The READIN Family Album
(March 2005)

READIN

Jeremy's journal

A willingness to let things wash over you can be the difference between sublimity and seasickness.

Garth Risk Hallberg


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Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

🦋 Weeping Willow

Here are three very fine songs which employ the weeping willow tree as a central metaphor: "Bury me under the weeping willow", "After Midnight", "Big River". There must be many more. I have been listening to all three recently and I wonder what it is about "weeping willow" that makes it so easy to use -- obviously the "weeping", and also I just think it rolls off the tongue very smoothly. Possibly related, "So lonesome I could cry" starts out with a reference to a whippoorwill, and today when I sat down to make a list of "weeping willow" songs, "So lonesome I could cry" was at the top of the list until I backtracked and checked the lyric.

posted evening of January 23rd, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Music

The White Castle is, like The New Life, not seeming a page-turner to me in the way that Snow and My Name is Red both did. As I read it I am encountering some very interesting bits -- like this evening I was feeling some kinship with Hoja over the question of how narrating one's experiences can communicate one's inner self -- but I do not feel invested in the characters in a way that would make me need to know what is going to happen next.

posted evening of January 23rd, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about The White Castle

🦋 watch

Cool! I found and fixed a bug today using gdb's watchpoint feature, which I have never tried before. (Not cool: the bug was a careless typo that I should never have introduced.)

posted evening of January 23rd, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Programming

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

🦋 Poses

We started taking a yoga class this evening, the whole family together. It was a good first class -- I think I like this teacher better than any yoga teacher I have previously met with; everything she said to the class seemed to be pretty well in tune with whatever I was experiencing at the moment. Class meets every Tuesday for the next couple of months.

posted evening of January 22nd, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Fitness

Monday, January 21st, 2008

🦋 Not as simple as it looks

Hmm: Turns out once you start worrying about what the music is actually going to sound like, this recording stuff gets exponentially more tricky. I am not going to put any recordings up for a little while yet, until I've (a) really gotten the hang of the software and (b) reacquainted myself a bit more with my guitar. My idea is, guitar and possibly vocals on one take, viola and/or violin dubbed on top of that. The guitar will be better for keeping a beat than a click track. But my fingers are still getting used to the idea.

Note to anyone thinking about putting a small recording studio together: the "Creative Professional E-MU 0202" is not actually that much cheaper than the "Edirol UA-25" when you consider that you will need to buy a phantom power source and extra cords; and its two inputs are not identical like the Edirol's are.

posted evening of January 21st, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Fiddling

🦋 Happy holiday

Neat -- the day off! I will get my hair cut and stop by the Radio Shack for some cables. If all goes according to plan, my recording setup will be complete this afternoon, maybe I will try laying down a track.

posted morning of January 21st, 2008: Respond

Sunday, January 20th, 2008

🦋 Play it any way you wanta

Listening now to Unfunkked 3 and I gotta say, the instrumental part in Sugar Pie DeSanto's "Soulful Dress" is absolutely genius. Now watch out there, boys.

...Also: Maxayn's version of "Can't Always Get What You Want" is beautiful. Ellen says of the tape in general, "Listening to it just makes you feel better!"

posted afternoon of January 20th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Mix tapes

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

🦋 Polk Salad Annie

Jerry raises in comments the legitimate point that "Polk-Salad Annie" by Tony Joe White is a fantastic song. Here is a video of White singing it in 1969.

posted evening of January 19th, 2008: 1 response

🦋 A couple of The White Castle links

Have not read either one yet, both look a bit interesting.

posted evening of January 19th, 2008: Respond

🦋 Story within a story within...

...I knew that at any moment the book would be snatched from my hand, yet I wanted to think not of that but of what was written on its pages. It was as if the thoughts, the sentences, the equations within the book contained the whole of my past life which I dreaded to lose... I desperately wanted to engrave the entire volume on my memory so that when they did come, I would not think of them and what they would make me suffer, but would remember the colors of my past as if recalling the cherished worlds of a book I had memorized with pleasure.

Cool: the inner story of The White Castle begins, like the outer story and like The New Life, with the narrator frantically reading a book, seeking to alter his consciousness through reading. Also I like seeing "the colors of my past", that brings to mind much of Pamuk's other work.

This is the fourth novel of his I am reading, and the fourth markedly different narrative style. Which is cool, I guess, his voice rings clear in each of them. It is surprising, not what I expect -- reminds me a bit of Pynchon I guess, but I think offhand that the differences in style among Pamuk's books are greater than among Pynchon's.

posted afternoon of January 19th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Orhan Pamuk

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