• Home
  • Product
  • About Us
  • Series
  • Weltschmerz
  • Song-a-Day
  • Apocryphal Histories
  • Three Things
  • Of a Garish Amateur
  • My Asinine Life
  • Tao Te Ching
  • Bedroom Theater
  • The Excerpt Series
  • Austrians in April
  • Mutable Radio Show
  • Twilight at the Lady
  • Features
  • Letter from the Editor
  • Manifesto of the Month
  • Sound of the Month
  • This is Not a Review
  • Stories & Poems
  • Interviews & Press
  • In the Mutableye
  • Artists
  • AD Jameson
  • Animal Hospital
  • Beta Male
  • Box Kites
  • Colin Winnette
  • Crank Sturgeon + Lineland
  • Gabriel Boyer
  • Happiness Island
  • Lina Ramona Vitkauskas
  • Liszts
  • Normal Feelings
  • OTL Summer Music Project
  • Paplib
  • The Thousand Eyes
  • The Mannerists
  • Menu

Mutable

  • Home
  • Product
  • About Us
  • Series
  • Weltschmerz
  • Song-a-Day
  • Apocryphal Histories
  • Three Things
  • Of a Garish Amateur
  • My Asinine Life
  • Tao Te Ching
  • Bedroom Theater
  • The Excerpt Series
  • Austrians in April
  • Mutable Radio Show
  • Twilight at the Lady
  • Features
  • Letter from the Editor
  • Manifesto of the Month
  • Sound of the Month
  • This is Not a Review
  • Stories & Poems
  • Interviews & Press
  • In the Mutableye
  • Artists
  • AD Jameson
  • Animal Hospital
  • Beta Male
  • Box Kites
  • Colin Winnette
  • Crank Sturgeon + Lineland
  • Gabriel Boyer
  • Happiness Island
  • Lina Ramona Vitkauskas
  • Liszts
  • Normal Feelings
  • OTL Summer Music Project
  • Paplib
  • The Thousand Eyes
  • The Mannerists

Hymnal1.jpg

Darkleaf & Hymnal's Performative Philosophy

June 24, 2021 in Article, Isstillcools**t, Feature

In the Mutableye

Many, many years ago, I heard a song that would haunt me, a rap song that seemed unlike anything I had ever come across before. For the next twenty years, that song would occasionally burble up like a puzzle. The mystery of Darkleaf would nag at me every so often. Who were they? The pieces never seemed to quite fit.

The song, a single called Caution, featured Mumbles, Acey Alone’s famed producer, and Cut Chemist, the notorious DJ behind Jurassic 5. The lyrics had a kind of mystical exactitude that I had never come across before.

A few years later, I discovered a “debut album”, F… the People, but it seemed off somehow. And it would take another decade before I discovered that this supposed debut album came out a full fourteen years from when the group was originally formed in ‘88, that much of the material had been reworked from a couple mixtapes that were coveted for their “abstract rhymes over primal beatscapes, infused with references and allusions to the occult and black mysticism” [The Untold Story of Terry “Hymnal” Robinson, by Nate LeBlanc]. The group had originally focused around the trio of Hymnal, Jahli, and Longevity, and were part of the notorious hip hop scene at The Good Life Cafe in LA.

Read More
Tags: Hymnal, Darkleaf, Classic Hip Hop
Identicals10.jpg

The Identicals Have Been Criming Again

June 19, 2021 in Story, Feature

Ben Segal

[Below are three shorter fictions, by Ben Segal. Enjoy!]


Robert Helps a Synagogue

There were eight of us and I was speaking. We were circled on chairs with metal frames and beige injection-molded plastic. Mid-week the run-down Beth El basement hosted a rotating string of such circles, each freshly and uniquely depressing. AA and NA and Grieving and us.

I was saying something I meant about my mother. David's eyes had strayed and fixed on a loose patch of wallpaper. Elaine ground her tea-tree stick to splinters. I kept talking, tried not to be irritated. This was hard enough for all of us. Murray, meanwhile, had worked his hand into the denseness of Jessica's hair and slowly pulled a fistful to his mouth. I caught on when I saw the sweep of black from his fat lips to the back of her head. I watched the silent movement of his jaw and wondered when Jessica would notice.

Read More
Tags: Ben Segal
FamilyAffair2.jpg

Chapter 5: A Family Affair

June 14, 2021 in Podcast, Series, Weltschmerz

Welcome to Weltschmerz

In this installment of Boyer’s audio memoir, Gabe and Jill meet up with Jill’s parents in Tuscaloosa, and then it’s on to New Orleans, vampire tour guides, tarot cards, and mysterious rashes. Then the two head off on their own once again and into Texas, and a near death experience changes things.

You can find Chapters 1 - 4 here.

coverweltschmerz-e1373760787674.jpg

Paperback Book
8" x 5.25"
560 Pages
$16.00
Now Available

Buy Now
Tags: Gabriel Boyer, Audiobook
Screen Shot 2021-06-12 at 9.09.39 AM.png

Mosaic of Time: Scarcely Gilded

June 12, 2021 in Series, Mosaic of Time, Poetry, Story

Lina Ramona Vitkauskas

‘Scarcely Gilded’ is a poem from the 2020 collection, Between Plague & Kleptocracy: Invented Poetic Creations & Conversations of Seva & Bill, in which the poet, Lina Ramona Vitkauskas, cross-references poems between deceased poets, Vsevolod Nekrasov & Bill Knott.

Throughout this collection, Vitkauskas serves as medium and "translator" of the posthumous conversations, making them essentially invented collaborations. Poems are written in the voice / tone / style of both Nekrasov & Knott, featuring borrowed lines and found poems within those lines—they are the transcripts of their thoughts across astral planes, what they’d perhaps discuss in this perilous time in history: of pandemic, widespread injustice, forced isolation, and of the US mesmerized by a traitorous, snake oil salesman.

SELECTED • 9th International Video Poetry Festival • Athens, Greece (2021)

Poem:

Scarcely Gilded

“Its ferocity is breathtaking and humbling.”

Before we knew
until our lungs
filled with pyrite spring
our lungs
hanging
out
or in
an elephant’s envelope

Mosaic of Time is a monthly series that each month explores another cinepoem by author and artist, Lina Ramona Vitkauskas.

The whole body of the “Mosaic of Time” section will create a broader mosaic, over time, and ideally capture time as the world progresses or regresses—plunging into global events and out again.

Featured
SpinyFront.jpg
Tags: Lina Ramona Vitkauskas
DFW5.jpg

On David Foster Wallace

June 06, 2021 in Article, Feature

Walker Zupp

I am here.

A hyper-intelligent adolescent whose scientific understanding of the world is betrayed by his lack of life experience. Undercurrents appear overhead, love is something only movies talk about, and whatever things the universe can’t articulate itself our hero can’t even begin to imagine.

I’ve not dedicated much time to David Foster Wallace: Brief Interviews with Hideous Men, The Pale King and The Broom of the System are the biggies I’ve read.

There’s Infinite Jest, but I got about halfway through and wanted to read some other books. I’ve also listened to him reading his porn essay, Big Red Son, and his commencement speech, This is Water. But I’ve not read the other Lobster essays; nor have I examined Oblivion or The Girl with the Curious Hair.

I like his work broadly speaking, but I think the emotional detail is lacking. I think it prevented him from producing works like Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin and pretty much every book Norman Mailer wrote. So Wallace had neither emotional nudity or a kind of progressive misogynism.

Read More
Tags: David Foster Wallace, Walker Zupp
Bing7.jpg

Tourists to the End

June 01, 2021 in Article, Letter from the Editor

Letter from the Editor

Chandler Bing has been on my mind a lot recently.

Or—to be more precise—Matthew Perry and the sitcom universe which he navigated, and what happens when that sitcom universe has its sitcom apocalypse. Like a stand-up comedian confessing to being a serial killer, or someone having a heart attack on SNL. Our illusions unravel.

Of course, our illusions are unraveling because a legitimate apocalypse is underfoot, and illusions cannot stand the unsettling of our world.

But also. Furthermore. To be clear, when I speak of apocalypse, I am speaking of an ending of things as they are. How the Mayans described the apocalypse or a Navajo understanding of the end of history. History never ends. It only has its psychotic break and then begins again somewhere earlier in the story. Maybe it’s agrarianism, or hunter gatherer with a smattering of bizarre tools that no one remembers how to make go anymore. It could also fragment, such that there are the Star Trekians living in orbit, when it’s all Dark Ages down below.

Who knows?

And it is specifically because we are facing this terrifying unknown that our world has lost its ability to dream anything but the most derivative of dreams. (We are the proverbial deer in the headlights and we have just proverbially shat ourselves.) And this inability to dream new dreams is fueling the unwinding of things in an endless cycle of imagination abuse. As in… Our panic makes us unable to imagine any solution, and our inability to imagine any solution fuels our panic. That sort of thing. And somewhere in there, we start intentionally using our imaginations in ways they weren’t meant to because we’ve forgotten what they’re there for.

Spoiler alert. Imaginations are a tool to help guide you through the universe. Not a blow-up doll to replace actual human contact.

(You may argue that an imagination can be used however the imaginer likes, including like a blow-up doll human replacement, but I think you’ll find it’s like trying to make love to a blow-up doll amoeba. It keeps frustrating your intent.)

So. We have all retreated into our sound stages and are televising our reactionary beliefs to a readymade audience of our peers. Our media universe has compartmentalized. Mitosis has begun.

Read More
Tags: Gabriel Boyer
Screen Shot 2021-05-29 at 11.29.01 AM.png

Video: Acoustic

May 29, 2021 in sad, Series

Song-A-Day

Our most recent addition from Dan & John is something of a pleasant little fairytale about an acoustic phenomenon and a changed world. It’s a fireside chat and a bar stool confessional. It’s a heartwarming parable of the weird and the wondrous. “Those who didn’t pull out their own eyes or stop their own hearts were changed and united in their horror.” See below… If you dare!!!

Accoustic is just one of a series of rock videos we have been posting from their collaboration, all of which can be found under the Song-A-Day link along the sidebar and you can find a selection of these songs on their album Secret Griefs here.

John Manson and Dan Madri of The Gondoliers, became involved 4 years ago in a project called Fun-A-Day. (Or FAD.) And now John and Dan are continuing this tradition under the title Song-A-Day or SAD, and over the course of the coming months, we here at Mutable will be posting them regularly for your viewing and listening pleasure. Enjoy!

The cognitive system according to the German scholar Johan Lindner of Mönchenburg. Illustration to a manuscript copy of Aristotle’s De Anima (1472-1474), courtesy of the Wellcome Collection.

The cognitive system according to the German scholar Johan Lindner of Mönchenburg. Illustration to a manuscript copy of Aristotle’s De Anima (1472-1474), courtesy of the Wellcome Collection.

Mundus Imaginalis

May 25, 2021 in Manifesto of the Month, Feature

Henry Corbin

[The below essay was originally brought to our attention sometime in early 2009, and would be part of a pivotal reshuffling of thought here at Mutable. It is presented in its full glory. The “imaginal” is not “imaginary”!]

In offering the two Latin words mundus imaginalis as the title of this discussion, I intend to treat a precise order of reality corresponding to a precise mode of perception, because Latin terminology gives the advantage of providing us with a technical and fixed point of reference, to which we can compare the various more-or-less irresolute equivalents that our modern Western languages suggest to us.

I will make an immediate admission. The choice of these two words was imposed upon me some time ago, because it was impossible for me, in what I had to translate or say, to be satisfied with the word imaginary. This is by no means a criticism addressed to those of us for whom the use of the language constrains recourse to this word, since we are trying together to reevaluate it in a positive sense. Regardless of our efforts, though, we cannot prevent the term imaginary, in current usage that is not deliberate, from being equivalent to signifying unreal, something that is and remains outside of being and existence-in brief, something utopian. I was absolutely obliged to find another term because, for many years, I have been by vocation and profession an interpreter of Arabic and Persian texts, the purposes of which I would certainly have betrayed if I had been entirely and simply content-even with every possible precaution-with the term imaginary. I was absolutely obliged to find another term if I did not want to mislead the Western reader that it is a matter of uprooting long-established habits of thought, in order to awaken him to an order of things, the sense of which it is the mission of our colloquia at the "Society of Symbolism" to rouse.

In other words, if we usually speak of the imaginary as the unreal, the utopian, this must contain the symptom of something. In contrast to this something, we may examine briefly together the order of reality that I designate as mundus imaginalis, and what our theosophers in Islam designate as the "eighth climate"; we will then examine the organ that perceives this reality, namely, the imaginative consciousness, the cognitive Imagination; and finally, we will present several examples, among many others, of course, that suggest to us the topography of these interworlds, as they have been seen by those who actually have been there.

Read More
Tags: Henry Corbin, Mundus Imaginalis
Screen Shot 2021-05-19 at 2.57.47 PM.png

Boston Bands in the 90's: Thalia Zedek

May 22, 2021 in Series, Boston Bands in the 90s

Thalia Zedek moved to Boston in 1979, and throughout the 80’s and 90’s she led some notable bands, Live Skull and Uzi, but most memorable will always be her 90’s band, Come. Seen here performing a more pared down set with Beth Heinberg at the Middle East Upstairs. All footage care of the legendary and now deceased Billy Ruane and his Road to Ruane feed.

Billy Ruane was a staple of the scene at one point, and he documented endless shows throughout the 90’s and beyond. These videos came out of that.

Tags: Crank Sturgeon
ForestCarnage3.jpg

Chapter 4: The Forest of Freshly Lit Carnage

May 18, 2021 in Podcast, Series, Weltschmerz

Welcome to Weltschmerz

In this installment of Boyer’s audio memoir we find Gabe and Jill are on the road and headed to Knoxville, TN. After two days of near collisions, car trouble, sushi, mountains, baco-bits, and the occasional trip down memory lane, they arrive in the deep south for some latenight shenanigans involving zombies and potted plants.

You can find Chapters 1 - 3 here.

coverweltschmerz-e1373760787674.jpg

Paperback Book
8" x 5.25"
560 Pages
$16.00
Now Available

Buy Now
Tags: Gabriel Boyer, Audiobook
Screen Shot 2021-05-11 at 4.04.40 PM.png

Video: Heart

May 17, 2021 in sad, Series

Song-A-Day

Hearts keep on beating and take beatings and keep on bleeding. Manson & Madri want to give you a lesson in anatomy. “We were built to bleed. We were built to take a beating.” The video for this paired down minimalist rock-and-roll ditty can be found below. It is just one of a series of rock videos we have been posting from their collaboration, all of which can be found under the Song-A-Day link along the sidebar and you can find a selection of these songs on their album Secret Griefs here.

John Manson and Dan Madri of The Gondoliers, became involved 4 years ago in a project called Fun-A-Day. (Or FAD.) And now John and Dan are continuing this tradition under the title Song-A-Day or SAD, and over the course of the coming months, we here at Mutable will be posting them regularly for your viewing and listening pleasure. Enjoy!

Alexander+Ross,+Untitled,+2018,+graphite,+42+x+36+inches.JPG

Video: Alexander Ross

May 12, 2021 in Article, Isstillcools**t, Feature

In the Mutableye

We here at Mutable just discovered Alexander Ross, and he has immediately become one of our new favorite humans. At first, we merely enjoyed him for the fact that his art is just the sort of abstract realism that we love to love. (See above.) Which for some reason reminds me of Kelly Reaves’ work.

But then, we discovered the album of his below, put out by our friends Audio Dregs, and featuring art that is more Jim Woodring than Salvador Dali. Then we listened to his music. Then we asked ourselves how it was possible we had never listened to his music before.

Of course, we had to immediately contact Eric Mast over at Audio Dregs to discover more about this mystery, and he was happy to explain how he had first discovered Fantastic Palace's music on a CD comp in ’92 called Chinny Chin Chin (See Eye) and played it on his college radio show at the time a bunch, listening to it for some 20 years, only to then discover it was his friend, Mike McGonnigal, who had originally released it, and the two got in touch with Fantastic Palace (Alexander Ross) to re-issue it on vinyl, a release that has just recently officially sold out.

As for the video below, it was not taken by Mast, but it certainly rounds out the mystery of who Alex Ross is and what he believes in.

Through the course of it, Ross discusses all aspects of his style, influences, and current experiments. The first painting they talk about is very different stylistically from the drawing above, and at first glance it seems almost cheesy, but when you get in close, you see the wonderful vibrancy of the piece. We have a special fondness for works that begin with clay sculptures and go from there, not to mention works that transform as you approach (think Chuck Close), and of course it’s also so illuminating hearing Ross talk about the “photorealism” of the paint versus the more abstract pencilwork in that first painting the video focuses on.

Over the course of the studio visit, Ross also talks about his distinct interests and many inspirations, from psychedelics, to silly putty, to mites, describing his drawings as a kind of monstrous R. Crumb scientific drawings. My favorite parts are always when Ross lets loose about how his ideas have evolved and are continuing to evolve.

Be sure to stick around to the end to get some nice peaks of some delightful experiments. “The most intelligent technology is nature.” Indeed.

In the Mutableye is a segment that sometimes showcases something interesting that is happening somewhere in the world at this moment, and sometimes showcases some fad or person from the past that we here at Mutable acknowledge is still cool s**t.

Tags: Alexander Ross, Fantastic Palace
161709414_467773864570000_3356372181816536969_o.jpg

My Asinine Life: The Ghost Hand

May 09, 2021 in Article, My Asinine Life, Series

Gabriel Boyer

I have lost my imaginary friend. She went out for a stroll and never came back. And other things have come to take her place.

Their paperwork was very official. They claimed themselves to be legitimate representatives of my imagination. We have on occasion been taxed with playing you in the early morning, they claimed. But in truth, these were things that wouldn’t play in the familiar ways upon the sprawling filaments of the universe my work station contains.

Sorts of things have hands where they should have eyes, and have eyes everywhere in between. Crawling insufficiencies and elongations of the lower intestine. The underthings—and the overdrive gone into overdrive. And everything in between.

I have been put into quarantine here in my suburban Vietnamese home. I have been in contact with a person who was in contact with a person who was in contact with a person. I have a cat who lives in my yard, and this is not a healthy cat. Old women scale the walls of my garden to chop down bananas and shout at me across the many leafy plants.

So, I’ve become reflective.

Read More
Tags: Gabriel Boyer
0024739917_10.jpg

Neptune: Cave Drawings

May 07, 2021 in Mutablesoundofthemonth, Feature, Podcast

Mutable Sound of the Month

This month, we have chosen the re-issued LP, Cave Drawings, from Neptune. The best thing that ever happened to art rock, Neptune featured guitars and other instruments constructed by Jason Sanford, and was a staple of the Boston scene throughout the 90’s and 00’s. This album, originally released in 2013, is just now being re-released through WWAB. Give it a listen and consider purchasing it for Bandcamp Friday, during which time all proceeds go to the artist. And while you’re at it, pick up one of the many fine Mutable products available as well!

Mutable Sound is pleased to present a unique musical experience every month or so by ourselves or someone we’ve been introduced to. These are from the reel-to-reels and tascams of the garages and basements of the world. If you have a track you would like us to hear, please feel free to send it on to mail@mutablesound.com along with credits and a brief description.

Tags: Neptune, Jason Sanford
Screen Shot 2021-05-05 at 9.27.16 AM.png

Video: International Writers' Conference

May 05, 2021

In the Mutableye

A few weeks ago, Mutable was invited to attend the International Writers’ Conference. Since then, the video feed has been made available by John Wojewoda. Although many speakers at this conference had useful information to offer, the first speaker, Angus Fletcher, gave a remarkable talk on the neurobiology of storytelling technologies. The audio for just that piece can be found on John’s podcast. (And please consider subscribing to it if you like what you see here. He’s always adding author interviews and insight into the creative writing process.) Other keynote speakers included Kosta Ouzas speaking on digital advertising for authors, Charlie Franco on the state of independent publishing, and John Wojewoda himself on NFT’s and the future of publishing.

Coolshit1.jpg

In the Mutableye is a segment that sometimes showcases something interesting that is happening somewhere in the world at this moment, and sometimes showcases some fad or person from the past that we here at Mutable acknowledge is still cool s**t.

Screen Shot 2021-05-02 at 9.52.36 PM.png

Mosaic of Time: My Vestibule School

May 03, 2021 in Series, Mosaic of Time, Poetry, Story

Lina Ramona Vitkauskas

The poem is from my 2020 collection titled Between Plague & Kleptocracy: Invented Poetic Creations & Conversations of Seva & Bill.

The collection cross-references poems of two dead poets: Vsevolod Nekrasov and Bill Knott, and the narrator/poet (Lina Ramona Vitkauskas) serves as medium, fusing bits of posthumous conversations and imagined collaborations between them. Vitkauskas hybridizes and recreates their texts, projecting possible dialogues during this perilous time in history: of pandemic, forced isolation, economic decline, and the US finding itself with a pack of kleptocrats and their sycophants overtaking the three branches of government.

The poem itself (below) was written in early 2020, beginning of pandemic. Special thanks to PEN America, which offered a relief grant to the author while unemployed, providing a chance to write the collection.

Poem:

My Vestibule School

National someone
future
something
sometimes
your toes
are a crystal ball
and sometimes
mini executioners

1630bf4c011a299315a662b7e9687bd3.jpg

Mosaic of Time is a monthly series that each month explores another cinepoem by author and artist, Lina Ramona Vitkauskas. This month marks her first collaboration with video artist, Michael Lewy.

The whole body of the “Mosaic of Time” section will create a broader mosaic, over time, and ideally capturing time as the world progresses or regresses—plunging into global events and out again.

.

Featured
SpinyFront.jpg
Spiny Retinas
Tags: Lina Ramona Vitkauskas
Weltschmerz3l.jpg

Chapter 3: The Van & The Camera

April 30, 2021 in Podcast, Series, Weltschmerz

Welcome to Weltschmerz

In this installment of Boyer’s audio memoir we find Gabe and Jill back in Boston and waiting on the van so that they can bring theater to bedrooms across America in a 1971 VW minibus, as well as hoping to get Zach to perhaps, possibly buy a camera to document this event. But will Jill and Gabe ever even get on the road? Featuring the occasional flashback.

To hear Chapters 1 & 2, go here and here respectively.

coverweltschmerz-e1373760787674.jpg

Paperback Book
8" x 5.25"
560 Pages
$16.00
Now Available

Buy Now
Tags: Gabriel Boyer, Audiobook
updike-1.jpeg

I Am the Hostility Queen

April 27, 2021 in Article, Feature

Liz Coffey

This is the tale of that time I inspired John Updike.

My parents’ friends called them one day in 1993 and said something like, Have you seen the latest issue of the New Yorker? Is it possible John Updike wrote about your daughter on the last page?

I’m from Beverly Farms, a part of Beverly, Massachusetts that is both Tony and Townie. (Note to self: new drag name = Tony Holmes.) We have private beaches, a small downtown, commuter rail service to Boston. John Updike was our most famous neighbor. We moved there in 1974, he moved there in 1982. My clever parents bought the cheapest house in the fanciest neighborhood for something like 35k. As middle class newcomers, we were neither Tony nor Townie and will never be. The house is an easy bike ride, a long walk, or a five minute drive to the beach. John Updike purchased a much fancier house with walking access to an even more exclusive beach a mile down the road.

Read More
Tags: John Updike, Liz Coffey
Screen+Shot+2021-04-23+at+10.23.11+AM.jpg

Jenn Pipp: Time Ceremony

April 25, 2021 in Article, Isstillcools**t, Feature

In the Mutableye

Jen Pipp, self-styled spiritual modernist, creates online ceremonies to help the rest of us to manage our minds. “There’s so much spiritual information out there right now, it’s hard to know what resonates with us and what is not resonant with us.” She has a show, The Great Big Infinity, up at the Emerson Contemporary Gallery through May 9th. Gallery hours are Wed-Sun 12-7pm. Zoom Artist talk Tuesday May 4th at 5pm. Stop by and check it out!

Coolshit1.jpg

In the Mutableye is a segment that sometimes showcases something interesting that is happening somewhere in the world at this moment, and sometimes showcases some fad or person from the past that we here at Mutable acknowledge is still cool s**t.

Tags: Jen Pipp, New Age
Screen Shot 2021-04-20 at 9.33.01 PM.png

Video: Knights

April 23, 2021 in sad, Series

Song-A-Day

Knights can have days. They can make a day of it. Sometimes, they take on more than they can chew. Sometimes we pray but pray for what? As we continue our journey through the mind of Manson & Madri, perhaps now would be a good time to ask how we got here? From Angels to Bliss, and now… “Every knight has his day.”

And you can find a selection of these songs on their album Secret Griefs here.

swan-17-hilma-af-klint.jpg

John Manson and Dan Madri of The Gondoliers, became involved 4 years ago in a project called Fun-A-Day. (Or FAD.) And now John and Dan are continuing this tradition under the title Song-A-Day or SAD, and over the course of the coming months, we here at Mutable will be posting them regularly for your viewing and listening pleasure. Enjoy!

Prev / Next

Product

Featured
Untitled.jpg
American Darlings
Secret Griefs
American Darlings
American Darlings
DifferentDirectionsCover_02.jpg
Gabriel Boyer
Different Directions
Gabriel Boyer
Gabriel Boyer
FBDownload.gif
Outside the Lines Studio
Falling Boxes
Outside the Lines Studio
Outside the Lines Studio
noplacetodie2.0.jpg
Gabriel Boyer, Normal Feelings
No Place to Die
Gabriel Boyer, Normal Feelings
Gabriel Boyer, Normal Feelings
SpinyFront.jpg
Lina Ramona Vitkauskas
Spiny Retinas
Lina Ramona Vitkauskas
Lina Ramona Vitkauskas
coverweltschmerz-e1373760787674.jpg
Gabriel Boyer
Welcome to Weltschmerz
Gabriel Boyer
Gabriel Boyer
twilightart.jpg
Gabriel Boyer
Twilight at the Lady Jane Grey College for Little Ladies
Gabriel Boyer
Gabriel Boyer
geebee.jpg
Various
A Mutable Decade
Various
Various
Revelation.jpg
Colin Winnette
Revelation
Colin Winnette
Colin Winnette
Cast_and_Costumes_large.jpg
Paplib
Cast and Costumes
Paplib
Paplib
Other_Occasions_Not_Minded_large.jpg
Crank Sturgeon, Lineland
Other Occasions Not Minded
Crank Sturgeon, Lineland
Crank Sturgeon, Lineland
AmazingAdultFantasy1.jpg
A D Jameson
Amazing Adult Fantasy
A D Jameson
A D Jameson
BOX_KITES_Glitter_Tracks.jpg
Box Kites
Glitter Tracks
Box Kites
Box Kites
liveatthepiehouse1.jpg
The Mannerists
Live at the Pie House
The Mannerists
The Mannerists
surveyweb1.jpg
Gabriel Boyer
A Survey of my Failures This Far
Gabriel Boyer
Gabriel Boyer
big_troubel_cover.jpg
Liszts
Big Trouble in Little China
Liszts
Liszts
Good or Plenty, Streets + Avenues
Animal Hospital
Good or Plenty, Streets + Avenues
Animal Hospital
Animal Hospital
7nightscover.jpg
Gabriel Boyer
Seven Nights in the Bedroom
Gabriel Boyer
Gabriel Boyer
noplacetodie2.0.jpg
Beta Male
Battery Power
Beta Male
Beta Male
living_from_the_dead2.jpeg
Gabriel Boyer
How to Tell the Living from the Dead
Gabriel Boyer
Gabriel Boyer
textbookcover.jpg
Gabriel Boyer, The Thousand Eyes
The Textbook Tapes
Gabriel Boyer, The Thousand Eyes
Gabriel Boyer, The Thousand Eyes
manifestoi.jpg
Various Authors
Manifesto I
Various Authors
Various Authors
journeyfront.jpg
Happiness Island
A Journey to… Happiness Island
Happiness Island
Happiness Island

Enjoymutable.com is the website of Mutable, a loose conglomeration of artists making books, music and other products, as well as sharing their ideas on the web and in the world. You can read more about us here.