quarta-feira, 3 de março de 2010

música e literatura andam juntas.


você não estaria ouvindo dylan se não fosse por kerouac. o vagabundo santo alcoolatra que deflagrou uma revolução (inicialmente)literaria que foi o germe o movimento hippie. se não houvesse kerouac(e ginsberg e burroughs e cassidy e corso e snyder)não haveria dylan, hendrix, morrisson e cia...e muito menos esse blog.
kerouac e seus amigos beats quebraram com os costumes vigentes em uma america (que no pós-guerra vivia o apice do american way of life) puritana e consumista, tentaram atraves das drogas e das leituras trascendentais de blake ampliar os limites da consciência, passaram longe dos dogmas do religiosismo burro, acabaram com os limites entre vida e obra, experienciando os dois como um só, fugiram do consumismo exagerado e conformismo em viagens sem um centavo no bolso por entre becos sujos, rodovias abandonadas, vagões congelantes com vagabundos errantes e desertos cheios de maconha. é por isso que você deve ler kerouac, ou melhor que isso, ouvir ele recitando sua prosa poética.

Kerouac no Steve Allen Show. por sinal o melhor programa de entrevistas eu eu já vi.



."A lot of people ask me why I wrote this book or any book. All the stories I wrote are true because I believe in what I saw. I was traveling west one time at the junction of the state line of Colorado – its arid western one, and the state line of poor Utah. I saw in the clouds huge and massed above the fearing golden desert of even fall – the Great Image of God with four fingers pointed straight at me. Through halos and rolls and gold foals that were like the existence of the gleaming spear in His right hand which sayeth c’mon boy, go thou across the ground. Go moan for man. Go moan. Go groan. Go groan alone. Go roll your bones. Alone. Go thou and be little beneath my sight. Go thou and be minutest seed in the pod. Go thou go thou – die hence, and if this world report you well and truly.
Anyway i wrote this book because we're all going to die - In the loneliness of my life, my father dead, my brother dead, my mother far away, my sister and my wife far away, nothing here but my own tragic hands that once were guarded by a world, a sweet attention, that now are left to guide and disappear their own way into the common dark of all our death, sleeping in me raw bed, alone and stupid: with just this one pride and consolation: my heart broke in the general despair and opened up inward to the Lord, I made a supplication in this dream.
So in the last page of On the Road, I describe how the hero Dean Moriarty has come to see me all the way from the West Coast just for a day or two. We’d just been back and forth across the country several times in cars, and now our adventures are over. We’re still great friends, but we have to go into later phases of our lives. So there he goes, Dean Moriarty, ragged in a motheaten overcoat he brought specially for the freezing temperatures of the East, walking off alone, and last I saw of him he rounded the corner of Seventh Avenue, eyes on the street ahead and bent to it again. Gone.
So in America when the sun goes down and I sit on the old broken-down river pier watching the long, long skies over New Jersey and sense all that raw land that rolls in one unbelievable huge bulge over to the West Coast, and all that road going, all the people dreaming in the immensity of it, and in Iowa I know by now the children must be crying in the land where they let the children cry, and tonight the stars’ll be out, and don’t you know that God is Pooh Bear? the evening star must be drooping and shedding her sparkler dims on the prairie, which is just before the coming of complete night that blesses the earth, darkens all rivers, cups the peaks and folds the final shore in, and nobody, nobody knows what’s going to happen to anybody besides the forlorn rags of growing old, I think of Dean Moriarty, I even think of Old Dean Moriarty the father we never found, I think of Dean Moriarty. I think of Dean Moriarty."

extraido de http://anaphylaxxya.blogspot.com/

neal cassidy e jack kerouac

Um comentário:

  1. Eu não só acredito que música e literatura andam juntas como sou capaz de afirmar uma depende da outra.

    Já imaginou como seria algum clássico dos Beatles sem as letras antológicas?
    Definitivamente, música e literatura andam juntas.

    abraço parceiro

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