Necronomicon Australis presents An Evening Discussion with
S.T. Joshi
Friday 28th of June, 5.30pm-9.00pm, 1st
floor Conference Room, the Castlereagh Boutique Hotel, Castlereagh Street,
Sydney NSW.
What
can I say about this? Where to start? To begin with, I only heard about this
event because one of the organisers read my author bio somewhere and then
contacted my publisher to ask her to pass the details on. I was intrigued, but
that weekend was building up to be a big one with many events – including a family
reunion – being scheduled then. In the end, I felt constrained to go for three
reasons: one, there probably wouldn’t be another opportunity to do something
like this; two, good Lovecraftian events are few and far between out here; and,
three, I felt guilty about turning it down after they’d sought me out. Turns
out, none of these reasons were valid, and I may as well have stayed at home.
‘Sounds
harsh? Let me explain.
The
organisers had envisioned an evening of music written by Larry Sitsky, an
Australian composer you’ve never heard of, whose oeuvre was largely
inspired by esoteric philosophies and occult written works; at some point in
the 90s he wrote a series of linked short pieces for piano and clarinet entitled
“Necronomicon: 18 aphorisms for clarinet and piano”. One of the organisers
works with Sitsky at the Canberra School of Music and decided that the stars
were right for a performance of this piece. So far, so good.
The
issue was that the composition is quite short, and so dragging people out for an
evening of music that would last less than half an hour seemed problematic –
something else was called for. They decided that someone needed to do an introduction
to the life of HPL to kick things off and, in a giddy moment, one of them
contacted S.T. Joshi, on a whim or a dare, and he agreed to come Down Under and
do it. I hope you’re all following…
Now
they had one evening’s entertainment prepared, but that seemed like a lot of
effort for just one night. So they decided to go on the road and turn it into a
touring event. They penciled in Hobart, Melbourne and Sydney, along with the
Canberra date, but there was just one issue: the musical performers who could play
the piece had other commitments and couldn’t be contracted for any more performances
than the one night. This meant that all the other dates would have to be
carried by Joshi flying solo. You can probably see where we’re headed…
Fast
forward to Sydney and the last evening of the tour. We had Joshi coming on
after the interval, fine, but for starters we were addressed by two other
figures from the local Lovecraftian scene, willing to talk about the impact of
HPL’s work in the Antipodes. Well, I say two, but one of them bailed, and had
to be replaced by a ring-in an hour beforehand. The first of these speakers –
Leigh Blackmore – talked us through his collection of Lovecraftian articles,
books and fanzines, published locally and elsewhere since the 1930s, while the
second speaker – Charles Danny Lovecraft (I shit you not) – just gushed about
how cool he thought HPL was, in his opinion. After this, Joshi came on and
told us all about his accomplishments and the “complete accident” of how he
came to be the world’s foremost Lovecraft scholar, followed by some
awkwardly-handled YouTube clips of a Lovecraft poem set to music, both
performed by choral groups, one including Joshi himself, who also composed the music.
After this came questions.
Let
me say, this was a train-wreck. Despite being “planned” ahead of time, the
event was cobbled together at the last minute and nothing of any value or
interest was presented (and frankly, if I want to watch YouTube clips, I can
sit at home in my underwear and do that). Anyone with a passing interest in
this stuff, knows who S.T. Joshi is and knows what he has done –
we don’t need to hear him blow his own trumpet and certainly not after
ponying-up 30-odd dollars and a trip into the City for the privilege. Additionally,
if I want to hear an HPL fanboy sing his praises while wetting himself in
excitement, I’ll go to a fan event where everyone cosplays (no, on second
thought, I won’t!). The only thing of interest – to me, anyway – was the
listing of bibliographic details of locally-published Lovecraftiana, and the delivery
of this material was dry and mirthless, scuppered by the ineptitude of the
person running the projector and the laptop to which it was connected. Every time
someone mentioned Fritz Leiber, they pronounced it “LEE-ber”, which always gets
my teeth clenching.
Somethings
were outside the organisers’ control: tea and coffee facilities had been
provided by the Hotel, but had been set up at one end of the very small
conference room, with the result that each time the urn went through its
heating routine, the sound of it drowned out whoever was talking. Add to this
that management had seen its way clear to turn off the air-conditioning, we
were all sweating profusely by the half-time break, during which someone
thankfully located the switch. On top of this, the audience – comprised chiefly
of socially-inept nerds – was about as rude as it was possible to be, talking loudly
at the back of the room while presenters were presenting, or playing games on
their ‘phones during the talks. I mean, really – would it kill them to unplug
for a couple of hours? Even the organisers themselves were culpable in these
transgressions, lending the event an air of them having gratefully reached the
finish line and getting ready to party. And all the while I was thinking: “I paid
for this?”
Question
time at the end was the moment that I thought things would get interesting but
even here it was dull. Someone asked if anyone else in the world of literature
has had such an ongoing impact on their audience and there was some mumbled
discussion between the speakers which resulted in a “no, not that we can think
of” response. Someone asked if Lovecraft was inspired by his home-town
surroundings to write his work, to which Joshi answered, “yes, yes I think so”.
Some people asked if there was any particular movie adaptation the panel felt really
delivered. I stuck my oar in, in desperation, and asked about my last sentence
of “The Haunter of the Dark” issue, asking why that particular
construction had been chosen as ‘correct’ and got a dismissive “because I
know better than you” answer. I mean really? How naff could all this be?
It was all empty, obvious inquiry and ego, and it made us run overtime at which
point the organisers abruptly called it quits.
In
summation, this was an event that was pitched at novices, people with no clue
about who HPL or S.T. Joshi were, but attended by an audience of people who
knew all there was to know about them. I mean, imagine going up to – oh, I don’t
know – your Mum, and going “hey! There’s this really cool event happening with
S.T. Joshi – wanna come?” What would you expect? Frankly if you had bought a ticket to
this event, you know what to expect, you’ve got all your bases covered and you’d be anticipating something
more. Something above Novice Level, anyway. There was no depth to the knowledge on
display and certainly Joshi’s talk could have been read directly from his
Wikipedia entry, except for the odd personal revelation that made little
difference – overall - to the material. The technical aspects of the show were
handled by a ham-fisted Luddite who should have known better: I mean, I showed up
early and was told to wait in the bar before going up to the room; the whole time
I was there, the Luddite was there too – shouldn’t he really have been upstairs
getting things good to go? Like learning how to use a computer? The whole event
was poorly thought out and even more poorly executed. I came away feeling like
I’d been fleeced.
As
a means of recouping something from the evening, I asked Joshi to sign a
copy of one of his books which I’d brought with me. He did so as dismissively
as he’d addressed my question earlier and his signature is an illegible scrawl.
If ever I decide to put it up on E-bay, everyone is going to just ask me to prove
it’s actually his signature!
To
top it all off, my train broke down on the way home and I didn’t get back until
almost two o’clock in the morning. Thank-you Gladys; thank-you State Rail. A
crappy way to finish off a crappy evening.