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Everything posted by ejp626
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Wrapped up Grossman's Everything Flows. Not bad but 2/3 in he breaks from any attempt at fictionalizing his material and writes a long, long essay on the crimes of Lenin and Stalin (at the time it was still fashionable in the U.S.S.R. at any rate to be blaming everything on Stalin, since Lenin was still a "saint"). The book certainly doesn't succeed as a novel, but is interesting reading nonetheless. One of these days, I really will have to finish Life and Fate. I am halfway done with Crummey's Galore, which is ok but I'm not loving it. Next up after that is Steinbeck's Travels with Charley. Then things get lo-oong (Anna Karenina, Mahfouz's Cairo Trilogy and Proust, ideally starting that this summer).
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My avatar still appears (at least for me) but Dolphy's head is cropped! I really ought to change it, but I was (am?) in the running for the never-changed-avatars-since-joining marathon...
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I don't feel obligated to rush out and get everything, but there are two sets that I plan on ordering within the next few months.
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Charles Mingus Birthday Broadcast - Better Get Hit in Your Soul!
ejp626 replied to Blue Train's topic in Artists
Can't stream the show from work, and will be too busy with other things when I get home. Oh well. -
What live music are you going to see tonight?
ejp626 replied to mikeweil's topic in Live Shows & Festivals
I saw the Smetana Trio this afternoon. They played Dvorak's Dumky Trio and one of Brahms' piano trio. Really nice, though I came close to falling asleep -- it has been a really, really long week. For the encore, they played "Prelude and Waltz." I think this was by Nikita Koshkin, though I cannot verify that this piece was ever officially scored for piano trio. In any event, it was really nice, so I hope it ends up on one of their CDs some day. (It appears that pretty much their entire discography (with an earlier line-up) is on eMusic, and I'll probably dl at least a few of their recordings. Best of all, it had been raining much of the morning and early afternoon, but the sun came out at the end of the concert and we had a couple of hours of sunshine. -
I think there are ones on sale that have been modded to be multi-region (if you search Amazon for example). I think I will go that route, but I am trying to hold off until next summer (most likely will be moving again and don't want one more thing to move). The real problem is that there are so many players out there that it is really hard to get a meaningful review.
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I 'did' that for 'A' Level back in the early 70s. Didn't much care for it. Reread it a few years back and enjoyed it a bit more. Well, that's one that hasn't stood the test of time. It was on my 20th Century Literature reading list at Leeds University in 1962, along with giants like Lawrence, Eliot and Yeats. In a seminar with Geoffrey Hill (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoffrey_Hill) when I said that while Lawrence described his characters' state of soul, Snow was concerned with whether or not they got promoted, Hill responded by describing Snow's novel as "Whitehall gibberish". I seem to recall Snow was obsessed with the division between the 'arts' and the 'sciences'. Apparently people worried about that sort of thing then. Yes, he made his name with "the two cultures". All seems a bit irrelevant now that government and business are prepared to junk academia generally. Well, in some ways the debates rage even greater than before. Most state universities in the US are under enormous pressure to promote STEM courses and other applied sciences and to junk the humanities. It isn't accurate to say that everything is under the knife equally. Anyway, from the perspective of cultural studies, Snow's novels and Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time are way more valuable than Lawrence's writings, since it is precisely the office politics of the day that are intriguing, rather than sort of a neo-Rousseauian take on the state of the soul. Of course, cultural studies departments may not survive the coming shake-out in academia...
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As you know from elsewhere on the web, one of my favorite novels. Your review led me to reread the novel. I actually saw a staged version of this, in Atlanta of all places. It is definitely an interesting novel (I've read it twice) but it's one where I deeply dislike the main character but find the book quite compelling anyway. (I suspect this unlikeable quality of Ignatius is why it was so hard to find a publisher in the first place.) I may have mentioned that there is a very similar book by a Canadian author -- Guy Vanderhaeghe's My Present Age. It isn't as epic as Confederacy, but the main character is an overweight, failed academic who gets up to some strange misadventures. I assume both authors were drawing heavily on Shakespeare's Falstaff.
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Having trouble getting into this. Crummey is trying so hard to replicate Garcia Marquez's sprawling generational epics (with more than a bit of magic realism) -- and the characters don't seem as much characters as chess pieces moved around by two of the main figures in the book. Towing Jehovah is far more to my taste. Also reading Grossman's Everything Flows, which is a shorter work written after his masterpiece, Life and Fate. It is pretty didactic but still interesting in places.
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The Taxman Is A Knockin', Tick, Tock,Tick, Tock
ejp626 replied to Soulstation1's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
I really feel for you. It's obvious (to me) that the IRS went too far in allowing e-filing these instant returns without enough true security measures, and I've read some real horror stories. But try getting them to change -- or even acknowledge the scope of the problem. -
What has happened to the U.S. Postal Service?
ejp626 replied to Don Brown's topic in Miscellaneous Music
I lived the Chicago postal experience. Most of the time it was fine. Sometimes mail was slow. We had one carrier who was great, replaced by one not so great. Again, most of the time it was fine. I did occasionally lose mail, and once I mailed a package that was severely damaged and someone on the board got some CDs they didn't order -- as if two boxes broke at the same time and they just shuffled what they could back into one. On the rare occasions I actually had to pick up a package, that was bad, because I had to go to this kind of remote post office where the customer service was truly abysmal. I did note that with the various cut-backs the counter service at the main post office downtown had gotten noticeably worse from 2005 to 2011. -
Yes, it does -- on two tape cassettes. Sounds like the kind of thing that should be archived. Nudge nudge wink wink.
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I put it on this evening, though I didn't realize it is over 2.5 hours, so we're watching it in phases. Made it through the gas station scene.
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The Taxman Is A Knockin', Tick, Tock,Tick, Tock
ejp626 replied to Soulstation1's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Mailed US taxes in a couple of days ago. Unbelievably complicated this year, but I am gettin $200 back. Starting Canadian taxes. Also complicated. -
What has happened to the U.S. Postal Service?
ejp626 replied to Don Brown's topic in Miscellaneous Music
You seem to be getting all hung up over the tax implications of pre-funding pensions as if the USPS were a normal company, when it manifestly is not. It is also very clear that governments have routinely not contributed enough for their state employee pensions (and health care plans), and this is a huge problem. Regardless of what any law says, many states face a huge gap in pension funding. Illinois is one of the very worst. So in a sense, it is good that USPS is clearly making payments towards these future medical costs, but it isn't clear to me that the numbers that the GOP came up with and put into the law are appropriate. They may be far too high, esp. as the USPS is downsizing the number of postal employees, so the required pension and health care costs may be vastly inflated. -
What has happened to the U.S. Postal Service?
ejp626 replied to Don Brown's topic in Miscellaneous Music
This is the text of the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/109/hr6407/text Go down to Sec. 8909a. Postal Service Retiree Health Benefit Fund I guess it is arguable whether this is literally pre-funding the benefit fund for 75 years in an accounting sense, or it is just some crazy numbers that the GOP pulled out of the air (was about to say something different, but Jim wants us to keep it clean). But no question, this is a heavy, heavy burden on USPS, when Congress won't let them do all kinds of other things, like close rural post offices, that might help them close the gap. So really the USPS has kind of the worst of both worlds. Sadly, this is happening more and more frequently, particularly with state colleges where state funding is slashed to the bone but legislative meddling is as high or higher than ever. -
Ripping the Membran JATP box
ejp626 replied to The Magnificent Goldberg's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Thanks, but I don't understand most of those expressions. Software programs, particularly freeware programs, pick up all these extra features (called bloat) and they get a bit larger and slower. Since you really only want the software to rip CDs, sometimes it is better to go for an older version when you go to download it. (Often for freeware software, they will have the last 10 or so working versions of the program.) MG -
Ripping the Membran JATP box
ejp626 replied to The Magnificent Goldberg's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Well, I mostly rip to mp3 not flac (yeah, yeah, I know). I use freerip, which is fine for mp3s. There are a bunch of comparable programs floating out there. Usually the slightly older build versions are better, as they don't have as much bloat and feature creep. -
Ripping the Membran JATP box
ejp626 replied to The Magnificent Goldberg's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
I've been pretty unhappy with this (and I'll see if David's fix works for me). I basically only rip contemporary CDs using WMP when I won't be splitting sessions. If I know I'll be reordering and splitting the tracks (like Prestige 2-fers or something), I just use a different ripper, since I am so sick of WMP undoing my changes. This has been particularly a problem with classical CDs, where I usually want each composition in its own folder (ultimately sorted by conductor, which is a little perverse, but it does help with folder management). -
Bernstein NY Phil Rite of Spring Finally Reissued on CD
ejp626 replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Classical Discussion
I guess that didn't come up, but this stub thread talks about the Anniversary box: -
I actually have listened to very little Nick Cave and just was streaming a bit of his newest album, Push the Sky Away. It has some good moments, but I really like "The Higgs Boson Blues" and listen to it a couple of times a day:
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What has happened to the U.S. Postal Service?
ejp626 replied to Don Brown's topic in Miscellaneous Music
I just checked and, interestingly, Amazon UK haven't raised their delivery charges for either UK or foreign sellers. Yet. MG They definitely will though. I'm glad I just put in an order or two, and I might put in one more this week (for a few DVDs). I'm sorry the good times are ending, but I certainly did stockpile a huge amount of goods back when the shipping was cheap. -
Bernstein NY Phil Rite of Spring Finally Reissued on CD
ejp626 replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Classical Discussion
I think it is a good recording, even though I am not a huge fan of the piece. I don't think you'll be disappointed once you hear it. -
Bernstein NY Phil Rite of Spring Finally Reissued on CD
ejp626 replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Classical Discussion
I'm a little baffled though. I think you mean the 1958 (not 1960) recording. I guess I didn't realize it was that hard to get. It is the version that came in the Bernstein OJC collection, which despite being a limited edition from many years back is still kicking around on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Original-Jacket-Collection-Leonard-Bernstein/dp/B00005T7RB