A Kiss Is Just A Kiss
A Kiss Is Just A Kiss or A Kiss Is Still A Kiss is the name of a radio program produced by Joe Frank.
Program Information
It is not clear when the program originally aired. The WFMU FAQ lists the program date as 2002, but this is clearly not the original air date. I [ddyer] have aircheck tapes for parts 2 and 3 which date from KCRW in 1986.
The only known existing copy is divided into three parts of unequal length, and the first part has been lost. It is not clear if the division is original.
Synopsis
- Part 2:
- Johnny and his relationship to his stepmother at the start of WWII.
- He fights with fascists in a German-American movie theater. He and his stepmother kiss.
- He runs off, gets drunk, and enlists in the Canadian air force.
- Enthusiastic recruits board the ship for Europe.
- His plane goes down and he gets a desk job, invites death when London is bombed.
- Part3:
- Johnny returns from Europe after the war.
- He finds religion in a Thomas Merton poem and joins the monastery in Gethsemani.
Miscellanea
- Shares text with To The Bar Life.
- This program is not available at joefrank.com.
Commentary
Please see guidelines on commentary and share your personal thoughts in this section.
Rash (talk)
I believe this was broadcast (or maybe just made available for RealAudio streaming on a KCRW web page) as the last "new" program of The Other Side, in 2002. I taped it and tried to listen a couple times but it sounded just like To The Bar Life, so being old material, I lost interest. And unfortunately I cannot locate that tape.
Shiro
From the tenor of Joe's voice and the style of the sound mix, it sounds to me like a fairly early program. There are a few moments where Joe slips on a word and then continues, and the background music is sparse and looping isn't obvious, which suggest that it may have been produced under unusual conditions. Was it broadcast live? Is it a demo-tape? A WBAI remnant? Or is it just another example of Joe doing something experimental and unlike everything else in his repertoire?
ddyer
I suspect this program falls into the category of early works the author would prefer to be forgotten. It doesn't appear anywhere on Joe's official web site. Too bad though - you can really see Joe's development as an artist in progress here, particularly in sequence in part 3 involving the homosexual vegetarian monks killing a pig for their feast day.