All posts by jupiterj

Chopin and attitude adjustment

This  morning I was in the mood for Chopin. I listened to an entire album by Gregory Sokolov on my Primephonic app as I did my morning routines. The album was recorded in 2012. The above video of an album by the same dude was uploaded in 2017 and the recording was done in 1990. I like the way he played these wonderful pieces on the recording on Primephonic.

Documentarian Stanley Nelson Tells Miles Davis' Story in "Birth of the Cool" | WDET

Speaking of Chopin, I was reminded of this quote from pianist, René Urtregetthis morning.

“One night at club (Club st-Germain in Paris), after hours, everybody had left. It was about 3 a.m. We had a few drinks, and I went to the piano and played the Fantasie-Impromptu in C# minor by Chopin. When it was finished, Miles said, ‘René, i’d have my right arm cut off if I could that.’ He had tears in eyes.” from So What: The Life of Miles Davis by John Szwed, p. 156.


I seem to have had a major attitude adjustment about church work. This morning I felt very relaxed about the morning Eucharist. After church, my energy was much higher than usual. Eileen and I went for lunch at the Biscuit. We had to wait for 45 minutes to be seated.

After a lovely brunch, we went grocery shopping. After that, I helped Eileen flip our new dishwasher on its back so she could adjust its wheels.

Admittedly, I am tired now. But usually church is enough to kick my butt for the day.

Eileen attributes this to my impending retirement. She said after she had decided to retire from the library she experienced a similar thing.

Cool.

 

Japanese by Spring

Random music.

 

 

Amazon.com: Japanese by Spring (9780140255850): Reed, Ishmael: Books

I’ve really been chomping at the bit to read some novels by Ishmael Reed. I was waiting until I had finished his book of poetry, Why The Black Hole Sings The Blues: Poems, 2007-2020. Yesterday I finished the book of poetry. I decided to randomly choose a novel by him and grabbed the first one on my to-be-read shelf.

I have read Japanese by Spring before, but I don’t remember it. I suspect I am getting more out of it in the second read. Most of the references Reed makes to history and Jazz I easily recognize now. I’m not so sure about whenever I read it before.

The Unparalleled Invasion by Jack London

The most startling thing so far is the references to Jack London’s completely perverted, 1910 story, “The Unparalleled Invasion.”

The plot to this story is so outrageous that I had to double check to make sure Reed hadn’t invented it. London begins his tale in the then future of 1922. After breaking away from Japan and conquering some of its territories, China spends the next fifty years experiencing a population explosion that overwhelms all European colonies in Asia. “The United States and the other Western powers launch a biological warfare campaign against China, resulting in the total destruction of China’s population.” (from the Wikipedia article linked below)

I admit I didn’t read the story yet. Not sure if I will, but here’s a link to the less painful synopsis on Wikipedia and here’s a link to the entire story online.

In the Reed novel, he invents a fictitious Jack London College in Oakland, California, for the setting of this romp. Basically, it describes a college in the nineties that has completely capitulated to the demands of more non-Western centered curriculum. There are many moving parts including the main character, Chappie Puttbutt, who is sort of a Clarence Thomas of academia (Thomas and many others are described in acidic and hilarious ways).

The winds change when the College is purchased by Japanese investors who not only give Puttbutt his much desired tenured, they actually retain him to axe all the feminists  profs, African American profs, and others.

I am finding it laugh-out-loud funny.

Although, the Jack London College is fictitious. There is a Jack London Square in Oakland.

Jack London Square | CIM Group

Japanese by Spring is also the name of a made-up text that teaches Japanese.

Time to go read Reed some more.