THOMAS PYNCHON

American Novelist

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Pynchon on Record, Vol. 4

September 28, 2017 by Christian Hänggi 28 Comments

The British literature scholar Cedric Watts once wrote: “One test of literary merit is fecundity, the ability to generate offspring” (xix). More than many other novelists, Pynchon’s work has generated not only literary but also musical offspring: songs, bands, entire albums inspired by Pynchon’s themes and novels. In 1982, Steven Moore made a first attempt to collect such songs and inspirations in Pynchon Notes under the title “Pynchon on Record,” to which Laurence Daw added “More on Pynchon on Record” in 1983 (and later expanded the list on The Modern Word). Sixteen years later, Juan García Iborra and Oscar de Jódar Bonilla published an article that added more names to the previous lists. Since then, the search algorithms on the internet have vastly improved—and so has the amount of available information and the possibilities to upload one’s own material.

Laurie Anderson’s “Gravity’s Angel” from Mr. Heartbreak.

I wrote a dissertation on music in Pynchon’s work (which I hope to publish soon), and since I believe that no large-scale study on this topic would be complete without acknowledging his musical offspring, I spent many days researching his impact on the music scene. I ended up with a list of more than eighty songs, artists, albums, and record labels who make their nods to the novelist (by the latest update on 14 July 2020, the list has grown to about 120 entries), and I am happy to present it here, replete with links and comments.

The Crying of Lot 49 initially proved to be the most fruitful novel for musical adaptations, likely because its length made it more accessible to readers and because it has been around longer than any other Pynchon novel except for V. However, publishing this blog post and finding more references, Gravity’s Rainbow overtook The Crying of Lot 49. Gravity’s Rainbow’s opening sentence has been used for band names, album and track titles (it’s certainly easier to remember than the opening sentence of The Crying of Lot 49). V. also has a good number of entries but the more recent novels have not received the same kind of attention from musicians. The range of genres covered by these recordings spans jazz (remarkably little), experimental music of all kinds, new classical music, world music, and all sorts of pop/rock subgenres such as rock’n’roll, indie, punk, new wave, or metal. The references range from homages to quotations and from inspirations to adaptations.

Some were recorded by well-known or influential bands and musicians such as Laurie Anderson, Radiohead, Devo, Mark Knopfler, Bill Laswell, or Soft Machine, others by college bands and in bedroom studios. The fact that many of the works of music cataloged are from recent years can likely be explained by the better visibility lesser-known bands enjoy on the internet nowadays, particularly with websites such as Myspace (anyone still remember that?), Bandcamp, Soundcloud, and Youtube. I doubt that it took about fifty years after a novel was released to catch on in the music world. Most artists mentioned are based in Western Europe or North America. Although this may have to do with Pynchon’s popularity in these regions, it is more sensible to assume that I simply did not find artists whose references are in languages other than English. The reason that the adaptations of songs penned by Pynchon are predominantly recorded by lesser known artists may have to do with legal considerations. If little or no money is involved and the visibility of the artist is not so great, the author or the legal departments of the publishing houses may not care to intervene.

On the occasion of some of my New York and Philadelphia talks on the subject in 2015 and 2016 (and the Pynchon birthday party I organized at Cabaret Voltaire in Zürich), musician and poet Tyler Burba interpreted songs from different novels. When I presented my work on Pynchon’s saxophone and kazoo in Atlanta, local musicians Reese Burgan and Caleb Herron accompanied the talk on the respective instruments. There is no telling how many other artists have referenced Pynchon or recorded songs from his books or were simply inspired by his work, but if progeny is a mark of literary accomplishment, these albums, songs, and bands are testament to Pynchon’s wide-ranging appeal as a writer of sonic fiction.

The following list is ordered chronologically, first by novel, then by the work of music. My personal favorites are marked with a magenta heart, thus: ♥. I am certain that I overlooked a great many other examples, so please contribute in the comments section! I will periodically update this post (last update: Jan 16th, 2022).

Contents

1 Introduction (this page)
2 “Entropy” and V.
3 The Crying of Lot 49
4 Gravity’s Rainbow
5 Vineland, Mason & Dixon, Against the Day, and miscellaneous homages
6 Bibliography and Biography

Image credit (top of page): spread-open cover of Land of Kush’s 2009 album Against the Day.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6

Filed Under: Pynchon Analysis, Pynchon General News, Pynchon in the Media, Pynchon Inspired Tagged With: Pynchon Inspired, thomas pynchon

Comments

  1. N.P. Elliott says

    September 28, 2017 at 12:05 pm

    For myself, reading Pynchon is such a personal experience that I really prefer providing my own soundtrack. This is still a very interesting look at the quite wide influence that Mr. Pynchon ‘s work has had on musicians. I hadn’t realised how wide. My personal preference is Devo’s “Whip It”. It is direct and to the point without extraneous extrapolation. Just sayin’.

    Reply
    • Christian Hänggi says

      October 2, 2017 at 3:02 am

      Your preference for providing your own soundtrack for reading Pynchon is probably a feeling shared by many of the musicians on this list, I would think, which is why they did create their own soundtrack. Some of the above tracks and albums would still fit nicely into my reading.

      Reply
  2. Ian Shaw says

    September 28, 2017 at 12:49 pm

    I enjoyed this very much and look forward to reading more. A lot of this was new to me and I will seek a lot of these recording out, particularly those which have tried to create songs from the books. One of my favourite things about reading Pynchon is when characters burst into song.

    Reply
  3. Mike Weidenhamer says

    September 28, 2017 at 2:00 pm

    The debut album of the ambient music project, Shadowy Lines is devoted entirely to Gravity’s Rainbow. The album is called “Mindless Pleasures”. You can download it on Bandcamp as a Name-your-price deal. Here’s their webpage:

    http://www.autohypnosis.net/shadowylines/albums.html

    Here’s the Bandcamp link:
    https://shadowylines.bandcamp.com/album/mindless-pleasures

    Reply
    • Christian Hänggi says

      October 2, 2017 at 3:08 am

      Thank you, Mike, for these additions! Thanks also to John Krafft and Thomas for a good number of other suggestions! I added them all. Now I count about 95 entries, but still not a single one for Inherent Vice or Bleeding Edge. Anyone want to do a recording of Meatball Flag’s timeless surf classic “Soul Gidget”?

      Reply
  4. Thomas Joel says

    February 1, 2018 at 8:57 am

    Singer/Songwriter David Arthur Brown is a self-expressed Thomas Pynchon fan and often alludes to his work via his band Brazzaville. Most notably the song “Soft Parade,” from Morrow Bay (2013).

    “Summer days remind me of the Soft Parade. Seventeen in L.A. and my heart kept breaking. So long ago—road trips down to Mexico—with ‘On The Road’ and ‘Gravity’s Rainbow.'”

    Reply
  5. vilma voldoni says

    July 5, 2018 at 12:04 pm

    The Jazz Butcher – Lot 49 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f8EVyEaXu_I

    Reply
    • Christian Hänggi says

      July 6, 2018 at 1:41 am

      Thanks! This one is already listed (with a different Youtube link) as “Looking for Lot 49.”

      Reply
  6. NJ Lester says

    September 10, 2019 at 2:11 pm

    So “Life During Wartime” by Talking Heads isn’t a condensed view of GR?

    What is GR if not life during wartime?

    “I’ve changed my hair style so many times now I don’t know what I look like.” That’s not Tyrone Slothrop who changes his personality/name three or four times until his atoms just dissipate?

    Reply
    • Christian Hänggi says

      March 30, 2021 at 3:41 am

      Yeah, possibly. Thanks for this. Before I add it to the list, I wonder if we can get more info to corrobate this. After all, there’s also a line that is very un-slothroppy: “No time for dancing, or lovey dovey I ain’t got time for that now.”

      Reply
  7. Carolyn Zaremba says

    September 22, 2019 at 9:46 am

    I am on the recording of “Unsung Pynchon” by Barry Koron, who was my partner at the time we recorded it in New York in the 1980s. We made a CD, of which I have a copy, but I don’t know if there are any of them left. I thought I gave you this information a few years ago, since you seemed to know so little about it. It’s a wonderful recording.

    Reply
    • Christian Hänggi says

      March 30, 2021 at 3:44 am

      Sorry about my late answer… If you still have the CD, I think it would be wonderful if you could upload the MP3s somewhere and share them with the universe! That way I could link to those tunes.

      Reply
      • Carolyn L Zaremba says

        May 4, 2024 at 6:54 pm

        Barry passed away last year and I don’t know what the copyright situation is (if any) regarding these songs now. I will ask his daughter.

        Reply
  8. Frank Benjamin Finger says

    July 13, 2020 at 2:20 pm

    Full of references in the track titles here:

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sombunall-Beneva-Clark-Nova/dp/B002RZZ14G/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=Beneva+%26+Clark+Nova&qid=1594675035&s=dmusic&search-type=ss&sr=1-2

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sombunall-Beneva-Clark-Nova/dp/B002RZZ14G/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=Beneva+%26+Clark+Nova&qid=1594675035&s=dmusic&search-type=ss&sr=1-2

    Reply
    • Christian Hänggi says

      March 30, 2021 at 3:45 am

      I wonder if these are actual references and not just resonances that we as readers of Pynchon are sensitized to. Is there any other piece of information to corroborate that these songs were inspired by Pynchon?

      Reply
  9. Otto says

    January 27, 2021 at 12:11 am

    The song in page 300 of my edition of V is very similar in content to “We Suck Young Blood” by Radiohead, who are previously known to have made several Pynchon references.

    Reply
  10. Anthony Gudwien says

    March 5, 2021 at 10:47 am

    The song “V” by Golden Smog from 1995’s Down by the Old Mainstream. It’s a great song!

    Reply
    • Christian Hänggi says

      March 30, 2021 at 3:26 am

      Thanks, Anthony. That is a great song! I’m just not convinced that it’s a reference to Pynchon. Except for “V” there’s little to make that assumption, I think, and I found the following on the internet: “V is an ode to a friend of the band’s, a bartender from the Uptown Bar in Minneapolis.”

      Reply
  11. Eric Gilliland says

    March 29, 2021 at 11:37 pm

    Here’s a Gravity’s Rainbow playlist I put together as I read the novel over the past several months

    https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1IwJR1RYnxY2LARCnT1X6d?si=b52b7eedcc164aa1

    Reply
    • Christian Hänggi says

      March 30, 2021 at 3:22 am

      Thank you, Eric. Would you like to explain what made you include songs? Inspiration, resonances, occasional reference perhaps?

      Reply
      • Eric Gilliland says

        April 6, 2021 at 10:58 pm

        All three of those. Some of the songs directly reference the novel, while some deal with similar themes. I also tried to imagine what Pynchon may’ve been listening to as he worked on the novel. But mostly the playlist was an exercise to help me make sense of the novel, even imagining what a film soundtrack would look like.

        Reply
  12. Carolyn L Zaremba says

    January 3, 2022 at 3:30 pm

    I think I may have written to you before about Barry Koron’s Unsung Pynchon. It was recorded in New York in 1987 and I am one of the performers on the recording. Barry was at that time my fiance and he wrote all the songs when we were living together, so I got to sing them all (but not on the recording).

    Reply
    • Christian Hänggi says

      January 3, 2022 at 3:55 pm

      Hi Carolyn, yes you did tell me a little over two years ago. It would be great if you could make the recording available! I will probably go through these pages soon and update some links, add a bit here or there.

      Reply
  13. wharf99 says

    March 25, 2022 at 4:00 pm

    Thanks for this – was prompted to come here when trying to locate some info about my own band, Greenfield Leisure, who are kindly included in your list (“too fat to frug, baby, that’s what you tell me all the time!”). If I recall correctly, we even tried contacting Mr Pynchon via his literary agent to get permission to “adapt” the lyrics, but something about the author living in a cave meant we didn’t get a definitive reply – so we thanked him anyway on the record sleeve. The late John Peel played “Too Fat To Frug” on his BBC Radio One evening show back in the day – there is an audio clip of Peel’s wry intro somehwere on the interweb. Greenfield Leisure still pop up from time to time on college radio, internet stations, eBay, Discogs and YouTube. Oh, and for die-hard fans, there’s a bunch of stuff on Bandcamp. Thanks for listening.

    Reply
  14. mike cooper says

    November 4, 2022 at 2:03 pm

    For the past twenty years i have been performing, live and on record, something I call Spirit Songs. They are all generated, William Burroughs/Bryon Gysin style, by cutting up Gravitys Rainbow and V. I improvise the backing to these pieces rendering each rendition completely different. No fixed harmony, tune or melody. There are many versions scattered across the music platforms. One of my favourites is this one – https://mikecooper.bandcamp.com/album/mike-cooper-spirit-songs-live

    Reply
  15. Charles Evans says

    April 11, 2024 at 3:51 pm

    While many of these references are to single songs and less well known acts one should note that Mark Knophler’s entire album Sailing to Philadelphia was influenced by Mason/Dixon.

    Reply
  16. JB says

    January 1, 2025 at 7:52 am

    I’m digging this one right now:
    The White Visitation by Beksinki
    https://open.spotify.com/album/6Q1n8JNR8DVrBWGQtM7FXt?si=JT4cvELVRWegNbv0mGXVVw

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Pynchon on Record –Shipwreck Library says:
    January 20, 2022 at 4:58 pm

    […] Pynchon on Record, Vol 4 In 1999, Juan García Iborra and Oscar de Jódar Bonilla published and update to Moore and Daw’s “Pynchon on Record.” Known as “Pynchon on Record, Vol. 3,” the essays is no longer available online. In 2017, Pynchon scholar Christian Hänggi published “Pynchon on Record, Vol. 4” online at Tim Ware’s Thomas Pynchon site. While there’s obviously some repetition between all these sources, Hänggi and Ware have different takes on these musicians, and it’s always pleasurable to lose oneself in Ware’s Pynchonian labyrinth! In 2020, Christian Hänggi published the definitive examination of Pynchon and music, available through Diaphanes Press: Pynchon’s Sound of Music Christian Hänggi Diaphanes, 2020. Publisher’s Description: Pynchon’s Sound of Music is dedicated to cataloging, exploring, and interpreting the manifold manifestations of music in Thomas Pynchon’s work. An original mix of close and distant readings, this monograph employs a variety of disciplines—from literary studies and musicology to philosophy, media theory, and history—to explain Pynchon through music and music through Pynchon. Encyclopedic and eclectic in its approach, Pynchon’s Sound of Music discusses the author’s use of instruments such as the kazoo, harmonica, and saxophone and embarks on close readings of the most salient and musically tantalizing passages. Zooming out to a bird’s eye view, Christian Hänggi puts Pynchon’s historical musical references and allusions into perspective to trace the trends and tendencies in the development of the author’s interest in music. A treasure trove for fans and an invaluable source for future scholarship, this book includes the Pynchon Playlist, a catalog of over 900 musical references in Pynchon’s oeuvre, and an exhaustive index of more than 700 appearances of musical instruments. Authors: Dr Larry Daw & Allen B. Ruch Last Modified: 19 January 2022 Main Pynchon Page: Spermatikos Logos Contact: quail(at)shipwrecklibrary(dot)com […]

    Reply

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