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ejp626

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Everything posted by ejp626

  1. I got through a shorter selected version and thought many of them were quite interesting. I then ordered this complete version, though it will be a while before I tackle the essays again. I generally enjoyed The Good People of New York. I got 100 pages from the end of Maxwell's Time Will Darken It and finally bailed. The main character makes a couple of horrible decisions, almost entirely because he wants people to think well of him (and he's a pushover). That would be bad enough, but when his wife and close friend try to dissuade him from this path, and he just ignores them... I am no longer going to read fiction about morons or near-morons (and probably not about weak-willed pushovers either). Life's too short.
  2. I went ahead and donated most of my CDs as it generally isn't worth taking them to the stores here and/or dealing with shipping rates. I've held onto a few that were a bit rarer and am seeing who might be interested on the board. As it happens, I will be in the States this weekend, so if any of these are of interest, let me know by Thurs. evening, and we can work something out regarding shipping (either media rate or first class). Let's say $3 for media rate, which I'll waive if you order 2 or more CDs. Sorry for the short notice. Shipping to Canada or elsewhere is always an option, but I'll have to get a shipping quote... HOLD $8 Jack Wilson Call Me: Jazz From the Penthouse (Century 67) $15 Rene Urtreger En Direct d'Antibes #03 (Carlyne) $8 J.R. Monterose The Message (Prevue/Xanadu) drill hole in UPC $12 Kenny Drew Home is Where the Soul Is (Xanadu Master Edition) HOLD $10 Sam Jones Changes & Things (Xanadu Master Edition) $15 Harold Mabern The Leading Man (Columbia) $8 Johnny Dyani Afrika (SteepleChase) $3 Yerba Buena President Alien - light fingerprint on disc, does not affect play Thanks for looking! Eric
  3. We'll be getting a different but presumably still representative Warhol exhibit up in Canada in Spring 2021. There is one more week to catch the Romare Bearden exhibit in Atlanta: https://high.org/exhibition/something-over-something-else-romare-beardens-profile-series/ I'll be travelling to see that next weekend. After this, the exhibit heads to Cincinnati, though missing a few of the paintings.
  4. At 700 pages, this really outstayed its welcome, especially section 7, which I didn't care for at all. Somewhere around page 350 or 400 I just lost all interest in the characters, particularly the main character, Hans, whom I never warmed up to. Probably The Good People of New York next and then back to William Maxwell: Time Will Darken It and some of the stories collected in the LOA volume. I do have the recent translation of Qualityland by Marc-Uwe Kling on hold at the library and that will be coming up soon as well.
  5. According to Steve Coogan, Terry Jones took the Monty Python tapes with him from the BBC (either bought or nicked them), so it is very possible there wouldn't be much of a Python legacy at all with Terry's far-sightedness. I mean the movies of course and the LPs, but you need the movies and the original episodes together to form such a towering legacy. So one more cheer for Terry Two Sheds (cause he needed both to store all those tapes) Jones: https://www.classicfm.com/music-news/remembering-terry-jones-genius-comedy-sketch/
  6. Norman Granz' Jam Session #9 from the Jam Sessions box set. (Been a loooong time since I made my way through this set.)
  7. So embarrassed that I didn't even remember I own a copy of Feeling Free... It looks tasty. Will listen to it tonight...
  8. I'm just back from seeing Laurie Anderson in her new show The Art of Falling. While there is indeed improvised music by Anderson and the cellist Rubin Kodheli, this definitely feels secondary to the various stories she tells during the performance.
  9. Launched into Mann's The Magic Mountain. I suspect this is a novel I will admire/respect more than really enjoy, if for no other reason than I don't like reading about illness and hospital settings (though in this case it is simply a sanatorium, though one that appears exceedingly difficult to check out from -- the main character, Hans, shows up for a 3 week visit that then stretches into months, then years...). Apparently, this almost happened to Mann himself. His wife was at one of these sanatoriums. He visited for 3 weeks, and by the end the director tried to convince him he was quite ill and should check in for a long-term stay.
  10. Looks interesting. Thanks for pointing this out. I'll try to remember to look it up in March... Right now I am listening to the 2 CD set of The Poetry of Jazz by Boone. I don't really like poetry read over a jazz background (with a few exceptions - Langston Hughes' The Weary Blues was solid), but I really like the poet Philip Levine, so I will give it a listen and see where it works and where it doesn't.
  11. In the end, I really didn't like His Only Son and skipped out partway through. However, the novella, Doña Berta, included in the NYRB volume, is worth a look. I did enjoy Rushdie's most recent novel, Quichotte. However, this is even more meta-textual than most of his novels (with "The Author" introducing himself a couple of chapters in), so if you are looking for a straight-forward novel, then I would avoid this. (At some point, maybe in the late spring, I really ought to read the Grossman translation of Don Quixote.) It looks like it will be Mann's Magic Mountain next and then probably Powell's The Happy Island.
  12. ejp626

    Jack Sheldon

    I was listening to a few of his recordings over the past few days, including The Warm World of Jack Sheldon (Dot). Unless I am just not looking in the right places, The Cool World of Jack Sheldon is not available for streaming and generally only as a pricey CD import. It's not that hard to find it on LP, though given shipping prices these days... Does anyone have a view on The Cool World? Is it worth tracking down? How does it compare to his other sessions? Thanks!
  13. I stumbled across the group Electric Six a while ago. The lyrics are often pretty droll (probably not that different from Jack Black's Tenacious D). I think the album that hangs together the best is I Shall Exterminate Everything Around Me...
  14. Saw Scorsese's Bringing Out the Dead at TIFF Lightbox tonight. I don't think I've seen it since the original release in 1999. I enjoyed it, though there are plenty of over-the-top moments (and not all are attributed to Nicholas Cage). I did not realize until I saw the closing credits that the voice of one of the dispatchers was Scorese himself, while the one who banters with Ving Rhames was Queen Latifah!
  15. I have not. I might give it a try, though it would be at the end of a long list... Despite my misgivings, I did order a copy of Alas's La Regenta (mostly because the library didn't have a circulating copy!), though I've heard the plot borrows heavily from Madame Bovary. I am still waiting on Mann's The Magic Mountain, as well as for the library copy of Dawn Powell's This Happy Island. I suspect the next book I actually tackle will be Rushdie's Quichotte. (Third time lucky? As I said, I've liked aspects of the other two I've just read, but wasn't completely satisfied with either.)
  16. There were quite a few interesting aspects of Rushdie's The Golden House, but I ended up with a fairly strong dislike of the narrator, Rene, and his actions towards the end of the novel seemed both unbelievable and unforgivable, so it did spoil the novel to a significant extent. Working my way into His Only Son by Leopoldo Alas. I'm struggling with this one as it features a not terribly interesting character making terrible life choices. I'll probably give it another 50 pages, then bail.
  17. Saw The Rise of Skywalker with my son today. Fewer outright howlers than in The Last Jedi. It was an acceptable end to the third trilogy.
  18. Did they film this with 3 alternative endings, a la Clue?
  19. Just getting into Rushdie's The Golden House. Interesting so far. After this His Only Son/Doña Berta by Leopoldo Alas (NYRB), then it will probably be back to William Maxwell and Dawn Powell. However, I do have a copy of Mann's The Magic Mountain in the newish translation by John Woods (supposed to be much better than other translations) wending its way to me, and I'll try to tackle that this winter.
  20. It's on Bloor between Dufferin and Ossington. Here's some photos of the interior - https://www.blogto.com/film/2019/12/paradise-theatre-toronto/ It's definitely a bit pricey for a second-run theatre (basically full price tickets), but I'll try to go from time to time, since the owners deserve some major plaudits for bringing this place back from the dead.
  21. Haven't seen many movies in a long time, but I just saw Almodovar's Pain and Glory at the newly refurbished Paradise Theatre in Toronto. It has some very strong moments. Banderas really inhabits his role well (esp. the scene when he reconnects with an old lover), though the most memorable scenes of the film are the childhood flashbacks. This review generally seems on target - https://www.theguardian.com/film/2019/aug/25/pain-and-glory-review-pedro-almodovar-antonio-banderas-penelope-cruz Will probably see Rise of Skywalker over the weekend and then perhaps a showing of 2001 (with 70 mm print) at TIFF.
  22. There's definitely a push among the critics to praise The Last Jedi and to run down The Rise of Skywalker, though the general audience seems to feel the reverse. (There were a few scenes (and dopey plot twists) in The Last Jedi that I thought were so awful that I am quite unlikely to watch it again.) Will probably check out Rise of Skywalker next week. Will be passing on Cats...
  23. Waterland by Graham Swift A bit of a slow burner, but I'm enjoying it now that some of the (many) family secrets have been revealed.
  24. Wrapping up Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights by Rushdie, which takes place in the intersection of the "real world" and fable with quite a few djinns crossing over and wreaking havoc. I found quite a few similarities to his children's book Haroun and the Sea of Stories. It's not top-notch Rushdie but it's entertaining. I do have higher hopes for The Golden House. I'm not entirely sure where I got the recommendation for Eugene Marten's Waste, but I just read it (it's barely over 100 pages) but I wish I hadn't. It's a morally bankrupt piece of fiction (right up there with Blaise Cendrars's Moravagine). I do wish I had read the rest of the reviews on Goodreads, instead of stopping after skimming the first few.
  25. I was not aware of this box set, but I will be checking it out in a while. I would say Monster probably is my favorite REM album, though I didn't listen to them so much that I ever burned out on a single album. Speaking of slightly out-there box sets, there is a 6 CD box set covering Zappa's Hot Rats sessions. It's a little hard to imagine listening to everything in this set, esp. more than once, but I'm sure there are some Zappa fans who will be all over this.
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