Remembering Jeff Porcaro

On This Date, August 5th in 1992: Toto drummer Jeff Porcaro died of a heart attack due to an un-diagnosed serious heart condition. He was 38 years old. There are rumors that his heart was weakened by years of cocaine abuse, but I can’t speak to that.  I know that everyone many people think of Toto as kind of a joke, but Jeff was an amazingly gifted percussionist. Drummers I interview still talk about his unique groove. Jeff Porcaro also worked with many other acts including Sonny and Cher, Roger Waters, Eric Clapton, Paul McCartney, Steely Dan, Paul Simon and Boz Scaggs.

Rest in peace, Jeff.

Happy 49th Birthday President Obama!


Image Source

President Barack Obama turns 49 years old today. Have a Happy Birthday Mr. President, and don’t let the Bastards get you down!

Yellow Submarine Wedding Cake

A deviantART user going by the name “estranged-illusions” made this wedding cake modeled after The Beatles 1968 animated movie Yellow Submarine. I wish they would create more cakes as cool as this one on all of the cake making competition shows I am always watching on The Food Network.

The cake is described as Vanilla strawberry cake with strawberry filling, white buttercream and marshmallow fondant. The figures are all color flow (a type of icing), with the exception of the submarine topper with the bride and groom on top. The topper is made from a polymer clay called Sculpey, so that the couple could have a keepsake. I’m sure you’ll agree that while it sounds very tasty, it is almost too beautiful to cut!

Thanks to Neatorama for the Tip!

Brion Gysin Dream Machine Retrospective at NYC’s New Museum


Original Dreamachine Sculpture by Brion Gysin – 1916 -1986 (Image Source)

It is a wee bit of an understatement to say that I see a lot of art. I always find it to be such a curious surprise when discovering something “new” in the art world involves me being introduced to an artist’s body of work decades after that artist’s death. Usually, the works are so vast and impressive that I can’t believe I never heard of that person before. It happens more than I would like to admit. Geoffrey and I had this experience again yesterday when we popped in to the New Museum of Contemporary Art in downtown Manhattan and were delighted by Brion Gysin: Dream Machine – neither one of us being at all familiar with Gysin’s amazing art or very interesting life story.

Brion Gysin: Dream Machine is the first US retrospective of Gysin’s work, which includes a comprehensive variety of mediums or par with, say, Andy Warhol. The exhibition includes over 300 drawings, books, paintings, photo-collages, films, slide projections and sound works, as well as an original Dreamachine – a kinetic light sculpture that utilizes the flicker effect to induce visions when experienced with closed eyes. In 1959, according to he museum’s write up on the exhibit, “Gysin created the Cut-Up Method, in which words and phrases were literally cut up into pieces and then rearranged to untether them from their received meanings and reveal new ones. His Cut-Up experiments, which he shared with his lifelong friend and collaborator William S. Burroughs, culminated in Burroughs and Gysin’s The Third Mind, a book-length collage manifesto on the Cut-Up Method and its uses. Transferring this notion to experimenting with tape-recorded poems manipulated by a computer algorithm, Gysin created sound poetry and was among the earliest users of the computer in art.”

Artists, poets and musicians citing Gysin as an influence include John Giorno (who was Gysin’s lover), Brian Jones, David Bowie, Patti Smith, Genesis P-Orridge and Keith Haring, among many others. I really enjoyed all of the works on view and especially loved learning something about how Gysin lived and his philosophy of art and life, but my favorite of Gysin’s works at the New Museum were his many colorful, abstract paintings that include his use of calligraphy-like writing that was inspired by both Japanese and Arabic scripts. Beautiful and intriguing.

The New Museum is super-strict about not allowing any photography of their exhibits (even >Geoffrey, who is usually so talented when it comes to avoiding the gaze of the Art Nazi’s, was unsuccessful at getting any images in his camera) so I can’t give you much of a preview of the exhibit. You are going to have to drop by yourself, but trust me, it will be worth it.

Dream Machine runs through October 3, 2010 at New Museum (second floor gallery) 235 Bowery, NYC.