘ 1997 album Zaireeka is one of the most peculiar albums ever recorded, consisting of four CDs meant to be played simultaneously on four CD players.”

You get the picture of how challenging it could be to even experience Zaireeka as it is intended.  Not only do you have to find three friends with portable stereos, you also have to sync up each of the eight tracks individually. Richardson continues:

“Zaireeka is the anti-headphone and the anti-mp3. It purposely makes the two biggest developments in end-user music in the last 30 years irrelevant. Zaireeka is not mobile. It is not personal. It is not solitary, cannot be easily controlled, and cannot easily be consumed in small doses. So another way to think of Zaireeka is as a one-off piece of technology that comes in a highly inconvenient dead-end format, which is a rather extraordinary kind of thing for a rock band to make.”

Richardson pays homage to the works’s format by breaking his book up into four sections, with each section having eight “tracks.”  The first section explores the idea of Zaireeka, and how its format requires a communal experience (with at least four people) — an idea in direct conflict with the personal soundtracks of the mp3 player generation.

The second section explores the nature of the band known as the Flaming Lips, how the departure of guitarist Ronald Jones provided a spark for musical exploration, leading to the Parking Lot Experiments (where the band provided up to 40 cassette tapes to be played simultaneously in car stereos) and, eventually, Zaireeka. In addition to losing Jones, the other musicians—leader Wayne Coyne, multi-instrumentalist Steven Drozd, and bassist Michael Ivins—were approaching the end of their Warner Brothers contract. The possibility of being dropped by the label in an album or two only added a fearless quality to the band’s experimentation.

Section three reviews the music, and how it is never the same–the sounds of individual stereos/boomboxes differ, the acoustics of different spaces differ, and synchronization can be a bitch! Beyond the intricacies of format, Richardson finds that Zaireeka represents the best music of the Lips up to that time, first-tier psych rock:

“(The opening song) feels like a foot kicking through a door, opening up another world beyond it. And the ensuing sequence of songs builds that world out beautifully.”

Section four is what follows the release of the album: the critical reception, the band’s boombox experiements at concerts, the Zaireeka listening parties held by Lips fans across the country, and the path to The Soft Bulletin, the subsequent album that would attract a host of new fans to the Lips.

What sticks with me most about this book, though, is Richardson’s own reaction to Zaireeka. Section Four, Track Eight is “One Listener’s Story.” Richardson, a self-identified Gen-Xer, writes about the personal impact of two seminal 1997 artistic works— Zaireeka and David Lynch’s movie Lost Highway. Here are two quotes from the book:

“The experience of listening to Zaireeka was overwhelming, but more than the actual event, it got my mind going. I started to reflect on the artistic possibilities of confusion, and somewhere around that time I came to value experiences that existed outside of understood categories.”

“A movie like Lost Highway seeps into your subconscious, and to appreciate it you have to trust yourself to make sense of pieces that don’t necessarily seem to fit together. Seeing it in 1997, the year I heard Zaireeka, I began to sense that a universe of abstraction previously unavailable to me was starting to make sense.”

And such is the power of art. It is important to note that Coyne’s name for the album is a combination of two words: Zaire (chosen as a symbol of anarchy after he heard a radio report on political instability in that African nation), and Eureka (I have found it!). Amidst the confusion, stress, and disaffection that too often makes up our modern world, there is always great beauty and meaning to be discovered. And that’s why we need art.

Who wants to have a Zaireeka party?


Duvall and Jacob, beautiful children’s books

The writing and illustrating combination of Deborah Duvall and Murv Jacob have produced some of the most charming folk-tale and  legend children’s books in Oklahoma.  The Grandmother stories are a seven book collection of Cherokee legends. This collection won the Director’s Choice Award at the 2005 Oklahoma Center for the Book Awards. The illustrations are magnificent. They look like intricate woodcuts.

Great Ball Game of the Birds and Animals

The Great Ball Game of the Birds and Animals
Deborah L. Duvall
Murv Jacob , Illustrator
An ancient Cherokee legend, retold with lively dialogue and intriguing illustrations.
$14.95 ( hardcover )  978-0-8263-2913-4
 
How Medicine Came to the People: A Tale of the Ancient Cherokees
Deborah L. Duvall
Murv Jacob , Illustrator
Simply told and magnificently illustrated, this fable is the story of revenge taken by animals against the people that hunt them for hides and food. It details the origins of the Cherokee herbal medicine. With the heightened awareness of the threat of disease and the usefulness of herbal remedies this story will enrich children as well as any adult.
$14.95 ( hardcover )  978-0-8263-3007-9
 
How Rabbit Lost His Tail: A Traditional Cherokee Legend
Deborah L. Duvall
Murv Jacob , Illustrator
In this, the third volume of the Grandmother Stories, Rabbit, whose Cherokee name is Ji-Stu, loses his long tail which is covered with thick, silky fur.
$14.95 ( hardcover )  978-0-8263-3010-9
 
The Opossum’s Tale
Deborah L. Duvall
Murv Jacob , Illustrator
Opossum brags about his tail, but later regrets it.
$15.95 ( hardcover )  978-0-8263-3694-1
 
Rabbit and the Bears
Deborah L. Duvall
Murv Jacob , Illustrator
Instead of gathering food for the winter, Ji-Stu the Rabbit travels with Yona the Bear to Mulberry Place, the high mountain homeland of the bears where the bears have much dancing and celebrations.
$14.95 ( hardcover )  978-0-8263-3131-1
 
Rabbit and the Wolves
Deborah L. Duvall
Murv Jacob , Illustrator
Ji-Stu the Rabbit travels far from home to try to prove he can be a great singer.
$14.95 ( hardcover )  978-0-8263-3563-0
 
Rabbit Goes Duck Hunting: A Traditional Cherokee Legend
Deborah L. Duvall
Murv Jacob , Illustrator
In the fifth Cherokee tale in the Grandmother Stories series, Ji-Stu the Rabbit thinks he has caught the Chief of the Wood Ducks, but soon wonders who caught who?
$14.95 ( hardcover )  978-0-8263-3336-0

 

Then there’s the Rabbit tales, continuing on with Cherokee trickster stories, starring Ji-Stu, as he goes on his many adventures. There’s How Rabbit Lost His Tail and Rabbit and the Well, Rabbit and the Bears, Rabbit Goes Duck Hunting and even Rabbit Goes to Kansas.  

Reading level: grade 4 and up. All can be purchased from the University of New Mexico Press.

If you haven’t seen these books you’re in for quite a treat.         How Rabbit Lost His Tail


New title from Full Circle Press

Juxtapositions book cover From the Full Circle Bookstore  website:

Juxtapositions
by Christiane Faris and Margaret Flansburg and award-winning graphic designer Carl Brune

Full Circle Press, is proud to announce its latest release–Juxtapositions, a retrospective of the life of artist and instructor Brunel Faris and his contribution to the visual arts community in Oklahoma City from the late 1960s until his death in 2005. Brunel Faris’s life and career as an artist, teacher and administrator was uniquely entwined with the growth and development of an increasingly confident visual arts community in Oklahoma City. For ordering information, please contact Full Circle by email at customerservice@fullcirclebooks.com or by phone at (405)842-2900 or (800) 683-READ.

For more book reviews to peruse for the holidays go to the Oklahoma Gazette Book Review section.