BETTER BROKEN by Sarah McLachlan and REMEMBERING NOW By Van Morrison

Two of my favorite singers have released new albums. Better Broken is Sarah McLachlan’s first album in 11 years. Van Morrison’s Remembering Now is his best album in the past 20 years.

Sarah McLachlan, a three-time Grammy winner, creates a very listenable–dare I say it…Easy Listening–album. For the first time, McLachlan is working with producers Tony Berg and Will Maclellan—known for their collaborations with Phoebe Bridgers and Lucy Dacus. The sound is amazing on this album in part because of contributions by Prince alumna Wendy Melvoin, drummer Matt Chamberlain, and pedal-steel guitarist Greg Leisz. GRADE: A

After listening to some of Van Morrison’s recent albums–a jazzy one, a bluesy one, an album of covers–Remembering Now is a return to the style of music I appreciate. Remembering Now includes a Van Morrison song entitled, “Back To Writing Love Songs,”  which sounds like it was recorded in the era of “Tupelo Honey.” A review in Mojo claims Remembering Now “might be Morrison’s best album since 1991’s Hymns To The Silence.” I agree.

This new album is full of soaring romantic lyricism missing from Van Morrison CDs in the 21st Century. One of my favorite songs on this album is “I Haven’t Lost My Sense Of Wonder”–and Remembering Now proves it. GRADE: A 

TRACK LIST:

A1Down To Joy Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar – Dave KearyBacking Vocals – Crawford BellDana MastersKelly SmileyBass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums, Percussion – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Organ [Hammond Organ] – Richard DunnPiano – Stuart McIlroySaxophone [Sax] – Paul O’Reilly (5)Trumpet – Mike BarkleyVocals – Van Morrison
A2If It Wasn’t For Ray Backing Vocals – Crawford BellJolene O’HaraBass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums, Backing Vocals – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Organ [Hammond Organ], Backing Vocals – Richard DunnPercussion – Alan ‘Sticky’ Wicket*Piano – Stuart McIlroySaxophone [Sax] – Paul O’Reilly (5)Trumpet – Mike BarkleyVocals, Electric Guitar – Van Morrison
A3Haven’t Lost My Sense Of Wonder Backing Vocals – Crawford BellDana MastersJolene O’HaraBass – Nicky ScottDrums – Eamon FerrisElectric Organ [Hammond Organ], Piano – John McCullough (3)Vocals, Acoustic Guitar – Van Morrison
A4Love, Lover And Beloved Backing Vocals – Crawford BellDana MastersJolene O’HaraBass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums, Backing Vocals – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Organ [Hammond Organ], Backing Vocals – Richard DunnPiano – John McCullough (3)Vocals, Electric Guitar, Saxophone [Sax] – Van Morrison
B5Cutting Corners Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar, Lap Steel Guitar – Dave KearyBacking Vocals – Crawford BellDana MastersJolene O’HaraBass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums, Percussion – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Organ [Hammond Organ] – Richard DunnPiano – Stuart McIlroyVocals, Saxophone [Sax], Electric Guitar – Van Morrison
B6Back To Writing Love Songs Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar – Dave KearyBacking Vocals – Crawford BellDana MastersJolene O’HaraBass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Organ [Hammond Organ] – Richard DunnPercussion – Alan ‘Sticky’ Wicket*Piano – Stuart McIlroyVocals, Electric Guitar – Van Morrison
B7The Only Love I Ever Need Is Yours Acoustic Guitar – Dave KearyBacking Vocals – Crawford BellJolene O’HaraPete Wallace (3)Bass – Nicky ScottElectric Organ [Hammond Organ], Piano – John McCullough (3)Vocals, Acoustic Guitar – Van Morrison
B8Once In A Lifetime Feelings Acoustic Guitar, Bouzouki – Dave KearyBacking Vocals – Crawford BellDana MastersJolene O’HaraBass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Organ [Hammond Organ], Electric Organ [Philicorda] – Richard DunnPiano – Stuart McIlroyViolin – Seth LakemanVocals, Electric Guitar – Van Morrison
C9Stomping Ground Backing Vocals – Crawford BellJolene O’HaraBass – Nicky ScottElectric Organ [Hammond Organ], Piano – John McCullough (3)Vocals, Acoustic Guitar, Saxophone [Sax] – Van Morrison
C10Memories And Visions Acoustic Guitar – Dave KearyBacking Vocals – Crawford BellElle CatoJolene O’HaraPete Wallace (3)Bass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Organ [Hammond Organ] – Richard DunnPiano – Stuart McIlroyVocals – Van Morrison
C11When The Rains Came Backing Vocals – Chantelle DuncanTeena LyleBass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums, Backing Vocals – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Guitar, Backing Vocals – Dave KearyElectric Organ [Hammond Organ], Electric Piano [Rhodes], Backing Vocals – Richard DunnPercussion – Alan ‘Sticky’ Wicket*Violin – Seth LakemanVocals, Acoustic Guitar – Van Morrison
D12Colourblind Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar, Bouzouki – Dave KearyBacking Vocals – Crawford BellJolene O’HaraPete Wallace (3)Bass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Organ [Hammond Organ] – Richard DunnPercussion – Alan ‘Sticky’ Wicket*Piano – Stuart McIlroyVocals, Electric Guitar, Saxophone [Sax] – Van Morrison
D13Remembering Now Backing Vocals – Crawford BellDana MastersKelly SmileyBass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums, Percussion – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Organ [Hammond Organ] – Richard DunnPiano – John McCullough (3)Saxophone [Sax] – Paul O’Reilly (5)Vocals, Electric Guitar – Van Morrison
D14Stretching Out Backing Vocals – Crawford BellDana MastersKelly SmileyBass – Pete Hurley (3)Drums, Percussion – Colin Griffin (2)Electric Organ [Hammond Organ] – Richard DunnPiano – Stuart McIlroyVocals, Electric Guitar – Van Morrison

TRACK LIST:

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1.“Better Broken”Sarah McLachlan Benjamin BockMatthew Morris4:00
2.“Gravity”McLachlan Thomas Doucet5:00
3.“The Last to Go”McLachlan3:34
4.“Only Way Out Is Through”McLachlan Tony Berg4:01
5.“Reminds Me” (featuring Katie Gavin)McLachlan3:49
6.“One in a Long Line”McLachlan Anne Preven3:44
7.“Only Human”McLachlan3:48
8.“Long Road Home”McLachlan4:02
9.“Rise”McLachlan Doucet Preven3:38
10.“Wilderness”McLachlan4:38
11.“If This Is the End…”McLachlan Berg5:35
Total length:45:53

WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #243: TALES OF THE IMPOSSIBLE By Bill Pronzini

In his Preface to Tales of the Impossible, Bill Pronzini cites Carter Dickson (aka, John Dickson Carr) collection of locked room and impossible crimes, The Department of Queer Complaints (1940), as the book that ignited his fascination with “miracle problems.”

Over his long and successful career, Bill Pronzini has published many stories involving locked room mysteries and impossible crimes. This new Stark House volume collects 19 top-notch stories in that genre.

My favorite story in Tales of the Impossible is one of Pronzini’s stories about his most famous character: the Nameless Detective. The Nameless Detective in “Booktaker” is hired by a bookstore owner to investigate the thefts of several rare and expensive items from his secure Antiquities Room. Despite locks and security monitors, valuable items have vanished. Kerry Wade, the Nameless Detective’s love interest, plays a key role in the solution of how the thefts were accomplished.

Also entertaining are the Carpenter and Quincannon stories set in the 1890s. Pronzini sets his stories in a mausoleum, a gold mine, a sawmill camp, a locked office, and in ghostly surroundings. John Quincannon, who thinks he’s “indisputably the foremost detective west of the Mississippi if not the entire nation,” proves this might be the case as he solves the eight crimes he’s investigating in Tales of the Impossible.

Tales of the Impossible displays the quintessence of Bill Pronzini’s locked room and impossible crime stories. The bizarre crimes, complex puzzles, the tantalizing enigmas make Tales of the Impossible one of the Best Books of the Year! GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

PREFACE: The Game of Miracles — 7

STANDALONES

The Arrowmont Prison Riddle — 12

Proof of Guilt — 31

The Half-Invisible Man (with Jeffrey Wallmann) — 40

The Terrarium Principle — 50

Vanishing Act (with Michael Kurland) — 54

NAMELESS DETECTIVE

Where Have You Gone, Sam Spade? — 70

Something Wrong — 97

A Nice Easy Job — 102

Dead Man’s Slough — 119

Ace in the Hole — 129

Booktaker — 139

CARPENTER AND QUINCANNON

The Horseshoe Nail — 172

Devil’s Brew — 192

The Chatelaine Bag (with Marcia Muller) –209

The Body Snatchers — 223

The Gold Stealers — 238

Smoke Screen — 255

It Couldn’t Be Done — 270

The Carville Ghost — 290

Bibliography — 312

THE OUTSIDERS: THE MUSICAL

Back in the mid-1960s, S. E. Hinton, a teenager, wrote The Outsiders, which became a surprise best seller. Now, over 50 years later, The Outsiders: The Musical is touring the country with a blend of West Side Story and Grease. The Broadway version won the Best Musical Tony.

The story is set in Tulsa in 1967. The city has two warring groups: the Greasers (poor teenagers) and the Socs (upper-middle class teenagers) (pronounced /ˈsoʊʃɪz/ SOH-shiz—short for Socials). The musical includes several fights including an epic battle in the rain.

 Ponyboy Curtis, a Greaser with aspirations, finds himself on the run after a vicious incident with the Socs. For a musical aimed at a younger audience, there’s a surprising body count.

While my favorite song is “Stay Gold,” I found many of the songs in The Outsiders merely passable. GRADE: B

MUSICAL NUMBERS:

1. ACT ONE:Tulsa ’67
2Grease Got a Hold
3Runs in the Family
4Great Expectations
5Friday at the Drive-in
6I Could Talk to You All Night
7Runs in the Family (Reprise)
8Far Away From Tulsa
9. ACT TWO:
Run Run Brother
10Justice for Tulsa
11Death’s at My Door
12Throwing in the Towel
13Soda’s Letter
14Hoods Turned Heroes
15Hopeless War
16Trouble
17Little Brother
18Stay Gold
19Finale (Tulsa ’67)

NFL WEEK THREE 2025

The 3-0 Buffalo Bills are celebrating their 31-21 victory over the Miami Dolphins on Thursday Night Football by taking this Sunday off. The Bills will be back next Sunday to take on Deb’s New Orleans Saints.

How will your favorite NFL team perform today?

DOWNTON ABBEY: THE GRAND FINALE

Six seasons on PBS and three feature films later, the franchise of Downton Abbey looks like it’s coming to an end (unless this movie makes a ton on money).

The movie is set in 1930, a year after a stock market crash that threw the world into The Great Depression. The Crawley family is forced to tighten its economic belt but not so much that they’ve given up their staff of servants and their assorted holdings. Dower House, former residence of Violet Crawley, Dowager Countess of Grantham (the late Maggie Smith, honored with a dedication as well as oil painting of the countess looming over the front hall) remains along with renovation plans to generate cash.

The family is visited by American businessman Harold Levinson (Paul Giamatti), brother of Cora Crowley (Elizabeth McGovern). Levinson’s brought another American, Gus Sambrook (Alessandro Nivola), a financier who, Harold says, helped keep the matriarch’s side of the family solvent after the crash. Unfortunately, Gus made bad decisions after that, depleting the nest egg that the Crowleys thought they could break open to renovate Downton Abbey and turn it into a rental property that could generate future income.

” Lady Mary is getting a divorce, the news ripples through the surrounding community, making her a pariah among the high society people she used to call friends (even though they really weren’t). Some levity is added by actor Guy Dexter (Dominic West, totally believable as a Clark Gable-style movie star), who was at the center of the last movie. Dexter is reintroduced as the star of a London play by Noël Coward (Arty Froushan, who is absolutely credible playing one of the most charming men who ever lived).”

If you’re a Downton Abbey fan, don’t miss this! GRADE: B+

FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #873: QUICKSAND By John Brunner and THE BOOK OF JOHN BRUNNER

John Brunner’s Science Fiction novels were a constant presence in ACE Doubles in the 1960s. Later, DAW Books reprinted many of Brunner’s works like Quicksand (1967) and a collection of his short stories in The Book of John Brunner (1976).

Quicksand follows the interaction of psychiatrist Paul Fidler with a mysterious woman who shows up in rural England naked and confused. Fidler has the young woman learn English and learns some incredible facts about where she might be from. As Fidler becomes more involved, he falls deeper in to the quicksand of circumstances surrounding the young woman and her incredible past. GRADE: C

The Book of John Brunner includes five of Brunner’s most unusual SF stories–none of them have previously appeared in paperback. Also included in this volume are five of Brunner’s most significant SF and futurological articles–none of which have ever appeared in book form before. If you’re a John Brunner fan, The Book of John Brunner is worth checking out. GRADE: B+

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Premumble — Crossword — Limerick #1 — A different kick, or how to get high without actually going into orbit — “Lullaby for the mad scientist’s daughter” — Bloodstream — Domestic crisis 2017 — Hide and seek = cache-cache / by Gérard Klein ; translated by John Brunner — Limerick #2 — The technological folk-hero : has he a future? — “The ballad of Teddy Hart” — Who steals my purse — Excerpt from a social history of the 20th century — Feghoot I — Die spange / by Stefan George — Limerick #3 — Them as can, does — “Faithless Jack the spaceman” — When Gabriel… — What we have here — Feghoot II — The Spartans’ epitaph at Thermopylae (from The Greek Anthology) — Limerick #4 — The educational relevance of science fiction — “The spacewreck of the Old 97” — Manalive (excerpt) — Matthew XVIII, 6 — Feghoot III — Corrida / by Rainer Maria Rilke — Limerick #5 — The evolution of a science fiction writer — “The h-bombs’ thunder — The new thing — The atom bomb is twenty-five this year — Epigrammata LXV / by Decimus Magnus Ausonius — Solution to crossword.

MIAMI DOLPHINS VS. BUFFALO BILLS [AMAZON Prime Video]

The 2-0 Buffalo Bills face the 0-2 Miami Dolphins in an AMAZON Prime Video extravaganza. No…not really. The Bills are favored by 12 1/2 points and the Dolphins look like a dumpster fire. Head Coach of the Dolphins, Mike McDaniel, may be fired soon. Many Dolphin players will celebrate that move.

The Bills beat the NY Jets 30-10, but lost three starters to injuries. Will that make a difference tonight? We’ll see…

WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #242: THE EYES STILL HAVE IT Edited by Robert J. Randisi

The Eyes Still Have It, from 30 years ago, still stands out as one of the best collection of Private Eye stories ever collected. Bob Randisi provides a compelling introduction and adds comments before each story to put the authors and their works in context.

I was impressed that Randisi included TWO stories by Loren De. Estleman and Lawrence Block…both excellent!

If you’re in the mood for some superb P.I. short stories, don’t miss The Eyes Still Have It. GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Introduction by Robert J. Randisi — vii

What you don’t know can’t hurt you / by John Lutz –1

Cat’s paw / by Bill Pronzini — 21

By the dawn’s early light / by Lawrence Block — 45

Eight mile and Dequindre / by Loren D. Estleman — 65

Fly away home / by Rob Kantner — 89

Turn away / by Ed Gorman — 105

The crooked way / by Loren D. Estleman — 117

The killing man / by Mickey Spillane — 139

Final resting place / by Marcia Muller — 165

Dust devil / by Nancy Pickard — 185

Mary, Mary, shut the door / by Benjamin M. Schutz — 203

The merciful angel of death / by Lawrence Block — 229