Interview on the Doors Book with the Wonderful "Not Fade Away" Podcast
Burning The May Tree: The Sacrifice of Jim Morrison A few weeks ago I had the sparkling opportunity to give an interview with the essential Margo Donohue of the "Not Fade Away" podcast series about salient figures of the recent past in the music and arts.
The interview was on Jim's poetry and my book, "Burning the May Tree: The Sacrifice of Jim Morrison" ( https://www.nottotouchthesun.net/door... )
Margo has a talent for packing the most value into a 30 minute segment, asking what are in my opinion all excellent questions of me, the interviewee.
The podcast is on your favorite platform, including Apple, but please check it out in its native format on Margo's blog, here:
http://brooklynfitchick.com/2020/07/n...
And for posterity, I've saved the blog post (but not the podcast itself) on the "Wayback Machine":
https://web.archive.org/web/202008170...
I wanted to add a couple additional thoughts to cover a few points in the interview:
On the phylogenetic tree of Jim's poetry, I forgot to mention William Blake. In fusing Blake and Symbolist poetics, Jim managed to keep the vivid, striking experience of Symbolist poetry while adding the interesting aspect that comes with the more prose-like storytelling of Blake's poetry. Jim's poetry is almost equal parts Blakean and Symbolist. It is a diversity of style that is truly remarkable in poetry, and lends a vast breadth to its range.
William Blake was also a studied commentator on empire, something that Jim picked up on and incorporated.
On "What the color green" and related poetry and lyrics such as "Television children fed / Unborn living, living dead / Bullet strikes the helmet's head" (from "The Unknown Soldier"), it should be emphasized that here, only a single aspect of many possible ones of the general subject was being brought to light. The fact that soldiers such as Oliver Stone are such big fans underscores this.
I'd like to invite readers to explore some of the possibilities of images presented in Morrison's poetry, such as (from "All hail the American Night"):
What the color green
When I watch the T.V. & I see
helicopters swirling their
brutal & bountiful sensation
over the fields
...
In the podcast, I touched on the historical usage of the phrase "What the ..." as a condemnation. But I could clarify my point a bit more. "The Oxford English Dictionary" offers us a smorgasbord of ever-fresh examples. So what Morrison has done here is substituted "green" for "the devil", as in the common phrase, "What the devil!"
At the time this poetry was written, the helicopters seen on the TV news coverage of the Vietnam "Conflict" were landing over fields often of tall rice grass. Like the blades of grass bending under the downwash of helicopter blades, nature and indeed all the Earth's surface is bent under the "brutal" military olive-drab green. Green is also a color found throughout much of the land in the world.
So the olive-drab green "devil", here a brutality bountiful in its power, is everywhere, worldwide, much as the U.S., dominating the world's reserve currency and funding its operations by printing money out of thin air at the expense of the rest of the world, has been able to apply raw military power on a hitherto unforeseen scale and depth of worldwide penetration. Here we get a glimpse into Morrison's reaction to the realities of the "police action" in Vietnam in terms of the violence versus the ostensible noble objective, the means versus the end.
Go hunting in Morrison's poetry for images and stories that resonate with you, and post your reactions to them in the comments below!
And finally, I went and checked my guess and the verse that begins with "Dead President's corpse in the driver's car" is in fact from "Not to Touch the Earth". The title "Not to Touch the Earth" is used in the seminal anthropological study, "The Golden Bough" by Sir James Frazier, as a section heading. The book deals primarily with the ritual sacrifice of kings across diverse cultures in ancient world history.
Check out my book, "Burning the May Tree: The Sacrifice of Jim Morrison", at https://www.nottotouchthesun.net/door...
The interview was on Jim's poetry and my book, "Burning the May Tree: The Sacrifice of Jim Morrison" ( https://www.nottotouchthesun.net/door... )
Margo has a talent for packing the most value into a 30 minute segment, asking what are in my opinion all excellent questions of me, the interviewee.
The podcast is on your favorite platform, including Apple, but please check it out in its native format on Margo's blog, here:
http://brooklynfitchick.com/2020/07/n...
And for posterity, I've saved the blog post (but not the podcast itself) on the "Wayback Machine":
https://web.archive.org/web/202008170...
I wanted to add a couple additional thoughts to cover a few points in the interview:
On the phylogenetic tree of Jim's poetry, I forgot to mention William Blake. In fusing Blake and Symbolist poetics, Jim managed to keep the vivid, striking experience of Symbolist poetry while adding the interesting aspect that comes with the more prose-like storytelling of Blake's poetry. Jim's poetry is almost equal parts Blakean and Symbolist. It is a diversity of style that is truly remarkable in poetry, and lends a vast breadth to its range.
William Blake was also a studied commentator on empire, something that Jim picked up on and incorporated.
On "What the color green" and related poetry and lyrics such as "Television children fed / Unborn living, living dead / Bullet strikes the helmet's head" (from "The Unknown Soldier"), it should be emphasized that here, only a single aspect of many possible ones of the general subject was being brought to light. The fact that soldiers such as Oliver Stone are such big fans underscores this.
I'd like to invite readers to explore some of the possibilities of images presented in Morrison's poetry, such as (from "All hail the American Night"):
What the color green
When I watch the T.V. & I see
helicopters swirling their
brutal & bountiful sensation
over the fields
...
In the podcast, I touched on the historical usage of the phrase "What the ..." as a condemnation. But I could clarify my point a bit more. "The Oxford English Dictionary" offers us a smorgasbord of ever-fresh examples. So what Morrison has done here is substituted "green" for "the devil", as in the common phrase, "What the devil!"
At the time this poetry was written, the helicopters seen on the TV news coverage of the Vietnam "Conflict" were landing over fields often of tall rice grass. Like the blades of grass bending under the downwash of helicopter blades, nature and indeed all the Earth's surface is bent under the "brutal" military olive-drab green. Green is also a color found throughout much of the land in the world.
So the olive-drab green "devil", here a brutality bountiful in its power, is everywhere, worldwide, much as the U.S., dominating the world's reserve currency and funding its operations by printing money out of thin air at the expense of the rest of the world, has been able to apply raw military power on a hitherto unforeseen scale and depth of worldwide penetration. Here we get a glimpse into Morrison's reaction to the realities of the "police action" in Vietnam in terms of the violence versus the ostensible noble objective, the means versus the end.
Go hunting in Morrison's poetry for images and stories that resonate with you, and post your reactions to them in the comments below!
And finally, I went and checked my guess and the verse that begins with "Dead President's corpse in the driver's car" is in fact from "Not to Touch the Earth". The title "Not to Touch the Earth" is used in the seminal anthropological study, "The Golden Bough" by Sir James Frazier, as a section heading. The book deals primarily with the ritual sacrifice of kings across diverse cultures in ancient world history.
Check out my book, "Burning the May Tree: The Sacrifice of Jim Morrison", at https://www.nottotouchthesun.net/door...
Published on August 16, 2020 17:35
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Chris
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Aug 20, 2020 11:36PM
Added a little more on "What the color green".
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