When we launched this publication, we started a section that, who knows why, ended up as just a pilot episode. It was this game-assignment we proposed to Jordi Labanda: we select a fragment from a book (in this case, by Proust, no less) and you illustrate it. As easy as that… or maybe not, because for some strange reason this section became an involuntary alpha and omega.
Since we think we should be prouder of our own corrections than of our assertiveness, we have decided to resurrect this game of mirrors between text and image, these encounters between literature and illustration (or photo, video… whatever our guest want). We have torn a page from Raymond Chandler’s The Long Goodbye to send it to Josep Prat and see what he sent to us in return. So we can consider this the new beginning of a section that could have been an exception, but has returned to become a norm. And, in this case, dyed blond. Or is it natural?
Torn pages
The Long Goodbye
“There are blondes and blondes and it is almost a joke word nowadays. All blondes have their points, except perhaps the metallic ones who are as blond as a Zulu under the bleach and as to disposition as soft as a sidewalk. There is the small cute blonde who cheeps and twitters, and the big statuesque blonde who straight-arms you with an ice-blue glare. There is the blonde who gives you the up-from-under look and smells lovely and shimmers and hangs on your arm and is always very tired when you take her home. She makes that helpless gesture and has that goddamned headache and you would like to slug her except that you are glad you found out about the headache before you invested too much time and money and hope in her. Because the headache will always be there, a weapon that never wears out and is as deadly as the bravo’s rapier or Lucrezia’s poison vial.
There is the soft and willing and alcoholic blonde who doesn’t care what she wears as long as it is mink or where she goes as long as it is the Starlight Roof and there is plenty of dry champagne. There is the small perky blonde who is a little pal and wants to pay her own way and is full of sunshine and common sense and knows judo from the ground up and can toss a truck driver over her shoulder without missing more than one sentence out of the editorial in the Saturday Review. There is the pale, pale blonde with anemia of some non-fatal but incurable type. She is very languid and very shadowy and she speaks softly out of nowhere and you can’t lay a finger on her because in the first place you don’t want to and in the second place she is reading The Waste Land or Dante in the original, or Kafka or Kierkegaard or studying Provençal. She adores music and when the New York Philharmonic is playing Hindemith she can tell you which one of the six bass viols came in a quarter of a beat too late. I hear Toscanini can also. That makes two of them.
And lastly there is the gorgeous show piece who will outlast three kingpin racketeers and then marry a couple of millionaires at a million a head and end up with a pale rose villa at Cap Antibes, an Alfa-Romeo town car complete with pilot and co-pilot, and a stable of shopworn aristocrats, all of whom she will treat with the affectionate absent-mindedness of an elderly duke saying goodnight to his butler.”
In this new series of interviews by Nando Cruz, A long question, he talks with musicians about a single topic. He starts with Art Brut and “Forming a band”.