Paul Motian Trio - Misterioso
13:28
13 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@seriouslyyoujest1771
@seriouslyyoujest1771 27 күн бұрын
Those watercolors are quite valuable today
@liltick102
@liltick102 Ай бұрын
Just the best person ever- wish there were more recording’s - thank god he published a lot, and that I have his archival work
@sammoe1292
@sammoe1292 Ай бұрын
If you enjoy this and Miller, you MUST GO READ Nikos Kazantzakis. “I shall never forget the day I met Nikos Kazantzakis. I did not meet him as one meets ordinary mortals - I met him as one meets a god.” Henry Miller from “The Colossus of Maroussi”
@Holoether
@Holoether Ай бұрын
This interview series is so warming and illuminating- thx
@renedescartes-ajouer8959
@renedescartes-ajouer8959 2 ай бұрын
I suspect he's confusing Arthur machen with John Cowper Powys when talking about Rabelais
@liltick102
@liltick102 2 ай бұрын
6:13 indeed, he too was a God.
@liltick102
@liltick102 2 ай бұрын
Florence is more silent than Paris @ night imo
@liltick102
@liltick102 2 ай бұрын
Miller is one of my favourite minds to ever exist. I’d give a lot to talk with him. Also - I am a Joey who also was with someone named Hoki
@liltick102
@liltick102 2 ай бұрын
These must never disappear from public availability
@liltick102
@liltick102 2 ай бұрын
4:00 I was relistening to this while circling my room with all my pillows and blankets balancing on my head.
@damasiolopes-wc4iz
@damasiolopes-wc4iz 3 ай бұрын
GRANDE.ESCRITOR.ESTADUNIDENSE.HOMEM.DE.MUITA.CORAGEM.DO.SECULO.20.😮😮😮😊😊😊
@jakemetcalfe3091
@jakemetcalfe3091 3 ай бұрын
Anyone able to point me towards the painter he references at 08:48? Thanks
@thomassimmons1950
@thomassimmons1950 4 ай бұрын
DELICIOUS!!!
@jiggersotoole7823
@jiggersotoole7823 8 ай бұрын
What is causing the climate crisis? Human activity.
@ovariantrolley2327
@ovariantrolley2327 8 ай бұрын
Who owns the rights to this @speakvisual
@charlescozic3208
@charlescozic3208 8 ай бұрын
I’ve loved Henry Miller’s writings for years. It never occurred to me there might exist recordings like this! What a treasure, thank you!
@theesperanzacompromisebyja9044
@theesperanzacompromisebyja9044 8 ай бұрын
Henry Miller could always be counted upon to articulate male sexuality with candour.
@coziestboy1788
@coziestboy1788 8 ай бұрын
my ex-girlfriend's mom gave me tropic of capricorn as a present... changed my life completely.
@StephenDedalus74
@StephenDedalus74 7 ай бұрын
Same for me... but with Tropic of cancer ;)
@coziestboy1788
@coziestboy1788 7 ай бұрын
@@StephenDedalus74 haven't read it yet. couldn't find it anywhere in physical form but I'm sure it'll blow my brains out.
@corsoconner
@corsoconner 9 ай бұрын
Henry Miller is a human treasure. He was a genius who encompassed and transcended this mortal coil. He was courageous and exemplary as an artist and generous to a fault. He lived and set the high watermark to be human. Sadly in today's reactionary and woke fascism, Henry's voice has been sidelined by Tweets and a degraded homoginous culture. His voice will rise again!
@filmbuff4
@filmbuff4 25 күн бұрын
woke communism, not fascism.
@ThingsTerrestrial
@ThingsTerrestrial 9 ай бұрын
BIG JOHN & TOM JOHNSON hung electric lines like wet clothes lines for 15 weeks. “I sure could go for 3 well-lubricated prostitutes after working in this dry desert heat,” Tom said. “That sounds good to me!” Big John exclaimed loudly while his huge cock swung like six diseased chimpanzees at a pancake breakfast for 5 retiring cops. IT WAS SO COLD ON THE NIGHT THAT SHEILA & ROBERT FIRST HAD MEXICAN SEXUAL INTERCOURSE TOGETHER WITH EACH OTHER THAT 14 EXTRA-LONG PHONE POLES HAD TO BE STUFFED INTO THEIR STEEL WOOD-BURNING STOVE OR THEIR SEXUAL PARTS WOULD HAVE FROZEN! “Pass the unused Lubriderm,” Sheila said with a sassy smile on her bone-thin face. “Here you go lover,” Robert replied a second before 12 monkeys fell through the rotten ceiling. “Are those the monkeys that escaped from the new zoo yesterday?” Sheila asked in a totally weird voice that shocked Robert so much that he ran from the huge cabin without hesitation all the way to eastern Michigan or Canada.
@ThingsTerrestrial
@ThingsTerrestrial 9 ай бұрын
THE FINAL LLAMA-FLIGHT OF BIG WHIP-DINGER GILROY Sherlock & Watson are on the trail of Whip-Dinger Gilroy who's at a local Arab llama-leasing booth to lease 1 (a llama) to flee London before he is eaten by retarded Negro Pygmy savages. “There he is!” Doctor John Watson screams in a modest bathing suit. “Grab him!” Sherlock screams back in a genuinely-masculine tone. “I dare not!” Watson painfully re-screams desperately. “Why on God's flat Earth not?!” Manly Sherlock asks absolutely perplexed. “Because Whip's got hold of my dinger!” Later they'd giggle for 15 weeks like 2 pre- teens because Watson's dinger was unhurt, only stretched a wee bit.
@ronniemurdoch7922
@ronniemurdoch7922 10 ай бұрын
Yes it's a beautiful thing the way you play it. Hare Krishna.
@KINGMOON444
@KINGMOON444 10 ай бұрын
great mind
@scoon2117
@scoon2117 11 ай бұрын
I found Miller through Kenneth Patchen and Norman Mailer, cant wait to get into his work.
@chokkan7
@chokkan7 Жыл бұрын
When I first read Tropic of Capricorn when I was 19 (I'm 63 now), I felt as though this man had pulled up a chair alongside me and simply started to speak to me as though I were his confidant, a rare and very remarkable experience, that. I've been a fan ever since, even taking the pilgrimage to his cabin in Big Sur many years ago, and I also visited his wife's bar (with one of Henry's paintings hanging above the toilet) when I lived in Japan; he is an absolute treasure.
@liltick102
@liltick102 2 ай бұрын
Same - 11 for me, Miller is so important to me.. I wish I could have lived during his existence to write to him.. luckily, Yale sent me a ton of his original drafts / letters etc, I bought his first prints all around Paris and Canada, I have so much to go through of his - but still, it’s a shame we don’t seem to have many recordings.. Thankfully though; a ton of written work. And this gem interview, a return to it like a sacred doctrine.
@glenadlin
@glenadlin Жыл бұрын
All that striving for artistic honour and honesty only to cheat on his family and wife.
@isaac-ne4ox
@isaac-ne4ox Жыл бұрын
My brother and my twin!
@StephenDedalus74
@StephenDedalus74 Жыл бұрын
Hearing his voice always gives me hope and energy so that I can keep on fighting for my dreams :)
@lanceash
@lanceash Жыл бұрын
At 6:00 MIller begins talking about men and women socializing together. What he says reminds me of something Kenneth Clark said; he said that he found that the level of civility in a room or at a gathering goes down when the men and women separate from each other and only communicate among themselves. I think this is true. In a civilized society like Europe in general or France in specific, the men and women feel relaxed in each other's company, free to talk with respect for the other.
@reaganwiles_art
@reaganwiles_art Жыл бұрын
What a voice
@reaganwiles_art
@reaganwiles_art Жыл бұрын
Miller has meant more to me than any other writer. He straight up stole Celine's lick; he was casting about...and rewrote Cancer after reading Celine (in French!), or more likely learned Celine through his famous conversations. But Miller is the lover, Celine the excoriator without mitigation, of mankind.
@downhlracr
@downhlracr Жыл бұрын
These interviews really put his writing into a much better perspective for me. He is deeply philosophical in a way that re-frames how you think about your own life - in a way that is actually meaningful, accurate, contemporary and lasting. It's strange because I could listen to this forever - and I find his writing addicting. I love and relate to what he is saying. Yet, I actually don't have the feeling that I would want to spend time with him in real life. I want to appreciate him from afar. I sort of want to love him, but not like him. I don't know, but what a contributor to our collective experience.
@liltick102
@liltick102 2 ай бұрын
Interesting, I would love to chat and this highly increases that feeling However- I panned my headphones to the right, and am listening to my wall, as if I am eavesdropping to take this relisten in better... from afar is also the notion of wtvr tf I’m doing here.
@udomatthiasdrums5322
@udomatthiasdrums5322 Жыл бұрын
still love all THREE!!
@kervilou5905
@kervilou5905 Жыл бұрын
génius !
@SUMERUP
@SUMERUP Жыл бұрын
and what a wonderful painting this is..
@SUMERUP
@SUMERUP Жыл бұрын
my beloved old master.. you're indeed that forgotten genius I once read and admired..
@johnnyjohnny8636
@johnnyjohnny8636 Жыл бұрын
He makes it seem so easy, yet there's only a few that rise like him. What a strange conundrum.
@Jetsetfastfood
@Jetsetfastfood Жыл бұрын
I stopped believing in God after watching films on the holocaust. If God existed why would he let this happen? If ever a time to intervene, that was the time. God does not exist.
@victormorgado5318
@victormorgado5318 Жыл бұрын
I found him to be the first genuine and honest voice of a "friend" who understood. I felt the loneliness he describes in the 1956 interview posted in you tube., concerning the artists and poets of the 19 century face to face to the new materialistic progress and rationalism of that period when it all began. I felt the isolation within my puerto rican culture and within the american culture and the marginalization of minorities during the 1960s and 1970s, as well as the struggle of the counter culture vs war and materialism, so Henry Miller was a welcomed voice from an elder who we could trust back then. I perhaps followed his example in a both, tragic and fruitful ways. When I discovered his paintings in a college library, his narration, the colors, his attitude gave me the courage to return to painting full time seven years later, his self imposed exile in Paris, was the tragic side for me but at the end it was good as well. I quit my permanent easy super well payed job in Brooklyn, New york in 1984, to embarked for France where I eventuatlly remained ten years as well. Ten years later I returned to New York and I got my easy job as an interpreter back , and continued working for 30 years, rounding up a period of 40 years back to back since that adventure began. I am now retired and ready for my promise land...
@stefanobonoli8783
@stefanobonoli8783 Жыл бұрын
I have the original video tape. ❤
@veldt7038
@veldt7038 Жыл бұрын
Real sick fucking guy
@GeoffreyLewis09
@GeoffreyLewis09 Жыл бұрын
all fire, all radiance
@canoerepairshop
@canoerepairshop 2 жыл бұрын
They stand or fall
@rickartdefoix1298
@rickartdefoix1298 2 жыл бұрын
I suppose I can't evaluate properly Miller since haven't read his best works. Did not read The Colossus of Maroussi and neither Tropic of Cancer, so my criteria can't be what it should. Instead, I choose to read Plexus and then Sexus, and part of Nexus. So I got the opinion that it was an author that hadn't much to say. Inspite of his affair with Anais Nin or even his trio with her and the famous June, while them in Paris. June and then Mona, would say were the women of his life. Miller wrote about his life, quite a crazy one, would say. Although he is a good entertainment now and then, he also became a tad boring or his books were too long, for what they tell. Their writing style seemed a bit a careless one to me. Sexus is a terribly "hot" book. That perhaps everybody should read. It's a book in which he is all time telling about his lazy days, full of sex and leisure time. I got the idea of him being just a hedonistic man. One who lived for fun and pleasure. Which is nothing wrong, but maybe if it's just that, it may not deserve to be told. In this sense, I never understood well how could he have been so close to Anais (you may think, mainly because of sex) and then to Durrell. Being Durrell a deeper and more sensitive character than him. Who knows. It goes so much about his sex feats and affairs, that one may think he is exaggerating the whole. Or maybe boasting about it. Anyway, both Plexus and Sexus are an easy reading, and sometimes, interesting too. When read it, being a teen, thought Sexus must have been a real challenge, for old puritan morality, to accept its publishing. He indeed broke schemes, and in this sense, yes, you can say he mattered. For it really tells in a very crude, explicit manner, everything related with sex you could imagine. It works as a "heater" for every one reading it, have no doubt about it. It's also funny, sometimes. But the idea I got about Miller as a writer, after these couple of books, is that surely he hadn't much to say, after all. A bit the same that I thought when read Buckowsky, some time after. But nowadays, knowing I haven't read what I should of Miller, I admit I was probably wrong, when thinking that. Keep thinking I must read The Colossus and Tropic of Cancer, to see if I can change my mind or improve my idea of Miller. 🙏
@reaganwiles_art
@reaganwiles_art 2 жыл бұрын
You feel that you're carrying your own self all the time as it were
@meghbhavsar3968
@meghbhavsar3968 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting these clips.
@danmartinazzi
@danmartinazzi 2 жыл бұрын
Sound massive with 3 pedals! ;) Great humble master ... for the delay part... "maybe sounds exactly the same!" :D maybe i dont need this one either :D
@christopherrobbins9985
@christopherrobbins9985 2 жыл бұрын
This is magnificent...thanks a million for uploading. Henry Miller was/is a true artist.
@SuperNesmaster
@SuperNesmaster 2 жыл бұрын
at 11:16 the interviewer mentions wiesmann. Who is this man? I cannot find him on the internet.
@thensaidJacob
@thensaidJacob 2 жыл бұрын
This is Gold