[contextly_auto_sidebar] HE was born before Elvis, had his songs covered by everyone from Judy Collins to the Pixies, and managed five decades of brilliant work in a field that tends to see only bright flares. Leonard Cohen is known as a more-or-less rock musician to most of us, but he started out as a poet, publishing books for a decade before his debut LP. The other day I met Cohen's son, … [Read more...]
Archives for September 2018
Ten Years After: Remembering The Recession
[contextly_auto_sidebar] A GREAT number of Americans have "moved on." Their lives are fine, and the Great Recession is just a bad, dimly recalled memory, like a really bad winter flu from years ago. But for a number of us, it was one of the defining events of our lives -- something whose consequences we deal with every day or every week. Over the last few days, the press has run a number of … [Read more...]
The Return of Jeffrey Deitch
[contextly_auto_sidebar] AS recently as a few years back, it would have been hard to predict that controversial art dealer Jeffrey Deitch would have any reason to come back to Los Angeles for anything more complicated than a French Dip at Cole's. But now the man pushed out of the Museum of Contemporary Art -- and for a while, synonymous with faux-sensational, shallow Warholism -- is one his way … [Read more...]
The Strange Death of the Alternative Press
[contextly_auto_sidebar] FOR the last few months I've been meaning to revisit some of the abiding concerns of this blog and the book that inspired it. Mostly, I'm talking about what we used to call the press and now typically describe as the news media. My overall sense is that some parts of the creative economy have healed since I began writing my book in the teeth of the recession and … [Read more...]