an unfinished novel . . . 4.15.11

02 December 2010

Dostoyevsky, Banquo, the ellipsis, & the "But"


Protest the Hero, Fortress.

January 2008: I'm hanging round on a Saturday flipping channels, & I check out Headbanger's Ball, the only metal that ever got played on the music channels.

Several (many) Cookie-monster-vocal-down-tuned chugga-chugga-riffed boring soundalike metal songs pass, & this band comes on.  I see the title "Bloodmeat" & assume it's more of the same.

Uh, no.

I mean, NO!!.

A tad screeamish, w/ some guttural growling, & some serious shred later, I had a new band to check out.

This album came out a few weeks later, so I grabbed Kezia, the debut, & picked up Fortress the day it came out.

Great stuff.

More great stuff: dudes were in high school when they started (as "Happy Go Lucky"--great band name there), began a tour the day they finished their senior finals, were still teenagers when they started releasing albums.

Best yet: in 2004 the bass player, Arif Mirabdolbaghi attended a symposium of the International Dostoyevsky Society in Geneva.

All this, & brains, too.

I like my music loud, obnoxious, angry, & all kinda of punk-metal-progressive-ish (all of these terms have been used to describe Protest), but if it's smart, too? Oh yeah, I am so there.

New album early 2011, also.

Juniors:
We re-did Act III, & i tried to answer questions & point out some very important lines & stuff.

Banquo begins the act, & then [Dies}.

Macbeth's growing paranoia & realization that he is in too deep to get out.

Lady Macbeth's line "Nought's had, all's spent" sums up the situ--- I mean, scenario

Lennox & the Lord scene implies that Malcolm & Macduff seem to be up to something

Act IV complete by MONDAY!!!

Sophomores:
We reviewed the notes & concepts from yesterday, & we went pretty deep into the poem "Moons."

Celestial & poetical.

How many of you had put that much emphasis on the ellipsis?

Do you see now how the "But" is majorly important?

As for vocab: you submitted your synonyms . . . CTS due Monday, quiz next Wednesday.

be cool

01 December 2010

strange days, indeed


The Doors, Strange Days

The bands 2nd album & an example, some say, of the sophomore slump. But the problem arose perhaps from the brilliance of the 1st one--how to follow up the self-titled debut?

How about changing the rules?

"Psychedelic" is a word that gets thrown around in discussion of this one, &, yeah, I guess so, but as a dude who listened to the band long after they were done & wasn't alive or cognizant of music while they were around, I enjoy each album for what it is.

& this is good.

Seriously, "When the Music's Over" is a much, much better album-closer than "The End."

& "Moonlight Drive" is the song that got Ray Manzarek to pay attention to Jim Morrison's words.

Yep, Rubel hates these guys, & he has good reasons. & part of the beauty of art in general is the possibility of opinion.

I have always thought of Morrison as the ultimate high school rock-n-roll icon . . . you know, the whole idea of guys want to be like him, girls want to be his lady friend.

Anyway, those of you who pay attention know that I referenced Mr. Mojo Risin' several times as a disciple of T. S. Eliot, & some of the lyrics on this album fit that comparison.

The only "hit" here is probably "People Are Strange," which Echo & the Bunnymen covered for the soundtrack to The Lost Boys, which should have made my top-10 from a few weeks ago

Check 'em all out.

He was The Lizard King; he could do anything.

Well, write some good songs & some  really pretentious ones . . .

Juniors:
You all read through Act III, & I'm sure all was good, & I thank you for that.

It's nice to know that when one of my children or I myself am sick that some of you have the respect to be cool in my absence.

This play gets really interesting now, as the centerpiece of Act II gives us some ramifications of the murder.

Also, it has the one "spurious" scene, #5, in which Hecate shows up to deliver a soliloquy.

Interesting . . .

Sophomores:
You should have:

-- read from the lit book

-- taken notes on "Reading a Poem"

--created a paraphrase chart for "Moons"

--answered the 10 questions for "The Stayer"

I have already heard the reality, &, well, it's kind of sad.

See "respect," above.

Let's do better tomorrow.

Unit 6 synonyms due.

be cool

30 November 2010

this, too, shall pass

Because, as George Harrison said, All Things Must Pass:



My favorite Beatle, mostly because John & Paul are a tad over-revered (no pun w/ "Paul" & "revere" initially intended), & Ringo, well, he's kind of Ringo-ish.

Yeah, he stole the melody for "My Sweet Lord," but musical plagiarism is much different from literary, in my (humble) opinion.

(Malcolm Gladwell has a really interesting piece on plagiarism--from the perspective of the plagiarized, actually--in his What the Dog Saw, which I highly recommend).

Anyway, when it comes to The Beatles, some of my favorites were George songs, especially "Something," "It's All Too Much," "Within You Without You" & his best, "While My Guitar Gently Weeps."

(Yeah, Clapton's Leslie-rotating-speaker-aided solo is probably the best part of it, but the song is phenomenal.)

This solo album has a great title, excellent cover art, & a few classics.

Along with "My Sweet Lord," check out "Wah-Wah," "What Is Life," & "Behind That Locked Door."

& if you really get into the George stuff, his collaboration w/ Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, & Jeff Lynne as The Traveling Wilburys rocks the folk, too.

Juniors:
Turn-in-your-notebook day.

Wow, I need a new name for these, because "notebook" just ain't enough.

I thank all of you for the time & effort you put into your creations, & among many, many creatively tremendous submissions, the toilet paper roll (you read that right), facebook page, collection of individual envelopes, & just some durn fine writing make it all worth the proverbial while.

Several "veteran" seniors who stopped by good ol' 57 today spent several moments reading through your work & admiring the creativity.

Quite simply, you rock.

Thanks also to those who read & performed today.

Yep, there was a ukulele & a tambourine involved.

Back to Macbeth tomorrow, for the pivotal 3rd act.

Sophomores:
All that "vocabumalriamaniarama" English-jargon stuff has been completed, & now we can focus on reading & writing some poetry using the academic vocabulary we have built.

Today you were asked to write a minimum-5-line, minimum-27 word "metaphor" poem as well as a rhyming poem of at least 8 lines & at least 50 words.

REMEMBER: you control all that which is not mandated, which is most of it.

You get full credit for following the directions as they are.

& you saw some super-fantastic examples form the junior classes.

Your notebooks will be due NO EARLIER THAN WEDNESDAY 8 DECEMBER.

Probably Thursday.

be cool

29 November 2010

where I been [sic]



Dinosaur Jr, Where You Been

Another of the more underrated bands in my lifetime, these guys did everything right.

This is what people mean when they call Neil Young "The Godfather of Grunge," because J Mascis sounds so much like Mr Young, & his fuzzed-out guitar solos rock like old-school Crazy Horse.

[He may not sound as much like Young as Jimmy Fallon does, though. & if you have not yet seen  Fallon  as a young Young & Springsteen as a young Springsteen doing "Whip My Hair," please check it out now.

Here's the link: http://www.latenightwithjimmyfallon.com/video/neil-young-and-bruce-springsteen-whip-my-hair-111610/1260532/

I'll wait.]

Anyway, besides having a tremendous band name, they made some great music. Check out Bug, Green Mind, & their latest "reunion" album, Farm.

They also had a minor hit w/ the song "Feel the Pain," which also boasted the best MTV-era golf video

But to me, Where You Been is the masterpiece, Highlights: "Out There," "What Else Is New," "Get Me," & "Goin Home."

Also, J has a solo album, Martin & Me--"Martin" meaning the acoustic guitar he plays--& one w/ his band The Fog.

It is all good.

You have my word.

OLD GUY "INTERWEBS-SCARE-ME" ALERT
Where I been (see what I did there?  kinda a reference to the album title?):

Took a little time off, like Lady Gaga & Alicia Keys are planning to do this Wednesday. If you haven't heard about that one, check out the details.  It's interesting.

I'm old enough to remember pre-myspace/facebook/twitter days, when privacy was something we craved, not something we'd give up if someone--anyone!!!--would pay attention.

Speaking of twitter, one of my favorite facepalm moments of the break was Stevie Johnson's tweet asking God why God let him down on that dropped ball at the end of the Bills-Steelers game (he pleaded:"I PRAISE YOU 24/7!!!!!! AND THIS HOW YOU DO ME!!!!!").

Narcissistic, self-involved, & just plain nuts (not to mention religious-like offensive) much?

Also, the fact that folks feel the need to go online to express their hatred for the Boise St. kicker, a guy who is better at his "job" than most of them are at anything, & who made 2 mistakes on TV.

So every once in a while I take a few weeks away from the online stuff, & I try not to do so at a time that would provide negative consequences for you all. You all knew what needed to be done just before & during break, so the posts went away for a while.

I think every once in a while we need to step back from the speed of the day & indulge in down time. I got mine through playing Mr Mom, reading a few books, & finally watching The Walking Dead, which I think I really like.

Oh, & going through a bunch of projects, soundtracks & such.

There are some fantastically creative folks out there, & I'm glad I get the chance to teach you.

I'll "ketchup" w/ the music soon, though.

I need to post about Springsteen's The Promise, Q*Ball's Fortune Favors the Bald, & TV on the Radio's Return to Cookie Mountain.

& I must reference Rubel's burning, passionate hatred for The Doors, but that will come.

Juniors:
Macbeth, quiz(zes) on acts 1 & 2.

You read 'em, you did well . . you didn't, you didn't . . .

Q & A on the poetry notebook, & a few of you turned 'em in.

I repeat: "There are some fantastically creative folks out there, & I'm glad I get the chance to teach you."

(yes, it's in poor taste to quote oneself, but you get the idea.)


Sophomores:
"Poetry," by Marianne Moore.

I think she lied, & she really does like it.

Just a thought, though.

Unit 6 definitions tomorrow.

Unit 6 synonyms Thursday.

Vocabumalaria!

Vocabumania!!

Vocaburama!!!

be cool