Monthly Archives: June 2009

FOREPLAY

J. Kingston Pierce of The Rap Sheet tagged Patti Abbott of pattinase who tagged me with this meme. Here we go:

FOUR MOVIES YOU CAN SEE OVER & OVER
Dirty Harry
Die Hard
Bananas
Independence Day

FOUR PLACES YOU HAVE LIVED
Lyndonville, NY
Niagara Falls, NY
Milwaukee, WI
Madison, WI

FOUR TV SHOWS YOU LOVE TO WATCH
The Closer
24
Mad Men
Yugioh

FOUR PLACES YOU HAVE BEEN ON A VACATION
Disney World (3 times)
Las Vegas (3 times)
San Francisco (3 times)
Alaska

FOUR OF YOUR FAVORITE FOODS
Pizza
Pizza
Pizza
Spaghetti

FOUR WEBSITES YOU VISIT DAILY
Bill Crider’s Pop Culture Magazine
pattinase
Amazon.com
WSJ.com

FOUR PLACES YOU WOULD RATHER BE
In a great used bookstore before they become extinct
In a great library
In a great restaurant
In a theater with digital 3-D IMAX

FOUR THINGS YOU HOPE TO DO BEFORE YOU DIE
Lose weight
Give most of my money to charity
Help more students to be successful
Read 5000 more books

FOUR NOVELS YOU WISH YOU WERE READING FOR THE FIRST TIME
The Executioner’s Song-Norman Mailer
Pride & Prejudice-Jane Austen
Moby Dick-Herman Melville
The Story of O-Pauline Réage (Anne Desclos)

Tag Four People You Believe Will Respond:
Patrick Kelley
Katie Kelley
Barack Obama
Paris Hilton

THE CLOSER–SEASON FIVE

Deputy Chief Brenda Leigh Johnson played by Kyra Sedgwick is now married to long-suffering Special Agent Fritz Howard played by Jon Tenney. But I’m sure there will be plenty of murders to investigate and suspects to question in the quest for a confession. I don’t watch much TV, but I do watch this. Underrated.

UP (3-D VERSION)

Five minutes into UP I had tears in my eyes and a lump in my throat. When Carl Fredricksen’s house takes to the air, I felt elation. When the menacing talking dogs attacked Fredricksen and his explorer scout friend, I felt like jumping out of my seat to help them. The chase scenes in and on the dirigible equaled anything in an Indiana Jones movie. Pixar’s 10th film is terrific, the 3-D effects are great, and for moments in the movie I thought I was watching real people not animation. Go see UP and experience that “sense of adventure” again! GRADE: A

13TH VAN CLIBURN INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION

If you’re a fan of classical music, particularly piano music, you’ll want to check out the 13th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. No, you don’t have to go to Fort Worth, it’s available for you to watch online at: http://www.cliburn.tv/ This format sets the bar very high for all other competitions.  It’s almost like a reality TV show with unscripted drama and insightful rehearsals.  Highly recommended!

FORGOTTEN BOOKS #20: THE POUND ERA By Hugh Kenner

Hugh Kenner, once considered one of the great literary critics (now forgotten), wrote an amazing work on poet Ezra Pound (nearly forgotten). The Pound Era is completely unique. It’s part biography, part intellectual history, and part literary analysis. Readers of this great work learn about the culture of the early 20th Century, the literary scene, and Ezra Pound’s influence on the ethos of the time. Kenner brings his vast knowledge of literature, philosophy, sociology, and psychology to bear on Pound and his era. This classic work is well worth rediscovering, reading, and pondering. I highly recommend all of Hugh Kenner’s works, but The Pound Era is in a class of its own.

REDEMPTION STREET By Reed Farrel Coleman

Reading Redemption Street reminded me of an old Mike Shayne mystery. Retired cop Moe Prager finds himself pummeled quite a bit in this book, reminiscent of Mike Shayne’s constant beatings. Prager gets involved in an investigation of a decades old fire in a Catskill hotel where 17 people died. Reed Farrel Coleman throws plenty of elements into the mix: a neo-Nazi cult, a colony of Hasidic Jews, an aging comedian, an ambitious politician, a corrupt police force, a mysterious real estate magnate, and crazy brother searching for his missing sister. There are a few sour notes in this story. And there’s one incredibly implausible scene near the book’s conclusion. But, if you can get by those flaws, Redemption Street is a compelling story. GRADE: B

MICHALA PETRI 50th BIRTHDAY CONCERT

Michala Petri has become the best known recorder performer in the world. This CD features selections Petri chose herself. I liked about half her choices: the Albinoni, the Mozart, and the Vivaldi. I didn’t care for Chen Yi’s “The Ancient Chinese Beauty” or Artem Vassiliev’s “Valere lubere,” but I’m not a fan of 20th Century classical music for the most part so be warned. Much more to my taste is Michala Petri’s Six Vivaldi Concertos. Completely enjoyable.

BARGAIN OF THE WEEK: MAD FOR DECADES

Barnes & Noble’s ALL BOOKS $3.98 table had the usual crap, but then I caught a glimpse of this treasure amid the dross. Mad for Decades is as thick as a brick and brimming with the wacky humor I read as a kid and, later, an adult kid. The material spans the 1950s to the 1990s. Great stuff, full of fun, and a bargain at this price. Check out your local Barnes & Noble and see if there are any copies left.

SKETCHES OF SPAIN (50th ANNIVERSARY LEGACY EDITION)

You could look at this CD as gem or a rip-off. The argument for this edition of Miles Davis’ Sketches of Spain is that it’s been completely remastered and sounds fabulous. So, if you have older copies on record or CD, this new edition will sound better. The argument that this edition is a rip-off is that all the bonus material included–alternate takes of the songs–have all been available on other recordings. It’s nice that it’s all here in one handy package, but the 2CD set will cost you $21 through AMAZON. Last year, the “Legacy Edition” of Kind of Blue was released with remastering and bonus features. You’ll see more and more of this recycling effort by the record companies to make money off their classic titles rather than make expensive investments in developing new talent. GRADE: A