I’d love to come home but I need an escape

Written by

Damien Jurado – Arkansas

Mark’s main preoccupation as a highschooler was trying to figure out how he could scrape together a living as an adult. His mother informed him frequently and smugly that at 18 he would be booted from his home so that she could enjoy the exclusive company of his step-father.

It seemed so daunting. Mark studied the bills that came through the slot every day, piling up on the tacky “Welcome!” mat on which he banged the snow off his boots. Electricity, Internet, cable, heating, gas, dues so that his step-father could receive a record once a month. It was much more than his meager summer jobs – Dairy Queen, church janitor, lawn mower – could ever cover.

Near the end of his senior year, Mark moved out a few weeks before his 18th birthday. His mom grunted when he left. He moved in with a buddy from the grade above, Freddy, who had taken a job at the tool and dye place on the outskirts of town after high school.

After some rough years doing grunt work, Mark accidentally fell into a mechanic gig which he enjoyed alright and which paid him more than enough to live alone and buy a couch or anything else he could want.

While smoothing out the hood of an old lady’s old sedan which a stray baseball had dented, he realized that he’d never planned what to do with his life once he found a tolerable job that paid a tolerable wage and that he had no clue what to do with the rest of his life. Mark was 26. The dent came right out.

[Buy Saint Bartlett.]

I still want to drown, whenever you leave.

Written by

The xx – Shelter

If he had stayed, he’d have cried. He could feel the tears welling, his breath short, and watched her watch him carefully. He knew if he dared exhale he would surrender every word he had ever said, would ever say, all in one moment. And he caught it just in time. And he pulled himself to his feet, and let go of her hand, and left her in bed, wondering. And he turned the corner after the door and stopped, staring at his feet. At his stupid black leather shoes. And his shoulders shifted with the pressing weight that only goodbye carries. The elevator chimed to announce its arrival. The door closed behind him. His sides stretched, pushed out by his insides clawing for air. His heart beating in irregular steps to compensate for his shriveled lungs, starved of nicotine. His intestines squirming with afterthoughts. His stomach churning. And his hand moved quickly to the thread necklace, with its wooden penchant, and its engraved flower blooming under the sun. He ran his thumb over the grooves in the polished wood, pulling it down so as to press against the back of his neck.

[Money can’t buy you love, but it can buy you XX.]

El Perro Del Mar – Shelter (orig. The xx)

… wouldn’t turn around and break it.

Written by

Cowboy Junkies – Sweet Jane

In New York, I Love You, was Shia even there? Was Shia indeed her; her inner turmoil expressing itself in the physical cripple that is Shia – the shedding of blood, the welling eyes, the forward steps of work and limp. This older woman, this woman so void of song, it’s the torn woman mirrored against the physicality a boy.

“You seem so sad. No one so young should be so sad.”

Is she speaking to her younger self? Is she persuading him to move away from such sadness or is this simply an exchange of shared notions between woman and boy?  A notion between those who know. And she no longer sings. Even the violets were sensationally dark and failed in richness of colour. The caged bird – without song. Shia, the boy, there’s nothing he can do now. A whispered ‘never’ when replaying this new awareness of her voice lacking song. A fall from atop the white hotel, the only reasonable move.

I do not like being told what to do. I do not like that my patience dies an early death each time it’s approached. I do not like to be asked how I am or what I do. I need to invest in a swing. What to do.

[Purchase the Trinity Session here.]

Please don’t change, dear

Written by

Hello Blue Roses – Shadow Falls

My little brother just came up to me and sheepishly asked if we could have Pizza Hut for dinner. We grew up in Asia, and any American chain restaurant – including Pizza Hut and McDonald’s – was a rare treat. Even now that we’ve lived in the United States a couple years, we treat such delicatessens as delicacies.

Sure, kid, we can have Pizza Hut for dinner.

[Buy The Portrait Is Finished And I Have Failed To Capture Your Beauty…]

Virtueless in the white smoke

Written by

[Be a dear and buy Kollaps Tradixionales.]

I’ve got the bombs to make you blow!

Written by

M.I.A. – Born Free

Her tragedy through the majesty of burns and worms.
The hustle of her soul.

Maybe she’s on to something, but will we listen? Mind blowing indulgence of damaging beats and that clamorous and inducing surge of bass or guitar or both. The greatest appeal – of many – to M.I.A. is the unshakable sensation that this package may not be a fraudulent one.

Allow the opening snare march to capture you. It’s screaming –
I WANT YOUR FUCKING ATTENTION.
SIT UP!
HEAR MATHANGI ARULPRAGASAM.

Then again, we may revert to type. We’ll tap our feet, sway our head, allowing for more time to half read books and proof read looks.

[Watch that ‘Born Free’ video here, download new single ‘XXXO’ (for free) here, and keep an eye out for the summer release of her third record, ‘/\/\/\Y/\ – that is not a typo.]

Think about things I really don’t wanna know

Written by

My little brother just drove across the country–from Texas up to Michigan over to Vancouver down to Seattle–to move in with me. He got rejected from the Canadian border twice and just made it in today. He says he likes this song. I’m not too keen on it.

[Buy Last Train EP, if you feel so inclined.]

We won’t give pause until the blood is flowing

Written by

Tool – Vicarious

[tunetheproletariat’s guest contributor Milad is young and learning. It’s kind of cool. I’d say more, but I’m busy humming the words It’s No Fun ’til Someone Dies to myself – Joan]

Maynard was a little different. In fact, some might even call him extra-terrestrial. Maynard was an alien of simple ideals. He didn’t enjoy the concept of the internet, nor the nifty little communication networks that accompanied it, such as that “book of faces, or whatever it’s called,” a line Maynard muttered to himself occasionally in his distinct alien tongue.

He didn’t like television, music, gaming consoles, coffee, telephonic devices, high cut skirts, low rider jeans, piercings or basically anything of value to the twenty-first century. The only remnants of media he received were the occasional newspaper pages gliding uninvited through the door of his humble abode and old paperbacks found God knows where.

You could say he lived under a rock.

What he did enjoy, however, was literature and arts, often engraving magnificent works into his rocky home walls. These activities kept him jubilant and also meant that he didn’t have to interact with those damned humans. The last time Maynard communicated with the human race, he was exiled.

“I’ve got a few extra tentacles, so what?”, he often pondered to himself as he indulged in a novel found in a nearby dump.

Soon there was nothing new. Life was redundant. Maynard thought perhaps he would give the outside world another go.

As he mustered every ounce of physical and mental strength he had, Maynard timidly probed each tentacle out of the door into the world outside. As he scanned around and the warm air lashed his face, all Maynard could see with his bulging eyes was terrain. Nothing in his immediate sight but a cactus or two. Not one thing else. But there was what seemed like a road in the distance.

Maynard slowly made his way to the dusty road, cautiously scanning his surroundings as he slid towards the street. He looked left. Nothing. He looked right. Something caught Maynard’s eyes. Two figures laying side by side on the road. Well, that’s what it looked like anyway. He needed to get closer.

Slowly and curiously, the alienated alien glided towards the figures. As he edged closer, it had dawned on him what he saw. Maynard hesitantly closed in. What he saw made him want to slide his eyes across the gravel road.

Two humans lay there in a bloody heap. That wasn’t the worst of it. It had seemed that they attacked each other with everything they had before dying for the cause — there were bite marks, scratch marks, bruises, lumps and more lacerations. They smelt rancid. Horrified, Maynard rushed away down the road from the bloody site. However, no sooner had he left the last scene did he come across another mutilated scene. Same deal as last time, two humans had seemingly fought it out until the gory end. Maynard was in panic mode. He kept running. This proved nothing. He ran more. All he saw was dust upon dust along the deathly road. He couldn’t escape it – the path was scattered in bloody battle.

No more. Maynard collapsed underneath his many limbs, heaving and gasping for a hit of fresh air. It seemed like hours; laying there, panting heavily and contemplating what he had seen. He didn’t want to open his eyes for fear of more corpses. He tried to catch his breath and caught a throat-choking sigh. A deep realization then dawned upon Maynard. After a significant pause, he seemed less frightful.

“All … this … time,” he panted lightly, “They were … concerned about … me.”

Another pause followed Maynard’s epiphany.

“Much better you than I”, he thought with a little spite towards the human race, his panic levels rapidly dying down.

Maynard picked himself up off his haunches and trudged away from the road and away from the bloody mess the humans had left themselves in, all the while reciting an old newspaper headline he had seen.

“It’s no fun ’til someone dies.”

[Purchase 10,000 Days for $12.99.]

Cold as ice

Written by

Eric Benjamin Bach – Cold On Him

After Bethany left me and before she dumped Trevor I thought to myself, “That bitch is just going to do the same thing to him too,” and it turned out she did, which left part of me masochistically pleased that others’ hearts were scarred like mine but I also felt bad for Trevor in a way, you know, because he didn’t deserve that. Nobody does.

Skinny Ricky & The Best Policy – Cold On Him (Live on KPIG)

[Download Dot Org Comp III for free.]

Oh, don’t don’t don’t get out!

Written by