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