Talking Heads: Fear of Music
Emerson Lake & Palmer: Tarkus
Firesign Theatre: I Think We're All Bozos on this Bus
Prince: The B-Sides
Faith No More: Angel Dust
Benny Goodman: Greatest Hits
Van der Graaf Generator: Pawn Hearts
The Dead Weather
Tommy Dorsey: Sinatra, Vol 1
Rolling Stones: Sticky Fingers
Brian Eno: Another Green World
Ray Charles: Anthology
Brian Wilson: Smile
14 August 2009
Weekly playlist
06 August 2009
Weekly playlist
Public Image Ltd - Second Edition
Genesis - The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
Peter Gabriel - (3)
Frank Zappa - One Size Fits All
Steely Dan - Countdown to Ecstasy
Marvin Gaye - Gold
REM - Reckoning
Squeeze - East Side Story
Michael Hedges - Breakfast in the Field
Julie London - Time For Love
30 July 2009
Weekly playlist
These tunes make the day go by quicker:
Apples in Stereo: The Discovery of a World Inside the Moone
Gang of Four: Entertainment!
David Bowie: Station to Station
Sufjan Stevens: Illinois
Jethro Tull: Thick as a Brick
REM: Murmur
Steve Hackett: Voyage of the Acolyte
Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane at Carnegie Hall
Jellyfish: Spilt Milk
Brian Eno: Taking Tiger Mountain
Regina Spektor: Far
Pere Ubu: Dub Housing
Soundtrack to Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
22 July 2009
15 Books
Rules: Don't take too long to think about it. List 15 books you've read that will always stick with you. They should be the first 15 you can recall in no more than 15 minutes.
1. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - A Conan Doyle
2. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll
3. Red Harvest - Dashiell Hammett
4. The Haunted Road - Margaret Sutton
5. Harriet the Spy - Louise Fitzhugh
6. Gravity's Rainbow - Pynchon
7. Notes from Underground - Dostoevsky
8. Big Sur - Kerouac
9. A Supposedly Fun Thing - David Foster Wallace
10. The Trial - Kafka
11. The Man Who Was Thursday - GK Chesterton
12. Harpo Speaks - Harpo Marx
13. Journey to the End of the Night - Celine
14. Ask the Dust - John Fante
15. The Code of the Woosters - PG Wodehouse
02 January 2009
Ye Olde Music Meme
1. Put your iTunes on shuffle.
2. For each question, press the next button to get your answer.
3. YOU MUST WRITE THAT SONG NAME DOWN NO MATTER HOW SILLY IT SOUNDS!
Here we go...
IF SOMEONE SAYS "IS THIS OKAY" YOU SAY?
Voices in the Fan (Devin Townsend)
WHAT WOULD BEST DESCRIBE YOUR PERSONALITY?
I've Seen All Good People (Yes)
WHAT DO YOU LIKE IN A GUY/GIRL?
Hellhounds of Madness (Harry Partch)
WHAT IS YOUR LIFE'S PURPOSE?
Poisoning Pigeons in the Park (Tom Lehrer)
WHAT IS YOUR MOTTO?
Afterlife (Dream Theater)
WHAT DO YOUR FRIENDS THINK OF YOU?
Ghost Riders in the Sky (Johnny Cash)
WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT VERY OFTEN?
Fried Chicken (Ice-T)
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF YOUR BEST FRIEND?
The Number of the Beast (Iron Maiden)
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE PERSON YOU LIKE?
Names (Cat Power)
WHAT IS YOUR LIFE STORY?
Fig Leaf Rag (Scott Joplin)
WHAT DO YOU WANT TO BE WHEN YOU GROW UP?
Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family (David Bowie)
WHAT DO YOU THINK WHEN YOU SEE THE PERSON YOU LIKE?
Love is Here to Stay (Dexter Gordon)
WHAT DO YOUR PARENTS THINK OF YOU?
Some Girls (Rolling Stones)
WHAT WILL YOU DANCE TO AT YOUR WEDDING?
Inheritance (Talk Talk)
WHAT WILL THEY PLAY AT YOUR FUNERAL?
Tokyo Storm Warning (Elvis Costello)
WHAT IS YOUR HOBBY/INTEREST?
Teeth Like God's Shoeshine (Modest Mouse)
WHAT IS YOUR BIGGEST SECRET?
Sweet Mary Blues (Leadbelly)
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF YOUR FRIENDS?
One Big Yes (Lounge Lizards)
WHAT'S THE WORST THING THAT COULD HAPPEN?
When a Boy Falls in Love (Sam Cooke)
HOW WILL YOU DIE?
You and Your Folks, Me and My Folks (Funkadelic)
WHAT IS THE ONE THING YOU REGRET?
Nobody Told Me (John Lennon)
WHAT MAKES YOU LAUGH?
Golden Ball (Stereolab)
WHAT MAKES YOU CRY?
Liberation (Outkast)
WILL YOU EVER GET MARRIED?
This is What I Believe In (Adrian Belew)
WHAT SCARES YOU THE MOST?
Forty-Six & 2 (Tool)
DOES ANYONE LIKE YOU?
Caroline Says II (Lou Reed)
IF YOU COULD GO BACK IN TIME, WHAT WOULD YOU CHANGE?
Used to Love Her (Guns N Roses)
WHAT HURTS RIGHT NOW?
Hello From Inside a Shell (Zombies Enter the Harbor) (Of Montreal)
11 October 2008
The Great Southwest
What follows is the photographic result of a quick little circumnavigation of the four corners of the American Southwest. Mountain paths were hiked, canyons climbed, rivers waded, horses ridden, tents pitched, skin sunburned, and egg burritos devoured. Impressive how quickly temperatures can fluctuate between 100 and 30 degrees fahrenheit in a matter of hours out there.
The Delicate Arch
The Eye in the Sky
Independence Ghost Town
Monument Valley
Zion Narrows
[Full gallery]
15 June 2008
The Telectroscope
The backstory is this. In the Victorian age, an engineer named Alexander Stanhope St George visited the recently-completed Brooklyn Bridge and was enchanted by the ambition and ingenuity that went into its design and construction. He was less thrilled, however, with the arduous, stormtossed journey required to reach the bridge from his cheery home in England. He hit upon the concept of a complex configuration of mirrors and lenses which would allow the curious to see down the shaft of a transatlantic tunnel spanning the two continents. A "telectroscope," as it would come to be known. At first popular enthusiasm was high as St George set out to execute his idea, the romance of connecting London to New York bolstering support among the populations of both nations. The fanciful tales of Jules Verne were highly celebrated at the time and this eccentric scheme gripped the imagination in a similar fashion. However a tragic cave-in soon dampened the spirits and eventually St George was forced to abandon the project as enthusiasm waned and skilled workers became scarce. He died heartbroken in an asylum in 1917.
A century later, his descendant, an artist named Paul St George, discovered a dusty trunk in his grandmother's attic. Inside were diaries, diagrams, sketches, and various other documents concerning the ill-fated Telectroscope. Seized with inspiration, he set about making his great-grandfather's vision a reality.
In May of 2008 the Telectroscope was finally opened to the public. It took over a century, but now, at last, Asian tourists in New York can peer into the lens and see Asian tourists in London waving back at them.
Sadly the exhibit closed on June 15th. The Telectroscope is to be dismantled and the transatlantic tunnel filled in. Presumably something to do with Homeland Security.
10 June 2008
The Ghosts of Asbury Park
Once an opulent seaside resort, now a haven for derelicts. Careful not to step on any discarded syringes in the sand.
11 May 2008
01 May 2008
19 April 2008
11 April 2008
06 April 2008
Choral Music
"I think I hear some choral music. One hears almost no music from these backyards. Knowing absolutely nothing about music, I conclude, in a scholarly way, that it must be Puccini because of the ascending and melodramatic scale of flats. Then I hear some dissonance and decide that it must be Berg or Schonberg. The soprano then hits a very high note and sustains it for an impossible length of time, and I realize that what I've been hearing is the clash of traffic and a police siren amplified by a light rain."
--from The Journals of John Cheever
05 April 2008
Steam Beast
In Lower Manhattan on rainslick midnights when roiling steam pours out of the grates in long flumes, it looks like the city itself is breathing. Halitosis from the jaws of a concrete Cthulhuian beast. A boiled claw reeking of sulphur reaches from the sewer to drag you down to its ancient realm of sodden newspapers, lost coins, White Castle containers, discarded subway passes, forsaken lottery tickets, condom wrappers, cigarette butts, and the occasional finger. You cling to lampposts & postboxes, but the wet pavement is a sluice down the gullet of the beast, who salivates over you, squirming slab of beef. But it's a welcome demise, as demises go. Unlike the mummified limbo of empty parking lots and cheap aluminum siding somewhere in the yawn of the great wide nowhere.
03 April 2008
Pandas
I suspect there are demonic pandas hiding in my cellar. I hear strange chewing noises late at night coming up through the vents. It's not the landlady at her fridge, gnawing on chickenbones after midnight - no, something more feral and unearthly is at work here. They're not chewing on bamboo & ferns, but the tattered souls of former tenants. Bloodshot goggle eyes peer out from the dark recesses of the stairwell when I go out to check the mail. The postman knows. He doesn't come inside anymore, leaves my packages on the stoop & hastens away. And those rumbling noises, like hell's empty stomach. Like a great furnace crying out for fossil fuel. There are jagged teethmarks in the wooden banister & everyday they seem to rise a little higher. Who do I call about this - an exterminator or an exorcist?
Guns of August
I'm in the midst of Barbara Tuchman's Guns of August right now, about the days leading up to The Great War (ha ha), trying to figure out why the hell anyone got involved in that bloody mudfest in the first place. Why it wasn't confined merely to a squabble between Serbia and Austria-Hungry while the bigger nations went about their business. Germany and France were looking for a fight, evidently. Itchy trigger fingers. They'd been looking for an excuse for years. I have yet to understand why Russia and England got involved. Treaties were in place, yes, but descending into nightmare just because your neighbor asks if you can lend a hand seems a bit hard to believe. Maybe people just took conscription much more seriously back then. Some perverted sense of honor. Or less focus on their own sense of discomfort.
The whole fiasco comes across as one big Rube Goldberg machine, starting out with an archduke getting smacked with a flyswatter and ending up in trench warfare. Four years of mud, shrapnel, barbed wire, mustard gas, and mortar fire. I have no idea how Wilson convinced America to get involved, having no great catastrophe to "avenge" a la Roosevelt and Bush. Yeah, Germany had a habit of sinking our boats which was most uncharitable of them, but was that enough to warrant hundreds of thousands of American deaths? I imagine America had recently emerged from the Spanish-American War with our uniforms barely mussed and figured this new one would be a similar jaunt. Go over, kick a few Germans while they're down, and be back in time for lunch. Certainly global warfare on this scale was unimagined and it never occurred to those in charge it would cost as much as it did. "Here, son, grab your bayonet and go make the world safe for democracy." How abstract. The lack of television probably had a lot to do with it, from America's perspective. Easy enough to send your young off to the majesty of battle when there's no carnage at your doorstep to disrupt your illusions of grandeur. After Cronkite's Vietnam we started to realize the whole thing was a lot messier than we'd imagined from all those Robert Mitchum flicks where children seldom had their faces ripped apart by grenade shrapnel.
And poor Belgium, getting trampled over because they had the misfortune of being situated between two bullies and contained some lovely flat real estate that made for superb parade grounds. Maybe in the future belligerent nations can conduct their warfare in the virtual realm and leave innocent bystanders alone. No, that won't happen. We like to get our hands dirty.
Happy Cheese Weasel Day
"Who brings the cheese on April 3rd?
The Cheese Weasel
He's not a silly bunny or a reindeer or a bird,
He's the Cheese Weasel
He's got a cute black tail
And tiny buck teeth
He doesn't bring fish, and he
Doesn't bring beef
So you'd better be good if you wanna get some cheese
From the Cheese Weasel."
For more information concerning the Cheese Weasel, consult his official website at CheeseWeasel.com.
02 April 2008
01 April 2008
Easter Fools
Since Easter and April Fools fall so close to each other in the year, they might as well be consolidated to save time. Jesus is captured, tortured, crucified, and entombed. Then, while the disciples are mourning, he comes forth from the tomb. "Oh, we thought you were dead," they say, confounded by the resurrection of their leader. "Nope," he replies, "April Fools."
25 March 2008
The Ghost of Seneca Village
Here's a classy piece of history I just stumbled upon. Seneca Village was settled in an (at that time) rural stretch of Manhattan by freed blacks in the 1820s. Twenty years later it had grown to become a community of working class African Americans, Irish, Germans, and Native Americans, supporting their own churches, schools, and cemeteries. The village was located roughly between 7th and 8th Avenues, in the west 80s, taking up nearly five acres. Those familiar with Manhattan will recognize this land is now a slice of Central Park. That's probably all the information you need to know to draw the right conclusions, but I'll continue.
Fernando Wood was one of Tammany Hall's most corrupt members, and there was stiff competition for that distinction. In 1857 he was re-elected as Mayor of New York, mostly with the help of the dead. Residents of the local cemeteries were probably as surprised as any to find their names on his list of supporters, courtesy of the Dead Rabbits gang who were in cahoots. Wood achieved notoriety for his part in the police riots of 1857, when he was dragged forcibly from City Hall during a clash between rival police forces.
Manhattan at that time was expanding northwards at a frantic pace, chewing up farmland and spitting out concrete. Since many of the parks of the time were private and hidden behind locked gates, New Yorkers seeking refuge from the frenzy of the city often found it in graveyards. Some, like Evening Post editor William Cullen Bryant, urged for something a little less morbid, such as a great public park. Mayor Wood was convinced. He summoned up the rule of eminent domain and had Seneca Village razed to make way for Olmsted and Vaux's masterpiece of landscaping. There were no bulldozers to lay in front of in those days, and overnight the entire community gave up the ghost.
What became of the residents of Seneca Village? Good question. No descendants have ever been found. But contemporary archaeologists are scouring the site looking for clues as to what they must have been like. Funny how beneath the foundations of our great monuments of beauty and grandeur one can usually find the ashes of something a little more modest in scope that didn't stand a chance. We've almost come to expect it.
24 March 2008
Penniless in NYC
"Shelby is extraordinarily fond of museums and galleries and has become something of an art expert. Vagrants are rarely molested in New York museums and galleries. Shelby is apt to smile and say this is because the guards can never distinguish between a legitimate bum and an artistic one. They never disturb a person like him because they never know when they are trying to eject an artist who is holding a one-man show on the third floor."
-From Subways Are For Sleeping, by Edmund G Love
22 March 2008
09 February 2008
A Totebag Full of Tunes
Albums I can't seem to stop listening to (not that they necessarily came out during the year):
The Fratellis: Costello Music
I don't know anything about these blokes, but this is one rollicking, humorous, melodic frenzy. Can't stop bouncing off walls.
Neko Case: Fox Confessor Brings the Flood
Spooky as hell. Flannery O'Connor reborn as a minstrel.
Beat Circus: Dreamland
"Weird American gothic," as they call it. How on earth did Tom Waits end up on one of Nino Rota's Fellini soundtracks? Boxcar blues, whiskey-tinged waltzes, junkyard jamborees, tobacco-stained saloon songs, and seasick shanties. A Coney Island of the Id.
Aretha Franklin: Rare and Unreleased Recordings from the Golden Reign of the Queen of Soul
Her voice on here nearly blew out my speakers. Some of the best stuff I've ever heard her do.
The Mars Volta: Bedlam in Goliath
Still getting into this one. Their last couple never really sunk in, but De-Loused in the Comatorium was a huge favorite when it came out - Black Sabbath meets Bitches Brew-era Miles Davis.
Kate Bush: Aerial
I think a lot of people expected to have their heads sawed off by the sheer brilliance her first release in over a decade. Instead they were treated to this serene album of contentment. They were listening wrong. It never left my player for months.
Of Montreal: Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer?
I don't know how they got from the Kinks-esque quirkiness of The Gay Parade to plundering the Bee Gee's platform shoes, but once past the shock of the disco beats, these songs are damn catchy.
Jerry Lee Lewis: Live at the Star Club, Hamburg
I'd read this might be the greatest live album ever recorded. May be true. While other nations were snubbing The Killer, the Germans didn't give a fuck about his marriage to his 13-year-old cousin. They just wanted to watch him bash the daylights out of his keyboard.
Arcade Fire: Funeral
I like this one better than their follow-up, Neon Bible, which strays too close to Springsteen territory for my comfort.
Bob Dylan: The Basement Tapes
Dylan hiding out in an upstate basement with a six-string and a hound dog, with no intention of releasing the results. Pure dusty Americana. "Apple Suckling Tree" and "Tiny Montgomery" are my favorites.
Decemberists: The Crane Wife
Almost as good as Picaresque. Strays strangely into Prog Rock now and then. The whine of his voice takes some getting used to but can't argue with the lyrics.
Dresden Dolls: Yes, Virginia...
Jesus, Brian Viglione is a demon on drums. Drop the needle on "Modern Moonlight" and stand back.
Modest Mouse: We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank
Sure, it's got some songs I skip towards the end. But it's got just as many I can't help hitting repeat on. I love their maniacal background vocals, like they just let some raving fiend into the studio and punched record.
Radiohead: In Rainbows
The songs aren't particularly catchy, but the mood is right. "Jigsaw" is a standout.
Regina Spektor: Begin to Hope
The lovechild of Tori Amos and Woody Allen. Charming, eccentric, and wonderful.
Steely Dan: Countdown to Ecstasy, Pretzel Logic
Just recently got into these guys. They used to sound like typical seventies polished radio fodder to me, but I've begun to see the light. The musicality is tremendous. Break out the headphones for these. It's like dining in the best restaurant in town when someone else is footing the bill.
Stevie Wonder: Songs in the Key of Life
If you grew up in the eighties, the name Stevie Wonder was associated with schlock ("Ebony & Ivory," "We Are the World," etc). What an eyeopener to return to the music that earned him the rank of genius. What could be more moving than "Joy Inside My Tears"?
Mozart: Symphony 41
The 40th was always my favorite, but I can't stop listening to the bombastic fourth movement of the "Jupiter symphony." Like seeing God from the center of an asteroid field. My version is Karl Bohm conducting the Berlin Philharmonic, which is [kisses fingers] exquisite.
Goblin: Soundtrack to Suspiria
Some of the creepiest music ever recorded - for one of the creepiest films ever shot.
Duke Ellington (with Charles Mingus & Max Roach): Money Jungle
Legendary line-up, anyone? This is not unlike Chuck Berry sitting in with System of a Down. Not sure if it'll work in theory, but does it ever. Pure musical conversation spanning generation and genre.
Brian Wilson: Smile
No, it's not quite what he had in mind back in the sixties before blowing out his brain on hallucinogenics. Don't care. I've heard the bootlegs and these sound better to me. I was not even slightly disappointed in this, even if the years have been a little rough on his vocal cords. As far as I can tell he used all the same instrumentation he would have used back then. And best of all, no Mike Love! Strap on the headphones and immerse yourself in Wilson's "Teenage Symphony to God."
Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane: At Carnegie Hall
Nobody even knew this legendary concert had been recorded until someone discovered it in a basement somewhere. You know the songs, but hearing them with Coltrane is like an IMAX experience.
26 November 2007
Kafka's Deli
Occasionally for lunch I stop in at the Subway around the corner from work, where the following exchange invariably takes place:
"May I help you, sir?"
"Yes, I'll have the six-inch steak & cheese on Italian. Toasted, please."
"What kind of bread?"
"Italian."
"What size would you like?"
"Six-inch."
"Would you like that toasted?"
"Uhh... yes."
Such a small thing - a tale to mildly amuse your co-workers with - and yet, rather despairing on reflection. Perhaps the job is so unfathomably dreary that all the hapless drone behind the counter can do to cling to the frayed remnants of his sanity is adhere to a little Madlibs script in his head, and all information received out of sequence is promptly rejected. White noise goes in the white trash. Stick to the script. Blinders in place. Fit the square peg into the square hole, fit the round peg into the round hole. Repeat, repeat, repeat. When you are dead the square box will be lowered into the square hole in the small round earth, and your offspring will be propped up to take your place at the wheel.
Or, on the other hand, maybe he's just a dumbass.