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What's New:
4/8/09 - More for my use then anything,
but if you are interested, check out my practice JavaScript
page here.
1/27/09 - New Hunter pix are located
here.
FYI - if you want some writing, you really should be checking out my
blog.
9/14/08 - While under the weather, cleaned
up a travellog about my last hiking trip
with some pix.
Comments? Reactions? Rants? Email
me and let loose! |
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now playing:
- Roxy Music. For
Your Pleasure and Stranded.
Holy crap. Why did I wait so long to listen to early Roxy Music? Amazing
stuff here, alternately rocking and moody, with fantastic melodies.
Byian Ferry's laconic voice may not be for everyone, and there are elements
of late-period Roxy's synth-pop romanticism, but overall this is quality
70s rock with hardly a bad toon in the bunch. For a bonus, give Brian
Ferry's radical reworking of classic toons on his These Foolish
Things (highlight: Sympathy for the Devil sung as a decadant lounge
lizard.
- Brian Eno & Robert Fripp. Evening
Star. Ambient keyboard washes mixed with frippertronic guitar
loops and moody noodling. Absent the too-long final track, a wonderfully
evocative album
- Neil Young. Ragged
Glory Outtakes. Rehersals and alternate takes of toons from
Neil's late period highlight album with Crazy Horse. Unapologicically
idealistic and rocking - a fresh drink of water from today's mope-rock
and Roxy's irony.
- Can. Peel Sessions. When they were on, they were
ON. Mighty Girl is a piano-driven rocker, pulsing along for nine glorious
minutes, while "Return to BB City" and "Tape Kebap"
are synth-powered journies that couldn't farther from many of the static
synth epics out there.
- Booker T & the MG's. Greatest Hits.
Can't get enough of those solid organ blues.
- Steve Reich. Different Trains/Electric Counterpoint.
Did you know that Pat Metheny played guitar on Reich's Fast,
or that The Orb used a sample from it as the main riff in Little
Fluffy Clouds? Neither did I. Minimalism meets jazz meets electronica.
Much more powerful then it's 20-odd minutes suggests.
on the nightstand:
- What I Talk About When I Talk About Running. Haruki
Murakami. A low-key memoir about - duh - running and writing. Inspired
me to kick up my running from 2-3 times a week to 3-4 times a week...
- The Wall of the Sky, the Wall of the Eye: Stories.
Jonathan Lethem. For a writer with
so much promise that (I think) doesn't always deliver, this short
story collection is a real winner. The highlight for me is the business
man who is cursed to continually return from hell in order to live with
his suburban family.
- The Inmates are Running the Asylum. Alan Cooper.
A dead-on analysis of why software companies rely on developers to design
their products, and why this leads to the failure of so many software
projects.
- The
Amalgamation Polka. Stephen
Wright. A fasinatingly-well written account of a boy's adventures
in the Civil War-era United States. So well written that it takes a
lot of time to full grasp the sentences, time which I don't really have
at the moment...
- Don Quixote. Cervantes. Translated by Edith Grossman.
The classic in a modern translation. My first time through it and my
first reaction after the first 100 pages or so is that it's suprisingly
funny; you don't typically find humor in books that are labeled as classics
(the master, Shakespeare, excepted, of course).
- Jung's
Map of the Soul. Murray Stein.
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