À la Super Eggplant, currently, I am…

Eating: Lots of eggs. Hard-boiled, cooked atop rice, what have you.

Making: [to repeat from last time] Sooooo close to being done with Amy’s Friendship Star quilt (only the binding to go)…but yet soooo far (the binding to go!!!).

Reading: The June challenge book with Dad: “War with the Newts” by Karel Capek. First published in 1936, it’s quite brilliant. Some non-PC words clue you into the age of this book, but otherwise I think it would be topical in any age. The first half was rollicking and so much fun. The middle section got a bit bleaker. Only the last bit to go and then my whole month will be freed up for pleasure reading. Crazy considering I stretched May’s book out as far as I possibly could (but it was stories, so there ya go) [yes, I’ll write it up soon].

Watching: Battlestar Galactica (old and new). CSI (old). That’s about it.

Listening: Spending so much time obsessing over BSG (oh you have no idea), I’ve barely been listening to anything, other than SModcasts while quilting and occasionally listening to stuff I bought in March since I didn’t do any listening that month so I felt bad for those albums (not because I’m three months behind on anything in life! No, not me!).

March Album Reviews

So turns out I didn’t buy that much music in March. Not only did I not buy much (some of what’s below was gifted to me), but I didn’t listen much either… Maybe that 9-day trip to Japan had something to do with it? (And, no, before you ask, I still haven’t listened to much of the music I bought there [mostly rap], I’ve been too busy reorganizing music while home to listen to new stuff [and didn’t put those on the Pod/iTunes yet].)

Absolutely Love & Adore:

Jesse Malin “Glitter in the Gutter” – One of those (increasingly rare) albums that just WORKS all the way through. Really love it. I actually like it so much, I couldn’t even narrow down a favorite song for ya. Today it may have been “Happy Ever After” but other days it’s been “Black Haired Girl” and sometimes “NY Nights” and other times… Uh huh. It’s that good.

Gnarls Barkley “The Odd Couple” – The more I listen to it, the more I like it. It’s not getting the press or the play their first one did, but I think it’s just as good. A little darker, but still delish. Cee-Lo just has such a great voice, I think that boy could sing anything and make it beautiful. Favorite song: definitely “Going On”.

Favorite Singles (not on any of the above albums):

  • “Rat Within the Grain” Damien Rice
  • “Wonderwall” Noel Gallagher, singing the Ryan Adams’ arrangement of Noel’s song
  • “Hideaway” The Weepies
  • “Buckets of Rain” (my favorite all-time Dylan song) covered by Redbird (Peter Mulvey)
  • “The Silence Between Us” Bob Mould
  • “Changing Your Mind” Bob Schneider
  • “Don’t You Worry” Jim Noir
  • “I Woke Up Today” Port O’Brien
  • “Vision in Red” Thao Nguyen

Other Albums I Liked:

  • Hot Chip “Coming on Strong” (and) “Made in the Dark” – I kept reading about this band everywhere and wondering if I should be listening and CCB took pity on my lazy ass and sent me both of these. The former (CoS) is not what I was (for some unknown reason) expecting. Instead it’s melodic, kinda jazzy with some background fuzz, sweet and smooth. The second (MitD) is more what I had in my mind: disco-y electronic, rhythmic. Fun! 🙂
  • Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks “Real Emotional Trash” – I never listened to Pavement back in the day; got turned on to them last summer thanks to Rob Sheffield’s lovely book so I’m new to the Malkmus fan club. On the rough, edgy side of rock. The first four songs don’t really pull me in but then we hit “Baltimore” and “Gardenia” and I’m a total goner… I could listen to those two (and the songs that follow) over and over!

Not really for me / but maybe for you!:

Robert Plant & Alison Krauss “Raising Sand” – Hmmm. You know, people kept occasionally playing me singles off this album and I thought “hey, maybe it IS as good as people are saying.” But apparently I only like it in singles because I almost fell asleep the three times I tried to get through the album as a whole. Pretty. But boring. Maybe I will like them better in person? We’ll find out in a few weeks…

Foo Fighters “Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace” – I was a big big Foo fan…a long time ago. (Their live show was one of my faves of my NY years.) And although it seems odd to say about music, sometimes I just grow out of a certain band or sound. When I put this on, I think “oh yeah, sounds exactly like some Foo stuff I was listening to 10 years ago.” (Loved their first two albums. Loved.) So while this album is perfectly fine and good and enjoyable enough (and could easily be in the above category instead of here), I just don’t find myself listening to it. I’ve kinda moved on.

Shamefully have either not listened to at all, or not all the way through, or so few times that I can’t legitimately offer an opinion:
Just the stuff I bought in Japan. 🙂

À la Nick Hornby, books in/books out for May.

Bought:

  • Just One Look, by Harlan Coben
  • Bad Luck and Trouble, by Lee Child
  • A Circle Is a Balloon and Compass Both, by Ben Greenman (stories)
  • Bad Luck and Trouble, by Lee Child (whoops)
  • Sleeping It Off in Rapid City, by August Kleinzahler (poetry)
  • Unmentionables, by Beth Ann Fennelly (poetry)
  • Dragon Blood, by Patricia Briggs
  • Raven’s Shadow, by Patricia Briggs
  • One False Move, by Harlan Coben
  • The Final Detail, by Harlan Coben

Read:
  • Just One Look, by Harlan Coben
  • Bad Luck and Trouble, by Lee Child
  • Slam, by Nick Hornby
  • The Devil of Nanking, by Mo Hayder
  • Dragon Bones, by Patricia Briggs
  • Dragon Blood, by Patricia Briggs
  • One False Move, by Harlan Coben
  • The Final Detail, by Harlan Coben
  • The Collected Stories, by Isaac Bashevis Singer

Big Screen: Sex and the City

Bittersweet. Disappointing.

  • Given the events of the middle, I thought the unspoken “message” of the end was complete crap.
  • Charlotte really got gypped in terms of storylines; hers had no tension whatsoever.
  • It felt both superficial and rushed, and considering it went over two hours, it should have been neither.

That said, the other six girls in our group (no I do not know seven girls to go to the movies with in Chicago; I knew one of them) all seemed to like it. So take from that what you will.

Best of April

Just in time for June!!

The best movie I saw in April was Leatherheads, which might seem like it’s not saying much since how hard is it to be the best of only two, but on the other hand, I thought it was really really good. It’s not its fault my lack of movie viewing didn’t give it much competition.

The best book I read in April was Belong to Me, by Marisa de los Santos but Monsters of Templeton by Lauren Goff was also good and a bit more high-brow if that’s what you’re looking for.

The best gig I went to in April was Bon Iver. A beautiful album done even more beautifully live.

My favorite tunes in April…. You know, at this point I’m not sure what I was listening to then, probably stuff I bought in February and/or March. The memory, it ain’t what it used to be.

Random personal highlights: The yearly trip to Portland, yay, including burgers, beers and brunch; trying out my new camera (Hasselblad, yo). Not much else good happened; it was a rough month.

Lowlights? Had the punes; which seemingly caused a mysterious shoulder injury (look for “physical therapy” in May’s highlights); had a LOTLOTLOT of stress at the secondary browsing location. And, I’m sure, airport delays on the way to Portland because you KNOW planes are delayed in every direction if I am flying on them.

Quote of the Night and perhaps THE CENTURY!

Said by my Dad, to my Mom, in the midst of reporting to her about how AWESOME Battlestar Galactica is (he’s halfway through season 1, disc 1 (the mini-series), he had to hang up to get back to it but called me midway through to rave), which he just started as I sent him all the discs as an early Birthday present:

Carolyn is the one kid in a million who actually paid off.

Hello, I WIN. 😉 And yay, Dad is loving BSG too. Someone else to share the obsession. Yay!

In Concert: The Long Blondes

per my drunken Flickr review:

Kicked Ass.
Openers sucked.
Venue was empty.
Crowd was weird.
Band Rocked.

Highly recommended that you see them live. Some songs almost a combination of Berlin (swoon) and early Madonna. Really great. Would love to see them again with a bigger crowd.

In Concert: Rogue Wave

I think the reason I didn’t write this show up earlier was it was so similar to the one I went to in October, except I wasn’t as tired that night so I had more fun. This time, my feet hurt and I was cranky and I left early even though RK probably would have happily stayed longer. But don’t fret, Rogue Wave, it was me, not you. You were great.

Really intimate show, started with an acoustic set in the middle of the audience and since it was Schuba’s, the “middle of the audience” was no more than 10 feet away from anyone. A bit fuzzy once they got on stage. Didn’t realize how much better the Double Door’s sound system is (that was where the October show was) but I guess now I know.

In Concert: Meg Hutchinson and Girlyman

We bought the tickets because AW is a huge fan of Girlyman; finding out that Meg Hutchinson was the opener was an added bonus!

Meg Hutchinson: Gorgeous set. Just her and a guitar. Mostly stuff from her new album which has such great lyrics, I really can’t get enough of it. Lovely. On the folky side of pop. LOVE.

Girlyman: Three very unique voices, used quite well together. Reminds me of early Indigo Girls with their harmonies although AW was a little snippy about me having that viewpoint. They seem to switch back and forth between joke-y and serious (in a BNL kind of way), but the vocals/mike were mixed way too low(quiet) for the soprano, they need to amp her up a bit (a big bit). Despite that, really enjoyable, fun show.