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  • An Interview with Adrian Belew, Part One

    Welcome! This interview is part of an ongoing series of chats with artists about their creative process. You can find the full set of interviews, including musicians Van Dyke Parks, Dan Wilson, and Jonathan Coulton, memoirist Ianthe Brautigan, and cartoonist Dan Piraro all at about-creativity.com. You can also subscribe to future interviews here. Thanks a lot for dropping by, -Cecil
    Creativity interview with Adrian Belew
    Photo credit: Image courtesy of Daryl Darko.
    Guitarist, singer, and songwriter Adrian Belew is a Grammy-nominated solo artist and a member of both King Crimson and the Bears. Belew’s big break came in 1977 when he landed a job in Frank Zappa’s band. Over the past thirty years, he’s played on records as varied as David Bowie’s Lodger, Paul Simon’s Graceland, the Talking Heads’ Remain in Light, Herbie Hancocks’ Magic Windows, Nine Inch Nails Downward Spiral, Laurie Anderson’s Mister Heartbreak, and William Shatner’s Has Been. To date, he’s released more than fifteen solo projects, starting with 1982’s Lone Rhino. His most recent CD is Side 4, a live recording of The Adrian Belew Power Trio, a new outfit featuring Julie and Eric Slick on bass and drums.
    Belew is currently posting a play-by-play of his ongoing recording efforts mixed with memories from years gone by over at his highly recommended Elephant Blog.
    This is the first part of a three-part interview. Be sure to check out part two to hear about how Belew taught himself guitar at 16, what it felt like to sign on with Zappa’s band, and how he writes and performs complex, multi-rhythmic pieces.
    Adrian Belew on the Web: Adrian Belew.net, Elephant Blog, Side Four
    CV: With both the Bears and King Crimson, you’ve developed longstanding creative relationships that have spanned decades. What do you attribute that to?
    AB: When you know something works, you should continue it. There’s a large part of me that’s solo oriented. Like a painter, I think sometimes, “Well, I don’t really need anyone’s help in this. This is me painting a picture or me painting a song.” So as much as I can, I try to do everything myself because that’s not only the most fun, it’s also the most rewarding.
    But it’s very healthy to step out of that and share something with someone else where you’re not the only one in control and you’re not the only one with the ideas. Interesting things happen that way. So I’ve tried to kind of have a diet of both throughout my career, as a way to continue to be fresh and grow.
    CV: How does collaborative songwriting differ from when you’re writing solo?
    AB: Well, most of my collaborative things have been quietly done — you know, one or two people sitting down together, perhaps, unamplified, where you’re just trying to get a basic outline of something. Then you take those ideas away and refine them and you meet again and show each other your refinements.
    If I’m working within, say, King Crimson, with Robert Fripp, that’s exactly how it works. It’s a quiet process and what you’re trying to do really is allow each other the freedom to try things and be a sounding board sometimes, or else be the one who’s leading the parade.
    CV: So with King Crimson, one person typically takes the lead writing a particular song?

    (more…)

  • haiku

    both kids at other
    kids’ houses two toothbrushes
    standing by the sink.

  • Hegel-themed Kraft Cheese Lunchables

    I dreamt last night that I was throwing a party and someone brought Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel-themed Kraft Cheese Lunchables.
    Der Wikipedia tells us that Hegel (1770-1831) talked about “a relation between nature and freedom, immanence and transcendence, and the unification of these dualities without eliminating either pole or reducing it to the other.”
    I’m trying to find the connection my subconscious was drawing between Hegel and Kraft Cheese Lunchables. The best I’ve come up with so far is that Kraft Cheese Lunchables are free from nature. Transcendentally free from nature.
    Immanence.

  • I wonder if when I die

    the last thing I’m
    gonna do is check my email.
    You know — blinding chest pain,
    hit refresh.
    Hit refresh again. Pull down some spam.
    Reboot
    this mortal coil.

  • My most original idea ever

    So I have this new idea for a movie. It’s the most completely original idea I’ve ever come up with. And tonight I’m giving it to the world because that’s how much I love the world.
    The movie’s called “Gnome Alone.” And the idea is, I’ve gone away for Christmas vacation and I’ve accidentally left my gnome home, all by himself. Two bungling crooks try to rob the place, but my gnome fights them off with a series of slapstick Rube Goldberg-style defensive maneuvers. And then he stabs them in the heart.
    I’m proud to say, this idea is entirely fiction. (I don’t even have a gnome!)
    It’s sort of a send up of all those gnome movies from back in the late ’50s. “The Third Gnome.” “Gnome on a Hot Tin Roof.” Remember those? “12 Angry Gnomes”? What was up with that?
    Update: My family reminded me that Meg Ryan also had those pair of gnome movies in the ’80s and ’90s: “When Gnome Met Sally” and then a few years later, “You’ve Got Gnome.”

  • Lego my gatling gun

    This hurts my brain:

    disclosure: I work for the publisher that distributes No Starch Press’ Forbidden Lego.
    more disclosure: Somebody should get the Nobel Book Titling prize for calling a book “Forbidden Lego.”

  • Jack

    When I first put my real name up here on the site about three weeks ago, I thought to myself (largely in the second person) “Not to worry, So-Called ‘Cecil.’ It’ll be years before you feel the urge to post something that in substance or by way of word choice might leave you later thinking, ‘Perhaps this isn’t the sort thing I’d necessarily want associated with my name for the rest of my life.’”
    Turns out I was off by roughly X, where X = [years minus three weeks].
    Here’s the latest addition to the Virtual LP. You’ve been warned. Therefore you can’t say, really, that I didn’t warn you.
    time: 1:08 seconds; specs: 1.6 MB
    Press Play to play.

  • Snow lights

    Snow lights
    the heavens you
    sparkle at me cold
    soft indentations
    that last a week or so
    the footprints crushed
    the heavens sparkle
    at me cold
    you
    snow.
  • Toast!

    I’ve been thinking a lot about toast and how everyone takes it for granted. I mean, how many foods taste great uncooked and taste even greater after you’ve heated them up? 10? Maybe? Maybe 12? It’s not a lot.
    So I’ve started working on some new slogans that I hope will help turn things around. See if you can incorporate these into your daily conversations. You know, virally.

    • “Toast: Like bread, only naughtier.”
    • “Suddenly everyone’s talking — about toast!”
    • “If you combined ‘toad’ with ‘roast,’ you’d get ‘toast.’ Who’s hungry?”
    • “Toast!” (this one’s not really a slogan, just a fresh way of saying the word toast — with extra emphasis.)

    OK. Enough jibber jabber. Let’s get this toast party rolling!

  • An Interview with Tobie Giddio

    Creativity interview with visual artist Tobie Giddio
    Image created for Tiffany & Co. by Tobie Giddio, reproduced courtesy of the artist.
    Tobie Giddio grew up on the New Jersey Shore where she fell in love with fashion and art from the books and magazines in her basement makeshift studio. After graduating from the Fashion Institute of Technology, she began illustrating advertisements for Bergdorf Goodman that ran weekly in the New York Times. Other work during this period included editorials for Interview Magazine and elaborately illustrated forecasting books and editorial work for Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue. Since 2000, her work has been commissioned by clients ranging from Seibu Department Stores of Japan, to Apple, Inc., and Tiffany & Co.
    Recent projects have included a series of classic charcoal and pen and ink drawings for Amy Sedaris’s book, I Like You: Hospitality Under The Influence and a series of drawings for Infiniti Cars, as well as animated projects with Dovetail Studios, a collaboration between Giddio and her fiancé, motion/graphic designer Peter Belsky.
    Tobie Giddio on the Web: Tobie Giddio.com, Dovetail Studios
    Cecil Vortex: Can you describe your background?
    Tobie Giddio: Well, I started out in fashion illustration. I studied with a number of teachers at F.I.T. [the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York – ed.]. And one of my main mentors was a teacher who was very rooted in fine art, so I was getting taught both principles at the same time. I was learning about drawing, and drawing the figure, and drawing the fashion figure, and then at the same time I was learning how to abstract the figure and learning about color and fine art and especially the modern art folks. To this day, I work in the fashion industry, and I spend a lot of time abstracting fashion and beauty and nature.
    CV: How does fashion illustration work — when you’re working on an ad, for example, what are you working from?

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