Week in Review – January 31, 2021

“Roses are Red”

Having a dental crown seated is not the ideal way to start out a week, but the operation was smooth and painless.  Dirty Penelope was treated to a bath on the way back from the dentist and it’s been much quieter in the garage since.

Monday was Burns day and so we cooked up one of the tins of haggis, the lamb version, and piped it in with “Scotland the Brave” from Spotify.  I gave a poor rendition of “Address to a Haggis”, with a translated printout for Diana, and then we enjoyed the once a year or so treat – really yummy.  After that Diana was “wanting something sweet” and so, in my typically cheesy way, I guided her through to the piano and attempted a rendition of “My Love is Like a Red Red Rose”.  It was a very poor attempt, having only printed the music a couple of hours earlier.  Here’s a better attempt – see Mum, I did get some roses this year.  Diana quipped “Now I recognize it.”

Oh, almost forgot, I also read a couple of verses of “Ode to a Mouse” at our Executive Committee meeting on Monday afternoon, telling them that since diversity and inclusion was such a big topic these days,  I wanted to be recognized for my diversity as well.  Here are links to read both poems:

http://www.robertburns.org.uk/Assets/Poems_Songs/toahaggis.htm

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/43816/to-a-mouse-56d222ab36e33

Going up to the elliptical on Tuesday, I came across this display of Mardi Gras beads.  Apparently McD had decided to organize our collection of beads ahead of parade season (cancelled this year) and thought the pool table provided the ideal surface.  We collected the majority of those on a freezing cold parade night on our first New Orleans Mardi Gras visit.

I went for a swim on Wednesday and enjoyed listening to a podcast where Alec Baldwin interviewed Kristin Bell.  On removing my earphones after the swim, I couldn’t hear anything from my left ear.  I assumed water was stuck in there, as happens sometimes.  On arrival home, and letting Diana know that I had enjoyed a nice swim with Kristin Bell, very cheesy again, I tried the drops we use to get water out of our ears when scuba diving.  No luck.  Now I’m getting a tiny appreciation for what Elspeth deals with every day – can’t hear anything Diana is saying if she’s coming at me from the left.  Still no joy on Thursday morning, so emailed the doctor.  Come on in for an ear lavage on Friday morning.  Ok, not sure what that is but it sounds soothing.  Turned out to be a quick and mostly painless procedure that within a few seconds had removed a wax plug that had adhered to my ear drum.  Going to have to be a bit more diligent with those earphones and the “Fit Goo” that I use to get a good seal.

The Designer Twins and Jose visited us on Friday afternoon to discuss the rumoured kitchen remodel.  We’ll see what great ideas they come back with.  One of the bigger discussion points was whether or not to keep the elevated, round section of the island.  We enjoy gathering around a meat and cheese plate there when we have another couple over.  Jose says they’re out of style and we need to consider a single long island that accommodates seating at the end.  Any input from those of you that have occupied the barstools at the raised end?  I’m scared to see the bid – so much tile and granite to be replaced.

Late breaking news on an incoming text.  Jose can start in 3 weeks.  Oh joy!

We watched the new Justin Timberlake movie “Palmer” on Friday and Saturday nights.  Second weekend in a row that we fell asleep before finishing our movie on Friday night.  We must be working way too hard during the week.  Timberlake did his usual excellent acting job in what was a pretty harrowing movie.  Spoiler alert…there is a happy ending.

I did complete week 3 of Couch to 5K on Saturday.  Diana asked me if I felt like I had a “balanced gait”.  Well, clearly by nature of the question she doesn’t believe that I do.  Apparently I lean over when landing on my left foot, or am just flat footed on that side.  Thanks, super helpful input, I’ll see what I can do about that as we enter into week 4, and I’m sure by focusing on that will develop some other anomaly.

We, one of us in particular, have developed a binging obsession with “Bridgerton.”  It’s actually pretty funny and certainly better than “The Bachelor.”  I believe Diana finished up the series last night after I fell asleep.

It’s a mistake to pull out the “Year in Review 2020” blog book and read about what we were doing exactly a year ago.  Very depressing – we attended an Eric Lindell concert, had a work happy hour at Baker St. Pub, brunch at Comedor, and dinner at Winebelly, amongst several other fun activities.  Hopefully those places hang on until we can safely visit Austin again.

I finished up “The Strangler” by William Landay this week and did enjoy the conclusion of the tale.

Michael, the Harvard lawyer brother, suffers from routine migraines and I thought Landay’s description of their onset and impact were exceptionally detailed and effective.  I assumed that he must suffer from migraines until I read the credit at the end of the book to “Migraine” by Oliver Sacks, the wonderfully talented medical writer.

The relationship between the three Daley brothers, their mother, and her boyfriend is at the core of the book, and just as central to the evolution of the plot as the history of the Boston Stranglers.

“Ricky always went a little crazy with Joe.  All that firstborn’s confidence and facile conservatism, the dense, bullying, confrontational manner, the reflexive, arrogant, empty-headed, aggressive xenophobia…Joe was Ricky’s negative image.  If they had not been brothers, Ricky was sure, they would never have been friends.  As it was, they needed Michael as a middleman.  Alone, there was a relentless fractious undercurrent to their conversations, as if their thirty-year relationship had been a single ongoing argument.  But, in the way of brothers, Ricky could not completely escape admiring Joe, who had, after all, willingly accepted the weight of their patrimony.”

I’m making good progress on “Mad at the World – A Life of John Steinbeck” by William Souder.  Souder is a good writer and has quite interesting material to draw from.  The history of the part of California where Steinbeck grew up – Salinas and the Monterey coast – was just as interesting as the background on how Steinbeck became the famous author.

Here’s a piece from the first page that I know Diana will particularly enjoy (she detests the California coastal fog).

“Ninety miles long and shaped like a sword, it follows the course of the Salinas River, which runs north to Monterey Bay.  The valley is flat between the Gabilans and the Santa Lucia mountains that separate it from the Pacific.  Here, a different fog comes  in summer, when inland heating draws in a marine layer of cooler, moist air from the ocean.  The sea-born fog does not lie still on the land, but seeps over the folded hillsides, rising and falling along the river bottom.  When the fog comes and the mountains are hidden, the world is an abstraction and you  are alone with your thoughts.”

Some history of the region, which now produces much of the vegetable crops that feed America:

“In 1602, a Spanish explorer, Sebastian Viscaino, sailed up the California coast as far as the estuary of the Salinas River.  Captivated by the harbor near the river’s mouth, and by the panorama of mountains and rocky headlands that curled into the Pacific around the northern and southern ends of a great by, he named the place Monterey.  In 1769, a Spanish expedition coming overland from Baja reached the southern tip of the Salinas Valley and found it an unpromising place.  “The hills,” their report read, “gradually became lower, and, spreading out at the same time, made the canyon wider; at this place, in sight of two low points formed by the hills, it extends for more than three leagues.”  The soil, the report continued, was poor and offered “treacherous footing,” as it was “full of fissures that crossed in all directions, whitish in color, and scant of pasture.”

Who knew that the beautiful coastline around Pacific Grove was once owned by a Scot?  Can you imagine what those 100,000 acres are worth today?

“Rising from the water’s edge in sloping terraces to a high, forested ridge, Pacific Grove was wedged between the towns of Monterey and Carmel.  In the late 1800s, there was a quiet wilderness of woods and grazing lands mostly owned by a rancher named David Jacks.  Jacks had come to the peninsula in 1849 from Scotland with an unquenchable thirst for land.  Eventually he owned more than 100,000 acres.”

Some interesting history of Stanford University:

“Young, shy, uninterested in school, and reluctant to admit to anyone what he hoped to become, Steinbeck was unlikely Stanford material.  Opened in 1891 – its first student was future U.S. president Herbert Hoover – the university had begun as a monument to Leland Stanford Jr.  The only child of Leland and Jane Stanford, Leland Jr. had died of typhus at the age of fifteen.”

“Mors was the same age as Steinbeck.  He’d grown up in Los Gatos, only twenty miles away, and entered Stanford at the age of sixteen.”

Steinbeck wandered from city to city, taking odd jobs as he worked on his writing in the evenings.

“He also got Steinbeck a job as a laborer on a project in midtown Manhattan:  the construction of Madison Square Garden, which was being rushed to completion before the end of the year.  Steinbeck’s job was moving cement up the inside scaffolding with a wheelbarrow, load after aching load.”

An interesting fact about Monterey Bay.  I had no idea it was that deep:

“Monterey Bay was one of the world’s most active fisheries, owing in part to its unique subsurface contours.  Only a short distance from shore, the Continental Shelf splits, and the bottom plunges to a depth of nearly 12,000 feet in a sheer abyss called the Monterey Bay Canyon.”

I’ve been listening to an album called “Day of the Dead” while writing this post.  It’s a series of Grateful Dead cover songs and I really like most of them.  Here’s a sampling.  Highly recommended if you enjoy their music.

Nick Lowe has a song and an album called “Trombone?”  I better check that out.

And finally this week, for some reason Shuggie Otis popped into my head and I remembered his excellent show at the Kessler several years ago:

Stay safe, kind and calm.

Week in Review – January 24th, 2021

“A Smooth Transition”

This was a pretty quiet week of working from home and not going anywhere exciting at all.  Well, Diana did sneak out twice – once to get her hair done and once to get her nails done.  Oh, and we had a Presidential inauguration.  As Rex Parker said in his New York Times crossword blog on Thursday: “OK, back to basking in this weird feeling of living in a county run by basically good, basically competent people.  Ahh.”  We both enjoyed the evening gala hosted by Tom Hanks from the steps of the Lincoln memorial.  Bruce Springsteen got things started (and apparently had a positive impact on pea-coat sales):

We watched the new Tom Hanks movie “News of the World” on Friday night, and then finished it on Saturday night.  Quite disappointing after the book – isn’t that usually the case?    The film completely missed what I thought was the core element of the book – the struggle of Johanna as she oscillates between her Native American upbringing and her return to the “civilized” American world.

I finished up week 2 of Couch to 5K on Saturday – everything is still feeling pretty good.  We received our “Year in Review 2020” blog book (300 pages) and Diana looked back to find how far I made it before the break – end of week 4 – so that will be a milestone to aim past.  I did convince McD to try something new mid-week – she went for a run in the rain with me – who knows what crazy activity is next.  After the run I had a short burst of energy for home tasks – installed the replacement Ring doorbell, tried to replace some porch lights but had the wrong shape of bulb, and replaced the steam shower aromatherapy bottle (a lot more work than it sounds) with some new lavender juice – my choice which McD has pronounced as a very “girlie” option.  New bulbs were ordered and that will be my task after this update is published.

Almost forgot – I made a drive over to Grapevine on Friday to the British Food Emporium.  My mission was to pick up some haggis for Burns night on Monday, but as usual I couldn’t help grabbing some other treats – a Turkish delight for Diana, meat pies for me, and some oatcakes to share.  If you’d like to read details  about the challenges with the Scottish haggis population, I recommend this article (I did chuckle when Brent observed that the hagglets look a lot like The Donald):

http://www.robertburns.org.uk/Assets/Documents/haggisarticle.pdf

I had been looking forward to a stop into Redefined coffee, a regular stop when I was driving to AIG, and right next to the British food place.  It wasn’t there anymore – typical, I thought.  A quick search showed it had moved just around the corner on to the main street.  A really good location and a much bigger and more modern shop – just didn’t seem to have the same character as the old place, but the coffee was still the same.

Continuing the British food theme – I shared Vince’s pastrami scotch egg recipe recently.  Here are some pictures of the end result that he shared this week:

Don’t those look delicious.  We’re hoping to sample some when we finally make a visit to his cabin in the Adirondacks.

I watched a documentary about the first person with Down Syndrome to complete an Ironman marathon.

Chris Nikic is such an inspiration.  He doesn’t have any real sense of how far he’s come or how much longer remains, but just keeps plugging away, taking regular breaks for hugs.  A massive achievement.

On a somewhat related theme, I was amazed at this video of a dog limping alongside its owner.  Apparently the dog was taken to the vet to be checked out.  Absolutely nothing wrong with the leg, it was just limping in sympathy with its owner.  Wow!  The owner seemed more focused on the 300 pounds he had spent on vet bills.

Norma in Guatemala was telling me about the “Yardi Gras” houses in New Orleans.  There are no Mardi Gras parades this year and so, in typical NOLA creative fashion, folks are decorating their yards to emulate parade floats.  Some are really amazing.

We received a late entry for the new cactus naming contest this morning, and we’re going with it.  Patty christened it “Mark 3.0” and we’ll just use “3.0” as a nickname.  Apparently the idea came to her in the middle of the night last night.  Our boss when we worked together was Mark and he had quite the prickly personality – so he became knows at “the cactus”.  When I worked with him more recently he proclaimed himself “Mark 2.0”, the kinder and gentler version.  Which was true most days.  Brent’s submission of “Squid Rock” has stuck after we tried it out this week.

I’m a bit more than half way through “The Strangler” by William Landay and am getting thoroughly sucked into the crime tale.  Landay is the author of “Defending Jacob” – we enjoyed the TV series and so I thought I’d try his earlier novel.  Here’s what Amazon says about it:

“Before the New York Times bestselling success of Defending Jacob, William Landay wrote this widely acclaimed second novel of crime and suspense, which was named a Favorite Crime Novel of the Year by the Los Angeles Times and several other newspapers.
 
Boston, 1963. Meet the charming, brawling Daley brothers. Joe is a cop whose gambling habits have dragged him down into the city’s underworld. Michael is a lawyer, always the smartest man in the room. And Ricky is the youngest son, a prince of thieves whose latest heist may be his last. For the Daleys, crime is the family business—they’re simply on different sides of it. Then a killer, a man who hunts women with brutal efficiency and no sign of stopping, strikes too close to the Daley home. The brothers unite to find the Strangler, a journey that leads to the darkest corners of Boston—and exposes an even deeper mystery that threatens to tear the family apart.”

I chuckled at this quote from the book.  Exactly what I had just said to Diana when recommending “Kind of Blue” as an album to send Alicia:

“Kat bobbed her head to the strolling rhythm. “You like it?”  “I don’t know.  Maybe.” “It’s Miles Davis.”  “I know who he is!”  “Here take it.”  Ricky got the dust jacket and offered it to her.  The record was “Kind of Blue”.  “Keep it.  It gets better the more you listen to it.””

And another interesting passage that also includes Miles:

“It was a limitation of human consciousness.  We live only in the future and the past, we cannot perceive now.  Now occupies no space, a hypothetical gap between future and past.  Only an exceptional few could feel now, athletes and jazzmen and, yes, thieves like Ricky Daley, and even for them the sensation was fleeting, limited to the instant of creative action.  Cousy knew the feeling; Miles Davis too.  The boundless improvisational moment.”

I’m looking forward to the conclusion.

I’ve been reminiscing about Austin this week by listening to the local Sun radio station.  They played this excellent new song by Rob Baird.  I’m interested to know who produced this for him as it’s quite a departure from his previous sound.

The Sun radio host went on a bit of Django Reinhart kick and I found these two interesting versions of his tune “Nuages”:

And finally, here’s one from a band with such a great sound that I don’t listen to often enough:

I’m off to try to replace those porch bulbs again, jump on the elliptical for a while, and then settle in for the final day of the NFL playoffs.

Stay safe, patient and kind!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Limping dogs

Week in Review – January 17, 2021

“Playoffs?”

I had only had one entrant for the name the octopus and cactus contest from last week.  Brent suggested “Squid Rock” for the octopus – get it?  (a play on Kid Rock – Brent would say it isn’t funny if you have to explain it).  Much better than “Blink” that I had come up with – he’s blue and shoots ink: bl-ink.  I know – much lamer creativity.  “Wily Peyote” was his best entrant for the plant.  I like that better than “Tortoise” – my idea based on carrying your house on your back in a self contained and mobile unit.  I’ll leave this open for one more week for late entrants before the official naming ceremonies.

Delbert McClinton was the special guest on the BoH Tuesday night supper club this week.  It’s hard to believe he is 80 years old.  I’ve mentioned before that I saw him at the sorely missed Caravan of Dreams club in downtown Fort Worth on my second night in Texas back in 1985.  I was in heaven.  Gordy told a similar story of going to see him at the classic honky tonk, Gruene Hall, in the late 90s.  He made his way to the front row with his girlfriend, now wife, and Delbert sang an entire verse of a ballad to her while holding her hand.  McClinton had a lot of good stories to share.

Vince and I have made a point of sampling many gourmet scotch eggs over the years on our work visits to New York.  The current first place winner is from the Dead Rabbit cocktail bar in downtown.  He sent me this recipe for a Pastrami scotch egg:

A Crunchy Remix: Try This Pastrami Scotch Egg Recipe

Here’s what the author had to say about these:

“Most Scotch eggs begin with loose sausage meat, befitting a dish with roots as an English roadside snack. But as I sat at Pastrami Queen on New York’s Upper East Side a few weeks back eating the city’s best deli sandwich (sorry, Katz’s), it dawned on me that pastrami had serious potential as a Scotch egg sausage swap-in. Crusted with a mixture of coriander, garlic, black pepper and mustard — and blessed with a prodigious fat streak — it has a spice blend that can stand up to even the best sausage meat, not to mention an immutable connection to the city I call my home.

Make sure you get the fattiest pastrami you can find (specify when you order a pound from your butcher), and please (I’m begging) don’t opt for turkey pastrami. You’ll also need to dust off the food processor for this one; giving the pastrami a high-speed whirl binds the meat into an ideal liaison, making it relatively easy to wrap around the eggs. Serve them with a mustardy dressing and your next New York deli-style craving may just be satisfied at home.”

I’m not a huge pastrami fan, but these do sound worth a try.

I received some uplifting news from Alex in New Orleans on Friday.  Finally something to put on the calendar to look forward to – Jazzfest has been rescheduled for the 2nd and 3rd weekends of October.  We’ll have to see about changing our flights that were booked for April.  Should we go for the first or second weekend?  Maybe just move into Denny and Anne’s cottage for both?

Diana had to wait until after 10am for her run on Saturday morning – that’s when the temperature broke into the 40s.  I went upstairs to the elliptical while she was working much harder on the road.  We rewarded ourselves with a trip to Filtered in downtown McKinney for coffee, crossword, and quiche.

After returning home, I was determined to try and fix Penelope’s cup holder cover latch.  This has been a recurring problem for years and I’m usually able to jiggle it just the right way and get it closed.  The last few days it has refused to play along.  A replacement of the whole unit is available for over $300.  With that information, it seemed like an hour or so of my time to attempt a repair was a good trade.

The hardest part of the endeavor was figuring out the location of the Allen bolts in the glove box that held the unit in place.  That was a solid 20 minutes of effort to extract the annoyance.

That little white piece in the middle is the guilty party.  It doesn’t seem to have quite enough weight to it to fall down and latch reliably.  Cleaning and lubing didn’t help.  I wonder what will happen if I attach a small piece of mounting tape on the top?

It certainly seemed to work with the top off and not mounted back in the car.  I decided to give it a shot.  Reattaching with the Allen bolts wasn’t quite as onerous as the extraction.  Et voila merci!

That was a fun project – made more rewarding by the $300+ saved.  I put air in Penelope’s tires (pressure too low with the cold weather), made some minor repairs to the convertible top, and bid her good night.

A nice steam shower session had me fully relaxed and ready to watch the Rams vs Packers playoff game.

We attempted to ordered Thai for dinner from the new “Spoon and Fork” restaurant – but no delivery option available.  The old stand by of Zin Zen with their fungi salad and shrimp pesto flatbread worked out just fine.

We finished up Saturday watching the documentary “Carter: Rock and Roll President”.  I really enjoyed this film as it showed how much Jimmy Carter enjoyed all kinds of music and what an impact various groups like the Allman Bros had on his election.  A highlight was Bob Dylan quoting “Simple Man” by Lynyrd Synyrd at the end of the film and applying the lyrics to Carter:

“Take your time, don’t live too fast

Troubles will come, and they will pass”

Sunday began with a somewhat earlier run for both of us – temperatures were well into the 40s by 9am.  Then we were off on some shopping return excursions to Target and Lulu Lemon.  The latter unsuccessful as the wait line to enter the store was too long.  The things I do…

I’ve been looking forward to the Saints vs Buccaneers playoff game all week.  This photoshopped picture from Tom Brady is great.  He will be the oldest quarterback to ever compete in a playoff game at 43 and Drew Brees is 41, making for by far the oldest quarterback combination in a game ever.  Both are playing at a very high level and this should be a good game.

I read “& Sons” by David Gilbert this week.  I really enjoyed Gilbert’s short story “Cicadia” in an August 2020 edition of the New Yorker and decided to try one of his novels – “& Sons” got great reviews on its publication back in 2013.

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/08/24/cicadia

NPR said “Smart and savage…Seductive and ripe with both comedy and heartbreak, “& Sons” made me reconsider my stance on…the term “instant classic””

Do you ever look at the author photo inside the back cover of books and try to analyze what kind of person wrote this book?  I am somewhat guilty of that.  Here are two pretty different pictures of David Gilbert and then what he writes about one of the main characters of “&Sons”:

“A. N. Dyer stands in front of us as forever young, peering from his author photo, the only photo he ever used on all of his books, starting with “Ampersand.”  In that picture he’s pure knowing, his darkly amused eyes in league with a smile that edges toward a smirk, as if he’s seen what you’ve underlined, you fiend, you who might read a few pages and then pause and glance back at his face like you’ve spotted something magical yet familiar, a new best friend waiting for you on the other end.”

I loved these two descriptions from a section where one of Dyer’s sons thinks he has successfully pitched a screenplay to a studio, only to find that it’s a ruse to get him to convince his father to offer film rights to “Ampersand”:

“”Well he’s still dead.”  Rainer rose from his chair, like Oscar Wilde playing Winston Churchill getting bad news from the front.”

“The bubbles in the champagne shimmied up the flutes, a hundred phony smiles breaking the surface, like some Esther Williams routine, Richard thought, a memory of stinging sweetness flooding his mouth.”

I love the thought of champagne bubbles performing a synchronized swimming routine.

“He had always been a decent typist.  (Thanks to Exeter, we were all decent typists.)  The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy log.  Instead of sheep he tried counting foxes, the image of fox inspired by the crafty Mr. Tod.  Andrew loved Beatrix Potter as a boy, the fond memory of being read to aloud, the words coming on trails of smoke and scotch, his father’s wonderful voice.”

I was telling Diana about the beautiful illustrations in Beatrix Potter as we were reading a Winnie the Pooh story and admiring the drawings this week.  Something she missed out on that we’ll have to remedy.

I enjoyed the number of Talking Heads “Once in a Lifetime” references included in this paragraph:

“Twitchy and sweaty, with a brand-new retro haircut, horn-rimmed glasses, a vintage suit, a bow tie, he had the vibe of early-to-mid David Byrne, and what with Richard’s and Jamie’s appreciation for New Wave music and their teenage days watching those first videos on MTV, what with the water flowing underground and the large automobile, what with the early evening sky and its remains of light, you may find yourself hearing the same song and asking yourself the same question: How did I get here?”

This book was very large and broad in scale, albeit a bit pompous in places.  I did enjoy the read and being back in New York for a while.

“Greenlights”, the recent autobiography by Matthew McConaughey was a much quicker and lighter read.  It feels like sitting down and having a drink with the author and listening to entertaining and engaging stories about his life.

He attended the University of Texas in Austin to study law – hoping to be a criminal defense attorney, and while his grades were very good, he decided after 2 years that his heart really wasn’t in it and switched to the film school.

All the classic tales are in here – “Alright, Alright, Alright”, arrested for playing the bongos naked inside his house – later dropped for unlawful entry, the efforts McConaughey went to to land the lead role in Grisham’s “A Time to Kill”, and many others.

I particularly enjoyed a tale where he takes an impromptu trip to Mali in search of his favorite musician, Ali Farka Toure.  This was a big surprise – I wasn’t sure anyone else in the state of Texas was familiar with this musician.  I had been listening to Farka Toure’s excellent album with Ry Cooder earlier in the morning while starting the book.  Weird.

Open in Spotify

I enjoyed reading McConaughey’s love letter to New Orleans.

“Places are like people. They each have a particular identity.  In all my travels around the globe I’ve written in my journal about the culture of a place, its identity.  If a place and a people move me, I’ll write them a love letter.  New Orleans is one of those places.”

“Home of the front porch, not the back.  This engineering feat provides so much of your sense of community and fellowship as you relax facing the street and your neighbors across it.  Rather than retreating into the seclusion of the backyard, you engage with the goings-on of the world around you, on your front porch.”

“You don’t use vacuum cleaners, no, you use brooms and rakes to manicure.  Where it falls is where it lays, the swerve around the pothole, the duck beneath the branch.  Like a gumbo, your medley’s in the mix.”

I was pleased to read that on a recent episode of BBC radio’s desert island discs, David Gilmour, guitarist with Pink Floyd, picked the Kinks “Waterloo Sunset” as the number one disc he would take with him to a desert island.  This would be one of mine too, as evidenced by the Ray Davies signed soundwaves painting of this song hanging in the piano room – thanks Diana.

Paul McCartney released a new album a few weeks ago.  It’s the third installment in his series and is naturally called “McCartney III”.  I enjoyed listening to the record but it’s not one that I’ll be rushing back to.  I did enjoy this video by Roman Coppola (Francis Ford Coppola of Godfather and Apocalypse Now fame’s son).  Coppola made this completely remotely from the family vineyard in Napa – utilizing 46 remote cameras to capture McCartney as he played all the instruments and built up the track.  Oh to have ten percent of that talent.

That and the Coppolas – Sofia’s “Lost in Translation” with Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson is one of my all time favourite movies.  I use this Teams backdrop sometimes and put myself at the bar of the Tokyo Park Hyatt having a drink with Scarlett and keeping her safe from Murray:

I had the luxury of quite a bit of quiet reading time this week.  I found myself on a Bob Dylan kick early in the week and a Brian Eno kick later in the week.  Two entirely different artists for sure.  I think I was looking for some calm and soothing escape as the week unfolded.  I decided on a chronological Dylan exploration.  Having never listened to “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan” from 1963 from start to finish, I was astounded by the number of all time classics on this album – “Blowin’ in the Wind”, “Girl form the North Country”, “Master of War”, and this favourite:

Brian Eno has a catalog almost as vast as Dylan’s, with quite a variety from his ambient albums, to soundtracks, and numerous collaborations.  Here’s one that I hadn’t heard before and really enjoyed:

Open in Spotify

The weekend brought some jazz, having just introduced Alicia to the classic “Kind of Blue” by Miles Davis, I explored some not heard before John Coltrane:

Open in Spotify

And another 80 year old, the guy with the amazing sax tone – Charles Lloyd:

Open in Spotify

Stay calm and patient with everyone.

Week in Review – January 10, 2021

“Back to Work”

It was back to work for me this week, with Diana joining me in the workforce on Wednesday.  She had a couple of extra vacation days that she might as well use.  Back to work meant Christmas was over and needed to be packed up.

 

The special guest on the BoH Tuesday night supper club was Butch Walker.  We hadn’t heard of him but he turned out to be an excellent guest – a talented musician, great guitar player, and producer, who also appeared to be a really nice guy.  He is currently producing a new album for Billy Idol and described him at 63, still rolling up on a Harley with his trademark sneer.  He also recently produced an album for the Wallflowers.  I attempted to follow Butch on Instagram so that I could watch the guitar videos that he releases regularly – I was all set up but couldn’t figure out how to get the videos to play on my phone.  A call to my social media support tech (Alicia) revealed that I had quickly identified the big issue with Instagram and posted videos – not easy to watch them on your phone.  Oh well, here’s Butch trying out a new Fender guitar and rig:

My Wednesday started out poorly – had to get a dental crown.  Everything went smoothly and I did pick up a good story from Dr. Toney, who initially tried to make a living as a singer, before studying dentistry.  A song, “Bluer than Blue”, came on and he commented that the guy who wrote the song, Randy Goodrum, played the piano on an album he made in Nashville back in the 70s.  He went on to describe Goodrum’s piano style and tell me about a number of other hits that he had written.

Open in Spotify

I did something a wee bit crazy on Thursday – started the Couch to 5K (C25K) program again.  Stop yelling.  I know that’s what caused me to break my leg and this time I have some very fancy shoes and will be progressing through the program very slowly and building up strength before moving to the next level.  In a few months I’ll be ready to run with McD again.  We did head out for a run on Saturday morning with me alternating short runs with walks and Diana doing loops around me.

Saturday afternoon was reasonably productive.  I worked through a list that included troubleshooting the Ring doorbell, helping Diana to stow Christmas back in the attic, fixing the outside floodlights, checking the sprinkler heads, hanging my new painting, Campbell’s photo guitar, and the fishing rod that my Dad hand made for me years ago (finally got it from Los Gatos), and bleeding the aromatherapy system in the steam shower.  After all that I was ready to test out the steam shower – working perfectly.

A new octopus appeared in my section of the bathroom.  A gift that Diana picked up on our visit to Pacifica.  Would you like to suggest a name for him/her?

And while we’re thinking about names, how about one for this interesting cactus that we got from Adamo and Amy?  It doesn’t have any roots – you just run it under the tap once a week for a couple of minutes.

 

Sunday has been a quiet day so far.  It’s quite cold outside and we’re having some light snowfall.  Dallas proper has an inch or two of accumulation but just wet ground here.  I’m settling in to watch the New Orleans Saints play the Chicago Bears in the first round of the NFL playoffs in an hour or so.

I just received some great dogs in the snow videos.  Here are our Austin Wolfhound friends:

And my co-worker Nikki’s three dogs, including the 8 week old Staffordshire terrier puppy:

And then the poor baby needed to warm up:

I enjoyed “Blacktop Wasteland” by S.A. Cosby this week.  The story is about Beauregard “Bug” Montage, a loving father, faithful husband, and honest mechanic, who has a criminal past – those in the underworld know him as one of the best drivers in the business.  He’s been trying to lead an honest life, but everything is crumbling around him.  His stack of bills and final notices is huge.  His daughter needs money for college.  His mother is about to be kicked out of her retirement home.  Bug tries to work through it, but the shiny new car repair shop in town has cut his business in half.  That’s why he can’t say no when a former associate offers him a job robbing a jewelry store.  Eighty thousand for a day’s work.  But nothing is ever as easy as it seems, and someone knows who did it, and it’s not the police.

Cosby understands the psychology of the criminal mind, how money can turn someone into a criminal.  He knows that good people often do bad things for all the right reasons.  Bug is a complicated character who’s haunted by the ghost of his father, who was also a criminal and a driver, and the mix of guilt and pleasure he feels when racing away from the scene of a crime in a souped-up car.  Despite that pleasure, he’s been to prison, so he knows what’s at stake, and the only reason he gets back into the life is because financial pressures push him to it.  Crime means keeping his business running, his children fed, his mother safe, and giving his daughter a chance to be better than him by going to college.  Prison is scary, but the temptation of giving your children a chance silences that fear:

“He would tell himself later that he had slept on it. That he had mulled over the pros and cons and finally decided the benefits outweighed the risks. All that was true. However, in his heart he knew that when Ariel told him about skipping college, that was the moment he decided to take the job with Ronnie Sessions and hit the jewelry story.”

Racial tension is at the heart of “Blacktop Wasteland.”  Cosby, a Black man from southeastern Virginia, knows racism well.  He understands what it means to be Black in places where things like the use of the Confederate flag (which comes up in the novel) are still being debated today:

“Listen, when you’re black in America you live with the weight of people’s low expectations on your back every day.  They can crush you right down to the goddamn ground.  Think about it like it’s a race.  Everybody else has a head start and you dragging those low expectations behind you.  Choices give you freedom from those expectations.  Allows you to cut ’em loose.  Because that’s what freedom is.  Being able to let things go.  And nothing is more important than freedom.”

There’s an excellent and very long article about the history of COVID to date in the Jan 4th New Yorker magazine – “The Plague Year” by Lawrence Wright.  It’s 30 pages long and very detailed – providing backgrounds on all the major players involved in how to react, create tests and vaccines, and giving insights that I didn’t have on what went wrong along the way and why.
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/01/04/the-plague-year
One thing that I didn’t know:
January 28th:
“Should we shut down travel?” Trump asked.
“Yes,” Pottinger advised.
Pottinger left the Oval Office and walked to the Situation Room, where a newly formed Coronavirus Task Force was meeting.  People were annoyed with him.  “It would be unusual for an asymptomatic person to drive the epidemic in a respiratory disorder,” Fauci said.
Brent shared a very enlightening article about “Insurrection and the no True Scotsman Fallacy”:
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/machiavellians-gulling-the-rubes/202101/insurrection-and-the-no-true-scotsman-fallacy
Here’s the summary:

In effect, this reported statement by Trump appears to be saying that he does not need to call for peace, because in his view, his supporters are not the kind of people who cause trouble. Trump’s statement about “my people” betrays a fallacy in reasoning that has repeatedly manifested itself in the 2020 election as well as in events leading up to and continuing after it. 

The “no true Scotsman” fallacy is a rhetorical device used to gain an unfair advantage in arguments when a person, lacking facts and evidence, resorts to moving the goalposts. It can be an intentional evasion, or it can arise as the unintentional product of fallacious reasoning. The following example shows how the fallacy works (and also illustrates why it is called “no true Scotsman”):

Angus: No Scotsman puts sugar on his porridge.

Scotty: My uncle is a Scotsman, and he puts sugar on his porridge.

Angus: But no true Scotsman puts sugar on his porridge.

No True Scotsman vs. Insurrection

Applying this fallacy to Trump’s “my people” statement, one gets a hypothetical situation something like the following:

Aide: Should we prepare for you to make an appearance appealing for calm?

Trump: What about the other side? No one cared when they were rioting.

Aide: But, sir, rioters have breached the Capitol! We’re getting frantic calls from Senators and Representatives!

Trump: My people are peaceful. My people aren’t thugs

Brent goes on to offer a useful example closer to home:

A slightly less hostile insurrection:

D:  “I’ve drunken all my champagne!  K, be a Scotsman and run out for another case.”

K:  “Seriously, D?!  Don’t give me this ‘Scotsman’ nonsense.  It’s triple overtime in the Superbowl, the Cowboys are down by 5 but sitting on their 1 with 3 seconds left…”

D:  “No TRUE Scotsman would let his wife go without bubbles.”

BP:  “Brawp!  Brawp!  Brawp!”

K:  “I’ll be right back.”

I love this song that popped up on my Discover Weekly playlist by Swamp Dogg.  There’s not a lot of information available about this reclusive artist.
I stumbled across a really interesting new album – “Greenfields” by Barry Gibb, the only surviving Bee Gee.  He has re-envisioned Bee Gees songs as collaborations with country stars.  An interesting and enjoyable listen:

Week in Review – January 3rd, 2021

“4,948 miles later”

It seems just completely crazy that we were able to drive almost 5,000 miles over the last few weeks.  How did we do that?  One long day at a time.  Monday:  Las Vegas to Albuquerque.  Tuesday:  Albuquerque to McKinney.  Wednesday: “Rest Day”.  Thursday: McKinney to New Orleans.  Sunday: New Orleans to McKinney (and the reason this post is late again).

The drive home from California was uneventful overall.  Diana suggested having Ray and Amy over for “Happy Hour” on Wednesday night  – I agreed as long as there was a stop time of around 6pm.  How do you think that worked out?  You are correct – didn’t finish up until around 10pm and then had an intended early start for the drive to New Orleans on Thursday.

Driving to NOLA on New Year’s Eve was a bit more work.  Things started badly with pouring rain and multiple accidents and lane closures before we ever left Dallas.  There were some brief respites but I was mostly driving in rain and truck spray all day.  It was lovely to see Denny and Anne on arrival and they really spoiled us with some yummy snacks – an amazing cheese board, crab fingers from Tableaux, and some amazing Denny oyster and sauce combinations.

The ladies (with a little help from Denny) were able to polish off the magnum of good champagne that D received from Kris and Cat as a birthday gift.

We did manage to stay awake to usher in the New Year but were asleep in the wonderful guest cottage soon after.

The weather on New Year’s Day was perfect for me – high 60s, sunny, with zero humidity.  We had a very pleasant morning walk and run in Audubon park  – one of the best city parks in America.  The energizer bunny enjoyed the warmer weather and the scenery.

Various groups of friends stopped by for a mostly socially distanced afternoon gathering.  Denny cooked up oysters four different ways – much to the delight of McD.

She especially enjoys the freshly shucked and handed directly to her variety:

You can see the lovely day from this picture of the front porch and Mr. Jack’s house across Webster Street.

We rounded out the evening watching a livestream of Jason Isbell and his band from Nashville that was excellent.  Kenny and I had a friendly Old Fashioned contest.  I think the new wood chip drink smoker that I got from Diana for Christmas pushed mine ahead in the competition.

If it’s 01/02/21, then the Ogan twins must be 18.  They were born on 01/02/03 at 7:33 and 7:38am, and it has become traditional for us to join them for lunch at Commander’s Palace.   Before lunch I had arranged for Laura to take the energizer bunny out for a run – she did a good job running McD down to the levee for a total of 3.5 miles – one of Diana’s longer outings.  A good appetite had been worked up for the jazz brunch at Commander’s.  The only trouble with brunch versus a regular week day lunch is that the 25 cent martinis are not available.  We started with the crazy good turtle soup.  Then Diana enjoyed short ribs with a perfectly cooked poached egg and I couldn’t resist the boudin stuffed and lacquered TX quail.  Both were delicious and also made for great leftovers.  The festivities finished up with the ridiculous bread pudding soufflé and whiskey sauce and toques for the birthday boys.

The drive home on Sunday was very smooth with mostly light traffic and an arrival just after 5pm and before dark.  We are now home to stay for quite a while, with no more road trips on the calendar.

I have nothing much to report on the reading front this week – too much time behind the wheel and enjoying friends.  We did listen to “The Last Days of John Lennon” by James Patterson on the drive.  This is mostly a very detailed and interesting  history of Lennon and the Beatles, with small sections interspersed about Mark Chapman planning his assassination.  I would recommend this to anyone looking to learn more about the Beatles and their interactions over the years.

Michael Drapkin worked with me about a year ago and is currently working on his PhD.  He is a wonderful clarinet player and his thesis is around making orchestras more economically viable by rescoring pieces originally scored for massive ensembles for smaller groups.  Here’s his version of Richard Strauss –  Salome’s Dance of the Seven Veils – from 108 piece full symphony orchestra to 24 piece chamber orchestra.  Michael told me that the biggest challenge for a conductor will be to make sure the violins aren’t overwhelmed by the woodwind and percussion sections.  I think he did a great job and can only imagine how time consuming and detailed this work ends up being.

Changing gears completely, I’ve been on a bit of a jazz funk music kick this week.  Let’s start with the always fantastic Jaco Pastorius and band from his “Birthday Concert” doing “Chicken”:

Even funkier is Herbie Hancock’s “Chameleon”.  I love those keyboard sounds he lays down for the bass groove:

And finally something a bit more current from the reigning jazz funk masters, Snarky Puppy:

Stay calm and patient and at home (easy for me to say after 4,948 miles).