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Joe Cummings

Joe Cummings is cool. Anyone who doesn’t wear a red MAGA cap can figure that out. Of course, that brings out the haters as well as the appreciators. We live in a binary, polarized world much of the time. I was in the Joe C hater camp, once. I had read that the Louisiana born and Army brat Cummings, best known for his pioneer days writing at Lonely Planet and Ronnie Wood lifestyle, didn’t like many things about Americans or maybe it was America? Well, fuck him, right? I am an American. So let me not like Joe, first, even if I had never met the guy at the time.

I’ve changed camps, now, with the help of a quote from Voltaire:

“Appreciation is a wonderful thing. It makes what is excellent in others belong to us as well.”

Let’s face it, grudgingly if it makes you feel better, Joe Cummings does a lot of things well and worse yet he’s made a good living and a good life for himself during his lengthy one-man show. Who does he think he is, making money from writing? No one does that anymore or so it seems. Joe’s a self-admitted 1%er when it comes to writing – I’m less sure about his portfolio. On top of that the guy wanders all over the planet he helped emancipate and never gets lost. There was a time when I used to think that, with a break here or a chance meeting there, Joe Cummings could have been Anthony Bourdain – all whiskey wishes and raw ant-egg salad dreams. Like so many times in my life I got it ass-backwards. With a few different decisions made, perhaps Tony could have traveled a more content and longer path? We’ll never know. Game Over for Bourdain. Joe’s and Keith Richards’ lives keep streaming on, with a few tolerable demons along for the ride.

I’ve read a fair amount of Joe Cummings’ work. Who hasn’t picked up one of his many over-priced coffee table books in a bookstore and perused it for a good-long while before setting it back down and then moving on? My favorite is, Sacred Tattoos of Thailand – Exploring the Magic, Masters and Mystery of Sak Yant.  Joe did the writing and Dan White, who died too soon in 2012, created the photographs. I was too cheap to buy the book but it gave me a lot of pleasure. Mainly because it was so superior to the competition out there. You can also watch Joe do a TedX talk, filmed in Chiang Mai titled Spells & Sigils: The Magic & Mastery of Thai Sacred Tattoos. Joe explains that tattoos, once the domain of sailors, circus performers, and gangsters, have a very spiritual, protective nature in Thailand. They’ve also moved upstream into HiSo/Celebrity territory.

 

Joe Cummings receiving a protective tattoo in the same placement he later recommended to Anthony Bourdain

My regular reading of Joe Cummings includes his monthly column in Bangkok 101 Magazine, appropriately titled Joe’s Bangkok. Joe’s writing often times reminds me of a professional baseball umpire calling a perfect game. Joe’s great at what he does. He calls the balls and strikes of any story flawlessly, and as he sees them, yet at the end of the game or in his case the article or book, you haven’t noticed that he was there. He rarely becomes an integral part of the story. The reason you don’t notice him is because he never makes a mistake. It is what I think makes him that rarest of things in the scribe world –  an in demand writer. His latest book, which I have not read is, The Hunt Bangkok . It’s a book that helps you experience the sprawling metropolis of Bangkok the way the locals do.

I’ve come to believe that while Joe C is no regular Joe his spirit and mine have a lot in common besides our surname. In fact it’s eerie, the amount of commonalities we share. Almost in a Lincoln/Kennedy kind of way. Here are just a few:

Joe Cummings holds a Master’s degree from Cal Berkeley.

I was born in Berkeley, California.

Joe Cummings speaks and reads Thai language fluently.

My wife speaks and reads Thai fluently.

Joe Cummings is beanpole thin.

I used to be beanpole thin.

Joe’s dad was a Golden Gloves boxer with an undefeated record.

My dad took me to a Golden Gloves boxing match once.

Joe Cummings plays regularly in a band at live music venues.

I listen to bands regularly at live music venues.

I could go on but you get the idea. Like most people we are more alike than we are different.

I did finally meet Joe long after becoming Facebook friends, at a live music pub run by an amiable Brit. Prior to that chance meeting our chats were always cordial and Joe was always helpful when I needed help. I respect our similarities and our differences. Our musical tastes don’t always align but even here Joe comes across accommodating enough. On the subject of music he wrote recently, “Critics be damned. You like what you like. ” It’s a good attitude and I suspect it applies to Joe for critics of all kinds.

One of the subjects I chatted with Joe about was interviews. He’s on record as stating that he doesn’t do many. And that seems to be the case. For a guy who has shown the Bangkok ropes to the likes of Mick Jagger and Steven Tyler and tailored those threads accordingly, Joe would make anybody’s interview A list in Southeast Asia. I thought of asking Joe for an interview but concluded that that would put him in a position of having to say, yes or no. And thoughtful guy that I am, I decided to spare him that choice.

It hasn’t kept me from coming up with some questions I would like to ask Joe, however, so here goes. My phantom interview with Joe C.:

KC: Your father was Colonel Cummings in the Army. You were a free spirit during the Vietnam War. How were you similar to your dad and how were you different? Tell me a poignant father/son story about conflict. Tell another father/son story about bonding, please.

JC:

KC: When you graduated from Berkeley you were said to have had at least two job offers: one from the CIA and one from Lonely Planet. Tell us why we shouldn’t believe that you accepted both simultaneously? It worked for the Paris Review after all.

JC:

KC: Name your three favorite guitar players whom are living and your three favorite that have died and what you like, specifically, about each, musically or personality wise.

JC:

KC: Who is your tailor in Bangkok and where do buy your shoes? What was the occasion for your last tailored suit?

JC:

KC: Where, if anywhere, did Anthony Bourdain go wrong? What were your thoughts and feelings when you heard the news?

JC:

KC: What exercise do you do besides walking? Alone, I mean. What’s your best tip on how to drink alcohol and remain thin?

JC:

KC: Do you ever regret picking up the cigarette/whisky combo habit or do you wax philosophical like Christopher Hitchens used to?

JC:

KC: What were your last meals under $3.00 and over $100.00 and where were you?

JC:

KC: Do you prefer asking questions or answering questions? Why?

JC:

KC: Musicians or chefs in Bangkok. Who are the bigger rock stars? Name a maestro or two.

JC:

KC: What music streaming service do you use and recommend?

JC:

KC: What’s your favorite live music venue in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Hanoi, Jakarta, Rangoon, and Bali?

JC:

KC: What’s the dumbest question you’ve ever been asked in an interview, this question and this interview excluded.

JC:

KC: Heaven, reincarnation, or, this is it? Choose one and tell me why it’s preferable to the others.

JC:

KC: Who were your mentors and/or idols in life during Act I, Act II, and Act III?

JC:

Thanks, Joe. Lets do this again sometime. I’d ask you a question about why you don’t like America, but your answer would make too much sense.

This, of course, is not the greatest Joe C interview ever. That was to get the attention of your eyeballs. That interview was done by Joe’s longtime friend and fellow All-Star musician, Keith Nolan in 2016, It’s part of Keith’s Beyond the Lines series found on YouTube and aired in the past on cable television in Bangkok. Truth be told, I like to interview authors but I don’t always enjoy or even watch the Beyond the Lines interviews. Listening to authors talk about their books can be a drag. I prefer their written words. However, this is my favorite interview in the series. It comes across as two friends, musicians, and adventurers having a good time.

Dizzy Dean is credited with saying, “It ain’t braggin’ if it’s the truth.” Satchel Paige, another baseball player, famously said, “Don’t look back. Something might be gaining on you”. I like Joe Cummings for a lot of reasons. Mostly because he tells the truth and doesn’t look back. They are good rules for living. While others, including me, are arguing the merits or demerits of an inconsequential person or moment, Joe is just as likely to be flying into a Chiang Rai airport in a 12-seater prop plane in order to visit a biker-buddy at his bar. Joe knows. He knows what’s important and what’s not important. To him. And I think that is way cool. Stick around and enjoy the best Joe Cummings interview – ever. By his friend, Keith Nolan.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Keith Nolan

(Photograph by Bernie Basley)

Keith Nolan appears in Chapter 1, page 1 and paragraph 1 of my book Bangkok Beat. That should come as no great surprise as Keith Nolan appears at a lot of places in Bangkok, Thailand as well as many other venues throughout the Kingdom. He has toured extensively throughout Southeast Asia for over two decades. There may be a harder working man in Bangkok show business but I have yet to meet him.

It’s been said you never get a second chance to make a first impression. It’s been over three years now since I first met Keith. I lumbered into Checkinn99 on a Sunday afternoon as a complete unknown and Keith made a memorable, and favorable, impression on me. When I would return he would remember me. The smile and interest were always genuine. Sure, he had a job to do but he found time to enjoy that job and enjoy the people and music around him as well.

In addition to his regular Sunday gig at Checkinn99 where he jams with the ever flowing jazz musicians, he also takes over General Manager responsibilities for Chris Catto-Smith that day to give Chris some needed time with with his wife, Mook and family, before Keith heads out to his second Sunday gig at Spasso at the Grand Hyatt Erawan. Keith plays Hammond organ and sings vocals for his Blues band, Keith Nolan’s Love Gone Wrong,(now called Cotton Mouth )which makes many weekly appearances at popular nightlife venues in Bangkok, including Apoteka on Sukhumvit Soi 11, Whisgars on Sukhumvit 23, Vertigo Bar at The Banyan Tree on Sathorn Road, and Molly Malone’s Irish Pub on Soi Convent to name just some. When he’s not playing the classically trained musician is composing, either for his corporate clients or for his own creative streaming sales. He’s written everything from New Age, to Funk, Blues, Spa music, and Horror movie background tunes.

Keith Nolan loves everything he does, even when it goes wrong, and that includes his main passion, the Blues. As Keith states, “The Blues is a state of mind!” The Dublin, Ireland native has lived in Bangkok, Thailand for 16 years but counts many friends throughout the world. His 5 years in Vietnam and 10 years living in Australia added heavily to his ample friend base. He is the antithesis of the musician joke: he’s a successful musician and a successful entrepreneur. If you have ever seen and heard Keith play it is a given that he is an artist as well. A perfect blend of talent and showmanship. There is plenty of steak and sizzle on his very full plate. Keith’s regular band mates include James Bell on bass / backing vocals, and Andy Lymn on drums. Additional musicians that have appeared with Keith and the band, first formed in 2002, include Warren Fryer, Wing Jinggit, Sawai, Takashi, John Dooley, Nils Anderson, and Anton Fenech.

 

In his spare time (unlike the masses, Keith appears not to need sleep ) he keeps busy with not one but two cable T.V. shows. The main purpose of this blog post is to focus on Keith’s latest cable T.V venture, Beyond the Lines, where Keith interviews many notable authors who either make Bangkok their home or live and write extensively about the City of Angels. I thought it would be beneficial for the readers of Thailand Footprint to have access to all of the interviews Keith has done in one blog post.

Keith Nolan is one of the most likable people I have met in my fifteen years in Thailand. Maybe it’s as simple as the Irish accent. In a city which can lack humility yet be short on talent, Keith has plenty of both. Refreshing in this day and age of Kanye West like personalities.

I best get on with the show. I present to you, in reverse chronological order, the interviews of Keith Nolan for his cable T.V. Show, Beyond the Lines with my short commentary on each interview:

Bangkok based author Jim Algie is the latest author to sit down with Keith Nolan to talk about music, literature, Punk Rock 101 and a plethora of other topics …

Tim Hallinan sits down with Keith to talk about the writing game ….

 

 

 

 

It could be because this is Keith’s most recent interview but I feel this is the most interesting one in the series so far. Joe Cummings doesn’t give a lot of television interviews and authors, by their own admission, are not always the most interesting people in the world on camera, but you get the feeling that Keith got Joe in his comfort zone, perhaps because they are both capable musicians, more likely because they are long-time friends who have shared stages as well as the trials, joys, and tribulations of being expats in multiple countries for seven plus decades between them. Joe is most widely known as the Lonely Planet Travel Guide writer for many years and the author of the critically acclaimed, Sacred Tattoos of Thailand which includes the terrific photographs of the late Dan White. Joe has over 40 books to his list of credits – all in the non-fiction variety. The U.C. Berkeley grad and former Peace Corps volunteer recounts many Lonely Planet memories, his flirtations with the world of fiction, and provides his take on the literary 1%. Dizzy Dean once said, “It ain’t braggin’ if it’s the truth”, and Joe Cummings speaks the truth in a very candid 20 + minute interview.

Hugh Gallagher is man of many talents and alter egos. He once took the stage of the Apollo Theater in Harlem as a pop star from Antwerp named Von Von Von and killed it – check it out on YouTube. How many white guys do you know who have appeared center stage at the Apollo? In this interview Hugh talks with Keith mostly about his latest book, Yo Ching: Ancient Knowledge for Streets Today. Published less than a year ago, it has its true believers and has been chalking up 5 Star Reviews at Amazon. Find out about True Player and more with Hugh and Keith.

Jim Newport has worked in Hollywood as an Emmy nominated production designer for both film and television. He is best known for his Vampire of Siam Series. In this interview Jim talks about his latest novel, Yankee Dragon with Keith. Jim also shares a passion for the Blues and performs as a Blues singer under the name Jimmy Fame in Phuket. Over the years he has toured with Eric Burdon and The Animals, Jimmy Witherspoon, and Robben Ford. Jim is a regular performer at the Phuket International Blues Festival.

One year ago I had the opportunity to interview John Burdett for the Bangkok Post. John has a sharp mind to say the least. He is best known for his Sonchai Jitpleecheep Royal Thai Police Detective series, which started with Bangkok 8. The most recent in the series is The Bangkok Asset, which took a futuristic, science fiction turn. I thought it was the best in the six novel series, other readers thought the sci fi turn was too severe for their liking. John enjoys a large and international audience with a loyal following.

What’s not to like about Dean Barrett? Erudite, self-deprecating, talented, and honest. As I wrote in Bangkok Beat he writes mysteries, among many other types of books, but he’s not mysterious. Dean remembers a different Bangkok but he’s too busy enjoying the present to be a bitter Bob of an expat. As Dean says he’s seen Thailand through many eyes. Dean has been a writer, a photographer, a traveler, a military man, and a poet. His latest novel is Pop Daryl’s Last Case, set in New York City, which is one of my favorites. It still has an Asian angle with Chinese legends and Gods involved. Dean and Keith have a comfortable conversation as they recap the decades that Dean has spent in Thailand and how it might be difficult to return to a normal society.

The one and only Jerry Hopkins sits down with Keith. Jerry is now 80 years old, he has dual legendary status in the U.S.A. and Thailand. The one time correspondent and two stint contributing editor for Rolling Stone Magazine, Jerry is best known for the rock biographies of Jim Morrison of The Doors, Elvis Presley, and Jimi Hendrix. The last time I saw Jerry he was still wearing blue suede shoes. A journalistic pro, Jerry Hopkins lives life to the fullest. Check out Jerry’s author page at Amazon. He doesn’t have a clinker in his entire back list.

Keith sits down with one of the most prolific and well known of the Bangkok based authors, Christopher G. Moore. Christopher has penned over thirty books including the Vincent Calvino Crime Series which has been translated in over a dozen languages and won international awards, including a prestigious Shamus Award for Asia Hand. In addition, Christopher is the author of the well known Smiles trilogy and three books of essays. With a little luck we may be seeing Vincent Calvino in a moving picture in the future. Christopher has seen a lot in his thirty plus years in Bangkok including many technological advancements which he always writes into his novels to perfection.

James A. Newman has tapped out over one million words and ridden many a city bus during his forty trips around the sun. Newman is the author of the Joe Dylan series and will have a new novel released this month by his publishing house, Spanking Pulp Press. The new release is called Fun City Punch, a futuristic look at a Pattaya based city of crime, debauchery and, get this, no money. The father of three boys is dedicated to his craft.

So that’s it. If I forgot anyone, send me an email. I thought there was a Timothy Hallinan interview? Send me the link if it’s out there. And the next time you might think that you are busy, think of Keith Nolan and perhaps think again. I hope you enjoy one or more of these interviews by Keith Nolan for Beyond the Lines. Check out his Facebook page for Cotton Mouth and give it some Like. Or send Keith a Facebook Friend request if you want to keep up with his many gigs or go to Checkinn99 on Sunday afternoon and say hello. He’s friendly enough and the Irish accent is easy on the ears.

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Curiosity may well have killed a lot of cats. But I suspect those cats lived their lives in Sammy Davis Jr. years. Wandering around back alleys and tunnels the sort of which used to exist behind Checkinn99. Those cats didn’t die sitting on or on top of a couch – more likely they were on an awning that gave way in Soi Cowboy. Last Sunday there was a celebration at Checkinn99 and the catalyst was the publication of my very first book, BANGKOK BEAT. Albert Einstein has a few good quotes about curiosity. One is: “The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing.”

Curiosity is what built Bangkok Beat. From the first time I met Chris Coles on Soi Cowboy over a decade ago to my first two lunches with Christopher G. Moore. The curiosity continued when I met Collin Piprell in Ari neighborhood to discuss writing, among other things, and later had a meet-up at Cactus bar where I met Dean Barrett and James A. Newman for the first time. Memorable meetings for me. For them commonplace.

Newman would later host Night of Noir I in April of 2013 where I would learn of the noir poetry of John Gartland among the many readers that night. James Newman would, a few days later, invite me to a meet-up at Bus Stop on Sukhumvit Soi 4 where I would meet John Gartland and his new friend and photographer Eric Nelson. Through Eric I would later meet a four time Muay Ying champion by the name of Melissa Ray. Through Melissa I would meet other champions.

Newman being Newman he decided to hold a second Night of Noir less than 9 months later. That night I met the novelists Cara Black and John Burdett among others. A photographer was there that night and he took some amazing photographs – his name is Alasdair McLeod.

I read Tone Deaf in Bangkok a book of non-fiction written by a middle aged American woman and author named Janet Brown, about her adventures in Thailand as a traveler and expat during those times. There are female expats – Janet reminds us of this with truthful writing. I got to know her via email and we would later have dinner together. She brought her friend along, Jim Algie, author of a book of non-fiction called Bizarre Thailand and a book of short stories called the The Phantom Lover and other Thrilling Tales of Thailand. When I stopped off to meet Janet Brown with my wife in Seattle in the summer of 2014 at Elliot Bay Book Company she introduced me to another Seattle resident, Kevin Conroy, who happened to be a regular traveler to Bangkok and it turns out Checkinn99 for over 35 years. There is a picture of Kevin in Checkinn99 from the 1980s in Bangkok Beat which he allowed me to use.

At Checkinn99 I met for the first time Chris Catto-Smith, Jerry Hopkins, Kevin Wood, Ted Lewand, Keith Nolan, William Wait, Clifton Hardy, Chris Wegoda, Peter Montalbano, Steve Cannon, Mark Fenn, John Daysh, Bernard Servello, MOTH, Mama Noi and Uncle Wat. I introduced Timothy Hallinan to the place because he asked me to and I was delighted to do so. I introduced the author Matt Carrell to Checkinn99 because I wanted to. Tim and Matt are both curious people. I like that about them. Before long I realized I had enough material to write a book. So I asked Colin Cotterill, the well known novelist and talented cartoonist living in the south of Thailand if he could draw a book cover for me. And he did. Right away. Damn him. Now I had a great book cover, plenty of material but no book. Life is in the details. I needed a hook for my book. An anchor really. The Checkinn99 history was my anchor – ably assisted by Thom Locke with his great short story – The Beauty of Isaan. Thom and I shared some early and fun times at Checkinn99, just as we did last Sunday when he and his family flew in from Northern Thailand especially for this event. The same James Newman noted above did the introduction for Bangkok Beat while John Gartland compiled an excellent chapter of noir poems. I cannot imagine the book without the contribution of any of these three writers.

I am going to let the pictures tell the rest of the story of a remarkable run of events that really took off when I created this blog four days before Night of Noir 1 and wrote my first blog post: I Am Not A Writer And Why The World Needs Them. That was less than 2 1/2 years ago. Last Sunday, my friend and actor John Marengo, whom I also met for the first time at Checkinn99, read that post, which is included in Bangkok Beat, to a good crowd who came to what was much more than a book launch – it was a celebration of the people, history and stories of Checkinn99, Bangkok and important people and events in my life. Better now than later. I know what’s waiting for me in the long run.

Bangkok Beat became available for purchase as an eBook on Amazon today – the paperback came out June 8th, 2015. But what I learned from writing this book is that it has very little to do with selling books. What it has to do with is more aptly described in Jim Algie’s story, Tsunami –  found in his Phantom Lover and Other Thrilling Tales of Thailand. You’ll learn to appreciate the value of friends and a campfire in Jim’s book and be reaffirmed that in the end it really does come down to good friends, family loyalties and the simple dignity of doing honest work and receiving honest pay. When I think of Chris Catto-Smith, Mook, Kiko, Cherry, Donna, Grace, April, Jesse and all the staff at Checkinn99 I’d say they are batting 1,000.

It’s not about tweets or Twitter followers. I’m certain of that.

Okay, enough with the sentimentality. The following is Bangkok Beat – the Live Version – July 26th, 2015. If you weren’t there, enjoy. If you were there, enjoy it again.

Anatomy of a Celebration

BookBanner

Door

Welcome to the time tunnel

CliftonWilliam

Have the Sunday Jazz going on when you start – no down time when Clifton Hardy and Dr. William Wait are in the house. Both Clifton and William are featured in Bangkok Beat with William getting his own chapter.

Kevin Cummings looks on as Alan Parkhouse of the Bangkok Post shakes hands with Bangkok author Dean Barrett

Be very pleased when the author who wrote your back cover blurb, Dean Barrett shows up early along with Alan Parkhouse of the Bangkok Post. Dean Barrett has his own Chapter in Bangkok Beat: Man of Mystery? Yes and No. Thanks to all the media members who came early and stayed late.

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Sign some books now …

Kevin Cummings Bangkok Beat Book Launch

and again …

JohnKevinStartShow

Turn the show over to some old show biz veterans – John Gartland and Kevin Wood

KevinJohnQB

Let Kevin Wood and John from Queen Bee do their thing

JimALgieMelissa

Make sure the guests get along – author, journalist and editor Jim Algie speaking with retired Muay Thai Champion Melissa Ray. Both guests are featured in two chapters each of Bangkok Beat

KevinAlasdair

Make sure your friend and photographer Alasdair Mcleod is never far away. Alasdair’s photographs are featured in Bangkok Beat and he has one of his poem’s published in there – City Pulse.

NelsonPhotographer

Have another friend and photographer, Eric Nelson in the house in case Alasdair’s battery dies. Eric gets a Chapter in Bangkok Beat called – Keeping Photography Alive in Bangkok and his photographs are also featured.

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Convince the affable Keith Nolan to hang around in-between his two paying gigs that day. Keith shown with Guest of Honor Mama Noi

MamaNJohnF

Have John Fengler fly down from Chiang Mai on a Saturday, wear his timeless cotton shirt to Checkinn99 and create some Bob Hope buzz on social media

AlgieWegoda

Try not to be boring while talking to Jim Algie and Chris Wegoda. Chris is featured in The Rocky Horror Show Chapter as he starred as Dr. Frank-N-Furter in the Checkinn99 adaptation. Jim is the author of Bizarre Thailand and The Phantom Lover and Other Thrilling Tales of Thailand and is one of five major contributors to Americans in Thailand.

ChrisMelissaKevin

Have MOTH come out and do three quick songs. Chris Catto-Smith, Melissa Ray & Kevin Cummings

Grace

Including one rap number from Fast & Furious – Featuring the fast and fabulous Grace

Kevin Cummings and Chris Catto-Smith at launch of Bangkok Beat

Chris Catto-Smith on the microphone. Kevin Cummings enjoying the show.

KevinChris

Try not too talk to much. Can’t win them all.

KevinCummingsMelissaStage

Bring up Muay Ying Melissa Ray and present her with her All Time Hits Award for most traffic on this web site for a single-day and all time. Melissa Ray to steal a line from Muhammad Ali, is simply, “The Greatest of All Time.” On Thailand Footprint and I’m sure her Mom would agree.

KevinJim

Next up was Jim Algie being presented with his Reincarnation Lifetime Achievement Award – well earned

MOTHBB

Music of the Heart Band were then presented with copies of Bangkok Beat – No one in the audience looked at the book

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Bring back the Big Dog for the evening John Gartland as the readings began

NewmanReading

James A. Newman reading his introduction to Bangkok Beat.

MarengoReading

Terrific job by John Marengo reading I AM NOT A WRITER and Why the World Needs Them written by Kevin Cummings

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John Gartland reading The Beauty of Isaan as the author Thom H. Locke and others look on followed by The Eye AKA The Mamba Hotel loosely based on Checkinn99 and its characters. A Chapter of John’s verse is contained in Bangkok Beat

Crowd Scene

Have a packed and appreciative audience which included the author of a stellar novel, Hunters in the Dark, sitting at the bar

KevinMothSing

Bring Back Kevin Wood and MOTH

KevinMoth

K Wood killing it – long time now. L to R: Jesse, Cherry, Donna, Grace, Kevin Wood, Kiko

Algie99

Check in on special guest Victoria Kirkwood and her date to see how they are doing

FenglerJohnQueenBee

John Fengler and John the owner of Queen Bee during a break in the action

PipEric

Collin Piprell an author, an editor, a mentor and a friend with another friend, Eric Nelson

KevinChrisColor

Allow for a moment at the end of a long journey

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My wife and family who had been upstairs having dinner with Melissa Ray finally arrive. It was a good night. One I have no plans to repeat for 2-3 years anyway. If you got this far you deserve some music from Music of the Heart Band. Go back and have a listen if you haven’t yet or do it again. Why not? If you buy Bangkok Beat today or whenever that would be great. If you don’t that will be okay too. But if you find yourself in Bangkok city and have never been to Checkinn99, do stop in. You never know when greatness will be in the house. Thanks to all the great people who came out on July 26, 2015. Another memorable date in Checkinn99 history, which began in 1957.

bangkok beat

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Special Thanks to the numerous Bangkok Soi Dog #1 Tshirts in Checkinn99 that night – art by Chris Coles

AND A SPECIAL SPECIAL THANKS TO PHOTOGRAPHERS ERIC NELSON AND ALASDAIR McLEOD

I’ll get attribution right one of these days.

Selected highlights from Bangkok Beat book launch as put together by Alasdair McLeod. Very useful guy, Alasdair is …

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I met the artist, J.D. Strange (James Dennison Strange) under a starless sky over a basket of chicken livers washed down with some pints of dark ale at an outdoor eatery, catty-corner from Queen Victoria Pub. The burned out second floor window at the bar across the soi had been replaced and a cat was licking one of the paint chips left behind on the red awning. Leaded or unleaded, I wasn’t sure. Foot traffic was picking up and so were the green and yellows. Strange seemed more interested in a busty woman in long heels and short shorts and a nerdy gal, wearing white framed glasses and eating deep fried larvae than this interviewer. But this wasn’t my first rodeo. No. On with it, as Christopher Minko once told me.

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KC: Someone, a long time ago, gave me some good advice about women. He said, “Tell the pretty woman she’s smart and the smart woman she’s pretty.” It made sense to me at the time.

JD: That’s pretty smart advice.

KC: You’re a writer.

JD: Thanks. So are you.

KC: Well, I’m not expecting a call from Elyse Cheney anytime soon. Thanks, though. You, on the other hand, have written four novels in the Joe Dylan Detective series, not to mention Lizard City with Johnny Coca Cola, have a screen option out on The White Flamingo and have published tons of short stories, which garnered you numerous rejection slips in the process. All years before your 40th birthday.

JD: I have. Rejection slips are my badges of honor.

KC: Your story, Pacific Coast Highway, in Paul D. Brazill’s Exiles: An Outsider Anthology really hit home. And all the proceeds go to charity. Good on Paul and you. You’ve even published a book about Buddhism under a nom de plume, so that leads us, naturally, to music.

Exiles-An-Outsider-Anthology-by-Paul-D.-Brazill-200x300

JD: Naturally.

KC: Can you be like Tom Petty and do some free fallin’ about the musical influences in your life from the time you held your first Atari joystick to what you listened to with your eggs this morning? 

JD: Okay. Let’s see. I thank my parents for introducing me to The Beatles, Stones, Squeeze, The Smiths, Neil Young, Leonard Cohen and many more bands and songwriters that I wouldn’t have discovered so early otherwise. In fact my grandparents are Beatles fans, God bless them. I discovered The Velvet Underground and Nico through my friend Scott who bought the record after watching the Oliver Stone movie The Doors based on the book No One Here Gets Out Alive written by none other than Jerry Hopkins who was at the last Night of Noir event in Bangkok, albeit fleetingly. So it all moves in circles.

As a teenager and during my early twenties opening my CD cabinet was like opening an angry teenager’s diary. There was a lot of dark stuff in there. Music for a New Society by John Cale. Early Beck, Sonic Youth and God Machine for a stateside trip to hell. The Auteurs and Pulp with their wonderfully British brand of fallen actor pop star gloom. Suede with their glorious drugs in a council flat chic. Dinosaur Jr with their weed inspired fuzz box meltdown and the Jesus and Mary Chain for an absolute nihilistic hit of the dark stuff. I took Metal Machine Music by Lou Reed seriously – it was just a record of noise and feedback. It almost ruined his career yet Reed toured the album shortly before his death. So, there you go. I like risk takers with dangerous minds. On the back of the Metal Machine Music LP is that wonderfully spikey quote: “My week beats your year.”

Early 90s in London I went to hundreds of gigs and a handful of festivals and played in a band as a guitarist, singer and song-writer. We were lucky enough to have a studio and a producer (all on a government loan!) and I wish I still had some of those recordings. We practiced solidly and spent a lot of time recording and experimenting with samples and effects and basically monkeying around with all the equipment at our disposal. Thousands of rehearsals over a number of years and we never even signed a record deal! We landed in the local paper and our live shows were unmitigated disasters as I had chronic stage fright and a weakness for Russian vodka. I love rock and roll and back then in my youthful naivety I had the narrow belief that the only thing I was any good at was writing and recording songs. This was nonsense. I was actually quite good at other things too, like smoking, drinking beer, fumbling around in the dark reading Burroughs and watching Easy Rider and generally acting the fool my friends.

Right now I like Big Fat White Family. Tom Vater turned me onto them. Touch the Leather is an awesome track.

KC: I’ll check it out. Vater is irreverent and informed, I’ve read. And a great comedian. Speaking of objectivity, can an artist be objective about his own work? ​

JD: Nah… Shane McGowen said during a brief period of coherence that art is like throwing shit at the wall. Some of it sticks and some of it doesn’t and the thrower really doesn’t know which way it will splat. I’ve struck out more than I’ve hit. A wise man realizes he’s a fool just fumbling around in the dark. I don’t cling to praise and I don’t cling to criticism and I am certainly not objective about my own work. Writing a novel is like bringing up a child. You love your child more than anything in the world but you know deep down inside you made more than a few mistakes along the way.

KC: Who decides whether someone is an apprentice, a craftsman or a true artist? Is it his peers, the public or the almighty sales figures?

JD: Peer acceptance is very important to me personally although I reckon in the end the audience decides, word of mouth decides, the readers are the real story makers, writers just kind of lay out the path. A promotional push can get the ball rolling but if the ball is bad it won’t sell after the first few months. Then there comes one who just breathes talent and nothing can stop him or her. He or she needs no promotion, word of mouth spreads like wild fire. Very rare, but it happens.

KC: Give me an example.

JD: A good example would be (Henry) Miller.

Henry Miller

Henry Miller

KC: Isn’t it possible that if Henry Miller had not hooked up with some well-heeled sponsors in Paris no-one would have ever heard of him? Did Henry get lucky or did he create his own luck? 

JD: Miller was certainly not lucky for much of his life if the books I’ve read are accurate. Miller published in France, and then Barney at Grove Press took a risk and put his books out Stateside. Thus the circus began; scandal, court case, and huge sales. I can’t see anything scandalous in Miller’s writing personally. I just see good prose and wonderful flights of imagination. When he flows he really flows like some kind of possession is at play, you know? He would enjoy success if he started writing now. He was a good writer who followed the simple discipline that one word should follow the next as if it were supposed to be right there.

If you study the careers of successful writers in depth and read the biographies you will see that they just kept plugging away until at least one person enjoyed what they were doing just enough to sustain the magic. Some of the great novelists were writing for just one person, normally a lover or a friend, or quite often, themselves. It seems that financial success and critical recognition for any artist normally comes later in life, if at all. Some people luck it and some have talent, but usually it’s just good old hard work over many, many years.

KC: A friend of mine said, as we discussed musicians, “There is more talent in the world than luck.” Do you agree with that?

Lady-Luck-2_LG

JD: An individual either has or doesn’t have musical talent, although some do have better musical talent than others. Musical talent is easier to spot than writing talent, you can hear it, but when you see writing talent, you really see it. Bob Dylan, for example is an average musician but an enormously talented writer who made a fortune in the music business owing to his use of words. The guitar was a prop to success and the Beats had blasted the barn door open in terms of what you could sing about at that time and place. I’m not saying that Dylan wasn’t a rock and roller, or a folk musician, he was, but first and foremost, like Lou Reed, he was a writer who used the rock and roll platform to express himself. Is there a creative gene? I don’t know. Perhaps it is a strain of autism. Musical talent has been proven to be genetic. Perfect pitch is passed on down generations. Anyone can play the guitar or the piano but how many can reach that state where the instrument takes over the musician? When the musician is just a puppet on a stage guided by some strange higher power? Writing can be learned to a certain degree yet a writer in full flow is like the piano player guided to that golden place by the muse. Burroughs wrote in a Tangerine letter to Ginsberg that “the writing is coming on like dictation; I can’t keep up with it.” Perhaps there is something supernatural at play. I don’t know. I know only one thing. Talent and luck are less important than work. Work brings talent and luck. Warhol said work is the most important attribute any artist has in his toolkit and many would say Warhol was untalented and lucky.

KC: Warhol critics are not hard to find. Warhol-like success is quite rare. He was a worker bee. Tell me about your book on Buddhism. Is Buddhism a mist, a lacquer, a veneer or a hardwood in your life? Expand on these things called thoughts? Should we pay them any attention? How does one unlock the great mystery of life, anyway?

Thai Meditations

JD: Thai Meditations was written after staying at several monasteries in Thailand. There is a short story or observation for each of the seventy-seven provinces of Thailand. You would have to ask someone else about unlocking the mystery of life. I’m not qualified; I’m merely fumbling around in the dark. Thoughts shouldn’t be held on to for too long in daily life. Living in the present moment is difficult, yet, as writers we get to play with thoughts. Novelists rearrange thoughts and construct them into stories that allow the reader to become lost in the story and forget their own anxieties. Stories really are a magical gift in that respect. It all goes back to the hunter gatherer society and tales around the camp fire. I guess the story-teller was a lousy hunter.

KC:​ Sean Penn once said that one is either born with a resistance to cynicism or you’re not. He went on to say that his friend, Charles Bukowski was one of those guys who was given every opportunity in life to become a jaded, cynical prick. But Penn claims Buk was anything but. Sean Penn goes on to describe Charles as the sweetest, most vulnerable pussycat who disguised it wonderfully. Do you agree with Penn’s assessment of Bukowski?

36.Charles-Bukowski-and-Sean-Penn-250x300

JD: I agree and disagree. I don’t think a child is born a cynic nor born with a resistance to cynicism. I think a cynical person becomes one by way of parental or institutional belittlement – social conditioning – although some argue genetics are at play, I’m not so sure. I do agree that Bukowski was sensitive and vulnerable. Most poets are. Penn knew Bukowski after he had made some money and had gotten himself married to Linda and had the hot tub and the BMW. He was cynical as hell while claiming to ride box cars and living on skid row. But when Penn knew him he was living the high life, Santa Barbara, baby. It’s difficult to be a cynic when you’re sitting in a hot tub smoking a Honduran cigar with close to a million dollars growing in the bank and a nice BMW on the drive and you’re having Dennis Hopper and Madonna over for brunch.

KC: How do you avoid becoming cynical? How would you describe yourself? What, if anything, do you disguise?

JD: The best way to avoid becoming cynical is to remove yourself from the source of that cynicism. If Thailand or any country brings out these feelings of cynicism, take a trip somewhere else for a week or two. If your job sucks, change it. I describe myself as a humorist creative type, a loyal son of a bitch who has a drive to succeed, but could be a better family guy. Disguise? A writer disguises nothing at all; it is all in his work for anybody to read. Do you know how much bravery it takes a novelist to publish their first novel? First novels are generally terribly personal, and packed with the author’s most awful secrets.

KC: Tell me about your writing process?

JD: It varies. The White Flamingo took a few sittings. After the notes were made and my outline was mapped out I hammered the novel out in a few weeks. I just deleted 25,000 words of my latest book Fun City Blues as I thought about a new science fiction direction. You know I was once asked by an attractive tall blond “What is a writer?” I replied “Someone who can’t stop writing.” So perhaps it’s an obsessive thing.

​KC: That blond sounds smart to me. Raymand Chandler wrote about Bay City in his 7 Philip Marlow Novels, which everyone pretty much knew was Santa Monica, California. You write about Fun City in your Joe Dylan series, which most, but not everyone, would recognize as Pattaya. Explain this literary technique if you can. What are the advantages of doing it the Chandler way? Is there a down side?

JD: First and foremost I love Chandler’s work and admire everything he has written apart from some of the very early work. Secondly Fun City is a strange beast of a city, a product of my warped imagination but grounded in visits to Pattaya and Bangkok where I’ve lived for 13 years. The series has become more popular than I would have ever of imagined it to have become. Fun City gives me the license to spill out any literary phantasies I may have without the geographical or cultural restrictions of actual place. I can push the fictional world further with the freedom of this make believe city. In the current book I have the harbor, the beach, the Central Business District, and the Red Night Zone all set together in the blade-running future. I have discovered my terrain after years of fumbling around with the concept and the formula of the series. The tourist zones of Thailand are so close to science fiction that it just makes sense to write in a cyber punk vein, and go all the way with it. Joe Dylan is of course a fedora wearing gumshoe detective who navigates around this strange neon world by night. It’s a nice concept. I’m content with Joe and Fun City. They mix together well, like red wine and cheese. I like writing the series and am happy that the series is being read.

KC: You’ve been at the forefront of the first two Night of Noir events at the Check Inn 99 bar. Tell our readers about Night of Noir Number 3.

james-a-newman-w-white-flamingos

Author James Dennison Strange reads from a Joe Dylan crime novel during a Night of Noir held at Check Inn 99

JD:  This coming Thursday, 8th January 2015 is the date set for the third Night of Noir. I’ll be the host for a line-up which includes, Dean Barrett and Tom Vater along with Jame Dibiasio flying in from Hong Kong. Jame wrote the excellent Gaijin Cowgirl for Crimewave Press and I believe the second book in that series is out quite soon. My publishing partner and editor John Daysh is in town. James Austin Farrell may come down to the big smoke from Chang Mai. Thom Locke is confirmed. Poet Noir John Gartland is reading. Artwork by Chris Coles and photography by Stickman and talk of an author’s band playing live. The wonderfully talented musician Keith Nolan will be in house. The last two years have been a great success and have drawn in some wonderful authors from around the world including Cara Black and John Burdett last year. Chris Catto-Smith, manager of the Check Inn 99 has been an absolute legend in helping us realize the event. Chris Coles has been an incredible influence on the whole scene with his paintings and vision and was the one who first got the ball rolling. I am very lucky and grateful to be here in this space and time with such wonderfully creative people. Including yourself, Kevin. Thanks for the time and the questions. I enjoyed it. Is it over? Do you mind if I hit Suzie Wong?

KC: The chicken livers are all gone. So, yes. Suzie Who?

JD: Exactly.

Bangkok Fiction Night of Noir

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the blog of J.D. Strange

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