Music

Something jewelled slips away

It was 10F this morning, which relative to recent temperatures, was arse cold. The slush from yesterday’s thaw had frozen overnight, so I had a hell of a time getting my car out, because my tires were stuck in ice.

I ended up being just late enough for work that the sun was starting to rise as while I drove east to Bloomington. It started as a slight lightening, but by the time I got to town, there was a narrow band of deep orange hugging the horizon. As I was driving into Bloomington, Bruce Cockburn’s The Rose Above the Sky came on.

I’d always associated that song with sunsets, partly because of the imagery of the lyrics, and partly because the song–for me, at least–is simultaneously sad and uplifting. It makes a lovely sunrise soundtrack, as well.

I discovered Bruce Cockburn when I was in high school. I was babysitting one night, and after the kids had gone to bed, I had MTV playing while I studied. They were debuting the video for Madonna’s Like a Virgin, so it was playing nearly non-stop. Sandwiched between repeated airings of Madge’s décolletage was a video for If I Had a Rocket Launcher. I was hooked (on Bruce, not Madge’s breasts). The next day, I went to Stonehenge, the local hippie head shop & record store, and spent my babysitting money on Humans and Stealing Fire. I think I probably spent more time listening to those two albums than any others during the rest of my high school years.

It’s weird. I didn’t know anyone else who had even heard of Bruce Cockburn, much less anyone who listened to his music. So, while it was the 80s, and I was listening to the standard Velveeta fair, I was also listening to Bruce Cockburn. It was like a weird, secret influence that no one else in my group of friends knew about. They were listening to Depeche Mode and the Petshop Boys and I was listening to Canadian folk-y-ish music with decidedly spiritual overtones (I really don’t know where I’d place him genre-wise). I like Depeche Mode, mind you, but their music didn’t make me think or feel. Bruce’s did. And does.

I still don’t know anyone who listens to Bruce Cockburn, though I did have an odd Bruce encounter with complete strangers once. A coworker was going through my CDs at work, and commented that friends of hers were going to see Bruce play in Indianapolis. She gave me their phone number, and I called and asked if I could tag along. (Keep in mind that I am pathologically phone-phobic and I’m not too keen on hanging out with strangers.) They said sure, so I went to Indy with a couple of strange–in more ways than one–Canadians to see Bruce play. It was an absolutely amazing show. I recall him saying, between songs, that Canadians only sing about social issues and love. He does both, and does them well.

Art, Artist Books, Collage, Meta, Music

A Mid-week Bundle of Non-sequitury Goodness

Hemp Bound Journal:  Skirting the Issue
Skirting the Issue
child’s dress pattern, used sandpaper, dried plant fibers, and hemp twine
8 3/4 x 11 1/2 inches

I haven’t finished this one yet, but it may not be fit for public consumption once I have, so I thought I’d scan and upload it while I could. I don’t know when I got au fait with Teh Punny, and it needs to stop rightthisminute, but what can I say? It’s an illness.

As you can see, I’m still stuck in Brown Land. I guess I’d better just face the fact that everything in this book is going to be some shade of blech, and stop worrying about it. Maybe if I tell myself it’s a reflection of the winter landscape, it won’t bug me so much. And pigs might fly.

The new Earl Brothers CD is out. Wheee! The Earl Brothers are goth bluegrass at it’s very finest, with a blend of humor and menace that can be found in some of Nick Cave’s best work. Their first CD was one of those rare gems that is an excellent companion for cleaning, arting, or driving. If their second release is half as good as the first, it’s worth every penny and then some. (Guess what I’m getting myself for my birfday?)

Speaking of music… I’m sure everyone has suffered having a song stuck in their head, and been unable to get rid of it. It happens to me regularly. Well, yesterday I had one so firmly lodged, that it stayed there all day, then showed up in my dreams, which consisted of various efforts to dislodge the damned thing. That’s right, I wasted my precious REM time getting rid of Generation X’s Kiss Me Deadly. Not because the song itself was bothersome, mind you. I quite like it. But, it had thoroughly outstayed its welcome.

This just in from the Things Could Be Worse department: Be thankful that you don’t own the green Pontiac that mysteriously rolled out of its parking slot this afternoon.

I’m in the process of installing WordPress on my main site. If I get time over the extra-extra long weekend (four days, onna count of MLK Day), and if my connection cooperates, I’ll play around with it (as in, I’ll try to break as many templates as possible). Right now, it is Teh Vanilla. My host also has some interesting looking image gallery packages that I’m going to have investigate. Because, you know, I need to complicate my life like I need another hole in my head. It’s that time of year, though. Spring cleaning is overrated. Personally, I’m a fan of mid-winter cleaning.

Music, Photography

Bones and The Magical Chair of Giving

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It occurred to me that Mr. Jawbone might have once belonged to a pig, so I went a-Googling, and sure enough, it did.

javelina jawbone
Credit: javelina jawbone, by Drew Mackie

I think the sacral vertebrae are bovine in origin, but I’m not having much luck Googling up any images that are helpful. The closest I’ve come are anatomical drawings.

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Image from page 47 of "A text-book of veterinary obstetrics : including the diseases and accidents incidental to pregnancy, parturition and early age in the domesticated animals" (1901)
Credit: Internet Archive, Image from page 47 of “A text-book of veterinary obstetrics : including the diseases and accidents incidental to pregnancy, parturition and early age in the domesticated animals” (1901)

I’m calling it Good Enough.

As I was driving in to work this morning, I did some more thinking on good car music vs. not-so-good car music. There are some things I love to listen to, but that I don’t like to drive to. For example, I like both Cat Stevens and Marilyn Manson, but only one of those things belongs in my car. So this is why, as I was listening to Antichrist Superstar this ayem, I was actually thinking of hippy-dippy music. Which reminded me of New Year’s Eve and the Magical Chair of Giving.

My neighbor and I attended a New Year party at a friend’s house, which was all sorts of good fun. At one point, we were both hanging out upstairs, when she realized she’d lost one of her hair sticks. So, she started rooting around in cushions of the big, squishy easy chair she’d been enveloped in. And, she started pulling out a vast and varied array of objects. The chair kept giving, and giving, and giving. The penultimate gift was a mixed CD with both Teaser and the Firecat and Tea for the Tillerman on it. She, a little drunk at this point, handed it to me, thinking it was mine. Why, yes, I do happen to have that those two albums on one CD, but that particular copy–despite the fact that the handwriting it bears looks eerily like mine–does not, in fact, belong to me. Very odd. Who knew I wasn’t the only person on Urth who listens to Cat Stevens and who decided to put those two albums on one CD?

Music

Good Morning

(Have you ever had cheese toast with a hint of cinnamon? Well, I cannot unrecommend it enough. I made cinnamon and sugar toast in my toaster oven last night, then cheese toast this morning, and the cheese toast has a slight bouquet of cinnamon. It is Teh Ptoui.)

So, anyway, I stopped at the Circle K-Bigfoot-BP-Mac’s-Whatever on 17th & College this morning, to get my daily dose of tasty beverageness. I can usually tell who is working the register by what music they’re playing: hip hop, bluegrass, NPR, B97 (manic top 40), or 92.3 (the dreaded “Quality Rock” station). And then there’s the Counting Crows guy, who reminds me so much of one of my former students that it kind of creeps me out when he’s working. This morning, though, the artsy looking guy, who usually listens to NPR, had T. Rex’s “Cosmic Dancer” playing. The funny thing was that I was listening to “The Slider” in the car.

I have a feeling it’s going to be one of Those days.

Crankypantsing, Music

6:58, Are You Sure Where My Spock Is?

6:58, are you sure where my Spock is?
Ears
Ears
Ears…
— Not Quite Tori

I often get random lyrics swirling around in my head. I think that happens to most people. The lyric du jour is not actually a lyric, though. For some reason, my brain insists that Tori Amos’ Spark would be vastly improved by the above substitution in lyrics.

I wouldn’t be suffering from this malady, if I had been motivated to burn some new CDs for the car. Most of the current CDs in my car are ones I made to listen to while arting. They work fabulously well for that, but they don’t do a whole lot to enhance the driving experience. Which is why, I guess, my brain started making up random lyrics on its own.

It could also have something to do with the fact that, though I went to bed early last night, I took Benadryl because my allergies were acting up. Usually, Benadryl makes me comatose, but last night, it made me wired-tired. I kept waking up, not knowing if I’d actually been asleep, or if I’d been awake and my mind had just been wandering. When I did finally fall asleep, I had weird dreams that kept waking me up. All in all, it was not a very restful experience, so I cannot recommend this product and/or service. Ugh.

Crankypantsing, Music

Quality Rock, Real Variety

My silly toy car has, as is only fitting, a matching silly toy radio antenna, so my commuting entertainment options are limited. Depending on what’s on, I listen to a combination of public radio and the local “quality rock” station. You’ll note that, in their tag-line, they decline to say what quality their, um, rock is. For the most part, it’s not too bad, though their program director occasionally goes on mystifying Bob Seger benders. O gross. Mostly, though, they stick with a gaggle of interchangeable angsty boys and girls, with a fair sprinkling of older stuff. I appreciate getting to hear OMD, Led Zeppelin, and Tori Amos mixed up together. And, though I’m not the biggest John Mellencamp fan, it is Indiana and I do have a small soft spot for him.

Which leads me to today’s purpose for blathering… I grew up listening to Q95, back before Bob and Tom were syndicated. Back when they were marginally funny. Back when potty humor passed for entertaining. Back when the juvenile rebel in me said “Hell, yes!” whenever they played an uncensored version of a song containing profanity. Back when those little forbidden rule flauntings counted.

This morning, I was reminded of that feeling when our local quality rock station played uncensored versions of John Mellencamp’s Play Guitar and Steve Miller’s Jet Airliner. It’s amazing that a little forbidden profanity can have such a profound effect, but my inner adolescent said “Hell, yes!” Instant attitude adjustment! Considering it was a rainy, gross Monday morning, that was no mean feat. And, it nearly makes up for having to listen to Bob Seger every morning last week. Nearly.

Art, Music

Instant Reviews (Weather, Music, Reading Material)

Instant Review: The Bloody Weather

Once again, I got to work to find that the network is down. My guess is that last night’s storms knocked out power and no one reset the servers. It wouldn’t be the first time it’s happened. Considering how much it’s costing the university to pay for us to sit and twiddle our thumbs, you’d think they’d try to keep this sort of thing from happening. Hrmph. That’ll teach me to haul ass to get to work on time when it’s storming.

And, speaking of the bloody weather, it was so hot on Tuesday that I had to dig out the window ACs and install them. Talk about a pain in the behindermost parts. I’d been looking forward to doing a whole lot of nothing when I got home, so physical labor was not on my To Do List. I’m glad I got that out of the way, though. It was even hotter yesterday, so being able to turn on the AC was a godsend. While cars and computers and telephones are wonderful inventions, I think AC trumps them all.

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Instant Review: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds B-Sides & Rarities

Anyway, I got the Nick Cave B-Sides & Rarities box set and have been listening to it non-stop, at work and at home. If I had a tape or CD player in my car (ha!) I’d be listening to it there, too. It’s absolutely wonderful. Most of the material was previously released as B sides, some of which I already had, but I figured it would be worth the price (US$20) just for the unreleased material. I wasn’t wrong.

And for those who like Nick Cave but are looking for something a little different, I recommend checking out The Earl Brothers. It’s gothic bluegrass at it’s very finest. No, really! It’s funny and a little menacing and, I’ve found, makes damnfine music to clean by. Mary Poppins, eat your heart out.

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Instant Review: Stuff I’ve Been Reading

I’ve been enjoying Bitch PhD and Echidne of the Snakes. Angie Reed Gardner’s art blog, where there’s good art and some good, thought-provoking conversation. Check out the discussion of Fernando Botero’s Abu Ghraib paintings. I also recommend the Velveteen Rabbi blog. I’m not particularly religious, but I’ve always been fascinated by religion, by religious philosophy, and by linguistics. The Velveteen Rabbi caters nicely to my interests.

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It looks like the network is back up. Yay! It only took them 1:30 this time. Now to upload this and get to work.

Music, Photography

Let’s Build a Snowman!

20050108_1

Sometimes, the world is black. And tears run from your eyes.
And maybe we’ll all get really sick. Or maybe we’ll all diiiie.
Sooo, let’s build a snowman, we could make it our best friend.
We could name it Bob, or we could name it George.
We could make it tall, or we could make it not so tall!
A snowman!

from Cannibal!: the Musical (You’ll laugh, you’ll cry, it’s way better than Cats!)