The 51-Volume Collected Works of Frank Novel

 

IÕm on the bus home, watching closely as a hulking nondescript cradles an oversized black hardcover book

in his arms. Its paper edges show a spattering of some kind. I am always curious about people with books,

and I wait patiently for him to open it. He is a large man wearing larger clothes: black drooping synthetic

pants; a bulky maroon overcoat; a yellow knit cap pulled down low on his forehead, the words ÒTUBORG

GOLDÓ inlaid in burgundy around its rim. He shifts in his seat and opens, showing the backs of pages

speckled with light blue, the pattern from a robinÕs egg spread across the dull white paper. I can see

the  vague impressions of dark dense drawings showing through from the other side.

 

He looks slightly lost in the world, yanking on the waistband of his trousers as he stands to exit at

the same corner that I do. I slow and follow him, first across the street, then into a convenience store,

then out again. I cross the street again behind him, then sidle up as we hit the sidewalk, deciding to gather

from him whatever I can.

 

ÒDo you ever show anyone your art?Ó I ask him. He is instantly smiling and offering me the book, saying

ÒEyeah, all the time,Ó in the voice of The Rain Man. ÒEyeah,Ó as I begin walking backwards into the snow

to protect the contents, marveling at what I find. Each new page reveals the tangled threads of a very

particular vision, all focused on a small central image inked in black, surrounded by tiny patterns and

repeated figures that mutate as they move outward. Each with his scrawled signature: Frank Novel.

 

ÒHow do you do it?Ó I ask him, between my exclamations. He is a beautiful child in a large manÕs body,

and I am asking him to articulate something that is at root unsayable.

ÒI do it at art class orÉ a restaurantÉ or bars. I have something to drink, and then I do that.Ó

ÒHow long does it take you to do something like that with all those lines in it?

ÒAn hour.Ó

ÒReally?Ó

ÒEyeah, just an hourÉÓ

ÒDoes it make you feel good to do it?Ó

ÒEyeah. SumthinÕ to do yÕknow.Ó

 

Something to do you know. There it is, the creative urge pared down and cored, leaving nothing

but a few seeds and a bit of stem. Something to do. Frank Novel tosses aside centuries of critical thinking

and analysis and developments in our search for a way to talk about wordless expression.

ÒI got fifty other books like that!Ó he tells me, astonishing me, revealing to me that he is compelled.

 

As we walk on he points to his destination, an art school in a low building across the street.

ÒHe teaches me something,Ó says Frank Novel, teaching me something.

 

And I, with all of my book knowledge and my life-long pursuit of the creative impulse, envy him

his uncomplicated and unhindered view of the creativity that comes pouring out of him, wondering

how I have come to my version of Òsomething to do.Ó

 

Amazingly, his drawings reminded me of my own, and especially of the way that I began to draw

after I had become sick of the way I drew. I pursued perfect renderings in my youth, but as I grew

and acquired a more complex take on the world, I began to feel that my drawings were only dealing

with one side of an extremely valuable coin. They did not accommodate or account for the chaos,

and so felt incomplete and false to me– a kind of wishful tinkering. What I wanted, regardless

of the medium I was working in, was a more accurate reflection of the place in which I created.

A picture, or text, or musical pattern that, while being ordered by my experience, my technique,

and my emotional response to the world and all of the incredible things it was revealing to me,

woul also contain a share of its madness, too. This is how I came to Motherwell, Duchamp, and Barron

in the visual arts;  to Faulkner, Nabokov, and Beckett in literature; and to Ornette Coleman, Anthony

Braxton, and Cecil Taylor in the realm of music.

 

 

My Version of Something to Do

 

Where do I go, what do I say, when words are required? To hell in a hand-basketÉ To imperfect

 renderings; ineffectual and inadequate terms; words that hit the wall and fall with a dull and

disappointing thud to the floor. I look to Frank Novel and his total lack of the means or a need to

try and lay out with words an idea-trussed architecture that might support and illuminate even a fraction

of what is revealable. And yet I do have the need. I do have the means.

 

I also have the knowledge that the exercise and its perceived goals are only attainable in small and

sporadic increments that, when gathered together and inspected, appear as a humiliatingly sparse

and nearly unnoticeable trail of crumbs. I imagine all of the lost and unlucky searchers, scrabbling

through the dry underbrush, as good as blind and having no idea which way IÕve gone.

 

 

 

 

Crumb / 1989:           Record Review excerpt– Chet BakerÕs LetÕs Get Lost

 

ÒÉNow on a cramped low stage in a strangerÕs heaven

backed by the soft brush

of piano, drums, and bass

his loverÕs voice

his fatherÕs voice

                  his gentle manÕs voice

Lips pursed he hands us his heart

(Pulsing)     on polished brassÉÓ

 

 

What am I doing here? Trying for a mood, the kind that puts the reader into the place where

It happened, where this kind of thing happened. Late night, a dark venue, the music quiet,

slow, and beautiful. Groups of alluding rhythms: the first line a melodic phrase; the second

and third a developing syncopation; the next three a hushed triplet to define the tone; and then

another full melodic phrase with a pause for a parenthetical reminder of the rhythm and then

the  phraseÕs tag– all aiming to recreate the essence of the subjectÕs performance.

 

 

 

 

Crumb / 1995:            Description of Another World– Nine Inch NailsÕ Downward Spiral

 

ÒÉit is dense and enthralling and it sounds like everything– and honest to God in places it reminds

me of Material; Talking Heads/Eno; Sinatra's Only the Lonely; Public Enemy; William Gibson;

early Pink Floyd on really aggressive acid; Shankai Juku trembling and chalk-covered; The Beatles;

Rutger Hauer soaking wet pushing a spike through his hand; Bela Lugosi; both incarnations of

King Crimson 23 miles away from a college FM station whose range is 3 blocks tops; Hendrix on fire;

the Alien flicking its tongue into Sigourney's ear; the torture chambers of the world heard through

a mile-thick wall of cotton; thrash beyond; white noise heaven; the spheres; Koyaanisqatsi;

my childhood swing-set after a particularly hard rain; The Carpenters' world moments before

Karen's last breath; Harry Partch; the Industrial Revolution...Ó

 

 

What am I doing here? Trying for an extreme opposite of mood– a layering of aggression,

complexity, and variety of sound-scape that hopes to mimic with imagery what the music does

with density of sound. A cybernetic apocalypse piled high with distortion and hints of underlying

beauty, all adding up to a completely subjective take on something that is explicable in part only

to someone with similar listening experiences. Taken out of context it appears to be nothing more

than a jumbled list. What is Shankai Juku and its Butoh extremism doing in the same sentence

with a ballad-filled Sinatra saloon album? How is it that the music of Òthe spheresÓ could be

juxtaposed alongside a ghastly and private scene involving The Carpenters? And yet, in reference

to the post-modern aural layering of Nine Inch Nails, where a vast array of dissonant elements are

woven together to form a cohesive whole, it can all make a perfect and communicable sense.

 

 

 

 

Crumb / 2000:          An imagined impossible last gift at her last moment–

Handing the Music of Cecil Taylor to my Grandmother

 

ÒÉI got Cecil Taylor and The Unit way up in the clouds doing the truly religious music,

the kind's got no time for simplistic fairy-tales and neatly boxed stories.

I want Aquinas and Òall my words are as strawÓ

I want the Upanishads and Òthat from which words turn backÓ

I want the Unnameable the Unknowable the face that cannot be seen

I want deep diving into essence

and the horrifying ordered chaos of the serious world outside

where everything is miraculous

but has nothing to do with petty wished-for miracles.

 

In this scenario the foam cups go flush around her ears and she is suddenly transported to a place

more complex and layered than she has ever known,

a soundtrack for an approaching storm in infinite-frame stereo,

the voices like reeds like voices like reeds like voices like reeds

the Whole swarming out in front of her the All appearing undeniable and crystalline

chorusing out across her fading horizons and she is HEARING it music of the spheres

and catching it catching the beauty the shimmering beauty the depths of it.

 

All this as her light trembles and her filament quietly snaps to dust

and she goes out and out and ever outwardÉ.Ó

 

 

And what I am doing here is impossible. There is no trick, or plan, or method. There is only

The torrential flow of emotion pouring out of my desperate head. That I am able to do this at all

is nearly unbelievable to me– how I do it is entirely out of my reach, and always has been. When I read it,

it overwhelms me, because it is as if someone else had done it and because it is beautiful and because

there is no accounting for it and because it fills me with anguish that it is not accessible to me as a mode

of continuous BEING. That it goes as quickly as it had come. As if it were not really mine.

Why do I instantly fall back to me?

Why is the expression limited to these rare moments?

Why is the rest so difficult?

 

So many levels. From Frank NovelÕs unknowing innocence at one end, to my channeling mad

linguistic spirits at the other. Eyeah. Something to do, you know. That if not doneÉ

 

 

 

Chet piece from ÒPoetic WaxÓ, a record review column I did  in the late Ô80s.

 

NIN bit from my Baseball & the 10,000 Things, Vol. 1 no. 4, 1995

 

SeizuresÉ from my LUCILLE, A Reverential Journal of the Care of the Beloved Hag, Month 2 / February-March, 2000

 

All material © Rick Lopez 2006