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Love is a mixtape
I think of my Friday newsletters like mixtapes. The latest one begins:
“There are all kinds of mix tapes. There is always a reason to make one,” writes Rob Sheffield in his memoir, Love is a Mix Tape. “I believe that when you’re making a mix, you’re making history. You ransack the vaults, you haul off all the junk you can carry, and you rewire all your ill-gotten loot into something new.”
Read the rest: “Love is a mixtape”
Nurturing the inner child
I thought my monthly mixtape project was complete, but I was wrong!
Here is a new mix I really love: Spotify | Apple | Youtube
I made it from a sealed, pre-recorded cassette I got for 99 cents at the record store. I taped over the cassette’s protection tabs and then I taped over the music and then I taped over the artwork.
This one I wanted to have a wintry, childlike feel to it, because that’s the way I wanted to feel while finishing the first draft of the book I’m working on, Don’t Call It Art, which is all about what I learned about being creative from my kids.
The record function on my good cassette deck went screwy on me, so I dragged out the trusty old Sony boombox I bought my son Owen when he first started getting into CDs:
Here’s the tracklist:
SIDE ONE
– Paul McCartney, “Every Night”
– Grizzly Bear, “Ready, Able”
– The Beach Boys, “All I Wanna Do”
– Robert Wyatt, “Heaps Of Sheeps”
– Here We Go Magic, “Collector”
– William Onyeabor, “Atomic Bomb”
– Chino Yoshio, “193193 (For Marimba)”
SIDE TWO
– Francis Bebey, “Pygmy Love Song”
– Herman’s Hermits, Mrs. Brown, You’ve Got A Lovely Daughter
– Harry Nilsson, Listen, The Snow Is Falling
– Timmy Thomas, Why Can’t We Live Together
– Broadcast, Echo’s Answer
– Radiohead, “Kid A”
– Norma Fraser, “First Cut Is The Deepest”
– Buddy Emmons, “Singing Strings Of Steel”
You can listen to the mix on Spotify or Apple Music or Youtube.
I also added it to a big 10+ hour playlist of all the mixes I’ve made so far.
Filed under: mixtapes
100 quotes that helped me write
I spent all of last year trying to write a book (it’s getting there) so a good deal of the entries in my commonplace diary were somehow related to writing.
(When you’re writing, everything is related to writing.)
I picked 100 of them and stitched them together for today’s newsletter: 100 quotes that helped me write.
Without hope and without despair
Today’s newsletter begins:
Raymond Carver liked to quote Isak Dinesen, who said that she wrote a little every day, without hope and without despair. “Someday,” he wrote, “I’ll put that on a three-by-five-card and tape it to the wall beside my desk.” The poet Tess Gallagher said Dinesen’s words were a “quiet banner of determination” that flew over the last decade of Carver’s life. I used to have an index card with the words on my bulletin board, but it got lost somewhere, so I made a new one and pinned it up.
Read the rest here.
My 4 notebooks
In Tuesday’s newsletter, I wrote about my four notebooks:
Before I get started, I want to say that this is my system, and I do not necessarily recommend it to others! Writing is my job, so it would make sense that I’d have a bunch of notebooks. My intention with this letter is to be descriptive not prescriptive.
If you’re interested in starting a notebook habit, I encourage you to just buy a notebook or The Steal Like an Artist Journal and write or draw in it every day.
I do not endorse any brands, but if you’d like to try out what I’m currently using here are links to my logbook, pocket notebook, commonplace diary, and diary.
I write in them with all kinds of pens — I’ve got a big list on my gear page.
Here’s a little teaser I posted to Instagram:
View this post on Instagram
One of the things I try to emphasize is that writing is my job. I don’t think everybody should keep a notebook, and I don’t care if everybody keeps a notebook. Let alone four notebooks! People ask, so this is what I do.
You can read the whole newsletter here.
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