Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Dead Like Me season 1

Also on the cd from Michelle were the first two (possibly the only two) seasons of this show Dead Like Me. Herewith the relevant part of the thank you email I sent Michelle:

I'm most of the way through the first season of "Dead Like Me", which I'm finding tres amusant. It's a cute concept which I thought, having watched the pilot, might be at risk of being a bit twee and maybe sort of boring, but far from it - I like it muchly, and generally the way that about once every couple of episodes it throws in something of such remarkably (and deliberately) bad taste that I can't help but laugh (the mauling of the protester by the service station bear comes to mind). Mandy Patinkin good value too - totally dorky yet with tons of gravitas (though we far prefer him as Inigo Montoya, natch - which is why you set me up with this show, right?). Also, George kinda reminds me of you - had you picked up on that resemblance? (I bet you hadn't - or, even if you had, that you aren't admitting it.)

To fill in the blanks: the premise is set up in the pilot, in which Georgia Lass (she prefers "George"), archetypal 18 year old slacker with an attitude (though to call her an 'archetype' doesn't do justice to the depiction of her character - but it's in the ballpark), is killed by a flaming piece of debris (a toilet seat, actually) which falls from a Russian space station, whereupon she discovers that she is now undead - a 'grim reaper' whose job it is to usher the souls of the recently dead to their next destination (the show is coy about where this might actually be). There's a motley collection of others in the city (Chicago?) sharing her portfolio (which is something like 'intrusively traumatic deaths' - which in practice means dying by, eg, being crushed by a falling piano, being crushed by a falling man while you're walking down the church aisle having just been married, (grislily) fruit guillotine, and, of course, mauling by aforementioned bear for whose rights you are ironically protesting); they meet at Der Waffle Haus, where Rube, their nominal boss, hands out their assignments on yellow sticky tabs; they're visible to the living (but look different from their 'living' selves - which is how they appear to other undead) and need to find some source of income in order to get by.

It's not really a black comedy/drama, though it's amusingly morbid in its general sensibility. Sometimes the deaths take on genuine pathos (the small child who dies in the train accident at night in either the pilot or the second ep, I can't remember, the gentle schizophrenic man who falls for George and then literally falls, the pair of lovers visited by Mason) while sometimes they're played for laughs - it's never depressing (and I say this as one who does occasionally get quite seriously down about the idea; well, who doesn't?) in part because it's so irreverent and in part because of the promise of something beyond which it holds out. Apart from the sporadic outbreaks of bad taste mentioned above (Mason's strip-searching in the airport comes to mind and then the subsequent bursting of the drug-filled baggie he's smuggled in up his rectum) I also get into the out and out profanity which pops up all the time, often but by no means exclusively from George, and also George's general anti-everything attitude (no surprises there).

(40-minute episodes; tops acting; decent characterisation and some nice development (though not as much as one might hope); neat episode structures; extended story arcs; generally clever writing.)

Carla Bruni - No Promises

Sometimes our friends just come through for us. A couple of weeks ago, I was reading about this album online somewhere; I'd heard of Carla Bruni before and had a vague idea that she was one of those old-sounding new chaunteuse types; I initially shuddered at the idea of anyone setting poems by Yeats, Auden, and others to music and laying them down on an album; but the review, while acknowledging the substantial 'hmmm' factor associated with the concept, was glowing about the record itself, so I was intrigued to hear it, not least because it included readings of two poems each by Dorothy Parker and Emily Dickinson (two of my fave poet types, of course); and lo, without any presaging, a cd arrived in the mail from Michelle holding a whole bunch of stuff - including, most fortuitously, No Promises. So yes, it's pretty good - chanteuse-y stuff with expected lounge influences and also a folksy, adult-contemporary-alt-countryish flavour which I like. It's nice.

Wilco - Sky Blue Sky

So I've lived with this record for two or three weeks now, and I like it about as much now as I did after the first listen - which is to say, rather a lot. It really sounds like nothing so much as the new Wilco album, and so on the account of course I'm much into it; as far as their past stuff goes, the best 'hybrid' description is probably Being There meets A Ghost Is Born. They played, I reckon, about half of it at their show the other week, and the songs are the type to stick in the mind after just one or two listenings, and have that Wilco trick of getting particular lines (lyrical and otherwise) particularly embedded, and likely to pop up frequently and unexpectedly (I had the titular hook from 'Shake It Off" running around in my head at work the other day; the lines "the more I think about/The more I'm sure it's you" materialise a fair bit too; etc). That said, most of the best bits are the glorious electric guitar moments, obviously.

I always find it tricky to extract particular Wilco songs from their albums as my favourites, but at present I think I particularly like "You Are My Face", "Impossible Germany", "Side With The Seeds", "Hate It Here" and "Walken", though Sky Blue Sky really works particularly well as a whole (the bookends are important to that sense - "Either Way" and the first half of "You Are My Face" easing the listener in, and then "What Light" and "On and On and On" taking it out in mellow, thoughtful fashion. Anyhow, all round a very consistent set, and excellent with it.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Macbeth

The recent Australian one, transposing the play to a Melbourne gangland setting. I was predisposed towards liking the film, but actually found it a bit underwhelming - while the concept has possibilities, and those possibilities are realised to the extent that the moody, matt-and-shadow settings, garish costumes and foreboding score work well, this Macbeth struck me as fundamentally uninspired and unimaginative.

See, for me, while the film's good to look at, it fails to reconceptualise the subject-matter of the play in line with its altered setting - that's what I think is the underlying imaginative failure. A good example is the way the dialogue is delivered straight, in Australian accents - there's nothing wrong with that per se, but it's as if the makers of the film relied on the mere fact of difference/novelty to make this Macbeth watching, without any more (in fact, a further quibble here is that those lines aren't particularly well delivered - but that seems more a failure of execution than of conception).

Related to this are shortcomings in the way this revisioning represents its characters and the narrative as a whole. I don't mind unusual or new takes on either of these elements when it comes to Shakespeare and his canonical co - indeed, 'positively welcome' would be a better description than 'don't mind' - but it's disappointing when, as here, there doesn't seem to be any particular take at all.

Anyhow, I don't want to seem too negative about this film. I enjoyed watching it, and on one level it's well done. But it didn't satisfy me at all.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

The Radio Dept - Pet Grief

What I'd expected, based on the two songs of theirs on the Marie Antoinette soundtrack - what would you call it, 'dream-indie-pop'? It's kind of wallpapery - pleasant and tasteful but not distinguished (the tunes not as striking as those on MA) - but nice.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Slow Down Tallahassee - "So Much For Love" cd single

Everything about this cd is just delightful. First, the music - a trio of two-and-a-half to three minute swatches of fuzzy, melodic girl-fronted indie pop, complete with oh-whoa-ohs, handclaps, keyboards and don't-look-now hooks around every corner. So the elements are all there, but in fact one of the most impressive things about the disc is the sturdiness and assuredness of both the songwriting and the execution...though of course being impressed is beside the point - the name of the game here is the music's immediate (and then continuing) effect which is, natch, where the delight comes in.

Over and above the music itself, though, is the aesthetic of the whole. The cd's a three-incher (ie, adorably tiny) and one of a limited run of 100 (mine's # 47); it came in the mail with a handwritten note from someone at the record company which puts it out (Cloudberry Records) - ending with the capitalised exhortation "don't stop indiepop!", no less - and a scissored-out scrap of a review of another band.

Here's what the band's myspace has to say (it's apt):

We met behind the bar of a seedy nightclub, serving endless drinks as Motown hits and disco classics stopped our hearts from giving in. Taking our inspiration from the paintings of Henry Darger, the writings of Dorothy Parker and Pablo Neruda, girl groups, playground gangs, paperback romances, tear-jerking pop and the burning ambition to write an album full of the greatest, most thoughtful pop hits that this country has ever seen, we formed a band and the fun began. JOIN OUR GANG, AND YOU WILL NEVER BE LONELY AGAIN.

* * *

Came across them through angels twenty, one of only two mp3-type blogs with which I more or less keep up (the other being motel de moka, which I secretly find rather inspiring).

Keating! @ the Comedy Theatre

I think that I almost certainly built this up too much in my mind beforehand, but it was still great. The best thing about it is the performance put in by Mike McLeish as Keating himself - the manic energy and posturing reminded me a little of Gob but with real charisma and, it seemed, genuine insight into his subject. Favourite songs probably the "the beginning is the end" one ("Gareth tell me more"), the "ruler of the land" reggae numbers, the Mabo bossa nova [?] and, of course, the Evans/Kernot love duet. Satisfying to have clear heroes (well, one hero really) to cheer and risible villains to hiss. Was glad of the way it ended, too - would've been a bit of a downer (pun unintended) without the closing rewriting of history (which also, of course, focuses all of our minds on the 'if only/what could have been?' question). All up, very pleasing!

(w/ Mehnaz, last Sunday afternoon following not one but two previous failed attempts on our parts to see it, tix having been sold out on both of those earlier occasions)

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Nikka Costa - Everybody Got Their Something

Kicks off with "Like A Feather", the stripped-back funk of which is still both weird and cool six years on from when I must've first been hearing it on the radio, but the definite highlight of the album comes next - "So Have I For You", in which Costa channels Janis Joplin by means of a slidin' funk-soul-rock'n'roll meld, one of those that feels not so much like a hybrid as a reaching back to the original roots of the forms (albeit infused with a modern sensibility, much of which is imported by the glitzy production). The next couple, "Tug of War" and the title track, are good too, but she isn't able to sustain the quality over the whole record; still, all up it's well worth the listen...definitely a good 'un.

Everclear - Sparkle and Fade

I remember "Santa Monica" fondly - a neat tune and lyrics which make explicit the aspirational tenor of much of that kind of 90s post-grunge rock - and occasionally get out the triple j hottest 100 cd with the song on it, and have less distinct memories of "Heroin Girl" and "You Make Me Feel Like A Whore", but really it was more So Much For The Afterglow which provided the radio Everclear songs which aren't an entirely insignificant part of the soundtrack to my recollections of late high school, and that album would probably give me more than this one. Sparkle and Fade's okay, but it's nothing special and very uneven - a small handful of decent songs, and the rest all slur into each other.

Queen - Greatest Hits

There are lots of artists whose albums I feel no need to listen to, but for whom I'd quite like to own a best of; I mentioned in passing while talking to Kevin a while back that Queen are one such, and he kindly made a gift of this best of to me not long after. For me, the main point of having these collections is usually twofold - being able to listen to particular hit/famous songs whenever one feels like it, and getting a sort of high level overview of the artist's career - and it's more the first of those which is going on with Queen. Still, taken as a whole this 17-song set shows them to be a lot less overblown than I usually imagine them to be - or, perhaps more accurately, that the overblownness doesn't particularly get in the way of the songs. Most are familiar (endlessly familiar) from the radio - though I never realised that "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" is, in fact, the song of that name, nor that it was by Queen!

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

2007 Law Week Oration - "Does Australia Need a Bill of Rights?" (the Hon Michael McHugh)

This was quite interesting, but more by virtue of who was delivering it than the oration's actual content. Justice McHugh's approach was to enumerate instances of deficiencies in the existing protection of human rights in Australia (focusing on immigration and detention, racial discrimination, and counter-terrorism laws) and argue that the alternatives to a (constitutional) bill of rights - ordinary legislation, common law, implied constitutional rights - are inadequate; he spent some time on the related arguments that the Westminster system of responsible government, independent judiciary, etc provides the best guarantee of human rights, that a bill of rights would be inconsistent with parliamentary sovereignty, and that such an instrument would politicise the courts and diminish respect for the judiciary.

Conversation afterwards was lively. Shaun, Jarrod and I repaired to the Corkman for fish and chips, a drink, and a fairly solid argument (mostly me v SEG) about first a variation on the old capitalism v socialism thing, and then (more on point) the legitimacy of implied constitutional rights; I must admit, Shaun probably ended up having the better of the first of those, but I'd score the second (which took place on more equal terrain, I suppose) as a hard-fought draw.

Plenty of others at the oration, including (very much without limitation) Nicolette, Vegjie and Sunny, which is par for the course with these things.

Y Tu Mamá También

This really took me by surprise. Steph pressed it on me a while back, and I was sceptical - nothing I'd heard about it particularly suggested that I would enjoy the film. (Two teenage boys go on road trip with older woman; prospect of sex and self-discovery; set in Mexico; ho hum.) In fact, though, from the cheeky opening scene through the depiction of the trip up to its climax (so to speak), and then on to the film's subtle and affecting epilogue, it offers a genuine journey. It's one of those pieces of art which just has something about it - it doesn't seem especially profound, but then again, maybe it is, you know? (It's quite straightforward in a lot of ways, but is somehow at once poetically economical and thoroughly earthy.) In any case, I liked Y Tu Mamá También very much.

Kelly Clarkson - Breakaway

Glossy of-the-moment pop - a mix of big ballads and anthemic rockers. Good value, though the first six songs on the album are far better than the second. "Since U Been gone" is the certifiable classic, of course, but I've plenty of appreciation left over for "Behind These Hazel Eyes" and "Gone" in particular. Hooks galore and songs well sold by Clarkson.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Tatyana Tolstaya - The Slynx

Though it's not a Great novel, there's something of an air of greatness to The Slynx (and not just because Tolstaya is Leo Tolstoy's great grand-niece...naturally, being the kind of reader that I am, I've never read Tolstoy anyway). It's a savagely dystopian vision of post-apocalyptic Russia with a certain amount of contemporary (and satirical) resonance - though I suspect that resonance would've been greater if (a) the novel had been written, say, 40 years ago and/or (b) I were Russian or at any rate more familiar with the culture than I am - and it has a darkly imaginative power which is compelling and not a little unsettling. At times it reminded me of Orwell, at others of Bulgakov, and its grotesque elements are well woven into the whole. I'm not sure how I feel about the ending; it further muddles an already muddled everything. Nor am I really sure what it's saying. But there's a thread running through it - some ineffable thing which gives the novel its haunting, memorable character despite its other failings.

Things to remember: the mice, the Slynx itself, the books, the plagiarism, the decrees, Benedikt, the Oldeners, the Degenerators, the pushkin, the exclamation marks, the golubchiks.

M J Hyland - Carry Me Down

This is excellent - a terse, tense, almost incidentally evocative piece of writing. It's told through the eyes of eleven year old John Egan, who is intelligent, opaque, and disturbed, and the narrative takes on those hues of his character with a sustainedness and a plausibility which is extremely impressive. It's difficult to get a handle on, but it's also thoroughly gripping from the first paragraph - Hyland eschews simplistic 'explanations' (both explicit and, the which is more difficult, implicit) for her characters' actions and thoughts, or for the circumstances of their subsistence, and also avoids straightforward or obvious resolutions to any of the (sometimes familiar) event-structures she throws up; she embeds in the fabric of the novel the same commitments evident in its content; the characterisations and plot strands are deliberately incomplete, and this incompleteness serves an important function in the whole.

It's odd. The book that Carry Me Down most reminds me of is The Catcher in the Rye, which I didn't particularly enjoy when I read it, and the details of which are by now very unclear in my mind. But a trace of the way it made me feel has stayed with me, evidently, and been reactivated by Hyland's novel. I'm not sure what it is, really. But it seems to me that there's something quite remarkable about Carry Me Down, in its apparent simplicity and deeper, murkier currents, and most of all (and wrapped up with all of that) in the way it completely inhabits the mind/world of its central character and pulls the reader along, almost claustrophobically, with him all the way down.

Steven Carroll - The Gift of Speed

I read about The Gift of Speed when it came out (2004, apparently), but my interest in reading it was piqued by a review of Carroll's latest, The Time We Have Taken, in an Australian Book Review a couple of issues ago. In particular, it was this passage which made me sit up and take notice:

...something else is being attempted, something rare in Australian fiction. The Time We Have Taken is breathtakingly ambitious, a Proustian narrative, allusive, reflective, elegiac and concerned very little with events as turning points in themselves. Instead, the minutiae of daily life and the unstoppable flow of time are at the novel's centre. This becomes a moving celebration of the quotidian and of the terrible beauty of the moment that we cannot see until change has rendered it past.

I've not read the more recent book, but in those lines, the reviewer, Christina Hill, captures much of the nature of The Gift of Speed. The narrative takes as its historical bookends the arrival and departure of the West Indian cricket team on its famous 1960-61 tour of Australia, and the events of tour are woven through the novel amidst several other strands, most prominently that of the sixteen year old Michael, growing up in suburban Melbourne and furiously practising his bowling with the aspiration of reaching a perfect moment, a moment of grace. The short chapters are told from several alternating points of view (one - and only one, I think - is told from two), present tense third person except those of Michael's aging grandmother, which are presented in the first person; the style is quite lyrical and very Australian.

I must admit, I admired this novel - liked it, even - more than I enjoyed it. About a quarter of the way in, I distinctly heard in my mind, in tones of woe, the words "oh no, it's a coming of age novel!", and while that didn't turn out to be entirely accurate (and even to the extent that it is accurate, that aspect of the novel is well done - the relationship between Michael and Kathleen Marsden, for example, is sensitively and precisely portrayed), there's enough of that here to put me on my guard. More tellingly, there isn't much of a story to it - which is hardly a criticism (and perhaps especially when that doesn't seem to be what the author set out to do in the first place), but makes it that much more unlikely that I'll really get into a book, and while The Gift of Speed has a lot going for it, it doesn't have the extra kick that a To The Lighthouse, say, or an Invisible Cities has, to really push me past the lack of story and bring me to love it anyway. So, overall response definitely positive, and it's grand to read a good novel set in Melbourne (even if near half a century ago), but it hasn't inspired me.

Monday, May 07, 2007

Two videos - "TempBot" (dir Neill Blomkamp) and "The Country" (Billy Collins)

Two things recently sent to me without much or any explanation.

Jon from MS sent me a link to this video, completely sans comment (unless you count "cool short video", which I don't). It turned out to be called "TempBot", and to follow the travails of a robot temp in an office environment; I can't decide whether it's deceptively straightforward or deceptively subtle, but I enjoyed it nonetheless.

And a few days later, Charlie, one from my open diary days (a long, long time ago), sent around this - an 'action poem' called "The Country" (subject line and entire content of accompanying message: Billy Collins is GOD. (Also: I'm not dead, just thought you all should know.)). It's a poem, set to animation; it begins "I wondered about you when you told me never to leave a box of wooden, strike-anywhere matches just lying around the house because the mice might get into them and start a fire..." and then turns into a sweet, curiously profound-feeling parable of sorts. It's too lovely for words, and makes me feel warm and happy and somehow uplifted.

Frida Hyvönen - Until Death Comes

The cover says it all, really. Hyvönen's an eccentric with a piano, following her own meandering muse: her songs are wilful, simple, off-centre, self-enfolded, stop-start and surgingly tuneful (see: "You Never Got Me Right") and often out and out ballads (the one and a half minute-long "Valerie" is another highlight); her voice is soulful and honeyed but with that Scandinavian catch and chill; the music is like streaks of sunlight falling on winter sand...cool and profane, terse and poetic, it's finely wrought and immaculately executed, a reminder of the possibilities of music.

Tom Clancy - Clear and Present Danger

This is what I did on Saturday night: listened to Camera Obscura (Underachievers Please Try Harder), Saint Etienne (Finisterre), Philip Glass (The Photographer) and Godspeed You Black Emperor! (f#a#∞) while feeling a bit mopey and sort of disconnected for not particular reason and in the meantime writing a bit; started reading Clear and Present Danger to distract me from myself. Have duly finished it, and with a renewed appreciation of Clancy's ability as a craftsman and less insult done to my sensibilities by his politics than I'd expected.

"The Art of Bollywood" @ NGV International

I've been aware of and reasonably interested in seeing the exhibition, but I suspect I would've missed it had Kelly not suggested we check it out over the weekend (she wanted to go in part for the subject she's tutoring). Anyway, it was fun - I didn't learn much about Indian history, culture or cinema (not that I'm particularly knowledgeable about any of the above, but sometimes these things tend to wash a bit over one, especially at the level that the material for such exhibitions is generally pitched), but I liked looking at the posters and watching the film grabs. Highlights definitely the too-very-for-words technicolour of Bobby (definite 'oh my god' factor) and the unintentional humour of the action-packed exploitsof 'fearless Nadia' (though I was disappointed I didn't get to see the whip fight atop the moving training). Also liked the two focusing on a dancer being watched by others, mainly because of the wonderfully cheesy reactions shots of the audience members (the heroic Errol Flynn-like one with the giant jaw in the first, and the somewhat puzzled-looking man and the solemnly approbatory woman in the other).

"SF local mix" (IMP - April 2007)

Pleasingly, most of the artists on this cd were completely new to me - I'd only even heard of two (the Aislers Set and Jolie Holland) before. It's a nicely constructed mix, weighted heavily towards acoustic and lo-fi indie-pop, with a twee flavour to several of the cuts - the kind of music that I enjoy but only rarely take to heart...so I've liked listening to the mix, though I probably won't return to it all that often (with the luxury, of course, of always being surrounded by more music than I have time to listen to...so it goes).

(from Jaime in San Francisco, CA)

"Score!" (IMP - March 2007)

Music from films (hence the title of the mix - which, somewhat embarrassingly, I only this second got) and suitably cinematic/dramatic - leads off with Morricone's mighty "L'estasi Dell'oro" and continues in pretty much that vein, nearly all entirely instrumental and tending to be themes. I've enjoyed listening to it, but unfortunately the cd is scratched, so I can only listen to the first half.

(from Chris in New York, NY)

Scarlett Thomas - Dead Clever

The first in Thomas's Lily Pascale edgy series of detective fiction. A bit more generic than Seaside but still an engaging and not entirely straightforward read. To me, seemed to take a turn for the Secret History about halfway through, prompting me to wonder whether my thinking that was due to the influence of said novel on literature in general, or just on the way that I read the stuff.

James Morrow - This Is The Way The World Ends

Went for a bit of a browse in the city library the other day (in the course of which, incidentally, I encountered a strange prevalence of novels with Bowie-referencing titles - three all told, which has to be some kind of statistical anomaly) and came up with this and a couple of others. It's one of those smart, thistly, rather weird sci-fi books with a strong satirical bent - it's kind of like Vonnegut crossed with Dr Strangelove. Everyman George Paxton signs an unusual contract in order to attain a body suit that's promised to protect his young daughter from the effects of a nuclear blast - it's free, but he has to acknowledge his complicity in the nuclear arms race by perpetuating the proliferation of the suits. A nuclear exchange and holocaust duly takes place on his way home to his family, killing everyone, and he is rescued by a strange submarine which turns out to be crewed by representatives of the 'unadmitted' - temporary avatars of those who would have lived were it not for the holocaust and who now intend to put Paxton and five others on trial for their crimes. It's stormy and strange and unsettling; I don't particularly like this kind of stuff but it's effective.

Complete Piano Music Volume 1 (Debussy - Haas; Philips)

I've never really listened to Debussy properly, but my cloudy impressions and the fact that his music always gets described as 'impressionistic' led me to expect that this would be all dreamy, misty, oceanic mood music. In fact, I was surprised to discover, it's often quite churning and turbulent, exciting the mind's eye and causing the occasional stomach-flip, and all in all positively demanding attention (even if it seems to work best, at least for me, on the level of suggestion). Includes his Préludes and a bunch of other stuff - my ear has most been caught by the Images, and especially "Hommage à Rameau" (somewhat arbitrary to mention that one rather than any number of others - it just happens to be one which has resonated on several occasions and recently). Much more exploring to do with his work - looking forward to it.

Camera Obscura - Underachievers Please Try Harder

Less glitzy and more downbeat than their latest (see immediately below) but equally nice. It has to be said, Underachievers is quite Belle & Sebastian, but the best moments on the album - "Suspended From Class", "Number One Son" and "Books Written For Girls" - take that influence and run with it to end up somewhere neighbouring but subtly and integrally different.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Camera Obscura - Let's Get Out Of This Country

Ravishing and delightful - ten sparkling, sometimes melancholy-edged, sometimes upbeat, sometimes both at once pop treats. Favourites: "Lloyd, I'm Ready To Be Heartbroken", "Come Back Margaret", "Let's Get Out Of This Country", "Country Mile" and, especially, the sprightly 60s-hued "If Looks Could Kill". Which is half of the album already, and the balance aren't far behind.

A M Hammacher - Magritte

There are two main parts to this coffee table book - an introductory overview of Magritte's work (headings: "Magritte's Lucid Dreams", "The Problem of Magritte's Titles", "Magritte and the Linguists", " 'Unthought-like Thoughts' " and "The Hidden Affinity Between Magritte and Coleridge") and then 40 colour plates with analysis...I enjoyed the second part more, but then obviously most of the point of reading these books is to look at the pictures. This one spans the whole of his career and has a fair few that I hadn't seen before, and I was interested to see that some of his early stuff was quite stormy and expressionistic (eg, "The Birth of the Idol") and I was also taken by the ominous "The Huntsmen on the Edge of Night" (neither of which I can find online) from the relatively early days. Here are a couple that I already knew but which are still too great for words ("Time Transfixed" and "The Tomb of the Wrestlers"):



(also)

Jasper Fforde - The Well of Lost Plots & Something Rotten

In these ones, as in Lost in a Good Book, Fforde allows himself more outright jokes and cute gestures, and as a result they're far more fun to read than The Eyre Affair (another part of that might be the investment in the characters and world of the books which develops over the series). They're wonderful to read, anyway - by this point in the series (the most recent, I think), Fforde's well and truly found his tone and it's a treat. The literary allusions are the main game, and the fun that results from Hamlet, Heathcliff, the Cheshire Cat, Humpty Dumpty (not to mention the cloned Shakespeares) and plenty of others striding around and basically being themselves while also reflecting in their various ways on their own characters and reception in the 'real' world, but it's also cool to follow the way Fforde distorts our 'real' world into the 'real' world of Thursday Next (cricket --> croquet, various rewrites of history, Goliath Corporation, etc). I wish there were more!

Curse of the Golden Flower

Struck me as kind of like a cross between Raise The Red Lantern (which still haunts me, though my initial impressions were mixed) and Hero - the ritual and oppressiveness and Gong-Li-doing-her-thing of the former crossed with the martial arts and ruminations on empire of the latter. I didn't enjoy it as much as either of those other Zhang films - it's very heavy and, for me, doesn't pay off (it's melodrama dressed in period clothes) - and the colour-drenchedness started to wear after a while but there's no denying its very-ness.

(w/ parents)

Laura Veirs - Saltbreakers

In some ways, it's funny that I've followed along with Laura Veirs in the way that I have. I got into her through her first widely-available record, Troubled By The Fire, which I still think is by far her best - it has a kind of crystalline plangency, a simplicity and a clarity which is delightful. But the next two, Carbon Glacier and Year of Meteors (excluding Orphan Mae, which actually predates TBTF but only got a wide release after Carbon Glacier hit), are quite different, and while they're both pleasant and interesting, and have some good moments ("Salvage A Smile" is a fave), neither especially excites me. Saltbreakers is much in the vein of Veirs' latter-day style, and while it's probably the best of the post-TBTF records, I suspect it may be the last of hers that I'll automatically buy...it's good but there just isn't enough sparkle.

Live: 29/5/05; 20/1/07 (I've just noticed how enthusiastic I was about her again in the immediate aftermath of that more recent show, which wasn't even that good...so perhaps it'll prove cyclic).

Fratres (Arvo Pärt - Benedek - Hungarian State Opera Orchestra; Naxos)

The main draw with this recording is the multiple recordings of "Fratres" in various arrangements that I hadn't heard before (in fact, I don't think I've heard any of these done before) but it also includes Pärt's "Festina lente for strings and harp ad lib.", "Summa for strings" and the ubiquitous "Cantus in memory of Benjamin Britten".

Stephen R Donaldson - The Runes of the Earth

A re-read. Still good.

(last time)