The past and the present? Breasts that suck rather than secrete? Where is Butcher Billy when we need him? What is happening to Archibald the Professor of Arcane knowledge? Listen for the demon on the pogo stick as he chases after one of the young scholars.
Episode 43
Wow. This non-stop narrative takes you to so many resort locations within the now fallen earth, overrun as it is by demons from the depths of hell, chambermaids being dragged before pustulant demon mounds and faeries copulating with crickets. Truly, a vacation package.
A new episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies aired on a semi-weekly basis.
Episode 44
Could Nathaniel and Isabel be the last hope for humanity? What sort of mischief have they been up to these long years gone by while the world ran down? Is there someone else could save us from the maws of hell? Only time will tell, and time is running out!
A new episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies aired on a semi-weekly basis.
Episode 45
Dr. William O’Reilly’s message is perversion, and what of it? He preaches that his parishoners kill themselves so that they then manifest in hell, only to then kill themselves back into the waking world and so become transplendent, which is not even a word, for earth is the hell of hell, just as hell is the hell of earth. To die in one is to be reborn in the other.
A new episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies aired on a semi-weekly basis.
Episode 46
Persons are lounging around a place formerly called the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies, now called the Dr. O’Reilly Die to Life Clinic. There is a small chapel abutting the grounds that’s been boarded up since the year 1892, the year a small girl was burnt alive, but where is that girl now? Could she be in hell? But where is hell? And why are faeries hatching out of her skin like the most adorable species of scabies you could ever imagine?
A new episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies aired on a semi-weekly basis.
Episode 47
The narrator is being killed by faeries are hatching out of a little girl like scabies, aka the Fairy Princess, while back in the waking world now overrun with demon spawn Dr. William O’Reilly is confronted by a demon has information concerning a few adolescents turned demon-hunters. He will find them and bring them out of hell to save the world.
A new episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies aired on a semi-weekly basis.
Episode 48
Demons have overrun the earth. It’s only the desire to stay alive that keeps people in hell, and Dr. O’Reilly has no desire to stay alive whatsoever, but how does he know what he knows and what is that thing that is currently insulting him from out the shadows, and what is that bird poking itself outside of Isabel’s guts?
A new episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies aired on a semi-weekly basis.
Episode 49
The end is nigh! The end is nigh! The narrator has a faery infestation within his brain, while Isabel and Nathaniel are confronted by the faerie Lilu. Listen to discover why faeries and demons both are dangerous to human-folk, unless you already know of course, in which case I suggest you hurry to the nearest mental health ward.
A new episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies aired on a semi-weekly basis.
Episode 50
“I haven’t seen young meat for so long.” So begins another episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies. Isabel is in a tavern in a world overrun by demons, while outside creatures of the underworld are eating each down to a dot across the globe, while in another place, Nathaniel confronts the faerie Lilu and discovers the truth about hell, faeries, and demons.
A new episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies aired on a semi-weekly basis.
Episode 51
The time is really truly nigh now, dear listeners. For Isabel is high above the single screeching howl of thing is all that’s left of the demon horde that has consumed all living matter until all that was left for them to consume each other in a cannibalistic slurp, while in the nether realm, Nathaniel must decide whether he will step within the medicinal bath found before him or not…
A new episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies aired on a semi-weekly basis.
Episode 52
The end is so nigh it’s beyond nigh. It’s so nigh that it’s fore and then nigh again, and then fore and then nigh again. In short, this is the final episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies, and Isabel and Nathaniel have found themselves within the belly of the beast! Prepare yourselves for the shocking ending, or is it?
A new episode of Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies aired on a semi-weekly basis.
Liszts
Your neighbor’s wife looks prettier than your own.
Follow the local custom when you visit a foreign place.
Elephant tusks cannot grow from out a dog’s mouth.
The participant’s perspectives are clouded while the bystander’s views are clear.
Pick the flower when it is ready to be picked.
When the tiger comes down from the mountain to the plains, it is bullied by the dogs.
It is impossible to change your basic characteristics.
One bitten by a snake, you are even frightened by a rope that resembles a snake.
When you go up to the mountain too often, you will eventually encounter the tiger.
Releases
A Bohemian in Brookline
Scott S. Greenberger, Globe Staff
A curtain is furled under a pipe that runs just beneath the ceiling, and a spotted cat wanders in. On the makeshift stage there is a ripped couch, a battered metal file cabinet labeled “This Was Your Life,” and a swath of green shag carpet.
Sporting long sideburns and blue Chuck Taylor sneakers, Gabriel Boyer takes the stage and launches into a reading of “Dracula.” The spectators arrayed on the performer’s bed are less than comfortable: The slats beneath his mattress aren’t nailed in, so they tend to shift whenever somebody moves too much.
This is “Bedroom Theater,” freewheeling performances that take place in Boyer’s Jamaica Plain loft every eight days. Boyer, 26, is a frequent actor and the author of some of the plays and skits that have been staged in his bedroom for the past year. He and a friend have even published a guide, “Seven Short Plays for the Bedroom.”
Read MoreDown and Out in Allston and Brookline
Scott S. Greenberger, Globe Staff
A curtain is furled under a pipe that runs just beneath the ceiling, and a spotted cat wanders in. On the makeshift stage there is a ripped couch, a battered metal file cabinet labeled “This Was Your Life,” and a swath of green shag carpet.
Sporting long sideburns and blue Chuck Taylor sneakers, Gabriel Boyer takes the stage and launches into a reading of “Dracula.” The spectators arrayed on the performer’s bed are less than comfortable: The slats beneath his mattress aren’t nailed in, so they tend to shift whenever somebody moves too much.
This is “Bedroom Theater,” freewheeling performances that take place in Boyer’s Jamaica Plain loft every eight days. Boyer, 26, is a frequent actor and the author of some of the plays and skits that have been staged in his bedroom for the past year. He and a friend have even published a guide, “Seven Short Plays for the Bedroom.”
Read MoreLina Ramona Vitkauskas
Lina Ramona Vitkauskas (Lithuanian-Canadian-US, b. 1973) is an evaporating language photographer = award-winning cinepoet / poet. Her cinepoems have placed as a finalist in several video poetry festivals in the UK, EU, Mexico, and US. In addition, in 2020, she received a PEN America Relief Grant to complete her poetry collection (soon to be visual arts collaboration) Between Plague & Kleptocracy: Invented Poetic Creations & Conversations of Seva & Bill.
Read MoreA D Jameson
A D Jameson, quaint and childish, tired ex-wife of a rodeo angel, owner of an antique tortoise-shell comb, nice-mannered, respectable, having been seen crawling quickly across the dinette set, destined to someday become a vice president at the bank, and whom you long ago bought and sold, is nodding off. If you let him, he’ll fall fast asleep on the unread page in your lap. He’s still wearing the camisole that you gave him, the one embroidered with his initials. He still has the cameo that you stuck in his Christmas stocking.
Read MoreOTL Summer Music Project
The Summer Music Project at OTL was a two-month exercise in which the artists at Outside the Lines Studio paired up with Mutable Sound’s own Gabriel Boyer to create songs and do their own renditions of favorites from the far and recent past. These sessions were recorded and then edited and mixed by Boyer to create the blessed chaos, Falling Boxes, available for download here. All proceeds go to Outside the Lines Gallery.
Releases
Paplib
Paplib’s music is like a known concept re-interpreted through the vocoder of God. He lives in a world of bleating stars, a vaporous universe of loops and abyssal darkness.
Inspired by bands such as Panda Bear and SJ Esau, Paplib consists of one Germain Caillet, formerly of the band Bellyache. He hails from Rennes, France. Working with pedals, repetitive and insistent, he creates what he calls, “grooves mélancoliques”. His songs have been featured in these compilations: Une Rentrée 2010 Volume 2, Collection Printemps/Été 2010, Objectif 2011, and Objectif 2011 Volume 2, all released by Les Inrockuptibles.
The verdict by Subjective e-zine: “Paplib : substance extraterrestre dont l’absorption a des effets bénéfiques variés selon le moment de la prise.”
[i.e. Paplib: alien substance whose absorption has beneficial effects varied by time of dosing.]
Releases
Crank Sturgeon + Lineland
Crank Sturgeon: junk sound, faux pas, actionist ethos (act-shun pathos), fisch kopf psychedelia, non-art-performance-art, nothing too serious (and yet serious enough to keep doing it). Crank Sturgeon has been active in the wayward wandering peripheries of noise and performance art since 1992. Combining the foundations set forth by the Dadaists, Joseph Beuys, and Allan Kaprow, Crank has giddily blurred the lines of quasi-art lecture/presentation with a circus of high volume, irreverent pun, and punk sensibility. Whether just a solo voice and spontaneous poetry; or armed with an array of busted guitars, contact microphones, and the essential scrappy costume in tow, the show desires to connect sonic expression and visual distortion with athletics of the absurd: the cause and effect becoming simultaneously caustic and celebratory. Wriggling, combustible, sweaty, and delirious, in matters of fishnoise and man. And Lineland?
Shortly after moving to Queens in 1998, Malcolm Felder borrowed his roommate’s digital four-track and began recording whatever sounds he could make with some old synths and a memory-man pedal. After a while he got a little impatient with mini discs and decided to move the recordings to a computer. He employed his friend Adam to help him build a pc that they mounted inside of an old Dynavox record player. With this development, all the pieces were in place, and Lineland was born. He got the name from the one dimensional realm in the book, Flatland, by Edwin A. Abbott. He compiled a bunch of the songs onto a cd and gave copies to all his friends. Eventually, one of the cds got into the hands of Eric from Audio Dregs, who thought it would be a fine idea to make a proper release of it. In 2003, “Pavilion” was released. But where did their collaboration begin?
Crank, having retreated to Maine where he continues to experiment with sound and performance, and Malcolm having moved to Chicago where he continues to experiment with sound in a more intimate setting, the two decided to merge their particular aesthetics, Felder to take Crank’s dissonance and run it through his matrix of melody much as Charlie Chaplin was in that famous scene from Modern Times, to process the raw and elusive power that Sturgeon emits with the help of his various noisemakers and bring it to a new life, something sinuous and light perhaps, but a new thing is neither the one or the other, but beyond.
Releases
Box Kites
Box Kites are (from left to right)
Annie Heringer: Guitar, Vocals
Dalton Eljer: Guitar, Vocals
Maggie Peng: Bass, Vocals
Malcolm Felder: Drums, Keyboards, Vocals
Felder, Heringer and Eljer first joined forces tearing tickets at a movie theater in Brookline, Massachusetts. They began writing and playing music together a few years later while sharing a loft in Queens, New York. In 2008, Peng joined the group, and all four of them drove to Maine, piled what equipment they could into a small boat, and spent a few days recording on an island in Cobbosseecontee lake. The results became the bulk of their first album, Glitter Tracks.