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Palm Desert
 
Palm Desert $24.95 / Trilogy $64.85
  

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Published by Emigre

Palm Desert is the first book of photographs in a series by Emigre magazine creator Rudy VanderLans. It is based on the music and lyrics of Los Angeles-based composer Van Dyke Parks and pays tribute to both Parks and Southern California. Somewhere between fact, fantasy and fiction, this book strives to visualize the environment evoked in Parks's 1968 composition "Palm Desert," and hopes to echo his creative approach of blending classical, historical, vernacular and environmental themes. The result is a curious mix of fan's tribute, documentary photography, impressionism, and experimental music review.

The book also includes a bonus music CD containing the original track "Palm Desert" by Van Dyke Parks, as well as three adaptations by Emigre recording artists Itchy Pet, Honey Barbara, and Elliott Peter Earls. Playing time 21 minutes.

96 pages, 5.5 x 8.5 inches, 75 full color and duotone photographs, cloth cover with blind emboss, sewn and case bound, with a CD attached in the back.

This book is part of a trilogy:

Buy the trilogy (Palm Desert, Cucamonga, and Joshua Tree) for $64.85 and save $10.00!

Buy Supermarket with the trilogy (Palm Desert, Cucamonga, and Joshua Tree) for $80.00 and save $14.85!

 

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Essay
 
 

 
Excerpt from Palm Desert.

The photographs and music [in this book] are based on “Palm Desert,” a track on the 1968 debut album Song Cycle by Van Dyke Parks, one of my all-time favorite records, and a mythical release of impressive proportions.

“Not since Gershwin has someone so completely involved in the pop holocaust emerged with such a transcendent concept of what American music really means. Song Cycle is that album we have all been waiting for: an auspicious debut, a stunning work of pop art, a vital piece of Americana, and a damned good record to boot.”
—Richard Goldstein, The New York Times, 1968

I purchased my copy of Song Cycle a few years after its release, and I still remember the store clerk, a weathered music fan many times my age, who assured me that it would take a dozen years until I would fully enjoy this record, and another dozen to recognize its true significance as a timeless classic. This comment turned out to be more profound than I imagined. After its release, Song Cycle received tremendous critical acclaim, as it does today, but it sold less then 10,000 copies in its first year of release—an insignificant number by major label standards. It was one of the most expensive studio albums of its time, and the execs at Warner Bros. were desperate. In order to minimize their losses they ran a series of ads, hotly criticized by Parks, with the headline: “How we lost $35,509.50 on ‘The Album of the Year.’ (Dammit)” The text read: “Van Dyke’s album’s such a milestone, it’s sailing straight into The Smithsonian Institute completely bypassing the consumer.” To remedy the situation, and to get some kind of buzz going, Warner Bros. offered people who had bought the album two brand new copies in return for their worn copy and one penny. This is the stuff myths are made of.