Tuesday, 23 June 2026

an entirely written in the morning blogpost

 a-ha! an entirely written in the morning blogpost 

(unless of course horsemouth carries on writing it in the afternoon)

horsemouth can't decide whether he should blog quick, go do the watering (before it warms up) and then come back to it later, or...

actually yes that's probably the right strategy. 

-------------

ok back after a spot of watering and the milk taken over  to the garage. (32C today maybe 35C thursday). 

... and what's the thing with jacques attali's noise?

noise is a book about the political economy of music. it argues that music is annunciatory - that the political economy of music is ahead of the broader political economy. this (at least) is the rationalisation proposed by frederic jameson in his forward to the english edition - one concerning the interactions between base and superstructure proposed by engels - the relations of production can determine culture but also (reciprocally) the political economy of cultural activities can indicate how the base is going to develop. 

that would be the (broad) thesis of noise translated into marx-speak. 

whether this is an accurate reflection of marx's thought or not horsemouth is not qualified to say. he suspects not. he suspects we are dealing with a simplification by engels that leads us into temporal and causal paradoxes. 

horsemouth was privileged to live through a period when music and  musical production and consumption was changing rapidly as a result of digitalisation - first at the level of production, then at the level of consumption.

to him it seemed that attali's theses around repetition (the huge overproduction and stockpiling of musical commodities) was coming true and that a counter attack was being staged round DJ culture and rave and hip-hop and any situation where the record was becoming a means rather than an end. 

the era being ushered in is one of composition - this is an unhelpful piece of naming by attali. in attali's first attempt at theorisation in bruits (1977) attali sees improvisation as fundamentally hopeful. 25 years later much of rave, MP3 etc. has happened and so attali attempts to incorporate this, but he's not your best source on all of these things. 

it seems to horsemouth a good time to come back to these ideas as AI make inroads into music production and consumption as a precursor to its wider effects in the economy. 

of course (helter skelter - coming down fast), given the speed at which AI is restructuring things, we may not have long to enjoy our new theoretical clarity.

coming next year (of course) 50 years of attali's bruits. 


Monday, 22 June 2026

what must be must be

horsemouth appears to be becoming the guy from the cover of noise:the political economy of music by jacques attali. 

indeed he's a breugel from the quarrel of carnival with lent. 

this was not his intention but as soon as he saw the two pictures side-by-side he had to admit that it was true. 

horsemouth will have to go back to it. attali has a long chapter on the meaning of the painting - mostly about how the four 'economies' of music are  in existence side by side. 




yesterday (in the afternoon) a visit from the guy from the water society. horsemouth had a beer outside in a shady spot and talked nuclear stuff (horsemouth's interest from a long time ago). 

later a zoom chat with someone in far off london. (horsemouth had to have a coffee to recover from the beer earlier). 

horsemouth seems to be moving stuff forward. 


today

well it is due to be hot. horsemouth's plan is to have a cool and quiet day. his mum is off to the doctor's in the village. and in the afternoon there's a delivery. all this is probably a bit too busy (but what must be must be). 

Sunday, 21 June 2026

one day (sure you don't want another?)

 '... mole had been working very hard all the morning, spring-cleaning his little home. first with brooms, then with dusters; then on ladders and steps and chairs, with a brush and a pail of whitewash; till he had dust in his throat and eyes, and splashes of whitewash all over his black fur, and an aching back and weary arms. spring was moving in the air above and in the earth below and around him, penetrating even his dark and lowly little house with its spirit of divine discontent and longing. it was small wonder, then, that he suddenly flung down his brush on the floor, said “bother!” and “o blow!” and also “hang spring-cleaning!” and bolted out of the house without even waiting to put on his coat...'

- kenneth grahame, the wind in the willows (1908).  

yesterday

 the zoom beer with howard. just the one. not even one. more like a half. howard is reading about the suffragettes and contemplating working until he drops. 

horsemouth advised that this was a terrible idea (the working until he drops bit).

howard has a book about sylvia pankhurst (horsemouth was most envious he's a big fan of sylvia pankhurst). 

así fue - that's how it was. 

last night  fireworks (for the solstice?)

and today the solstice. the sun will have risen back at 04.51 - long before horsemouth will have woken up. he woke up at about 7.30. 

in the week? a heatwave. 

in a bit horsemouth will go around the house closing the windows that were open overnight to let in the cooler air. 

Saturday, 20 June 2026

and so (inauspiciously) it begins

and so it begins 

'horsemouth writes about where he is (the golden valley, herefordshire), where he lives (mostly), but he doesn't do it in much detail. you know that he goes attempting to learn bell-ringing, you know that he goes for walks on the common, you know that he sometimes goes down to unlock the abbey, you know that he makes use of the local bus services to visit hereford or abergavenny, you know that he makes use of the trains to visit london (the wen). he has mentioned the chickens, the garden, and such wildlife as he sees...'

- horsemouthfolk blogspot, 19th june 2024.


horsemouth's blog dates back to june 2013 but an earlier one on myspace dated back to 23rd of november 2006. 

at some point it became a daily thing on facebook and then, in about 2020,  when facebook abolished the notes tool it became a daily blog on blogspot. 

soon horsemouth will celebrate the twentieth year of his blogging

in a bit horsemouth goes to open up the abbey. 

tomorrow the solstice. 




Friday, 19 June 2026

trial by bells (nous n'irons plus au bois)

yesterday was  a typical day in that horsemouth  was feeling anxious. 

he' d done the chickens. he'd done the abbey. he'd got the bin up from the bottom of the drive. he'd watered the garden and the greenhouse and done a bit of weeding. he'd pegged back the nasturtiums to give the other plants a better chance. 

he'd even been for a quick walk up on the common. 

ideally horsemouth would be able to go and drink without subjecting himself to trail by bells first (but hey-ho). 

but before that there was the locking up the abbey and getting the chickens in. he did some watering as well. 

yesterday a wren got trapped in the conservatory. it took horsemouth a while to shoo it out. eventually he succeeded because it flew into his open back-pack as a dark and safe space. 

musically horsemouth thinks nous n'irons plus au bois will work well (clapping and singing version). similarly he thinks there's a version of le chaland qui passe that could be done (because rob is a big fan of jean vigo and l'atalante). this he thinks is a guitar and vocal one. he's taken a look at learning the words and the chords. 

he should watch l'atalante again. his memory of it is that there is a tune other than le chaland qui passe that plays a similar role in the film and it would be good to get that in too if possible. 

so far he thinks the clapping and singing songs he has sent off to rob have worked well  - travailler c'est trop dur, j'ai vu le loup, mes bourons sont morts etc. largely because they work with the limitations of his recording setup

this is not  to say horsemouth's singing always sounds in tune but because it sounds authentically like it is not. 

the songs with guitar or harmonium have been a bit more problematic because horsemouth's laptop takes exception to recording anything other than the human voice and tries to filter it out as background noise as soon as possible. 

various other recording strategies (hambone, playing rhythmically on the banjolin, recording guitar  etc.) have not yet led to success (or perhaps they will but horsemouth just doesn't know it yet).  

next week it looks like a bit of a heatwave (before fizzling out at the end of the month). 

midnight horsemouth is back from the bell-ringing (and the pub afterwards). the bell-ringing has gone well (as has the pub afterwards). 

the morning a grey coolish morning horsemouth has been over to the chickens and put the milk in the fridge in the garage. in a bit down to the abbey. 


Thursday, 18 June 2026

a variety of clouds

so horsemouth watched a lot of je tu il elle with spanish subtitles (and french dialogue at low volume).  he didn't at any point hear the nous n'irons plus au bois song on the soundtrack (as is claimed in various places).

jaques brel used a part of this tine in his anti-war song la colombe (later covered by joan baez)  

'nous n'irons plus au bois, la colombe est blessée.

nous n'allons pas au bois, nous allons la tuer.'

in  je tu il elle a woman rattles round her apartment. re-arranging the furniture, dressing, undressing, writing letters she won't send, living on sugar. and then she's off hitchhiking, the truck driver's tale of woe, then she's with the ex-girlfriend (who doesn't want her to stay). 

people (but closely observed). you can see the marguerite duras/ chantal akerman comparison. (the woman is chantal akerman).  

it's the morning

horsemouth is just back from feeding the chickens. 

an aphid crawls across the top of the laptop screen. (go away you silly beast! shoo!)

he should go get the bin from the bottom of the drive soon. this evening bells.  

a variety of clouds. a cool morning. he's probably excused watering. 

Wednesday, 17 June 2026

utopian and apocalyptic (je tu il elle)

yesterday (as will be and then not again) 

horsemouth's mum went to the doctors in ewyas harold. the community transport people came to get her at midday and brought her back for 2pm. it is a very useful service (and horsemouth thanks them profusely for it).

horsemouth is ok with the buses but  for horsemouth the walk back from the village is do-able (except at night in the dark perhaps). for his mum it is not.  so if anything goes wrong it is a bit of a worry.

later horsemouth walked into ewyas harold and back to pick up a few things (and then down to the abbey and back). three miles all told (three and a half by road). 

such are the vagaries of living in the countryside without a car. 

horsemouth on the hunt for french songs

he thinks he has one in nous n'irons plus au bois (we won't go again into the woods). this was a favourite of debussy (he lifted it a number of times for his own compositions). it is also (allegedly) in je tu il elle by chantal akerman (1974) (but horsemouth hasn't found it yet). 

he supposes he wants slightly naive medieval sounding ones rather than chanson and melodie sounding ones. there's le chaland qui passe perhaps. 

the sung stuff seems to work best with the sound recorder software (designed to record speech). horsemouth sings and claps to give a sense of time and lets rob fill in the musical instruments. 

perhaps try some wordless singing.

it is a mild and temperate morning in the wild. 

horsemouth has just been out to see the chickens and he has his cup of coffee. later he delivers the eggs to the crossroads. 

e.m. cioran and utopia

inspired by his conversation with maria zambrano cioran embarks on a two to three year reading project on utopia (and its pre-requisite apocalypse). perhaps this is  his least likely topic. 

who does he read?

hesiod, genesis, prometheus, vico, fourier, saint-simon, pelagius, robert owen, dostoyevsky, cabet, william morris, campanella, swift (gulliver's travels), saint john of patmos, condorcet, plato, and, of course, st. thomas more. 

horsemouth has a fair amount of utopian and apocalyptic literature.