Gallo's expertise evident in 200l's 'When' recordina The artist better known for acting and filmmaking combines girlish vocals with retro sound on ‘When’ By Helen Schumacher Vincent Gallo's "When" is an al bum with a sound that is very much a product of the materials with which it was made. A self-described hustler, yet best known as an actor and primitive recording tools and, as this album proves, a master at manipulating those tools to create a warm and grainy aesthetic. The album was recorded at Gal lo's The University for the Develop ment and Theory of Magnetic Tape Recorded Music Studios and re leased in 2001 by Warp Records, a label whose roster reads like a who's who of electronic music and in cludes Aphex Twin, Squarepusher and Prefuse 73. Like his labelmates, Gallo relies heavily on technology (or in this case anti-technology) to shape the music's sound. The sound, when combined with his feminine vocals, brings to mind a 1970s 8mm movie of a lonely Los PULSE BRIEF Students to give poetry reading Tuesday Eleven University students will read their works of poetry in the EMU Amphitheater on Tuesday. "The reading is for the sake of Pulse Columnist FORGOTTEN ALBUMS and film maker, Gallo also is an ob sessive col lector of antique Angeles afternoon, one in which the colors of the scenery are faded by the smog and sunlight. On the first track — titled with the brilliantly pretentious "1 Wrote This Song for the Girl Paris Hilton" and written years before any home sex videos and Fox reali ty shows — a slow jazz beat oozes through the speakers with a drowsy swagger, setting the mood for the rest of the album. Every song conveys a similar theme and tone, and there is no emotional rise and fall, but each es capes being repetitive. The album's title track is characterized by Gallo singing a cascade of dooo-do do-do do-dos that seem to belong to a heartbroken woman. On "Honey Bunny" he sings "Honey bunny, my baby girlfriend / sweetheart, my sug ar girlfriend ... Oh darling, you're my darling" and makes it sound de pressing and beautiful rather than sappy and vomit-inducing. There is a reason for the cult fol lowing of Gallo's work. This record, like the movie "Buffalo '66," demonstrates that he's in top form when in control of every aspect of a project. Both show a man with clearly defined artistic sensibilities and an understanding of the im portance of fine details. This album is a well-guided trip into Gallo's dreamy vision. Contact the Pulse columnist at helenschumacher@dailyemerald.com. the language, poetry and art itself," said student George Vidas, one of the event's organizers. The event, which is officially ti tled "Articulate Orgasm", begins at 2 p.m. regardless of weather, and will go "until death," Vidas said. Free bagels will be provided. —Aaron Shakra MCDONALD THEATRE music Tickets at all TfcketsWest Outlets or call ^ All concerts will feature an opening band unless (800) 992-TIXX Service charges may apply ^ otherwise noted Times subject to change Interactive show Information available at www.mcdonaldtheatre.gom PRESENTED IN COORDINATION WITH") THE 8ASQUATCH RREW FEST BENEFIT ■SATE JUNE 9 9 PM DOORS-21+ Tlx for concert AND Brew Foot LIVE IN THE LOUNGE DJ OAN-O-MITE »«£!■» FRIDAY JUNE 4 8 PM DOORS 9 PM SPINS 21 + FRIDAY JUNE A tO PM TO 1 AM LOUNGE 21 + MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN Style, form exploration feed short story's soul The short story is an interesting stylistic form. Anyone who has taken a high school or college creative writ ing course has dabbled in it, yet it has never really gained the promi nence afforded to longer works. It just sits in a modem literary gutter of obscure publications and cheap an thologies, passing drinks back and forth with that other downtrodden style, poetry. But unlike poetry, short stories have been down so long that it's probably starting to look like up (to paraphrase one of my favorite po ets). Can you name five people off the top of your head that have be come famous for short stories alone? I can get to about three before my brain peters out and I begin to scramble (can Raymond Carver real ly be considered famous?). Short stories have been a hobby/obsession/lifestyle of mine for quite some time now. In my youth I imagined turning these pieces into longer works, the old Great American Novel dream. Now 1 just enjoy the simple pleasures of short-and-to-the point — or pointless, as the case may be. Many a night have I spent in my secluded workspace, staring blankly at a screen and deciding on whether or not a sentence would end better with "duplicitous" or "hypocritical." Many an afternoon have I happily wasted scribbling into a notebook at some coffee shop, my hands becoming shaky from the intense caffeine in take, so much so that my usually scrawled handwriting begins to look as if it was written by a hyperactive chimp attempting to transcribe Japan ese into Sanskrit. One good thing about writing in a style that usually gains little public recognition is that no one is paying at tention to what you are doing. I know that doesn't sound all that wonderful, but there is a great deal of freedom that comes when no one has any pre conceived notions of your work. Pro vided, the odds of getting published are small (Harvard has a higher i I Ryan Nyburg Budget rack acceptance rate than most small liter ary magazines). But these odds are still better than trying to get a novel published, especially if it's one that is hard to categorize. The key to publishing in maga zines is finding a publication that is right for your style of writing. A quick flip through the Novel & Short Story Writer's Market should yield something, as there is a magazine out there for absolutely everything: Horror, fantasy, romance, drama, Icelandic Sheepdogs (no, I'm not kidding), whatever. There are a thousand niches out there; you can certainly be pigeonholed into at least one of them. Personally, I find that it's best to write in a myriad of styles. This varia tion gives me a lot of options as far as publications go, and I find that it also satisfies my curious and unfo cused mind. I'm interested in writing that messes around with forms and styles. Not just good old-fashioned genre chemistry (it's "Dracula" meets "Finnegans Wake"!), but real mind bending form twisters. My current fa vorite is Jorge Luis Borges, the great Argentinean writer. Book reviews for books that didn't exist, mysteries done as metaphysical conundrums and westerns that question the exis tence of the self; Borges did all that and more. How about a story about an old man who meets a younger version of himself on a park bench? Writers such as Borges just kick my ass every time. Another favorite right now is "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner, r.* ■ - ■ ——i Special Spring SAVINGS Medium Two-Topping Pizza with one free ■VM 22 oi» soda FREE DELIVERY Eugene: 686-5808 Not valid with any other offer Expires 6/12/04 %ixza Pipeline Large Two-Topping Pizza with tricky stix & AA two free 22 oz* sodas I FREE DELIVERY! Eugene: 686-5808 Not valid with any other offer Expires 6/12/04 a story which is told in first person plural. In other words, it is narrated by an entire community. Wrap your brain around that one. Jesus. Here's another one for you: Am brose Bierce's "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge," which is about a man about to be hung from a bridge, thinks he has escaped his execution ers and then realizes it is all in his mind just as he is about to die. Sweetness. It's sad that so many writers today choose the easy way out, writing what is essentially memoir minus the prerogative of truth. A whole world of literary invention is out there ready to be toyed with, yet few people are taking it up. Instead, they write about childhood traumas, rela tionship difficulties or (and this is the one that bugs me the most) about their adventures abroad. The next time I have to read a story about a sexually abused young man who breaks up with his girlfriend in Prague, I swear I'll start causing some violent trauma of my own. What's worse is a story that does ex periment with form but for no pur pose other than to show how clever the author is. This doesn't happen as often, but when it does it can be un bearable. The point is to find some balance between experimentation and substance — between those, the truth lies. But enough of that. In the end, it all comes down to simply enjoying the act of writing and finding some comfort in storytelling. It really does n't matter if you get published or not, since you won't really be paid and will only be read by other writ ers hoping to be published. It helps to view it as a hobby, or maybe just a lifestyle choice. Just remember to keep it to the point. Contact the senior Pulse reporter at ryannyburg@dailyemerald.com. His opinions do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. IVMVIhail Community Center for the PerfomHig Arts 8th & Lincoln . Tonight • The Dirty Dozen Brass Band New Orlea ns Jazz 9:00 pm, $12 advance, $14 door - Friday • Rusputina with Audio Learning Center Goth Rock 9:00 pm, $13 advance, $13 door . Saturday ■ Hie Better Than You Battles” Local and Regional Rappers Competition S:oo pm, ft advance, $10 door • Wednesday. WatashiWa with Reubens Accomplice Rock 7:00 pm, $7 advance, $1 door ■ Thursday, June 3 ■ Pn>n?,Do? Fashion Disco, All That Remains, Beyond the Embrace, Hard Rock l:oo pm, $10 advance, $12 door All Ages Welcome 637 2746