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THE FIRST COLLECTION OF CRITICISM BY A LIVING FEMALE ROCK CRITIC: REVISED AND EXPANDED EDITON By Jessica Hopper

“Upon its release in 1977, Rumours became the fastest selling LP of all time, eight hundred thousand copies per week at its peak, that success makes Fleetwood Mac a cultural phenomenon. The million-dollar record that took a year and untold grams of cocaine to complete became a totem of 1970s excess, a yardstick by which to measure just how ’70s the ’70s were.” (p. 115)

“In short, Lana Del Rey is Amy Winehouse with the safety on.” (p. 59)

“I can still listen to Led Zeppelin and take joy in…James Brown. I condemn the things they did. I’m not reminded constantly in the art, because the art is not about it. But if you’re listening to ‘I want to marry you, pussy’ and not realize that he [R. Kelly] said that to Aaliyah, who was fourteen, and making an album he named Age Ain’t Nothing but a Number–I had Aaliyah’s mother cry on my shoulder and say her daughter’s life was ruined, Aaliyah’s life was never the same after that.” (p. 43)

Jessica Hopper has been a rock journalist for decades. Her articles in The First Collection of Criticism By a Living Female Rock Critic (2021) cover Major and Minor groups and singers over the past 30 years.

As you can discern from the passages above, Hopper has a crisp, snarky writing style. The third excerpt comes from an interview with Jim Derogatis, the reporter who covered R. Kelly’s molesting of young girls for years. Like Jeffrey Epstein, R. Kelly ruined the lives of many, many girls for many, many years before Justice finally prevailed.

Anyone who is interested in contemporary music will enjoy The First Collection of Criticism By a Living Female Rock Critic. GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Forward by Samatha Orby — xi

Introduction: I have a strange relationship with music — xiii

PART I: Chicago.

Chance the Rapper (June 2013) — 3

Viva la filthy noise! : Coughs’ Secret passage (October 2006) — 7

Sweet things (January 2006) — 13

LIL’ SQUIRT: JUICEBOXXX TAKES HIS SHOW ON THE ROAD, RIGHT AFTER HE GRADUATES HIGH SCHOOL — 15

San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Oswego: An Up-and-Coming British Post Punk Trio Wows the Preteens of a Suburban High School Gym — 21

Pogoing Across Boarders — 26

The “Stomach-Churning” Sexual Assault Accusations Against R. Kelley: Conversation with Jim Derogatis (December 2013) — 31

Part II: Real/Fake

We Can’t Stop: Our Year With Miley (January 2014) — 49

Gaga takes a trip (April 2011) — 53

Deconstructing Lana Del Rey (January 2012) — 56

St. Vincent, Strange Mercy (November 2011) — 66

Kacey Musgaves, Pageant Material — 71

Louder Than Love: My Teen Grunge Poserdom (Spring 2005) — 76

Part III: Death/Redemption

The passion of David Razan (July 2009) — 83

Flirting with religion : Rickie Lee Jones (March 2007) — 94

Superchunk : I hate music (August 2013) — 99

Why Michael Jackson’s past might be Gary, Indiana’s only future (July 2009)– 102

Between the viaduct of your dreams : On Van Morrison (July 2008) — 106

Part IV: Nostalgia

When The Boss went moral : Bruce Springsteen’s lost album (November 2010) — 111

Fleetwood Mac, Rumours Box Set — 115

Shouting out loud : The Raincoats (October 2009) — 123

Chalk Circle: Reflection — 127

You’re reliving all over me : Dinosaur Jr. reunites (April 2005) — 131

Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me — 137

Sonic Youth: Daydream Nation Deluxe –141

Nevermind already : Nirvana’s 20th anniversary boxset (September 2011) — 146

PART V: CALIFORNIA

Kendrick Lamar : not your average, everyday rap savior (October 2012) — 153

Lana Del Rey: HONEYMOON — 162

California demise : Tyler, the Creator and EMA feel the bad vibes (2011) — 166

Will the stink of success ruin The Smell? (February 2009) — 169

Part VI: Strictly business

Punk is dead! Long live punk! : a report on the state of teen spirit from the mobile shopping mall that is the Vans Warped Tour (August 2004) — 181

Chief Keef, King of Chicago’s Insurgent Rap Scene (August 2013) — 191

How selling out saved indie rock (November 2013) — 196

Not Lollapalooza : Rollin Hunt, Screaming Females & Abe Vigoda (August 2007) — 213

Part VII: Desire, power, pleasure

Liz Phair, Exile in Guyville, Expanded Reissue — 221

Cat Power : Sun (September 2012) — 228

Body/Head, Coming Apart — 238

Joanna Newsom — 243

Fiona Apple, The Idler Wheel is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More than Ropes Will Ever Do — 247

Nicki Minaj, Pink Friday — 251

Part VIII: Personal/Political

Emo : where the girls aren’t (July 2003) — 257

TV on the Radio, Return to Cookie Mountain — 265

SWF, 45 : Mecca Normal’s The observer (April 2006) — 269

An Interview with Lida Pimienta — 275

Robyn Knows What It’s Like to Feel Bad — 290

M.I.A.’s Maya (July 2010) — 295

Janelle Monae is Breaking Rules and Creating Space for Others to Do the Same — 308

Part IX: She said

You will ache like I ache : the oral history of Hole’s Live through this (April 2014) — 315

“It Was Us Against Those Guys”: The Women Who Transformed Rolling Stone in the Mid-1970s — 338

Joni Mitchell: The Studio Albums 1968-1979 — 358

Sleater-Kinney: A Certain Rebellion — 369

The Invisible Woman: A Conversation with Bjork — 379

A Woman Every Hour: How Nashville’s Women Are Fighting Country’s Bra Rule — 392

Kacy Musgraves, Janelle Monte, and the Year of the Woman…Again — 399

Afterword — 411

Acknowledgments — 425

— — — —-



NEW BREVILLE SMART OVEN PRO

About ten years ago, Diane and I bought a Breville Oven. It’s a handy unit that sits on our counter and is perfect for quick cooking. Instead of using our big Frigidaire oven, the Breville makes sense for baking pizza logs (15 minutes), chicken patties (15 minutes), and various veggies (usually 5-8 minutes).

But the other day, when Diane turned the Breville on, there was a loud grinding sound. Diane immediately turned it off and unplugged it. So I do what I usually do when an appliance fails: I ordered a replacement Breville from AMAZON. AMAZON set me an email that the new Breville would be delivered the next day. It was.

When I was telling my Pool friends about the Breville problem, Mark the Electrician asked, “Can I take a look at it?” I said, “Sure, it’s yours. We ordered a replacement already.” Mark drove over to our house and picked up the dysfunctional Breville. “I’ll take it apart and check it out,” Mark promised. We’ll see if Mark can fix it…and enjoy it as much as we did. Have you had an appliance problems lately?

FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #903: THE DENTIST, THE CYCLIST, THE PATIENT, and THE POLITICIAN By Tim Sullivan

I read a review of Tim Sullivan’s  Detective Sergeant George Cross series and decided to give it a try. Cross is a police investigator with Asperger’s syndrome. He struggles with conventional conversations and social mores but is a genius at solving crimes. The first book in the series, The Dentist, starts with the murder of a homeless man who is later revealed to have been a successful dentist. But the unsolved murder of his wife led him to leave his practice and investigate the death that police left unsolved. Now, Cross uncovers a connection to a 15-year-old cold case involving the dead dentist and his murdered wife. 

The Cyclist continues Cross’s investigations into seeming random crimes that turn out to be more complex and sinister. Cross’s partner, a black single mother, finds dealing with the odd antics of this gifted investigator irritating. But, like the head of the Detectives, she cuts Cross slack because he has a 97% conviction rate–the best in the Police Department. When a young amateur cyclist is found dead at a demolition site, Cross uncovers a maze of performance-enhancing drugs, jealousy, and family secrets.

With The Patient, Tim Sullivan expands George Cross’s personal Life with his father–a retired engineer who worked on the Concorde. His father has become a hoarder and Cross takes action when his father falls amid all the stuff he’s collected over the years. Also, Cross reaches out to the mother who abandoned him and his father years ago. The Patient is a young woman whose death has been ruled a suicide but Cross–with his intense focus on Logic and Data–believes she was murdered. Uncovering the complicated past of the victim and her “drug overdose” death requires Cross’s skill to solve the puzzle.

The Politician is former Mayor, Peggy Frampton. Initially, Frampton’s death looks like a burglary gone wrong. But Cross finds indications that the former Mayor was murdered. After Frampton retired from office, she became a controversial on-line influencer who gave “advice” to her many followers. But she was threatened by trolls issuing death threats. Also in the mix is Frampton’s gambling addicted son, her philandering husband, and Albanian gangsters. Because this is a High Profile case, Cross and the rest of the detectives are under intense public pressure to solve the case. Using proven police procedures and impressive detection skills, Cross cuts through the web of suspects and motives to find the real killer.

Tim Sullivan, a veteran director and screenwriter, has created a sympathetic autistic detective, Detective Sergeant George Cross, who struggles with social situations, but is a wizard at solving intricate crimes. I’ll be reading the rest of the books in this excellent series! GRADE: A

DS Cross Mysteries:

The Dentist (2020)
The Cyclist (2020)
The Patient (2022)
The Politician (2022)
The Monk (2023)
The Teacher (2023)
The Bookseller (2025)
The Basket Case (2025)
The Tailor (2026)

HITS OF THE SIXTIES!! (VOLUME 2)

Back in the 1960s, I listened to my transistor radio all day long. All of these songs became the soundtrack of my teen years. Loved The Dixie Cups’ version of “Chapel of Love.” And The Shirelles’ “Will You Love Me Tomorrow?”

The Drifters’ “Under the Boardwalk” was a favorite. As was Martha Reeves and The Vandellas’ “Heat Wave.” I couldn’t get enough of The Archies’ “Sugar, Sugar”. The Sixties also featured instrumentals like The Ventures’ “Walk, Don’t Run” and The Champs” “Tequila.”

Do you remember these songs of the Sixties? Any favorites here? GRADE: B+

TRACK LIST:

1-1The Beach BoysSurfin’ Safari
1-2The Dixie CupsChapel Of Love
1-3Fats DominoBlueberry Hill
1-4The DiamondsLittle Darlin’
1-5The ChiffonsHe’s So Fine
1-6The CrestsSixteen Candles
1-7The Shangri-LasLeader Of The Pack
1-8Gene PitneyTown Without Pity
1-9Chubby CheckerLimbo Rock
1-10The ShirellesWill You Love Me Tomorrow?
2-1Jan & DeanSurf City
2-2Gary PuckettYoung Girl
2-3John Fred & His Playboy BandJudy In Disguise
2-4The DriftersUnder The Boardwalk
2-5Martha ReevesHeat Wave
2-6The DiamondsWhy Do Fools Fall In Love?
2-7The ChampsTequila
2-8The ArchiesSugar, Sugar
2-9The VenturesWalk, Don’t Run
2-10The Swinging Blue JeansHippy Hippy Shake

WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #266: A MULTITUDE OF WORLDS By Robert Silverberg

I started reading Robert Silverberg stories in the late 1950s. Little did I know Silverberg started writing Science Fiction in his teens. Now, over 70 years later, Silverberg is still publishing collectIons of his vast output: 82 SF novels, over 200 erotic novels (as “Don Elliott”), and hundreds of short stories.

 Between 1956 and 1959 alone, Silverberg routinely averaged five published stories a month, with over 80 stories published in 1958 alone. Take the first story in A Multitude of Worlds (2026), “Collecting Team” (Super Science Fiction, December 1956) for example. A human crew is search for planets with Life. They discover a planet that teems with various species. But when the crew tries to depart from the planet, they discover their rocket engines have been sabotaged.

Compare that with a more recent story, “Defenders of the Frontier” (2010). A garrison that once numbered in the thousands defends a fort on the edge of a desert. For 20 years, the garrison has fought the Enemy. Time after time they have won battles and stopped the invasion. But the Empire has lost touch with the soldiers. The garrison, after so many years of fighting, is now reduced to 11 survivors. Their Seeker, a soldier with the power to locate Enemy troops by telepathy, claims there is no more Enemy. The soldiers have to decide whether to stay in the fort or return to the Empire.

A Multitude of Worlds is a good place to start if you want to experience one of the best Science Fiction writers. You’ll be awed by the range of themes and settings in these 13 stories. David Gerrold provides a laudatory Foreword about Silverberg’s long and successful career. GRADE: B+

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

FORWARD By David Gerrold — vii

INTRODUCTION By Robert Silverberg — xiii

I. Collecting Team — 1

II. World of a Thousand Colors — 15

III. Death’s Planet — 39

IV. Spacerogue — 55

V. The Sixth Place — 95

VI. These and the Ghayrog — 107

VII. Symbiont — 147

VIII. Sunrise on Pluto — 167

IX. We Are for the Dark — 179

X. The Tree That Grew From the Sky — 247

XI. Travelers — 293

XII. The Colonel Returns to the Stars — 311

XIII. Defenders of the Frontier — 373

About the Author — 403

COLE SLAW VS. BROCCOLI SLAW

Diane and I eat a salad almost every day. Diane usually prepares the salad with leafy greens like lettuce and spinach. She adds tomatoes, celery, peppers, carrots, and sometimes cheese.

But sometimes, we’re in a hurry so we resort to Wegmans Cole Slaw. It’s a fast, easy, and tasty substitute.

But a few weeks ago, Wegmans was totally out of Cole Slaw. Diane decide to buy Broccoli Slaw and give it a try.

Delicious!

The Broccoli, Carrots, Red Cabbage come together in a flavorful blend that’s satisfyingly crunchy. We add a dab of Marie’s Cole Slaw Dressing and it’s a salad fit for a Queen (and King)!

Do you like Salad? What kind?

THE ART OF UNCERTAINTY: HOW TO NAVIGATE CHANGE, IGNORANCE, RISK, AND LUCK By David Spiegelhalter

With the havoc Trump’s tariffs have caused, with the chaos Elon Musk and DOGE have inflicted on our Government, and the sense of DOOM in the air as a result of Trump’s Iran War, David Spiegelhalter’s useful The Art of Uncertainty: Living with Chance, Ignorance, Risk and Luck (2024) brings some clarity to dealing with all this pandemonium.

David Spiegelhalter is a professor emeritus of statistics at the University of Cambridge. He was knighted in 2014 for his services to medical statistics. The key to dealing with uncertainty–which increases by the day under Trump–is understanding how to handle ignorance and risk.

One of the problems with today’s ignorance is determining what is True and what is Fake News. The Internet floods our lives with bogus facts, rumors, conspiracy theories, and bullshit. Sorting out what is Real and what is Fake requires time and energy. But, as in the old computer saying: GARBAGE IN, GARBAGE OUT. If you make decisions based on false “facts” the end result will be wrong. Just look at the people who didn’t inoculate their kids with Measles vaccine and opted for castor oil and Vitamin-A.

The other key factor to deal with is risk. Again, there’s a shitstorm of deceptive and misleading “news” flooding our computers and cell phones daily. Spiegelhalter shows how to assess risks in various instances despite the counterfeit data.

Spieglehalter believes the old adage formulated by Pascal: “Chance favors the prepared mind.” In essence, we make our own Luck by choosing the right times and places to act based on preparation. If you want some tools to deal with the current (and future) catastrophes, The Art of Uncertainty is a good guidebook. GRADE: B+

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

INTRODUCTION — 1

Uncertainty is personal — 11

Putting uncertainty into numbers — 21

Taming chance with probability — 38

Surprises and coincidences — 65

Luck — 84

It’s all a bit random — 102

Being Bayesian — 122

Science and uncertainty — 142

How much confidence do we have in our analysis? — 164

What, or who, is to blame? : causality, climate, and crime — 174

Predicting the future — 194

Risk, failure and disaster — 214

Deep uncertainty — 232

Communicating uncertainty and risk — 241

Making decisions and managing risks — 258

The future of uncertainty — 276

Acknowledgements — 283

Notes — 285

Glossary — 299

Index — 309

THE DEADLINE: ESSAYS By Jill Lepore

Jill Lepore is one of my favorite contemporary historians. History plays a big part in The Deadline: Essays (2023) but Lepore makes it clear that her attitude towards history is a little different. “I agreed with the heroine of Jane Austen’s Northhanger Abbey, when she complains about history, ‘It tells me nothing that does not either vex or weary me. The quarrels of popes and kings, with wars or pestilences, in every page; the men all so good for nothing, and hardly any women at all–it is very tiresome: and yet I often think it odd that it should be so dull, for a great deal of it must be invention.’ I have tried to write history differently.” (p. xviii)

As an example of Lepore’s writing history differently, take “The Man in the Box.” Lepore delivers a clever and informative essay about Doctor Who. Doctor Who was the brainchild of Sydney Newman, a Canadian who became head of the BBC’s drama department in 1963. Newman, who had created The Avengers, for ITV, in 1961, was brought in to produce television that would meet the BBC’s remit as a government-owned broadcasting service as will as its need to win viewers from ITV, a commercial rival that had begun broadcasting in 1955. By 1960, the BBC had not a single program among the top ten ratings earners. Newman had an idea for something that could be both education and entertaining: science fiction.” (p. 152)

Jill Lepore goes on to explore the beginning of the program and the various Doctors who played the iconic role. But, Lepore doesn’t stop there. She reveals the origin story for the greatest villains The Doctor has to face: The Daleks. “The Daleks were invented by Terry Nation, who was born in Cardiff in 1930. …He took a job writing for Doctor Who in 1963. He once said that he got the name ‘Dalek’ from an encyclopedia volume that ran from ‘dal’ to ‘lek.’ …He invented a race of creatures mutated by an apocalyptic nuclear war who, in order to survive, live inside robotic shells and are so convinced of their own purity that their object is to exterminate every other race.” (p. 157)

Lepore’s essays deal with books and writers, politicians and voters, crises and triumphs. I read these essays with delight! If you’re in the mood for something different, give The Deadline a try. GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Introduction — xvii

Part one

Prodigal daughter

Prodigal daughter — 1

The deadline — 17

Easy rider — 27

The Everyman library — 36

Part two

Misjudged

It’s still alive — 43

Ahab at home — 54

The fireman — 67

The shorebird — 78

Misjudged — 93

Part three

Valley of the dolls

The oddyssey — 111

The ice man — 121

Valley of the dolls — 137

The man in the box — 150

No, we cannot — 166

Buzz — 175

Part four

Just the facts, ma’am

Just the facts, ma’am –191

Bad news — 201

After the fact — 209

Hard news — 216

Part five

Battleground America

Battleground America — 235

Blood on the green — 255

The long blue line — 268

The riot report — 282

Part 6 

The disruption machine

The cobweb — 299

The disruption machine — 314

The robot caravan — 331

Mission impossible — 343

Part seven

The rule of history

The rule of history — 355

The age of consent — 367

Benched — 381

The dark ages — 395

Drafted — 407

Part eight

The parent trap

Back to the blackboard — 413

To have and to hold — 426

The return of the pervert — 440

The parent trap — 451

Part nine 

The isolation ward

Plague years — 467

These four walls — 478

The isolation ward — 488

Burned — 496

Part ten

In every dark hour

Politics and the new machine — 507

The war and the roses — 524

You’re fired — 541

The Trump papers — 554

In every dark hour — 571

The American beast — 583

Acknowledgements — 599

Index — 601

DIANA KRALL PERFORMANCE

“A record-breaking musician, Diana Krall is the only jazz singer to have eight albums debut at the top of the Billboard Jazz Albums chart. Her albums have garnered two GRAMMY® Awards, ten Juno® Awards and have earned nine Gold, three Platinum, and seven multi-Platinum status albums. Her 1999 release of When I Look in Your Eyes spent an unprecedented 52 weeks in the #1 position on Billboard’s Jazz chart, won two GRAMMY® Awards, and went Platinum in the U.S. and Canada, establishing her as a powerhouse of the genre. Her album, This Dream Of You, garnered critical acclaim and displayed the effortless virtuosity that has become Diana Krall’s musical signature. Krall’s unique artistry and musicality transcend any single musical style, making her one of the most recognizable artists of our time.”

Diane and I last saw Diana Krall in 2022 (you can read my review here). We ordered tickets months ago when we found out Diana Krall was returning. The performance was a jazz-trio format (piano, bass, and drums) with Diana Krall thrilling the audience with her fabulous piano playing.

To be honest, I prefer listening to Diana Krall backed by an orchestra. This striped-down version was more appropriate for a Jazz Club instead of a 1,748 seat theater. The 90-minute performance was punctuated by applause. Diana shared the stage with Matt Chamberlain on drums and Tony Garnier on bass. They came out and did an Encore of “Mrs. Wonderly.” GRADE: B-

SET LIST:

  • We Just Couldn’t Say Goodbye
  • There Ain’t No Sweet Man That’s Worth the Salt of My Tears
  • On the Sunny Side of the Street
  • You Know — I Know Ev’rything’s Made for Love
  • California Dreamin’
  • Wallflower
  • Operator (That’s Not the Way It Feels)
  • Temptation 
  • In My Room
  • The Look of Love
  •  I’ve Got You Under My Skin