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~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Category Archives: Podcasts etc.

The Lovecraft Geek returns

10 Tuesday May 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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I’m pleased to see that Lovecraft scholar Robert Price has re-animated his The Lovecraft Geek podcast, now the pandemic is effectively over. To the extent that there are three new episodes available. Before this, the last episode had been 31st March 2020. Then there was a long hiatus.

The new episodes can download to .MP3 from the show’s Podbay listing. Episode 22-001 is a 56-minute regular Lovecraft Geek, and one of the best I’ve heard. This is followed by two with Price’s new readings of Lovecraft’s “Dagon” and “The Temple” respectively.

It thus looks like there’s a good chance of another The Lovecraft Geek or two during 2022, so send in your questions to help encourage the next one.

I also took a look to see if more Lovecraft-related episodes had popped up over on the Christian MythVision YouTube channel, but no… they still only have his short 18 minute-one on “Lovecraft and the Origins of Religion” (June 2020). The rest of his podcasts over there appear to be about Biblical historicity and suchlike, and are thus not likely to be of interest to Lovecraftians. But there’s plenty to dig into in the back-catalogue of The Lovecraft Geek, linked above.

There’s also his The Bible Geek Show, and he mentioned on the new Lovecraft Geek that he recently did a complete Clark Ashton Smith reading there. Though he doesn’t say which episode.

Also mentioned in the new Lovecraft Geek are Lovecraft’s Dreamlands tales and two of the best emulators of these are named… Myers for his The House of the Worm / Country of the Worm, but also the “early Kuttner”. And Price should know on that point, since he was the editor for Kuttner’s The Book of Iod: The Eater of Souls and other Tales (1995, Chaosium) collection. A quick perusal of Price’s Introduction in that book reveals the two stories he must be thinking of…

Kuttner penned a pair of pastiches of Lovecraft’s Dunsanian tales. These are “The Jest of Droom Avista” and “The Eater of Souls”.

Both short tales were in Weird Tales in 1937 and can thus now be found online as originally printed…

“The Eater of Souls”. (Plain text).

“The Jest of Droom Avista”. (Plain text).

The Dark Pool

03 Tuesday May 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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In the latest short-poetry collection from Libivox, a public-domain reading of the poem “The Dark Pool” by Weird Tales editor Farnsworth Wright, published as by ‘Francis Hard’ in the April 1925 edition — along with the Lovecraft/Eddy collaboration “Deaf, Dumb and Blind” and “The Wind That Tramps The World”.

Did the editor pop other poems in, when there was a page to fill? No. This seems to be his only one during the Lovecraft years. But he did have two in the magazine in early 1923, before his editorship…

* “The Closing Hand” in Weird Tales (March 1923).

* “The Snake Fiend” in Weird Tales (April 1923).

“The Dark Pool” runs to two minutes in a fine and well-paced reading.

Meanwhile, over in Canada… Lovecraft’s “At The Mountains of Madness” in an hour, on stage.

Strange Roads on Librivox

25 Monday Apr 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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New on Librivox, an audio reading of Strange Roads by Arthur Machen, read by Ben Tucker.

In 2019 I noted this as…

…his little travel book Strange Roads (1924). A letter to Dwyer shows that Lovecraft also knew this, and considered it a bookend to the autobiographical trilogy” by Machen.

Kittee Tuesday: Cat breeds

12 Tuesday Apr 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Kittee Tuesday, Podcasts etc.

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While I recover from yesterday, let the re-animated HPL himself entertain you on Kittee Tuesday with his new talk on ‘Cat breeds’…

“I wail! I yowl!”

27 Sunday Mar 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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Last week the SSFAudio podcast pampered “The Cats Of Ulthar” by H.P. Lovecraft with a full reading and discussion, and graphic novelist Jason Thompson was in on the subsequent discussion. No imitations of Lovecraft meowing or yeowling or purring, but judging by the show-notes the discussion does get pretty wild.

An aural love-fest

20 Sunday Mar 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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It’s a Love-fest in the latest LibriVox Short Ghost and Horror Collection. Lovecraft’s “The Cats of Ulthar”, “Dagon”, “The Temple” and the Eddy collaborations “Deaf Dumb and Blind” and “The Loved Dead”. Also his friend Whitehead’s “Across the Gulf” and “Jumbee”, and Derleth’s “The Coffin of Lissa”. Their new Story Collection 101 release also has Whitehead’s story “Tea Leaves”. All readings are in the public domain.

Doorways to Lovecraft’s world

14 Monday Mar 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Podcasts etc.

≈ 1 Comment

The latest Voluminous podcast reveals part of a Lovecraft letter formerly only partly published, and now part of the “recently acquired letters from HPL to Frank Belknap Long”. These are now being prepared for annotated print publication.

The scan being beautifully read on the podcast mentions “the Mason collection of Rhode-Island Colonial Doorways” which numbered in the “thousands”. Thankfully the collection has not perished and, in the Voluminous show notes, we find that…

Somehow the Providence Public Library came into possession of the George Mason photograph collection

This is now online under Creative Commons, albeit with only 509 items rather than the “thousands” Lovecraft observed. Possibly the collection ranged more widely than Rhode Island, though, and others survive but are not scanned because not local. Lovecraft seemed to imply the collection had such a breadth, when he remarked how it made him aware of the unseen colonial treasures of Philadelphia. Perhaps the various relevant parts of the collection were disparate to other local collections, and Providence only kept their pictures.

1233 Westminster Street, Providence.

The Voluminous letter also has vivid accounts of two urban explorations of the city with Eddy, in search of more decrepit colonial relics. One of these walks is known from Selected Letters Vol. 1, and is in the Morton letters in almost identical form. Possibly also the Moe letters, as I recall. But the letter’s account of a slightly later visit to the Italian quarter seems less familiar. This also has a remark from Lovecraft which indicates that, though he may well have been taking night-walks before late 1923, these had not ventured down into the industrial slums of the south-west waterfront or up into the Federal Hill area of the city. The latter was somewhat dangerous for a non-Italian to enter, especially in the bootlegging era.

There is a letter in the Brown Digital Repository which adds just a touch more to the Voluminous letter. In 1943 Muriel Eddy states that her husband recalled a “Poe Street” being encountered on these walks.

The new Voluminous letter shows Lovecraft enthusing over a “Gould’s Court” there, which he imagined in its “gnawing hideousness” as “Ghoul’s Court”.

But he does not mention Poe, which one might have expected him too if he and Eddy had got down that far on that walk — as there is indeed a waterfront Poe Street far down on the west side. But probably there were multiple Lovecraft-Eddy expeditions that pushed down into that area, and Poe Street was likely encountered after the first visit and the initial enthusing letters to Long and Morton. Hence, no mention of Poe. This supposition can be confirmed by showing that in the 1970s city native Henry Beckwith recalled that “Ghoul’s Court” was…

on Gould Street, just northwest of Pine Street between Claverick and Chestnut Streets

This is the site of the current Beneficent House complex, and quite a way away from Poe Street. It thus puts the “Ghoul’s Court” spot directly back from the bookshop of ‘Uncle Eddy’ and just a little south. I’ve just had a Lovecraft Annual essay on ‘Uncle Eddy’ accepted (for 2022 or 2023, not sure which yet). At one point in this I briefly follow Lovecraft into this area, and so I’m glad of this additional confirmation on location.

Podcast with John L. Steadman

07 Monday Mar 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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A new podcast interview with John L. Steadman, author of the books Aliens, Robots & Virtual Reality Idols in the Science Fiction of H.P. Lovecraft, Isaac Asimov and William Gibson, and the historical survey H.P. Lovecraft & the Black Magickal Tradition: the master of horror’s influence on modern occultism.

Symposium from the Untold Depths

26 Saturday Feb 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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Symposium from the Untold Depths: Lovecraft and the Popular, 25th March 2022, online. Seems to be a joint postgrad symposium linking students at Birmingham University and Manchester Met (MMU), England.

It has three interesting sounding talks…

* Post-Millenial Lovecraftian Humour.

* From Thalassophobia to a Thalassic Feeling in H.P. Lovecraft’s Oceanic Weird Fiction.

* ‘A Greek Influenced by Grimm’: H.P. Lovecraft’s Classical Reception

Life on Mars

23 Wednesday Feb 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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New on YouTube from HorrorBabble, a four and a half hour ‘Complete Mars Cycle’ recording of stories by Clark Ashton Smith.

“The Dweller in the Gulf”.
“The Vaults of Yoh-Vombis”.
“Vulthoom”.
“Seedling of Mars” (The Planet Entity)

Apparently there’s also a four-page Mars fragment in the Cycle, but that’s not read here.

Incidentally something very screwy seems to have happened to The Pulp Magazine Archive at Archive.org. I think it’s just the search that is way off, and it’s probably just a glitch. Don’t panic if you see masses of collections have been zero-d. Click through and you’ll find they’re still there.

Two useful audio tools

22 Tuesday Feb 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc.

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This may not be news to some savvy Tentaclii readers, but I’ve discovered the wonderful automatic speech-transcription feature of Nuance Dragon Professional 15. This used to be known as the Dragon Dictate software. Works on a desktop PC back to Windows 7, offline and with no Cloud required. It must be the Professional edition, not lesser editions, as only Professional uses a trained AI and auto-transcribes. It does this surprisingly well from a clear .MP3 — if the speaker has good diction and good English on a good microphone.

It then still needs work to polish up the interview transcript, which for my use-case was not too much hassle as I only needed to use it for one old audio interview (Digital Art Live does interview by email now, sending a list of questions). But after several hours of research it looks to me like this software is the best offline ‘one-time payment’ solution. There are of course various online / subscription sign-up option from other services. The online version of Microsoft Word now also offers free audio transcription, and Microsoft recently purchased the company that makes Dragon for a gazillion dollars. Which may mean Dragon’s offline transcription days are numbered, at a guess.

Another AI-powered and offline wonder appears to be the well-recommended Izotope RX, a desktop PC suite of audio-repair VST modules for speech audio. But that’s not yet been tested by me.

I’ve also replaced the old Audacity audio editor with the fine Windows desktop freeware Ocenaudio. Like Audacity but prettier and a bit simpler. Easy to use, supports VST plugins like Audacity did, and bundles FFmpeg codecs and other codecs (like Audacity didn’t).

Rhode Island Fish Sounds

22 Tuesday Feb 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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Rhode Island Fish Sounds, being marine fish recorded from the 1950s to 1960s…

The sounds range from the “boatwhistle” toots of the oyster toadfish, to the teeth rasps and clicks of the parrotfishes, to the ratchet sounds of the drums and croakers.

Sadly not under Creative Commons.

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