Ian Curtis by Tim Lane

How do you get at how and why somebody meant something to you when it is someone you have never even known? I never saw Ian Curtis live in concert. All I have ever had is the lyrics, the songs, the music, the articles, the interviews and the photos. And yet I felt something for him; some kinship. Blake and I talked about him endlessly, or so it seemed. We related to his anguish, in one sense, to his humble origins, in another sense. His perspective captured thoughts and feelings we possessed. His situation echoed ours, to a degree.

We had similar interests, as well: poetry, literature, music, Bowie. I was reading Sartre and Camus and Simone de Beauvoir and other existentialist philosophy. I wrote poetry. I wanted to be in a band, but I didn’t play an instrument, and I couldn’t sing.

I immediately fell in love with the music.

The songs seemed to take the feelings and thoughts that were swirling around inside of me and channel them elsewhere. The music was cathartic. People assumed that listening to Joy Division was an element of my early adulthood depression, but it was more of an element of what kept me going.

I do not admire suicide. I would have liked to have seen what Ian Curtis might have become. His is a sad story. I am glad that the members of Joy Division carried on and became New Order. That they can talk about those days, now, and give us some insight into Curtis’ illness and other struggles.

Photo: Phillipe Carly

Photo: Phillipe Carly

Then, Then Again & Now by Tim Lane

Then is a very old painting, then again is an older painting and now is a newer one.

002_00A 2.jpg

The Shape of Things to Come, 2021 by Tim Lane

There is a new painting in The Sublime series. This is the first time I have painted on Stonehenge Aqua—what a great paper!

The Shape of Things to Come, 2021acrylic, house, spray, colored pencil & crayon on paper30”x22”

The Shape of Things to Come, 2021

acrylic, house, spray, colored pencil & crayon on paper

30”x22”

The Record Player Song by Tim Lane

Do your friends ever send you songs? Or mixes? If they don’t, then you need at least one friend who does. Or at least one friend who makes playlists. Try sending a friend a song and see what happens. It is fun to have friends who share your passions. Or look at the world through similar prisms: the prism of songs, or music.

When you hear the right song, or a song that feels right, you exist a little more intensely for a few minutes. You refract different colors. You think: me. You connect with the song, and you are alive a little more because your friend made a similar connection. They heard the song, and they thought: you.

It is nice when somebody occasionally thinks, Ah, yes, you.

A friend of mine sent “The Record Player Song” to me bright and early this morning. Another friend of mine occasionally supplies me with a flash drive full of new music. Sometimes a friend will text a video or a link. Is there anything more important than music, other than people, shelter, healthcare, justice—the obvious?

I don’t know.

These moments make me here. My friend said, I knew it.

#songs #daisythegreat #friends #friendship #music #recordplayers #GenX #playlists #mixtapes

I had this record player when I was a kid.

I had this record player when I was a kid.

Red Skies at Night by Tim Lane

I finally got home from work tonight with a pizza and a thirst around 8:30. You know what that means? Scarf some pizza. Walk across the street for a six of Heinies. Shower beer. Now, I’m listening to an awesome New Wavy 80s playlist that Pete Martens and I put together: Red Skies at Night. Have you given it a listen? You can follow all of my playlists on Spotify—they’re public. Just search Tim Lane and look for the blue and yellow hair.

O, Madonna. What’s your favorite Madonna song? I gotta say Borderline. Hands down, for me.

When’s the last time you’ve listened to Nik Kershaw’s Wouldn’t It Be Good?

I tell ya. The 80s was a magical period for music.

Something for everyone.

#newwave #80s #madonna #redskiesatnight #alternativemusic #NikKershaw #heineken

17860_1345864490030_7703937_n.jpg

The Young American Poets by Tim Lane

My first edition of Paul Carroll’s anthology from 1968, The Young American Poets, which also happens to be signed by the American poet, Diane Wakoski, has arrived! Over the years, I have owned hardback and paperback versions of this anthology, but I was in dire need of a replacement, having loaned out my copies. It is one of my favorite anthologies.

If you can’t tell, Diane Wakoski is on the front cover, at the apex of the pyramid of blue cubes.

O, happiness. O, purple lilacs! O, red-covered, hefty book of poems.

***

I would like to thank my friend, Peter Richards, for notifying the universe that I needed this book.

I would like to thank the United States Postal Service for safely delivering this book to my front door.

I would like to thank Third Mind Books in Ann Arbor for their wisdom and foresight.

#DianeWakoski #TheYoungAmericanPoets #60s #poetry #americanpoetry #thirdmindbooks

FTL, 2021 by Tim Lane

Another painting for The Sublime series.

This painting started out as a need to simply paint versus a need to say something: it wasn’t going to be part of any series. I needed to get my mind off of some things. Needed to de-stress. So I started making this painting. I decided to work on a perspective that I had been thinking about but had not tried to execute—I don’t know why. So, I thought, “Okay, let’s see this idea.” I just wanted to make it; see it. I did not have any patience. I started working backwards—images first instead of creating a unified foundation. Thus, as the painting progressed, it did not cohere. The negative space wasn’t working. It lacked the unification that an overall first layer would have created. I thought, “Oh, well, doesn’t matter. You can just keep pushing this, trying different things, this is just a fun experiment.”

Eventually, the piece arrived at a place where I felt that it was actually somewhat working, despite the varied techniques and seeming lack of harmony, and I said to myself, “Now, I can say something.”

I’m not exactly sure if I would exhibit this piece, but I think so. I will definitely keep it around for a while. I sort of love it.

FTL, 2021, mixed media on watercolor paper, 30”x22.5”

FTL, 2021, mixed media on watercolor paper, 30”x22.5”

An Excerpt from Your Silent Face: Nigel's Four Stages of Belief by Tim Lane

Stuart Page’s buddy, Nigel, gets the girls and does a lot of philosophizing in Your Silent Face. Here’s an excerpt where Nigel reveals his “Four Stages of Belief” at Thoma’s (a coney island) while an intoxicated Stuart fantasizes about the waitress and bitterly observes Kimberly and Karen fawning over Nigel.

Key words: #fiction #comingofage #80s #NewWave #GenX #RustBelt #NativeAmerican #graffiti #urbanpoetry #Flint

Get it on Apple Books
blake eastside late 80s his house Beechwood .JPG