Monthly Archives: August 2008

Rock Gods of Acht – officially published!

So, with a rather unexciting click of my mouse, Rock Gods of Acht: a music meltdown was officially published today at 6:11pm.  Woo-hoo! 

It won’t appear on amazon.com or other online booksellers for another 6-8 weeks, so I can’t really do anything to promote it just yet - though if you want a copy, you can purchase one now at http://www.lulu.com/content/2230290 for the low low price of $14.95.  (I get a better royalty through Lulu – the publisher….)

Many thanks to Chris Chaput for designing the cover, and to my old writing group who sat through this book page by page, line by line, word by word for several years.

Following is the press release (written by Chesley Hicks) that I’ll send out once the book is available through amazon and other online booksellers….

for immediate release:                               contact:

August 24, 2008                                                  RockGodsofAcht (at) yahoo.com

                                                                                                   

 Rock Gods of Acht: a music meltdown

Surrealist exposé on the downfall of the corporate music industry out now!

 

New York, NY, August 2008 - Author Diane Hatz releases Rock Gods of Acht: a music meltdown, her eye-witness-through-a-galactic-prism tale of rock’n’roll devastation and redemption.

 

The nineties: the era ushered in by grunge and escorted out by the MiniDisc. These were the reigning glory days of the corporate record industry—music before the masses’ access to the Internet. It was Rome before the fall.

 

Rock Gods of Acht tells the spiraling tale from inside the industry, with surreal dimensions that author Diane Hatz describes as “the only way to capture the insanity of that era.”

 

The novel takes place in the monolithic halls of Acht Records, an industry behemoth recently bought out by the Yakadans, an imperialist alien race eager to test its new technology—clonebotting—and to hatch (literally) a superstar performer called Big. Thwarted Acht secretary Alex is trying to get out of her dead-end position, while her maniacal boss Langferd explodes blood vessels all around her. At the top, Vinny DiMachio, Deity and Ruling Dictator of the company, plots how he can become the richest, most powerful man in his universe, sealing his Caesar-like fall.

 

These and Rock Gods of Acht’s riot of other all-too-real characters weave in and out of each other’s lives, coming together for the huge finale—the breakout live performance of Big at the famed Salvadori Ballroom, a show that ends up nothing short of explosive.

 

Hatz can tell the tale, because she was there. “When I first became involved with music, there was an electric, vibrant energy that fueled my passion for working in the industry,” she says of the era. “But then I went to a major label as it was absorbed by a large faceless corporation and watched the life get sucked out of the company, the music, and its employees. It’s no mystery why most corporate music has no soul.”  

 

Rock Gods of Acht reveals that success can be more than we bargained for—or less than we imagined. It’s also a loving ode to rock’n’roll. With equal measures science fiction, eye-witness account, and soul-searching revelation, the book serves absurdist delight, hard-knock realism, and mad laughs in generous, balanced proportion.

 

Copies can be purchased at http://www.lulu.com/content/2230290

 

 

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Down on the farm….

Last weekend, I jetted out to Peoria, Illinois (yes, they do have jets that go there) to spend a few days on a farm in Elmwood, IL.  I have to start by saying that I could never live there, but what a great place to visit!  I stayed at Karen & Rocky Hudson’s family farm that’s been in Rocky’s family for four generations (a rare thing these days).  They grow corn and soybeans (the two most popular crops in this country).  One of the cool things about the place is that their house literally sits in a cornfield – so it’s a regular suburban-type house with a green lawn, above ground swimming pool, but it’s literally surrounded by a field of corn stalks 10 feet or higher.  So you sit in the back garden, swinging on a hammock under a tree and you’re looking at huge stalks of corn.  It was too cool!

We were joined by two other farmers and spouses - Terry and Linda Spence from Missouri (they raise cattle) and Chris and Christi Petersen from Clear Lake, Iowa.  Karen, Terry and Chris used to be consultants for the GRACE Factory Farm Project, which I managed years ago, but they’re now off doing their own thing, and I’ve gotten swallowed up with my Sustainable Table and Meatrix projects – but it was so great to spend a few days with them all.

And I bet you’re wondering what we did….

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Cory Arcangel, Bruce Springsteen and Glockenspiel

I have to tell you, tonight I went to one of perhaps the most surreal experiences of my life.  It involved an artist, a glockenspiel (like a xylophone), Bruce Springsteen videos of live performances – all from his Born to Run album, a hot sweaty air condition-less room, and an overflowing crowd of Brooklyn trendy art-types – somewhere in the bowels of Brooklyn.  Wow!  My head is still reeling….

To back up a bit – I mentioned a couple blog posts ago that I attended the Creative Capital artist retreat in the Berkshires a couple weekends ago.  It was an amazing time and I met the greatest group of people – among them was Cory Arcangel, who a couple people there told me is an extremely popular, sought after artist.  He’s a lovely person who focuses on digital media, including Internet and videogame hacks, digital art and video, and he’s currently working on a project called D.I.Y.W.I.K.I. – an opensource website that details what he does.

Anyway, I just befriended Cory on Facebook, and saw that he’d posted up an invite to an event he was having tonight at Light Industry, an artist space in Brooklyn – a part of Brooklyn I’d never been to.  Just to give you a little background on me and Brooklyn – I’ve lived in NYC for 18 years (meaning Manhattan) and only just started going to Brooklyn in the past six months.  I would joke that I needed my passport to cross the river.  (Some day I’ll tell you how I got my Brooklyn phobia – it involves the band Pavement and their UK label, 4 in the morning, and not being able to jump on poles in the East River to get to a boat.  Oh, yeah, and 3 foot rats….)   Brooklyn also has a reputation for being uber trendy, etc etc, so it’s something I’ve sort of avoided (like, no one in Manhattan tries to be trendy…).

But! – Cory was doing a live performance on a Glockenspiel to Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run album.  Being a huge Springsteen fan, having seen him live loads of times, and also having just met Cory and thinking he was good people, how could I pass this up?  So I convinced my colleague at Sustainable Table, Dawn, to cross the waters with me (okay, she lives there so getting there was no big deal to her), but I convinced her that seeing a glockenspiel performance to Bruce Springsteen music really was what was called for two days before her 40th birthday.  (Happy Birthday, Dawn!)

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Rock Gods of Acht – update

The (hopefully!) last galley for Rock Gods of Acht: a music meltdown has been ordered and will be mailed to me in the next day or two.  I haven’t picked an actual release date yet for the book, but it’ll definitely be in the next month or two.  I have to make sure the book is laid out properly and then need a couple weeks for it to be registered and online on www.amazon.com

More info soon!