From Milk magazine -
Paola: What's the first memory you have of Harry?
Allen: I heard about him before I met him, from Jordan Belson, who lived on         Montgomery Street up the block from me in San Francisco, a  filmmaker who had learned a lot from Harry. Harry originally came from  Seattle, then in Berkeley as part of what was called "the Berkeley  Renaissance" in 1948 around Robert Duncan, Jack Spicer, and other poets  studying medieval history. I don't think Harry was matriculated, but I  think he had worked with Kroeber, I'm not         sure the anthropologist. While we were  sniffin' ether, Jordan told me about Harry, this polymath brilliant  fellow who'd invented the machinery for making light shows and had left  that behind when he left San Francisco. The people working on rock  concert light shows developed their multimedia Fillmore West  wall-collage projections from Harry's equipment, including the idea of  mixing oils or colors on a mirror which was then projected on the wall:  liquid psychedelic flowing moving images.
       He told me enough about him so that when I was in New York later  in 1959 I went to the Five Spot to listen to Thelonious Monk night  after night. The Five Spot was then on the         Bowery a regular classic jazz club where once I  saw Lester Young, and Monk was a regular for several months. And I  noted there was an old guy, with a familiar face, someone I dimly  recognized from a description, slightly hunchback, short,  magical-looking, in a funny way gnomish or dwarfish, same time  dignified. He was sitting at a table by the piano towards the kitchen  making little marks on a piece of paper. I said to myself,         "Is that Harry Smith? I'll go over and ask him." And it turned  out to be Harry Smith. I asked him what he was doing, marking on the  paper. He said he was calculating whether Thelonious Monk was hitting  the piano before or after the         beat trying to notate the syncopation of  Thelonious Monk's piano. But I asked him this track record of the  syncopation or retards that Monk was making, never coming quite on beat  but always aware of the         beat. He said it was because he was calculating the variants.  Then I asked him why he was interested in Crowley, magic, in numbers, in  esoteric systems, Theosophy, and         was also a member of the O.T.O. He had practical use for it. He  was making animated collages and he needed the exact tempo of Monk's  changes and punctuations of time in order to synchronize the collages  and hand-drawn frame-by-frame abstractions with Monk's music. He was  working frame-by-frame so it was possible for him to do that, but he  needed some kind of scheme.
More...
See also:
American Magus / Harry Smith: A Modern Alchemist
Harry Smith - Ian Simmons looks back at the eccentric career of Harry Smith - filmmaker, musicologist and magician
This interview is available in a more extensive and more accurate form on
ReplyDeletehttp://www.allenginsberg.org/index.php?page=paola-igliori-interview-on-harry-smith
Also check out the various posts on Harry Smith on the Allen Ginsberg blog eg this - http://ginsbergblog.blogspot.com/2011/11/remembering-harry-smith.html