Monday, February 21, 2011

#98 - 10K MP3

Number 98 is complete. I've hit 10,000+ MP3s in my music collection.

#91 - SLSO and SLAM update

Couple of cultural events to note:

Listened to Beethoven's 7th at the St. Louis Symphony.

Saw the Joe Jones Painter of the American Scene exhibit at the St. Louis Art Museum.

Joe Jones' famous and powerful American Justice which was included in the exhibit:





#89 & 90 - Struggling Theatre

Plays seen since the last update. Noticed a common theme of many of these plays; even the comedies are about struggling with a loss. Some (True West, Slasher) had physical fights on stage. Struggle could also refer to the challenges of live theatre. One play had a small tech glitch (Closer), one had an audience member faint (Shadowlands), and one had an actor who had a flat tire on the way in and had to be understudied for the first scenes (Distracted).

As Bees in Honey Drown by Douglas Carter Beane
- Comedy about celebrity. And people famous for being famous. And people wanting to be famous. This doesn't really fit the struggle theme, though the main con woman character did struggle to reinvent herself and her image from her small town roots. But I'm probably stretching the point. At Stray Dog Theatre.

Closer by Patrick Marber - I thought this was really well-done. Didn't pull any punches about love or sex or people. At St. Louis Actor's Studio.

Crumble (Lay Me Down Justin Timberlake) by Shelia Callaghan -Qualifies as Modern, Arty, Freaky; since The Apartment is a central talking character and a little girl blows her hand off. Plus dream sequences with Justin Timberlake and Harrison Ford. At Echo Theatre.

Distracted by Lisa Loomer - As always I love Michelle Hand. Seriocomic play about a parent struggling with a newly diagnosed ADHD kid. At Stray Dog Theatre.

Pericles by William Shakespeare - Second tier Shakespeare. A prince has to flee his country because of some McGuffin. He gets married, has daughter, loses wife, loses daughter, has about 17 shipwrecks. But it all works out in the end. First time I ever encountered the plot device of Pirates Ex Machina. Seriously they come out of freakin' nowhere. At The Black Rep.

Shadowlands by William Nicholson - My cousin David had a silent role in this play about a love affair that author C.S. Lewis had with an American divorcee. Although platonic at first, the feelings deepen. Thenl she is stricken by cancer and Lewis has to confront a) his feelings and b) his beliefs about why God allows suffering. At Mustard Seed.

Slasher by Allison Moore - Spoof of horror movies. No real struggle here except - TO LIVE! Pretty funny. At Hot City.

True West by Sam Shepard - Sibling rivalry cranked to 11. At Hot City.

The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion - One woman play based on the novel of the same name. The Didion character recounts the year following the sudden death of her husband. A year spent dealing with the loss as well as her adult daughter's several illnesses and eventual death. At St. Louis Repertory.

Ruined by Lynn Nottage - A proud woman survives amidst the chaos of the Congo Civil War. Powerful. At The Black Rep


#94 & #95 - Book Report

List of books read since the last update.

Fiction:

Bluebeard by Kurt Vonnegut - Not as good as Slaughterhouse Five or Cat's Cradle but a decent Vonnegut to be read if you are a fan.

The Call of the Wild by Jack London - Great story about the Alaskan Gold Rush, as seen through the eyes of a sled dog. I read this in a collection of other Jack London stories, which all have the basic plot of people freezing to death in the woods. Recommended to read indoors and not in November in a tent like I did.

A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess - Saw the movie, read the book. Enjoyed it. Just discovered I read the American version i.e. without the last original chapter. Might have to go to a bookstore and finish it, see if it changes anything.

The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald - Brilliant novel. Beautiful turns of phrases. Wish they had made me read it in high school.

Full Dark, No Stars by Stephen King - Four novellas by King. Worth reading.

The Long Goodbye by Raymond Chandler - Liked The Big Sleep better but Marlowe remains a great character in any situation.

Lullaby by Chuck Palahniuk - Another interesting novel by
Palahniuk. This one is about a newspaper reporter who discovers there is an African culling song in a book of poetry. The poem is deadly to the listener, who are usually infants. He tries to track down and destroy all the copies of the poem. While that part is straightforward there is an abundance of weird characters, including the realtor who keeps reselling the same haunted house, several witches, and an ambulance driver who kills fashion models so he can have sex with their dead bodies.

Non - Fiction:

Life by Keith Richards - Autobiography of Rolling Stones guitarist. Showed me a couple of things 1) That Hunter S. Thompson was right: "once you get locked into a serious drug collection, the tendency is to push it as far as you can". And 2) perhaps one of the keys to life is to simply pursue your passion and money will follow. Or maybe have a desire to share your passion. All they wanted was to be the best Chicago blues cover band in London.

Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer - Story of a disastrous climb to the summit of Everest in May 1996. Quote that sticks with me: Above 8000 meters is not a place where people can afford morality. Note that was not said by Krakauer, who I thought wrote well and IMO took the appropriate amount of responsibility for his decisions on that trip.