Tag Archives: Garrett Faulkner

Mixtape Monday: Garrett Faulkner

I don’t have much to say about these selections. Cicero wrote that literature “faithfully comforts us through the night, in the farthest lands and darkest woods.” Wise words, to be sure, but I have trouble reading in the dark, and in the car, so songs like these have, more than once, served in a pinch and served beautifully. Listening to them, I’ve also learned I’m prone to air banjo and singing full bore into the wall. If that isn’t joy, I don’t know what is.

1. Stephen Stills – Old Times Good Times
2. Arthur Crudup – Rock Me Mama
3. Cat Stevens – If You Want to Sing Out, Sing Out
4. Old Crow Medicine Show – Don’t Ride That Horse
5. Jackson Browne – Cocaine
6. Elliott Smith – Miss Misery
7. Dave Rawlings Machine – Monkey and the Engineer
8. Gillian Welch – Red Clay Halo
9. Patty Griffin – Moses
10. Nick Drake – Things Behind the Sun
11. Bruce Springsteen – Darkness on the Edge of Town
12. Mumford and Sons – Roll Away Your Stone
13. The Rolling Stones – Factory Girl
14. Simon and Garfunkel – Blues Run the Game
15. Punch Brothers – Next to the Trash
16. John Prine – Christmas in Prison
17. Grateful Dead – New Speedway Boogie
18. Jimi Hendrix – It’s Too Bad
19. Brandi Carlisle – Have You Ever
20. Belle and Sebastian – Like Dylan in the Movies
21. Bob Dylan – Dirt Road Blues
22. Sam Cooke – Bring it on Home to Me

Listen to Garrett’s playlist here: Songs to Listen to in the Dark

Garrett Faulkner is an MFA candidate in fiction at the University of Arizona.

WIP This Friday, November 11

The WIP Reading Series continues this Friday, November 11th (back) at Casa Libre. This will be the first of two back-to-back weeks of WIP readings, (or as Daisy Pitkin more attractively put it:) a WIP Double Dip, if you will. Have a look-see at the biographies for Round 1:

Garrett Faulkner catches hell for his surname often. He is working on memorizing the five versions of the Gettysburg Address. His interests include lake effect, brisket, em dashes, and open browser tabs (lots of ‘em). He looks forward to spinning some tales for you this Friday.

Natalie Cunningham realized this fall that she far prefers the desert of southeast Utah to the desert of Tucson; it has far more color. She tries to write works of art about science.

Daniel DeKerlegand
Existing is plagiarism.
-Emil Cioran