Empty Wallet Hodgepodge
Thanks to the various illnesses of Heather Samuels and our multiple visits to the Vet's office, my record purchasing for the rest of the year will be non-existent. Plus, I have holiday purchases to make...
Which is to say that the entries for my favorite records of the year are all in. Am I prepared to discuss them? My iPod Shuffle Project has dominated my listening over the past seven weeks. Therefore, I haven't given my usual obsessive attention to new records in the past couple of months. I like to listen to music when I'm walking around, moodily gazing at the bare winter landscape, that sort of thing. So, I'll spend what's left of the year listening to the records at home and then say what I have to say about them. Plus, a couple of favorite new old discoveries as well...
At the Uncorrected Proof, Psychedelic Eskimo, Couch Terrorist household, we've been watching a lot of Sopranos lately. Sometimes I wonder if the show's been on too long, if motifs are repeated intentionally or out of creative stagnation, but then a subplot like Vito, the gay gangster on the lam, gives the show a fresh narrative shot (pun possibly intended?). Don't tell me what happens in the final episodes of Season 6, Part One, we'll be getting there this week...
It's only November but it's hard not to feel excited about the Warriors after watching them slug it out with the Spurs last night. Nellie has turned this team around, and there's no doubting the continuing development of Ellis and Biedrins. Opposing teams are paying attention to them--especially Ellis--and they're rising to the challenge. The W's will no doubt lose their share of games this season, but if they play this hard, it's going to be a hell of an entertaining season.
Finally, I'm back on the Russian literature. Recently finished Isaac Babel's Collected Stories. I know his reputation rests on The Red Cavalry Stories--the bespectacled Jew riding with the Cossacks, but the stories I dig the most are the Odessa Stories and some of the other autobiographical ones of Babel's boyhood. Babel's fellow Jews aren't saintly sufferers, they're just regular people--vain, proud, sweet, stupid, drunk, pious, funny, tragic. No doubt a model for Philip Roth's portrayals of New Jersey Jews. My Dad's people were from Odessa. So, a shout out to Isaac Babel, my homeboy.
Currently, I'm reading Chekhov stories ("The Kiss") and finishing up Richard Ford's "The Lay of the Land." More on that when I finish it.
Which is to say that the entries for my favorite records of the year are all in. Am I prepared to discuss them? My iPod Shuffle Project has dominated my listening over the past seven weeks. Therefore, I haven't given my usual obsessive attention to new records in the past couple of months. I like to listen to music when I'm walking around, moodily gazing at the bare winter landscape, that sort of thing. So, I'll spend what's left of the year listening to the records at home and then say what I have to say about them. Plus, a couple of favorite new old discoveries as well...
At the Uncorrected Proof, Psychedelic Eskimo, Couch Terrorist household, we've been watching a lot of Sopranos lately. Sometimes I wonder if the show's been on too long, if motifs are repeated intentionally or out of creative stagnation, but then a subplot like Vito, the gay gangster on the lam, gives the show a fresh narrative shot (pun possibly intended?). Don't tell me what happens in the final episodes of Season 6, Part One, we'll be getting there this week...
It's only November but it's hard not to feel excited about the Warriors after watching them slug it out with the Spurs last night. Nellie has turned this team around, and there's no doubting the continuing development of Ellis and Biedrins. Opposing teams are paying attention to them--especially Ellis--and they're rising to the challenge. The W's will no doubt lose their share of games this season, but if they play this hard, it's going to be a hell of an entertaining season.
Finally, I'm back on the Russian literature. Recently finished Isaac Babel's Collected Stories. I know his reputation rests on The Red Cavalry Stories--the bespectacled Jew riding with the Cossacks, but the stories I dig the most are the Odessa Stories and some of the other autobiographical ones of Babel's boyhood. Babel's fellow Jews aren't saintly sufferers, they're just regular people--vain, proud, sweet, stupid, drunk, pious, funny, tragic. No doubt a model for Philip Roth's portrayals of New Jersey Jews. My Dad's people were from Odessa. So, a shout out to Isaac Babel, my homeboy.
Currently, I'm reading Chekhov stories ("The Kiss") and finishing up Richard Ford's "The Lay of the Land." More on that when I finish it.
