IVIV reception: "like all good Pynchon books, frequently hilarious"
Henry Musikar
scuffling at gmail.com
Mon Aug 17 19:44:41 CDT 2009
The Wild Man Fischer Story isn't available on CD or vinyl, but:
http://tinyurl.com/wildmanfischerstorysingle
I happen to have it on vinyl, and I have .mp3's of the whole 2-record album,
and I play them on KCUF
Henry Mu
Sr. IT Consultant
http://astore.amazon.com/tdcoccamsaxe-20/
-----Original Message-----
From: Doug Millison
http://www.chicagoreader.com/TheBlog/archives/2009/08/17/diddy-and-felix-lec
tro-black
Diddy and Felix: Lectro Black Posted by Miles Raymer on Mon, Aug 17,
2009 at 4:56 PM
Over the weekend I tore through Thomas Pynchon's new Inherent Vice,
which is excellent and, like all good Pynchon books, frequently
hilarious. Given its late-60s LA-hippie setting and Pynchon's
affection for rock music, it's not surprising to encounter talk
throughout about acts like the Trashmen, Thunderclap Newman, and Wild
Man Fischer. Less expected-and thus more Pynchonesque-was a frequently
repeated joke revolving around a P. Diddy reference. (I'm not gonna
spoil it here.)
For me reading Pynchon has always had the side effect of heightening
my paranoia levels and increasing my sensitivity to coincidence (or
maybe that should be "coincidence"). Which is why I had to stop and
consider what the universe might be trying to tell me when, just hours
after finishing the book, I learned that P. Diddy had dropped a mix
tape with Chicago electro legend Felix da Housecat under the name
"Lectro Black."
After downloading the mix I decided that the universe was probably
trying to tell me that a) P. Diddy can actually get down pretty hard
with Felix's electro styles, b) it's still mostly Diddy's fault if
we're all underestimating him, and c) "Lectro Black" sounds like a
good name for a Pynchon character. It's not exactly satori, but I
guess you take what you can get.
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