Sunday, June 20, 2010

100

photo used under Creative Commons by pasukaru76

Scruffy the Yak's 100th post. I wanted to get all hot and bothered about this, do something big and splashy and celebratory. But I'm not. A blogger I read regularly wrote that without engagement, blogs die. He's right. I'm a little weary of not receiving any comments on my posts. I'm not looking for self-congratulatory, ego-stroking nonsense, just the occasional discussion, opinion, or even argument. Try to leave a comment below a post sometime. Like most bloggers, I'm not getting paid, so your feedback is meaningful. If Soundcloud's not working, or you can't download from the widget, let me know. Disagree with something on this page? Voice your opinion, please.

Anyhow, no special birthday celebration came to mind, so the only difference with this post is I'm hawking a book I read recently. Rest is the same, new and old music I'd recommend you take for a spin.

Kids on Fire I haven't been able to learn a lot about yet (Mr. Transistor 66, send more updates!). The Winnipeggers released their debut cd in January and will be playing Canada Day in front of Music Trader at 8:00.

KIDS ON FIRE - Pure Passion for the Desperate Masses from Randy Frykas on Vimeo.



This is not a fresh new video, but Spoon is one of my top three bands throughout the last decade, and I haven't given them much notice here. That's only because the band gets hyped enough. However, if you've never paid attention, the following is from Transference, the new one. For an intro to the band, Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga should make you a beleiver, and I sincerely urge you to try Kill the Moonlight as well; you can hear them at the band's site.

Spoon - Got Nuffin from Merge Records on Vimeo.







During the Stanley Cup playoffs, I heard a Pride Tiger song (Fill Me In) used as the rock and roll soundtrack to stir up viewers and I remembered how much I liked the band. I just discovered the band broke up. Too bad, our loss. Here's The Lucky Ones.



I only knew Buck Owens as a bad joke guy on Hee Haw as a kid, but I've recently discovered he made some cool music, not necessarily the cheesy country I associated him with. I'm still learning. For example, what genre does this tune, Who's Gonna Mow Your Grass, fit into?



I really enjoyed Donald Westlake's Memory, in which the protagonist loses his memory and never regains it. Here's the beginning of the book:



After the show, they went back to the hotel room, and to bed, for the seventeenth time in three weeks. He had chosen her because, being on the road with him, she was handy; and additionally because she was married, had already clipped the wings of one male, and could therefore demand nothing more from him than he was willing to give. Why she had chosen him he neither knew nor cared.

He was deep in clench-faced sweaty blindness of physical passion when the hotel room door burst open and what could only be the husband stormed in, topcoat flaring behind him like Batman’s cloak. He rose up from the mounded woman, smiling idiotically at the enraged face rushing toward him, thinking only What a cliché! and so unable to take it seriously. Till the husband reached out one flailing hand and brought it back lifting a chair, the legs pointing at four spots around his head as though to frame him there symmetrically for eternity, and then he scrambled back and away from the woman, his hand slipping on her rubbery breast, and he cried out, "What are you doing?"

And the nurse dressed all in white said, "Ah, there you are!" She was smiling, looking down at him, pleased by his presence. Her teeth were wide and shiny, like enamel kitchen cabinets all in a row. The pale lips were an oval smile around them, but then the oval reversed to the comic exaggeration of a frown, and she said, "Oh, no. Don’t fade away again."

The teeth aren’t real, he thought.

There was nothing between the two thoughts, what are you doing and the teeth aren’t real. No transition, no time lapse, no going to sleep and waking up, no explanation.

The nurse had a face of leather, like a cowboy, but with a soft round nose. She said, "The doctor will want to talk to you. Now don’t fade away again."

"I won’t," he whispered, because whispering was all he dared until he found out whether or not he was real.
Copyright © 2010 by the Estate of Donald E. Westlake.

David Byrne recently released his cover of Peter Gabriel's I Don't Remember, which might be a fitting cover for Westlake's book (which, by the way, is very different from many of his humourous crime caper novels). Byrne says his version "might imply a willing sublime surrender to memory loss.”

Listening Wind/ I Don't Remember by RealWorldRecords


The The made increasingly less accessible music in some ways after having some form of hit with Infected, but I think a lot of it has aged pretty well.


4 comments:

Dale said...

Congrats on post 100, scruffy. I'd say more but I know jack squat about music.

Albert Bannatyne said...

Login is required to leave a comment == less comments. Logging into blogger.som messes up some other stuff I have going on in my computer, so commenting requires stopping and restarting a bunch of stuff. But I'm reading.

If you think Buck Owens actually had some talent (he did, he was quite a guitarist) you should check out some Roy Clark some time. Same deal - he was a real musician when he wasn't hee-ing and haw-ing. Both of them had been recognized as outstanding talents by Guitar Player magazine.

Haven't bought Gabriel's album of cover songs yet - interested, but somewhat put off by his loud advertisement of "no guitars or drums". Also interested in the album of covers of his songs, but I haven't seen any info on it yet.

Unknown said...

Hi, this is Rebecca. Long time reader, first time commenter...

Ok, that's probably not entirely true. I'm sure I've commented at some point.

I read. I listen. I enjoy. Congrats on 100. You do good work. :-)

The The!!!

chris yak said...

Thanks to all. Mr. Bannerman - er Bannatyne, I realize that logging in to leave a comment takes a few minutes, I wish I could change it - maybe I have to go to Wordpress or some other blog app. However, if a person can take the time to download a few songs, I would hope that person could take the time to leave a brief comment, even if it means redoing some other programs or applications that are running. Thanks for the input.