The Art of the Award Winning Poet Igor Goldkind

Posts tagged “Bob Dylan

The Poverty of American Arts: The Main Threat to American Mental Health

I have only had two editors in my life. One was the now deceased artist Eleanor Brooks. She was the widow of the great novelist Jeremy Brooks, and a friend of Ken Kesey’s and Robert Stone. Eleanor was a British Beatnik, an official Friend of Wales, and a former Duchess of Gloucester. She renounced her title and seat in the House of Lords to marry Jeremy, a commoner.

The other and now my current editor is Dr. Miles Krogfus. He won first place in a national poetry competition back in the 1950s. This achievement paid for his entire university education. AND his PHd in Yeats, an the Romantics. At 83, he can detect the Classical within the contemporary. He keeps my poetry disciplined within the legacy and structures of poetics.

Part of The Mission is to publish the monthly Mission. My newly incorporated company will include comics, poetry, prose, and art. Mile’s work will feature in it and then after a year, we will publish a book of his poetry.

Not for his sake or mine.
For the sake of the American people. This is especially true for Americans under the age of 30. They have been denied the richness of art and culture. They continue to be denied access. Art and culture are how any civilized society tends to its emotional and psychological challenges.

I am utterly certain that many Americans are mentally ill due to poverty in arts and culture. Some are lethally so. This society has ultimately commodified arts and culture into extinction.

It is difficult to pursue a career as an artist anywhere. However, it is next to impossible in America. It didn’t always used to be this way. It’s a change I’ve seen happen slowly, really just in the last 40 years. The only socially acceptable vocation in America today are institutional ones or corporate jobs. Or science, engineering and technology. because we value our tools more than we do our fellow human beings.

We treat dogs like people and people like dogs in America.

Anything else is derided as “not a real job”. With the rare exception of musicians and recording artists who are viewed as potentially money-spinning. Painters and writers and sculptors are treated like complete shit. We are advised to stop practicing our craft. Instead, we should get jobs loading paper bags at Trader Joe’s for rich hippie vegan scum.

Once when I was being processed after being arrested in San Diego for one of my many nefarious crimes (I will die before I tell them where I buried the 4th body!), I was at the booking desk and I was being asked what profession I claimed, I said “Poet” and the desk sergeant guffawed, laughed loudly and turned to the other deputy as they both belly laughed.

THAT is what Americans think of and how they treat the arts in this tragic land.

All to the detriment of the mental health and well being of our society. Yes, the word ‘Society’ does actually refer to a real thing, you just can’t buy much of it.

The last time America had an arts-based culture that pervaded society was from the late 1950s until the dawn of the 80s. This culture was admired and emulated by other cultures far and wide. Whats loosely referred to as the 60s. Nobel Prize Winning Poet Bob Dylan completely revolutionized the music industry with his songs and music. He turned the Beatles onto LSD, and we all know where that led: cultural, spiritual, and social Revolution!

Ken Kesey wrote Sometimes a Great Notion and then Cuckoo’s Nest, was experimented on by the US military with LSD and decided that not only did he like it, he would give it to everyone else!

And the Merry Pranksters and the Grateful Dead were born, Giants of cultural upheavel and enduring art. Yes, I’m saying that Jerry Garcia wasn’t just a great guitarist like Jimi Hendrix. (Another America icon to the arts, our “Mozart” of the electric guitar.). He was an artist plain and simple. He intuitively grasped the dream nature of art, how to embrace chaos and allow the growth of form to emerge out of content. There was nobody ever like his band The Grateful Dead and there will never be another like them.

Jerry Garcia was a Boddhisatava who changed the lives, improved the lives, alleviated the suffering of millions upon millions of people. For which he took no credit or accolade because he knew that it wasn’t him,, he had no ego, he was just Jerry doing what Jerry wanted to do.

Because “if you’re not having fun doing what you’re doing, you’re not doing it right!”

Jerry Garcia and Ken Kesey were artists using humanity and the people as their canvass. They improved people’s lives, period!

Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, Ton Carter, Sonny Rollins, Lee Morgan, Anthony Braxton (and too many more black musicians to list here), took the suffering and political humiliation of the African American people, absorbed it deep within their soul and then produced something more beautiful, more African American, more valuable than all the suffering of all their generations had endured could quell: Modern Jazz. The only uniquely indigenous American cultural product, ever. And it was our underclass, our N**g**s that produced it, that created our cultural heritage

White folk produced it and took most of the money and sometimes, on occasion aligned with it in emulation and imitation. But it was black people, African Americans who created it, from the blood and sweat of their masters lashes, the only lasting cultural worth America has every produced.

The Blues and Jazz will endure all of us for the next 2 thousand years. If humanity still exists in 2 thousand years, you can be certain. They will be listening to Jazz. Maybe ‘their’ Jazz, but they wouldn’t be listening to anything without the creative fountain of the African American artist.

Andy Warhol, Georgia O’Keefe, Jackson Pollock, (and please list painters that changed your life in the comments) didn’t just create visual art that sold for high prices. They changed the way people SEE and think about art. Consequently, they altered the way people viewed their lives as they are living.

Charles Olsen, Alen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder, Walt Whitman, Eugene O’Neil. John Reed, Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Carver, Carolyn Forche, Jack Kerouac. Lillian Hellman, Shirley Jackson, Dorothy Parker, Gertrude Stein, Bessie Smith. Billy Holiday, Lenny Bruce etc. etc. etc.

These were all writers and artists creating the raw material that makes up our soul. They weren’t just singing songs or spinning rhymes. They offered up, from the depth of their souls, the remedies for living. They provided the cure for our social illness! They taught us how to live better. They guided us in leading more rewarding lives. They helped us overcome the slings and arrows of our outrageously over-priced fortunes.

They were and still are our shamans. They are our urban witch doctors, our counsellors, and our therapists. Without them, without more generations of artists, we are all going to languish. We will whimper and suffer in our straitjackets, in one big WHITE lunatic asylum. It is ruled by the insanest WHITE king of them all: mad Donald Trump.

Today “art education” consists of “you better pick up a skill you can fall back on”. It has taken me 40 years of hard graft. Daily work, rejection, and overcoming rejection have brought me to this point. Now, I can look the cop in the eye. I can proudly say, “yes, I’m a poet, I’m an artist. You gotta problem wid dat”?

These days I mainly talk to young people, meaning people younger than me.
Guys and gals, working odd jobs, standing outside of restaurants barking customers. Because San Diego is so fucked up, the management gets weird when I talk to young women my daughter’s age. People give me hostile looks. I’m asked not to return to the establishment to spend my money.
Generational isolationism is a real social problem in San Diego. But I don’t give a shit, I’ll talk to whomever, whenever I want regardless of their age or mine. Unless they don’t want to talk to me and then I apologize and go away. But young people need their elders to give a shit about them, to talk to them to ask them what’s on their minds.

That is how a civilized, healthy society functions. You go to any other developed nation in the world. You’ll find ancient town centers in England, France, Spain, Italy, and Greece. In these places, the neighborhood’s children run free. Their parents sit at outdoor cafes or at tables or around fountains gossiping away. The children run free, feeling both free and safe. They know, without even being conscious of it, that they are the village’s children. They belong to the community, and the community will care for and protect them.

Socialist? You’re damn right that’s socialist. It is much better and healthier than the fear and paranoia that dominates current American parenting. Our teachers are prison guards. Our parents are overworked overlords. Our police are soldiers. They view every citizen and every member of the public as an antagonist.

How many cops does it take to change a light bulb?
None. They’d prefer to just beat up the room for being dark!

America has lost its soul along with its way.
Now it is just about the money; not even about what the money buys, just the frigging money.

When I last ran a company (or more accurately, ran after my company to make sure it didn’t go off its own rails!), I used to hire what were then a new breed of worker: the code, the computer programmer, the software developer. This was very difficult for me. Although I served my investor’s interests and followed my detailed business plan, I knew little about actually writing code. At the time, I didn’t even know how to write html. It’s not a code, but a mark-up language for the web.

So I had to hire some dozen coders very quickly to execute an array of electronic publishing projects, on CD-ROM at the time as DVDs had yet to be invented. So I interviewed everyone who came to apply for a poisition as I did with all of my staff. Anyone who ever works for me, who is paid by me, has a direct contact with me. A direct human to human connection is crucial in order to maintain a cohesive working environment. I do not delegate Human Resources. Because Humans come first, before even the money.

So I would typically take two strategies to discern whether or not I wanted someone working with me. The first was to sit in front of a screen and a keyboard with the individual and ask them to show me what they did that affected the screen,. Like I was an idiot. I called it my “Colombo” approach.

If the young candidate (typically college graduates in their early to mid 20s), balked and told me that I didn’t know enough to understand what they did; or try to waffle me with computer code jargon or resisted explaining anything to me; I would thank them for their application and say I’d be in touch.

I never was ‘in touch’.

If you can’t explain what you do to a 12 year old child, much less your potential employer, then you don’t really know what you’re doing yourself

My second approach is relevant to the point of this essay.
At the time I had secured over a million and a half £s in corporate investment. Enough to develop, produce and market an electronic publishing platform of 8 new interactive titles.
I coined the term INTERACTIVE DRAMAS to avoid the computer game association. Ironically, it was the computer Game MYST that was our great inspiration. It inspired the development of these interactive titles. I had the superb artist, designer and my aesthetic mentor Dave McKean as my nonsalaried Art Director. I also had a team of hard working, London working class designers.

They were “My Boys”. (along with a couple of girls). My Boys is my reference to Garth Ennis’s superb comics series and now Netflix series (The Boys; highly recommended if you hat super hero movies as much as I do)

So I was a happening dude in London in the early 90s. Which was a success that was all too shortlived, as all successes ultimately are. Nothing lasts forever, baby, apart from the Moon, the mountains, the ocean and the stars.

But back to the interview process relevant to my point about money and its intrinsic valueless-ness. So I had a company cheque book at the time when people still wrote cheques. My candidate would come into my office and sit in front of me and I would ask the usual questions about their backgrounds and experience. Then we’d do the computer screen test. Finally I would lean forwards and look them straight in the eyes (and smile).

“Tell me, what is it that you really want out of life, what is the real reason that you’ve applied for this job; what do you want?”
Without exception, the candidate would drop their guard and answer with one word:
“Money”

And these were British kids, mind you. Working class, self-educated or middle class college graduates. Not Americans. With Americans, its ten times worse.
Now the lesson would begin:
I would smile and say

“But of course, what would be the point of going to a job every day if you weren’t being paid. I want money,, I like what money buys me”.

The informality would open the candidate up:

“I want loads of money, I want to be rich by the time I’m 30 and I’m so good at what I do, I’m going to make that real” (or some paraphrase to that effect).
So then I would start the game. I would look seriously at the candidate and say:
“Would you consider a million pounds enough money?”
Inevitably, they would be confused by the question.
I would repeat myself while I opened my desk drawer and extracted the company cheque book.
“Would you consider a million pounds enough money to make you happy to achieve your dream?”
The answer was always the same. So I would begin to write out a cheque so that they could see my writing, for a million pound on the company cheque book, logo and all. Then I would rip the cheque out and being to hand it to the candidate.

“I’m going to give you this million pounds, it’s yours and you can call the bank right here and now to verify that the cheque’s good. It’s a real cheque for a million pounds and I’m going to give it to you, right here and right now on one condition.”

The candidate was never sure how real this game was but they knew for certain it was a real cheque; one guy actually called our bank and was told that the funds were liquid. But I wasn’t taking any pleasure in the startled eyes and nervousness of these young people. Instead I had an invaluable lesson to impart.

“One condition and the money is yours”, I repeated.
And I would hand them the cheque so that they could feel reality in their own hands.
Some would ask “What’s the catch”?
Some wouldn’t.

Then I would explain:

“You can have this cheque. You can have a million pounds on one condition. You must accompany me directly to the airport. We will go without interruptions and with no stops. At the airport, we will grab the first flight to Cairo. Once in Cairo there’s a helicopter awaiting us (there wasn’t, I lied). The helicopter journey will take some 3 or 4 hours to the heart of the Sahara (‘Sahara’ means desert, so to say Sahara desert is redundant). Once we have reached the centre of the Sahara, we will land. Or we will hover about 5 or 6 feet above the desert. You will jump a short distance. The sand will cushion your jump. And then we are going to leave you in the middle of the Sahara with your cheque but no water, no phone and at least a hundred mile walk to the nearest oasis.”

And then the punch line, which I would deliver while meeting the person’s eyes full on:

“So what is your million pounds worth to you now?”

The AHA! Moment
(the one word that Allen Ginsberg wrote on my first edition City Lights copy of Kaddish when he signed it and invited me up into his room; I didn’t go, its another story. Always been a touch homophobic)

The day to day epiphany available to all of us any time of day, “if you look at it right”.
The moment of realization of enlightenment and understanding happens when you grasp not just something new but when everything you had been thinking crumbles away. Everything that you thought to be true up to that moment crumbles away. Those scarlet begonias are a touch of the blues.

And your mind is just blown wide open to the fact that what you knew was certain wasn’t very certain at all.
You can’t hide that moment on your face.
And I knew with utter certainty that the look on my candidates face was their passing grade. If they ‘got it’ I could work with them.

I’m friends with some of my ex employees to this day and recently one of them, a girl now a woman, reached out to me to remind me of my little employment game and how it made her start to see her life in a totally different way.

I told her that no thanks were needed.
That I was just doing my job
The best way I knew how.
Thanks for reading.
Leave your comments below and I will respond.
Still human that way.




Running Away With Bob Dylan

When I was 15, I ran away from home.

Actually, I hitchhiked away from home.

I told my mother that I was going camping with my friend Barry Alphonso and got him to vouch for the lie. My mother dropped me off in Pacific Beach near the on ramp for highway 5 and not too removed from where I find myself dwelling now.

Barry met me on the turnpike and gave me a golf club. I think he thought it was for protection and I thought it was to help me walk, as my backpack was loaded with too many clothes.

But now I think it was a flagstaff; a fasces of power to herald my embarking on adventure. I had $20 in my pocket, a rolled up sleeping bag an overloaded backpack and a fasces of a golf club.

I said goodbye to Barry and stuck out my thumb on the turnpike and thrust it into the wind.

I had no idea where I was going, I just wanted to go.

As far from navel gazing San Diego as I could.

My father had moved out of our recently bought house a couple of weeks previous to my embarkment. My mother and he had been fighting for years but recently the arguments had got louder while my sister and I cowered in our shared bedroom, confused and bewildered by our world falling apart.

And then my dad moved out and took an apartment.

My parents played that typical futile, delusional adult trick of hiding it from the children.

My sister and I knew better, our world was ending.

At 15, I was beginning to listen to music that wasn’t classical or show tunes. I started with Simon and Garfunkel, The Sounds of Silence, then Bridge Over Troubled Waters. And then Bob Dylan who changed my world. Highway 61 Revisted left an indelible mark on me. From the Triumph Bonneville that he strides on the cover (my first ever motorcycle), to the road trip I was now setting off on at 15. Dylan had a terrible voice like mine but it didn’t stop him from singing, sneering and spinning imagery that lifted me far above suburbia with it’s over watered golf courses,

apartheid gardners and stupid, stupid sports teams.

Bob Dylan wrote the truth and then recited it while he strummed an acoustic and then electric guitar. His gravel encrusted voice shaped mine. Dylan taught me not to trust authority, that the police were not my friend, that the government was corrupted by its own power, that the world was a mystical carnival of sighs and how to make love to a woman on a roof top at night under a canopy of stars and dreams.

I had no idea where on earth I was going but damn if I wasn’t taking Dylan with me, in my head, in my heart and on the soul of my shoes.

I had a vague idea of San Francisco where my parents had once driven us, my sister and I to. I had loved it. To me, San Francisco was the Emerald City and San Diego was a dust bitten Kansas.

It took me at least a dozen rides and several days to get up to the Bay Area. I passed the time on the side of highway 101 singing songs of the road. The Boxer, Homeward Bound, Mr. Jones, She Belongs to Me and of course the incomparable Like a Rolling Stone. No walkman, no headphones, no wireless stream; just the sound of my lungs flying with the wind.

In Bakersfield, I hopped a train car that was luckily heading to Oakland for the last leg of my pilgrimage. I had slept under bridges, in open fields on cowboy ranches, city shelters and Christian refugees on the way and the train car gave me a respite from seeking shelter.

When I crawled out of the train car, blinking and squinting at the orange sunlight in the Oakland trainyard, I smelled the dawn, it smelt like freedom.

I panhandled enough change to get to Berkeley and spent the night sleeping in People’s Park. The protests, the revolution, the 60’s were well over but there were still vestiges of change in the air, of lingering desires for another way of living than endless repeating episodes of Leave it to Beaver.

My brother was actually enrolled at UC Berkeley when I passed through but it didn’t even occur to me to contact him. He was a half brother from my father’s first wife who had died in a lunatic asylum. My mother had raised my brother until he eventually went to college. Then I was born and we’ve never got along since.

I was on Telegraph Avenue asking for spare change.

A man in a suit handed me a five dollar bill and I was set.

Enough to get to San Francisco, the City of Love, where I would find the Wizard and ask him for a new heart, a new brain, new courage and the way back home. All in one.

The Bart let me out downtown and I hiked up Pike street to get to Haight Ashbury where the revolution was still happening.

Of course it wasn’t.

There will still free concerts in Golden Gate Park and the smell of burning marijuana was woven into the morning fog like a blanket.

The hippies with their brightly coloured scarves and tie dye rags made the streets undulate with color.

I walked up the Haight until I got to the point of this story:

A window above the steps to a walk down basement proclaimed:

THE HAIGHT ASHBURY SWITCHBOARD

I walked down the steps, turned the knob on the door and entered a hallway lined with benches. The benches were packed with travellers, backpacks in freon of them. Men, women, boys and girls, some my age and some younger all waiting to be registered. Once our names were on the list, local residents would stop by and the girl at the desk would shout out something like, ‘4 places in a shared room, a couch, a back garden, floorspace for 2, a couch, 2 for a bunk bed’. and other variations of the same.

This was the Haight Ashbury Switchboard where people who needed a place to stay came to put their name on a list and people who had room in their houses and apartments would show up to give somebody a place to stay.

This is how the Hippies and the Revolution solved the homeless problem. People who needed hospice went to a place where other people came to give hospice.

For no money!

There were also other resources like free food kitchens, drug and suicide counselling, access to libraries but always, always a place to sleep safe at night. I spent 2 weeks in San Francisco cared for by strangers, by people of open hearts and minds who had enough to spare a wayward 15 year old runaway, running away from his collapsing word.

That’s how you solve homelessness:

YOU FUCKING GIVE PEOPLE HOMES!

Or at the very least a temporary safe place to crash that’s not on the streets, until they figure out where they’re going.

When people are lost, you give them directions. You help them find their way.

That’s what decent people do.

Nothing has both shocked and struck me dumb since my return from Europe to my native Calfornia than the treatment, nay, mistreatment of the homeless.

This state is the richest state in the richest nation on this earth. California ranks like the 5th or 6th richest economy on the planet. It rivals the wealth of whole nations. And yet, and yet the selfish, self obsessed, glutenous PIGS that reside in this state can’t be bothered to offer the most meagre of resources to alleviate the suffering of others.

People treat the homeless like scum here and it’s the most disgusting socially acceptable attitude I have ever encountered.

Voltaire said that you can judge a society based on how it treats its weakest and most vulnerable. His words not mine, but his judgement is mine and I condemn the lifestyle, the privilege, the hypocricy, the victim-blaming that fuels this Consumer Capitalist nightmare that is California.

It’s not rocket science or brain surgery.

When people don’t have houses, you house them so that they don’t languish on the streets. Sure, you get something from them for the privilege, but you don’t ignore them, you don’t spit on the homeless for not having what you have, however you happen to get what you have that they don’t.

If someone is lost, you give them directions.

If someone is hungry you feed them.

If someone is homeless you give them a home.

It’s a right, not a privilege.

Just like living, loving, working and dying.