i didn’t like jazz/i didn’t like funk

gramparsons

memory is just hips that swing
like a clock
the past projects fantastic scenes
tic/toc tic/toc tic/toc
fuck the clock!
― Patti Smith, “Babel”

Ghost Dance. Chinese lanterns. Opium Wars. Wild strawberries. Cinnamon stick triangles blowing in the window. Walking into a thrift store on Grand Street on a Sunday morning. Alone, with a coffee. The girl behind the desk is bundled in a hooded sweatshirt. She’s got a record player on the desk playing Tattoo You. So, i stay. And i remember a story you told me the last time i saw you, about being upstate and tired and fucked up and it was dark outside and you sat down next to a girl who was playing a record on a picnic table. The moon was shining and you were by a river and you told her, “Look, I don’t want to talk to you. i just want to sit here and listen to this.” i wish i could remember which record it was. That’s totally something i would remember.

Mick with Big Audio Dynamite
“Little T & A” comes on and i realize, embarrassed, that i’m singing out loud. My Mom used to sing this to me when i was little–just the chorus line. She can’t possibly have known what song it came from, but it worked some kind of magic anyhow. Sleeping on the beach in the back of their truck. Fishing for shrimp on the dock with a bright light and a net. Ponytail fern. Snapdragons. Flashlights. Tents pitched on a bottom bunk. Air conditioning. Palmettos. That old sewing machine she kept her make-up in. And yes, carrot flowers. Greyhound Bus. Headphones. A very pretty copy of the Catcher in the Rye from that decent used book store you guys had. i wish this place sold chandeliers. Something made out of driftwood and sea glass meant to slip into the top of a teepee and to run on campfire light. It seems like the kind of place that would have something like that. Here’s an old memory: yours, not mine–you riding around in a van all night with some band you guys were on tour with. You happened to be in Gainesville, and they kept a cassette tape of Tattoo You on repeat. Of course you were into the Stones, and were excited that they were, too. Maybe confused then by the album choice but not now. And it was such a good night.

chickee

The wallpaper on my desktop is a picture of Patti Smith wearing an obviously handmade t-shirt that says, “Fuck the Clock.” She’s so skinny. And her outfit is perfect. She’s holding a microphone and her eyes are closed. There’s a guy standing in the crowd–he could really be you. i originally kept it as a motto for my dissertation. Not because i’m taking forever, although of course i am, but because it suggests weird life narratives, kids. The other day i was reading the “invisible jukebox” column with Christina Carter in The Wire, enchanted by the description of her in a house filled with poetry books and her strange history, but then i woke up a little and thought about what she was saying about time, and i thought: maybe that’s what the t-shirt was always about? And this basement room and everything in boxes again and the shirt i finally bought with holes in it and the structural intervention that music necessarily stitches in time all felt something like relief. Making time. Stress on the first word. Making time. Stress on the second word. Okay. So, morning glories. Tusk. Cedar. Stars. Little Suzy.

compact_cassette_internals_diagram

We all need someone we can bleed on.

Maybe it’s perfectly fitting that one of the biggest hits by the Stones is one of the least romantic songs ever written: “You can’t always get what you want (But if you try sometimes…”) — you know the rest. One of my earliest memories is of insisting on a lacy pale yellow and white pair of socks, tantalizingly on display between the Juicy Juice and the V8, right at grocery cart height at Publix, of all places, in Palatka, and of my mother saying no by singing this song to me. Pragmatism was evidently no more appealing to me then than it is now, as i’m sure i responded with my best wailing pout of disapproval.

Let It Bleed (1969), released the day before the free concert at Altamont, begins with “Gimme Shelter” and closes with “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.” The album is adult, disappointed, junkie, sad, and the last to include Brian Jones. In my mind, it is akin to that other great abortive elegy to “the Sixties,” — Joan Didion’s Play it as it Lays (1970): “The bleeding began a few weeks later. ‘It’s nothing,’ the doctor on Wilshire said when she finally went. ‘Whoever did it did all right. It’s clean, no infection, count your blessings’.” Both beg the question of what is to be done when the romance is gone but the desire remains. Want and need — can we really know the difference? And what can we know from novels, from rock and roll? Maybe, in the long run, much more than the papers ever gave us.

Here’s a slightly different question, what does it mean to call leftist politics romantic? Why is something like the Baader-Meinhof “gang”–the exact opposite of a Cinderella story, dismissed as “romantic”? “Romantic” can describe a supposedly trashy novel, impractical ideas, and/or feelings of preoccupation and affection — (“love”) — for another person. What do reckless idealism, selfishness, and love/desire have to do with each other? For a long time, i found myself sort of floundering in graduate school. These were the questions i was interested in, but i didn’t know how to combine them. Questions about desire were asked in one class, Marxism in another, until queer theory came along. On the first day of ‘Introduction to Queer Theory’, i was nervous as usual — anticipating the usual uncomfortable necessity of disciplinary introductions — but with the added worry that i would have to provide some inadequately shorthanded sexual identification (which of course never, ever happened). This complicated word –queer– gave me the room to keep pushing for a way to find a common space for my records and my books and my novels and my day job and my night job and my extremely conflicted (didn’t want, did desire) heterosexuality. “All your love’s in vain?” Check. The only way to make it okay seemed to be to take it apart–to make it not need to “count.” “I laid a divorcee in New York City?” Check. “Come on now, honey, don’t you wanna live with me?”; “And there will always be a space in my parking lot?”; “Feeling foolish, and that’s for sure?” Check check check. Let it Bleed, indeed. But, how is this political, you might ask?

If you are someone who has actually needed to say no– to any or all of the rules and expectations of heteronormativity (another supposed definition of romance) — you won’t ask, because you will already know that this is literally an extremely expensive refusal. Part of what makes leftist politics romantic is their sense that this is not the only way, that it is possible to say no–a sometimes extreme desire for a very pointed and thoughtful and, alas, necessary, no. Feminists, activists, waiters, academics, band dudes (i consider that a gender neutral category), teachers, nurses, strippers, librarians, clerks, and everyone else who lives by night–you are holding out for something. Do you remember what it is?