Simon: You are my beautiful sister. River: I threw up on your bed. Simon: Yep. Definitely my sister.

'War Stories'


Buffista Music II: Wrath of Chaka Khan  

There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.


tommyrot - Apr 29, 2004 7:04:07 am PDT #2456 of 10003
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

I suddenly have become obsessed with finding a copy of Robyn Hitchcock's Invisible Hitchcock. I was really into this album at a certain, um, "intense" time of my life.

It's out of print, and no used CD site that I've found has it in stock. I did manage to listen to low bitrate samples of a few tracks - they brought tears to my eyes as memories came flooding back....


Ginger - Apr 29, 2004 7:05:14 am PDT #2457 of 10003
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

Alt.Country. At last a category in which I can contribute:

David Olney - Deeper Well, Roses
Tom Russell - Hurricane Season, Poor Man's Dream
Fred Eaglesmith - Lipstick Lies & Gasoline
Kathleen Edwards - Failer
Kasey Chambers - The Captain
Buddy & Julie Miller - Buddy & Julie Miller
Robert Earl Keen - Gringo Honeymoon, Bigger Piece of Sky


msbelle - Apr 29, 2004 7:08:50 am PDT #2458 of 10003
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

I have two CDs to send to meara, I have been lazy.

ALSO! does anyone other than Carl Douglas sing "Kung Fu Fighting", I can't find it on iTunes.


Jon B. - Apr 29, 2004 7:09:56 am PDT #2459 of 10003
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

tommy - Invisible Hitchcock


tommyrot - Apr 29, 2004 7:14:56 am PDT #2460 of 10003
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Thanks Jon!

ALSO! does anyone other than Carl Douglas sing "Kung Fu Fighting", I can't find it on iTunes.

I think Robyn Hitchcock does... or maybe I'm thinking of some other '70s novelty song he covered.


msbelle - Apr 29, 2004 7:16:10 am PDT #2461 of 10003
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

I got it off musicmatch, but thanks.


joe boucher - Apr 29, 2004 7:19:24 am PDT #2462 of 10003
I knew that topless lady had something up her sleeve. - John Prine

Go Down, Moses is actually my favorite Faulkner, hayden (hence my email address), but A!A! is right there. "Wash" pairs nicely with "Barn Burning," too (which reminds me that it *is* available online -- because I put it there when I led an alumni seminar on the two), very similar themes & a number of scenes that echo one another. One of the advantages to reading an author's work as a totality, especially someone like Faulkner, is seeing his obsessions and seeing him search for the right vehicle to frame the story he wants to tell. The central conflict in Faulkner, it seems to me, is his profound love of his land and its people coupled with an unblinking yetnuanced recognition of its past and present sins (his language, but I concur). When Wash Jones belatedly acquires that clear vision it destroys him: "Better that all who remain of us be blasted from the face of earth than that another Wash Jones should see his whole life shredded from him and shrivel away like a dried shuck thrown onto the fire." He commits de facto suicide; Quentin actually kills himself. The young Sarty Snopes flees because he can't process what he now knows (including his complicity: do what's "right" and destroy his father or maintain the status quo and become part of the problem.) Ike McCaslin is Sarty grown up yet stuck in stasis and ineffectiveness, repudiating his legacy but ultimately realizing it can't be escaped. "The Bear" gives us Faulkner's extraordinary imagery of why the "past isn't even past": the New World was a new Eden and we poisoned it by chattel slavery (among other things). The sweat of the slaves watered the crops they tended, cotton and food, the former providing the money which built the society, the latter providing the nourishment for all who lived there -- America's Original Sin, the South's "curse," literally was ingested and became part of everyone who lived there, and their ancestors continued to drink from the poisoned well.

As you can see Faulkner gets me a little worked up. This is the music thread, so I'll stop. The Table Talk Faulkner thread is how I ended up here, and the Book of the Month I started with was A!A!. Guy running the thread didn't know what he was talking about, but it was fun anyway.

Love Melville. Respect but don't dig Pynchon. Eliot and I occasionally yell "Fickt nicht mit der Raketemensch!" at each other, but I want more than one tagline out of a 900 page book. I will say, though, that in the aftermath of 9/11, especially with the war in Afghanistan, and now with the "peace" (or at least post-"cessation of hostilities") in Iraq, I've had the urge to re-read the whole "In the Zone" section. Haven't done it, but still feel the urge. I will admit that I haven't put nearly the work into Pynchon that I did with Faulkner, and I'll stipulate that the former is much smarter than the latter -- though I think that F is the far greater artist. In a nutshell, I think the difficulty in Faulkner arises from his struggle to find an appropriate narrative technique to tell the stories he wants (one that conveys the struggle in his stories and characters), whereas I think Pynchon is willfully obscure and wants to dazzle his audience with how smart he is. I'm not saying there's not more to it than that, but I don't feel like putting in the work to get more out of it.

And now for <fanfare> music! Do you like/are you familiar with Jim Hall, hayden? With a few exceptions I'm not much of a jazz guitar fan, but Hall is one of the exceptions. And he's playing at the Vanguard this week & I think I'll go see him.


Jon B. - Apr 29, 2004 7:22:49 am PDT #2463 of 10003
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

does anyone other than Carl Douglas sing "Kung Fu Fighting",

Yep -- Robyn covered it on a benefit comp called Alvin Lives (In Leeds).


joe boucher - Apr 29, 2004 7:32:46 am PDT #2464 of 10003
I knew that topless lady had something up her sleeve. - John Prine

"Kung Fu Fighting"

One of the first records I ever bought. There were funky Chinamen from funky Chinatown/They were chopping them up, they were chopping them down. Love that stuff.


tommyrot - Apr 29, 2004 7:35:05 am PDT #2465 of 10003
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

You know, that's a little bit frightening....