Posts

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest at 50

Image
The first thing McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) does when he is transferred from the work farm to the mental hospital is laugh at one of the guards and kiss the other one. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest turns 50 today. Too many years have passed since I last enjoyed this cinematic marvel and I found myself asking the same question as always: why don't I watch this movie more often? It's an astonishing film. For the first two-thirds of its runtime, it's genuinely hilarious and surprisingly fun. There are warm scenes and plenty of laugh-out-loud moments. You're just hanging out with these guys, laughing at McMurphy's antics. I don't watch particular films obsessively anymore (except when I initially discover them as I did with Tarkovsky and Stalker a couple of years ago, for example). I used to, but these days I really don't have any "watch it every year" type movies—except for The Fellowship of the Ring with Avery at Christmas, and the whole LOT...

Bon Voyage Jeffery!

Image
Me and Jeffery.  Our friendship is the longest either of us have had so far. We were fellow partiers. We played and sang countless songs together. We played hundreds of games of chess together, played poker and bridge together, wargames, and probably a lot of other games I no longer recall. We were ‘Dillo friends long before the Cumberland Island Armadillos were even a thought, before I was married, before I went to India. We had so much fun together it is difficult now to even believe it was us. We watched each other change considerably over almost a half century of friendship. Jeffery is a surprising man of marvelous humor, inquiring mind, rugged skilled hands, innate creativity, and emotional intelligence. He is a bit of an odd-ball like me. We are both sort of like the people who live around here. But, in fundamental ways, we are like no one around here at all. We were born and grew up here, graduated together (though we did not know each other until after high schoo...

Shostakovitch’s Leningrad Symphony

Image
Under remarkable wartime conditions, this is the Leningrad premiere of Shostakovich's Symphony No. 7 on August 9, 1942.  To look at these people you would not know that all of them, without exception, are malnourished and under German artillery fire.  The orchestra itself fought fatigue to be able to learn and then perform the massive work of defiance dedicated by the composer to the city itself.   I recently completed Prit Buttar's excellent two-volume history of the Siege of Leningrad. I was struck by much in the books, but nothing of a non-military nature surpassed the extraordinary story of Shostakovich's Seventh Symphony as described by Buttar in To Besiege a City: Leningrad 1941-1942 . It's one of those intersections of history and art so improbable that it almost feels like myth, except that it happened among bombings, starvation, and bureaucratic terror. Shostakovich had already been through his own siege long before the Germans arrived. In the 1930s, Stal...

P·U·L·S·E at 30: Pink Floyd’s Last Great Eclipse

Image
  P·U·L·S·E Boxed CD Cover.  Pretty cool! As I have said before, one thing leads to another .  I have an idea for a future blog post "All The Ways To Be Comfortably Numb."  There are several really good versions of this Pink Floyd song performed by the band as well as by Roger Waters and David Gilmour separately.  I decided I would blog about all the interesting facets of the different performances of that song.  There would be no covers.  At least one band member had to be involved.  I have my favorites and several that are not as good but nevertheless interesting. In putting the list together from YouTube videos naturally I came across in the incredible performance at Earl's Court on October 20, 1994.  This appeared in 1995's CD (and 2005's DVD) entitled  P·U·L·S·E .  This was the final full-on tour by Pink Floyd, so this music is special.  Suddenly, where I was once obsessed with just "Comfortably Numb" I became hyper-fixate...