Week in Review – April 10, 2022

“Two Majestic Nights”

After our two misfires on getting our fourth booster shot, Diana called Walgreens on Monday to see if they had anyone available to give us shots.  “Come on in and we’ll get you taken care of right away,” said the pharmacist.  We did – and are now fully boosted again – quick and easy.  After that I took care of several catch up activities from being gone for two months – a haircut at the Boardroom, and car registration and wash.

I enjoyed the NCAA “March Madness” final game on Monday night – that was until the tornado sirens started going off.  No tornados, but we did have some very heavy rain, with flooding in McKinney making the national news.

Diana had a sore arm and shoulder, and was very tired from the shot on Tuesday.  Fortunately I didn’t have any side effects this time around.  I cheered her up with a couple of episodes of the new series of Bridgerton on Netflix.  She did make it out to get her hair coloured and cut after two months.

Bryce, the piano tuner, made his annual visit on Wednesday and that was pretty much the highlight for the day.  I was busy consuming all my potions to prepare for my colonoscopy screening on Thursday.  Nothing to eat all day made me hungry and grumpy by the time evening came.

The colonoscopy was quick and easy on Thursday morning.  I did not appreciate having to awaken at 2:30am to take the last of the options.  D was surprised when I didn’t want to go for tacos when she picked me up after the procedure.  I was tired and didn’t feel hungry – just wanted to go home and relax.

Kenny and Kara drove to Dallas from New Orleans early on Friday morning.  They had invited us to join them for the Lyle Lovett concert on Friday and Saturday evenings.  The concerts this weekend were celebrating the 100th anniversary of the gorgeous Majestic theater in downtown Dallas.  This wonderful Renaissance revival style concert venue is located amongst all the modern high rise buildings.

I enjoyed seeing Thanksgiving Tower nearby – this is where I worked when I first started with EDS in 1989.  That was back in the days when I had to wear a dark suit, white shirt, tie, and wingtip shoes to work every day.  Things have changed so much in the almost 35 years since those days.

 

 

We checked into the Indigo hotel, a few hundred yards from the Majestic, and met up with Kenny and Kara.  I suggested walking over to Deep Ellum, a funky neighbourhood of bars, restaurants, and shops just on the other side of Interstate 75.  We walked over and enjoyed a drink on the lovely patio at the Twilite lounge, and a light dinner at Postino.  I highly recommend Postino for a quick and tasty bite in the Deep Ellum area.

We walked back to the Majestic to watch Hayes Carll open the Friday night show for Lyle Lovett.  He came on right on the nose of 7:30pm and gave us an excellent opening set – all quiet and thoughtful songs – none of the usual rockers that we are used to from his livestream shows.  Here’s my favourite – “Beaumont”:

Lyle Lovett and band followed that up with an excellent two and a half hour set.  Here’s a write up on the band members:

Viktor Krauss had to attend a funeral and so a substitute bass player was arranged at the last minute – Lovett mentioning that he had just met him that morning – he did an excellent job.  The other band members were equally exceptional – I loved Josh Swift on the Dobro.  Here are some samples from the first night:

I think that last one, North Dakota, was my favourite of the evening.  A close second was this cover of Guy Clark’s “LA Freeway” with Hayes Carll joining in:

We’re not used to being out and about after 11pm, and so were quickly asleep after the short walk to the hotel.

I was looking for a nice cup of coffee on Saturday morning, and found this great place a short walk from the hotel.  I chuckled at the Tucan card I was given so that they could find me with my coffee.  The shop is designed to feel like a tropical rainforest – very unique.

Kara and Kenny joined us for brunch at the Standard Pour on McKinney Avenue – what a great spot to relax on the patio and enjoy some good conversation.  Here are Kara and Diana posing by the Margaret Hunt bridge mural on the wall of the restaurant.

From the Standard Pour, I drove over to the Wild Detectives book store in the Bishop Arts district of Oak Cliff.  We perused the books and enjoyed a drink on the back patio – it was such a lovely day.  We walked down Bishop Street after that, browsing through some stores before happening upon the Revelers Hall Band playing at their namesake bar.  What a nice langiappe:

That’s as close as we come to New Orleans in Dallas.  After a coffee, we drove back over to Deep Ellum to check out some stores that the group had liked the day before.  Nothing much doing and a lot busier on Saturday afternoon, so we drove to the Velvet Taco for a snack prior to the second night of Lyle Lovett.

We arrived early to check out the 100th anniversary exhibit.  The most interesting thing I read was that the owner of the theater contributed $5 million to help Walt Disney get started, when nobody else would give him any funding.

We were seated on the Mezzanine this night, rather than the orchestra section from Friday night.  This gave even better views of the beauty of  the theater, and I think provided for better sound.  The sound on both nights was amazingly pristine, with every instrument and voice heard perfectly.

The Old 97s, a famous local Dallas rock band, opened on Saturday.  In contrast to Hayes Carll, they did not quieten down their set much – full on rock ‘n roll.  Kara is a big fan of the lead singer, Rhett Miller, and was happy to see him hamming it up.  She had a big smile on her face during the entire set.

The Lyle Lovett set was pretty much the same as the previous evening, and I enjoyed it even more, able to really focus in on the instrumental pieces that I had enjoyed the night before.  The quality of the band really can’t be over-stated.  Rhett Miller joined the band to sing a cover of “Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head.”  Made me think of Mum in Rothesay, dancing down the street and singing that song.  Apparently a Dallas local, B.J. Thomas, recorded the song in 1969 for the movie “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid”.  That version reached number 1 in 1970 and he performed it at the Academy Awards.

Miller joined the band again for the final encore, a Townes Van Zandt cover:

We met Kenny and Kara for coffee on Sunday morning, and then drove back home via Taco Deli.  I tried their migas royale platter – so yummy, and I still have some in the fridge for later.

I’m enjoying watching the final round of the Masters golf tournament while finishing up this post.  Scheffler is still in the lead by 4 shots, with Smith and McIlroy trying to catch him.

I loved my book this week – “The Storyteller” by Dave Grohl.  He was the drummer with Nirvana when they changed music forever with the “Nevermind” album, and then went on to found the Foo Fighters band.  This a wonderful collection of varied stories from Grohl’s youth discovering music, almost to the present day.  It’s sad to hear him write about the depth of his friendship with Taylor Hawkins, the Foo Fighters drummer who passed away in the last few weeks, causing them to cancel their tour, including a New Orleans jazzfest appearance.

How Grohl’s Mom encouraged his early love of music:

“A tiny old club on Pennsylvania Avenue just outside of Georgetown, One Step Down not only was a hotspot for established touring acts but also hosted a jazz workshop every weekend where the house band (led by DC jazz legend Lawrence Wheatley) would perform a few sets to the dark, crowded room and then invite up-and-coming musicians up to jam with them onstage.  When I was a teenager in the eighties, those workshops became a Sunday ritual for my mother and me.  We would sit at a small table ordering drinks and appetizers while watching these musical masters play for hours, reeling in the gorgeous, improvisational freedom of traditional jazz.”

On getting the call to join Nirvana:

“And then I read the five words that changed my life forever: “Have You Ever Heard of Nirvana?”

On a phone call with an old friend who had grown up with the guys from Nirvana in the tiny town of Aberdeen, Washington, I was informed that they were in between drummers at the time and had seen Scream perform just weeks before on our ill-fated tour.  Apparently, they were impressed with my playing, and I was given their phone numbers to call.”

“I packed up my duffel bag, my sleeping bag, and my drum set into a cardboard moving box and headed up to Seattle, a town I had only visited once and where I knew virtually no one, leaving one life behind to start another one.  I felt a loss that I had never experienced before.  I missed my home.  I missed my friends.  I missed my family.  I was now truly on my own, back to square  one, starting over.”

Writing about a particularly rowdy show as Nirvana was just blowing up in popularity.  Trees nightclub is directly opposite the Twilite lounge that we visited on Friday afternoon, and there was a tour bus parked in front:

“Welcome to the fall of 1991.

Trees nightclub in the Deep Ellum district of downtown Dallas, Texas, was just another stop on the North American leg of our “Nevermind” tour, which boasted a streamlined itinerary of thirty exhausting shows in a short forty days.  With a max capacity of around six hundred people, this relatively new club was similar to most of the other venues that were booked for that tour: cramped, a low stage, limited PA and lights, and a small dressing room in the back to prepare for (and recover from) another cathartic performance.”

On the genesis of the band name, “Foo Fighters”:

“In a chapter about unidentified craft over Europe and the Pacific during World War II, I found a term that the military used as a nickname for these unexplained glowing balls of light and thought it was just mysterious enough for me.  Not only did it sound like a group of people, it almost sounded like a gang:  Foo Fighters.”

One of my favourite stories – about a dinner after the Grammy awards:

“We reserved a table at a restaurant called Faith and Flower just a few blocks from the venue and planned to meet for dinner and drinks away from the hubbub after the show.  Paul McCartney was in town as well and inquired what we were planning on doing afterward, so we gladly invited him and his wife Nancy along, adding two more chairs to our growing table.  Take it from me, any night with Paul is a good night, so this was shaping up to be an epic evening.  Apparently, Paul bumped into AC/DC at the hotel, and when asked what was going on afterward, he said he was having dinner with us, with led to my life’s most surreal test.

Pause.  Reflect.

A few days before the show, I received another text, from my good friend Ben Jaffe of New Orleans’s legendary Preservation Hall Jazz Band, notifying me that he was also in town form the Grammys and looking for a party.

While filming our documentary series “Sonic Highways” in 2014, Foo Fighters had the honor of spending a week filming in Preservation Hall itself, a tavern that dates back to 1803.  We all became fast friends.  By the end of that week, I had decided that New Orleans is an American treasure, and that we all indeed need to preserve its rich culture steeped in European, Caribbean, and Cajun history.  There is nowhere on earth filled with the pure magic that New Orleans has to offer.  It is, without doubt, my favorite city in the world.

“Dude…we’re having dinner with Paul McCartney AND AC/DC!” I exclaimed to Ben.  “You wanna come along?”  I knew Ben would most definitely appreciate the enormity of such an incredible chance encounter.  “Can I bring all the guys with me?”  he asked.  I paused and did the math.  The band consisted of seven musicians, which realistically meant at least ten more people.  “Uh, let me check,” afraid that the restaurant would decline our request for another ten chairs.  But then Ben sealed the deal:

“How about we all come marching down the street playing in a second line, into the restaurant, straight to the table, and perform a set for you right there?”

There was absolutely no refusing this incredibly generous offer.”

I loved this book and highly recommend it to any music fans.

Here’s the original studio version of “North Dakota”, my favourite from the shows this weekend.  The performances and production on this are just excellent:

Something from the Old 97s:

And my favourite from the Old 97s set:

Finally, a great Foo Fighters song from the Sonic Highways album:

Stay safe, patient and kind with everyone!

 

 

 

Week in Review – April 3, 2022

“Residency Week 9 – Time to Go Home”

The final week of the residency started with a Magazine Street ramble for Diana and Alicia.  They began with a beignet and grits at The Vintage, before wandering around the shops.

They worked up an appetite with all that walking and rambling, and stopped into Mahony’s Po-Boy shop for lunch – fried pickles and a shrimp and oyster Po-boy – that’s just half of it in the picture.  They had plenty of leftovers for me to snack on later.

The Ogans had us over for dinner on Monday evening, before Alicia left town.  It’s always fun to watch Denny with multiple pots cooking, and the ease with which he brings it all together.  Scallops on a purple sweet potato puree, shrimp risotto, and asparagus.  All delicious.  Thanks Chef Denny.  We even had a special guest appearance from Jack.

Alicia took these pictures of us on our balcony before packing up.

We dropped her at the airport on Tuesday morning – we’re both pretty confident that she really enjoyed her visit.  Then Diana met Debra (Tuesdays are her day off from Jacques-Imo’s) for lunch at Del Fuego taco shop.  Apparently they filled up on guacamole and tostadas – so no left over tacos for K.

We made it to The Franklin on Tuesday evening for dinner – you’ll remember that we canceled last week with the inclement weather.  The duck liver mousse appetizer was just excellent – satsuma marmalade on the bottom and herbs and nuts on top , with excellent bread – each bite was a treat.  I followed that with the burger and Diana enjoyed some wagyu beef.  Well worth the drive across town to the Bywater area.  Then there was a little langiappe, as so often happens in New Orleans – the local middle school band was practicing close to where we parked.

We met the Ogans and Kirschs for lunch at Gris Gris on far East Magazine for Wednesday lunch.  We sat at the kitchen counter, which provided great entertainment and a good preview of what we should order.  I watched a few plates of shrimp ‘n grits being put together and decided that was what I wanted – very good.

Thom had missed our Happy Hour at Monkey Hill last week, and so we had a reprise on Wednesday evening – the majority of the krewe made it out.

 

 

 

 

Torrential rain, high winds and possible tornados were forecast for later in the evening, so we left the boys at Reginelli’s pizza and ubered home just before the heavens completely opened.

Thursday was a pretty quiet last day of the residency.  Diana spent most of the day packing us up – she did get a break to meet Kara and Kenny for oysters at Superior Seafood.

We left right on schedule on Friday morning – just after 9:30am.  The extra few minutes were because Diana packed up all of her shoes and realized as we were walking out that she hadn’t left out a pair to wear.  We stopped at Athena Greek and Lebanese restaurant in Shreveport – this has become our regular stop for lunch when making the drive to or from New Orleans.  We arrived home around 7:30pm.

I had a treat waiting in the stack of mail.  A $75 fine for apparently driving 26mph in a 20mph zone on Napoleon Avenue – my parting gift from the city of New Orleans.  I haven’t had a speeding ticket in at least 25 years.

The house seems to have survived just fine – with the freezer repaired before we got back.  Thanks for helping with that Finn.  Penelope decided to show her displeasure at being left behind by turning on her check engine light – drives just fine, so I’m sure it’s just some overly persnickety German sensor that needs to be reset.

On a walk after lunch, our neighbor called us over to show us a hole that squirrels have gnawed through into our eaves.  He had watched them going in and out.  Time to call a “critter guy.”

We met Finn for a Mexican lunch on Saturday and listened to him grumbling about how hard he’s having to work these days.  We had made appointments to have our second booster shots before lunch but got a call from Walgreens that they didn’t have anybody to administer the shots.  I enjoyed watching Duke play North Carolina in the NCAA basketball final four in the evening – what an entertaining game for Coach K’s final appearance.

Sunday began with an all time record for me on the crossword – finally beat 5 minutes:

The morning featured another failed attempt to get booster shots.  No call to cancel this time – just a note on the pharmacy window saying no shots today.  We’ll try again during the week.

My book this week was “The Magnolia Palace” by Fiona Davis.  This is another of the books that Diana picked up at Octavia books in New Orleans.  Here’s the Amazon plot summary:

“Eight months since losing her mother in the Spanish flu outbreak of 1919, 21-year-old Lillian Carter’s life has completely fallen apart. For the past six years, under the moniker Angelica, Lillian was one of the most sought-after artists’ models in New York City, with statues based on her figure gracing landmarks from the Plaza Hotel to the Brooklyn Bridge. But with her mother gone, a grieving Lillian is rudderless and desperate – the work has dried up and a looming scandal has left her entirely without a safe haven. So when she stumbles upon an employment opportunity at the Frick mansion – a building that, ironically, bears her own visage – Lillian jumps at the chance. But the longer she works as a private secretary to the imperious and demanding Helen Frick, the daughter and heiress of industrialist and art patron Henry Clay Frick, the more deeply her life gets intertwined with that of the family – pulling her into a tangled web of romantic trysts, stolen jewels, and family drama that runs so deep, the stakes just may be life or death.

Nearly 50 years later, mod English model Veronica Weber has her own chance to make her career – and with it, earn the money she needs to support her family back home – within the walls of the former Frick residence, now converted into one of New York City’s most impressive museums. But when she – along with a charming intern/budding art curator named Joshua – is dismissed from the Vogue shoot taking place at the Frick Collection, she chances upon a series of hidden messages in the museum: messages that will lead her and Joshua on a hunt that could not only solve Veronica’s financial woes, but could finally reveal the truth behind a decades-old murder in the infamous Frick family.”

I enjoyed this book quite a bit – learning about the art and history of the Frick mansion in New York, while bouncing back and forth between two historical periods.  Davis did a cunning job of bringing the two periods together as the mystery is revealed in the concluding paragraphs.

I watched the wonderful movie CODA this week.  I really enjoyed it and was reminded a lot of Mr. Holland’s Opus – one of my very favourite films.  This song was featured in the movie and I like both versions equally.

I heard this song somewhere in New Orleans this week – another great funky Meters song:

This song isn’t really my typical kind of thing – but it caught my ear while having dinner at The Franklin:

And finally, something from Eric Clapton that was on the house CDs in the condo – an excellent Stevie Wonder cover:

 

Stay safe, kind and patient with everyone!

 

Week in Review – March 27, 2020

“Residency Week 8 -Francais Semaine”

Week 8 started with a very pleasant run/walk in Audubon park on Monday.

We planned dinner at the Franklin on Tuesday evening, but canceled when we saw very heavy rain and winds forecast.  Instead we walked down to La Petite Grocery and enjoyed a lovely dinner at the bar.  The turtle Bolognese had changed to alligator, so I had to try that – even better than the turtle version.  Diana had their amazing burger.

We made a good choice in not venturing far from home as the storm was very severe, including significant tornado damage a few miles away in St Bernard parish.  Thanks to all of you who texted to check on us after the storm.

Diana went to an exhibit at the New Orleans Museum of Art (NOMA) on Wednesday afternoon.  Anne, Kenny and Kara accompanied her.  Queen Nefertari’s Egypt was the name of the show, and all seemed to enjoy it quite a bit.  Here’s the description from the NOMA website:

“Queen Nefertari’s Egypt brings to life the role of Nefertari and other powerful women in ancient Egypt through 230 exceptional objects, including statues, jewelry, vases, papyrus, steles, wooden coffins, and stone sarcophagi, as well as tools and various items of daily life from the artisan village of Deir-el-Medina, home to those who created the royal tombs.”

Stela of Nakhi, “Servant in the Place of Truth”, Offering to Osiris and Anubis.  New Kingdom, late 18th Dynasty (c. 1300 BCE)

 

 

 

 

The group stopped at Café Degas for a nice French snack before returning Diana and Anne to the condo.  Then Denny picked us up for dinner at N7 in the Bywater area.  This wonderful French restaurant is hidden away behind a fence with just a small stencil to indicate the location (as seen in this Denny does Hitchcock picture.)  We had chosen to sit in the covered patio area rather than the garden or inside – great choice – the setting was beautiful.  I think this was my favourite meal in New Orleans so far.  The tarte flambee with caramelized onions and lardons was a wonderful appetizer, and the steak au poivre was so perfect and flavourful.  Bon Appetit magazine calls this the most romantic French restaurant in the world.

Almost forgot dessert – I’m always wary of pavlova – expecting it to be nowhere near as good as the ones that Mum and Diana make.  The N7 version was yummy.

 

 

 

 

Kara suggested the Booker Sessions at the Maple Leaf Bar for our Thursday evening entertainment.  A nice early show at 6pm featuring John Paxson playing piano in the back bar in the style of James Booker.  I was able to sit close enough to watch his fingers fly across the keyboard – a real treat.  That’s a Frenchy painting of Booker atop the piano.

We enjoyed a slice of alligator cheesecake and a drink at Jacque-imo’s before the show.  I love that cheesecake!  And as a special langiappe, the wristbands for the Booker show were penguins.

 

 

 

We collected Alicia at the airport on Friday and made our way to meet the krewe for Happy Hour at Monkey Hill.  Alicia had asked for as much live music as possible – and it started with Johnny Sansone playing outside Monkey Hill.

The group was getting hungry and we ultimately decided on Cooter Brown’s for a casual dinner and March Madness basketball watching.   Sadly, the meat pies are no longer on the menu.  They do have fresh oysters though.

I almost forgot – Diana got a love letter when she parked the car in the neighborhood on Friday morning.  She’s making friends with the locals.  It was written on the back of a fax confirmation sheet – so at least one person still uses a fax machine.

 

 

I was impressed when Diana and Alicia were up and ready to go to yoga with Kara and Kenny at 7:30 on Saturday morning.  They attended a class in the sculpture garden in City Park – what a lovely setting.  Then they enjoyed iced coffee and beignets at the City Park outpost of Café du Monde – even saved one for me.

The French school down the street, Ecole Bilingue de Nouvelle Orleans, hosted Fete Francaise on Saturday afternoon.  They had food tents from a number of French and other local restaurants – including N7.  Some really wonderful food and drink options to choose from.  Live music was also available all afternoon – adding to Alicia’s requested intake.  I really enjoyed the whole afternoon – and so close and easy.

New Orleanians never miss a chance to dress up:

The music started with the Young Fellaz Brass Band – music that always makes me smile.  That was followed by Sunpie, Preservation Brass, and Sweet Crude.

The Preservation Brass were excellent, featuring Grammy award winning Craig Klein on trombone.  Sweet Crude were a Creole rock band – very energetic and creative and a favourite of Greg and Colleen.

 

 

I enjoyed watching the dancer that was part of the band:

Alicia seemed to enjoy all the music as well.

As if we hadn’t had enough excellent music already, we decided to make the walk to the Kingpin where Derek Huston and friends were performing outside.  We stayed until folks started feeling chilly, then ordered Theo’s pizza to pick up on the walk back.  What a full day of music.

 

Diana and Alicia walked to the Chloe for Sunday brunch, and enjoyed even more live music – this time from Andrew Duhon.  I think he has a really good voice – reminds me of Anderson East.

 

 

Greg and Colleen hosted a crawfish boil on Sunday afternoon.  I had never peeled a crawfish before, but do love the taste.  I had a lesson and gave it a shot.  It was great to see a few folks I hadn’t run into in a few years – Chris Pete and Randy Bush – along with the rest of the krewe.  Greg did a great job remodeling (pretty much completely rebuilding) their new house on State street.

 

I enjoyed watching the guys pour out the entire feast on to the long table.

I read another one of Diana’s books this week – “The Paris Apartment” by Lucy Foley.  This was not the light, airy tour around Paris that I was expecting, rather a very dark mystery where every member of a bad family had a different and dark secret.  It passed the time, but I’m not sure I’d recommend it unless you enjoy dark mysteries.

Lots of music already this week, so stay safe and kind to everyone!

 

 

Week in Review – March 13th, 2022

“Residency Week 6 – Live Music Week”

Monday started with Anne going with Diana over to Metairie (where the big box stores are nearest to New Orleans) to shop for a new oven for her Mom’s house.  Everything was on a long back order and so she didn’t have a successful trip.  But she did learn where all the huge stores like Best Buy and Home Depot are located – they don’t have them within the normal New Orleans city limits – which I think is a nice feature.

We walked to Dos Jefes for the regular Monday night Jon Fohl show, and were pleasantly surprised to find Papa Mali subbing for him.  Mali had a nicely varied set, playing a number of songs he had written with Robert Hunter (Grateful Dead lyricist), and telling some great stories.  Here he is playing “Deal.”

I also enjoyed his version of Bob Marley’s “Redemption Song.”

We had a nice chat with Papa during his break.  Diana asked him about the song below that he had written about his wife (married for 40 years with 6 kids and 2 grandkids).  The struggling musician actually offered to buy us drinks – silly man – but such a sweet guy.  He noticed a friend at the bar – Dale Spalding, harmonica player for Canned Heat, and went off to coax him into playing in the second set.

Here’s the song for his wife, “Not so hard to understand.”

And then a real treat, Dale Spalding playing the Boz Scaggs classic, “Lend me a Dime.”

An excellent start to “Live Music Week.”

Diana met Debra and Anne for a ladies lunch at Shaya on Tuesday.  They did bring me some leftovers and hung out at the condo for a while after lunch.

“Pogeutry” provided our music on Wednesday at Tipitinas.  This is a band made up of the Lost Bayou Ramblers with Spider Stacy and Cait O’Riordan of the original Pogues from the 1980s.  I loved this show – so much energy and a good lead in to St. Patrick’s celebrations.  Here’s “Dirty Old Town.”  Kenny and Kara were able to join us and both enjoyed the show very much.

 

Spider Stacy is quite the tin whistle expert:

We enjoyed Happy Hour on the Columns porch again on Friday afternoon.  The beet salad may be the best that I’ve ever had – the food has really come a long way under the new ownership.  We laughed at Tim’s patron saint on our walk home:

And the number of beads still in the trees:

It was back to Tipitinas (thankfully a 5 minute walk around the corner) on Friday for a free show by the Soul Brass Band.  Another excellent evening, that ended with McD getting a big hug from the surly bouncer that she befriended over the course of the evening.  Here’s the band performing the Rolling Stones “All Over Now”:

Saturday brought…another parade!  This time the Irish Channel St. Patrick’s parade.  Not nearly as crowded as the Mardi Gras parades, but just as much fun.  I wasn’t expecting cabbages, leeks, and carrots to be typical throws from the floats – you really needed to pay attention.  We all had fun collecting “Kiss Me, I’m Irish” stuff for Anne’s dad, Grandpa Jack.

The krewe came back to the condo to relax after all the fun of the parade.  We ordered Theo’s pizza and the boys enjoyed a cigar on the front balcony.

And then…Diana convinced me to walk around to another free show at Tipitinas – this time Papa Mali, the guy we enjoyed so much at Dos Jefes on Monday night.  Unfortunately, this one was not our favourite – too much noodling around on the guitar and keyboards and not enough song structure.  Oh well – we had an amazing week of music overall.

Sunday was a mostly lazy day and then we joined Denny and Anne for dinner at Jamila’s.  This is a Tunisian restaurant with excellent lamb tagine.  I had been talking to my mum about the place, and she encouraged me to get the tagine and report back about it.  It was thoroughly delicious – so tender and so much flavour.  The place is run by a husband and wife – he manages the front and she runs the kitchen.  So welcoming and funny – we will be back for sure.

We had a drink at Chaise Delachaise before Jamilas.  I didn’t recognize the name, but realized on arrival that we had enjoyed a lovely New Year’s Eve dinner there a few years ago.  So many great places close by in this town.

Enough music already, so I’ll dive right into the book section.

My first book this week was “The Violin Conspiracy” by Brendan Slocumb.  The plot revolves around a Stradivarius violin that is stolen from a black violinist.  It turns out it was given to his great great grandfather by his slave owner.  The story of the violin theft is interesting, but less so than the story of Ray and his journey through racism to become runner up at the Tchaikovsky competition.  I found the first 70 or 80 pages a bit superficial, but really got sucked in when the story flipped back in time to Ray initially being obsessed with playing.

Slocumb holds a degree in music education (with concentrations in violin and viola) from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.  For more than twenty years he has been a public and private school music teacher and has performed with many orchestras in the region.  All of this makes for some detailed descriptions of violin technique and repertoire that I enjoyed a lot.  I learned what double and triple stops are all about.

I recommend this book to anyone with even a passing interest in classical music.

Having run out of books on hand – time for a visit to Octavia books down the street – I read one of Diana’s stack.  “One Italian Summer” was a very quick and easy read.  Pretty girly but set in Positano with pleasant descriptions of the food and the area.

Here’s the Amazon summary:

“When Katy’s mother dies, she is left reeling. Carol wasn’t just Katy’s mom, but her best friend and first phone call. She had all the answers, and now, when Katy needs her the most, she is gone. To make matters worse, their planned mother-daughter trip of a lifetime looms: to Positano, the magical town where Carol spent the summer right before she met Katy’s father. Katy has been waiting years for Carol to take her, and now she is faced with embarking on the adventure alone. 

But as soon as she steps foot on the Amalfi Coast, Katy begins to feel her mother’s spirit. Buoyed by the stunning waters, beautiful cliffsides, delightful residents, and, of course, delectable food, Katy feels herself coming back to life. “

I liked the way that Katy discovers her mom as a real person in Positano.  The construct of time travel seems a bit hokey, but actually works out well in the end.

Stay safe and kind to everyone!

 

 

 

 

Week in Review – March 6th, 2022

“Residency Week 5 – Lundi Gras King and Queen”

I learned this year that Lundi Gras (the Monday before Mardi Gras) brunch at Commander’s Palace restaurant is a big deal with the New Orleans locals.  Anne was able to get us all a reservation and strongly encouraged us to dress up in fun Mardi Gras outfits.  She lent Campbell and Molly some fun duds:

Denny and Anne were also very sparkly – Anne with her band hat and tasseled boots:

And then D with her complete flapper girl outfit:

The food at Commanders is always excellent, with great service and good fun all around.  I met my work friend, Fred, who recently retired.  His family all had matching crazy suits:

A small band toured the restaurant taking requests.  I asked them to play “What a Wonderful World” – and the trumpet player had a great deep, raspy voice:

Here we all are in our corner table after a lovely meal:

And then….as we were about to leave, the lady in charge of the room asked us to wait a minute because she had something for us.  Oh boy, what she had was not anything that I expected.  She quietened the room and then announced that she had chosen Diana and me as Lundi Gras brunch King and Queen.  We were awarded decorated spatulas and then paraded around the restaurant behind the band waving them to all the diners.  Who knew that was a thing?  Apparently the locals did because Debra asked Diana the next day if they had crowned the King and Queen.  Diana had a good story to reply with.

What to do after all that excitement?  How about….another parade?  Yes – this was going to be the last one for us.  Orpheus was quite different with the floats beautifully decorated and lit up – a real feast for the eyes.  I always enjoy checking out the bands warming up in the park on the corner – and St Augustine’s is one of the best in the city:

Here are some pictures from the parade watching:

Yes – even the penguins made it out for this parade.

I had been told that Mardi Gras day begins very early, and there was a rumour that Mardi Gras Indians and bands would be gathering at Tipitinas shortly after 6am.  Vince and I made our way there to check it out.  Galactic was just finishing their overnight show when we arrived.  It was funny to watch the concert goers emerge into the daylight.  The Professor Longhair statue at the entrance was all beaded up:

Kenny and Kara joined us and we waited for a long time – but no Indians or bands.  Calling it a bust, we went back to the condo to get ready for our bike ride down to the French Quarter and the Marigny to checkout all the crazy outfits.

 

The group assembled and then we were on our bikes and off.

After a couple of stops we arrived in the Quarter and stopped to admire all the outfits.

We ultimately arrived at Anna’s in the Marigny and Diana and Debra enjoyed some champagne together.

That was maybe the most fun day of people watching that I’ve ever had.  We were exhausted after the day, but the kids headed off on the bikes to meet up with the rest of the krewe at The Kingpin.  Oh to be in your twenties.

Debra manages Jacques-Imo’s restaurant (first meal Diana and I had together in New Orleans was there) and had secured reservations for us on Wednesday night – a last meal for Campbell and Molly.  Denny, Anne and Jack joined us for an excellent meal.  Debra had arranged a lovely bottle of French champagne for Diana, and loaded the table up with complementary appetizers.  She is so sweet and kind.  This place was quite the opposite of Commander’s Palace – very casual and loud.  The southern food was amazing and the portions so generous that we were eating left overs for two days.  Molly was talking about her fried chicken on the flight home.

Honey was happy to have her parents back home on Thursday, and quickly destroyed her treat from the parades.  How could you be angry with that face?

Campbell texted me, “We had so much fun and will have stories forever.”  Mission accomplished!

 

 

We walked over to the Columns Hotel for drinks and snacks on Friday afternoon.  New ownership has really upped the cocktail and food game there.  It was a beautiful day and we really enjoyed passing an hour or two on the porch.

We passed this nicely decorated house on our walk down Marengo to The Columns.

Saturday started with a pleasant run in Audubon Park and a trip to Octavia Books where D stocked up on reading material for her sun-bathing sessions on the back terrace.

In the evening, we picked up Denny and Anne and drove to Faubourg Brewing in East New Orleans.  It used to be called Dixie Brewing, but has changed like so many other businesses as the Dixie statues and monuments have been removed.  Sun Pie and Gal Holiday were both performing outside on the expansive lawn.  Gal sat down at the table with us and rapidly consumed a bunch of crawfish before her set – she had some great peeling and eating skills.

There were several games available on the lawn and I was very impressed that Denny was able to outplay the Connect 4 champion McD.  You could tell he was really concentrating.

We enjoyed some chargrilled oysters and boudin egg-rolls and called it a reasonably early night.

Sunday’s run was in the Riverside part of Audubon – an experiment that we won’t likely repeat – the pavement is just too rough and unpredictable for a leisurely run.

In the afternoon we attended another porch concert.  This was hosted by one of Anne’s tennis ladies who was celebrating her birthday.  These started as a way for musicians to make money during early COVID and I hope they continue.  Just a great way to pass a couple of hours on a Sunday afternoon.

The band was The Walrus and they played all Beatles music – and played it very well.  A nice selection from all the albums.

There was an interesting moment when one of the guitar players amplifier broke down.  No worries – the man of the house quickly nipped inside and emerged with a replacement.  “The beauty of playing at a musician’s house”, said the singer.  I did chuckle at the guys in their “Laissez Boy” recliners, fresh from the parades.

Kenny and Kara joined us for pizza at Theo’s.  It was nice to sit outside, enjoy the yummy pizza and tell stories.

I finally finished “The Great Wide Open” by Douglas Kennedy.  Almost 600 pages long and pretty dense, but a really good read.

Here’s the summary from Amazon:

“Alice Burns – a young book editor – is deep into a manuscript about the morass of family life. The observations within resonate, perhaps, because she has just watched her own family implode.

As she reads she wonders: When did the sadness start? And could it be that unhappiness is a choice?

Thus begins a great American epic which follows Alice as she navigates high school, first love and sexism at an elite college, a spell in 1970s Ireland, and a tragedy that sends her stateside as the US embraces a cowboy actor named Reagan.

But it is also the tale of her endlessly complex parents and brothers – how their destinies are written by the lies they tell themselves and others.”

The book started out very well but veered into a bit of unbelievable territory in the middle sections.  There’s only so much that can realistically happen to one family, and I felt that Kennedy was trying to cram in too many historical references and events.  That being said, I still recommend this read if you have the patience for such a long book.

This Tom Petty song was in my head each time I picked up my book:

Here’s one from the late keyboard player, Chuck Leavell that I’ve had on pretty heavy rotation this week:

Stay safe and be kind to everyone!

 

 

 

Week in Review – January 30, 2022

“Let the NOLA residency begin”

This week was all about packing up and organizing for our “residency” in New Orleans.  Diana did a fantastic job of getting everything ready and packed in the Atlas – lots of room thankfully.

Before we left I had one last follow up appointment from my hand surgery.  The doctor said it looked great and it was clear that I had been doing all the recommended exercises.  I’m not sure McD believes that, but I really have been pretty good about doing them several times a day.

We split up the drive to New Orleans with a stop in Shreveport on Friday night.  We didn’t have very high expectations, but were delighted to find the Fat Calf brasserie.  What a wonderful meal – one that I would drive the 3 hours from Dallas to repeat – just amazing.  We selected four appetizers for our meal – all were excellent.  Moules frites, escargots, a duck and foie gras parfait, and quail with dirty rice.  I don’t know which was my favourite, all so well done and delicious.  We’re already plotting a visit on our return drive.

We arrived in New Orleans at 2pm on Saturday and met our hosts in the Villa Vici furniture store below the condo.  Very pleasant folks who helped us unpack and carry things upstairs.  The condo is very sleek and modern as advertised.  We’ve been enjoying the lovely outdoor spaces – balcony overlooking the street out front (great for people watching), and extensive rooftop garden area out back (gets wonderful sun in the morning for coffee and the crossword.)  There are a few sheep happily grazing on the rooftop:

We met Kenny, Kara and crew at the Westin in the French Quarter around 4pm for the Happy Hour show by Kenny’s cousin, Tim Laughlin on clarinet.

It was a real treat to meet Kenny’s Mum, Miss Sue.  We really enjoyed the excellent music and time to relax and catchup.

The view of the Mississippi and the Quarter from the Westin are quite impressive.

After that lovely arrival music, the Ogans and Kirschs came back to the condo with us and we ordered Thai food from Pomelo – directly across the street.  Pomelo describes their food as “street style Thai.”  It was quite good, but different than the traditional curries that we’re used to.  We had a great time hanging out and catching up with each other.

Denny and Anne arrived with a Mardi Gras starter kit:

Sunday started with a long walk down the Nashville Avenue “neutral ground.”  This is what the grass area between lanes in the middle is called.  There’s a nice path winding all the way down.  We made a turn on to Freret Street (Kenny’s neighbourhood) and enjoyed a coffee from Mojo before walking back home.

Our appetites were suitably worked up now for brunch at Atchafalaya – one of the more popular weekend brunch restaurants.  I absolutely loved my duck confit hash.  The blackberries and mangos listed on the menu made me a bit nervous, but they complemented the duck very well.  Diana loved her Bayou Benedict.

I made it back to the condo in time to watch the Bengals defeat the Chiefs by 3 points in the AFC Championship football game – the result that I had predicted on a work call on Friday.  That was only after a very nerve wracking overtime session.

Kenny and Kara had us over for burgers and to watch the NFC Championship – Rams versus 49ers.  The team I was hoping would win was again victorious.  It will be the Rams and Bengals in the SuperBowl in a couple of weeks.

What a great couple of starter days to the residency.

I added a new puzzle to my daily crossword routine.  “Wordle” is a game that was created by a gentleman in the U.K. to play with his wife.  You get zero instructions – just 6 chances to find the Wordle of the day.  Each attempt is highlighted with green for the correct letter in the correct spot and yellow for the correct letter in the wrong spot.  I think I had significant beginners luck on my first attempts:

This is embarrassing.  I read 50 pages of William Kent Kreuger’s “Ordinary Grace” before convincing myself that I must have read it before.  It didn’t seem overly familiar but there were occasional passages that sounded just like something I’d heard before.  I finally did a search of the blog and found that I read it back in 2018.  Silly K!

After those 50 pages, things got too busy for me to settle down with a book.  I’m looking forward to making up for that next week with some good book time in the rooftop garden.

Here’s one of my favourites from Tim Laughlin, the clarinetist that we saw on Saturday:

An interesting cover of Neil Young’s “Heart of Gold”:

A favourite from the excellent Tom Waits that popped up on a playlist this week:

And finally something great from Radiohead that I heard on the soundtrack of a show I was watching, just don’t remember which show that was:

Stay safe, calm and kind!

 

Week in Review – January 23, 2022

“Spouting Volcano on the Horizon”

Monday was Martin Luther King Day.  Here’s an essay he wrote in 1964, after winning the Nobel Peace Prize, for the Berlin Jazz Festival.  What wonderful writing, capturing the role music has played in social change in a compact essay:“God has wrought many things out of oppression. He has endowed his creatures with the capacity to create—and from this capacity has flowed the sweet songs of sorrow and joy that have allowed man to cope with his environment and many different situations.

Jazz speaks for life. The Blues tell the story of life’s difficulties, and if you think for a moment, you will realize that they take the hardest realities of life and put them into music, only to come out with some new hope or sense of triumph.

This is triumphant music.

Modern jazz has continued in this tradition, singing the songs of a more complicated urban existence. When life itself offers no order and meaning, the musician creates an order and meaning from the sounds of the earth which flow through his instrument.

It is no wonder that so much of the search for identity among American Negroes was championed by Jazz musicians. Long before the modern essayists and scholars wrote of racial identity as a problem for a multiracial world, musicians were returning to their roots to affirm that which was stirring within their souls.

Much of the power of our Freedom Movement in the United States has come from this music. It has strengthened us with its sweet rhythms when courage began to fail. It has calmed us with its rich harmonies when spirits were down.

And now, Jazz is exported to the world. For in the particular struggle of the Negro in America there is something akin to the universal struggle of modern man. Everybody has the Blues. Everybody longs for meaning. Everybody needs to love and be loved. Everybody needs to clap hands and be happy. Everybody longs for faith.

In music, especially this broad category called Jazz, there is a stepping stone towards all of these.”

I caught a flight to Guatemala City on Monday afternoon for work.  There were several guys sitting near us who were with an organization called “Stoves for Guatemala.”  Apparently rural Guatemalans often cook on unventilated wooden stoves in single room dwellings, leading to bad respiratory disease.  This organization has built 600 clean burning and well ventilated stoves already.

https://helping-guatemala.com/

Here are some aerial pictures of the Guatemala City area during landing:

BP was excited to be allowed on the trip, and insisted on having his picture taken on arrival at the airport.

I stayed in an area called Cuidad Cayala – a planned city done in the Colonial architecture style.  The GoWork office and restaurants were all a short walk for the hotel, which made things very easy.  Cayala is very pretty and safe – with many high end shops and restaurants.

I met some work colleagues for an Italian dinner at Tre Fratelli on Monday night.  We sat outside and it was very chilly for Guatemala (high 50s).  I needed my puffer coat as the evening cooled off, with no humidity at all.  The city is at 5,000 feet and so cools quite quickly this time of year.

Here’s a picture of a volcano spouting in the distance, taken from my hotel room balcony:

Tuesday breakfast was at Cafe Saul – a great spot that I found on my last visit.  It’s so nice to be able to get a perfect macchiato with no fuss.

My first meeting of the day was a one on one with Jorge, and we decided to sit out on the patio of Cafe Barista and enjoy another coffee.  Such a pleasant way to do business and get caught up before the rest of the day inside.

Lunch was again enjoyed al fresco – this time a Greek place called Arena.  The pulpo (octopus) and falafel were both delicious, and the setting delightful.

After a long afternoon of team meetings, we enjoyed a seafood dinner at Atuna.  The croquette appetizer was delicious and then I enjoyed a very impressive lobster thermidor.

Sunset behind the volcanoes after dinner was quite something:

Back in Pacifica, the girls were enjoying the sunny day and then afternoon tea – complete with some very fancy finger sandwiches.

Diana sent me this lovely video of Frankie showing me her penguin sweatshirt.  She can be so adorable when she’s not being quite stubborn and opinionated:

Wednesday was another busy day of meeting various teams.  That was followed by a steak dinner with the leadership team at Montanos.  We had a private room with a TV that allowed us to share videos and photos of hobbies.  Damon gave a short talk about his basement garden where he grows peppers and vegetables during the winter.  Josue shared videos of him drumming with his band that won the Guatemalan Battle of the Bands contest.  A fun evening.

With the new US COVID rules – test no more than 24 hours prior to flight departure, I had to take a test before dinner.  Here I am working away while awaiting the test:

We met with our Project Management team on Thursday morning, enjoyed another delicious lunch at Arena, and then made our way to the airport for the flight home.  I had an Ensalada Fatouch that was very fresh and yummy.  Finn always has a chuckle about “Fatouch”.  I don’t really remember why – think there was somebody he worked with that liked it.

I was fortunate again, with a smooth and on time flight.  Customs at DFW was very quick and I just had to wait a short while for Diana to arrive from San Francisco.

It’s always pleasant to return to my home office, and I worked in it most of Friday morning.  Then we picked up Finn from work and had lunch at the Mexican Cactus.  Diana tried the ceviche with barramundi and it was really fresh and delicious.

Will supervised the loading of Finn’s car on to a transporter that should deliver it here on Tuesday.  Will has put a lot of time and money into getting the car absolutely perfect for Finn to enjoy.  I only have a limited number of days to wake up at 4:30am to deliver Finn to work, and I know the retiree is quite happy about that.

Jens and Glenda are coming over for dinner tonight.  We’re looking forward to it as it has been months since we’ve caught up with them.  I think McD is planning her excellent shrimp and scallops – yum!

“The Blue Hour” by Douglas Kennedy was my companion on the trip this week.  What a well written and constructed book.  I was hooked on the first page and wasn’t disappointed after that.  Page one:

“First Light.  And I didn’t know where I was anymore.

The sky outside: was it a curved rotunda of emerging blue?  The world was still blurred at its edges.  I tried to piece together my whereabouts, the exact geographic location within which I found myself.  A sliver of emerging clarity.  Or maybe just a few basic facts.

I was on a plane.  A plane that had just flown all night across the Atlantic.  A plane bound for a corner of North Africa.  A country which, when viewed cartographically, looks like a skullcap abreast a continent.  According to the flight progress monitor illuminating the back-of-the-seat screen facing me, we were still seventy-three minutes and 842 kilometers (I was flying into a metric world) from our destination.  The journey hadn’t been my idea.  Rather I’d allowed myself to be romanced into it by the man whose oversize frame (as in six foot four) was scrunched into the tiny seat next to mine.  The middle seat in this horror movie of an aircraft.”

A good plot summary from Amazon:

“Robin knew Paul wasn’t perfect. But he said they were so lucky to have found each other, and she believed it was true. When he suggests a month in Morocco—where he once lived and worked, a place where the modern meets the medieval—Robin reluctantly agrees.

Once immersed into the swirling, white-hot exotica of a walled city on the North African Atlantic coast, Robin finds herself acclimatizing to its wonderful strangeness. Paul is everything she wants him to be—passionate, talented, knowledgeable. She is convinced that it is here that she will finally become pregnant.

But then Paul suddenly disappears, and Robin finds herself the prime suspect in the police inquiry. As her understanding of the truth starts to unravel, Robin lurches from the crumbling art deco of Casablanca to the daunting Sahara, caught in an increasingly terrifying spiral from which there is no easy escape.

For fans of thought-provoking page-turners such as The Talented Mr. Ripley, Douglas Kennedy’s The Blue Hour is a roller-coaster journey into a heart of darkness that asks the question: What would you do if your life depended on it?”

An example of the excellent descriptions:

“Simo insisted that I sit in the backseat, where I had both windows wide open to rid the car of his incessant cloud of smoke, and to provide some ventilation on a torpid night when the humidity and the actual mercury level made the air seem as glutinous as maple syrup.”

For a pleasant change, the ending of this story wasn’t rushed but unfolded at just the rate pace.

I really enjoyed the story, the writing style and the surprising twists of this book very much.  I understand that Kennedy is much better known in the UK and France than in the US, and maybe those folks appreciate this kind of writing for the same reasons that I do.

Cafe Saul in Guatemala plays an eclectic mix of music, with some really unusual covers of popular songs.  I had to use Shazam to identify who was playing this hit from David Bowie.  A typically subtle arrangement from M. Ward:

Something from my Spotify Discovery Weekly list.  The level of musicianship on a Bela Fleck album is always extraordinary:

A song from The National that I think I heard on a movie soundtrack, but can’t remember the details:

And lastly, a lovely song from the excellent Rodney Crowell:

Stay safe and kind!

Week in Review – January 16, 2022

“Pretty Pacifica Sunsets”

I dropped Diana and Alicia at the airport on Wednesday morning, then dropped the VW Atlas off with Tony in downtown Plano – she’s (or is it male?) getting a ceramic coating treatment (Christmas present from Will).  I enjoyed a coffee at the 1418 coffee house before the drop-off.  They have really good coffee and a nice atmosphere.  Tony is a character from New Orleans, who recently sold his shop there and has just opened the shop in Plano.  I think he would have happily chatted with me all afternoon.

Diana sent some amazing sunset pictures from Pacifica.  These from Wednesday night are the prettiest I’ve seen there:

And then almost as impressive later in the week:

I used my solo time to enjoy a couple of movies.  I read “The Tender Bar” a few years ago, and was looking forward to seeing the recently released movie.  As is typical, the movie didn’t really live up to the book, it was enjoyable, Ben Affleck pretty good, but just not what it could have been.

“Swan Song”, starring the wonderful Mahershala Ali and Glenn Close, is based on an interesting premise:  Ali is a husband and father, diagnosed with a terminal illness.  He is presented with a controversial alternative solution to shield his family from losing him – replace himself with a carbon copy clone.  The acting is good, but the story just doesn’t have that much going for it after the premise is exposed.

After two mediocre movies, I was absolutely delighted with “Get Back”, the new Beatles documentary, directed by Peter Jackson of “The Lord of the Rings” fame.  It shows the band on a sound stage, preparing for a TV show that will feature new material – the idea being a new album performed live with a studio audience.

It’s fascinating to see how much Paul McCartney is the catalyst that makes everything work – orchestrating the rehearsals, one minute telling George what to play on guitar, then immediately pivoting to dictating a rhythm to Ringo.   How passive George Harrison is during the sessions is also interesting – he takes direction from Paul constantly and seems quite happy to just go along with what he wants.  Paul and John really don’t seem to even acknowledge him when he does speak up.  The band does a run through of “All Things Must Pass”, written by George, and it doesn’t really go anywhere.  Of course, this became the title for the fantastic triple album that George released after the Beatles breakup.  In one interesting sequence, George talks about how Eric Clapton can improvise an idea, shape it and take it somewhere, admitting that he doesn’t have that kind of talent at all.

George comes in one morning with a new song he’d written the night before, in response to a BBC2 program.  The song is “My Me Mine”, and there’s a great moment when the band runs through it (sounding great) when John and Yoko dance a waltz.  The rest of the time Yoko is just sitting next to John saying nothing for hours on end.  Similarly, George has a couple of Hari Krishna friends who sit on the floor, saying nothing for the duration.

My favourite moment from Episode 1 is Paul creating “Get Back” from nothing – strumming chords and humming and then, out of nowhere, the song appears.  Just stunning.  Other favourites are the footage of Paul messing around on the piano, while the others are taking a break – the beginnings of “The Long and Winding Road” and “Let it Be” come out almost fully formed, except for the lyrics.  I had been on the John Lennon was the genius, with Paul being the second fiddle bandwagon, but this documentary completely upended that perspective – Paul was clearly the creative driving force.  The episode finishes with George quitting the band- and this diary entry.

I’m looking forward to the watching the remaining episodes.

Tony finished up the ceramic coating on Friday, and Finn drove Penelope to the shop so that I didn’t have to Uber over.  The job looks very good and should protect well for several years.  And Finn did a good job of not scaring me as he drove Penelope home solo up Central Expressway – a very intimidating highway.

Thanks again to Will for orchestrating all of this with Tony.

I’ve been in a pretty regular routine this week – wake up at 4:30am, drop Finn at work, come back and read for a while in bed, then fall back asleep for a couple of hours.  He started at 4am one day, and that’s where I have to draw the line – he was helping his boss unload a truck before the day started.

I picked Finn up from work on Saturday, a very cold and windy day in McKinney with minor snow flurries, and we enjoyed a delicious lunch at Bengal Bay Grill – an Indian/Mexican/American fusion place that has delicious food.  Plenty of leftovers for both of our dinners.

Saturday afternoon looked like fun in Pacifica from these pictures of a get together with Andy and Jude.

Finn is coming over to watch the Cowboys vs. San Francisco 49ers playoff game with me this afternoon – a flashback to the classic playoff games that happened between both teams routinely in the 90s.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading “This Tender Land” by William Kent Krueger this week.  The story reminds me a lot of my recent read, “The Lincoln Highway” by Amor Towles.  Here are some of the quotes that led me to read this book – particularly the “Where the Crawdads Sing” reference:

“If you liked Where the Crawdads Sing, you’ll love This Tender Land by best-selling author William Kent Krueger. This story is as big-hearted as they come.“ —Parade Magazine

“A picaresque tale of adventure during the Great Depression. Part Grapes of Wrath, part Huckleberry Finn, Krueger’s novel is a journey over inner and outer terrain toward wisdom and freedom.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune

“Crafted in exquisitely beautiful prose, this is a story to be treasured – outstanding and unforgettable.” —Historical Novel Review

“If you’re among of the millions who raced through Where the Crawdads Sing this year and are looking for another expansive, atmospheric American saga, look to the latest from Kreuger.” —Entertainment Weekly

“Long, sprawling, and utterly captivating, readers will eat up every delicious word of it.” —New York Journal of Books

“Rich with graceful writing and endearing characters…this is a book for the ages.” —Denver Post

Here’s the Amazon summary of the plot:

In the summer of 1932, on the banks of Minnesota’s Gilead River, Odie O’Banion is an orphan confined to the Lincoln Indian Training School, a pitiless place where his lively nature earns him the superintendent’s wrath. Forced to flee after committing a terrible crime, he and his brother, Albert, their best friend, Mose, and a brokenhearted little girl named Emmy steal away in a canoe, heading for the mighty Mississippi and a place to call their own.

Over the course of one summer, these four orphans journey into the unknown and cross paths with others who are adrift, from struggling farmers and traveling faith healers to displaced families and lost souls of all kinds. With the feel of a modern classic, This Tender Land is an enthralling, big-hearted epic that shows how the magnificent American landscape connects us all, haunts our dreams, and makes us whole.

I enjoyed learning about how Native American children were rounded up and placed in these special boarding schools – just horrendous treatment and a huge effort to stamp out an entire culture by “Americanising” the entire generation.  The description of the struggle by so many to survive during the “Great Depression” was also quite interesting.

As is typical lately with the books I’ve been reading, I was disappointed with the rush in the last 20 pages to tie up all the loose ends and bring the story to a conclusion.  A slow moving and highly descriptive book moves to a rapidly paced and rushed ending.

I really enjoyed this read and am looking forward to exploring some more of Krueger’s books.

Let’s start this week with an excellent song by Rich Robinson, guitar player with the Black Crowes, and brother constantly fighting with Chris Robinson.  I love the feel of this song.

It’s been too long since I listened to Jackson Browne.  This song popped up on “The Tender Bar” soundtrack to remind me of what I’ve been missing:

One of my magazine’s had an interview that mentioned this soundtrack by Pat Metheney and friend – it’s excellent relaxing music:

I’ve been delving back into the Radiohead catalog this week.  How does a band go from the relatively straight ahead rock of “The Bends” to the art pieces that comprise “OK Computer” in a couple of years?

and then…

I tell the story of going to see R.E.M in Dallas with opening band Radiohead, back when they had just released “Pablo Honey.”  They blew R.E.M. off the stage with an excellent performance.  I didn’t know any of their songs and thoroughly enjoyed the entire set.  I can still hear the crowd going wild for their performance of “Creep.”

Stay safe and kind to everyone.

 

Week in Review – January 9th, 2022

“Congratulations to Retired D!”

This was the big retirement week for Diana.  Can you believe it?  Yes, after more than 35 years battling away in the IT world, she’s going to become what her Mom describes as “A Lady of Leisure.”

If you have worked with Diana, then you know nothing is done half-way.  This was true of the last week also, with several 5:50am alarms to make sure she was fully prepped for her 7:00am calls.  Here she is leading her last ever Thursday morning 7:00am call:

You can tell from the layers that it’s been very cold outside this week – temperatures down around 20 degrees Fahrenheit in the mornings.

Friday was retirement day, and flowers and cards arrived to celebrate McD.

Here she is with the official retirement sign:

If you didn’t zoom in, here’s what the top part says:

I thought I was pretty funny with that one.

Diana showed me over 60 congratulations emails that she received during the week.  Very impressive, I certainly don’t think there will be that many people sending me notes if I retire.  Here’s the farewell note she sent to her NTT colleagues:

Scott is going to try and replace Diana, and he must have had the most complete turnover that I’ve ever seen.  Would you expect anything less?

We enjoyed a lovely retirement dinner at C.T. Provisions on Friday, with Brent as our waiter.  Finn and Alicia were able to join us.  The food, company, and service were all excellent.  Diana toasted her retirement with an Old Cuban (first experienced at the Moonshiner speakeasy in Paris.)  C.T.’s was very busy, and Finn got a kick out of watching Brent buzzing around.  Here’s D reading Finn’s retirement card, I think she liked his message about “sip and dip” and “fun in the sun”:

We tortured the kids with a mathematics problem during dinner.  I was impressed that Finn remembered the order of operations and was able to get it right on the first attempt:

Yes – that’s the kind of exciting stuff we do when out for dinner.

So, what do you do with your first day of retirement.  Well….it seems you get up early and attack one of your Christmas jigsaw puzzles.  In this case, a hummingbird shaped challenge from my Mum.

You can see that the outline had to be completed before we decided to get dressed for the day.  As I sit here at almost 1pm on Sunday, the puzzle is more than 90% complete.  I’ve heard a lot of comments about how difficult this puzzle is – apparently all the pieces are almost exactly the same shape and size.  I remember watching an interview with Rob Gronkowski after he retired from the Patriots and the NFL.  He was doing a jigsaw puzzle and talking about how it was helping to heal his brain.  I think D is substituting one challenge for another, and hopefully doesn’t do what Gronk did and come right back out of retirement.  I don’t think I’d put any money on that happening.

Changing locations to Stewarton, Scotland.  Mum sent this lovely picture of a snow scene in the back garden.  Pretty to look at, but not ideal for driving.

Late breaking news, as I finish up this post, the puzzle was just completed.  It’s a very pretty one.

And lastly, happy 26th birthday to Campbell, celebrating in San Diego yesterday, and finally feeling much better today.  We’ll see you in New Orleans soon Campbell.

I thoroughly enjoyed “South and West: A Notebook” by Joan Didion this week.  After her passing a couple of weeks ago, this was the only one of her books available at the library, and fortuitously, one of the few that I haven’t read at least once.  She is one of those authors whose books you have to read a few times to really fully appreciate.

The book traces a road trip she took with her husband, John Gregory Dunne, in June 1970, through Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. She interviews prominent local figures, describes motels, diners, a deserted reptile farm, a visit with Walker Percy, and a ladies’ brunch at the Mississippi Broadcasters’ Convention.

From the Foreword:

“The idea was to start in New Orleans and from there we had no plan.

This has been the idea of so many people who have come to New Orleans.  It was the idea of the French explorer Rene-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, who in 1684 set out to establish a city near the base of the Mississippi River, only to fail to find the river’s mouth from the Gulf of Mexico and, after three years, to be murdered by his mutinous crew.

It was the idea of William Faulkner, who quit his job as postmaster at the University of Mississippi and moved to New Orleans because he despised taking orders, and of Tennessee Williams, who wrote in his diary, ‘Here surely is the place that I was made for if any place on this funny old world.’  One does not have to stay long to learn how easily plans in New Orleans, like its houses, become waterlogged and subside into the mud, breaking to pieces.”

She writes about the stifling heat, the slow pace of life, and the preoccupation with race, class, and heritage she finds in the small towns they pass through. And from a different notebook: the “California Notes” that began as an assignment from Rolling Stone on the Patty Hearst trial of 1976. Though Didion never wrote the piece, watching the trial and being in San Francisco triggered thoughts about the city, its social hierarchy, the Hearsts, and her own upbringing in Sacramento.

Back in New Orleans:

“In New Orleans, the old people sitting in front of houses and hotels on St. Charles Avenue, barely rocking.  They have mastered the art of the motionless.”

“They had many suggestions for understanding the South.  I must walk Bourbon or Royal to Chartres, I must walk Chartres to Esplanade.  I must have coffee and doughnuts in the French Market.  I should not miss St. Louis Cathedral, the Presbytere, the Cabildo.  We should have lunch at Galatoire’s (where I had my bachelor party lunch): trout almondine or trout Marguery.   We should have dinner at Manale’s (where Diana has her oyster meetings with the girls), tour Coliseum Square Park.  I should appreciate the grace, the beauty of their way of life.”

Some classic Didion as her road trip moves on to Mississippi:

“A somnolence so dense it seemed to inhibit breathing hung over Hattiesburg, Mississippi, at two or three o’clock of that Sunday afternoon.  There was no place to get lunch, no place to get gas.  On the wide leafy streets the white houses were set back.  Sometimes I would see a face at a window.”

I highly recommend this short book.  A delightful afternoon read.

Here’s an interesting version of the Todd Rundgren classic that I stumbled on this week.  Rick Wakeman doing his thing on keyboards:

It would have been David Bowie’s 75th birthday yesterday, he shares it with Campbell.  So here’s a couple of my favourites:

Keeping the Rick Wakeman theme alive, here’s his excellent take on the same song:

We had tickets to watch a Bowie cover band celebrate the 50th anniversary of “Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars” on Friday night, but decided it would be safer to have a local dinner.  Here’s my favourite from that classic album:

Stay safe and be kind!

 

 

Week in Review – January 2nd, 2022

“Happy New Year!, and Happy Birthday Jack and Mason”

Boxing Day afternoon was spent hosting Andy and Jude at Clorinda’s house.  It’s always so nice to visit with the best neighbours ever.  We had a very entertaining time and even had Clorinda telling some old stories to much hilarity.  We have some good videos of the stories, but are still working on getting them in the right format to be able to share with you here.

Earlier in the day, Diana participated in a virtual Secret Santa with Alicia and John and Joey’s families.  Bonna was D’s Santa and she put together a lovely champagne themed basket.  Diana was really delighted with the detail and with everything in the basket, and she had the perfect hoodie to complement it.

 

 

We flew home on Monday and were subject to the delays that thousands of other travelers experienced.  Our flight was delayed with a 3:30am arrival, and fortunately we were able to change to an earlier flight, making it home just before midnight.  Not too bad considering all the cancellations.

We were able to get out for walks and runs during the week, after no exercise in California last week due to the cold, rainy weather.  The weather in Texas was great this week with highs in the 70s – just like pleasant Spring days.

Wednesday was Finn’s day off and so I took him for a walk and then to Trader Joe’s to pick up some nice meals for the weekend, while we’re gone to New Orleans.  The rest of the day was catching up on some admin tasks that had been ignored over the break – expense reports and health care claims all filed now.  I know – very exciting stuff, but it feels good to have everything caught up and organized for the New Year.

“Emily in Paris” has a new season on Netflix and we’ve been enjoying that in the evenings.  It’s way too long since we’ve been able to visit Paris.

We flew to New Orleans on Friday morning for the fourth annual celebration of Jack and Mason’s birthday on January 2nd.  We spent the afternoon enjoying the new Ogan patio, and exchanged some gifts.  Anne loved her “champagne clutch” and Diana her tennis skirt (in preparation for taking up tennis during our NOLA residency.)

After enjoying the lovely weather on the patio, we got changed for New Year’s Eve dinner at Costera.

Costera was an excellent choice for dinner (thanks Denny) with multiple courses of Spanish tapas.  The menu was fixed and included a plethora of delicious courses – beef shank Bombas, scallops, and an amazing seafood paella were the standouts.  We were joined at dinner by the Kirshes, Krieks, and Eisles – what a fun group.

There was a bit of a wild party in progress when we returned to Webster street after dinner (and a few minutes after midnight.)  Things quietened down quickly and we were able to get a decent sleep.  Apparently a good enough sleep for McD to pop right up on New Year’s Day and head out for a run in Audubon park with Laura and Kara.  She particularly enjoyed the band playing at the park entrance.  Great job of starting out on the right foot Diana!

Denny and Anne hosted an open house on New Year’s Day afternoon, with oysters served 7 or so ways.  Frank and Macon showed up early to help shuck several hundred oysters – quite a special skill that Frank certainly has mastered.

Denny is an excellent chef, creating all kinds of delicious sauces for the oysters.  My favourite is the grilled version, and I’m glad Fire Chief Kenny was on hand to supervise the process.

Merry Lee, Jeff, Donna, and Steve (our friends from California) were able to secure an invite to oyster fest.  Merry Lee and Jeff have a condo in New Orleans now.  They seemed to enjoy meeting everyone and sampling the various types of oysters.

 

Chef Denny was finally able to relax with old friends and enjoy the evening with a cigar.  What amazing weather we had for both days.

The weather changed on Sunday as we planned to celebrate Jack and Mason’s 19th birthdays.  Can you get a better birthdate than 01/02/03?  We bundled up and headed to Cafe Sbisa in the French Quarter for brunch.  Other than an overly loud but very talented jazz trio, the lunch was perfect.  The boys invited some friends and seemed to really enjoy their lunch.  We had a brief ramble in the Quarter after brunch, and then retreated to Webster Street to watch the Saints game – they still have a shot at making the playoffs.

Have you read a book by Stuart Woods?  Apparently a lot of folks have.  He’s written over 70 books, and occupied almost an entire shelf at my local library.  I was looking for something light and easy to enjoy on the New Orleans trip, and decided to give him a try.

“Bombshell” is part of the series featuring ex-CIA agent and Hollywood producer, Terry Fay, and is co-written with Parnell Hall.   This is certainly easy reading, with each chapter 3 or 4 pages long.  You can tell that Woods has a formula that he deploys to crank out these books.  I don’t have any quotes as the writing is quite basic and used to drive the action forward, rather than set the scene or develop the characters.  I’m not sure I would select another Woods book, except maybe for some mindless poolside or beach reading.

Diana and I were chatting with Derek Huston, New Orleans saxophone player extraordinaire, at Oyster Fest, and D asked him who was his favourite musician.  After some thought, Derek gave an eloquent explanation of why that was Charlie Parker.  Here’s one of the more mellow and accessible Parker pieces:

Here’s a calm and relaxing guitar piece from an album that I love, Julian Lage’s “World’s Fair”:

And finally, the ultimate calming piece for me, Bill Evan’s “Peace Piece” – this is right up there with “Kind of Blue” as music that I can listen to every day and not tire of:

Please stay safe and be kind in 2022!