October 16, 2014

The past week or so there has been a slight uptick in interest in the case of Lennon Lacy, a black high school student from a small town down east, south of Fayetteville. Back in August he left his house one evening & was found the next morning, hanging from a swingset. According to press coverage, the police seem eager to call it a suicide and be done with it.

It’s a mark of these strange times that all of the social media posts I have seen about the case have linked to this article from the Guardian [UK]. There may well have been other, more local coverage (I found this in the Indy, for instance), but somehow that Guardian article is what finally caught on, at least among people I follow on Facebook & Twitter.

The story itself is all kinds of sketchy, and horrible, and the fact that I could so easily believe that it’s a lynching being covered up is a whole nother kind of horrible on top of that. The past couple of years have been rough ones, in NC and all over.

Last night I drove to Carrboro to see tune-yards; my mood was elevated substantially before I even got there because I grabbed the Capstan Shafts’ Fixation Protocols to listen to on the way. Now that Guided By Voices have broken up again, maybe Dean Wells can finally have his moment.

tune-yards were amazing, of course. I’ve seen them three times (the only three times, as far as I know, that they’ve played the Triangle), and every time they’ve put on my #1 show of that year. Back in the day you’d go see them & it would just be Merrill and Nate, and she’d stand there before every song, tapping her loop pedals and building the entire rhythm track for each song from scratch.

Nowadays you go see them and it’s Merrill and Nate and a drummer and two backup singers, and she *still* manually constructs the underpinnings of every song live, in realtime, using her loop pedals, before they play it. Only now she has to do it – all of these amazing syncopations & polyrhythms & self-harmony vocal layers– while 600 people in the audience are trying to clap along in straight 4. Or yelling “I love you! Marry me!” over & over.

The music is so funky and the politics are so upfront and the joy onstage is so totally overflowing. I’m not as enamored of the latest album as I was of the first two, but in a live context, all of the studio noodling falls away and they mostly turn into mega dance jams. (Still iffy on “Water Fountain,” though – kind of surprised that it was one of the biggest crowd-response hits of the night.)

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Abigail Nessen-Bengson, Merrill Garbus, Jo Lampert – photo by instagram user designofeye

Weirdest moment: backup singers/dancers Jo & Abigail had this squishy picture frame, and between songs Abigail was holding it up for Jo to pose in. Jo struck this incredibly emotional & sad face – it went well beyond goofing, & looked like she’d tapped into some real depth of sorrow all of a sudden – and then suddenly she toppled over. Passed right out for a second. 

They got her offstage, and Merrill & Nate did a song or two in duo format, and then later in the set she seemed to be fine. Fatigue & stress are weird things; people who think performing on tour is an easy gig are just so totally wrong.

Anyway. Lives weren’t ruined, and neither was the show, and we all left on a high note.

In the car on the way home I listened to Big Science. Perfect segue (and totally apropos). 

Although mostly I found myself wondering whether there has been a remaster since the mid-80s CD version that I own. Like, maybe one with at least some low end?

October 16, 2014

October 15, 2014

I’m not gonna talk about how stupid it seems to allow nurses who were directly handling an Ebola-infected person to up & get on airplanes within the 3 weeks immediately thereafter. Nobody makes medical personnel stay under house arrest (voluntary or otherwise) when they’ve been working, professionally, with any of a huge variety of pathogens.

So instead I’m going to wonder how it was that these nurses hadn’t read the Hot Zone or seen any of two zillion epidemic-paranoia movies, and thus didn’t balk [or didn’t balk sufficiently strongly] at being assigned to care for the Ebola victim for 2 days before they got proper protection & training.

Rainy this morning, sunny this evening. Lingering malaise that I’m fully confident is not Ebola. Myra Breckinridge arrived in the mail today but I was too busy doing work-after-work for us to have time to watch it.

Too busy doing work to have much else to report today, in fact, which is a drag. I *did* check out James Tillman, the guy opening for tune-yards tomorrow. Very nice fragile neo-soul:

Shangri La EP by James Tillman

October 15, 2014

October 14, 2014

Got a new t-shirt. One washing & it’s already starting to flake away, so I guess it’s more a museum piece. But it brings my Cthulhu-related shirt collection to three, and my general tentacles collection to, I dunno, at least 7 or 8?

Anyway. Honestly not a lot to report today. A lot of work. Work and some nice monkfish from Saltbox Seafood, then more work, then part 1 of Lonesome Dove, which we’re watching because why not, but also because last week in the NYT magazine, Robert Duvall said it was his favorite role. He certainly is the core of the movie. So far poor Tommy Lee Jones hasn’t quite found his way out from under his Kenny Rogers hair & beard.

Short discussion about ticket scalping on Twitter. I currently feel like limiting folks to 2 tickets apiece, especially for general admission club shows, is more than sufficient, but clearly some touring acts think differently. Which is why I’ll be standing in line at will-call at the Cradle on Thursday for tUnE-yArDs, instead of printing at home like a civilized person.

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October 13, 2014

Halloween!

OK, not really, but it’s a safe bet that right about now, the Baker 13 are lathering up in the bathroom next door to my freshman-year dorm room. I never ran (although I made one of what I’m sure must be many many short student documentaries about the phenomenon).

Switching gears: There has been mass civil disobedience in St. Louis this weekend, culminating in a lot of building takeovers today & tonight. It’s exciting to follow it on Twitter; I recommend Shaun King as a good single-stop resource.

So much lately has my mind been on Ferguson, St. Louis, police brutality, institutional racism et al, that this morning when I walked past a truck with a Cardinals sticker on it, literally the first word that came to mind was “racist.”

Because this.

In other news, I did a remote video briefing this evening to a classroom full of Cornell MBAs. They had some kind of fancy remote-instruction camera setup in the classroom, such that each student had a button, and when they wanted to ask a question, they pushed their button, and the camera would do a swish-pan and fast zoom in to that student. It was hilarious. 

I actually found it easier to do the briefing if I just pretended that I was talking to the video window of myself in the corner of my screen. Is that weird?

October 13, 2014

sydneyisdeffonfire:

klairy-dust:

fairydustandklainebows:

brendanshaw:

p3n1s:

femistorian:

This is what a REAL rape prevention campaign looks like

All the awards.

DO ME A HUGE FAVOR AND REBLOG THIS!

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This is perfection in a campaign

I love how they included a situation where a guy could’ve gotten raped. People don’t seem to realize that males get raped too. It’s less common, but it happens. That is what sets this campaign apart from others. 

These rape prevention posters are light years ahead of the victim-blaming that still seems to be the norm in too many places.

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October 12, 2014

It was ~60F and misty all day today. Downtown felt deserted – hardly anyone at Old Havana for lunch, and the same at Dos Perros for dinner. People joke about southerners & our inability to drive in ice & snow, but half the problem there is that we’re out driving in ice & snow. 

A Seattle/London style dim damp, on the other hand, and we fuggin hibernate, apparently.

Posted the following to Facebook & Twitter: “That thing where dudes who are like barely even 30 want to go ahead & make dad-rock. I mean, way to get it over with, I guess?”

No response on Twitter; 84 comments on Facebook. I guess everyone was hiding out from the damp at home, itching for a discussion. 

I didn’t define “dad-rock” (and I probably couldn’t, really, if truly pressed to do so) and the conversation kinda circled around that. johndarnielle engaged fully, as he is wont to do (if he’s gonna engage at all, he’s gonna engage fully), saying “like seriously if that’s your yardstick, who is presently the most dadrock band on the planet? Joy Division. Dads around the world can’t shut up about Joy Division, and dads with access to the press reserve their praise for bands who emulate Joy Division. Or Wire. These are the present-moment cornerstones of dadrock. The other stuff is easing into grandpa rock.”

Can’t dispute any of that. Who’s to say what dads like? Whether there is a separate genre of music that ONLY dads like is perhaps another matter.

I was just using it as lazy shorthand for what my old friend James Adair summarized thusly: “Sensitive/white/paunchy …. above average harmonic sophistication, and exquisitely curated influences = dad rock”

I was also inventing a trend out of two songs by one band who shall remain nameless, because that’s what you do on a cool misty Sunday afternoon in the South when everyone’s afraid to leave the house.

Finished Transparent. In addition to its various other flaws, it sure plays like an HBO/Showtime half-hour dramedy. Like Six Feet Under with more trans people and fewer corpses.

As a corrective, I ordered a DVD of Myra Breckinridge. Will file a full report once it shows up & we watch it. I saw it once before, and I recall it as memorable, although I don’t really remember it.

October 12, 2014

October 11, 2014

Saturday. It’s hard to give myself permission to do nothing on the weekends, because lately the weekends are the only days when I feel like I have enough time to work on extracurriculars. 

A few months ago I moved most of my recording gear into a rack at WXDU, with two goals: 

  1. Less time loading in & setting up for live [music] shows
  2. Being able to train other DJs & then turn them loose to do their own live recording/production/on-air stuff

And then I promptly stopped booking bands. Or maybe I had already stopped booking bands & had formulated this plan as a strategic attempt to nudge me to book bands again.

I’ve had slow periods before, so I’m not particularly concerned, but it has put more of my mental focus on #2. Which is how I found myself sitting on the sofa on a lovely Saturday afternoon, writing documentation for a bunch of studio gear – documentation aimed at complete novices, which means I’m actually writing a beginner’s how-to guide to studio production.

This could take a while.

After lunch we walked over to the new Central Park Cohousing building across the way from us, and took a tour (it was one of the stops on the AIA Triangle tour this year). The apartments are lovely spaces. They made an interesting choice to design most of the apartments with at least one windowless bedroom, so as to maximize windows in the spaces occupied by non-sleeping people. Our old apartment had one windowless bedroom & I liked how quiet & cavelike it was (well, except for when the girl directly above us came home & vomited at 2:30 a.m. on the reg). But M says she’d literally never be able to wake up & get out of bed without sunlight.

As for the cohousing components, definitely not my thing, but more power to them. Love all the art hanging in the hallways. The average age of the residents we met seemed to be somewhere in the 50s; I wonder if they’ll be able to backfill vacancies with younger folks, or if they’ll all wind up caring for each other until they can’t anymore.

Tried Blu Seafood for dinner for the first time in years. We were easily able to get a table at 7:00 on a Saturday night, and once we’d been there for a few minutes, it felt like that was because they have about 2x as many people crammed in there as is really comfortable. 

Also, memo to the chef: Unless you’re cooking at the restaurant of the same name, it’s time to get the chipotle off the menu. It’s 2014.

Still: It’s hard to fuck up good raw oysters.

Came home, watched 4 more episodes of Transparent. The flashback episode was a wonderful piece of television, although my enthusiasm for it was also due to the fact that the asshole kids weren’t in it (as their adult asshole selves, anyway). 

It seems like part of the goal of the show is to illustrate how difficult & painful it can be for a parent to come out as trans, but I feel like that would carry a little more weight if the kids weren’t so shitty to begin with.

Here is a thing that I saw on the internet. It is fascinating, and more than a little adorable, and I find it so sad that literally none of the things cited by the people in the video as reasons for voting are actually going to be remotely changeable by voting in an election in the US in 2014:

October 11, 2014

Forward NC voter protection meeting THIS TUESDAY

This is important, y’all. The SCOTUS refused to block the new law banning out-of-precinct provisional ballots, so it’s vital that everyone either vote early, or be triple-sure of their precinct.

This is especially critical for get-out-the-vote organizers, so if you are one, please attend this meeting:

Our vote is at stake in this election

Provisional ballots can make or break Democrats up and down the ticket

Join the Attorneys from Forward North Carolina’s Voter Protection Team, Kay Hagan for Senate Political Team, and the North Carolina Democratic Party for a discussion on our plan for voter protection during early vote and on Election Day

WITH SPECIAL GUESTS:

PRATT WILEY, NATIONAL VOTER EMPOWERMENT DIRECTOR FOR THE DNC

DEMOCRATIC HOUSE LEADER LARRY HALL 

DEPUTY DEMOCRATIC SENATE LEADER FLOYD MCKISSICK 

When:  Tuesday, October 14, 2014

5:15pm until 6:30pm

Where: Durham South Regional Library

4505 S. Alston Avenue

Durham, NC

Please email aensley@kayhagan.com to RSVP.

Forward NC voter protection meeting THIS TUESDAY