Sunday, November 22, 2009
Elvis Costello, yet again
In my last post on the topic, I implied that the Get Happy!! bonus CD was better than the King of America bonus CD, but now I'm reconsidering. It's true that there are more tracks of interest on the Get Happy!! bonus CD, but none of them are as good as "Having It All" or "End of the Rainbow" from the King of America bonus CD. Elvis Costello's singing on those tracks is so desolate it's almost heartbeaking.
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Ghostbusters
I saw something today that reminded me that I'd seen Ghostbusters when it first came out, and had thought it only mildly amusing. I had thought it would be about three guys calling themselves "ghostbusters" trying to exorcise ghosts that didn't exist. That would have been funny. Instead it turned out to be about three guys successfully exorcising ghosts that did exist, and I didn't see what was funny about that. Also, I think you have to "get" Bill Murray to find the movie funny, and I didn't. And, since I never watched Ghostbusters again, or anything else with Murray in it subsequently (except a few minutes of Lost in Translation) I probably still don't.
Friday, November 20, 2009
King of America bonus disc
So, to finish up with the Elvis Costello bonus discs, the King of America bonus disc is intermediate in value between the Get Happy!! and Blood and Chocolate bonus discs. Its highlights are "Having It All," "I'll Wear It Proudly" and "End of the Rainbow," three moving solo acoustic demos; "Betrayal," an outtake; a terrific live version of "The Big Light"; and some lightweight but fun live blues covers.
Oh, and I'm feeling better today.
Oh, and I'm feeling better today.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Questioning this blog
Technically, I've been pretty good about posting something every day either here or on my main blog. But I'm starting to wonder if there's any point to this if I'm just going to post stuff written in five minutes at the end of the day when I'm exhausted. This wasn't what I intended when I started this blog.
Get Happy!! bonus CD
[I slipped yesterday. I had a post all ready to go, but didn't get around to posting it until I was too tired to do anything but sleep. So here it is today, bright and early, and not counting as today's post.]
Get Happy!! was originally a twenty-track album, which was an awful lot for an LP back in those days. (The Rhino set even includes an unlisted bonus track of a radio commercial for the LP whose main selling point was that it had so many tracks.) Of course, twenty tracks on a CD is nothing special; but Rhino outdoes themselves on the bonus disc, which contains thirty tracks (not counting the one mentioned above). And a substantial proportion of these are worth repeated listenings. Some are better than anything on the original LP. The tracks that stand out are alternate versions of "B Movie" and "Girls Talk," "Hoover Factory," "Just a Memory," an alternate version of "New Amsterdam," demos of six songs that appear on Get Happy!! and a solo acoustic demo of a previously unreleased song called "Seven O'Clock."
The Get Happy!! demos are quieter and more subdued, with a country-rock flavor and without the swirling keyboards that dominate the album. I'm normally not in favor of rock being quieter and more subdued, let alone of country rock, but in this case the demos are way better. It's not that I don't like the sound of the album: I do. But on the demos, the songs sound like they're good songs. On the album, they don't.
Listening to these albums, I came to the realization that I like Elvis Costello best when he's keeping things relatively simple. Simple arrangements, either unadorned and acoustic, or straight-out rock; and simple (for Elvis Costello, anyway) lyrics. Which is a problem, of course, because his tendency has been to complicate things (at least up until Spike, when I stopped listening to him).
Get Happy!! was originally a twenty-track album, which was an awful lot for an LP back in those days. (The Rhino set even includes an unlisted bonus track of a radio commercial for the LP whose main selling point was that it had so many tracks.) Of course, twenty tracks on a CD is nothing special; but Rhino outdoes themselves on the bonus disc, which contains thirty tracks (not counting the one mentioned above). And a substantial proportion of these are worth repeated listenings. Some are better than anything on the original LP. The tracks that stand out are alternate versions of "B Movie" and "Girls Talk," "Hoover Factory," "Just a Memory," an alternate version of "New Amsterdam," demos of six songs that appear on Get Happy!! and a solo acoustic demo of a previously unreleased song called "Seven O'Clock."
The Get Happy!! demos are quieter and more subdued, with a country-rock flavor and without the swirling keyboards that dominate the album. I'm normally not in favor of rock being quieter and more subdued, let alone of country rock, but in this case the demos are way better. It's not that I don't like the sound of the album: I do. But on the demos, the songs sound like they're good songs. On the album, they don't.
Listening to these albums, I came to the realization that I like Elvis Costello best when he's keeping things relatively simple. Simple arrangements, either unadorned and acoustic, or straight-out rock; and simple (for Elvis Costello, anyway) lyrics. Which is a problem, of course, because his tendency has been to complicate things (at least up until Spike, when I stopped listening to him).
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
A placeholder post
Once again, it's late and I'm tired. I'm writing a post, but I won't finish it tonight. So consider this a placeholder, to be expanded later.
I've been listening to the bonus disc to Get Happy!! as I intimated in my last post, and there's a lot more interesting stuff there than on the Blood and Chocolate bonus disc, even proportionately. (There are twice as many tracks on the former as on the latter.) Specifically, I found twelve tracks worth listening to more than once, or even twice. If you want to play along at home, they're tracks 8, 9, 16, 17 and 19-26.
I've been listening to the bonus disc to Get Happy!! as I intimated in my last post, and there's a lot more interesting stuff there than on the Blood and Chocolate bonus disc, even proportionately. (There are twice as many tracks on the former as on the latter.) Specifically, I found twelve tracks worth listening to more than once, or even twice. If you want to play along at home, they're tracks 8, 9, 16, 17 and 19-26.
Monday, November 16, 2009
Blood and Chocolate bonus CD
If you read my earlier Blood and Chocolate post, you may have wondered why I was listening to the album in the first place if I remembered it as not being very good. The short answer is: the bonus CD. The long answer is that about a week ago I noticed that my local library had copies available of the early 2000s Rhino reissues of Get Happy!! King of America and Blood and Chocolate. Each of these reissues came with a bonus disc loaded with tracks. I was an Elvis Costello fan back when people thought of him as being punk, or at least New Wave. And though I wasn't interested in hearing the albums themselves again, I was curious enough about the bonus tracks to borrow the CDs. This set me off on an Elvis Costello mini-project, in the course of which I decided to listen to the original albums after all.
Well, of the three bonus discs, the one for Blood and Chocolate is by far the least interesting. There were only three tracks that drew my attention: an uptempo version of "Battered Old Bird," a track called "American Without Tears No. 2 (Twilight Version)" which has the same music as the King of America track but almost completely different lyrics, and a song called "Seven Day Weekend" with Jimmy Cliff. The first two of these are not necesssarily better than the original versions ("American Without Tears No. 2" is definitely worse), but they're interesting to listen to.
Incidentally, I didn't post yesterday because it was my birthday and I decided to give myself a day off.
Well, of the three bonus discs, the one for Blood and Chocolate is by far the least interesting. There were only three tracks that drew my attention: an uptempo version of "Battered Old Bird," a track called "American Without Tears No. 2 (Twilight Version)" which has the same music as the King of America track but almost completely different lyrics, and a song called "Seven Day Weekend" with Jimmy Cliff. The first two of these are not necesssarily better than the original versions ("American Without Tears No. 2" is definitely worse), but they're interesting to listen to.
Incidentally, I didn't post yesterday because it was my birthday and I decided to give myself a day off.
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Blood and Chocolate
I just finished listening to the Elvis Costello album Blood and Chocolate for the first time in many years. It's better than I remembered it being, but it's still not very good.
Friday, November 13, 2009
Diary of the Dead: suspension of disbelief
I just watched George Romero's latest (I think) film Diary of the Dead, in which he reboots, so to speak, his long-running series by going back to the first appearance of zombies but setting it in the near-present, as opposed to 1968 when Night of the Living Dead appeared. Reviews may have been mixed, or so I surmise from the obscurity of the sources of the blurbs on the DVD box. But I enjoyed it, though it has its flaws: in particular, some of the "meaningful" dialogue comes off as pretentious. (I'm unusual, though, in that I preferred Night of the Living Dead to Dawn of the Dead.)
But there's one major aspect of the film which I have a hard time suspending my disbelief for. As I said, the film takes place in the present, as the role played by the Web makes clear. And the protagonists are film students who, as the film begins, are making a horror movie. But nobody ever mentions any of Romero's films, although they would be the first thing that would come to anyone's mind if they began hearing reports about the dead returning to life and eating the living. What's more, nobody ever even says the word "zombie." Now, I understand the convention by which, for example, the South Park doesn't exist in the South Park universe, although shows like The Simpsons and Family Guy do. But flesh-eating zombies are now such a major part of our popular culture that to simply "delete" them doesn't work, at least not for me.
But there's one major aspect of the film which I have a hard time suspending my disbelief for. As I said, the film takes place in the present, as the role played by the Web makes clear. And the protagonists are film students who, as the film begins, are making a horror movie. But nobody ever mentions any of Romero's films, although they would be the first thing that would come to anyone's mind if they began hearing reports about the dead returning to life and eating the living. What's more, nobody ever even says the word "zombie." Now, I understand the convention by which, for example, the South Park doesn't exist in the South Park universe, although shows like The Simpsons and Family Guy do. But flesh-eating zombies are now such a major part of our popular culture that to simply "delete" them doesn't work, at least not for me.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Stuff I don't like as much as I'm supposed to, Part 2: More TV
The Sopranos
Wire
Deadwood
Lost
Battlestar Galactica
Seinfeld
The Simpsons
Wire
Deadwood
Lost
Battlestar Galactica
Seinfeld
The Simpsons
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Stuff I don't like as much as I'm supposed to, Part 1: Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Well, this should be an inexhaustible source of posts when I can't think of any other topic. The subject is just what the title says: stuff that other people say I should really like, but which I don't like that much (or at all). These won't be reviews because I won't be trying to be fair. It will be just me sounding off.
SPOILER WARNING: This post has spoilers for season 2 of Buffy the Vampire Slayer; also for the first arc of Sailor Moon the manga.
The premiere of this series is devoted to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the TV series, of which I have watched on DVD the first episode and what I gathered were the best episodes from the second season. (See what I mean about not being fair?) The first episode didn't interest me enough to watch any further. First of all, it didn't strike me as being like high school. Rather, it was like a Hollywood version of high school, where even the "plain" characters are pretty or handsome by non-Hollywood standards and everyone is constantly being witty (that's the writers' intent, anyway). Second, I just couldn't suspend my disbelief enough to buy the whole defeating-vampires-with-martial-arts shtick. And third, like I said, it just wasn't that interesting to me.
Some months later, after encountering a bunch of intelligent people who were fans of Buffy on the internet, I decided to give the show another try. This time, I wanted to see the series at its best. And as far as I could tell from reading books, websites etc. it was at its best in Season Two, and the best episodes from that season were the two-parter where Angel reverts to Angelus and the two final episodes, plus one other which I don't remember too well now. Again, I just wasn't that interested. I was particularly annoyed with the finale, because 1) the setup for Buffy killing Angel just after he's turned back from Angel is so obviously and ridiculously contrived, and 2) the teenage girl killing her boyfriend because he's possessed scenario was done better in the first arc of Sailor Moon the manga (which is otherwise pretty forgettable).
And I'm not even going to get into the plot's obvious illogicalities (some of which, to be fair for one second, may have been explained in the episodes I didn't see).
SPOILER WARNING: This post has spoilers for season 2 of Buffy the Vampire Slayer; also for the first arc of Sailor Moon the manga.
The premiere of this series is devoted to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the TV series, of which I have watched on DVD the first episode and what I gathered were the best episodes from the second season. (See what I mean about not being fair?) The first episode didn't interest me enough to watch any further. First of all, it didn't strike me as being like high school. Rather, it was like a Hollywood version of high school, where even the "plain" characters are pretty or handsome by non-Hollywood standards and everyone is constantly being witty (that's the writers' intent, anyway). Second, I just couldn't suspend my disbelief enough to buy the whole defeating-vampires-with-martial-arts shtick. And third, like I said, it just wasn't that interesting to me.
Some months later, after encountering a bunch of intelligent people who were fans of Buffy on the internet, I decided to give the show another try. This time, I wanted to see the series at its best. And as far as I could tell from reading books, websites etc. it was at its best in Season Two, and the best episodes from that season were the two-parter where Angel reverts to Angelus and the two final episodes, plus one other which I don't remember too well now. Again, I just wasn't that interested. I was particularly annoyed with the finale, because 1) the setup for Buffy killing Angel just after he's turned back from Angel is so obviously and ridiculously contrived, and 2) the teenage girl killing her boyfriend because he's possessed scenario was done better in the first arc of Sailor Moon the manga (which is otherwise pretty forgettable).
And I'm not even going to get into the plot's obvious illogicalities (some of which, to be fair for one second, may have been explained in the episodes I didn't see).
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Nocturnes follow-up
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Princess Tutu again
I just finished watching Princess Tutu (against my own advice) and the ending (most of which I had forgotten since my first viewing) was good enough to make up for any feelings of disappointment with the rest of the series. A lot of anime flub the ending, but here the ending is the best part. I will say that in retrospect the series feels somewhat padded, but this is probably true of most 26-episode anime.
Saturday, November 7, 2009
Sayonara, Zetsubou Sensei
I gave the manga comedy Sayonara, Zetsubou Sensei a lukewarm review in a recent Comics Journal. But I've been watching the anime, which is remarkably faithful to the manga, and it's one of the funniest anime I've seen. I'm not sure what accounts for my differing responses. Part of it is that the anime has a much higher density of gags, many of which go by too fast to be seen clearly. But I think the main reason is that the anime has that anarchic spirit which the manga lacks, as I noted in my review.
Friday, November 6, 2009
Anime: Princess Tutu
I'm in the middle of watching the anime Princess Tutu for the second time. It's good, but not quite as good as I'd remembered it. One problem with it is the protagonist's "friends" Pike and Lilie. The same-sex "friends" of the protagonist who do nothing but annoy and obstruct him or her is are a cliche of anime, and while they're intended as comic relief, usually they only annoy the viewer as well. Pike and Lilie were actually funny at first, but having now watched them for twenty episodes, they're irritating as heck. It occurs to me that it might be better to watch one episode of Princess Tutu a week, as I originally watched it, and as it was first broadcast. That would probably reduce the feeling of repetitiveness that arises from watching a bunch of episodes in a row. And Pike and Lilie would certainly be less irritating when taken in small doses.
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Metapost
I have to say that so far this isn't working out quite the way I wanted. The problem is that by the time I get around to posting, I'm often so tired that I can't come up with anything substantial, so I wind up with these very brief posts, which isn't what I intended. And my first priority is practicing Japanese reading, so when I'm at my most alert I do that instead of blogging.
Incidentally, there was no post on Tuesday because I was up in Chicago all day, and by the time I got back it was way too late, and I was way too tired, to blog.
Incidentally, there was no post on Tuesday because I was up in Chicago all day, and by the time I got back it was way too late, and I was way too tired, to blog.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
A word of advice
If you're planning both to watch Princess Tutu and to listen to Forbidden Broadway Cleans Up Its Act, watch Princess Tutu first. In particular, make sure you see episode 13 first. (Actually, this only matters for "Swan Lake" on Forbidden Broadway Cleans Up Its Act.)
Monday, November 2, 2009
A Sgt. Pepper epigram
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band has been labelled overrated for so long, and by so many, that it's now underrated. (Sorry; I'm very tired and that's all I can come up with tonight.)
Sunday, November 1, 2009
The Toon Treasury of Classic Children's Comics
The Toon Treasury of Classic Children's Comics includes a number of stories that are indeed classic: three Barks stories, three Sugar and Spike stories by Sheldon Mayer, two classic Little Lulu stories (and one not so classic, as I mentioned before), and one (only one?) of George Carlson's stories from "Jingle Jangle Comics." If you're familiar with comics history -- particularly if you've read The Smithsonian Book of Comic Book Comics -- you'll be familiar with these artists, if not necessarily the particular stories chosen. But to the "layman," these stories will be revelations.
The trouble is that it includes even more stuff that is far from classic. Some are simply hackwork: Nutsy Squirrel, Intellectual Amos (represented, incomprehensively, by three stories), Alix in Folly-land, Supermouse, Billy and Bonny Bee, Flip and Flopper. Rover may not be hackwork, but it's dull. Some stories are interesting but hardly classic: among these are The Fox and the Crow, Egbert the Elephant, and a Dick Briefer Frankenstein story. (Going by this story, claims that Briefer was a great artist are wildly overstated.)
Then there are the inferior stories by great artists. As I stated in another earlier post, I include the non-Lulu John Stanley stories in this category. And while I'm a huge Pogo fan, the Walt Kelly non-Pogo stories included here are depressing: cute mice and bunnies and Disneyfied dwarves engaged in lukewarm gags or adventures. For that matter, I was disappointed by the Pogo story included here. The Pogo stories in The Smithsonian Book were better. I know I'm in the minority here, but while I love Sugar and Spike, I've never cared for Mayer's earlier strip Scribbly. And while some of Mayer's funny animal stories are indeed classics, the ones included in The Toon Treasury aren't.
I know I'm also in the minority in not liking Kurtzman's Hey, Look! strips (I'll admit, I did like a couple of the ones in here, but even those are hardly classics). Likewise, though Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly, the editors, may have felt bad about their decision to omit any Plastic Man stories, Cole's Burp the Twerp one-pagers are not an acceptable substitute. In fact, most of the covers and one-page strips included could have been omitted with no loss, and the extra space used for another George Carlson story, or one of the stories where Little Lulu tells Alvin a story.
A successful anthology of this sort should make you think "Wow, how much more great stuff that I've never heard of is out there?" This anthology, on the other hand, is more likely to leave you suspecting that this vein must be nearly tapped out. The only real discoveries here for me were two Alice in Wonderland-based stories by Dave Berg. Yes, that Dave Berg. I can't claim that these are classics, but I would like to see more of these stories. It's also a surprise how much Berg's art in these stories resembles Will Elder's EC art.
Incidentally, lovers of Tintin, Asterix or Dr. Slump, to name only three, will be surprised to learn that only the United States produced classic children's comics. (This is particularly ironic, of course, considering the book's editors.)
The trouble is that it includes even more stuff that is far from classic. Some are simply hackwork: Nutsy Squirrel, Intellectual Amos (represented, incomprehensively, by three stories), Alix in Folly-land, Supermouse, Billy and Bonny Bee, Flip and Flopper. Rover may not be hackwork, but it's dull. Some stories are interesting but hardly classic: among these are The Fox and the Crow, Egbert the Elephant, and a Dick Briefer Frankenstein story. (Going by this story, claims that Briefer was a great artist are wildly overstated.)
Then there are the inferior stories by great artists. As I stated in another earlier post, I include the non-Lulu John Stanley stories in this category. And while I'm a huge Pogo fan, the Walt Kelly non-Pogo stories included here are depressing: cute mice and bunnies and Disneyfied dwarves engaged in lukewarm gags or adventures. For that matter, I was disappointed by the Pogo story included here. The Pogo stories in The Smithsonian Book were better. I know I'm in the minority here, but while I love Sugar and Spike, I've never cared for Mayer's earlier strip Scribbly. And while some of Mayer's funny animal stories are indeed classics, the ones included in The Toon Treasury aren't.
I know I'm also in the minority in not liking Kurtzman's Hey, Look! strips (I'll admit, I did like a couple of the ones in here, but even those are hardly classics). Likewise, though Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly, the editors, may have felt bad about their decision to omit any Plastic Man stories, Cole's Burp the Twerp one-pagers are not an acceptable substitute. In fact, most of the covers and one-page strips included could have been omitted with no loss, and the extra space used for another George Carlson story, or one of the stories where Little Lulu tells Alvin a story.
A successful anthology of this sort should make you think "Wow, how much more great stuff that I've never heard of is out there?" This anthology, on the other hand, is more likely to leave you suspecting that this vein must be nearly tapped out. The only real discoveries here for me were two Alice in Wonderland-based stories by Dave Berg. Yes, that Dave Berg. I can't claim that these are classics, but I would like to see more of these stories. It's also a surprise how much Berg's art in these stories resembles Will Elder's EC art.
Incidentally, lovers of Tintin, Asterix or Dr. Slump, to name only three, will be surprised to learn that only the United States produced classic children's comics. (This is particularly ironic, of course, considering the book's editors.)
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