Apropos of yesterday's post, here's a song I can't get out of my head lately, in the great tradition of songs wherein people tell you what they don't wanna do. Have you heard the new Kurt Vile album? It's maybe not quite as good as this one, but still probably the best album I've heard so far this year.
And here's a rock show you might want to know about, if you're in the area next week. Come one, come all! This time I will be into it, I swear.
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Madness!
Still here, still tired. Oh, lord, this week feels like it will never end, what with all the finishing of projects that still has to get done. But it will, and very soon, and then I'll be working on completely different kinds of projects. So weird...
I've been rereading Eckhart Tolle's A New Earth for I'd say realistically the ninth time at least. Somehow there's always surprising stuff in there that I need to hear, even though I feel now like I should be able to recite it verbatim. I've also been watching the new season of Mad Men. Have you? Oh boy, I thought after that double episode it was maybe getting a bit boring and overly slick, but I'm totally hooked again after this last weekend's one. Way to go, Trudy, am I right?
Anyway, there are lots of interesting parallels between the show and the book. I've definitely noticed Buddhist themes popping up on MM before, but doing Tolle and Weiner together really makes for some extra levels of enjoyment on both sides. Check out these things-said-by-Eckhart-Tolle-or-Don-Draper, e.g.:
WRT the last quote, by the way, I went to see Revolution in the theatre tonight with Alison. It's a really powerful documentary by the guy who did Sharkwater, this time about the larger issues involved in saving life on this planet, especially our own. It's awful and frightening, and everyone should see it, because we're all going to be extinct in about 50 years if we don't start getting frightened really fast. Especially Canadians — we really suck. I noticed that no one in the audience could look each other in the eye when it was over, even though it ends on a note of hope. And even though I'm quite sure none of us voted for Harper.
I've been rereading Eckhart Tolle's A New Earth for I'd say realistically the ninth time at least. Somehow there's always surprising stuff in there that I need to hear, even though I feel now like I should be able to recite it verbatim. I've also been watching the new season of Mad Men. Have you? Oh boy, I thought after that double episode it was maybe getting a bit boring and overly slick, but I'm totally hooked again after this last weekend's one. Way to go, Trudy, am I right?
Anyway, there are lots of interesting parallels between the show and the book. I've definitely noticed Buddhist themes popping up on MM before, but doing Tolle and Weiner together really makes for some extra levels of enjoyment on both sides. Check out these things-said-by-Eckhart-Tolle-or-Don-Draper, e.g.:
- The people in the advertising industry know very well that in order to sell things that people don't really need they must convince them that those things will add something to how they see themselves or are seen by others; in other words, add something to their sense of self.
- Paradoxically, what keeps the so-called consumer society going is the fact that trying to find yourself through things doesn't work: The ego satisfaction is short-lived and so you keep looking for more, keep buying, keep consuming.
- Even though success is a reality, its effects are temporary.
- The ego wants to want more than it wants to have. And so the shallow satisfaction of having is always replaced by more wanting. This is the psychological need for more, that is to say, more things to identify with. It is an addictive need, not an authentic one.
- You're happy with fifty percent? You're on top and you don't have enough. You're happy because you're successful, for now. But what is happiness? It's a moment before you need more happiness. I won't settle for fifty percent of anything. I want one hundred percent. You're happy with your agency? You're not happy with anything, you don't want most of it, you want all of it. And I won't stop until you get all of it.
- The physical needs for food, water, shelter, clothing, and basic comforts could be easily met for all humans on the planet, were it not for the imbalance of resources created by the insane and rapacious need for more, the greed of the ego. It finds collective expression in the economic structures of this world, such as the huge corporations, which are egoic entities that compete with each other for more. Their only blind aim is profit. They pursue that aim with absolute ruthlessness. Nature, animals, people, even their own employees, are no more than digits on a balance sheet, lifeless objects to be used, then discarded.
WRT the last quote, by the way, I went to see Revolution in the theatre tonight with Alison. It's a really powerful documentary by the guy who did Sharkwater, this time about the larger issues involved in saving life on this planet, especially our own. It's awful and frightening, and everyone should see it, because we're all going to be extinct in about 50 years if we don't start getting frightened really fast. Especially Canadians — we really suck. I noticed that no one in the audience could look each other in the eye when it was over, even though it ends on a note of hope. And even though I'm quite sure none of us voted for Harper.
Tuesday, April 09, 2013
Now It Can Be Told
But I'm too tired to tell it properly. OK, I'll just come out with it: I have a new job! It's as associate art director for the Shambhala Sun magazine. I went for an interview last Monday, and there was a message waiting for me when I got home that I'd gotten it!
It's not quite the same job I applied for last year, but very similar. My friend Meg got that one, which was doing double duty for the Sun and their new, more broadly aimed offshoot, Mindful. Now it has turned into a position working just for Mindful, so the Sun part of the job became a new opening. That works out great for me, because I am actually much more interested in the content of the Sun than in Mindful. And plus, now Meg works there too!
I got to be a lot clearer this time around about why I wanted to work there, having had a year to kick myself over my unpreparedness in the previous interview. And I also got some hipper pants and shoes, the latter of which I'm convinced are what really got me the job.
So now I'm in the process of dismantling my freelance business. It's sad but also really exciting. I'm looking forward to getting out of the house every day and seeing real people. And it will be nice to have a regular paycheque, with health benefits and paid vacations. But mostly I'll be happy to be working on a publication that I actually enjoy reading, putting stuff into the world that I think lots of folks need and want to hear.
I start working there on the 22nd, and until then I'm working long hours trying to get all outstanding work done before other designers take over my clients' business. The clients are all super understanding about my leaving for my dream job, but they also suddenly need everything done that's been sitting dormant until now. Late nights and early mornings...
Tomorrow I'll be meeting Meg downtown for lunch, though, and afterwards she's going to show me some of the processes I'll need to know about. That will be my first real tour of the magazine's offices.
They occupy a floor of the Centennial building, which is coincidentally the same building my dad worked in when I was a kid in the seventies, on the top floor. It kind of looks like a smaller version of the building Bob Hartley's office was presumably in, as indicated by the camera panning up it before we saw Bob sitting at his desk on the old Bob Newhart Show. I used to go in with my dad sometimes when he had to get work done on the weekends. I would lean my head against the window and try not to freak out about how incredibly high up we were (probably about 12 stories, I think).
Or else I'd type hilarious messages about poop and my friends and my friends' poop into the keypunch machine and print them on cards full of numbers and rectangular holes, while my dad puttered around in a room full of wall-sized boxes and reel-to-reel tapes that he called a "computer." I have no idea what he was doing in there, but it involved giant paper constantly coming out of a very loud dot matrix printer.
Anyway, the elevators in that building still smell the same as they did then, I'm happy to report, and they even have the same square buttons with the Futura numbers like a Wes Anderson film. So, needless to say, I'm looking forward to calling the place home from nine to five very soon.
It's not quite the same job I applied for last year, but very similar. My friend Meg got that one, which was doing double duty for the Sun and their new, more broadly aimed offshoot, Mindful. Now it has turned into a position working just for Mindful, so the Sun part of the job became a new opening. That works out great for me, because I am actually much more interested in the content of the Sun than in Mindful. And plus, now Meg works there too!
I got to be a lot clearer this time around about why I wanted to work there, having had a year to kick myself over my unpreparedness in the previous interview. And I also got some hipper pants and shoes, the latter of which I'm convinced are what really got me the job.
So now I'm in the process of dismantling my freelance business. It's sad but also really exciting. I'm looking forward to getting out of the house every day and seeing real people. And it will be nice to have a regular paycheque, with health benefits and paid vacations. But mostly I'll be happy to be working on a publication that I actually enjoy reading, putting stuff into the world that I think lots of folks need and want to hear.
I start working there on the 22nd, and until then I'm working long hours trying to get all outstanding work done before other designers take over my clients' business. The clients are all super understanding about my leaving for my dream job, but they also suddenly need everything done that's been sitting dormant until now. Late nights and early mornings...
Tomorrow I'll be meeting Meg downtown for lunch, though, and afterwards she's going to show me some of the processes I'll need to know about. That will be my first real tour of the magazine's offices.
They occupy a floor of the Centennial building, which is coincidentally the same building my dad worked in when I was a kid in the seventies, on the top floor. It kind of looks like a smaller version of the building Bob Hartley's office was presumably in, as indicated by the camera panning up it before we saw Bob sitting at his desk on the old Bob Newhart Show. I used to go in with my dad sometimes when he had to get work done on the weekends. I would lean my head against the window and try not to freak out about how incredibly high up we were (probably about 12 stories, I think).
Or else I'd type hilarious messages about poop and my friends and my friends' poop into the keypunch machine and print them on cards full of numbers and rectangular holes, while my dad puttered around in a room full of wall-sized boxes and reel-to-reel tapes that he called a "computer." I have no idea what he was doing in there, but it involved giant paper constantly coming out of a very loud dot matrix printer.
Anyway, the elevators in that building still smell the same as they did then, I'm happy to report, and they even have the same square buttons with the Futura numbers like a Wes Anderson film. So, needless to say, I'm looking forward to calling the place home from nine to five very soon.
Tuesday, April 02, 2013
Schleprock
I have some big news to report, but not quite yet. Soon, soon. Meanwhile, let me tell you about this show The Reference Desk played at Jacob's Lounge in Dartmouth on the weekend. This is not a self-congratulatory story, if that makes any difference to whether you feel like reading it. It is a bit long, though.
We were the first of three bands, and there were quite a few people there. Quite a few hip people whose opinions I actually care about, including the members of the other two bands. I always get somewhat nervous playing live shows, but this night I was extra anxious. It probably had to do with the big news I'm not telling you about yet, plus I wasn't sure whether Amber would be coming in from Musquodoboit Harbour with her aunt who has probably never attended an indie rock show in her life and already has mixed feelings about me, plus I'd heard there might be a fairly sizeable crowd according to the Facebook event page, possibly because Joel Plaskett may or may not have mentioned the show on stage a couple of nights earlier. Anyway, for whatever reason, before the show even started I felt like this:
And also a bit like this kid:
(Sorry — no good English versions of that scene available. We've all seen it though, right? Poor Lawrence...)
Unfortunately, I didn't have Jack Black there to tell me how cool I am, so I just had to tough it out feeling uncool and incredibly self-conscious. Sometimes that can work out OK, if I can just go with the shy weirdo vibe and inhabit it as an interesting persona. David Byrne taught me that trick. But there were extra problems this night, because the microphone I was singing into was a weird kind I'm not used to, and I couldn't figure out how to get the angle right while still being able to see what my guitar-playing hands were doing, if necessary. Turns out it's more often necessary than I would have thought.
Besides all that, there are no monitors at Jacob's. Usually the musicians on a stage get to hear their own special mix of what everything sounds like through small speakers that are aimed at them (monitors), because they have to be behind the speakers that are pointed out at the audience (the "PA"). If the microphones get in front of the latter speakers, they'll feed back like crazy, because those speakers are generally super loud. But even though they're loud enough for the whole audience to have its ears blasted by them, they're also directional, so that listening to what's going on from behind them gives you a weird, muddled perception with no detail. So the smaller speakers give the musicians a quiet but more accurate idea of what they sound like. Sometimes the monitors can even be given a special mix that's different from what the audience is hearing, if a musician needs to hear certain things better than others in order to perform well. That's called being a "diva." Not really — it's perfectly acceptable when available, although I always feel a bit sheepish about asking for "a little bit more of the rhythm guitar" or whatever.
Anyway, if you're a musician, sorry for the preceding paragraph. The point is that Jacob's doesn't have monitors, so it can be kind of hard to hear what you and your bandmates are doing. Last time we played there, it didn't seem to be a problem, but this time it was really throwing me. I had to be extra careful about my singing, to make sure I wasn't accidentally belting out some completely inappropriate note. That meant I couldn't just relax and let my voice do what it felt like doing to a certain extent. I also could barely make out the bass, and my guitar sounded like utter garbage to me — somehow both too loud and too quiet at the same time. It's an awful feeling when you're trying to get a song across to an audience, and you really want them to like it, but to you it sounds just terrible. Hard to fake being into it in that case, and probably just embarrassing to everyone if you try.
So I just kept playing, reminding myself that it must sound all right to the audience, because they were very appreciative after each song. But I could feel that I had a really sour look on my face the whole time, and there didn't seem to be anything I could do about it. I thought about what it would be like to watch a performance where the singer had such a sour look on his face, and that made me feel worse and look even sourer. I think I even sighed with exhaustion at the end of one song. The set seemed to go on and on... Why did we write such a long set list? Did we have to play every song we know? And why were all the songs so energetic and aggressively catchy, when my mood was more suited to a slow number with minimal chord changes? Who wrote these stupid songs, anyway?
In desperation, a few times I looked back at my bandmates for some camaraderie. Maybe we could all laugh at what a taxing show this was turning out to be. But there seemed to be a huge physical distance between us, so that I couldn't even get their attention. Besides, they had their heads down and wore looks of extreme concentration, obviously having just as hard a time as I was...
I wish I had a hilarious surprise ending to this story, but in fact all that happened was that we continued to work really hard and eventually made it all the way through the set. People said it sounded really good out front and that we shouldn't worry about what the onstage sound was like. Ron said it was our best show ever, but he always says that. Amber turned out to be there with her aunt (they had come in a few songs into the set and slowly made their way past the front of the stage without me even seeing them), and they had both enjoyed it. But I was inconsolable. I didn't even care whether it sounded good or not. What really bothered me was that I got so invested in all the problems that I couldn't manage to have any kind of a good time or at least have an entertainingly authentic bad time. Instead, I just turned inward and "performed," in the worst sense of the word. I know you'll say it doesn't matter, and everyone has good shows and bad shows, and you'll be right. But that night, I had disrespected the spirit of rock with my inauthentic self-preserving attitude, and the whole next day I couldn't listen to any music out of utter shame.
But I feel OK about it now. Just thought you might appreciate some insight into the periodic nightmare that is caring about one's art.
We were the first of three bands, and there were quite a few people there. Quite a few hip people whose opinions I actually care about, including the members of the other two bands. I always get somewhat nervous playing live shows, but this night I was extra anxious. It probably had to do with the big news I'm not telling you about yet, plus I wasn't sure whether Amber would be coming in from Musquodoboit Harbour with her aunt who has probably never attended an indie rock show in her life and already has mixed feelings about me, plus I'd heard there might be a fairly sizeable crowd according to the Facebook event page, possibly because Joel Plaskett may or may not have mentioned the show on stage a couple of nights earlier. Anyway, for whatever reason, before the show even started I felt like this:
And also a bit like this kid:
(Sorry — no good English versions of that scene available. We've all seen it though, right? Poor Lawrence...)
Unfortunately, I didn't have Jack Black there to tell me how cool I am, so I just had to tough it out feeling uncool and incredibly self-conscious. Sometimes that can work out OK, if I can just go with the shy weirdo vibe and inhabit it as an interesting persona. David Byrne taught me that trick. But there were extra problems this night, because the microphone I was singing into was a weird kind I'm not used to, and I couldn't figure out how to get the angle right while still being able to see what my guitar-playing hands were doing, if necessary. Turns out it's more often necessary than I would have thought.
Besides all that, there are no monitors at Jacob's. Usually the musicians on a stage get to hear their own special mix of what everything sounds like through small speakers that are aimed at them (monitors), because they have to be behind the speakers that are pointed out at the audience (the "PA"). If the microphones get in front of the latter speakers, they'll feed back like crazy, because those speakers are generally super loud. But even though they're loud enough for the whole audience to have its ears blasted by them, they're also directional, so that listening to what's going on from behind them gives you a weird, muddled perception with no detail. So the smaller speakers give the musicians a quiet but more accurate idea of what they sound like. Sometimes the monitors can even be given a special mix that's different from what the audience is hearing, if a musician needs to hear certain things better than others in order to perform well. That's called being a "diva." Not really — it's perfectly acceptable when available, although I always feel a bit sheepish about asking for "a little bit more of the rhythm guitar" or whatever.
Anyway, if you're a musician, sorry for the preceding paragraph. The point is that Jacob's doesn't have monitors, so it can be kind of hard to hear what you and your bandmates are doing. Last time we played there, it didn't seem to be a problem, but this time it was really throwing me. I had to be extra careful about my singing, to make sure I wasn't accidentally belting out some completely inappropriate note. That meant I couldn't just relax and let my voice do what it felt like doing to a certain extent. I also could barely make out the bass, and my guitar sounded like utter garbage to me — somehow both too loud and too quiet at the same time. It's an awful feeling when you're trying to get a song across to an audience, and you really want them to like it, but to you it sounds just terrible. Hard to fake being into it in that case, and probably just embarrassing to everyone if you try.
So I just kept playing, reminding myself that it must sound all right to the audience, because they were very appreciative after each song. But I could feel that I had a really sour look on my face the whole time, and there didn't seem to be anything I could do about it. I thought about what it would be like to watch a performance where the singer had such a sour look on his face, and that made me feel worse and look even sourer. I think I even sighed with exhaustion at the end of one song. The set seemed to go on and on... Why did we write such a long set list? Did we have to play every song we know? And why were all the songs so energetic and aggressively catchy, when my mood was more suited to a slow number with minimal chord changes? Who wrote these stupid songs, anyway?
In desperation, a few times I looked back at my bandmates for some camaraderie. Maybe we could all laugh at what a taxing show this was turning out to be. But there seemed to be a huge physical distance between us, so that I couldn't even get their attention. Besides, they had their heads down and wore looks of extreme concentration, obviously having just as hard a time as I was...
I wish I had a hilarious surprise ending to this story, but in fact all that happened was that we continued to work really hard and eventually made it all the way through the set. People said it sounded really good out front and that we shouldn't worry about what the onstage sound was like. Ron said it was our best show ever, but he always says that. Amber turned out to be there with her aunt (they had come in a few songs into the set and slowly made their way past the front of the stage without me even seeing them), and they had both enjoyed it. But I was inconsolable. I didn't even care whether it sounded good or not. What really bothered me was that I got so invested in all the problems that I couldn't manage to have any kind of a good time or at least have an entertainingly authentic bad time. Instead, I just turned inward and "performed," in the worst sense of the word. I know you'll say it doesn't matter, and everyone has good shows and bad shows, and you'll be right. But that night, I had disrespected the spirit of rock with my inauthentic self-preserving attitude, and the whole next day I couldn't listen to any music out of utter shame.
But I feel OK about it now. Just thought you might appreciate some insight into the periodic nightmare that is caring about one's art.
Monday, March 25, 2013
Productive Despite Myself
Monday morning. I hope everyone had a nice weekend. The vast quantities of work that have to get done around here continue, preventing me from spending any time on blogging or even emailing, let alone anything that requires standing up or looking at things that are not a computer.
That sun's supposed to be going down instead of coming up, by the way (remnant of an earlier verse sequence), but I can't be bothered to go back and fix it. Now to get some more work done!
However, I was able to get out on Saturday to buy some very needed new pants. When it comes to clothes, I pretty much agree with Harvey Pekar that people spend way too much money on them and then look like crap anyway. And I really hate the ordeal of trying to find something you even like and/or fit into just so you can hand over your hard-earned cash. So it was nice of Alison to come with me and offer her advice. We spent most of the afternoon looking in every store we could think of. I started getting tired and very frustrated, but the "one last store" we tried had lots of decent pants that were available in my size. Sure, they were expensive. But I would've paid a couple of hundred dollars just to stop shopping at that point.
Other than that, besides nine billable hours of work, I also got a new song recorded this weekend. It was rattling around in my head and driving me crazy, so I just had to get it out, even though there really wasn't any time to spend on it. It's fairly scrappy in quality, therefore, but I finished it super fast and didn't even use any microphones. Garageband is incredible these days! It's unbelievable to me that I can sing an idea to my laptop and come away a couple of hours later with something that sounds this good.
That sun's supposed to be going down instead of coming up, by the way (remnant of an earlier verse sequence), but I can't be bothered to go back and fix it. Now to get some more work done!
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Happy St. Patrick's Day
After Black History Month, I'm glad we now get to celebrate the history of pride and suffering that is the Irish identity. It's only fitting, as they were the ones used mainly as slaves by the British until the latter stumbled on the idea that bringing shiploads of Africans in for that purpose would mean their slaves would speak a multitude of mutually incomprehensible languages, and hence couldn't organize against their owners as easily as the pesky Erinese had. Once that idea had caught on, it wasn't long before the strategy was taken up by the Americas and other colonies, freeing the Irish to live a life of peace and liberty in their abject poverty.
In solidarity with this brave and indomitable people, may I present my rendition of this traditional Irish ballad? Sorry about the sound distortion. I got a little too passionate at times.
I'll also, of course, be drinking and subsequently vomiting gallons of green beer like everyone else.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Sounds of the Human Condition

Poem Addressing People Who Are Tired, Hungry, or Horny
These things can wait. This is a very good poem and you’d be very myopic to lose sight of this beauty simply because some of your baser needs are asserting themselves. I’ll keep this short, but you should exercise some control, okay? Stay with me here. Allow this poem to carry you beyond yourself, transcending your mortal flesh as you wed yourself with the potentially infinite.
- Peter Davis
And, hey, speaking of uncontrollable noises, lately I keep getting woken up in the middle of the night by loud, horrible screams. That's a pretty awful thing to happen, but not as awful as when I realize they're coming from me. Some kind of nightmare keeps scaring me so much that I have to wake myself up by yelling out loud, and let me tell you, the screams of an unconscious person trying to become a conscious person would be horrific enough even if both of those people were NOT myself. If only I could remember the dreams when I wake up, I might be able to get to the heart of what's bothering me. But they immediately withdraw like slippery sea creatures under a rock before my memory can grab hold of them.
Psychic Fair and The Reference Desk will both be contributing to the racket that St. Patrick's Day at Gus' Pub promises to be. This Sunday, starting at 1:00 in the afternoon, the bar is hosting 14 different bands, offering live indie rock until well past the bedtime of anyone with any kind of conventional job to get back to on Monday. I'll be there at 5:something and again sometime after 10. Stop by if you're in the mood for some loud music and ironic young people enacting borderline offensive cultural stereotypes in the name of getting drunk.
Friday, March 08, 2013
Stir Crazy
Sorry no bloggy blog. Too much worky work. Today I finally felt sort of on top of things, though, so I was able to get outside for awhile and see some other members of my species wandering around. From what I could tell, I'm still passing as human.
Still, it'll be nice to have a weekend now. I didn't really get one last time around, there was so much work to catch up on. Looks like it's going to be a nice one, too, so I'm hoping to get some nature walking in — all work and no play makes Jack pretty much unfit for social interaction.
(By the way, Jack, happy birthday. And Henry, and Hannah. And happy International Women's Day, too!)
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Born Again Atheist
Crow carrying twig
flies up and down beside me
out the bus window.
Today was sunny and warm and seemed to be full of magical signs expressing a newfound freedom and joy. Many involved crows, strangely, since I usually think of them as symbols of evil and decay. But maybe they were telling me that true freedom and rebirth require acceptance and appreciation of death. Who knows?
Some were more straightforward. I had a therapy appointment downtown in the morning that went really well. I had taken the bus, but the day was so nice when I left that I decided to walk across town to get my hair cut. A poster on a telephone pole I passed said "Future Possible" in large letters over an open green field. It was advertising a series of classical concerts. The next one I saw congratulated me on my "Good Whork," in an ornate, gothic typeface. I marvelled at the relative transparency of the universe's usually quite inscrutable intentions, and patted my own back on its behalf. A block later, I saw the same goth poster again and realized this time that it was actually for an upcoming show by a metal band called "Goat Whore." But I was already in too good a mood to do anything but laugh about it.
A couple of days ago felt like:
But today was much more:
flies up and down beside me
out the bus window.
Today was sunny and warm and seemed to be full of magical signs expressing a newfound freedom and joy. Many involved crows, strangely, since I usually think of them as symbols of evil and decay. But maybe they were telling me that true freedom and rebirth require acceptance and appreciation of death. Who knows?
Some were more straightforward. I had a therapy appointment downtown in the morning that went really well. I had taken the bus, but the day was so nice when I left that I decided to walk across town to get my hair cut. A poster on a telephone pole I passed said "Future Possible" in large letters over an open green field. It was advertising a series of classical concerts. The next one I saw congratulated me on my "Good Whork," in an ornate, gothic typeface. I marvelled at the relative transparency of the universe's usually quite inscrutable intentions, and patted my own back on its behalf. A block later, I saw the same goth poster again and realized this time that it was actually for an upcoming show by a metal band called "Goat Whore." But I was already in too good a mood to do anything but laugh about it.
A couple of days ago felt like:
But today was much more:
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Charlotte Glencross: The Fabric of Her Life
I'm in Fredericton this weekend, checking out a retrospective of my late aunt Chooch's textile art with some of my family. The show is way more thorough and generally fabulous than I'd anticipated. Lots of batiks and weavings I had either forgotten about or never seen before. There's a beautifully designed catalogue that fits all the pieces into a comprehensive narrative of her life. And there's even a corner in which they've set up a mock studio, including her loom, books, and lots of fabric bits and notebooks from her working process, kind of like the Maud Lewis house. It's all really impressive and evocative.
Here are some photos my sister Erika took.
This is one of my favourites from the early 70s. I'd seen it at that time, but somehow it escaped my memory until I saw it again yesterday.
The studio installation.
M. Hulot was particularly interested in this one large batik.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Faith
Sometimes I am the water.
Sometimes I am a sailboat navigating the waves.
And sometimes I am a monkey trying desperately not to drown.
At those times, I remind myself
That sometimes I am the water.
Sometimes I am a sailboat navigating the waves.
And sometimes I am a monkey trying desperately not to drown.
At those times, I remind myself
That sometimes I am the water.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
New Face on Desk Duty
Our good friend Meg joined The Reference Desk last night on bass for four songs. They sounded way better than any of the other songs we'd played, so I guess that seals the deal... We're a three-piece now! Thanks to all the folks who came out to see us in Dartmouth on a rainy night. It was fun.
Spooky photo by KC
Thursday, February 14, 2013
HVD II
Coincidentally, my horoscope had this to say today (I don't usually pay much attention to horoscopes, but if their advice seems apt, insofar as it could be good advice for anyone, I will take it into consideration):
This Valentine season, meditate on the relentlessness of your yearning for love. Recognize the fact that your eternal longing will never leave you in peace. Accept that it will forever delight you, torment you, inspire you, and bewilder you — whether you are alone [yes] or in the throes of a complicated relationship [also yes]. Understand that your desire for love will just keep coming and coming and coming, keeping you slightly off-balance and pushing you to constantly revise your ideas about who you are [yup, sounds about right]. Now read this declaration from the poet Rilke [ooh, I love Rilke] and claim it as your own: "My blood is alive with many voices that tell me I am made of longing."So, I should just love my love of love, instead of problematizing it? Lean into the grasping in order to appreciate it, rather than treating it as an affliction to be overcome? Sounds dangerous but possibly true. I will definitely sit with this for awhile...
HVD
Some Valentine cards
seem like they want something more
than to be a gift.
Somehow, most of us have forgotten that we are pure love and so we seek it outside ourselves. This longing is very useful in that it serves to activate your quest for love. Ultimately this search for the beloved leads you to the realization that you feel love when you are being loving, not when you are being loved by another.
Deborah Anapol
The Seven Natural Laws of Love
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Strumming My Own Guitar
Did I tell you that the band I'm in with Kristina Parlee, The Reference Desk, recorded some songs and put three of them out as an EP of sorts? Probably not. You can listen to and/or download it here. And hey, I just saw today that it's on the local college radio station's top 30, even though they'd told us a 3-song "EP" probably wouldn't get played. All right!
We're playing our second show ever this Saturday night at Jacob's Lounge in Dartmouth. There'll be a surprise guest. Come and see us, if you feel so inclined.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Warm Impermanence
Sidewalk slush rivers
are fun for little children
and nobody else.
We got even more snow last night, but today it's all melting. There was a beautiful thick winter fog this morning — the kind we only get in the Maritimes. I had a treacherous half-hour walk to a 9:30 client meeting along narrow sidewalks full of water with nowhere to go.
I was running late and so panicked when I found myself stuck behind a short-legged woman. But she was a determined walker, and — more importantly — wearing boots that were more sensible than
mine, so our wildly different routes ended up taking about the same amount of time. For my part, I kept
imagining a dotted line trailing behind me, like one of those Family Circus cartoons where Billy or Jeffy makes some simple task into an Odyssean study in childish whimsy.
Really, though, my puddle-hopping, bank-climbing Mr. Bean jig probably would have gotten more laughs in real time (say, for instance, if the galoshed dwarf had ever turned around to see what all the huffing and puffing behind her was about) than any post-mortem diagram Bil Keane could ever draw. I realize that's not saying much...
Hey, have you been watching Girls this season? And has it been making your stomach hurt as much as mine? I'm finding the 20-somethings' emotionally cavalier escapades really anxiety-producing this time around, but maybe the story lines have just been a little too close to home. Don't get me wrong, though, I've been enjoying the hell out of it, possibly even more than the first season. I thought this last weekend's episode, "One Man's Trash," was especially beautiful and sad. You?
are fun for little children
and nobody else.
I was running late and so panicked when I found myself stuck behind a short-legged woman. But she was a determined walker, and — more importantly — wearing boots that were more sensible than
mine, so our wildly different routes ended up taking about the same amount of time. For my part, I kept
![]() |
Image via Nietzsche Family Circus — highly recommended. |
Really, though, my puddle-hopping, bank-climbing Mr. Bean jig probably would have gotten more laughs in real time (say, for instance, if the galoshed dwarf had ever turned around to see what all the huffing and puffing behind her was about) than any post-mortem diagram Bil Keane could ever draw. I realize that's not saying much...
Hey, have you been watching Girls this season? And has it been making your stomach hurt as much as mine? I'm finding the 20-somethings' emotionally cavalier escapades really anxiety-producing this time around, but maybe the story lines have just been a little too close to home. Don't get me wrong, though, I've been enjoying the hell out of it, possibly even more than the first season. I thought this last weekend's episode, "One Man's Trash," was especially beautiful and sad. You?
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Nowhere to Look
We dig through the snow
for something or somebody
and fall asleep, lost.
I was attempting the former yesterday in the middle of some of the heaviest dumping, as I had to pick up my bass guitar from the music store where I'd left it for some neck adjustment. Psychic Fair (= The Lodge, but with Mike O'Neill replaced by frontman extraordinaire Josh Salter) had a show to play in Dartmouth last night, so it was important to get my bass back.
Unfortunately, the store was closed due to the bad weather. I kind of flipped out a little, pulling repeatedly on the locked doors as if breaking the lock would somehow turn the store's lights back on and bring its employees up from the basement, where I was sure they were hiding from me.
Didn't work. So I trudged home through the deep drifts and blowing powder, wondering how Jacob's Lounge would respond that night to a bassless Psychic Fair. The show was cancelled in the end, so I never got to find out.
But the bleak, desperate flavour of my walk through the blinding whiteness made me think a lot about the constant search outside myself for some kind of contentment or meaning that goes on in my mind. I've seen it referred to in Buddhist literature as "grasping," which strikes me as a pretty apt term for it. It's an almost universal human failing, and it always leads to suffering.
Generally, I think of myself as fairly independent and able to find my own reasons for doing things. But lately it keeps coming to my attention that this is not strictly true, and that in fact huge parts of my life's motivation, when examined thoroughly, end up being about the search for some reward beyond the enjoyment of the task at hand. Specifically, in my case, that reward seems to mostly take the form of approval and admiration from other people, real or imagined.
That's a really ugly thing to find out about yourself, but I have to admit its truth. It's probably the biggest reason why I had to get off Facebook. That world is virtually designed to encourage self-invention and -assessment based on the validation and approval of others. I guess it's arguable whether keeping a blog is any more discouraging of those tendencies, but I feel like the relative infrequency of posts and limited readership make it at least slightly less insidious. Maybe if I were really concerned about it, I would turn commenting off. I don't know. What do you think?
Monday, February 04, 2013
2012 Top Ten, Belated
Oh, hello. Looks like I'm back. Yeah, Facebook turns out to be kind of a pain in the butt. Did you know that? It's all people doing and saying and liking things, and then before you can close the window, they've gone and had another opinion/meal/baby. Exhausting!
So, is it too late for a top ten list? Because I really enjoy looking back at these, and it feels like a nice, shallow way to ease back into the long form. In fact, I'll keep my reviews to three words, if it'll make you happy. All right, then — my picks for last year were:
So, is it too late for a top ten list? Because I really enjoy looking back at these, and it feels like a nice, shallow way to ease back into the long form. In fact, I'll keep my reviews to three words, if it'll make you happy. All right, then — my picks for last year were:
Bat for Lashes - The Haunted Man
Lush goth balladry.
Beach House - Bloom
Spare goth balladry.
Chromatics - Kill for Love
Bleak primitive disco.
Chris Cohen - Overgrown Path
Gorgeous complex pop. (Former member of Deerhoof!)
Cousins - Palm at the End of the Mind
Catchy Halifax duo.
Deerhoof - Breakup Song
ADD dance rock.
Godspeed You! Black Emperor -
Allelujah! Don't Bend! Ascend!
Allelujah! Don't Bend! Ascend!
Instrumental noise anthems.
(First album in 10 years! Exclamation points!)
(First album in 10 years! Exclamation points!)
Grimes - Visions
Dark Madonna wunderkind.
Liars - WIXIW
Spooky synth barbarians.
Melody's Echo Chamber - Melody's Echo Chamber
French psychedelic Broadcast-lover.
(Produced by the Tame Impala guy!)
French psychedelic Broadcast-lover.
(Produced by the Tame Impala guy!)
Tame Impala - Lonerism
Australian psychedelic Lennon-lover.
Honourable mentions:
Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti - Mature Themes
Can - The Lost Tapes
Mohn - Mohn
Talk Talk - Spirit of Eden and Laughing Stock vinyl reissues
Wild Nothing - Nocturne
Saturday, June 23, 2012
A Heartfelt Apology
I'm sorry, blog, that I've been ignoring you so much lately. I guess I just haven't felt much like writing at length about the details of my life recently. Everything seems either too important or too unimportant to be material for your entertainment. I wish I had some nice little pithy stories to tell you.
And, OK, if we're being completely honest here, I've also become involved with another website. I know you've probably heard the rumours, so let's just get it out in the open. Yes, it is Facebook. Does that make you feel redeemed? Is there a kernel of enjoyment now in your disappointment, because my betrayal is so predictable and pathetic that it makes you morally superior? Well, good. I'm glad that something nice can come out of this for you.
Aw geez... This is meant to be an apology, and here I am already getting defensively bitter. I'm sorry. In all sincerity, I really do want only the best for you. And I'd like to continue giving you the best of me, if you'll have it. I just might not be able to devote as much time to you as I used to.
I don't actually know how long this thing with Facebook is going to last, but it's something I have to pursue. I can have the lightest of general conversations or the most in-depth one-on-one discussions. Either way, there's a give-and-take there that I feel like I need now. And that's just not something you've ever been able to offer me. I'm sorry to put it so bluntly, but I think you deserve the truth.
Look, I'm not accusing you of selfishness here — I honestly value your passive nature. I know that I have a tendency to talk at you at length, while you're expected to sit there and listen politely. Believe me, I'm grateful. When I think of all the times you've gotten up in the middle of the night, never complaining, just to hear me hold forth on whatever stupid stream of consciousness has seemed important to me at the time, well...
You've been a great sounding board and guardian of my thought process. I will never forget that. And if my hope that we might even continue such a relationship on a less frequent basis strikes you as unforgivably presumptuous, please understand that it is only a testament to your unswerving generosity and goodness.
OK, gotta run for now. But we're good here, right? There are some funny cat videos I have to go and look at, but thanks, as always, for your sympathetic ear.
Much love, Andrew.
And, OK, if we're being completely honest here, I've also become involved with another website. I know you've probably heard the rumours, so let's just get it out in the open. Yes, it is Facebook. Does that make you feel redeemed? Is there a kernel of enjoyment now in your disappointment, because my betrayal is so predictable and pathetic that it makes you morally superior? Well, good. I'm glad that something nice can come out of this for you.
Aw geez... This is meant to be an apology, and here I am already getting defensively bitter. I'm sorry. In all sincerity, I really do want only the best for you. And I'd like to continue giving you the best of me, if you'll have it. I just might not be able to devote as much time to you as I used to.
I don't actually know how long this thing with Facebook is going to last, but it's something I have to pursue. I can have the lightest of general conversations or the most in-depth one-on-one discussions. Either way, there's a give-and-take there that I feel like I need now. And that's just not something you've ever been able to offer me. I'm sorry to put it so bluntly, but I think you deserve the truth.
Look, I'm not accusing you of selfishness here — I honestly value your passive nature. I know that I have a tendency to talk at you at length, while you're expected to sit there and listen politely. Believe me, I'm grateful. When I think of all the times you've gotten up in the middle of the night, never complaining, just to hear me hold forth on whatever stupid stream of consciousness has seemed important to me at the time, well...
You've been a great sounding board and guardian of my thought process. I will never forget that. And if my hope that we might even continue such a relationship on a less frequent basis strikes you as unforgivably presumptuous, please understand that it is only a testament to your unswerving generosity and goodness.
OK, gotta run for now. But we're good here, right? There are some funny cat videos I have to go and look at, but thanks, as always, for your sympathetic ear.
Much love, Andrew.
Thursday, June 07, 2012
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