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	<title>Oakland Writer, Poet and Editor Paul Corman-Roberts Blog &#187; Underground Poetry</title>
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		<title>Dream Elegy for a Vampyre</title>
		<link>http://paulcormanroberts.com/2008/10/27/dream-elegy-for-a-vampyre/</link>
		<comments>http://paulcormanroberts.com/2008/10/27/dream-elegy-for-a-vampyre/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Oct 2008 04:40:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Paul Corman-Roberts</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Cafe Babar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Counter-culture]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Underground Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vampyre Mike Kassel]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Sometime in the bitter godless morning of winter, well before sunrise in the godless waste of the early 21st Century America; Cheney’s America… where the highs are always second class but the hangovers last for months; a tall, dark and bed- -raggled figure stops in front of a non-descript storefront and awning on the Southwest [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Sometime in the bitter godless morning of winter,<br />
well before sunrise in the godless waste of the<br />
early 21st Century America; Cheney’s America…<br />
where the highs are always second class but the<br />
hangovers last for months; a tall, dark and bed-<br />
-raggled figure stops in front of a non-descript<br />
storefront and awning on the Southwest corner<br />
of 22nd and Guerrero in San Francisco’s Mission<br />
District.</p>
<p>The tall, dark and bedraggled figure leans forward<br />
on his cane as the night fog sweeps down from<br />
Twin Peaks. He limps forward a couple of steps<br />
toward the window, and tries to see inside the<br />
darkness.  He pulls out a flask, one of his most<br />
instinctual moves, and takes a long, deep pull of<br />
cheap end rotgut before returning it to its trusty<br />
holding spot and peering back into the locked up<br />
commercial space.</p>
<p>It’s not easy making the years melt away, but some-<br />
-how, somewhere deep inside the subconscious gallery<br />
of  imprints, the Vampyre manages to pull up the file<br />
where he can see the ghost of a final, flamed out youth.</p>
<p>There they all are again…Joie Cook, Danielle Willis, David<br />
Gollub, Bruce Issacson, Kathleen Wood, Jack Micheline with<br />
his little club kid hanger on Matt Gonzales…and the once and<br />
mighty patron saint of this once and mighty temple, David<br />
Lerner.  A distant echo, the voice of Julia Vinograd having<br />
migrated over from Telegraph for the evening’s communion;<br />
her booming blues mama voice yells “STARTING!!!”</p>
<p>And he, the tall, dark and bedraggled figure, had been a<br />
high priest among this congregation, once upon a time.</p>
<p>Soon enough, the initial sting and rush of the rotgut begins<br />
its slide back down into the familiar stupor, and the vision all<br />
too predictably fades.  And the tall, dark and bedraggled figure<br />
limps on down the street, his cane ready for any action that<br />
may target him, but with just enough of the memory to keep<br />
him warm enough to the next pull or the next bed.</em></p>
<p>…</p>
<p>Long before it became cool, yea even trendy to be a<br />
trailer park pirate or an “Outlaw Poet” with an intellect,<br />
there was Vampyre Mike Kassel openly admitting he read<br />
the old texts and the old myths (The Iliad, the Torah)<br />
…not in school, but on his own time while in-between<br />
recovering from another epic hangover, dueling with an<br />
old lover or visiting yet another death bed strapped friend/fiend.</p>
<p>Kassel the spoken-word artist walked the walk as a low maint-<br />
-enance, heavy laboring couch surfer who could embed (and bed)<br />
himself perfectly amongst not just the Babarians but also the<br />
hard edged (at least then) Bay Area punk scene during the eighties<br />
and nineties.  But Michael Alan Kassel was also a gifted musician,<br />
a theatrical prankster impresario, and a genuine pagan, comfort-<br />
-ably rubbing shoulders with Norse gods and Jungian archetypes<br />
at the same time; a truly, uniquely American renaissance artist,<br />
meeting Thoreau’s charge and manifesting Whitman’s ideal. </p>
<p>Vampyre Mike finally had his meeting with the reaper, many<br />
versions of which he wise-assedly (and smartly) wrote about<br />
in his career on March 22, 2008.  </p>
<p>And the hard truth is that there just haven’t been that many<br />
rock &#038; roll poets before Kassel, and being the real deal, he has<br />
in turn set an incredibly high bar for any “counter-cultural” poet<br />
who might casually ponder taking the road of D.A. Levy, Jim<br />
Morrision and now Vampyre Mike.</p>
<p>He took many cliché poetry moves, such as overuse of capital-<br />
-ization, Romantic pretense, numbered verses, blues ballads &#038;<br />
naturally sea shanty’s, and reinvented them as his own…as an<br />
uncompromising rock &#038; roll poet. And nowhere is this on better<br />
display than in <strong>Toxic Vaudeville</strong>  (Ajax Press of San Francisco).<br />
On the cover is a picture of the Vampyre Mike I remember from the<br />
90’s, a comfortable unapologetic member of the first generation of<br />
40 year old punks, who could dominate a high maintenance night-<br />
-club with sheer personality.</p>
<p>The poems in this collection were not written for the page, but<br />
primarily for performance, and while I confess to my supposedly<br />
hardened, supposedly “literate” inner poetry editor wincing while<br />
reading some of these pieces, I also had the advantage of having<br />
seen Mike perform Above Paradise (yes, a high-maintenance night<br />
club) with David Lerner over ten years ago.  When I found my own<br />
inner curmudgeon rising up in protest while reading pieces like<br />
“Johnny’s Going Down”, “The Hungry Season” and particularly “Aren’t<br />
You Getting Too Old For This?” I made myself picture Mike, not as I<br />
remembered him in his later years, but as the iconoclastic tour guide<br />
of Hades, leather jacket, freak-out long hair and Beelzebub goatee<br />
stomping in his boots on a stage, bleeding out the lines through an<br />
amplifier.  These were poems meant to be heard with a crude fuzz<br />
guitar riff backing them and filtered through a drunken haze:</p>
<p><em>MAN, I WAS AT THE PARTY LAST NIGHT<br />
I BORRROWED SOMEBODY’S VINTAGE ’57 MARTIN GUITAR.<br />
BROKE THREE STRINGS<br />
AND PUT A DING IN THE NECK.<br />
I THINK I INSULTED THE EDITOR OF A MAGAZINE<br />
THAT WAS CONSIDERING PUBLISHING A POEM OF MINE,<br />
I KNOW I ACCIDENTALLY BARGED INTO THE BATHROOM<br />
IN THE MIDDLE OF SOMEONE’S BLOWJOB<br />
AND STAYED TO PISS ANYWAY.<br />
I ARGUED POLITICS WITH A COMMUNIST,<br />
DANCED THE FUNKY CHICKEN WITH A GIRL ON CRUTCHES<br />
(I THINK I WAS TRYING TO FAITH HEAL HER)<br />
AND ACCIDENTALLY SPILLED BEER IN THE AQUARIUM<br />
I TOLD A FRIEND WHO WAS WORRYING ABOUT GETTING OLD<br />
THAT HE WAS BORN TO BE MIDDLE AGED,<br />
I PUT THE CHIPMUNKS SING THE BEATLES ON THE STEREO<br />
CRANKED THE VOLUME UP TO 11, AND THREATENED TO<br />
	PUNCH OUT<br />
ANYONE WHO TRIED TO TAKE IT OFF,<br />
I FOUND THE ROOM WHERE EVERYBODY TOSSED THEIR COATS<br />
AND SWITCHED EVERYONE’S CAR KEYS.<br />
I PHONED IN A NOISE COMPLAINT TO THE POLICE<br />
I PUT A FIFTH OF VODKA IN THE NON-ALCOHOLIC PUNCH<br />
I STUCK MY NOSE DOWN EVERY WOMAN’S DECOLLETAGE<br />
RANG THE NEIGHBORS’ DOORBEL AND RAN AWAY,<br />
AND ACCIDENTALLY SAT IN THE LASAGNA.<br />
I FOUND THE EIGHTEEN YEAR OLD CHICK WHO WAS ALL<br />
	BROKEN UP<br />
BECAUSE HER FIRST ONE TRUE LOVE HAD LEFT HER AND I<br />
	TOLD HER IT MEANT<br />
SHE WAS PROBABLY A LESBIAN.<br />
I PUMPED UP THE KEG, STUCK THE NOZZLE IN MY MOUTH<br />
AND GUZZLED TILL SOMEONE THREW ME OFF THE BACK PORCH.<br />
THEN I WENT OUT AND COPPED SOME RUM<br />
WHEN I GOT BACK TO THE PARTY<br />
SOME JERK TRIED TO KEEP ME OUT<br />
BUT I JUST BROKE A WINDOW AND CLIMBED BACK IN.<br />
I DON’T REMEMBER MUCH ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED AFTER THAT<br />
UNTIL THE FIREMEN SHOWED UP.<br />
THEN I JUST GRABBED MY GUITAR AND MY RUM AND SPLIT.<br />
I WAITED TWO HOURS FOR A BUS THAT STOPPED RUNNING<br />
	AT MIDNIGHT<br />
THEN LURCHED A BROKEN THREE MILE TRIP HOME<br />
PAUSING ONLY TO PISS ON CERTAIN RICH BASTARDS’<br />
WELCOME HOME MATS,<br />
I WAS A HIT IN CLOWN ALLEY HAMBURGER HELL<br />
WHEN I GAVE THEM A TWENTY UNDER THE ASSUMPTION THAT<br />
IT WAS A ONE.<br />
THEY KEPT THE CHANGE,<br />
THEN I WOKE UP EVERYONE IN MY HOTEL<br />
WHEN I DROPPED MY GUITAR DOWN THE LIGHTWELL<br />
BUT I NEVER PUKED ONCE.<br />
SO, LIKE, SO MUCH FOR FRIDAY NIGHT.<br />
HEY DUDE, IT’S LIKE, SATURDAY NIGHT, MAN…<br />
WHERE THE HELL IS THE FUCKING PARTY?! </em></p>
<p>…</p>
<p>I remember watching Mike perform that same poem through<br />
my own blithering, drunken agenda all those years ago and<br />
realized with something between fascination and horror that<br />
I wanted to be him, and realized, with even greater anguish,<br />
that I never would be.</p>
<p>Toxic Vaudeville was published mere months before Vampyre<br />
Mike’s passing.  It is a collection of later career poems, many<br />
of which were written for, performed for and only experienced<br />
by Café Babar audience members until now.  </p>
<p>There is a 90 page section of Kassel’s prankster stories at the<br />
end of the book, and truthfully the poems are stronger.  Kassel<br />
treated fiction like tall tales with extended jokes and put-ons,<br />
his flash prose frequently ending in a punch line.  He was not<br />
going for the deep, intellectual musing like one would find in<br />
the pages of Glimmer Train (in fact, one of his early books with<br />
Manic D Press was titled <strong>Going for the Low Blow</strong>.) Like his hero<br />
Jim Morrison, Kassel seemed to want to be something other<br />
than what his reputation was built on, always more interested<br />
in the most outrageous stories possible.  In fact, many of Kassel’s<br />
stories are simply characters from his life sitting around a bar<br />
sharing stories, and a more effective collection of these works<br />
can be found in <strong>Graveyard Golf  &#038; Other Stories</strong><br />
  (Manic D Press).  Many of the characters who are met in<br />
Graveyard Golf  show up in the stories in Toxic Vaudeville, unfor-<br />
-gettable low life’s like Stevie Malone, The Worst Person In The<br />
World, and Freddie the Weasel, as well as The Radium Pit, the<br />
most incredible dive blues/punk bar in Oakland which serves as<br />
the setting for Kassel’s tall tales.  </p>
<p>The tales are sometimes hilarious, serving as rock &#038; roll analogies<br />
or low satire, but more frequently having the beer drenched scent<br />
of “ya had to be there” hanging on them…Mike wouldn’t have had<br />
it any other way.  He didn’t pretend to be a serious fiction writer<br />
…he was an extremely serious poet, a serious jester, and a serious<br />
prankster who wrote unabashedly for the masses.  He still throws<br />
out the same punch lines in his poems that he does in his stories,<br />
but the difference is that in Kassel’s poems, the effect is as profound<br />
a stumbling upon the truth as any reader could ask for:</p>
<p><em>I wanted to write something serious,<br />
a page that would ignite when exposed to air.<br />
I wanted to dive deep into my soul<br />
and swim back to the surface<br />
with some big bloody truth clenched between my teeth.<br />
I wanted something that would burn in the mind<br />
like a malarial fever<br />
you could never quite put out.<br />
Something that would inspire<br />
lust and revulsion simultaneously.<br />
Something so dangerous<br />
that Bush would have to send an invasion force<br />
deep into my head.<br />
Something that would replace the Gideon Bible<br />
in the hotel drawers of the world.<br />
Something so big, so beautiful and so true<br />
that the sun would immediately eclipse himself<br />
because he knew we were onto him.<br />
I wanted to write something more addictive than crack,<br />
more debilitating than love,<br />
and more destructive than religion.<br />
I wanted to make the moon weep.<br />
I wanted to build a mirror so cruelly true<br />
that it would send all the yuppie lawyers<br />
and investment bankers<br />
howling into the bush to make honest livings<br />
as highwaymen, headhunters and horse thieves.<br />
I wanted to write something that Ringo would understand,<br />
something God would not forgive,<br />
something the Weekly World News would refuse to print<br />
because it was in bad taste.<br />
I wanted to write something that would make<br />
Rimbaud and Baudelaire<br />
grind their teeth in envy<br />
and throw their pens at the moon.<br />
I wanted to give Poe the willies.<br />
I wanted to make nuns wet their pants.<br />
I wanted to make dogs howl, highways tremble,<br />
and hair grow on grandma’s bald head.<br />
I wanted to write something<br />
that would make everyone illiterate.<br />
I wanted to write something so beautiful<br />
that it would make every woman in the world<br />
fall in love with me<br />
so I could break their hearts simultaneously.<br />
I wanted to write something that would make money chuckle.<br />
I wanted to write something that would cure cancer<br />
and then kill you anyways.<br />
I wanted a poem<br />
A real poem.<br />
A Robert Graves spit in the eye<br />
this is the way the Iliad goes<br />
so early in the morning dance round the campfire<br />
roses are red barnburner of a walloping good God<br />
did he really say that<br />
motherfucking mouthful of meat<br />
bad ass bitch of a poem<br />
poem.<br />
Know what I mean?<br />
But<br />
just as I got the paper in the machine<br />
Della switched on “The Flintstones”<br />
And all that came out of the typewriter<br />
Was<br />
Yabba dabba doo.</em></p>
<p>-I WANTED TO WRITE SOMETHING SERIOUS<br />
(from “Wild Kingdom”, Zeitgeist Press, 1992) posted at http://www.sfheart.com/sfpoets/kassel/mcCowen.html)</p>
<p>The above poem was posted by Kassel’s friend and fellow<br />
freak Babarian Whitman McGowan at the SF Heart site,<br />
in conjunction with a powerful memorial service held for<br />
Vampyre on the Lower Haight’s Café International.  Mike’s<br />
reputation (and I don’t use the word “career” because the<br />
mere concept of a “Career” is something he was genuinely<br />
allergic too) was cemented in performing pieces like this<br />
one at the Café Babar, which one could argue would not<br />
have been as compelling a scene as it was without him.<br />
Mike saved his most powerful proclamations for the very<br />
act of poetry, or impassioned creation in general; the jester<br />
is never wiser than when justifying his existence in the sheer<br />
contradiction of all reality and pretension to “civility.” </p>
<p>McGowan’s bio at the SF Heart site is invaluable because it<br />
shows that, of course, there wasn’t always a Vampyre Mike,<br />
but a series of personae that were a musician, a theatrical<br />
performer…in essence a genuine troubadour of the underworld<br />
whose sole mission is to keep anyone from getting too serious<br />
about anything when it isn’t warranted, which mostly it isn’t.<br />
And the funny thing about it is, Vampyre Mike could point this<br />
out to you and make you come away not feeling so bad about<br />
it, maybe even laughing about it.</p>
<p>Toast one for the Vampyre this All Hallow’s Eve, this Day of the<br />
Dead…Halloween was his season, his favorite part of the year<br />
(Freddie The Weasel’s Halloween, Cub Scouts from Hell from<br />
Graveyard Golf and The Lords of Halloween from Toxic Vaudeville)<br />
…he was the best of us who like to consider ourselves “under-<br />
-ground” or “counter-cultural”; someone who lived what those<br />
words really meant, for better or worse.</p>
<p>Discussed in this benediction:</p>
<p>Toxic Vaudeville; Ajax Press, 2007, 188 pages<br />
(http://www.ajaxpresssf.com/)</p>
<p>Graveyard Golf &#038; Other Stories; Manic D Press, 1991, 63 pages<br />
(http://www.manicdpress.com/)</p>
<p>Wild Kingdom; Zeitgeist Press, 1992, 25 pages<br />
(http://www.zeitgeist-press.com/)</p>
<p>http://www.sfheart.com/sfpoets/kassel/mcCowen.html)</p>
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