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![]() Click for music events Night of the laughing dead Suiting up for a shooting gallery
Tim Kinsella, a member of the bands Joan of Arc, and Owls, and
Everybody, has spawned a fresh mutation called Make Believe. A tour
poster and EP cover were called for, and he asked if I had a dark suit,
and what was I doing at 10pm the next night?
Inside a Bucktown industrial space, a grave has been "dug" in the
middle of the space, a burial to be reenacted, mimicking an
Inquisition-era Goya, "The Death of Truth." Instead of Goya's clergy
killing truth in the form of a sleeping young female form in pronounced
dishabille, the tableau is of thirty-three local musicians and cohorts
in twenty-first century corporate uniform--suit, tie, an impasto of
ghoul makeup, hair pomaded to the skulls. (The number is a reference to
a ritual of the Freemasons.) Risers have been set up to compensate for
differences in height.
The milling mass of faces smell of vitamin E cream, powder and brutal
hair product. Newly minted zombies pass Polaroids around. A note of
marijuana mingles with cigarette clouds. The longneck Old Styles go
quickly. Blurry photocopies of the Goya etching flurry around the bare
ankles of one makeup artist. Photographic lights pick up rising tobacco
trails before the smoke machine fires up. A scowling white cat dabs
against the black mound of potting soil meant to be the grave's turned
dirt, sniffing at the fistful of textile calla lilies poked into the
pile.
You might know some of the names: Tim Rutili from Califone, a stray
90 Day Man, a couple of ex-Boas members, the cartoon auteurs of Hamster
Man and Gorilla Suit, a coffee-shop manager, a record-store clerk, a
record-label owner, a booking agent, me. "The Rainbo must be empty
tonight," someone mutters, sotto voce, to general laughter from the
gathered habitués of that Ukrainian Village music bar.
Thax Douglas, who christens local performances with poems of praise,
stands in the center, ill at ease in a large, dark nightshirt. Someone
asks if Thax feels like he's on the cover of "Sgt. Pepper." Kinsella
waves his hands, in his dark suit and skinny tie looking like a 1960s
Italian director, his cigarette leaving curls behind him in the
backlight. "Look Enron, people! Give me your best Enron," he says,
waving his MGD. Everyone shifts, zombieish in place. It's not the most
Cassavetes-like direction, but the general jokey, beery, smoky
conspiracy does have an improvisational delight. "Eyes wide, look at
the camera, just be dead for four more. Three more, c'mon."
Also by Ray Pride Tip of the Week
Charlize's Angles
Off camera
Short Runs
Cold stare
Uniform code
Short Runs
Tip of the Week
Wind done gone
Father figuring
Short Runs
Salud
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