Greil Marcus: IV & "L.A. Women"
Bekah
bekah0176 at sbcglobal.net
Mon Dec 12 14:50:40 CST 2011
Oh my - I was looking for something like that - thought I'd read it somewhere - heh
thank you!
Bekah
On Dec 12, 2011, at 12:25 PM, Paul Nightingale wrote:
> "... the instant Doc turned thirty, which would be any minute now ..."
> (199).
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-pynchon-l at waste.org [mailto:owner-pynchon-l at waste.org] On Behalf
> Of Bekah
> Sent: 12 December 2011 19:48
> To: rich; Robert Mahnke
> Cc: "pynchon-l at waste.org"
> Subject: Re: Greil Marcus: IV & "L.A. Women"
>
> Can I agree with both of you?
>
> L.A. Woman has the whole darkening, Manson era LA scene circa 1970 (because
> that's who they were!). And yes, I feel that same spirit, ambiance,
> mood, in Inherent Vice. This is a compliment to Pynchon imo - he got it
> right.
>
> But like Rich, I thought Doc was a bit older - he tended to wander off and
> visit the jazz bars, he was certainly no teen-ager, no young wanna-be rock
> star. Doc seemed like an older brother to the actual L.A. nights
> participants like Shasta, Coy Harlingen and Japonica Fenway (others) , and
> maybe a year or two younger than Bigfoot and Mickey Wolfmann, while quite a
> bit younger than Crocker Fenway. Pynchon was 33 years old when he lived in
> the area in 1970 - I'd put Doc at about 29 - (never trust anyone over 30.)
>
> I had to stir some Door juices with:
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=eOTwcrQFjuw&feature=endscreen
>
> and
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xo6Es-itLg0&feature=related
> (better music and with some cars and a bit of the city but a few parts of it
> are pretty stupid)
>
> Bekah
>
>
>
> On Dec 12, 2011, at 10:58 AM, rich wrote:
>
>> is Sportello that young? thought he was a bit older than that. I could be
> wrong
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 11:55 AM, Robert Mahnke <rpmahnke at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>> You write that you can hear "L.A. Woman" being played "between every
>> other line" of Thomas Pynchon's 2009 Los Angeles detective novel
>> Inherent Vice. Could you talk about why you made the correlation
>> between Pynchon's work and that song?
>>
>> "L.A. Woman" is recorded in 1970 and comes out in 1971. Inherent Vice
>> is set in 1970, just as the Manson trial is about to begin. And
>> both-the book explicitly and the song not explicitly-is really
>> shadowed by Charles Manson, by the crimes he and his family committed,
>> and the specter of more crimes of death and destruction and revenge
>> whether for real reasons or completely random, is just hanging over
>> Los Angeles and a lot of the country at that moment. And both
>> Pynchon's book and "L.A. Woman" seem to capture both that sense of
>> dread and fear, but also a sense of the absurd, the ridiculousness,
>> the craziness of that moment too, and to laugh at it. "L.A. Woman" is
>> a very funny, loose, free, open piece of music, and Pynchon's novel is
>> hilarious and scary and upsetting and confusing. And its hero is an
>> almost 30-year-old private eye named Doc Sportello, and he's part of
>> the atmosphere in the song "L.A. Woman." He's the kind of person whose
>> radio plays Doors songs. And maybe he's too cool to be a fan of the
>> band. Who knows? That's not the point. Both Pynchon and The Doors are
>> drawing maps of L.A., one in a song and one in a detective story.
>>
>>
> http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2011/12/greil-marcus-on-why
> -the-doors-still-matter/249697/
>>
>
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