Sunday, January 22, 2012

Song for Kimpary

My step-son Eric needed a bit of music for a film project.  After hemming and hawing, I just went nuts with the effects.  Yeah, it's undisciplined, raw, stupid, and goes WHOOAOOOGHHH too much, but it was fun to do, wasn't it?  And that's the whole point.

bass_thing.mp3 Listen on Posterous

Friday, March 4, 2011

Soundtrack to the Paco Lisp - An Aural Douche

Yesterday I was supposed to be working on a rewrite of a 10-minute play for class.  Instead, I sat down at the keyboard and created this horrible thing.  I think my total lack of understanding of the keyboards, drum machine, recording process, and musical creativity is charmingly inoffensive.  Or at least, that's what I was going for.  Probably this would sound good to someone rolling in the pudding, but I wouldn't know as I'm no longer in the Pudding Roller tribe.

The sad thing is, it's a new day and all I really want to do is make another one of these things.  I can't be left alone with the keyboard...

Soundtrack_to_the_Paco_Lisp.mp3 Listen on Posterous

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Taking a Gander at Neil Gaiman's Web Journal

This is a bit different because I can’t actually respond to Neil Gaiman’s blog.  It’s not set up for two way communication; that’s why he has a forum on his site.

Fiction writers are struggling just like everyone else who writes for a living how to best use the new tools at our disposal.  The Internet and desktop publishing have created new publishing opportunities; and the social networking tools have created new ways of interacting with the readership.

Let’s consider Neil Gaiman for a moment.  As most of you know, he is an English author who gained fame for the “Sandman” comic book series and has also written novels and children’s books and Young Adult.  And like most writers, Neil has a website (http://neilgaiman.com) where you can read old material no longer in print, talk to other fans on the forum, purchase various Neil Gaiman related materials, and of course read what Neil has to say on his blog.

This is a very good example of how a writer should handle a blog.  First notice that he’s got his twitter.com information off the right, and it updates automatically from twitter.  That’s a small thing, everyone does it.
Now on to the journal entry; the one I’m looking at is from October 9, 2010.   It isn’t just that he is taking a few moments to publicly acknowledge the people who work for him, and posting their pictures.  What I find interesting is the little insight into the life of a working writer.   And of course, they sound like fantastically interesting people, catering to the whims of luminaries like Lady Gaga, jetting around the world, making vitally important phone calls so Neil doesn’t have to deal directly with the airlines himself.  Okay that was SLIGHTLY snide.  I don’t have an assistant so I’m jealous, so what.

Notice how Neil also manages to slip in a shill for the House on the Rock Gathering (if you’ve read “American Gods” you know what this is all about… yes, it IS a real place).  That’s good product placement and he fits it into the flow about his assistant’s life.

And then he pumps up the National Irish Sci-Fi Convention which he won’t be attending… but his assistant will be there!  Again, that’s a nice shout out to the Octocon and considering he’s not even going to be there, he sure didn’t have to mention it.   That’s just polite blogging.

And then of course, he gives us a link to Lorraine’s blog about the whole Irish adventure, which is again good blog etiquette.

Now this is stuff that is related to Neil’s life, but not really to his fiction.  Is this the sort of thing his fans might be interested in?  Absolutely.   Too much info?  Too personal?  I don’t think so.  Believe me, this is the tip of the iceberg when it comes to what obsessive fans would want to see.

There are links to previous posts, like how Kitty taught his daughter to bowl with lemons.  That’s perfect because it makes the reader want to delve into the archives to see what else they might be missing.
Now he works in a link for a commerce site run by Kitty that sells Gaiman-derived merchandise – and he points out that his profits are all donated to the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, which he links to as well.  The CBLDF is a fantastic organization (I realize some people might not like it, but there it is) and Neil has long been an ardent supporter.

And then he manages to push the limited edition stuff on Kitty’s site while congratulating her on her impending nuptials.

That’s how it’s done.  It’s got the Kilian “action” idea all over the page, even if there is no direct reader interaction.  Very interesting blog; I’m impressed, but then again Neil rarely makes a bad move (ahem… the whole “1602” series be damned!)

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Editors Note: "Letters from the Burning Pyramid" is a new column debuting this month; but if it doesn't work out, we'll go back to running prison-sex chat line advertisements in this space.  We hope this was worth the shipment of freshly radiated clams, shellfish and mollusks the writer demanded we send as payment before he’d send in this first column.   If there's a good reason for that request, we don't want to know what it is.  We're not entirely convinced the writer isn't, in fact, a hyper-intelligent space walrus being held captive and chained to a specially designed keyboard.  We've only talked to him by phone, and come to think of it, his voice was strangely muffled... but we'll let you decide for yourselves.

Oh hello.  Sorry if I don’t get up, I’m still sponging the residue from the prison-sex chat ads off the walls.  Here, let me just move these books, sorry about the mess – I just moved in and I’m still unpacking my stuff.  Okay for now?  Alright?  Good.

Let’s introduce ourselves then.

I’m Sebastian Gregory and I create.  I’m a writer, an artist, a musician, actor – anything that allows me to express the thoughts and ideas that churn in my mind.  When I heard that there was an opening for a column writer, I almost injured myself trying to volunteer.

I had a cushy government contract job for years, catering to the Information Technology needs of a bureaucracy staffed by drooling, shambling wage zombies.   I could have stayed there until I retired at eighty-five, taken my golden Boot To The Ass and tottered off to die.

But I'm not like that.  Why should I grind myself into a box full of crematory dust instead of flinging my creative crap at the world?  Working in a cubicle for a big IT company on a government contract was lucrative but hardly creatively rewarding.

So I quit.   Scariest thing I ever did, too.   The week after my last day I sat around the house in a fog, waiting for the phone to ring, demanding that I return.   The phone never rang.  Corporate America and the U.S. Government went right on wasting your tax dollars without me.

And now I’m starting my writing career.   “You’re going to do what?  Be a writer?  Better ‘brush’ up on those broom skills," my co-workers snarked as we raised our farewell pints down at Gibney’s Pub.

Who’s laughing now, guys?  Look at the masthead, what does that say?  “Letters from the Burning Pyramid”.  That’s right, no broom pushing here – not yet.

Which brings up the columns title - a little odd, I know.  But it’s also very meaningful on a personal level.  Let me explain.

When I was a kid in middle school my Mom showed me some artwork by someone she'd dated back in the day.  These amazing pen and ink drawings, done with so much style and individuality, sparked my imagination in new and exciting ways.  I was never the same after my initial exposure to John Carter from Mars.  Without ever meeting him, the man fired my creative spirit.

He really was named John Carter, but he added the “from Mars” bit in homage to the Edgar Rice Burroughs character, and it was fitting because John was a tall, athletic, good looking guy.  He also had a wicked sense of humor and a bottomless appetite for getting high.  Or so my Mom tells it!

I studied his art with intense concentration, trying to glean some tricks of the trade from his prints.  My own art began to imitate his style.  My art teachers were concerned; I flaunted my new found creative power in class and paid a price for going against the institutional plan.

I've had several creative mentors along the way.  But John Carter from Mars was unique in that I only met him as a baby and he dropped out of sight years and years ago.  He was no more knowable to me than Salvador Dali or Ritchie Blackmore.  But unlike the other writers, artists, and musicians I've followed from afar, I felt like I almost knew John Carter – but not quite.

One of his images was a simple pyramid with a flaming top.  It was such an iconic symbol of all that John Carter meant to me and the growth of my creative power and imagination that I started incorporating it into my own artwork years and years ago.

In fact, I've always wanted to own a publishing house called Burning Pyramid Comics; that was my tag on my artwork for the longest time.  And it just feels right to use it at this juncture.  It symbolizes the place inside me where creativity is nourished.  When I'm writing, when I'm tapping away on this keyboard, I'm really writing letters to you from the shadow of the burning pyramid.

This column isn’t going to be serious, logical, or heavy.  I don’t want to persuade you, cajole you, or put myself on a pedestal.  Read me and it’s like a twist on the cultural kaleidoscope.  I’m going to bring a little of everything: high brow and low, slow rolling or flash fast.  My greatest pleasure is communicating with my good friends, telling my stories, letting people laugh with me, at me, and maybe even at themselves.  I’m not interested in changing minds; there’s enough of that going around already!   If I happen to enlighten your viewpoint on a particular issue, well, that’s just a happy byproduct of all this gabbing.

As we spin around the sun a few more times, let's swap stories and tell lies and watch the sparks fly.  We can bicker and bitch and complain some other time, right?  Let's see where this goes!