Friday, July 14, 2006
Thursday, July 13, 2006
Guell Park
Valle Crucis



Valle Crucis, Wales. So you're driving your car down the road and you just never know what's around the corner. And there...right before your eyes...materializes a magnificent 12th century abbey you didn't even know existed! It's why we travel.
The layout of the abbey largely followed the standard Cistercian plan. The abbey church accommodated both the choir monks, who spent their time in prayer and contemplation, and the lay brethren who undertook more mundane duties, such as agricultural work, enabling the community, at least in its early years, to remain largely self-sufficient. The monks observed their daily offices in the choir, beneath the crossing of the church, separated by a screen from the lay brethren who worshipped in the nave.
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
Painter of Light™

Ah…Thomas Kinkade, the beloved Painter of Light™. Beyond goofy?..corporate kitsch?…sentimental crap?..no, no, no…he’s much more. Here you have a choice selection from his little known collection "Demons of the Apocalypse”. And you thought he was just into feeding off the clueless who have just a wee bit too much disposable income.
Monday, July 10, 2006
Scottish Borders

Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Stendhal

I once read part of Stendhal’s The Red and the Black and loved it. Unfortunately, I lost it before I even got a fourth of the way through. What struck me was that, even in translation, how contemporary the novel was, making it totally readable with not a hint of being dated (it was published almost 200 years ago). One of the hallmarks of a classic is that it reads like it was written yesterday-something about illuminating the universals...
As someone says to the protagonist Julien: 'Truth is austere, sir...You must take care to guard your conscience carefully from this weakness: Excess of feeling for vain exterior charm.' Quite so: dialog like that makes one realize that at least someone has really thought about this crazy life.
Since this Stendhal fellow is soooo cool, I thought I’d borrow the title of his memoir for my journal, just for awhile.
P.S. Found it, finished it, loved it-considered the first 'modern novel' in the way it deals with the complexity of the human condition given the world we now live in-read it!
Friday, June 02, 2006
Dacha Chillin’ Top 10

Zero 7: When it Falls (not talking about the beer on the carpet)
Air: Moon Safari (give it a few tries-one of the best)
Morcheeba: Who Can You Trust? (good question, eh)
Love & Rockets: Sweet FA (hard to find, try Amazon for used)
Wilco: Yankee Hotel Foxtrot (aka the Hillbilly OK Computer)
Thievery Corporation: Mirror Conspiracy
Tosca: Suzuki or T.A.C.
The Beatles: Abbey Road (as fresh, original, and chillin' as the day it was released)
Radiohead: OK Computer (or anything by Radiohead)
Cat Power: You are Free
Note: So what is a dacha, you ask? It's very easy to explain. It's just a cabin--sometimes a shack. But it is difficult to understand that it's not just a cabin and much more than a shack for most. This is the place to escape from the rash and the problems of a city. The place where kids grow up like grass...a resort and a slavemaster…a pleasure and a disaster...a lifestyle... a sweet curse.
Saturday, May 27, 2006
Bovill, Idaho



I had the pleasure of spending a few days in Bovill this week. It’s really a beautiful, but sad place, almost alpine, where some years it snows until June. Getting out of the land of starched shirts and into such a rustic setting is a bit of a culture shock. I walked around the town to see what I could see, almost expecting to hear dueling banjos around every corner. I didn’t bother to change out of my starched shirt &etc, so the locals stared as if I were from another planet. I was told before I went to ‘lock your car in Bovill’ but I never got that feeling while there. The local tavern was full of apparently unemployed men at 10am, not good. Bovill: another example of the decline of rural America, where those who are left behind are left out.
Friday, May 19, 2006
Metropolis

The original Blade Runner, Metropolis takes place in 2026, when the populace is divided between workers who must live in the dark underground and the rich who enjoy a futuristic city of splendor (with a lot of dramatic license thrown in, kind of like the difference between West Riverside and say West First in downtown Spokane).
Unfortunately, a large chunk of the original movie has been lost. But the recent Kino Video version released in Dec? 2003 is the most complete version in 75 years. The storyline is simplistic but the images will sear intro your brain, probably forever-in short, an impressive film.
Thursday, May 18, 2006
Music for Airports

Whereas the extant canned music companies proceed from the basis of regularizing environments by blanketing their acoustic and atmospheric idiosyncracies, Ambient Music is intended to enhance these. Whereas conventional background music is produced by stripping away all sense of doubt and uncertainty (and thus all genuine interest) from the music, Ambient Music retains these qualities. And whereas their intention is to `brighten' the environment by adding stimulus to it (thus supposedly alleviating the tedium of routine tasks and levelling out the natural ups and downs of the body rhythms) Ambient Music is intended to induce calm and a space to think.
Ambient Music must be able to accomodate many levels of listening attention without enforcing one in particular; it must be as ignorable as it is interesting.
BRIAN ENO September 1978
Trillium
Wednesday, May 17, 2006
Some greats

Try any of these gems and I guarantee an effect on your very being-no kidding!
All the King's Men, Robert Penn Warren
The great American novel (according to me). Much less about the ‘dictator of Louisiana’ than a wonderfully lyrical meditation on a man finding himself. You guys out there got that?
Portrait of a Lady, James
Where James contemplates the contrast between appearance and reality and the perils of not seeing.
The Good Soldier: A Tale of Passion, Ford Madox Ford
Ouch! Sometimes it all ends in confusion.
Women in Love, D.H. Lawrence
Wow! Don’t let your kids see this-or better yet, make them read and discuss.
Sentimental Education, Flaubert
This guy can really write.
Money and leisure can be a curse. It’s kind of a 19th century predecessor of ‘Seinfield’ without the humor. If you read this-please tell me what you think-I absolutely need to know!
A House for Mr. Biswas, V.S. Naipaul
Is it all really this futile? I mean, the poor guy just wanted a house. But really, the novel captures the fundamental nature of the human condition.
The Perennial Psychology of the Bhagavad Gita, Swami Rama
Captures the essence of this beautiful, religious, hmm…no psychological work. It won’t necessarily make you a better person, but at least you’ll know a way (hint-it’s all about the yoga).
Thursday, May 04, 2006
It's me

The pic-it’s summer, I’m in a garden, I must be happy or something.
So I'm out of ideas already. Maybe I just need inspiration...a muse...a muse I tell you!
Just to clarify, I have nothing in common with the guy in the previous post. I wish I had his ears though.
CabaƱa en el lago

Weekends in the country-peaceful, quiet, birds chirping, you can play music really loud and no one cares. It’s nice to get back to nature after the wild cacophony that makes up downtown Spokane. I do kind of miss the freak show down on the street, but the countryside has it’s own version, they just don’t walk past the porch much.
The cabin was named Trillium by my grandfather due to the elusive and lovely flowers that grew in the back lot-what an interesting guy he was.
Friday, April 21, 2006
Nosferatu
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