ℳ▲☨☪h฿ ۞☓ℬLUΣS

ℳ▲☨☪h฿ ۞☓ℬLUΣS is a vintage art, fashion, film and music mash-up brought to you by Katelyn Molgard.

Mingus in Diaspora

BY WILLIAM MATTHEWS

You could say, I suppose, that he ate his way out,   
like the prisoner who starts a tunnel with a spoon,
or you could say he was one in whom nothing was lost,   
who took it all in, or that he was big as a bus.

He would say, and he did, in one of those blurred   
melismatic slaloms his sentences ran—for all
the music was in his speech: swift switches of tempo,   
stop-time, double time (he could talk in 6/8),

“I just ruined my body.” And there, Exhibit A,   
it stood, that Parthenon of fat, the tenant voice   
lifted, as we say, since words are a weight, and music.   
Silence is lighter than air, for the air we know

rises but to the edge of the atmosphere.
You have to pick up The Bass, as Mingus called
his, with audible capitals, and think of the slow years   
the wood spent as a tree, which might well have been

enough for wood, and think of the skill the bassmaker   
carried without great thought of it from home   
to the shop and back for decades, and know
what bassists before you have played, and know

how much of this is stored in The Bass like energy   
in a spring and know how much you must coax out.   
How easy it would be, instead, to pull a sword   
from a stone. But what’s inside the bass wants out,

the way one day you will. Religious stories are rich   
in symmetry. You must release as much of this hoard   
as you can, little by little, in perfect time,
as the work of the body becomes a body of work.

(Source: clroff1)

(Source: k-w-lski, via kowalskivision)

languagethatiuse:

Mr. Ray Charles performing, 1964.

languagethatiuse:

Mr. Ray Charles performing, 1964.

languagethatiuse:

The Yardbirds in 1964, with a young Eric Clapton, showing Lord Willis in his backgarden what “Pop music” was all about. 

languagethatiuse:

The Yardbirds in 1964, with a young Eric Clapton, showing Lord Willis in his backgarden what “Pop music” was all about. 

languagethatiuse:

Mr. Bo Diddley on stage with his band, 1965.

languagethatiuse:

Mr. Bo Diddley on stage with his band, 1965.

languagethatiuse:

Ms. Jeanne Moreau and Mr. Miles Davis playing the trumpet for the music score to the 1957 film “Elevator To The Gallows”. 

languagethatiuse:

Ms. Jeanne Moreau and Mr. Miles Davis playing the trumpet for the music score to the 1957 film “Elevator To The Gallows”. 

If… 1968

If… 1968

electricalice:

Night on Earth - Jim Jarmusch
Segment “Rome” with Roberto Benigni e Paolo Bonacelli

Privilege 1967

Harpo Marx Brothers (by themethodman87)

People Let Me Know [as Linnie Walker w/Black Merda] 1970 (by jjdesmondinteriors)


Jacques Brel  

Jacques Brel  

(Source: i-got-rhythm-and-music)


James Earl Jones, 1961, by Carl Van Vechten.

James Earl Jones, 1961, by Carl Van Vechten.

(Source: kitschgirl65)


Dizzy Gillespie, 1955. Carl Van Vechten