Tosh Berman's Blog, page 137

August 23, 2019

August 21, 2019

Tosh's Journal: August 21

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Published on August 21, 2019 22:18

August 20, 2019

Tosh's Journal: August 20

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Published on August 20, 2019 20:12

August 19, 2019

Tosh's Journal: August 19





Tosh Berman reads from his Journal.
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Published on August 19, 2019 23:21

August 15, 2019

Book Musik: Podcast on Charles Mingus's "Beneath the Underdog"




Tosh & Kimley discuss Beneath the Underdog: His World as Composed by Mingus, the memoir by iconic jazz musician and composer Charles Mingus. Mingus’s memoir is known for its picaresque telling of his childhood growing up in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles and his travels to the California Bay Area as well as his time in New York City. While the book doesn’t give a lot of detail on his musical work or his playing with all the greats of his era, it does give an illuminating perspective on race and growing up and living as a black man in America in the twentieth century. Not to mention his many escapades with pimps, prostitutes and assorted other riveting characters. This book swings like few others!

Book Musik: Charles Mingus's Beneath The Underdog

Charles Mingus Apple Music Playlist

Charles Mingus Playlist on Spotify
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Published on August 15, 2019 08:08

August 4, 2019

Essay on Tarantino/Welles/Fassbinder by Tosh Berman




The 21st-century is very much a juxtaposition of little joys and significant tragedies. On one end, I get the warm feeling of pop culture doing what it does best, by bringing a specific grouping to the movie theater to see a film. "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood" is such a work that represents their desire of an ordered world. I'm the filmgoer that loves to spend a few hours in a theater engrossed in someone's else's world. Quintin Tarantino, Wes Anderson, Jim Jarmusch, and at times, even Woody Allen makes a world that is instinctively closed off to the outside world.
For the past six or seven months, citizens of Los Angeles have been experiencing going through a time-tunnel, due to Tarantino transforming various main streets in the city to the year 1969. The changes have brought out a strong sense of Nostalgia for those who remember that era or year. For however long the fake billboards, bus advertising, signage on buildings, were up, the streets became not a route to one place to another, but a spectacle, where people can reflect their memories, both false and true onto themselves and those around them. In theory, fairytales are dark, but here we have a happy ending that is what most of us wished had happened. We have come back home, after acknowledging the past is dead. For a short series of moments, Los Angeles became an amusement park devoted to a dead history.



The 21st-century is not huge on reflection, so having a popular film that reflects an image or society of that time, makes one think of the current status of life. The horrifying disappointment of life being drained either by racist violence or collective stupidity is a lot to digest in one sitting. Therefore, art should allow a specific space to reflect on one's history, and thus the presence in a world that is not exactly beautiful, but nevertheless, an important existence.
There are two types of filmmakers I admire. One is in the world of Tarantino, Anderson, Lynch, and Jarmusch, and the other is Fassbinder and Orson Welles. For the latter, they put us in a world that exposes the rot within that landscape. There is nothing vague about what causes the rotting of a culture but also reflects on the sense of power and how it plays out in religion, politics, and life. The other filmmakers want to make a world of their own making. In that sense, when you see their films, you are immediately in a planet that is sealed off from the outside world. Fassbinder and Welles are dwelling in the world of not their making, but in a hostile environment that is horrifying and deadly.



Fassbinder and Welles don't bring people together. They are dissatisfied with their lot. On the other hand, the world of Tarantino and others of that cinematic world are reflecting on the warm light of the cinema, as we know the night will eventually turn into day. Fassbinder and Welles know very well that they may never see the light of the morning. So, as we trot down Hollywood Boulevard and deal with those in iconic costumes in front of the old Chinese Theater, we come upon a fantasy that's sick, but if we turn the clock back, we live in a happy space. - Tosh Berman
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Published on August 04, 2019 09:02

August 1, 2019

Tosh and Kimley Discuss "Ennio Morricone: In His Own Words (Ennio Morricone in conversation with Alessandro De Rosa)

Book Musik Episode 4 – Ennio Morricone: In His Own WordsPosted on August 1, 2019 by Book MusikTosh & Kimley discuss Ennio Morricone: In His Own Words (Ennio Morricone in conversation with Alessandro De Rosa.) The great Italian composer whose music everyone knows even if they don’t know his name has scored literally hundreds of films, first gaining fame for his scores for the spaghetti westerns of Sergio Leone (A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, The Good, the Bad & the Ugly) and then working with a who’s who of Italian directors (Pier Paolo Pasolini, Bernardo Bertolucci, Giuseppe Tornatore to name a few) and eventually getting noticed by Hollywood and beyond. Terrence Malick, Brian de Palma, Pedro Almodóvar, and Quentin Tarantino have all been lucky enough to have an Ennio Morricone score for their films. His IMDB page currently lists 519 composer credits! And that does not include his incredible output of “Absolute Music” and his work with the Gruppo di Improvvisazione Nuova Consonanza where things get really interesting.
Book Musik: Ennio Morricone In His Own WordsSoundcloud: Ennio Morricone Book Musik
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Published on August 01, 2019 07:49

July 25, 2019

July 21, 2019

Rebekah & Matthew

Rebekah & Matthew
Rebekah's press, Penny-Ante Editions is a vital publishing house, located in Los Angeles. She not only published my book of poems, but also works by Stewart Home, Masha Tupitsyn, Momus, Jarett Kobek, John Tottenham, Beau Rice, and Lynne Tillman. Beyond that, she married a brilliant fellow Matthew who is a lot of fun to hang out with. Matthew did an amazing piece on me for Dangerous Minds. They are expecting a baby in August, but as cruel life can be, Matthew was diagnosed with stage 4 colorectal cancer. They both need financial support. I can't begin to tell you how important these two people are in my life. If you ever purchased a book published by Penny-Ante Editions or enjoyed the writings of above, it will be helpful if you can send what you can to this fantastic couple. Please do so in the link below. - Tosh Berman

Rebekah & Matthew

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Published on July 21, 2019 10:54