Where I’m Talking about BookTour…
Jason Boog, who runs the GalleyCat publishing blog, interviewed me this past week for his podcast Morning Media Menu.
Jason's very smart and I enjoyed myself a lot. Give a listen if you like.
Jason Boog, who runs the GalleyCat publishing blog, interviewed me this past week for his podcast Morning Media Menu.
Jason's very smart and I enjoyed myself a lot. Give a listen if you like.
I've been poking around the online archives of Bomb Magazine (28 years of artists interviewing each other = Mountain of Crack) when I came across a conversation between Me'shell Ndegeocello and singer/songwriter Marc Anthony Thompson. Mr Thompson and I haven't had the pleasure. Ms. Meshell I know and love all two well.
I'm been talking some crazy jibberish for at least ten years about what a genius MN is, what a gift she is to contemporary music and its fans about how your ears, mind and heart are missing out if you aren't familiar. But after printing out this interview (haven't read it yet), I asked myself why. Why'd I pick this one out of the hundreds in Bomb's archives.
Which lead straight to a list of 8 reasons why I love Me'shell NDegeocello.
Where to start:
Get thee a copy of Bitter and listen to it, start to finish, preferably on headphones with the lights turned off. Then have a lot of wild sex or wild sexy thoughts.
To say in the slow, sensual groove, jump over to Comfort Woman (2003) or the jazz-based Dance of the Infidel. To shake your butt heavy bass-style, begin at Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape (2002).
Recently I spoke with Oscar Villalon, my former editor at the San Francisco Chronicle, now Publisher of McSweeney's. I wrote up the interview for The Rumpus some time later.
As publisher of McSweeney's, Oscar was one of the driving forces behind "San Francisco Panorama", the gigantic, beautiful newspaper experiment that came out earlier this week.
Our conversation happened before that or else I would have asked about it. Oscar summed it up pretty nicely in this radio interview, if you're curious.
Anyway, we talked mostly about reading, writing and books. Enjoy!
"You could easily argue, yes, they’re the most
important thing going on in our culture, is fine literature. Is fine
non-fiction, and fiction, and poetry, etc., and essays. Because of
that, it does carry a disproportional weight. So, I find it
disheartening when, for example, when we read a review by someone who’s
very critical of a big shot author, and it’s a sound review, and the
criticism I get back from our readers is, “Well, this person has never
written anything important, so why should I listen to them?” Now, they
didn’t bother—you read the review based on what’s presented. Who the
person is, what their bona fides are, is meaningless. Who cares? If
what they’re saying is true, it’s true. I don’t care if the guy’s a
parking lot attendant or if he’s got a doctorate from Harvard, what’s
the difference?"
I’m interviewed or asked every so often to give my thoughts on culture, technology and their collective future.
Recent press..
2014
Past Interviews
Like to speak to me? Get in touch at Smokler at Sonic dot net.