He had Miranda Lambert on his headphones. She was his absolute favourite. She was blonde and curvy and sang about drink and sex and heartbreak and nostalgia and he suspected he would be slightly nervous of her in real life. But she was still his absolute favourite.
Saturday, January 30, 2021
Kate Atkinson - Big Sky
Wednesday, January 27, 2021
Belle and Sebastian - What to Look for in Summer
A live album and a peppy one at that. The first proper song is my latter day favourite B&S song, "Dirty Dream Number Two", and they do it justice, and there are plenty of classics across its 23 tracks, among which "Beyond the Sunrise" stands out for the way this rendition elevates it and gives it new texture and "The Fox in the Snow" and "My Wandering Days Are Over" stand out for just being such completely great songs. Plus there are a couple of newer ones I hadn't heard before along with a couple from Write About Love, which I never really internalised. Two from way, way back when in "Dog on Wheels" and "Belle & Sebastian". And it all fits.
Promising Young Woman
Sunday, January 24, 2021
Boogie Nights
A long time since I watched this one, and I wonder whether I ever sat down and watched it all the way from start to finish before. It's lively and human, and PTA's flair was already well in evidence at this stage even though some of the depth wasn't quite yet. The warmth and optimism of the 70s, followed by the crashing fall of the turn to the 80s, and something of a happy ending for those left standing, wrapped up with a bit of a theme of 'family' which sits naturally with the porn industry setting when taken together with the lostness of the people who find their way to it.
Friday, January 22, 2021
"2020 MIX" / "2020 in short"
Sunday, January 17, 2021
iTunes most played
I'm switching from iTunes to Spotify as my primary music player, so here's a final record of the songs I've listened to the most times over the iTunes part of my life, circa 2007/08 to now.
Accompanying entry from a few months ago: most-listened to artists over that same period.
The Queen's Gambit
Saturday, January 09, 2021
NGV Triennial (second visit)
Netflix
A few things incompletely watched over the last year or so:
- Archer seasons 1 to 7 and a bit - a cynical, crude and extremely fun piece of animated action tv candy, enlivened further by a surprising ability to flesh out its characters into something more than just cartoons.
- 3% season 1 and a bit of season 2 - enjoyable Brazilian semi-dystopian future show in which members of the living-in-poverty majority get one chance each to win their way to the pampered land of the elite (the 3%) through an allegedly merit-based series of tests and contests, like a less blood-thirsty Hunger Games but with the political commentary equally - if anything, more so - up in lights.
- Warrior Nun - two or three episodes only before losing interest.
- Bojack Horseman season 1 - this show hasn't landed with me in the way that everyone on the internet had led me to expect it would (maybe that comes with more perseverance?) but its first season shows at least flickers of greatness, with one episode in particular, "Say Anything", punching pretty hard in the stomach in the way it unwraps Princess Carolyn's situation.
- The Forest of Love - I got through about half of this movie before giving up and scrolling forward to find out what happened at the end, which required some synopsis reading anyway given the significant twist. It was hard going - too nasty for me and without the bubblegum pleasures of the director's Love Exposure.
- New Girl - I think I'm about halfway through season 1 of a show that I can't imagine going deep on, but offers the lightest of entertainments at times when such is called for.
Ted Chiang - Stories of Your Life and Others
Monday, January 04, 2021
Brooklyn Nine-Nine seasons 1-7
Friday, January 01, 2021
Brandon Sanderson - Dawnshard & Rhythm of War
The next novel plus extremely full-length novel in this series. Reading these, and Rhythm of War especially, had me thinking about what it is that I read genre - and (including) literary fiction - for. There's a relatively heavy emphasis on character here, and particularly on mental illness and disability, in a way that's impressive for a fantasy novel but would be only passable in lit fic - along with the depth of the world (and universe) being built, and the moments and crescendos of excitement and intrigue. I'd like it if Sanderson went a bit darker, in a way that was hinted at in parts of the first in the series, but that's a matter of taste rather than a reflection of quality. All told these continue to be pacy, richly imagined stories told in a way that doesn't insult the intelligence (at the level of both prose and characterisation), and a good way to escape for a time.