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"The Master of Cat College" [circa 1925] by Louis Wain

Earlier this year, my cat died. Ned [a.k.a Sir Nedrick von Kittenpuss, Nedgy Doodle-Dandy] wasn’t always my cat. My fiancé knew him years before I did. However, despite a rough start that included him peeing on my backpacks and rug, I grew to love him as my own. He could be a real sweetheart once you got to know him.


Ned was an inquisitive cat, whose immense size matched his intelligence and sense of humor. He had excellent comedic timing, and he loved to watch how people did things, like open a can or assemble Ikea furniture. He used to sit in a chair like a person and eat breakfast with us.


He was only seven-years-old when he died. One day, he had a seizure while napping next to me on the couch. After many trips back and forth to vets, it was discovered he had been living with a bad heart his whole life. Half of his heart was consumed by fibrous tissues by the time he started showing serious symptoms, and the other half was severely enlarged.


At that point, we realized he had been living with this condition his entire life, and it had changed how he acted and developed as a cat. It forced him to just watch other cats playing because he got winded easily, and forced him to be more observant as a way to entertain himself. He would have been a completely different cat from the one we knew and loved if he hadn’t lived with that disease.


Louis Wain had a disease too, one that we still don’t know all that much about. The noted English artist suffered from late-onset schizophrenia, and spent the last 15 years of his life in an asylum. Previous to that, he managed to build a small empire on painting and drawing cats, often in human situations. Even H.G. Wells respected his dedication and distinct perspective, saying “English cats that do not look like Louis Wain cats are ashamed of themselves.”


Many look to the works produced after his committal as a clear sign of his disease, placing them in an order from most realistic depictions to the most fractal and calling it evidence. In reality, the creation dates for the majority of his works are vague, so a linear reading of his stylistic development is conjecture at best.


See, he was infatuated with intricate wallpaper patterns at the time as well, so the fractals did not come out of nowhere, and as an artist, it is normal to experiment with form. If you look at his body of work purely as an artist, you will see he was unique and skilled. If you look at his work for signs of his affliction, however, that’s what you’ll find, and you’ll likely miss out on the part where he was a successful artist long before he was labeled with a disorder. In a different time with different circumstances, he may have been another R. Crumb or Joe Coleman, designing album covers or hanging out with Johnny Depp and Leonardo DiCaprio.


Life can suck sometimes, but it’s how we deal with setbacks that defines our character. Since my cat died, I decided to put this mix together to honor his memory. As a tribute to Ned, it should be taken with a mix of thought and humor. The memory of Louis Wain also deserves to be honored, in magazines and art shows, and not through poorly researched mental health blogs [as of early 2008, his London gravesite was left derelict by city council]. How our lives are lived, what people remember about us when we’re gone, is more important than how our lives come to an end… unless that’s a really funny story.


 
 

 


01. Dosh - “Steve the Cat” (Dosh, 2002)
- Start time: 0:00; Links: Anticon - Dosh


02. Kid606 - “Just Another Kool Kat Looking for a Kitty” (GQ On The EQ++, 2000)
- Start time: 4:10; Links: Tigerbeat6 - Kid606


03. Broadcast - “Black Cat” (Tender Buttons, 2005)
- Start time: 9:53; Links: Warp/Bleep - Broadcast


04. The Clifford Gilberto Rhythm Combination - “Concrete Cats” (I Was Young and I Needed the Money, 1998)
- Start time: 13:46; Links: Ninja Tune - The Clifford Gilberto Rhythm Combination


05. The Long Lost - “Cat Fancy” (The Long Lost, 2009)
- Start time: 19:18; Links: Ninja Tune - The Long Lost


06. Husky Rescue - “Sweet Little Kitten” (Country Falls, 2004)
- Start time: 21:46; Links: Catskills - Artist


07. Jaga Jazzist - “Kitty Wü” (The Stix, 2002)
- Start time: 26:27; Links: Ninja Tune - Jaga Jazzist


08. Brian Posehn - “Cuddling” (Fart and Wiener Jokes, 2010)
- Start time: 30:51; Links: Relapse - Brian Posehn


09. Pepe Deluxé - “Pussy Cat Rock (Live Version)” (Catskills First XI Album , 2008)
- Start time: 32:02; Links: Catskills - Pepe Deluxé


10. The Detroit Cobras - “Leave My Kitten Alone” (Tied & True, 2007)
- Start time: 34:46; Links: Bloodshot - The Detroit Cobras


11. The Herbaliser - “Kittynapper” (Take London, 2005)
- Start time: 37:24; Links: Ninja Tune - The Herbaliser


12. Mike Monday - “Catnip” (Songs Without Words Part 1, 2008)
- Start time: 40:00; Links: OM - Mike Monday


13. Adrian Belew - “Big Electric Cat” (Lone Rhino, 1982)
- Start time: 45:30; Links: Island - Adrian Belew


14. Between The Pine - “I Know You Can Hear Us” (Friends, Foes, Kith and Kin, 2008)
- Start time: 50:10; Links: Supply and Demand - Between the Pine


Total Running Time: 51:31


 

Ranta is a music geek from East Vancouver. He spends most of his time researching, procuring, listening to, and writing about music. Since 2004, his work has appeared in such publications as Exclaim!, CBC Music, Tiny Mix Tapes, and PopMatters, and he has been a Polaris Music Prize juror since 2010. He graduated from SFU's Contemporary Arts program with a BFA in music in Summer 2011.


Media
Pepe Deluxé - Pussy Cat Rock (Spare Time Machine, 2007) Mike Monday - Catnip (Songs Without Words Part 1, 2008) Adrian Belew - Big Electric Cat (Lone Rhino, 1982)
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