** Original copies of this rarity. Factory sealed. Few copies available ** Volume two of the series, again a double-LP, with many of the same participants as the first volume plus the likes of Greg Corso, Peter Orlovsky, Imamu Amiri Baraka (Leroi Jones), Paul Blackburn, John Ashbery, and Charles Amirkhanian. "As album covers go,this must be one of the worst ever?...or one of the best ever? Maybe even the Best ever? A disco shirt clad John Giorno, knealing on a beach in the surf as if bathing in a sea of his own bodily fluids. Then we're treated to an inset of a very creepy looking Giorno in his hotel room, prostrate,legs akimbo, like a sex tourist on his unmade bed after deflowering an underage native rentboy. Looking at the other bed in the room, which seems unused, he must have paid the single person's supplement, unless the person unknown, who took these candid photographs, is sharing the room with him. Perhaps he got that severely abused native boy to take them as part of his fee? How these images connect with the album title I can only imagine?...maybe that's it, the poetry, cover and artists are all disconnected from each other and that's the concept?
Whatever is going on in Giorno's mind, this double album has some rather good spoken word pieces on it, and is thankfully light on Rock stars wanting to be associated with Mr. Burroughs. There's little or no music to ruin the words. Interestingly, or not, I understand that one Robert Zimmerman makes an appearance on one of the Ginsberg tracks, alongside very over-rated and now dead cellist, Arthur Russell." Die or D.I.Y.
Side One
A1 - Allen Ginsberg: Vajra Mantra (Western Illinois University, April 15, 1972)
A2 - Diane Di Prima: Revolutionary Letters Nos. 7, 13, 16, 49 (GPS, New York, March 21, 1969)
A3 - William Burroughs: Excerpts from The Wild Boys (Duke Street, London, November 19, 1971)
A4 - Anne Waldman: Pressure, Holy City (GPS, New York, June 9, 1972)
A5 - John Giorno: Vajra Kisses (GPS, New York, August 9, 1972)
Side Two
B1 - Emmett Williams: Duet (GPS, New York, December 1968)
B2 - Ed Sanders: Cemetery Hill (Berkeley Poetry Conference, California, July 19, 1965)
B3- Taylor Mead: Motorcycles (GPS, New York, January 1969)
B4 - Allen Ginsberg: Green Automobile 1953 (Recorded Sacramento State College, April 23, 1971)
B5 - Robert Creeley: The Messenger For Allen Ginsberg, I Know A Man (Bolinas, California, July 1971)
B6 - Harris Schiff: Poems (98 Greene Street Loft, New York, April 4, 1972)
B7 - Lenore Kandel: Kali (Berkeley Poetry Conference, California, July 19, 1965)
B8 - Aram Saroyan: Not A Cricket (GPS, New York, February 1969)
B9 - Philip Whalen: Excerpt from Scenes Of Life At The Capitol (YMHA Poetry Center, New York, November 15, 1971)
B10 - Ted Berrigan: Excerpt from The Sonnets (Berkeley Poetry Conference, California, July 19, 1965)
Side Three
C1 - Frank O’Hara: Ode To Joy, To Hell With It (New York, September 1963)
C2 - Joe Brainard: Excerpt from I Remember (Calais, Vermont, July 1970)
C3 - Clark Coolidge: Small Inventions: Suite V (Plurals) Secante, Suite IV (Mills College, California, January 1969)
C4 - Jim Carroll: Excerpts from The Basketball Diaries (GPS, New York, March 1969)
C5 - John Cage: Mushroom Haiku (St. Mark’s Church, New York, April 1972)
C6 - Bernadette Mayer: These Stories About After The Revolution (New York, September 1970)
C7 - Michael Brownstein: Geography (GPS, New York, November 1970)
Side Four
D1 - Brion Gysin: I Am That I Am (BBC, London, 1958)
D2 - John Sinclair: The Destruction Of America (Berkeley Poetry Conference, California, July 19, 1965)
D3 - Anne Waldman: How the Sestina (Yawn) Works (GPS, New York, June 9, 1972)
D4 - Heathcote Williams: I Will Not Pay Taxes Until (GPS, New York, March, 1969)
D5 - David Henderson: The Louisiana Weekly No. 1 Ruckus Poem Part 1 (GPS, New York, December, 1968)
D6 - Bobby Seale: Excerpt from Fillmore East Speech (New York, May 20, 1968)
D7 - Kathleen Cleaver: Excerpt from Fillmore East Speech (New York, May 20, 1968)
D8 - Allen Ginsberg: Blake Song: Merrily We Welcome In The Year (Corning Community College, New York, November, 1971)