Reykjavík Grapevine - 14.08.2015, Qupperneq 50

Reykjavík Grapevine - 14.08.2015, Qupperneq 50
UNO at Ingólfstorg | Tel. 561 1313 | www.uno.is HAPPY HOUR EVERY DAY 17-19 GREAT FOOD NI CE GOOD DRINKS ATMO KITCHEN IS OPEN Weekends 11.30–24 Other days 11.30–23 free Wifi BISTRO&B AR uno is the perfect place to start a good day or end a great evening Well, maybe entitlement wouldn’t be the right way to describe me (I thought I’d talk about myself a little bit now, another surefire way to get people to give up and move on to the next article). I know some entitled people, and I’m not one of them. If anything, I’m frankly a little embarrassed I exist. One of my most finely honed tal- ents is staying out of people’s way. And I’ll be the first to admit that I’m kind of a hack, stealing most of my writerly MO from stuff I hear and see around me, and not really using it to create anything truly new. I’m sure you’ve read hundreds of “don’t-read-me” pieces just like this one in publications, zines and blogs stretch- ing from now and all the way back to beat poetry, depending how old/well-read you are. Rest assured, this is just another one of those. No, I’m talking about entitlement that’s afforded to me by those around me. I’ve had a long-standing offer from this paper to publish whatever the hell it is I want to write, an offer that I’ve had extremely rare occasion to accept, and usually only when it suits my purposes. I’m not sure exactly why that is; someone once asked someone else I know if I was “afraid of success,” and that could be it. I don’t think so, though. I love suc- cess. I love the limelight, and I’ll in fact happily assume that any audience, be it a silent one of readers or an applauding throng of concert-goers is utterly thrilled to be entertained by my insufferable ass. I mean, you’re reading this now, right? I’ve hardly really said anything in 500+ words, and you’re still reading. Clearly, you love me, and I’m loving that you love me. No, I think the root goes deeper than simple fear of success. I definitely harbor a fair amount of re- sentment toward those who, despite their clearly inferior talents, have achieved suc- cess, however modest, in their pursuit of followers, be they writers, musicians, pho- tographers, sculptors, whatever. That re- sentment is sort of a vicious cycle, because successful people that would ordinarily happily help me feel the resentment, and consequently don’t help me, or stop help- ing me if they already are, causing me to resent them even more. So I clearly love success, or at the very least crave it. But would I love it so much if I had it? And would I even recognize it if I ever achieved it? Am I maybe already successful? Success can be a gradual pro- cess, so gradual you don’t even realize it’s happening, or so I assume, having read the occasional article about it (and of course shamelessly plagiarized it for content). I’m the son of a somewhat successful artist, and maybe I feel like any success I attain would be unfair to those not lucky enough to be in my very fortunate posi- tion. There are certainly far more talented and original people I could name who, through no fault of their own, have yet to achieve even the very modest success I have, and it’s unfair. Sometimes I wish they were relatives of a successful artist; maybe that way, they could catch a break. Meanwhile, my entitled ass gets to put out records on vinyl through family con- nections, records full of trite, middling pop-punk that’s been done to death for 20+ years. …except that’s not really true. Or not always, anyway. Sometimes, I find myself perversely resentful of those who don’t give me more of a chance than they would some filthy unwashed mugblood musi- cian, simply on account of me having a famous relative. Those are the moments I am at my absolute worst as a human being, and thankfully they never last long before I catch myself. I think what I fear far more than suc- cess is a success I have not earned. I fear achieving notoriety as a musician or writer, only for people to find that there is no talent behind the words or behind the songs. It’s all hype, and you only bought the record because of my mom. You only read this article because you’re a Bjork fan. If so, shame on you, because you’re a horrible person who’s ruining my life. No wait, sorry, you’re really not, it’s just a knee-jerk thing I do, but still; you see my point. While there’s nothing inherently wrong with how you come by music (I mean, shit, I got into GBV because of Jay Carney), you can see why I might hate you, in the same way that a lifetime comic book fan doesn’t like it when you attend ComiCon because you saw Chris Evans traipse around with an American flag on his back in some horrible fucking movie. You may be reading this because you de- cided to dabble in cute Bjork-Iceland stuff because it seems fun and cute, but this is my entire existence you’ve taken a casual interest in. It’s my life; don’t you forget, it never ends. But this article must. It’s already taken a long time to not really say anything, ex- cept maybe offer a hopelessly incomplete explanation as to why I don’t write for the Grapevine anymore. The truth is that I don’t really know. I mean, I do and I don’t. I don’t really know if I know or not. Some- times I feel like I do. But most times, I’m not really sure. So basically you read this whole thing for nothing, really. Sorry. TAKE NOTE: The vinyl edition of Sindri El- don's critically acclaimed solo début, 'Bitter And Resentful', just hit local record stores. MUSIC OPINION It’s good practice to start your article with a nice, attention-grabbing line that draws the read- er in, one that serves as a purposefully inconclusive summation of the piece’s content without a fully satisfying conclusion; that way, the reader will have to continue reading. Preferably, it’s a short sentence that gets its own paragraph to make it more eye-catching, a sentence that has a rhythm to it, whether it’s a clipped rhythm, full of plosives and punctuation, or a roll- ing, lilting rhythm that seems to tumble off the page into the reader’s brain, or sometimes a purposefully disjointed rhythm to intentionally subvert what’s traditionally considered “good form.” Whatever kind of sentence you choose, it’s how I believe any good article should start, and normally, that’s what I would have done here. But I’m not going to do that this time. I thought I’d write a piece with the most meandering, meaningless opening paragraph—a paragraph that could easily have been divided into two or more paragraphs, incidentally— and keep the reader thoroughly disinterested. That way, I can fulfill my obligation to the editor of this paper whilst simultaneously keeping a promise I made to myself. Because you see, I don’t really want you to read this article. This article is an in-joke, an elitist, self-congrat- ulatory prank played on you by a lazy agoraphobic wordsworth whose sense of entitlement plainly exceeds his intellect. So don’t read it. Photo Hvalreki Words Sindri Eldon 6 A Semi-Partial Introduction To Opinions I May Or May Not Have
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Reykjavík Grapevine

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