« The Beginning of Beauty | Main | Narrow House CD/Book Release Party: June 29 (Baltimore) »
June 20, 2007
Week 112 Is Like Keanu Reeves In My Own Private Idaho

All wrongs melt to the Earth before my pink, plush glory.
We were going to make light of our extended absence by getting our in-house robot to roleplay as Rock Heas and then grill it mercilessly. But when we turned it on it said, "i'm afraid of zombie haiku, this conversation is so interesting that i hate that." The morale of the story? Everybody hurts.
So suffice to say, we are back to get in touch with our adoring fan. And intend to do it big.
First, Joey Cashiola sent these great polaroid + poems that reminded us of why we got into this racket in the first place.
And persistent badgering of Ryan Walker for a review of the recent and great Chris Toll-Buck Downs split-book resulted in a review of the recent and we-haven't-read-it-yet-but-he-did-and-thinks-it's-hot chap from Mel Nichols.
More you say? More? The Song of the Week is from the Broken Social Scene, and if you have managed to go this long without hearing, I worry for you. For everyone else, worth a reminder.
Not to mention the fact that the Narrow House empire is about to unleash a fabulous Ric Royer-John Berndt book-CD with a release party on June 29 in Baltimore and events to follow worldwide (or at least East-and-West Coast-wide). We're sure to have more related cool in this space soon -- in the meantime scroll on, scroll on for the flyer.
There is so much great work at RH-HQ right now -- if we'd stop doing all this vacationing, and working, and traveling for work, and chilling, and playing music, and reading out-of-character spiritual texts, and listening to music, and skateboarding, and eating, and sleeping we'd be getting it all out to you. Instead, we hoard. But we're on it man, nous promettons.
Week 112 Contents
Sky Log (August 29), from Joey Cashiola;
A review of Mel Nichols' The Beginning of Beauty, from Ryan Walker
Sky Log (September 3), again from Joey Cashiola;
Song of the Week for a Seventeen Year-Old Girl (Broken Social Scene); and
Sky Log (November 11), the last from Joey Cashiola
Posted by Rock Heals at June 20, 2007 07:00 AM



