December 10, 2007
Music Station Lurve
Posted by lucyleaf under Links, Listening | Tags: online radio, slacker.com |No Comments
December 10, 2007
December 7, 2007
December 5, 2007
We should shine a light on, a light on.
And the book of right-on is right on, it was right on,
I killed my dinner with karate -
kick ‘em in the face, taste the body;
shallow work is the work that I do.
Do you want to sit at my table?
My fighting fame is fabled
and fortune finds me fit and able.
And you do say
that you do pray
and you do say
that you’re okay.
Do you want to run with my pack?
Do you want to ride on my back?
Pray that what you lack does not distract.
And even when you ruin through my mind
something else is in front; you’re behind.
And I don’t have to remind you
to stick with your kind
And you do say (…)
And even when you touch my face
you know your place.
We should shine a light on, a light on. (…)
December 4, 2007
Cinematical Seven: Youth, Music, Sex, and the ’90s
I have seen all of these movies multiple times, memorized half of them, felt like they reflected my life at the time, etc. The one movie missing that I would include in my personal lexicon: Heathers
December 3, 2007
November 28, 2007
This looks awesome.
November 21, 2007
A great story about a woman who reclaimed her body through redefining her relationship with food: No Bread, No Worries: The Gluten-Free Girl
One of the great things about The Gluten-Free Girl is her absolute joy in eating and living. Even those who don’t have celiac’s disease like her, can find inspiration through her writing.
This is a personal reminder to myself to be mindful this holiday season - food is to be savored, relished and shared with love with friends and family.
Happy (American) Thanksgiving to the few reading this! May you eat, drink, be merry and have fun with those you love.
November 20, 2007
There is an interesting discussion going on at ask.metafilter about the twist in “The Illusionist”, and whether it was successful. Lots of spoilers, so proceed with caution.
I liked this comment a lot:
But on an emotional level — for me at least — it’s a love story. The howdoneit angle is secondary. Think about it as a love story for a minute: it’s a pretty clear-cut example of boy-gets-girl, boy-loses-girl, boy-wins-girl-back again. To me, that’s inevitably going to be an engrossing formula, if the storytellers set the romantic tone well and if I’m attracted to the protagonists.
For me, all the magic stuff was a backdrop. It gave the movie a gothic feel, like “Wuthering Heights” which, for me, is a love story about Catherine and Heathcliff. The windswept setting just makes adds spice to the romance.
I agree with all the flaws mentioned, but this really hits it on the head for my personal experience - and makes me think of how my film-viewing style has sort of morphed into this over the years: the movie doesn’t have to be perfect on all levels; if it makes me feel, evokes a big emotion - distaste, love, wonder, thrill, terror, dislike, silliness - then it’s a good movie. This is why I consider both “Requiem for a Dream” and “Anchorman” to be great movies. But it doesn’t mean I will ever watch the former again, and the latter, I watch a few times a year.
November 20, 2007
So, Monday, November 12, 2007, marked a couple of significant firsts for me: first concert since Camille’s birth, first concert with my sister, Olivia, first long solo trip for me, first Tori concert in the new millennium. Maybe I’m reaching there, but you get the idea. I was freakin’ psyched for this show.
Olivia’s awesome housemate and friend, BJ, helped organize the trip and treated tickets for me, Olivia and Jerome. Orchestra, row J, people. I could have thrown marshmallows at sweet Tori if I wanted to!
And then venue - best sound I’ve ever heard for a live band. BJ described hearing a concert there as not just hearing it from the source on stage, but feeling the sound surround you. And it was just like that. I called Pete during two songs, and during “Cooling”, he said he got chillbumps. It was really that good.
One of the most fun parts of the evening was after the concert. After spending an hour in the parking garage (we’re guessing because of some confusion with the system for paying to leave), we drove by Tori’s tour bus. A nice crowd was there, so we stopped and waited. And waited. And waited. Slowly Tori’s crew trickled out, and finally, an hour or two after the end of the concert, the goddess herself made her way out. She waved and smiled and called, “I love you”’s back to us, but did not stop. She tucked herself into her tour bus. And then we waited some more. Finally the tour bus took off, and we waved goodbye. Sure, it was a thrill to see her, but secretly, I had the most fun just chatting and laughing with Olivia, BJ and Jerome.
Full song list, clips, photos and concert accounts at the amazing undented.com
November 20, 2007
The awesome music blog stereogum, maintained by Scott Lapatine, posted all the clips from the recent Radiohead.tv, which I tried but could not access when it was live. Looks like the Radiohead guys have some fun and play most of their songs from In Rainbows (currently my most favorite album) live.