Saturday, January 16, 2010

Violin Practice in the Airport Terminal

Q has been studying the violin by the Suzuki Method since around March
2008 at the amazing Karyn Grove-Bruce studio in Anchorage. He has
missed exactly one day of practice during that time... 12.25.08 to be
precise.

Sooooooo... Stranded at SEA-TAC for a day?

No problem.

The travellers in N Terminal were serenaded with May Song, O' Come
Little Children, Go Tell Aunt Rody and Song of the Wind.

If we got a nickel for everyone who tipped our burgeoning busker...
we'd have collected exactly zero nickels toward his future education
at the Curtis Institute in Philly.

I shot the photo in color, then turned it black and white in the
Photogene app. I greatly increased contrast to obscure Qs features
(I'm not yet to the point where I want total strangers looking at my
son), and then used the Color Splash app to recolor the violin and bow.

Fun exercise!

Brass (?) Fish in Floor

SEA-TAC International Airport, Gate B11.

the Ever Lonely Evergreen




#16
01.16.10

I've always empathized with this lonely evergreen tree.  I first noticed it several years ago when I went golfing with my father-in-law at Anchorage Golf Course off O'Malley.  It's a gorgeous course, winter and summer.  This tree stands so very straight and tall, yet it is completely isolated from all of the other evergreens in the area.  How does it do that?  

The Chugach mountains are actually much closer than they appear in the photograph (you can see them through the clouds in the background); and the wind can come ripping through on any given day, often times exceeding 60 m.p.h.  Yet here stands the lonely evergreen, ever strong.

Today I thought I might drive by around 10 a.m. when the sun was coming up to see if it would make a decent photo.  I'm not thrilled with the photo, the foreground is too dark, but I'm posting it anyway.  I leave on a 10 day trip tonight, and I just needed to get something up for tomorrow while I travel.  I hope you'll forgive me.


I took another few shots at the golf course and saw the morning Sun light some amazing clouds on fire:



 

I chose Evergreen by Ryan Adams & the Cardinals for the soundtrack.  His career seems to parallel the previously featured artist José González.  Better stated, José González's career parallels Ryan Adams.  Both started out in punk rock, but then both switched to folk / alternative-country to better express their entire range of emotions.  After his punk phase, Adams was a founding member of the critically acclaimed alt-country act Whiskeytown, but they only made two albums.  He left and formed the Cardinals, with whom he has been rather prolific.  


Evergreen comes off his latest album 'Cardinology'.  I think it is a nice companion to the photos.  


I have been experimenting with posting blog entries from the iPhone on the road, but haven't figured out if I will be able to add music to those posts.  So Evergreen may be playing A LOT in the next 10 days.  At least I have the alternate up-to-date running playlist called "iPhone photo blog soundtrack" on the site, if desired.


Until tomorrow (I hope)... thank you for looking, listening and reading.  CCE


Friday, January 15, 2010

From Here to There and There to Here - Rachelle Dowdy

Ted Stevens International Airport.

This is the first real test at mobile posting... And we're off! CCE

Sleeping Lady




#15
01.15.10

Mt. Susitna is a smallish mountain that sits alone out in the Cook Inlet about 40 miles to the northwest of Anchorage.  The Dena'ina, literally "The People", who inhabited what is now Anchorage for hundreds, if not thousands, of years called it "little mountain" in their language.  Most people living in Anchorage call it "Sleeping Lady" because of how it appears to be a human figure lying supine with arms over chest.  It reminds me of a similar appearing mountain near Mt. Timpanogos in the Provo, Utah area.

I took this photo from the Earthquake Park vantage, just off Northern Lights Boulevard in west Anchorage.  The park is named in memory of the 9.2 earthquake of 1964 that wrecked the city, and pounded many coastal towns and villages for hundreds of miles.  It was very cold when I shot this, right around 0 degrees Fahrenheit.  The wind was really whipping, so I could only be out of my car for about 60 seconds before I'd have to get back in and warm up the hands and camera.  I've learned my lesson about shooting iPhone photos in the cold by now.  Sadly, I've not yet learned the lesson about wearing a coat and gloves whenever I leave the house.


I like the featured photo for the sublime orangey sunset and a view of the icy inlet.  I took some other photos of Mt. Susitna, and also the Alaska Range to the west and north.  The north end of the Alaska Range contains Denali, a.k.a. "the big one", a.k.a. Mt. McKinley, which rises to the highest point in North America.  That mountain is about 350 miles to the north of Anchorage, but we can see it clearly around 15 days a year when the weather is good.  It is such a massive mountain that it creates it's very own weather pattern; so even if it's nice in Anchorage, Denali might be completely socked-in with clouds.

Here are some of those additional photos taken of Mt. Susitna, the Alaska Range to the west, and Denali and Mt. Foraker to the north.  Foraker is just 14 miles away from Denali, and is the 4th highest peak in North America.



Mt. Susitna with Raven in Flight



Mt. Susitna close-up


 

Southern Alaska Range
West across the Cook Inlet

 
Central Alaska Range
Mt. Foraker (left), Mt. McKinley / Denali (right)



I know these images are super-grainy; but quite honestly I love them.  They kind of look like impressionist paintings by the pointillist Georges Seurat, and the colors kind of remind me of Armand Guillaumin's Sunset at Ivry hanging in the Musee d'Orsay.  The close-up of the Sleeping Lady shows snow being whipped up in the wind on its central crest.  

 
 Sunset at Ivry, Armand Guillaumin, 1873

I used the Camera Genius app on the iPhone to shoot the last three images posted here.  I prefer that app to the Camera Zoom app because in addition to a zoom feature, it has guide-lines, anti-shake, a photo-timer, burst setting, and a "big button" feature which is very nice.  With that you can touch anywhere on the screen and the camera will shoot, rather than having to hit the small screen button.  There is even a sound-capture feature, but I've not tried that to date.  I suppose I use Camera Genius third-most commonly after the native iPhone camera app and the Photogene digital processing app, for what it's worth.

I chose Sleeping Lessons off the album 'Wincing the Night Away' by The Shins for today's soundtrack in honor of the Sleeping Lady.  I adore the Shins.  James Mercer is their lead writer and vocalist, and he's simply wonderful.  The band formed in Albuquerque, New Mexico, but is now based out of Portland, Oregon.  They were touring with none other than Modest Mouse when they got signed by none other than Sub Pop.  (I find it amazing how my musical tastes and preferences are so intimately inter-connected.)  The Shins craft some of the most intelligent and artistic indie music these days, and I rate them amongst the best current bands, with a chance to break in to my All-Time Top 5 if they can put out another two or three stellar albums to match their current discography.  

This song can be interpreted many different ways, as any great song might be.  I interpret it as a rally cry to think for yourself, and to not conform to anyone else's ideas of how you should think, act or live.  There seems to be a lot of French Revolution imagery in the song.  The lyrics really are lovely.  My favorite passage is:

And glow,
Glow,
Melt and flow,
Eviscerate your fragile frame,
And spill it out on the ragged floor,

A thousand different versions of yourself.


I think this means to break the image of what you think you're supposed to be; or what "the old guard" thinks you should be... and be instead what you know you can and should be.



Until tomorrow... thank you for looking, listening and reading.  CCE


Thursday, January 14, 2010

Trippin' at the Car Wash




#14
01.14.10

What is one to do when the day is ending and no photograph has been procured for the daily iPhone photo blog?  I'll tell you want one is to do... Rally!  And by "Rally!" I mean "take a random picture and hope for the best".  So this is an admittedly weak entry on the photography side of the blog, and I'll just have to hope that the music rescues the venture.  I suppose a little background is warranted.  

So there I was sitting in the car wash tonight getting the sled cleansed from a week of snow and dirt accumulation.  In Alaska the roads are not salted, they are dirted and graveled.  I guess this practice is a more environmentally friendly way to give tires some traction on the highways and byways of the Anchorage mega-metropolis (~275,000 humans, ~3,000 moose, ~250 black bear, ~60 brown "grizzly" bear, and ~1 gentleman named Ramón who wears shorts and Crocs in the winter time along with two fake Rolexes on his left wrist and who insisted to me today that "Kanye West will go down as the next Wolfgang Amandious Mostart"); but the dirt and gravel don't do wonders for a sled's complexion.  It is, however, a particularly lovely event to have a rock fired your direction from the knobby tire of the guy in front of you driving a jacked up pickup truck with a bumper sticker reading "Alaska Girls Kick A**".  Said rock makes such a delightful "crack" as it hits your own forward-hurtling transportation apparatus. 

So, back to the photo.  I was sitting in the car wash looking through past photos to see what I might post, when I smelled the fruity scent of soap, or wax, or whatever the colorful stuff is that is sprayed toward the end of the wash.  My co-pilot Q enjoys that particular part of the weekly wash more than any other part, but sadly, he was not with me to enjoy it this time.  And of course, that's when I got the lame idea to take a photo for him, immediately followed by the even lamer idea to post it in this blog. 

{"Sigh", groaneth Ansel from the grave...}

Actually, I kind of like this photo.  It's like, totally psychedelic, dude.  Rad!  Here are the subsequent images from the wash.  I envision these three photos on separate panels hanging together on the wall at the Hirshhorn someday, if their curators have any taste at all:





And if the photo isn't psychedelic enough, then by golly the soundtrack featuring Anenome  by the Brian Jonestown Massacre will have to help it along.  

I entered the second "psychedelic phase" of my musical explorations beginning about two years ago when I discovered the album "Passover" by the Black Angels.  It blew me out of the water when I first heard it, and it inspired me to progress through bands like Midnight Movies, the Morning After Girls, Darker My Love, and this band, the Brian Jonestown Massacre.  The Black Angels still have my ear more than the others, but I like the BJM quite a bit too.  

Earlier, in the mid-90's, I entered my first psychedelic music phase when I saw Spiritualized perform at the Trocadero in Chinatown, Philadelphia.  Sadly, that was one of only two total concerts I was able to afford during my 8 years in Philly.  What torture to live in a city renown for it's amazing music culture, and not be able to afford any of it.  (Incidentally, the other show I saw in Philadelphia was the chamber pop maestros Belle & Sebastian at the Tower in Upper Darby.  The Tiffstress went to that one with me, making it one of our biggest splurges over those years.)  Once I heard Spiritualized I got in to the earlier incarnation of that band, Spacemen 3.  Just prior to all this I had been getting in to Mazzy Star and its lead singer Hope Sandoval's psychedelic music, too.  I seem to be working chronologically backwards here, eh?  Trippy!

So please enjoy the Brian Jonestown Massacre's Anenome.  I think it fits the photo well enough.  I won't go in to the history of BJM too much, other than to say it is really a one-man show led by Anton Newcombe out of the Bay area.  He is a talented musician that I think is probably clinically insane.  He kind of reminds me of Syd Barrett, the organizing and artistic force behind early Pink Floyd before he got carted off in a loony bin.  Times have changed, apparently, as Newcombe not only remains free from a padded cell, he is free to harass and insult Twinkies in small convenience stores to his heart's content.  

Of course, I don't have a clue about what I'm writing here... mostly I am just trying to amuse myself and deflect attention from my photo of a windshield covered in soapy goo.  I am quite sure Anton is perfectly stable, and it is I whom can be seen harassing small plastic-wrapped baked goods at any number of trading posts along the subarctic front on any given day.


Until tomorrow... thank you for listening, looking and reading.  CCE

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Grey (Green) Ice Water




#13
01.13.10

I am enthralled by this photo.  Such a range of colors!  It was taken right where the Portage Creek exits Portage Lake about 55 miles from Anchorage.  Capturing the precise color of the milky green-blue glacier water in Alaska is no easy feat.  Over the years I have used my old Nikon Coolpix somethingoranother, my Nikon 8800 and my Canon Xsi and never captured the color more perfectly than my simple iPhone camera caught it here.  It must be an issue of where the sun is in the sky, and my position to it, while shooting.  In the end, all the frustration of the hunt melts away when I gaze at these colors. 

Many alaskan lakes, rivers and creeks look just like this.  The water turns positively turquoise due to the presence of 'rock flour'.  As glaciers migrate toward lower ground they grind the underlying substrate, picking up particles of rock and mineral along the way.  This "rock flour" is held in suspension in the water, and affects the reflection and refraction of light which we then perceive as either blue, green, turquoise or grey.  The opacity makes the word 'milky' a fitting adjective.

The next shot came out a little less milky green, and a little more milky grey.  Again, I think it's because I was facing toward the sun, albeit low on the horizon.  





The color of the water in this photo was identical in person to the color shown in the featured photo, and that demonstrates just how difficult it is to capture the true milky color.  The next two shots show more of the mountainside and the tunnel that leads toward the longer tunnel to Whittier:








Today's song is one that I am absolutely thrilled to feature.  It is Grey Ice Water by the amazing band Modest Mouse, but performed here by Sun Kil Moon.  If the Velvet Underground and Sonic Youth can be called "experimental"; then Modest Mouse are uber-experimental.  To most ears the music comes off tone-deaf and abrasive.  Admittedly, it has been a lengthy process for me to fully embrace them over several dedicated years.  I just felt like there was talent and beauty beneath the surface of static electricity, and at this point I can finally hear the beauty clearly on every listen.

Modest Mouse is a band out of the Seattle area, led by the insanely brilliant Isaac Brock.  He is known for what seems like random fits of shrieking alternated with periods of calm, almost whispered phrases in many songs, and for singing in to his guitar pickups, etc.  He uses a lot of "cold" imagery from Alaska / Antarctica in his album titles (e.g. the Moon and Antarctica), song titles (e.g. A Life of Arctic Sounds, Grey Ice Water, Tundra/Desert, The Cold Part), and in lyrics (e.g. Trucker's Atlas, others).  


Grey Ice Water is beautiful both musically and lyrically, and I think the lyrics deserve full attention, here:

You're standing by the grey ice water
Out in the wind, above ground out in the weather
You had yourself a crazy lover
Becoming frozen, trying hard to forget her
You got a job up in Alaska
It's easy to save what the cannery pays
Because there ain't no way to spend it
At home on a boat, it's a fish trap
You took the path of least resistance
On the phone, cutting out talking
Short to long distance
You're standing by the grey ice water
Out in the wind, above ground out in the water
You had yourself a crazy lover
Become unfrozen, trying hard to forget her
You got a job up in Alaska
It's easy to save what the cannery pays
Because there ain't no way to spend it
On the arctic blast
On the arctic blast
On the arctic blast
On the arctic blast
On the arctic blast
On the arctic blast
On the arctic blast


Wonderful stuff.  I am not sure of the source for Brock's / Modest Mouse's attraction to all things cold.  I don't even know if he's ever been to Alaska, for example.  He has his own record label called Glacial Pace, which I know about because the folkie Mason Jennings was signed to that label when he released his best album to date, 'Boneclouds'.  Brock also worked as an AR man for the legendary Sub Pop label in Seattle and signed one of my favorite indie bands "Wolf Parade".  So he is a multi-talented and saavy music dude, to say the least.

Sun Kil Moon is a group fronted by Mark Kozelek, the lead singer of a nice band called Red House Painters.  He has a super-mellow sound, and has developed a knack for drastically re-arranging songs from acts as diverse as AC/DC to Modest Mouse.  In the album 'Tiny Cities' he rearranges 11 Modest Mouse songs, and in such a beautiful way.  It really brings attention to the amazing lyrics of Isaac Brock, especially if you cannot tolerate the typical harsh delivery of Brock.  If you like the Sun Kil Moon track featured today; RUN, do not walk, to your nearest record store and buy 'Tiny Cities'.  I spin that music as often as any other non-Jazz album in the past 4 years.  I can highly recommend it to anyone liking the track featured today.

I've just decided as I was typing here to break with tradition in this entry and post both versions of the song.  The first will be the cover by Sun Kil Moon since it highlights the lyrics, and has a real soothing feel.  The original track by Modest Mouse will follow, and hopefully you'll be able to better appreciate it after the more mellow cover, first.  Keep in mind that this track is one of the most calm and accessible of all Modest Mouse tracks; I would recommend further research and sampling online before you decide to take the plunge and become a full-fledged M. Mouse fan complete with satin roadie jacket, belt buckle, and sacral tattoo.

Until tomorrow... thank you for looking, listening and reading.  CCE


Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Perfect Day





#12
01.12.10





Today was as close to a "perfect day" as any Monday could ever aspire to be.  I had plenty of rest, plenty of time to get ready for the day with my wife and son, enjoyed an unusually uncomplicated work day, and got a Kathy's Godfather hero from Geno & Sal's for dinner tonight.  Did I mention the Zeppolis from Geno & Sal's?  Amazing... like dense little beignets.  Most importantly, I got a break at midday.  Getting time for lunch is often The Thing that affects my end-of-day analysis on whether or not it was a good day.  If I get some time to decompress out of the hospital for 30 minutes or so, well that's a great day.  If I don't, then it's not.  And usually I don't.  But today, this perfect day, I did.

As I left the building to board my silver dog sled, I was greeted by those same evergreen guardians that were bathed in a purple haze just last week (blog #6).  Today, however, they were bathed in the most brilliant blue I can ever recall seeing during the winter months.  We usually get a real hazy powder-blue light on our best days in the winter, and even those are rare.  This was Alaska-in-Summer blue skies; which contrasted with the snow-covered spruce in amazing fashion.  Perhaps the skies have in fact been this blue before, but it's only because I'm looking around myself at all times for potential photos now that I actually noticed today.  {What else am I missing?!}  The temperature was -5 degrees F, which I find refreshing and invigorating.  Especially when I can mount my heated dog sled periodically to warm up. 


Todays photo ends up being a sister-piece to entry #6.  I expected to post a "wide" shot of the spruce under blue skies since the last one under purple skies was close-up and looking upward.  I snapped the featured photo above first to replicate that last shot, though it was a different tree for blog #6.  The tree I shot last week was a little ways away from me today, and it was just a titch too cold to want to make that walk (I wasn't wearing a coat - I find those mute the "refreshing" sensation I crave midday).  By the time I stepped back for the wide shots today I could only get two more photos before: 1) my hands were stiff, and 2) the iPhone crashed in the cold.  This has happened once before, in blog #3 I believe.  I wonder if anyone else has had this occur in very cold conditions?  


Once I checked out the three photos later, I noticed the two "wide" shots got distorted a bit.  Check out those pics below and see the color aberration (yellowing of the snow) on the left of the images, and blurring on the right side.  







Interesting.  A similar thing happened in #3 "Hoar Frost".  I had thought there was grease on my lens that day, but perhaps it really is just a phenomenon of the cold; a "reverse mirage", even.


There has been no digital processing of any of the photos today; I couldn't fake a blue this fake if I wanted to!  And the two wide shots just didn't move me like the first one did, so there you have the daily winner being another upward shot.


I've chosen Perfect Day by Lou Reed for today's song.  Obviously it matches my description of having a good day / seeing the sun / seeing a deep blue sky we don't typically get in Alaska this time of year, etc.  There are other reasons, too.  Though we're only up to blog #12 here I have already mentioned in at least two or three entries to date that the Velvet Underground are, in my mind, an extremely important band in the progression of music.  Yet I haven't featured a song of theirs to date.  This song still isn't a Velvet Underground piece... I'm waiting for the perfect photo / lyric match, and it just hasn't happened yet.  But this was fairly close since Lou Reed is a founding memeber of the Velvet Underground and he was their usual lead vocalist (the german model / actress / singer Nico was occasionally the featured vocalist).  


The Velvet Underground was very experimental, and I think they were way ahead of their time.  It wasn't just their music, but the themes and lyrics were quite controversial too.  That seems prerequisite if you are going to blaze trails for new directions in music.  I don't necessarily celebrate the topics and themes they sang about, mind you; but I do celebrate their bravery in not pretending to be something they weren't.  Honesty will get you a lot of respect and real estate in my world.  This piece by Lou Reed will serve as an attempt to get the Underground closer to my blog soundtrack.

Their are three or more ways to listen to this song Perfect Day.  On first listen it may strike you a very happy and optimistic song.  It's such a perfect day, I'm glad I spent it with you, etc.  But on second listen you might pick up a melancholy in the music that doesn't quite jive with the lyrics.  So you listen a third time and pick up other lyrics like You make me forget myself.  I thought I was someone else, someone good.  Hmmm.  So you drop another quarter in the jukebox and on 5th listen you hear about problems all left alone and you think "egads, he's talking about a heroin high!"  It ends with a four line stanza repeating You're going to reap just what you sow, perhaps referencing KJV Galatians 6:7.  


So as one listens repeatedly I think a deeper, more somber or emotional vibe bubbles to the surface.  I've spent a lot of time listening to this song quietly in front of the fireplace wearing Sennheiser cans, pondering the lyrics, melodies, harmonies, and their relation to each other.  I've spent additional time reading online message boards to hear other's opinions.  This is no bubble-gum pop song; it's super deep.  That depth is what makes it, and Lou Reed, genius in my mind.

I go in to all of that because my feeling after countless listens and deep pondering is that  it is a cautionary song about optimism.  What seems perfect make actually be transitory, fleeting, and artificial; and one must be prepared for the difference once the filters over their eyes change colors.  So it could be that a perfect day with his girlfriend wasn't as pure as he thought, and it all fell apart.  Or he was happy to find his next heroin fix, got high for a minute and then crashed hard.  


Today I walked out into the deep blue day of Anchorage with bright sun on white snow-covered trees.  A perfect day?  Talk about transitory! There hasn't been a day like it this winter, and there may not be another until next winter, or the next.  To be truly happy in Alaska I need to find a way to perceive the dark and cloudy days, i.e. routine reality, just as happily as I do the occasional blue-sky days.  On the one hand; celebrate the special moments.  On the other hand, prepare for the more common reality and esteem that, too.


Nah, forget all that.  I think the dude was shooting heroin through a spike in his vein.  Lou has likely reaped more badness than goodness from what he's sown; yet he's still planted much for me to enjoy and reap for myself just the same.  Thanks, Lou.  I'd love to hear any other ideas or comments you might have.  


And I'd like to mention that while I may portray myself as an expert on music in this blog, that could not be further from the truth.  Just as I am an admitted weak amature in photography; I am a poser in philosophy and music.  I happen to enjoy music the way other people might enjoy drugs, or gambling, or sex, or any other thing harboring addictive qualities.  In fact, I think it is fortunate that I found music courtesy of my older bro C.T.E. in 1982 at the ripe age of 13; because if I had not, perhaps I would have become obsessed with one of those other "interests" that can end up destroying more than they create.


So when I spout off here about music and the meaning of life... let's be clear.  I'm writing about my perspective alone, which I expect absolutely no one, anywhere, ever, to agree with. 

Until tomorrow... thank you for looking, listening and reading.  CCE



Monday, January 11, 2010

Frosted Rock (and Sonic Youth)




#11
01.11.10


I find it interesting that often times I can be searching for a beautiful or sweeping landscape to photograph, when sometimes if I just take a moment to look downward I can find attractive subjects.  Such was the case with this frosted rock, small cones and a lichen. 


I had to sharpen the photo and increase the color saturation to make the colors match what they looked like live and in person.  I think it made the photo a little grainier than I'd prefer; but I like it anyway.  The rock and lichen would have been attractive enough alone, but the addition of the frosted small cones gave it a little extra something.  I didn't place those cones  there; it was just a small gift from the wind to my mind's eye.  


Once I got that first picture I started looking around for similar subjects and found these:







Here is an iPhone photo of a moss on tree bark from earlier last year:





I have decided to break from the breathy, quiet, contemplative and mellow-toned tracks that I have been featuring thus far in the blog.  It was inevitable; my music tastes are wide-ranging and eclectic.  My goal is to choose music that I find beautiful and interesting, just like photos, but hopefully ones that the average person will not be familiar with.  This song will serve as the "bridge" from jazz and folk to more driven, louder songs that I think are equally beautiful and interesting.  


It is appropriate that Sonic Youth serve as that bridge.  They have been grinding out experimental and avante-garde "noise" music since the early 1980's.  During that decade it seemed you had your choice of "classic rock" (e.g. Zeppelin, Floyd, Clapton, Beatles, Stones, Doors, etc.) or "metal" (e.g. Ozzy, Maiden, Crue, Ratt, Twisted Sister, Poison, Cinderella, etc.) or "new wave" (e.g. Depeche Mode, Thompson Twins, Howard Jones, New Order, etc.).  I don't factor in classical or country, because I had no interest in either of those genres at the time.  Punk was still an underground sort of thing, but I can remember a few friends in Jr. High wearing trench coats featuring inked Anarchy logos and the names of punk bands scratched on their binders (e.g. Black Flag, the Clash, Sex Pistols, Stooges, etc.).  I was unfamiliar with those bands at the time, too.  And I don't consider Top 40 a genre... sorry to all the folks still listening to Huey Lewis and the News, Mike + the Mechanics, Wham! and Weird Al Yankovic.  You'll get no love from me, there.


I know my big three categories are broad, but that's what I recall.  I fit squarely within all three mainstream genres, favoring Pink Floyd, Ozzy, and Love and Rockets out of each respective movement at the time.  All-the-while there was what I'll call a "fourth movement" brewing, and which I totally missed out on.  It had the intensity of hard rock, the experimentalism of new wave, but without all the "visual stylings" that had taken over rock and new wave once MTV and music videos were born.  R.E.M., easily one of my three favorite bands of all time was born from (or gave birth to?) this "fourth movement".  Hmmm... maybe I'd give that credit to the Velvet Underground.  I'd put Talking Heads in this group, too.  All of this in preparation for the opinion that a crown jewel in that movement has to be Sonic Youth.  


This band just wasn't going to play what was popular or expected of them; they were going to make noise and lots of it.  On first (and sometimes second, third, fourth and fifth) listen, it may just seem like chaos and reverb; distortion and noise.  But there is definitely beauty and form woven in these deeply textured songs.  I can get lost in some of their songs.  One such example is Hits of Sunshine (for Allen Ginsberg) off "A Thousand Leaves".  It was the first SY song I ever heard, playing on late-night programming of KJQ in Salt Lake City around 1987.  The song features an eight and one-half minute stretch of repeated bass and percussion lines with overlying experimental guitar that just sends me to the moon and  beyond every time.  When I first heard the song, it unsettled me due to it's length and seeming lack of melody.  But the piece stuck with me, stewing in my subconscious for several years.  In the early 90's when the alternative rock and "grunge" movements were taking off, a common theme from mega-successful bands like Nirvana et al. was the unanimous praise for Sonic Youth as a major inspiration.  I recall reading an interview with Kurt Cobain in Rolling Stone magazine during those years in which he commented that it was ridiculous that everyone was liking and buying Nirvana's albums, while not doing the same for Sonic Youth's albums.  I may have the magazine wrong, but I remember the comment clearly.


I still didn't jump on the Sonic Youth bullet train until the mid 1990's when I got to hear them play live as the opening act for R.E.M.'s "Monster" tour in Salt Lake.  My friend D.R.S. had procured nice club box seats for us and our wives, so we had a great view.  SY was promoting their latest album "Washing Machine" but it was their live performance of the ever-cool Bull in the Heather from the prior album "Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star" that dyed my wool in the color of Sonic Youth from then 'til now.    


Today's song Stones comes off a later album, "Sonic Nurse".  I picked it for the title, and the following lines:


Camera on the haunted stones
Blood-shadow gentle painted scorn
Now it's dancin' ink across your skin

Hieroglyphic-lover nature-friend


By the time this album was released, the SY style had become a little more focused and accessible, yet it still displays their brash insistence on experimentation true to their original post-punk sound.  Distortion, reverb, and extended "improvised" sounding solos are still a mainstay.  Every SY fan has a favorite album or vocalist... I prefer the vocals of Thurston Moore over his wife Kim Gordon's or guitarist Lee Ranaldo's.  The only other person I know who respects Sonic Youth as much as I do, my good friend M.C.D. also prefers Thurston's vocals, if I remember correctly (he gifted me a Thurston Moore solo CD recently that I was previously ignorant of, and which I absolutely love.)  


The band has been able to maintain such a high standard over the years;  even to the point that I feel their last three albums collectively stand alongside, if not atop, their earlier groundbreaking albums beginning with "Sister" or "Daydream Nation".  I wish I could say the same of my beloved R.E.M., or even a band like U2 - but I cannot do that with honesty.


Okay, I do believe I am done now.  Once again, the music seems to be staging a mutiny against the photos in my blog.  I hope it is a battle that rages on for the remaining 354 expected entries, but I also understand that the average reader likely does not have the time or interest for all this crap I bother to write.  No worries.  If people just check in from time to time to look at some photos and maybe listen to a minute or two of music... well, then that alone is flattering to me.  However, I suppose I really am doing this for me first, and hope that some wandering soul out their likes it too.


Until tomorrow... thank you for looking, listening and reading.  CCE


Sunday, January 10, 2010

Fire on the Water




#10
01.10.10


After three consecutive posts of iPhone photographs featuring hanging artwork; it was time to hit the road and wrestle a pic or three from Mother Nature.  I woke up my co-pilot Q super-duper early, because we wanted to be on the road an hour before the sunrise to catch my favorite morning light.  Alright, so it was not as dramatic as it sounds; we just had to be up by 9 a.m. to be on the road by 9:15 to meet our goal of catching the sunrise.  We were not disappointed!


We got about 15 miles from Anchorage to a popular pull-out on the Seward Highway along the Turnagain Arm of the Cook Inlet that is called 'Beluga Point'.  (The drive from Anchorage to Seward is considered among the Top 5 scenic drives in the U.S.A., by the way.)  I took some acceptable photos there; but the light just wasn't right yet.  So we drove on, and suddenly the sun crested over the Chugach Range to the South over the Kenai Peninsula.  This cast a lovely morning light over the deep waters of the Turnagain Arm, so we made a hasty pull-over and I was able to get some nice photos.  The clouds looked like they had set the ocean on fire.  All of the floating objects are ice.


The beauty of Alaska is such that often times digital processing can only but ruin a photo; so the featured photo, along with the two supporting photos, are all original and unprocessed.  I find myself more attracted to the reflection of burning clouds in the ocean than the actual sun and clouds in the sky.  Perhaps that's why I like photography so much; often times it shows a more exciting reality than the one I am accustomed to focusing on.  


Here are the nominees for Best Supporting Photograph in an iPhone Photo Blog entry:








The music for this entry is 'Deeper Water' by Minnie Driver.  Yeah, that Minnie Driver.  I sampled Minnie's music back in 2004 when I first heard that she was making a CD.  I thought "yeah, that should stink pretty badly", only to find that the music, lyrics and vocals were better than simply passable.  I bought the album for my wife, thinking she might like it, but soon found that we both turned it on a few times per week.  The album is "Everything I've Got In My Pocket", and it might surprise you too with it's quality.  It features an amazing cover of Springsteen's 'Hungry Heart' that is not to be missed.  I chose this track for today's blog entry based on the title of the song, and the peaceful calm it offers to match the morning sunrise in my photo.


Until tomorrow... thank you for looking, listening and reading.  CCE

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