Friday, December 31, 2021

Sun and the Moon

Piggybacking on my other post about Duran Duran's Notorious, this morning I download The Sun and the Moon's "Peace in Our Time" and "The Price of Grain". The MP3 versions I had ripped from vinyl finally got on my nerves, especially with the latter song, where it skipped a couple times. I don't mind intermittent crackling and hissing, but skipping pisses me off.

Interestingly, the original album was self-titled, now it's called The Great Escape, with a bunch of B-sides and outtakes. The two songs I downloaded weren't cheap: close to $5; but I never cared for the rest of the album . . . a pale shadow of the vocalist/bassist and drummer's old band, Chameleons UK. The same formula with different guitarists just didn't work. Ya can't substitute chemistry!

Why am I on a music-buying binge (I also bought The Dimestore Haloes' Singles Going Unsteady)? Probably because on Xmas I was around my cousin Michael and his daughter Sara, both who, around 36 hours later on Monday morning, woke up with COVID. I got my booster 11 days before Xmas, so I think I'm fine, though I have had an occasional headache, but I think that's more with anxiety, plus it's been slow this week at work, I've been sleeping restlessly, and I haven't been exercising much, though I plan on correcting that with this three-day weekend.

Duran Duran: NOTORIOUS

I finally got sick of the old MP3s that I ripped from my Notorious LP (I had bought the album when it first came out in '86); a couple tracks skipped at the most inopportune of times. I downloaded the regular version of the album, not the remastered deluxe version. I'm wondering if I made a mistake. In the car it didn't sound that high quality, though now on my MacBook Air, it sounds fine.

Anyway, I may remove "Skin Trade" from my iTunes library. Always hated that song. Lyrically and musically, it's the worst representation of the '80s. Still can't believe they released it as the second single. I may also get rid of "So Misled" — just never did it for me. Overall, though, good album. Before they started to suck!

Thursday, December 30, 2021

THE STAGES OF MEDITATION by The Dalai Lama

Took me two-and-a-half months to listen to this audiobook. Pretty pathetic, since it's only three hours and thirty-nine minutes. Just couldn't get into it. A similar thing happened when I read Thomas Merton's The Seven Storey Mountain. I've moved on from a religious mindset, that when I read something spiritual, it's like listening to some crazy guy on a city street corner — they have has no basis in reality. I dunno, maybe I'm too tethered to this world and lack imagination or a higher state of consciousness. I give The Stages of Meditation two stars.



Sunday, December 19, 2021

RAISING HELL by Run-DMC

For some reason, recently, Run-DMC's "It's Tricky" was stuck in my head. I had on an old zip drive with "Peter Piper", "It's Tricky", and "You Be Illin'", so I decided to pick up the whole album. Good stuff. Nice companion piece to The Beastie Boys' License to Ill. Though I removed Run-DMC's "Dumb Girl" from my iPod because it's slightly misogynist. And I like the extended version of "Walk This Way"; the 45 I bought as a teenager didn't have Joe Perry's impressive guitar work at the end . . . forgot what a great guitarist he is, since he's overshadowed by Steven Tyler and Eddie Van Halen.



Wednesday, December 15, 2021

THE LIAR'S DICTIONARY by Eley Williams

I gave up on this novel after about 40 pages. The introduction/prologue was way overwritten. And I have the habit of looking up words up I don't know — I was doing that at least five times a page . . . got old after a while. Also, I have average intelligence, and this book seems like light reading for graduate students.



Thursday, December 9, 2021

THE PERFECT NANNY by Leïla Slimani

Philistine I am, I only recently heard of the Prix Goncourt, apparently France's most prestigious literary award. Unfortunately, the novel by this year's winner, Mohamed Mbougar Sarr, isn't out in English yet, so I picked up from my library the 2016 winner, Leïla Slimani's The Perfect Nanny. I give it 2.5 out of 5 stars. Her writing style reminded me of Amélie Nothomb: relative short chapters. Thankfully, The Perfect Nanny is a pretty quick read at around 200 pages. I didn't find the characters very believable. My sense is that Slimani was more concerned with examining class that focusing on plotting. Hopefully the other Prix Goncourt winner I reserved at my library, Hervé Le Tellier's The Anomaly, is better.



Tuesday, December 7, 2021

YOURS CRUELLY, ELVIRA by Cassandra Peterson

I picked this memoir up as a lark at my local library. Figured it would be light reading, and that it is. I give it 3 out of 5 stars. She does a good job with pacing in telling the story of her 70 years. I can't believe she's made a living off of one character. Wow, America's a crazy place. And, of course, the socialist in me got turned off by all the commercials and licensing she's done with her Elvira character. Kind of crazy both of her sisters died relatively young because of substance health issues; that coupled with Cassandra's pursuit of fame makes me wonder what type of house of horrors she grew up in.

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Oak Ridge Boys

Back when I was 12 or 13, I dug the Oak Ridge Boys' "Elvira", so for my birthday I asked for one of their albums. My Aunt Maryann got me, I believe, The Best Of The Oak Ridge Boys. I remember being completely disappointed. Even though I was still a good Catholic boy, I couldn't believe the quartet I heard on the radio and probably saw on Solid Gold was a gospel group.

Anyway, I've been reading Cassandra Peterson's memoir, Yours Cruelly, Elvira, so the Oak Ridge Boys' "Elvira" has been on my mind, therefore I picked up one their greatest hits, 20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection. It covers their golden period, from the late '70s to the mid-'80s. Pretty good. I was going to very selective but decided to keep all but the last track (had no heart) because I'll probably never buy anything else by them. Fortunately, there are no gospel tracks on there.

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

For All Mankind

* * * CONTAINS SPOILERS * * *

Finished watching the first season last night. Wow! Much better than The Expanse. Pitch perfect. I like how they set up that Wayne Cobb basically becomes Karen Baldwin's therapist, and how she starts to change but not completely when she comforts Marge Slayton after the news of Deke's death (her husband). That scene got me a little verklempt. It reminded me why I enjoy TV series so much. You have at least a handful of episodes to get to know the characters, and when an emotional scene like that comes up, if acted and written well, it just blows you away and stays on your mind for days. Something, I find, films fail to do because they only have two hours to work with.

Can't wait for the second season!

Monday, November 29, 2021

THERE IS NOTHING FOR YOU HERE by Fiona Hill

I read most of this memoir over Thanksgiving weekend because it's overdue and I have another book, Yours Cruelly, Elvira, due tomorrow but I have a feeling I won't be able to renew it, and my library is holding a novel, The Perfect Nanny, until today (I can't pick up holds if I have an overdue library book).

There Is Nothing for You Here: Finding Opportunity in the Twenty-First Century is good — I give it three stars out of five. Interesting reading about her growing up in northeast England, pretty much the equivalent of America's flyover states, or as Chris Hedges likes to call it, "a sacrifice zone." Fascinating how far she's come from being a coal miner's daughter to being embedded in the deep state. Remarkable how many luck breaks she got growing up from educational opportunities to applying for grants to cover room and board.

A couple things turned me off. First, she uses the word populist as a pejorative and not once did she refer to Trump as a fascist wannabe. And, second, she strikes me as belonging to the corporate wing of the Democratic Party with its myth of meritocracy; if I was a betting man, I'd say she voted for Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden. Makes sense: if you get a Ph.D. from Harvard, you're most likely going to embrace the Matrix. I kinda give her pass, though, given her quasi-poverty childhood.

Sunday, November 21, 2021

THE STRAYS by Emily Bitto

Wow, what a debut novel! I give it 4.5 stars out of 5. I've always been infatuated with Australia, so I opened this book a little biased. It's mostly set in 1930s Melbourne at a commune for avant-garde artists. SPOILER!: I probably would have given it 5 stars, but the two sisters running off with the one artist seemed a little cliched and predictable. But that's a minor quibble. First, Nancy Tucker's First Day of Spring, and now this novel. Is 2021 the year for debut novels by women? (Yeah, yeah, yeah, a kind of a cheat 'cuz Bitto's book came out in 2017.)

Monday, November 15, 2021

ABBA: Voyage

Hard to believe it's been 40 years since ABBA's last album. I was a little hesitant to purchase Voyage because pop stars don't age well. Boy, was I wrong. I'm keeping 5 of the 10 songs on this allegedly final album:
  • "I Still Have Faith in You": The formula still works!
  • "Don't Shut Me Down": Love that sound around the 40-second mark.
  • "Just a Notion": Apparently it was written during the Voulez-Vous sessions. My, how it shows! It's got the energy and imagination of youth.
  • "Keep an Eye on Dan": Another up-tempo number.
  • "No Doubt About It": Ninth track, but I end the album/EP here with the misheard last line of "This is where it ends".
Props to the Swedish pop stars for putting out this album. Nice epilogue to their catalog, since their previous two albums, Super Trouper and The Visitors, sounded pretty forced.

Sunday, November 14, 2021

WATERSHIP DOWN by Richard Adams

I tried reading this back in my twenties but couldn't get into it, so I picked it up recently. About halfway through, I stopped reading it for a few days because I started researching getting a rabbit by reading stuff online and watching The Bunny Lady and Lennon the Bunny's YouTube videos. Though I'm probably gonna have to wait until I move into a new apartment in July because rabbit piss or poop attracts mice, and I got enough problems with those rodents as it is (one of my glue traps ensnared a mouse Thursday night — didn't see it until 10 AM, Fri. morning, as it crawled across my carpet).

Anyhoo, I give the novel 2.5 stars outta 5. I didn't care for the campfire tales the rabbits told. The rest of the story was OK. I dunno, after the Watership Down warren escapes from General Woundmort, if I wrote it, the final act would have had something different instead of Woundmort tracking down Watership Down and attacking them. Glad I read it, though. . . .

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Silence Is a Dangerous Sound: A Tribute to Fugazi

Took a while for me to get through this comp. I bought it back on Sept. 30 and didn't listen to it for the fifth time until the other night (I had been listening to it only when exercising). I'm keeping 7 out of the 44 tracks. Main reason is that Fugazi's versions in a lot of instances are better than the covers. Still, I don't regret buying it. The 7 tracks I'm keeping got a good flow. Here's what I'm keeping:

1. "Bad Mouth" by Authority Zero: Standard cover but a rocking way to kick the comp off.

3. "KYEO" by Dowsing: Love Fugazi's version but I bought two of Dowsing's albums, so I have to keep this song

8. "Target" by Batteries: I own almost everything by this bis side project. This rendition is traditional with Batteries' unique twist on it.

18. "Runaway Return" by Chamberlain: I didn't care for this song when I heard it on Fugazi's Steady Diet of Nothing, but Chamberlain make that riff stick in my head like an unforgettable jingle.

21. "Brendan #1" by Seas, Starry: They rework this instrumental where it sounds almost nothing like the original. That's a good thing.

33. "Suggestion" by Jonah Matranga: Pretty cool mellow, electronic rendition of this crowd favorite from Fugazi's 13 Songs.

44. "Arpeggiator" by Ripcord Records: Nice electronic cover of this instrumental. Glad I downloaded the album when I bought it the day it came out. Looks like they've since taken that song down.

Thursday, November 4, 2021

ALONE IN A DOME by The Copyrights

After picking up Teenage Bottlerocket's Sick Sesh!, I was a little hesitant to check out this other new release on Fat Wreck Chords because TBR only had 5 great tracks out of 12. It's good to be wrong. Alone in a Dome is the best thing they've done since 2008's Learn the Hard Way, and it's a marked improvement over their previous album, the inconsistent Report. Every song on Dome is awesome, and the sequencing is spot-on! I don't buy everything The Copyrights put out, partly because a lot of their songs sound the same, especially with the singer's voice, but Dome mixes thing up enough. $8 well spent . . . I just wish the lyrics came with the digital download at Fat, or were over at Bandcamp!

Sunday, October 31, 2021

The Thrill of It All

Kicking myself for getting rid of my old cassette of Roxy Music's Greatest Hits. Found out yesterday that the version of "The Thrill of It All" only appeared on that comp. Doh!

Friday, October 29, 2021

Fugazi's "Guilford Fall"

A song that's been in my head this past week, the demo of "Guilford Fall" by Fugazi. I listened to the final version on a later album, which seemed overproduced to me. The demo is so much better. Weird how it's been on my mind lately; in the past it was never one of my favorite tracks off the Instrument album.

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Gob Memory

Piggybacking on that Roxy Music post from the other day, about two months ago I had the beginning of Thatcher On Acid's "Gob" stuck in my head, but I couldn't place it. I kept thinking it was a song off the comps C86 or Can't Stop It! Australian Post-Punk 1978-82, or off Trans Am's Sex Change. Wow, I really missed the mark. Glad "Gob" popped on my iTunes shuffle during work.


Oh, and off-topic: I had a Carlsberg on Sunday night as my beverage after dinner (97% fat-free hot dog, mixed vegetables, and French fries). I know I'm playing with fire because I had a drinking problem from 1988 to 2012, but the plan is to only have one after a meal, not get drunk, and drink only imports, like Carlsberg and Foster's. At the moment, I'll probably only drink one after dinner with French fries (hot dogs and crab cake).

Monday, October 25, 2021

Sunday, October 24, 2021

THIS IS WHAT AMERICA LOOKS LIKE by Ilhan Omar

Don't think I've ever even read a political memoir before, but after hearing Ilhan Omar on The Majority Report podcast on Friday, October 15, I thought would pick up her book, This Is What America Looks Like: My Journey from Refugee to Congresswoman, which just came out in paperback. Fairly easy read. I absorbed most of it in two sittings: last Sunday and yesterday (Saturday).

The beginning was interesting with her upper class upbringing in Somalia before it turned into a failed state. I did get a little annoyed when she talked about being in a Kenya refugee camp and mentioned they found ways to avoid malaria, but she didn't give any details, though that may be more fault of her ghostwriter.

Upon her arrival in America, she goes into how conservative she is some ways. For example, wearing leggings in high school because her faith says don't show skin. And since a teenager she's always hidden her hair, even to the point that there are no photos of her in the book, past childhood, without some type of head covering. I dunno, that seems to clash with her progressive politics; then again, most people are complicated.

Fascinating to learn that that Somali community here in the States is split between the status quo and progressives. Crazy how when Omar was running for office in Minnesota, Somali elders practiced political dark arts on social media. Explains why right-wing attacks in Washington, D.C. don't faze her.

Near the end of the book, she seemed to recycle stump speeches from the campaign trail. Obviously, I speed-read those sections.

Overall, glad I picked up this paperback. Don't think I'll read another political memoir for a long time. It's basically a 250-page press release.

I give Omar's book three out of five stars.

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Roxy Memory

Memory is so weird. The music around 1:30 of Roxy Music's "Bitter Sweet" was stuck in my head yesterday, but I couldn't remember the song. I thought it was on their first or second album. Had to go through my Roxy Music collection to find out. Mystery solved!

Sunday, October 17, 2021

GOD'S POCKET by Peter Dexter

I heard about this book in March of '20 over at Billy Penn's "10 underrated Philly books to devour in the quarantine era". I'm convinced the cover designer didn't read the book or jacket copy — worst book cover ever.

Anyway, I give this 1983 novel three out of five stars. Even though it's set in a South Philly neighborhood, it reminds me of people I grew up with, especially in high school, with kids coming from Fishtown and Port Richmond. Dexter nailed Philly's white working class back then . . . . how they only leave the neighborhood for work, and how row homes are passed down from parents to children.

A couple complaints:

  • The newspaper columnist, Richard Shellburn, seemed unbelievable. Even back in the '80s, I don't believe columnists had their own offices (my impression is they were all thrown in the bullpen), and they weren't as popular as Dexter makes Shellburn out to be. Maybe back in the mid-20th century that was the case, but by the '80s, TV had captured the public's imagination. I dunno, part of the reason it irritated me is because newspapers are now on hospice. Dexter made a decent living working for newspapers during the end of its golden age, and he seems to shit on the institution. Guess I shouldn't be surprised because Dexter strikes me as a self-centered opportunist.
  • There was forced plotting with Mickey. I was confused for a long time why the dead body of his stepson, Leon, was in the funeral home's backyard. And it struck me as absurdly unrealistic when Mickey was selling his truck, and the potential buyer took it for a drive, with Mickey chasing it on foot, and the truck getting into an accident.

Nonetheless, it's a good novel. Nice way to spend a week. I probably won't read anything else by Dexter. Will be interesting to see if any of the novel stays with me, or if I'll forget all about it like a paint-by-numbers mystery yarn.

Leon said Cheryl was a flight attendant for U.S. Air and lived in the Northeast, which Mickey recognized for the classiest thing Leon could make up.

p. 15

To get an idea how big Philadelphia was, all you had to do was go to the Northeast and try to find a street sign. Going the the Northeast was like going the hospital, you forget all the little things they do to you, you forgot how slow time moves until you're there again.

p. 139

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Existenz

I watched this movie Sunday night for the first time. I wanted to watch Crash because I just finished the audiobook, but it's not available here in the States to rent online legally, so I went with Existenz, another Cronenberg flick from the '90s.

Interesting film. I give it 2.5 stars out of 5. A little campy, but the Grade A acting saves it — Jennifer Jason Leigh, Jude Law, Willem Dafoe, oh my! Since it's about video games and virtual reality, I thought it was going use technology of the time (1999), but it was a different timeline or the near future, which was a nice touch. I can see why it never really made an impact. Tough to follow The Matrix, which came out the same year.


Sunday, October 10, 2021

Right-wing Propanda

I saw on Google that Mark Levin's American Marxism is one of the bestselling books of 2021, which is a frightening fact, so I read this piece over at Jacobin. This part blew me away:

There is something particularly American in not wanting to understand the people you set out to destroy. . . . For the early Puritan, the forest was a site of Satanic evil; for the anti-communist, Marxism was a kind of witchcraft, to be burned — or perhaps electrocuted — rather than incorporated or co-opted. 

Friday, October 8, 2021

CRASH by J. G. Ballard

I give this audiobook two out of five stars — rating probably would have been lower if the author wasn't Ballard. I saw the movie way back in the '90s, and while I didn't love it, Cronenberg's film has always stayed with me (plus the soundtrack is amazing with that haunting guitar riff).

Quite honestly, for most of the audiobook, I only half-listened. Because it's only about seven hours, I figured I would power through. Ballard's a deep writer, so there is more to the pornographic language, but it was a bit much for me. I guess you could say that Crash is the quintessential horror novel, since it's so ugly. That's what horror is all about: entertainment that makes you cringe.

One cool thing about listening to Crash is that for the novel I'm working on I'm going to change the protagonist's name to my own. I liked how Ballard named the narrator after himself. Ballsy.

Oh, and I've been jamming out to Flesh For Lulu's "Crash". Great song, even though it's got nothing to do with the book (predates the film).


Thursday, October 7, 2021

Babylon Berlin

Finally finished watching the third season of Babylon Berlin. Glad I didn't stop watching it around episode four, when I thought it was starting to drag. The last few episodes were awesome! I liked how they wrapped everything up, especially with the Nazi Benda. Now I can cancel Netflix (nothing else I really want to watch, especially since most of its content is geared towards teenagers and twenty-somethings). I got plenty of other stuff to watch, like Dublin Murders and the Penny Dreadful series set in 1930's L.A.


Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Goodbye Gyro!

Wanted to document this. Ate my last gyro Sunday night. It wasn't sitting too well that evening, but Monday was tortuous. Never had food poisoning like that. Not only was my stomach upset, but I had a headache, felt achy, and my joints was creaky. Monday night's dinner didn't help: dr. Praeger's Spinach Cakes were a little too greasy (the french-style cut green beans were fine, but I couldn't finish my brown rice); took a great amount of effort not to throw up.

Monday was made worse by my goofy apartment building shutting off the air-conditioning a few days ago — you can only have the A/C or the heating on, not both. It was bad timing for me. It was sticky and in the 80s all day in my apartment, even though it was high 70s outside.

Tuesday I ate light. Two pieces of toast for breakfast; craisins for mid-morning snack; chicken noodle soup for lunch; banana for mid-afternoon snack; Gordon's fish fillet, french green beans, bulgar wheat, and hot green tea for dinner; and cherry yogurt for dessert.

Sunday's gyro was worse than one I got about three years ago in Manayunk. At least with that one, my stomach was only rumbling until 1 AM that night.

Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, double-shame on you.

Sunday, October 3, 2021

THE SCAPEGOAT by Sara Davis

Back in March, I read a review of this debut novel in The Washington Post. Sounded interesting, so I bought the hardback. Read most of it yesterday (while marketed as a novel, it's more like a novella with a blank page between most chapters). I give it 2 out 5 stars. Her prose is good enough where I didn't feel the urge to skim sentences, but I just didn't get the plot, though I'm pretty sure she was more concerned with theme and metaphors. I went on Goodreads and a few reviewers mentioned the word Lynchian; that tracks — this is the type of story David Lynch would be attracted to.

Oh, and why did Davis have her protagonist read a Swedish mystery without mentioning who the detective is? I'm 99% sure it's Wallander. I dunno, seemed like an odd choice to withhold that name.

Saturday, October 2, 2021

B&N book purchases

Because of an article I read, "Book Publishers Warn of Supply Chain Delays for 2021 Holidays", I picked up these books (I also bought them because my library has been pretty poor lately with holds — I reserved one book back in March; I cancelled that hold last month).

The Age of Decadence: A History of Britain, 1880 to 1914 sounds interesting from The New York Times review. Clocking in around 900 pages, should be a nice long read, though it's probably less with the photos and footnotes. Looking forward to it.

The Last House on Needless Street has been out in the UK for at least six months. Was finally published here in the States in September. Stephen King's blurb plus a Guardian write-up made it sound purchasable.


Thursday, September 30, 2021

LOVE LIKE WATER, LOVE LIKE FIRE by Mikhail Iossel

Upon reading about this story collection in The New York Times, I was excited to read it, especially because of the passage on page 12 that I've typed out below the book cover. But I soon regretted buying it — should have put a hold on it at the library. I give it 2.5 stars out of 5.

Part of the problem is that as a leftist, I admire what the U.S.S.R. accomplished. Yes, there is the horror of the purges and the gulag, but America has 10% of the world population and 25% of world's prison population; plus, the average American has an unhealthy obsession with money.

One thing that irks me about Iossel is that he prostitutes his Soviet youth for fiction fame. He seems to play a part in the West's propaganda against Russia. I probably wouldn't be so critical if his non-communism stories weren't so forgettable.

Also, the title story runs at about 50 pages. It's so unbelievably overwritten. Should have been at least half the length.

Definitely donating this book the first chance I get. Don't won't it blemishing my bookcase much longer.


"You could always simply kill yourself,"..."As long as there's death, there's hope. That's something always to look forward to. Don't lose heart there's tunnel at the end of the light."...

"too fucking late, Lyokha. Too late. I missed my opportunity to kill myself when the time was right, and now it's too fucking late. Now I'll just have to fucking wait until it fucking happens naturally, in due course of my growing decrepitude. There is nothing to be fucking done about it now. . . . Okay, here's to merciful death."

p. 12

Memory either confirms or refutes the very fact of our own existence.

p. 226


Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Chris Mars' NOTE TO SELF

If a record label ever releases a compilation of Chris Mars' songs, they should title it Diminishing Returns. Every song on his debut, Horseshoes and Hand Grenades, is awesome; his second album, 75% Less Fat, has 10 good songs out of 13; on Tenterhooks, only 5 out of 12 songs are keepable; Anonymous Botch is aptly named with only 3 good songs; and his latest, after about a two-decade break, Notes to Self, has only 1 decent song, "When I Fall Down", which I was already familiar with because it helped Mars' old bandmate from The Replacements, Slim Dunlap, pay medical bills.

I usually listen to an album 5 times before deciding which songs to keep on my iPod, but Notes to Self grated on my ears from the first listen, so I only subjected myself to it 3 times. It's throughly soaked in classic rock, which I'm not a fan of. At least with his earlier stuff, there was a punk edge as well as some humor (see "Car Camping"). Notes to Self has none of that. Sounds like he's trying to sing — he can carry a tune, but Kody Templeman he is not. Every song sounds the same. I doubt Mars will release any more music. Probably for the best. . . .



Saturday, September 25, 2021

Pacific Northwest playlist

I wanted to document this because I had this playlist on my current iPod but I must've deleted it because I had to recreate it. Luckily, I had it on an old iPod, so that makes things easier. Here it is, and it's awesome!:

  • Beat Happening
  • Best Kissers In The World
  • Bikini Kill
  • Brownstein, Carrie
  • Built To Spill
  • Courtney Love
  • Crayon
  • Dawson, Kimya
  • Decemberists
  • Epoxies
  • Everclear
  • Halo Benders
  • Harvey Danger
  • Junkyard Dogs
  • Kingsmen
  • Lillingtons
  • Mirah
  • Mudhoney
  • M. Ward
  • MxPx
  • New Bad Things
  • Nirvana
  • NOFX's "Kill Rock Stars"
  • Poison Idea
  • Replacements' "Portland"
  • Seaweed
  • Sebadoh
  • She & Him
  • 6 Cents + Natalie
  • Sleater-Kinney
  • Snuff's Reach
  • Soundgarden
  • Supersuckers (up to and including How The Supersuckers Became The Greatest Rock And Roll Band In The World)
  • Teenage Bottlerocket
  • Telekinesis
  • These Arms Are Snakes
  • Tullycraft
  • Violent Femmes
  • Witchypoo
  • Tooth & Nail Rock Sampler Vol. 2
492 songs, 23 hours, 35 minutes, 1.80 GB

Let the record show some entries include record labels based in the Pacific Northwest, like K Records, with artists based elsewhere in the country (I'm lookin' at you, Kimya Dawson!). And, yes, it's a bit of cheat putting The Lillingtons and Teenage Bottlerocket on there because they're from Wyoming, but love me some Ramones / Screeching Weasel punk rock to mix shit up!!!

Thursday, September 23, 2021

Tullycraft's THE RAILWAY PRINCE HOTEL

Back in June of last year, I picked up a bunch of Tullycraft's latest releases. I only kept three songs off Lost in Light Rotation and didn't keep any songs off the Touch Me, I'm Sick (over you) EP, so I've been procrastinating in giving their most recent release, The Railway Prince Hotel, a shot. Wow, what a mistake, it's one of their best albums! Up there with Old Traditions, New Standards and Disenchanted Hearts Unite.

Railway Prince is Tullycraft's first album without drummer Jeff Fell, and like The Church's man woman life death infinity, which didn't feature guitarist Marty Willson-Piper, maybe new personnel can reinvigorate the creative process. According to Wikipedia, Tullycraft is a four-piece now, with the drummer not being a full-fledged member. Also, I noticed that Sean Tollefson doesn't play bass this time around. Maybe those changes partly make The Railway Prince Hotel such a great album. Plus, Tollefson is penning some of the best lyrics of his career.

Out of the 12 tracks, I may remove two, “Goldie and the Gingerbreads” and “Beginners at Best”.

What's weird: Last year, when I listened to the "Passing Observations" single, I wasn't too impressed, but I like it now. Amazing how it's all about the sequencing.

Maybe the band should call it quits. Nothing like going out on a high note.


Wednesday, September 22, 2021

MIDNIGHT, WATER CITY by Chris McKinney

I give this sci-fi novel 3.5 out of 5 stars. I found the mad scientist, Akira, intriguing; the main character less so (I can't even remember his name), though it was cool how he matured slightly throughout the novel. And I liked McKinney's vision of Hawaii about 100 years from now.



Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Sarah' Silverman's THE BEDWETTER: STORIES OF COURAGE, REDEMPTION, AND PEE

Finished listening to this audiobook Sunday. I got through a good portion of it on Saturday because I was pretty depressed. I think it had something to do with having five days off (Labor Day weekend plus Tues. & Wed.). All that free time made me realize what a loser I am. Probably will die alone, don't really have any friends, drank away what little writing talent I had, etc.

Anyway, I give it 3 out of 5 stars. Bedwetter is much better than Wanda Sykes' book or Chris Rock, Jerry Seinfeld, and Drew Carey's books, where they just repackaged their standup. I zoned out a little when she went into detail on her TV show. I had seen one episode and wasn't entertained. She seems to hold that project in high regard.

Sidebar: while I find Silverman funny, there does seem to be something desperate about her comedy. She's hysterical, but there's nothing admirable when you're constantly aiming for the lowest common denominator. Hell, that was my jam back in the day, but I wasn't a professional comedian, just a lonely Gen X'er looking for friends instead of having people roll their eyes at me or just avoid me altogether.



Saturday, September 11, 2021

Grimple Up Your Ass

I heard about this early 90s band on the Brendan Kelly podcast, Road to the Skeleton Coast. Glad I listened to those four episodes where he talks about The Lawrence Arms' Oh! Calcutta! It's one of my least favorite Lawrence Arms' albums, but he mentioned Grimple's Up Your Ass was a huge influence on Oh! Calcutta! Can't believe Grimple totally flew under my radar back in my 20s. Kinda cool how it's produced by Kevin Army, who did a lot of J Church's best recordings. I just read the lyrics to Up Your Ass. Not the greatest, but the music is awesome! 15 songs in 23 minutes. What's not to love?

Thursday, September 9, 2021

J Church poster

I had a five-day weekend (Labor Day, plus Tues. & Wed.). Because I moved into a smaller one-bedroom apartment at the end of June, I had to downsize. Spent Tuesday and Wednesday organizing my paperwork, though still not finished. Anyway, I found this from J Church's Lance Hahn. I must've been trying to buy "Turn to Stone" 7-inches from him. It's a keeper!



Tuesday, September 7, 2021

SICK SESH!: Teenage Bottlerocket

It's been over 10 years since I've picked up a Teenage Bottlerocket (TBR) album, 2009's excellent They Came from the Shadows, so I thought I would check out their latest, Sick Sesh!. Gotta give it an overwhelming meh. Out of 12 tracks, I'm keeping 5:

  • "You're Never Going Out of Style" (digging the synthesizer)
  • "Ghost Story" (whatta single!)
  • "Strung Out on Stress"
  • "Hello Dana" (nice love song)
  • "Gorilla Warfare"

The other 7 tracks are your typical derivative Ramones / Screeching Weasel punk rock. I still can't believe they actually put on there a song called "Squirrel". There's no subtext to it. Christ, guys, save it for a B-side.

Needless to say, I probably have enough TBR in my record collection. I'll still keep songs on the occasional comp, but I doubt I'll buy anymore of the albums.



Monday, September 6, 2021

THE ROOSEVELT I KNEW by Frances Perkins

Took me about a month to read this 400-page book. As typed out below, there were memorable passages, but it was quite a slog — I give it 2.5 out of five stars. I think part of the problem is that I get bored with the minutiae of public policy. Also, she name-drops people from about 75 years ago who may have been household names back during the Great Depression and WWII, but, to me, they're now just  footnotes in the annals of U.S. history. I guess I'm living very much in the present with our 21st century problems. And it's depressing how well organized labor was back then; after FDR's death, the elites struck back so much that I fear our only future is a neo-feudal age.


a "superficial young reporter" who tries to pin Roosevelt down on whether he is a communist, a socialist, or a capitalist. Roosevelt answered no on all three scores, adding that he was "a Christian and a Democrat — that's all."

p. xviii

He became thoroughly familiar with the concept that good and evil, hope and fear,  wisdom and ignorance, selfishness and sacrifice, are inseparably mixed in most human beings.

p. 44

I told him how one American who had lived in Russia a great deal had responded to my question "What makes the Russians tick?" with these words, "the desire to do the Holy Will."

...

When I told this to the President, he said, "You know, there may be something in that. It would explain their almost mystical devotion to this idea which they have developed of the Communist society. They all seem really to want to do what is good for their society instead of wanting to do for themselves. We take care of ourselves and think about the welfare of society afterward."

p.84

[[FDR said,]] "You know, the post office in every community ought to be the people's contact with the government. We ought to make more of it. The post office is a natural for co-operation between the people and the Federal Government."

p.211

[[FDR]] believed in trade unions. He had no fear of them, and he saw no reason why employers should fear them. He recognized that there had been an occasional crook in the trade union movement, but so had there been in every other human activity. He recognized that the labor unions had usually rid themselves of crooks, just as the directors of a business got rid of the occasional scoundrel they had unwittingly entertained.

...

I heard him explain to people, "You don't need to be afraid about unions. They only want to be in a position to arrange their own affairs, to agree to their own terms and conditions of work, and not be pushed around by their bosses. They really have no other objects in mind. You shouldn't be afraid to have them organize in your factory. They don't want to run the business. You will probably get a lot better production and a lot more peace and happiness if you have a good union organization and a good contract."

When someone once argued that unions might get too powerful, he said, "Too powerful for what? It might be a good democratic antidote for the power of big business, which certainly tries to dominate in many cases."

It must always be remembered that Roosevelt had no hatred of business; in fact, he had considerable admiration for what he called the good businessmen, those who made a contribution not only to the goods of the country but to the social advancement, of their employees, customers, and community. While he had no dislike for businessmen as such, he was always in strong opposition to the idea that business should dominate the life of the country; he felt keenly that it was unhealthy for our economy and contrary to decent principles of human development and culture. Productive business that did not dominate he considered a blessing to the community.

p. 294-5

The Americans seemed to [[FDR]] the best of all possible people; not necessarily the smartest or the most powerful, although he recognized their cleverness, but the ones with more goodness per thousand of population than in other countries. By goodness, I think, he meant good-heartedness, kindliness.

p. 368


Tuesday, August 31, 2021

ONCE UPON A TIME by Simple Minds.

Well, that was fun. Finished listening to the final Simple Minds album I bought, their seventh one, Once Upon a Time. It reminded me a lot of the UK music coming out at the time, like Hipsway and Blow Monkeys, with that play-that-funky-music-white-boy guitar. I'm keeping half of the songs: the main singles ("All the Things She Said", "Alive and Kicking", and "Sanctify Yourself") and "Oh Jungleland".


Saturday, August 28, 2021

ALL SYSTEMS RED. by Martha Wells

Finished listening to this three-hour audiobook during lunch today. I give it three out of five stars. Interesting. I wonder if the series is so popular because the protagonist, a robot, comes across as an intelligent teenager that is socially awkward.

Story was OK. Seemed like a script that could have worked as a Doctor Who episode. My only complaint is that the climax was too short. Most stuff I read is overwritten, but that section of the story could have been a little longer.

Don't think I'll listen to any other installments in the series, but I don't regret using an Audible credit on this one.



Friday, August 27, 2021

POST NEO ANTI: ARTE POVERA IN THE FOREST OF SYMBOLS by Close Lobsters

I listened to this 2020 album several times and I'm going to keep every track on my computer. While it's not as good as their two albums and one EP from the late '80s, it's still solid. Like Garden Variety's Knocking the Skill Level, it works better listening from beginning to end rather than playing one song. Post Neo Anti is a bit mellow compared to their '80s output, but's that understandable: difficult to capture the vigor of youth when pension days are on the horizon.



Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Simple Minds: Sparkle in the Rain

Finished listening to this Simple Minds album, the sixth one out of seven that I purchased recently. Out of ten songs, I kept five:

  • "Up on the Catwalk" (already heard on The Best of Simple Minds comp)
  • "Speed Your Love to Me" (same as above)
  • "Waterfront" (same; also, did anyone during the songwriting process mention that the beginning bassline sounds eerily similar to The Doors "Roadhouse Blues"?)
  • "The Kick Inside of Me" (I wonder if "Kick It In" from a later album was a reworking of this classic 1984 rocker)
  • "Shake Off the Ghosts" (nice instrumental)

One final Simple Minds album to listen to, Once Upon a Time. Interesting to hear if there are any other good songs on it outside of the three big singles.

Sunday, August 22, 2021

Quip #7

Been listening to Close Lobsters' Post Neo Anti: Arte Povera in the Forest of Symbols. Really enjoying it. Wonder if it's because their last album came out in 1989. Perhaps: "Absence makes the ear grow less critical."




Simple Minds: New Gold Dream (81–82–83–84)

Been meaning to blog about this for a couple days now. I listened to Simple Minds' New Gold Dream (81–82–83–84) several times; and out of nine songs, I'm only keeping four:

  • "Someone Somewhere" (already heard on the Best of Simple Minds collection)
  • "Promised You A Miracle" (already heard on one of the Ashes to Ashes soundtracks)
  • "Somebody Up There Likes You" (love me a half-decent instrumental)
  • "Glittering Prize" (didn't like at first when I watched the video, but it grew on me with each additional listen)

Overall, I wasn't too impressed with the album. If I had picked up as a freshman in high school, I probably would have loved it, but — I dunno — sounds dated. Plus, it seems they mimicked whatever popular sound was fashionable. On the one hand I understand it: it's their livelihood. But on the other, it lacks conviction.

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Claire-Louise Bennett

The Guardian interviewed Claire-Louise Bennett. This part caught my eye:

Asked recently to write about a book that changed her life she says she realised that Marx and Engels’ The German Ideology, which she studied at A-level, had had a profound effect. “After that, I just thought: ‘Oh, my God, everything’s just made up. And it’s made up by the ruling class, and there isn’t such a thing as reality. It’s all just ideology, and it’s there to suit them, and we’re all a load of plebs. And I’m not. And they can shove it!’”

Sunday, August 15, 2021

Sons and Fascination/Sister Feelings Call: Simple Minds

I listened to Simple Minds' fourth album five times and got a good handle on it. Out of the 15 tracks, I kept 6:

  • "Sweat in Bullet"*
  • "70 Cities as Love Brings the Fall"
  • "Theme for Great Cities"*
  • "The American"*
  • "League of Nations"
  • "Sound in 70 Cities"

The three songs with asterisks I was already familiar with because they're on The Best Of Simple Minds comp. "70 Cities as Love Brings the Fall" and "Sound in 70 Cities" are cool because of that sound running throughout that reminds me of a cow mooing; "League of Nations" is weird in the best of ways. Most of the songs on this double album just didn't do it for me. I found the slapping of the bass to be overdone. Of course, following up Empires and Dance with an equally excellent album was an almost impossible task.

Friday, August 6, 2021

EMPIRES AND DANCE: Simple Minds

Wow, what a comeback after their sophomore slump with Real to Real Cacophony! Not one piece of filler on Empires and Dance. The sequencing is perfect too. Highlights include "I Travel", "Celebrate", "Twist/Run/Repulsion", "Thirty Frames a Second", and "Kant Kino". It sounds like a British record that came out in 1980, but that's a good thing from my point of view, since some of my favorites tunes came out in the early eighties. The epitome of New Wave.

When I listen to Empires and Dance, I can't help but think if Real to Real Cacophony was an in-between album. They needed to made that disappointing album in order to create the excellent Empires and Dance.



Thursday, August 5, 2021

A LONELY MAN by Chris Power

Had to return this novel to the library last night. Over a week I read less than 50 pages. Part of the reason over my lack of interest is that I had to buy a new computer and I'm still working on recreating my favorite playlists in iTunes. Also, I've noticed after I read an excellent novel (in this case, Nancy Tucker's The First Day of Spring), the next book on my TBR shelf almost always disappoints. Oh well. . . .



Wednesday, August 4, 2021

BIG BLUE SKY by Peter Garrett

One minor downside to the pandemic is that it takes me forever to finish audiobooks, since I used to mainly listen to them during my commute to and from work. Took me about three months to get through Peter Garrett's memoir/autobiography, though, things started to slow down for me when he got to his political career — partly because I'm not too familiar with Aussie politics, and also because I don't respect Garrett for sidestepping out of his activist role to be part of major political party. What's the axiom, those attracted to power are either mediocre or venal?

Not surprising, I was more interested in the chapters about Midnight Oil, and even though he devoted a decent portion to them, he seemed more detailed on his political career. My sense is politics is his passion and music a distant second.

Anyway, I gave it three out of five stars. Glad I listened to it, but could've used an editor to tighten things up.



Monday, August 2, 2021

REAL TO REAL CACOPHONY: Simple Minds

I listened to Simple Minds' second album five times, so I formed an opinion on it. I kept 4 out of 12 songs: "Carnival (Shelter In A Suitcase)", "Cacophony", "Veldt", "Film Theme". The last three are instrumentals. I dunno, I may remove one or two of them. "Carnival" reminds me a little of the World/Inferno Friendship Society's "The Cat in the Hat Has a Right to Sing the Blues" although Simple Minds' song came first by 31 years.

The album's Wikipedia page says that the band only had four songs going into the studio. My, how it shows.  A definite sophomore slump after the excellent Life in a Day.



Thursday, July 29, 2021

THE FIRST DAY OF SPRING by Nancy Tucker

Wow, first novels don't get much better than this. I give it 4.5 stars out of 5. I would have given it 5 stars, except I wasn't itching to pick it back up each day, and I learned in The Guardian that the story bears a striking resemblance to the Mary Bell case. Slightly disappointing that The First Day of Spring didn't all sprout from Nancy Tucker's imagination. Nonetheless, great novel! The characters were so life-life, and in parts the book is a black comedy. The jacket copy mentioned "humor and horror" — that's a good way of putting it. Can't wait for Tucker's next novel!!!



Wednesday, July 28, 2021

Simple Minds: LIFE IN A DAY

In the first of many Simple Minds listens, I played their first album, Life in a Day, several times. Strong debut! You can hear the Roxy Music and Boomtown Rats influence. Only song I'm deleting from my iTunes library is "Pleasantly Disturbed". Little too long and art rock for my tastes. Up next: Real to Real Cacophony.



Sunday, July 25, 2021

Leftöver Crack (LOC): FUCK WORLD TRADE

New apartment I moved into has a mouse digging though in the bedroom wall (the one near where my head rests). Kept me up Friday night, so yesterday energy was lacking, therefore I went to PLyrics and listened to Fuck World Trade while reading the lyrics. Been meaning to do it for a while, since I picked up the album back in April.

LOC's Stza is a gifted lyricist, but from now on I'm mainly only going to listen the following 10 tracks:


And I like these bonus tracks:


I also dig the first six and a half minutes of the bonus track "Fuck World Trade", but I'll listen to it when I'm reading or writing. Oh, and I'm keeping the discarded tracks on my computer; while I don't want to hear 'em constantly, they'll be nice to pop up on shuffle occasionally.

Sidebar: Why did Stza even start Star Fucking Hipsters (SFH)? Fuck World Trade and SFH's first album sound similar.



Friday, July 23, 2021

THE UNQUIET by John Connolly

I decided a while ago that this would be my last Charlie Parker novel. Back in 2018, I listened to the audiobook for The Woman in the Woods. I really enjoyed it and thought that I found a Robert B. Parker replacement, so I bought the first six books in the series. I quickly grew bored with it. Almost every entry has an interchangeable antagonist who almost seems inhuman in its capacity for evil and makes life incredibly unpleasant for Parker; and to increase the suspense, there's the threat of cliched mobsters. It's a formula that gets old after a while. Plus, unlike Robert B. Parker's Spenser, I don't find the jokes funny; Parker comes across as someone who flunked comedy class quicker than Drew Carey bombing at improv night. Also, the romance between Louis and Angel feels unrealistic (Louis strikes me as a sociopath who could fuck but not love). And the paranormal backstory throughout the series annoys me with its too little reveals. But Connolly's lyrical prose is seductive, even though at times it could be edited down.

I give The Unquiet four out of five stars. Lots of surprises at the end; the pacing is really good throughout; and some characters are so lifelike, I had to remember it wasn't nonfiction. Nice book to stop reading the series at.


He was about five years older than I was, big and strong-looking, but balding badly on top, although he kept his hair cut short enough to disguise the worst of it. It was petty and childish, I knew, but I always felt a brief surge of warmth inside when I met someone close to my own age who had less hair that I did. You could be king of the world and own a dozen companies, but every morning when you started in the mirror your first thought would be, Damn, I wish I still had my hair.

Chapter IX, pages 115-116

Men, by and large, sought sex. Women traded it.

Chapter IX, p. 119



Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Simple Minds

Been listening to The Best Of Simple Minds a lot lately, so I picked up their first seven albums last night (up to and including Once Upon A Time). I'm $53.99 poorer . . . hopefully I don't regret it 😊

Thursday, July 15, 2021

Loki

Watched the final episode last night of season one. That's one of my problems with this series. I thought it was going to be a standalone, but turns out there's going to be a season two. Also, there's was a lot to hate about it:
  • Turning Loki into a hero when I think he's more interesting as a villain.
  • The love angle fell flat.
  • If Loki's a god, why is he so powerless most of the time?
  • The fight scenes seemed out of place, like the screenwriter said, "There hasn't been any action in 20 pages. Time for some violence!"
  • The last episode with who was behind everything I found to be a huge letdown (both the actor and the never-ending explanation).
I don't watch too many Marvel movies, so a lot of the plot probably went over my head. Only other thing I saw with Loki was the first Thor movie — the one Kenneth Branagh directed.

I give Loki 2 out of 5 stars. WandaVision was much better.