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Thoughts, Ponderences, and Updates

"To live is to fly, low and high..." - Townes Van Zandt
November 19

Ignoranus?

Apparently,the Washington Post has a contest in which they ask readers to take any word from the dictionary, alter it by adding, subtracting, or changing one letter, and supply a new definition.  Here’s my favorite.


Ignoranus (n): A person who’s both stupid and an asshole.



October 30

Mellow Friday

I can't remember the last time a spent a whole evening just listening to old music and scanning the net for new (to me stuff).  Here's what I've discovered so far tonight.

  • Magnolia Electric Co's album, Josephine.  I've had it for a while but just haven't had time to listen.  Whoa.  Good.  Like Top 10 albums of the year good. In fact, the first track, O! Grace, might be one of my favorite songs of the year.
  • A free sampler from Lost Highway records.  It has songs from Hayes Carll, Willie, Robert Earl Keen, Lyle Lovett, Ryan Bingham and Black Joe Lewis.  My 2 favs are Willie's cover of Hank Williams' Lost Highway (not sure who the fella singing with him is, but damn, he has a voice) and Hayes' new song called Wating On The Stars To Fall.
  • A new band called the Star Room Boys.  The tidbit of research I've done tonight revealed that the got together in Athens (GA) back in the late 90's/early 00's.  Too bad for me that it appears they're not together anymore.  However, they did leave behind little gems like this one called Cocaine Parties.
  • This gorgeous song by Wyckham Porteous.





October 29

One Year Ago Today...

You could not have paid me to run to the mailbox.  I just got back from running in the rain because after 2 days off I absolutely couldn't take another day without some exercise.  Crazy, eh?
October 12

I and Love and You - Mission Statement

Who writes a mission statement for an album?  The Avett Brothers do, that's who. I've decided to share it below because A.) it's a lovely piece of writing and B.) I and Love and You is one of the lead candidates for my favorite album of the year (hell, even Paste Magazine gave it a 96/100...and they don't give 90's very often). 

“The words “I” and “Love” and “You” are the watermark of humanity. Strung together, they convey our deepest sense of humility, of power, of truth. It is our most common sentiment, even as the feeling of it is so infinitely uncommon: each to proclaim these three words with his or her very own heart and mindset of reason (or lack thereof); a proclamation completely and perfectly new each time it is offered. Uttered daily and nightly by millions, the words are said in an unending array of circumstances : whispered to a newborn in a mothers arms; shared between best friends on the playground; in the form of sympathy - said by a girl to a boy, as the respect continues but the relationship does not. It is said too loudly by parents to embarassed children in the company of their friends, and by grown children - to their fading parents in hospital beds. The words are thought in the company of the photograph and said in the company of the gravestone. It is how we end our phone calls and our letters… the words at the bottom of the page that trump all those above it, a way to gracefully finish a message, however important or trivial, with the most meaningful gift of all : the communication of love. And yet the words themselves have been the victims of triviality, a ready replacement for lesser salutations among near strangers, burst forth casually as “love ya.” Truly? To what degree? Why, how much, and for how long? These are questions befitting of the stature of love, though not the everyday banter of vague acquaintance. The words have also been twisted by the dark nature of deceit : To say “I love you” with a dramatic measure of synthetic emotion; a snare set by those who prey upon fellow humanity, driven to whatever selfish end, to gain access to another’s body, or their money, or their opportunity. In this realm, the proclamation is disgraced by one seeking to gain rather than to give. In any case, and by whatever inspiration, these words are woven deeply in to the fibers of our existence. Our longing to hear them from the right place is maddeningly and simultaneously our finest strength and our most gentle weakness. The album “I and Love and You” is unashamedly defined by such a dynamic of duality. As living people, we are bound by this unavoidable parallel. We are powerful yet weak, capable yet temporary.

Inevitably, an attempt to place honesty within an artistic avenue will follow suit. This is a piece which shows us as we are: products of love surrounded by struggle. The music herein is, in many ways, readable as both a milestone and an arrival. A chapter in the story of young men, it bridges the space between the uncertainty of youth and the reality of it’s release. The record is full with the quality of the question and response. As far as questions go, there are plenty- normally residing within the tone and delivery of the lyrics themselves, which, ironically, are sung with so much confidence. Among songs and thoughts so driven and purposeful, the most basic relatable doubt comes through with a resounding clarity. Outside of the eternal theme of romantic love, the album speaks thankfully upon a landscape of light-filled rooms, word-filled pages, time machines, forgiveness, singing birds, ocean waves, art ,change, confessions of shortcomings, and reasons to continue on. Hope and a cause for smiling follow naturally. In the midst of all this, there are allusions to the less-than-ideal conditions of life: the loss of memory, the inability to control temper, insecurity, indecision, jaded indifference, and the general plague of former and current weakness. “I and Love and You” is an album of obvious human creation, chracterized by its best and its worst. Emotional imperfection is a reality for those who recorded the piece, just as it is for those who will hear it. The conclusion of the song from which the title is taken admits that the words “I love you” have become “hard to say”. And perhaps that difficulty is as common as its counterpart. Perhaps the inability to say these heaviest of words is as much a part of life as the lighthearted candor of those who say them without any difficulty at all. And so it ends with the phrase whispered to and by those of us most defeated and most elated… I and love and you…”
October 11

Music-Filled Fall

This Fall's music schedule here in the Ice Hole is going a long way towards making up for the craptastic climate.  Here's what's on tap for me (for as long as my energy and money hold out):

October:
23  Lucero - Varsity Theater
25  Langhorne Slim - 400 Bar
29  Monsters of Folk - State Theater
31  Loudon Wainright III - Cedar Cultural Center

November:
4  Hoots and Hellmouth with William Elliot Whitmore - 7th St Entry
5  Romi Mays - Lee's Liquor Lounge
6  Chris Koza - Cedar Cultural Center
7  **Decision time**  The Whigs @ the Triple Rock  or Old Crow Medicine Show @ State Theater
9   White Rabits - Cedar Cultural Center
13 Ray LaMontagne - State Theater
20  Jason Isbell -  The Turf Club
24  Sam Roberts - 7th Street Entry
25  AA Bondy - 400 Bar

December
2  Works Progress Administration - Cedar Cultural Center
4  Dan Auerbach w/ Justin Townes Earle - First Avenue
5  The Swell Season - State Theater
9  Dave Rawlings Machine - Cedar Cultural Center




 

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