July 29, 2020

"Hey Siri, play music."

I said into my AirPods. So nonspecific! I was out and about and not in a good position to skip things, but I was also forcing myself to accept whatever it was that I had put into my iPhone music library. I have so many audiobooks, but they're in a different app, so it's only rarely that spoken word comes up when I'm playing the "Music" app randomly. I can tell Siri to skip a track, so it's not as though I'd need to dig the iPhone out of my bag and squint to read it in the sunlight. But I sometimes adopt a discipline of listening to what The Randomness wants from me at any given moment.

Yesterday, it was "Kaddish," written and spoken by Allen Ginsberg, because a CD collection I bought long ago — "Holy Soul Jelly Roll: Poems & Songs" — took up residence in the Music app and not the audiobook app. There's other spoken word in the Music app. In fact, there was one thing I told Siri to skip yesterday — the oral argument in King v. Burwell. I will submit to The Randomness, but only so far. I considered skipping "Kaddish," but, I thought, I can do this. How long can it be? I dug in. It's an hour. (Audio. Text.)

Anyway... that radically changed the nature of my outing. But I stuck it out. Sample text:

Eugene got out of the Army, came home changed and lone—cut off his nose in jewish operation—for years stopped girls on Broadway for cups of coffee to get laid—Went to NYU, serious there, to finish Law.—
That caught my ear because I went to NYU School of Law and because one of the news stories of yesterday was "Georgia Senator Is Criticized for Ad Enlarging Jewish Opponent’s Nose/Senator David Perdue, a Republican, drew a quick rebuke from his Democratic opponent, Jon Ossoff, who said the Facebook ad employed the 'least original anti-Semitic trope in history'" (NYT).

There's an annotation at Genius.com on "cut off his nose in jewish operation":
This refers to [Ginsberg's brother] Eugene changing his ‘Jewish-sounding’ surname from Ginsberg to Brooks.
I'm happy to see that Genius is a place to annotate poems and not just song lyrics. Unfortunately, there are very few annotations in "Kaddish." I wanted more, but at least I got a hint of what "jewish operation" might refer to. Not the nose, even though "nose" is right there? Maybe "nose" is there to call to mind the saying "Don't cut off your nose to spite your face," and whatever that saying is supposed to mean is what Eugene was doing in changing his name from Ginsberg to Brooks.

More about Eugene from "Kaddish":
But Gene, young,—been Montclair Teachers College 4 years—taught half year & quit to go ahead in life—afraid of Discipline Problems—dark sex Italian students, raw girls getting laid, no English, sonnets disregarded—and he did not know much—just that he lost—
so broke his life in two and paid for Law—read huge blue books and rode the ancient elevator 13 miles away in Newark & studied up hard for the future
Some law school casebooks are blue — and there are also the red ones and the brown ones. You can commute to NYU — in the heart of Greenwich Village — from your apartment in Newark, New Jersey. It does sound gloomy, I thought, as I bicycled around Lake Monona on the sunny day that was yesterday. When I went to NYU, I lived right there in Greenwich Village.

Ah! Here's the building. It's a co-op now, and I think the very studio we lived in is on the market now. $600,000 to buy into the privilege of paying $4,000 a month. Somehow, that makes me feel so lucky. What a nice .6 mile walk I had on that street with its own Bob Dylan song... back in the days when I didn't even have a way to pipe music — or talking — straight into my ears.

***

You say “How are you? Good luck!”/But you don’t mean it....

26 comments:

rcocean said...

There's a Youtube of Ginsberg talking to WFB on firing line. Watched a little of it, but Ginsberg wasn't saying anything amusing or insightful. His friend jack Keroauc was also very drunk on Firing line. He was slightly more interesting, but only in a "he's very articulate for someone so obviously drunk" way.

Joe Smith said...

Ginsberg was a socialist, homosexual, pedophile. So at least he had that going for him...

Nonapod said...

$600,000 to buy into the privilege of paying $4,000 a month.

I can't help but wonder in the wake of Covid-19 and riots... sorry, peaceful protests, if those prices will hold. I find it difficult to believe that there'd be little effect.

tim in vermont said...

The Ginsberg stuff was the low point of Rolling Thunder Review. That’ and Joan Baez’s weird gyrations on stage.

robother said...

So, Ginsberg is music to Siri's ears? Good to know.

tim in vermont said...

Dylan said about Baez’s stage antics “I guess we didn’t give her enough to do."

jeremyabrams said...

Kurt Vonnegut commented on the first line of Howl (not Kaddish),"I saw the best minds of my generation..." by suggesting that the best minds of their shared generation were likely engineering majors.

Carol said...

Ah, so teaching sucked back then, too. Because of the students' "culture."

Eleanor said...

While you're out and about, why would you force yourself to listen to something? At our age there's no prize for being more miserable than whatever chore you're doing already makes you. There's no one to impress with your willingness to make yourself miserable. It's time to find the things that bring you pleasure. It's OK to hit skip or pick a different playlist. Really, it is.

bagoh20 said...

Do you think there is any question to which Siri would reply with "fuck you"? There should be at least one.

bagoh20 said...

"Ginsberg was a socialist, homosexual, pedophile."

So which comes first, these character flaws or celebrity? There is a very strong correlation, but which direction does the causation go?

wildswan said...

I can remember carefully seriously reading Ginsburg's Howl as part of "being at college", not home. But it didn't get beyond thinking "this is what happens if you take drugs," an secret opinion I would never have acknowledged out loud. Now I might say this is what happens if you look for salvation wholesale, not retail.

Lyle Sanford, RMT said...

I went to a Ginsberg reading around '69 or '70 and was completed surprised by the power of his presence - took him and his poetry much more seriously after that.

Char Char Binks, Esq. said...

So many Jews have changed their name to Brooks that it now sounds Jewish. Same goes for Davis, which was probably an easy one-letter step, but I’m not sure why they went with Brooks. It’s kind of like the ethnic confusion of the name Costello, and maybe Elvis was trying to pass as Irish.

PM said...

In that space, Alan Watts had the best voice.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZTFfyUnEnc

madAsHell said...

It's interesting what has carried over from the analog era (Ginsberg, deceased 1997), and into the digital age.

Bruce Hayden said...

First thing I do when I get a new Apple device is to turn off Siri. In a perfect world, they would let me deinstall the software. But this is the company that determined that no one needed more than one mouse button. So, of course, you can’t deinstall any of their stuff.

Why would I want to deinstall Siri? Because it can relay anything it hears to Apple Central, in Cupertino, PRC (People’s Republic of California). All, of course, just for quality assurance reasons. Do I want a bunch of entitled, unprincipled, SJWs listening to everything I say around any of my Apple devices?

tcrosse said...

Don't trust Siri. Siri is asshole.

Ann Althouse said...

"While you're out and about, why would you force yourself to listen to something? At our age there's no prize for being more miserable than whatever chore you're doing already makes you. There's no one to impress with your willingness to make yourself miserable. It's time to find the things that bring you pleasure. It's OK to hit skip or pick a different playlist. Really, it is."

Everything in my iPhone is stuff I put in, so I had some idea of wanting to listen to it. There's absolutely nothing in it that I regard as unworthy, so I challenge myself to follow through on my own aspirations.

Ann Althouse said...

"In that space, Alan Watts had the best voice."

It's a matter of taste. For me the best spoken word voice is David Sedaris. I listen to him just about every day, and have heard "Theft by Finding" a thousand times.

khematite said...

There's some dispute as to whether the 4th Street of the Dylan song is the one in Greenwich Village or the one in Dinkytown, near the University of Minnesota. Dylan did a lot of hanging out at a Minneapolis coffee house, the Ten O'Clock Scholar, located on 14th Avenue between 4th and 5th Street.

https://www.popspotsnyc.com/dinkytown/

Joe Smith said...

@AA

It's unusual that writers are also good narrators, even for their own books.

Kind of like defensive backs that drop errant passes that are thrown right into their hands. There's a reason they're not wide receivers : )

n.n said...

Hey, Siri, Alexa, Andrea, Cortana, too, stop spying on me.

Ginsberg was a socialist, homosexual, pedophile. So at least he had that going for him...

Trendy, forward-looking, a social progressive.

tim in vermont said...

"It's unusual that writers are also good narrators, even for their own books.”

I think that a lot of times men with great voices choose to exploit that gift by writing stuff that maybe reaches the artistic level of flower arranging, but gives women an excuse to listen to them.

It’s like beautiful actresses, a lot of times the movie is just an excuse to look at them, because staring at beautiful women IRL is a strong urge that is nonetheless frowned upon.

Joe Smith said...

"because staring at beautiful women IRL is a strong urge that is nonetheless frowned upon."

Here we actually agree...and nowadays you can stare with impunity from behind your mask and goggles : )

Narayanan said...

Kaddish or Qaddish or Qadish (Aramaic: קדיש‎ "holy")
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similar to Arabic Quds - good to know