Martin Mull  

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-First off: I love the work of [[David Toop]], he is a part of [[Jahsonic's canon]], so therefore any criticism you read in this post is non-existent. If anything, I'm just glad to add something to the discussion. 
-I'm surprised that [[David Toop]] in ''[[Sinister Resonance: The Mediumship of the Listener]]'' (2010) does not refer to the [[Laocoon marble]].+'''Martin Mull''' (born August 18, 1943) is an [[United States|American]] actor who has starred in his own [[Situation comedy|television sitcom]] and acted in prominent films. He is also a [[comedian]], [[Painting|painter]], and recording artist.
-Toop does mention ''[[The Scream]]'' by Munch, which is the direct heir of the ''Laocoon''. 
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-The Laocoon is central to the [[ekphrasis]] concept, and the ekphrasis concept is central to "Act of silence" and "Art of silence" chapters in ''Sinister Resonance''. In fact, the whole area of writing about music is an act of transposing, some of us have found nonsensical, testimony: "[[Martin Mull]] 
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-Illustration: ''[[The Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression: As Connected with the Fine Arts]]'' by [[Charles Bell]] [http://wwww.archive.org/stream/Bell1844nu34M#page/157/mode/1up] 
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-<hr> 
-The notion of a [[fractured self]], it's from Plato's [[Symposium (Plato) |symposium]],” Chase confesses. [[Dexter Morgan]]'s response is a hilarious "are you shitting me?" look. 
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-<hr> 
-Laocoon, what you have already had to suffer. ... allow for the purposeful representation of the abject scream as in Caravaggio's [[Medusa's Head]], Munch's The Scream, [[Siqueiros]]' [[Echo of a Scream]], or Rodin's sculpture [[The Mute Scream]]. 
 +==="Dancing about Architecture"===
 +[[Elvis Costello]] attributes the well-known phrase "[[writing about music is like dancing about architecture]]" to Martin Mull.
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Martin Mull (born August 18, 1943) is an American actor who has starred in his own television sitcom and acted in prominent films. He is also a comedian, painter, and recording artist.


"Dancing about Architecture"

Elvis Costello attributes the well-known phrase "writing about music is like dancing about architecture" to Martin Mull.



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