2015-06-13 Captain Beefheart Radar Station (www.beefheart.com) - “A Look at the New Book from Herb Bermann..."

“A Look at the New Book from Herb Bermann, Don’s Co-Writer on Safe As Milk

It’s not that long ago that many people thought that Herb Bermann was just another myth created by Don Van Vliet. Although he shared writing credits on eight songs on the Safe As Milk album, and, much later, one on Shiny Beast, he seemed to have disappeared off the radar. But the Radar Station kept looking for him….

You can read about my and Derek Laskie’s search here. We were certain he was out there and Derek eventually managed to secure an exclusive interview with him for the Radar Station (read interview). Herb is proud of his work with Don, apart from being annoyed at not getting writing credits on some of the Strictly Personal songs, but he’s not bothered about shouting about it from the rooftops.

Some time in 2014 an interesting item turned up on eBay. One of many items that have appeared for sale from Herb Cohen’s estate. (Herb Cohen was Frank Zappa’s and Don Van Vliet’s manager for a time… it’s their acrimonious falling out that delayed the release of Bat Chain Puller for over 35 years). This particular eBay item was a collection of original song lyrics from Safe As Milk. Unfortunately the Radar Station couldn’t afford to buy them and secure them for Beefheart fans. However Derek alerted Herb to the sale of his manuscript. It was clear to Derek that this was a copy of the document he had quoted from during their interview. In the exchange which followed he suggested that Brass Tacks publish a facsimile edition of the manuscript.

And thanks to Pablo Capra at Brass Tacks Press here we have that facsimile plus other fascinating bits and pieces.



The Mystery Man from the Magic Band
Publisher: Brass Tacks Press, Los Angeles
Published: June 2015
First Edition of 100 signed / numbered copies
ISBN: 978-0-9820140-1-1
Price: $25.00

“Notes”

From Brass Tacks Press publicity:

Herb Bermann was credited as co-writing eight of the songs on Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band’s debut album Safe As Milk (1967); it would have been a completely different record without him.

Yet Bermann kept silent about Captain Beefheart for almost 50 years—so silent that some people said that Captain Beefheart had invented him. Now Bermann shares his story!

Fans will be charmed by Bermann’s descriptions of how his songs came to be written. They may also be surprised to learn just which songs he says he wrote. Included is a facsimile reproduction of his original lyric sheets, with dozens more songs that were never produced.

Bermann’s story reveals previously unpublished information about the early work of Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band, Neil Young and Steven Spielberg. It also introduces us to an artist whose work and influence have been generally overlooked.

“Review”

by Steve Froy

The centrepiece of the book is the facsimile of the 64 typewritten lyric sheets of songs composed by Don Van Vliet with Herb Bermann, plus some only written by Bermann. This is great stuff! To finally see the actual lyrics Don would have used for the songs on Safe As Milk, and to find out what some of the more difficult to hear words are at long last.

What’s more there are a few surprises.

It seems Bermann was involved with four of the songs that appeared on Strictly Personal as Van Vliet-only credits. One of the extra items pictured in the book is a letter from Bob Krasnow informing Herb Bermann that he needs to get a letter signed from Don if he wants to get the writing credits changed.

More exciting are the lyrics for three of the songs that only exist as instrumentals on the Plain Brown Wrapper sessions—“Flower Pot,” “Moody Liz” and “Dirty Blue Jean.” Here’s a project begging for the Magic Band reunion to take on. Wouldn’t it be something if they could perform these three songs with lyrics! The “Dirty Blue Jean” lyrics are completely different to all the other later versions apart from one line— “don’t cha wish y’ nevah met dirty blue jean”.

(Click on image to see larger version. Doesn’t that first line of “Moody Liz” remind you instantly of the opening of “I’m Glad”?)

And, what’s more there are a bunch of songs, Bermann / Van Vliet collaborations, that have never been recorded. John French lets slip that some of them were rehearsed and early versions may exist on tapes still held by Doug Moon. It’s doubtful that any of Moon’s tapes will see the light of day (although one can hope!) but it would be another interesting exercise for John to revisit these songs with the reunion band. Although that’s probably easier said than done!

There are two pages of “End Notes” by Herb Bermann which offer a bit more detail about the songs and its origins. There’s some fascinating details here but I was hoping there would have been more than this relatively brief commentary which only touches on some of the songs.

All the songs are copyright 1966 which is the year Don and Herb met. It seems some of the songs/poems were already finished by the time of the meeting and it’s not clear what, or indeed, how much input Don had to the lyrics. Don was obviously very interested in Bermann’s work and, I’m sure, saw it as something he could build on and use to create his own style. Before they met Don’s use of words in his songs was fairly conventional. However, all that was to change and I think it was Bermann’s way of writing that kick-started the development in Don’s own songwriting. Bermann’s poems are lean and sparse with concentrated meaning, use of repetition, little or no punctuation and much use of the colloquial—“t’” instead of “the,” “mah” instead of “my,” “cain’t” instead of “can’t,” “nevah” instead of “never” etc. Don was to take this, develop it and take it to places nobody had been before. I’d like to speculate that “Abba Zaba” and “Beatle Bones and Smokin’ Stones” were early examples of Don using the “Bermann method.”

Fans often wondered why Herb Bermann didn’t appear again after Safe As Milk. I think it’s fairly obvious now. Don took what he needed. Through Herb he managed to find a way to his own unique songwriting style and once he’d found that he didn’t need the poet anymore. But there’s no denying Herb Bermann seems to have been an important influence on Don.

John French has written a short introduction to the book and the content is rounded off with an edited version of Derek Laskie’s excellent 2003 interview with Herb that appeared here on the Radar Station. Illustrated throughout with a number of photographs from Herb’s career—none of Don or the Magic Band unfortunately—this is a well designed, good looking large format paperback.

This first edition is limited to just 100 copies, all signed and numbered by Herb Bermann.

Currently only available from the publisher.

Definitely worth getting if you’re a fan.

2014-07-21 mobilemojoman.wordpress.com - "Book Review: Topanga Beach Experience by Paul Lovas" by mobilemojoman

"Book Review: Topanga Beach Experience by Paul Lovas"

by mobilemojoman
• Topanga Beach Experience: 1960s – 70s
• by Paul Lovas (as told to Pablo Capra)
• Publisher – Brass Tacks Press
• Copyright 2011
• 43 pages

RATING – 7.5/10

SUMMARY – Topanga Beach Experience is a chapbook recounting Paul Lovas‘ experiences there during the 1960s and 1970s. The book is short, but has some great anecdotes about bohemian life in Topanga before gentrification. At the end, the reader is left to ponder what we can learn about life from Lovas’ stories.

REVIEW – In the short book Topanga Beach Experience, Paul Lovas recounts his experiences living on Topanga Beach during the 1960s and 70s. He has a great collection of stories about how he and his friends “lived for the moment.”

The Topanga Destroyer

Lovas’ place in the world came about by happenstance. Back in the 1960s, he had a high school friend whose parents had a beach house on Topanga Beach. Lovas and the friend began surfing Topanga and Lovas then moved to Topanga, where he has lived since the sixties.

Eventually, Lovas acquired a reputation as an excellent surfer and friends dubbed him “The Topanga Destroyer.” Much of Topanga Beach Experience centers on the ways that surfing shaped Lovas’ life.

Vignettes

43 short chapters comprise the book, which loosely arranges the vignettes in chronological order. The chapters start with Lovas’ high school experiences and run to the 2000s. However, almost all of the book centers on the 1960s and 1970s.

For the most part, Topanga Beach Experience is lighthearted. Lovas recounts how he spent his early years surfing and partying with the creative people who drifted through Topanga. (In one memorable scene, Lovas and actor Jan-Michael Vincent barely escape getting arrested for drugs. In another, Lovas and a friend “take over” a beach house that Bob “Bear” Hite of Canned Heat had recently rented and trashed).

However, the book has a more-sobering, serious side. Lovas also discusses:

• the Vietnam draft,
• the time a good friend of his was stabbed in the heart. (He lived).
• And the destruction of Topanga’s beach community by (first) floods and (then) the State of California.

Whatever the topic and tone, the book is consistently interesting.

Areas for Improvement

Prospective buyers should know that Topanga Beach Experience is not a “true book” – it’s a chapbook and the printing reflects that. It’s something of a cross between a pamphlet and a book. There are 18 pages of interesting pictures, though they are grainy, black-and-white. (There are 43 pages of text, as the “photo pages” are not numbered). Moreover, the pages’ size varied a little, which gives the book an “untidy” appearance.

One thing that I would have liked to have read is a bit more reflection at the end of the book. Lovas sums up simply by stating that “success is just a smile on your face.” It’s not a bad way to end, but Lovas has lived an unconventional lifestyle in a place that has been a center of many of the social changes in the U.S. since the 1960s. Paul’s reflections on “what it all means” would have been welcome.

Summary

Topanga Beach Experience is a fun, lighthearted look at a world that – for the most part – no longer exists. It’s also cheap – with shipping, my copy set me back $7.50. I recommend it to anyone interested in the 1960s, bohemians, surfing, or southern California.

2014-03-13 Messenger - "Star-Studded Topanga Rockumentary to Benefit Young Adults with Autism" by Flavia Potenza

Excerpt from:
"Star-Studded Topanga Rockumentary to Benefit Young Adults with Autism"

by Flavia Potenza
Photo by Annemarie Donkin

The producers, editors and writers of the rockumentary Topanga are, from left, editor Brian Carter, Producer Matt Prine, Associate Producer Tom Mitchell, Robby Krieger, Impressario George Paige and writer John Hartman.

On February 27, Robby Krieger of the legendary rock group, The Doors, joined a roster of Rock 'n' Roll music greats at a fundraiser to raise money for young adults with autism and announce the upcoming production of a feature-length "rockumentary" entitled Topanga, about the culture of Topanga Canyon during the 1960s, '70s and '80s as experienced through the music of the time.... [Producer Matt] Prine was the catalyst that reinvigorated [director George] Paige’s interest in Topanga when he gave him a book about Topanga [called Topanga Beach Experience by Paul Lovas and Pablo Capra (Brass Tacks Press, 2011)]. "I became enraptured with Topanga beach and the 'Cosmic Children,' who lived there," says Paige....
... 

2012-06-07 LA Weekly - "Theater Review: Astral Dick" by Rebecca Haithcoat

"Theater Review: Astral Dick"

by Rebecca Haithcoat

No need to read Kierkegaard or Camus -- playwright James Mathers neatly breaks down the trio of resolutions at which the absurdist philosophers believed humans arrive during their search for meaning in the world. In some distant future, two detectives investigate a death they believe is tied to a cult-like religious sect worshipping the "AnarChrist." It's a by-the-book interpretation of absurdism: subtitling his world premiere "a play in three acts," Mathers clicks off suicide, religion and, finally, acceptance that life is meaningless. Kaytlin Borgen's luminous, wild-eyed performance is exhilarating, providing the thrill that motivates most of us to press on (or check out) despite the general monotony of life. Mathers' strict adherence to form is -- like life -- often tedious, though that's probably the point. Directed by Hanna Hall. Carbon Copy Productions at Electric Lodge, 1416 Electric Lodge, Venice; Thurs.-Sat., 8 p.m.; Sun., 3 p.m.; through June 10.
electriclodge.org.

2012-06-01 Free Venice Beachhead - "Theater Review: Astral Dick" by Roger Linnett

"Theater Review: Astral Dick"

by Roger Linnett  

As director Hanna Hall writes in the program’s Director’s Note, “Chaos represents the thread in the universe that allows humanity free will. Even though it is wild and unpredictable, it is part of the human condition.” 

And from the opening scene of James Mathers new play, when a crazed, ranting woman (Laura Peters) crawls into an oven, in a sort of extreme Sylvia Plath maneuver, you kind of wish your seat had a safety belt because you’re definitely going down the rabbit-hole. 

Enter the Homicide Detectives -- The Captain (Paul Tei) and his psychic sidekick, the eponymous “Astral Dick”, Lt. Leo Fleck (Marc Hickox), a parapsychological detective, i.e., a medium with a badge, under the recreationally abusive guidance of his captain, to investigate what they ultimately determine, by way of a fluid Abbot and Costello-style repartee, is the work of a serial killer -- and that’s one of the more rational scenes. 

Hall uses every inch of the compact Electric Lodge stage, accented by perfectly-executed lighting, to create a modernist noir reality upon which this existential mixing of terror and freedom struts and frets, framed by a nondescript hodgepodge of architectural styles and extraneous objects, complementing the sparse, multi-functional set pieces. 

The use of wooden orange crates adds a playful, almost childlike, quality to the set. 

Occasionally, amateurish Mummenschanz-like figures attempt to surreptitiously deliver to, or take props from, the characters, who continue unfazed, adding another delicious layer to this tiramisu of absurdity. 

The use of pre-recorded audio as Lt. Fleck communes with the Captain from his “astral plane,” synchronized to the action on stage, helps draw the audience into the screwball multi-dimensionality of Mathers’ tour de farce. 

After the Captain is “killed” at the end of Act I, the intrepid, albeit insipid, Lt. Fleck, wracked by totally over-the-top anguish, vows to find his killer. As he says: “I’m a dick. It’s my job to know things.” 

The play is billed as a whodunit, but in the end it doesn’t really seem to matter that the mystery isn’t solved as Fleck’s investigation leads him into a web of sex and religion. One he wants, the other he despises, but at times you can’t tell which. 

The subject/object of his investigation/desire is one Marlo Montecarlo (Kaytlin Borgen): “It rhymes and it’s alliterative,” she points out. 

Abetted by her conniving, lascivious mother, Bunny (Rachel Robinson), Marlo sets her sights on the tall, dark and handsome, but conflicted Lt. Fleck. Then things get really kinky. (I’d just like to add a personal note to Mr. Mathers -- Thanks for undoing years of therapy with that damned Sock Monkey (the late, crispy Laura Peters)). 

Fleck’s interrogation of the cult leader Master Jeshu (Dan Lawler) and his sycophantic minions (Skyler Millicano and Jessica Farr) is a glib send-up of every bad cop show or movie you ever saw, and made even zanier by the appearance of their attorney Stan (Jordan Byrne), the best Satan incarnate smarmy lawyer since Al Pacino in "The Devil’s Advocate." 

The finale is a Fellini-esque amalgam of bodies, and amid all the craziness is a “message,” but it’s up to each audience member to figure out what that is after they emerge from Mathers’ darkly-wacky world. 

Astral Dick will be performed at The Electric Lodge, 1415 Electric Ave., Venice for the next two weekends: May 31-June 3 and June 7-10. Thu., Fri., Sat. evenings at 8p.m. and a Sun. matinee at 3 p.m. Tickets are $20, and are available at carboncopyproductions.com or at the door. 


2012-04-05 Messenger - "So What Surf 'n' Skate Shop Mixes Philosophy with Fun" by Ali Murtaza

"How's Business? So What Surf 'n' Skate Shop Mixes Philosophy with Fun"

by Ali Murtaza
Photo by Briana Diamond

Topanga's Old Center plaza sees more change as Will Wicks starts his own surf shop.

First shop on the left, two doors down from recent pop-up art shop, ART, Will Wicks' So What Surf n' Skate Shop opened its doors with a promising new line for those who would rather pick up a board locally and support local commerce than drive miles to find other products.

"This shop is for people who need last-minute accessories for the beach but would rather not travel to the Valley or deep into Malibu," says Wicks. Since opening, he has seen his vision fulfilled, adding that he has been embraced by most of the local surfing community.

"Our boards have been a success, another step in making Topanga a surf city once again," he says. He looks up to Paul Lovas' Topanga Beach Experience calling it "the surf hangout, groovy place to be away from LA."

So runs the motto of the new space that carries wetsuits for men, women and children, as well as custom hand-shaped surfboards with skateboards and rental gear for those caught without a board or for people wanting to learn surfing.

Ever since he first started to ride waves in 2002, he has dreamed of opening a surf shop. He now stands in the reality of that dream, 10 years in the making, and could not be prouder, except for the fact that he'll be a parent come next Christmas with Bekah Bourget, a local fashion designer and owner of Indio Eight boutique.

The name came about through something he has long held within his heart, a philosophy on life and surfing: "’So what?’ is a great thing to say when faced with life's challenges whether it's riding a big wave or dealing with people," he says. He pauses and reflects, then comes back with a smile and explanation: “Don’t take things so seriously, have fun, live life, for it can all be gone in a second.”

The casual laid-back approach to life that Wicks promotes is not only a staple of the California surf culture, but a cry of Topangans tracing back over years of the lifestyle.

He says that he has heard countless locals thank him for not having to drive miles out of the Canyon and feels that customers like these will be essential to him in the coming months and years.

Though he is a Topangan, some of Wicks' skills can be traced back to West Hills, where his mentor, Glen Kennedy, makes his own surfboards. He is grateful to have learned what he did with Glen and his family, not only for the skills that they helped him hone, but also the way of life, deep-rooted philosophies that passed from one surfboard maker to another.

When asked about the surf culture in Topanga, Wicks states, "The surf culture in Topanga is as free as the ocean," describing the calm he feels when surrounded by the waves and the same calm that he senses in the other Topangans and surfers.

"Some surfers only go out when the surf is big and good," he says. “Others surf almost everyday rain, shine, swell or no swell. There is the older generation, their offspring and the offsprings’ offspring. There are visitors who want to experience the amazing point break. All these are the people that Wicks admires and wants to accommodate. Yes, it is about Topanga, but it is more about the love of surfing and beyond that, the sea itself.

Wicks has seen more than Topangans around his shop lately including Malibu residents, commuters and even visitors from other countries. Advertising has garnered more interest, he says, “and shows we're not just some scrappy town; we actually have culture and roots that are pretty cool.

The business is still growing but his philosophy dictates that he not worry about it. Spoken like a true surfer, he simply says, "I'm just taking it day by day," and as if to test him, his road-side sign was recently bashed to pieces. He didn't go into a rage. Rather, he laughed it off with his friends while making a new sign, but he would like to know who the vandals are who didn't have the courage to confront him. Such shenanigans don't deter him because he feels that he has the support of the community.
He tries to express his gratitude but is reluctant to try to name everyone — there are simply too many. In general, he thanks the Canyon and all its residents who have supported him through this endeavor and who have appreciated his hand-made boards.

Two people he did name, however, were Jeff Hull and Jerry from Ventura showing him the ins and outs to completing surfboards at production value and good quality.

For everything else, he only needs his planer and sure-form, an experienced eye for symmetry that he has acquired over the years, lots of elbow grease and even more patience.

So What Surf n' Skate Shop is located at the Old Topanga Town Center, 115 South Topanga Canyon Blvd., Topanga, CA 90290; (310) 455-0101; shop@sowhatsurf.com.
...

2011-02-11 surfwriter.net - "Topanga Beach Experience: Thanks for the Memories…" by Robert R. Feigel


"Thanks for the Memories…"

by Robert R. Feigel
Photos by Frank Lamonea, John Clemens, Anthony Friedkin, and Woody Stuart

TOPANGA BEACH EXPERIENCE: 1960s - 70s
Author: Paul Lovas (as told to Pablo Capra)
Publisher: Brass Tacks Press

For me, reading this small, but potent book was both strange and exciting.

Strange, because Paul - who is 7 years my junior - became part of the beach community I know so well at a time when I was in the process of leaving it. As a result, much of what he experienced either happened after I'd left or involved a younger generation.

Exciting, because he fills in so many of the gaps that were missing from my own experience.

For example, I finally found out what led to my friend Woody Woodward's near fatal stabbing and what happened to the houses just south of "The Yellow Submarine" house that used to belong to the Roach family.

After reading through Paul's smooth, often humorous, narrative and looking at the photos from that period, I'm almost sad that I missed the transition from the Topanga Beach of the early-mid 60s to that of the late-60s after I'd moved to Maui.

Paul's book sets the scene for some wonderful counterculture exploits that have since become part of coastal legend and shouldn't be missed. Take George's narrow escape from the cops. It is one of the funniest things I've ever read and Shane's ongoing battles with the fumbling, frustrated dogcatcher is classic. They must have driven the authorities mad more than once.

On the other hand, some of the antics were already part of local beach culture years before they were reinvented by later arrivals.

No rocks on the roof for me. When the noise from one of the band's practice sessions would drive me bonkers, I'd sneak out of my little room above the garage at Dr Schweiger's house (just north of the "Yellow Submarine") and slightly loosen one or two of the fuses that powered the living room in the main house so all the lights and amplifiers would suddenly die. Because I'd only loosen the fuses just enough to disconnect the electricity all the fuses looked just fine when George or Davey or Jay or Jeff would come out to check with a flashlight. By the time someone finally thought to test if they were screwed in tight (probably Craigy), I was half-way to Costa Rica.

We'd also wreak unmentionable havoc on trespassers (aka "outsiders") with pellet guns, slingshots, deflated tires and dog poo on their car seats. But I'd like to think our generation was just a bit more original and a lot less obvious.

After all, Topanga Beach was a more balanced little community back then.

By balanced, I mean it was made up of a wide assortment of different people: old, young, rich, poor, families, gay couples, loners, lovers, artists, business people, actors, cops, ballet dancers, models, surfers, students, teachers, carpenters, filmmakers, lifeguards, writers, musicians, stuntmen, lawyers, sailors, even a professional golfer cum poacher and an award winning soundman. And, for the most part, we all got along, accepting each other's differences and respecting each other's space.

All that was starting to change by the time I left for Maui in 1968 and I returned two years later to a fragmented, harder, less open community made up mostly of people under 30.

Not that this is in any way meant as a criticism of Paul's photo rich book or the period it covers. The times they were a changin' anyway. And not just on Topanga Beach or in Southern California. American society was in the midst of major changes from sea to shining sea, and the laid-back, easy going lifestyles and optimistic expectations of post war America had finally given way to overdoses, suicides, flag draped coffins, blind patriotism and thoroughly corrupt politicians and their supporters. In other words, it was replaced by cynicism, hedonism and me-ism.

Paul's book is a must read for anyone who wants to taste the magic of a beach community that was completely eradicated just for being different, as well as by everyone who ever lived at Topanga Beach before the bulldozers and remembers how special it was.

For me, the book's last paragraph says it all:

"Leaving was sad, but moving on for many was a good time to explore. People went out and started seeing new places to surf and live their lives. There was a new era coming, and it wasn't bad, but the old one ... boy, you couldn't beat it if you were at Topanga."

Thanks for the memories Paul....




2010-01-18 Citizen Tleilax - "YouTube Comments Have Literary Merit" by D. Bene Tleilax





FIRST! – A Book of YouTube Comments
Edited by Pablo Capra
Published by Brass Tacks Press
Zine/Booklet – 23 pages

"YouTube Comments Have Literary Merit"

by D. Bene Tleilax

Well, perhaps “literary merit” is an overstatement – however there is certainly a value in such expressions, however base they may predominantly be at first glance. The comments referred to here are mainly those which are posted as instantaneous reactions to what has just been viewed, requiring probably less than 2 seconds of thought on the part of the authors. These types of comments are of course not limited to YouTube; they can occur in various places across the internet: Facebook statuses, 4Chan (and related) forums, etc. Taken as a whole, the myriad collections of such comments on all manner of topics across the web present a revealing view into the state of mind of a mass segment of our internet-infused culture. I view them as a sort of collaborative folk art, combining to create a humorously absurd, abstract tale of the frivolity and often intellectually stunted nature of many of the internet’s denizens. These negative aspects abound, certainly, yet a keen sense of highly developed and succinct comedy appropriate to its environment is perhaps just as frequently displayed, if one has the correct mind to interpret it.

While one need not look far to read multitudes of such commentary in their natural habitats, Capra’s published collection recognizes that this incidental output from our society deserves more than a cursory glance as we wander through these very spaces on our own missions. Presenting these small blips of text on paper as a uniquely modern form of automatic poetry or literature imbues them with the strength of cultural documentation, a strength which allows them to outlive their inherently unstable environment where all might be lost when a video is removed or a thread deleted. I have myself thought on many occasions that similar things should be published, and I am glad to see it done here in this small booklet.

(Link to Citizen Tleilax)

...

2009-12-23 Open Mind Dead Sound System - "Dicso Bunny talks about FIRST!: A Book of YouTube Comments..."

Dicso Bunny talks about FIRST!: A Book of YouTube Comments (edited by Pablo Capra) on the radio...

2009-12-07 LA Downtown News - "The Write Stuff" by Ryan Vaillancourt

"The Write Stuff"

by Ryan Vaillancourt
Photos by Gary Leonard

Downtown’s Growing Collection of Published Authors Finds a Home at Metropolis Books

DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES - Most urban bookstores have a local writers section, though “local” can cover a vague, regional set of boundaries. That’s not the case at Metropolis Books: At the small, independent bookstore in the Old Bank District, local means, quite specifically, Downtown Los Angeles.

The nearly 3-year-old bookstore stocks all the bestsellers, the classics, the hot titles of the month — these days, it’s anything Julia Child related — and the usual tomes from the Los Angeles literary pantheon of Chandler, Bukowski, Didion, etc.

Then there’s the locals section, where a collection of relationship-focused short stories is mixed with a youth-oriented, ecological adventure book, some self-published poetry books and a series of contemporary mysteries written for American Anglophiles.

“It’s nice to feature people who are from the neighborhood,” said Metropolis owner Julie Swayze. “We’ve had authors from England and Australia who included us on their tour, but I think it’s nice that someone can walk from upstairs to a book signing.”

Swayze has also made a habit of inviting published local authors to hold book launches, readings and signings at the store. Next up is Hannah Dennison, who on Thursday, Dec. 10, will read from and sign Exposé, the third installment in her Vicky Hill Mystery Series.

Lending shelf space to local authors is not entirely altruistic: They sell well, too, Swayze said.

“If it’s a local author people are sort of drawn to that,” she said. “I can sell them very well just saying that they’re local.”

Los Angeles Downtown News caught up with five Downtown authors whose works are in stock at Metropolis to talk about their craft and writing Downtown.

Hannah Dennison: Dennison, a native of England, didn’t set out to be an author. She came to Los Angeles as an aspiring screenwriter, then tired of the pursuit and took what was supposed to be a temporary gig as an assistant to a corporate CEO. It ended up being more permanent, as Dennison has now worked in a Downtown officer tower for 10 years. But in the early morning hours, Dennison, 51, writes installments of the Vicky Hill Mystery Series, about a young newspaper reporter outside London (Dennison used to write obituaries for a small English paper) who dreams of being an investigative reporter.

“It’s basically a cross between Bridget Jones and Agatha Christie with a splash of Nancy Drew; it’s in a small town, and murders take place,” said Dennison, whose Dec. 10 reading begins at 7 p.m. and coincides with the Downtown Art Walk. The stories also explore eccentric English traditions like hedge-laying (competitions for farmers trimming hedges), or in Exposé, snail racing.

“Oddly enough it seems to appeal more to American readers who are Anglophiles,” Dennison said. “They find English tea and English traditions sort of nice. England seems to want the stabbing and incest and hardcore stuff. My stuff is more like cozy mystery. It’s supposed to make you feel good; you curl up at the fire with a box of chocolates and a cat.”

Dana Johnson: Los Angeles native Johnson has lived all over the county, and in Downtown for about four years. She remembers strolling up Main Street three years ago and seeing paper in the windows of the future Metropolis space, wondering what new retailer was investing in the area.

Today, the paper is long down and the window instead features her collection of short stories, Break Any Woman Down. The first-person accounts won the prestigious Flannery O’Connor Award for short fiction.

“I was experimenting with voice at the time so there’s all different kinds of people,” said Johnson. “One story, for example, is a white punk Irish musician guy, one character is a black female stripper, and one’s an older black woman in the south.”

Johnson, 42, who is a professor of English and creative writing at USC, has also co-written two “chick lit” works under a pseudonym. Metropolis stocks those books, Eye To Eye and Flyover State.

Though her work isn’t necessarily set Downtown, Johnson said she takes plenty of inspiration from living in the area.

“For any artist of any kind, Downtown is a fascinating place to be living and working because there’s just always something to see and something to hear and something to smell,” she said. “There’s something about Downtown that’s really confrontational, in a good way.”


Richard McDowell: McDowell and his circle of Downtown poets didn’t need a publisher to get their work out. They formed Brass Tacks Press, hooked up with a Santa Monica printing company, and published their prose themselves. McDowell is behind a series of “chapbooks,” or self-published, pocket-sized books, containing poetry by himself and other L.A. writers.

McDowell’s self-illustrated 30 Days on Spring is his stylized reflections on life along the Historic Core street before gentrification.

“On any given day on a walk from Fifth down Spring, you can buy next to anything, cigarettes at bootleg prices two-fifty a pack, Marlboro, Marlboro Lights, Newports, pickup a lighter, pack of chewing gum, mango’s [sic] bus tokens, corn-on-the-cob, plastic animals or planets, and if your [sic] so inclined a man or woman to fulfill you sexual desires,” he writes in the book.

McDowell wrote 30 Days on Spring while living, under the radar, in an abandoned Historic Core building. The 44-year-old now resides in a Wall Street loft in the Toy District and is looking to compile work from Downtown poets to publish as a collection.




Diana Leszczynski: Leszczynski, an 8-year resident of Downtown, is a former film industry worker who later found her voice as a professional writer. Her Fern Verdant & the Silver Rose is an ecological adventure for children. Its young protagonist shares a secret ability with her mother to communicate with plants.

The book bounces from Oregon to France to Sri Lanka, a fact that Leszczynski admits is somewhat ironic, since she wrote it while living in the San Fernando Building in the Historic Core. The closest she comes to an ecological adventure is having an indoor garden, she said.

Leszczynski, 44, did not have long-seeded dreams to write fiction for children.

“It’s one of those things where something just comes to you, where your brain is ricocheting around in a million different places and this seemed like the most logical way to tell this story,” she said. “And also one of my favorite books when I was growing up was Alice In Wonderland, essentially the story of a girl going into a different world, which is what [Fern Verdant] is.”

Fern Verdant & the Silver Rose, which was named a Smithsonian Notable Children’s Book of the Year in 2008 and was a Green Earth Book honoree this year, encourages young readers to protect the environment, but it’s not “heavy messaged,” she said.

Local sales have been strong too.

“I have a wide circle of friends down here, and people knew me when I was going through the anguish and torture of writing my first draft, so I think people were genuinely supportive having seen that and then seeing me have the good fortune to get published,” Leszczynski said.

Daniel Olivas: For almost 20 years, Daniel Olivas has spent his weekdays working for the state Attorney General in the Ronald Reagan State Building at Third and Spring streets. The neighborhood was already familiar to him from childhood bus trips with his grandmother to Grand Central Market.

The 50-year-old deputy attorney general, a second generation Angeleno, was an English major in college and has published five works of fiction, including the short story collection Anywhere But L.A. He’ll sign copies of and read from the collection next April.

“It’s a collection of short stories where essentially the characters are either trying to escape L.A. or they have completely left L.A.,” Olivas said. “I found that over the years I started accumulating stories that seemed to want to pull out of the city.”

Still, Olivas’ characters maintain a close connection to the City of Angels, and often Downtown, he said.

“I get distressed with outsider views of Los Angeles,” Olivas said. “There are so many stereotypes out there, including that the classic L.A. novel has to be about Malibu and movie stars, forgetting about the people who have no connection to Hollywood or the movie industry, people who go to work every single day. Those people, I try to address.”

Metropolis Books is at 440 S. Main St., (213) 612-0174 or metropolisbooksla.com.


2009-09-01 Foxy Digitalis - "An Interview with Penny-Ante Publisher Rebekah Why" by Jon Lorenz

From "An Interview with Penny-Ante Publisher Rebekah Why"

by Jon Lorenz

I read that you initially started Penny-Ante with a focus on poetry and you said at the time that you "saw it as something that was completely dead," could you elaborate on that?

Poetry has never died and I find is hilarious that the first time I’m misquoted is by one of my own editors! (Laughs). I think when I said that I was referring to my own surroundings and friends, who don’t really find contemporary “big name” poetry as something they connect with… But with that said, there will always be poets, and people interested in poetry. Byron Coley’s been doing it with the Ecstatic Yod’s poetry journals, or Brass Tacks Press out of Topanga… There are people carrying the torch from one generation to the next and with that, it’s not completely dead, and thank goodness.... Penny-Ante website Foxy Digitalis website ...

2009-08-01 Penny-Ante, Three - "3 Brass Tacks Press Poets"

"3 Brass Tacks Press poets published in Penny-Ante, Three!"

List of contributors:

Loto Ball, Sean Bonniwell (The Music Machine), Caleb Braaten (Sacred Bones Records), Billy Bragg, Heather Brown, Mark C (Live Skull, Int'l Shades), Robert Campbell (poet), Pablo Capra (poet), Victory Cayro (Bald Eagles), Mathew Cerletty (artist), George Chen (KIT, 7 Year Rabbit Cycle, Chen Santa Maria), Sharon Cheslow (Chalk Circle), Billy Childish, Circle, Helios Creed (Chrome), Nathan Danilowicz, Joe DeNardo (Growing), Jason Diamond (writer), Arrington de Dionyso (Old Time Relijun), John Dwyer (Thee Oh Sees), Phil Elverum (Microphones, Mt Eerie), Jill Emery (Hole, Mazzy Star), Jad Fair (Half Japanese), fey, Mick Farren (writer, The Deviants), Larry Fondation (writer), Jessica Lee Garrison (writer), Evan George (writer), Aaron Giesel (photographer), Wynne Greenwood (Tracy+The Plastics), Liz Haley (artist), Robert Hansen Jr. (artist), Maya Hayuk (artist), Casey Henry (writer), Julian Hoeber (artist), Christopher Ilth (artist, Daily Void), Gregory Jacobsen (artist), Mason Jones (writer), Dawn Kasper (artist), Dana Kline (poet), Chris Knox (Tall Dwarfs, The Enemy, Toy Love, The Nothing), Bettina Koster (Malaria!), Dirk Knibbe (artist), Terence Koh (artist), David Jacob Kramer (Family/Hope Gallery), Hanna Liden (artist), Matt Maust (artist, Cold War Kids), Ian MacKaye (Dischord Records, Fugazi, Minor Threat, The Evens), Stephen McCarty (Dead Meadow), Roger Miller (Mission of Burma), Irene Moon, Thurston Moore (Sonic Youth), Naked on the Vague, Ashley Nelson (writer), Martin Newell (poet, Cleaners from Venus), Lora Norton (Chuck Dukowski Sextet), Jed Ochmanek (artist), Honey Owens (Valet), owleyes, George Parsons (Dream Magazine), Alia Penner (artist), Martin Phillipps (The Chills), Pocahaunted, Andrew Pogany (writer/poet), Robert Pollard (Guided by Voices), Cassie Ramone (Vivian Girls), Robedoor, Rob Roberge (Urinals), Steven Salardino (writer), Silver Apples, Danny Simon (artist), Anna Spanos (writer), Spires That in the Sunset Rise, Jessie Stead (artist), Sumi Ink Club (aka Lucky Dragons), Ann Summa (photographer), Jason Burke Sutter (writer), Drew Tewksbury (writer), Toylit (poet), Lia Trinka-Browner (writer), Brian Turner (WFMU), Michael Andrew Turner (Warmer Milks), TV Ghost, Matt Valentine (MV/EE, Tower Recordings), Steve Vanoni (artist), John Whitson (Holy Mountain), Bett Williams (writer), Allison Wolfe (Bratmobile, Partyline) 

Flyers for the "street date" party:

2009-07-22 Heide Museum of Modern Art - "Ern Malley: The Hoax and Beyond"


Excerpt from the Heide Museum of Modern Art's catalog for the show
Ern Malley: The Hoax and Beyond (July 22 - November 15, 2009) 

Curated by Kendrah Morgan and David Rainey

[The poems of Ern Malley] next appear in California in 2004 in volume seven of the little magazine from Brass Tacks Press, Life as a Poet (Plate 20).... With at least 20 versions in all -- not only in Australia but in London, Paris, Lyons, Kyoto, New York, and Los Angeles -- this "black swan," this "darkening ecliptic," is indeed still trespassing on many "alien waters." ...

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Los Angeles, California, United States
Official website at www.brasstackspress.com