Some morning pages in my diary to remind me to stop doomscrolling and keep calm and make ugly art.
Please, for goodness’ sake, start a mailing list

It is 2022 and I am still frustrated every week that somehow my favorite artists and writers don’t have a simple mailing list I can subscribe to so I can know when they have a new book, article, show, etc.
Here I am, a fan who wants to read/see every single thing you put out… and you don’t have a freaking mailing list!
START A MAILING LIST, Y’ALL.
It doesn’t matter what platform it’s on. You don’t need to commit to a regular newsletter. Just put a box on your website that people who want to hear from you can type their email into. When you have a new thing, send it to your list.
Social media is not enough! The algorithm will screw you, eventually. You need a list of emails.
I cannot believe I’m still having to type this.
This is not complicated. This is basic punk rock show 101 write your address down on this clipboard and we’ll send you a zine stuff.
Stop making it hard for someone to be your fan.
Bare minimum, folks: a website with a box to put an email into.
End rant.
(You can sign up for my list here.)
A walkthrough of my diary
For today’s newsletter, I did something I’ve never done before: I filmed a 20-minute walkthrough of my diary.
Tomorrow’s newsletter is something I’ve never done before: a 20-minute video walkthrough of my diary.
Sneak peek below.
Subscribe! https://t.co/Mcn5jBbumo pic.twitter.com/jBOofqH7hC
— Austin Kleon (@austinkleon) January 17, 2022
The creative seasons
Songs as shelters in time
“I could wrap myself in the warm cocoon of a song and go anywhere. I was invincible.”
— Johnny Cash
It was the late singer/songwriter David Berman’s birthday this week. I have been listening to his last record, Purple Mountains, over and over. It seems to me a plague album the way Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is a 9/11 album: both feel like prophesies, when really, like many works of science fiction, they were the products of sensitive souls describing our pre-existing conditions.
Friends in NYC and the northeast were posting photos of snow on Instagram while I was listening to “Snow is Falling on Manhattan”:
Songs build little rooms in time
And housed within the song’s design
Is the ghost the host has left behind
To greet and sweep the guest inside
Stoke the fire and sing his lines
“Songs build little rooms in time” reminded me of John Berger’s “Some Notes about Song,” collected in his last collection, Confabulations. (You can also hear Berger read the essay in this BBC radio feature.)
A song, when being sung and played, acquires a body. And it does this by taking over and briefly possessing existent bodies….
A song, as distinct from the bodies it takes over, is unfixed in time and place. A song narrates a past experience. When it is being sung it fills the present. Stories do the same. But songs have another dimension which is uniquely theirs. A song while filling the present hopes to reach a listening ear in some future somewhere. It leans forward, further and further. Without the persistence of this hope, songs, I believe, would not exist. Songs lean forward.
The tempo, the beat, the loops, the repetitions of a song construct a shelter from the flow of linear time: a shelter in which future, present and past can console, provoke, ironize and inspire one another.
Berger thought of songs as being forms of possession: they are hauntings, in a way. “In every song there is a distance,” he writes, and also an absence. “Absence is what inspired them and it’s what they address.”
Flamenco performers often talk about el duende. Duende is a quality, a resonance which makes a performance unforgettable. It occurs when a performer is possessed, inhabited, by a force or a set of compulsions coming from outside her or his own self. Duende is a ghost from the past. And it’s unforgettable because it visits the present in order to address the future.
(Here I’m reminded of a line from Longfellow: “And at last we hardly distinguish / Between the ghosts and the guests”)
Elsewhere in the essay, Berger wrote, “Much of what happens to us in life is nameless because our vocabulary is too poor.”
Berman had the vocabulary. He wrote us these songs. He built us these temporary shelters to step inside.
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