More than ever before, if a person wants to write a book, they can. The changes to publishing brought about by the digital age are something we are constantly discussing. We have seen these changes affect film and music before writing, but one of the differences between the previous artistic mediums and writing is: 1. Everyone thinks they can write […]
Author Archives: lisathatcher
Pith and Amber – the watery words of Carah A. Naseem (Book review)
posted by lisathatcher
I’m not even sure what compelled me to purchase Pith and Amber. Perhaps I was entranced by the idea of the beautiful cover? I wanted to read some books from Fugue State Press who publish beautiful works of experimental fiction, and for some reason I purchased this book. The first thing that strikes me when […]
Puff up the Volume – Talibam! Music as a refusal. (Music review)
posted by lisathatcher
I’ve got a soft spot for the Talibam! guys. You can see from my previous review I was very taken with their Launchpad Series. For me their music is an assault on the weird appropriation that goes on with music. The “music is mine!” principle. It belongs to me! Amid the fun and exuberance a […]
Solaris – The film Tarkovsky didn’t like.
posted by lisathatcher
I had a lot of help with this review by reading M. Dawsons wonderful review here, on Left Field Cinema. I watched Solaris a few weeks back for the first time – what an enormous pleasure it is to be able to watch films like those made by Andrei Tarkovsky. In an oh so clever move, […]
Omni – Hideki, Akiyama and Nakamura move away from the conventional aspects of time. (music review)
posted by lisathatcher
Omni is a Latin prefix meaning “all” or “every.” Omni the album is two tracks, one coming in at 40:10 and one coming in at 05:02 minutes long. The trio of musicians are Japanese, Kato Hideki, Tetuzi Akiyama and Toshimaru Nakamura. Hideki plays electric bass with prime number tuning, bass synthesizer. Akiyama plays prepared electric […]
Seven Psychopaths Review – Martin McDonagh goes cute n’ clever on the art of the screenplay.
posted by lisathatcher
Seven Psychopaths is one of those really cute and really clever takes on the Hollywood screenplay. I have to say up front that Martin McDonagh (who writes this as well as directs it) is giving Tarentino the elbow here in a film that is sort of homage sort of pay-out, sort of frustrated attempt to […]
Great Expectations (theatre review) – Bakehouse lives up to the perils of ambition
posted by lisathatcher
“Love her, love her, love her! If she favours you, love her. If she wounds you, love her. If she tears your heart to pieces – and as it gets older and stronger, it will tear deeper – love her, love her, love her!” Miss Havisham. Great Expectations is my favourite Dickens – I love […]
Your Breath on my Lips – Jim Denley and the intimacies of the natural.
posted by lisathatcher
One of the most exciting things about watching Jim Denley live is that he practises “circular breathing”. That’s something we’re familiar with in Australia because our Aborigines use it when playing the didgeridoo. For those of you who are not so familiar, here’s the wiki: Circular breathing is a technique used by players of some wind instruments to […]
“The Master” review – Paul Thomas Anderson and the Death-Drive
posted by lisathatcher
One of the best ways to avert a certain kind of controversy is by allowing another kind to take its place. In other words, when you are going to write a controversial book, film or piece of music, if you want to avoid the controversy, overlap it with another controversy that will divert critics and […]