Week in Review – July 25, 2012

“Pretty P”

Just after I posted the blog last week, I received this nifty little tool from Amazon.  What do you think this is used for?  It’s a $10 item that freed Finn from a hazardous task.  We were going to beg him to climb up in the empty alcove at the bottom of the stairs where the bulb has been out for years.  Diana changed the next one over, which is easier to get to from the stairs, but we were not comfortable having her try this one.  I remember Finn climbing to the top of a friend’s very tall pine tree to install the Christmas star – he used to be such a completely unafraid climber.  No need, 2 minutes with the right tool and I had the bulb replaced.

I enjoyed a new streaming series with my workouts early this week.  “3-2-1 McCartney” features Sir Paul discussing his music with über (I finally figured out all the secret codes necessary to add accents to letters in this blogging software) producer, Rick Rubin.  As Diana would say, this is “right up K alley.”  Particularly the parts where McCartney is sitting at the piano, showing Rubin how songs came about.  A very simply produced (black and white mostly) series that I highly recommend.

I loved the story of a roadie asking Sir Paul to “pass the salt and pepper”.  McCartney heard Sgt. Pepper and thought what an interesting character that might be…

 

 

 

The boys gave me a full interior and exterior detail service for Penelope for my birthday.  I thought that should get done before I lost the coupon, and so scheduled it for Monday morning.  Unfortunately the weather did not cooperate with torrential rain until around 10:30am.  The guy who came to do the service had to wait a while for a break in the rain.  He came in a special truck outfitted with everything he needed – didn’t even want a hose – “we use special de-ionized water.”

P hasn’t looked this good since the day that I bought her.  The wheels are spotless throughout and she really sparkles in the sun.  I hope I haven’t set a bad precedent with her now.

The last piece of the kitchen project arrived this week.  Jose installed the new ovens (and a couple of new ceiling fans for the back patio).  They certainly seem to heat up and cool down faster than the old ones (which took forever.)  Finn cooked a great batch of lemon bars last night.  Clorinda is a big fan of those.  Diana particularly likes that the doors open vertically rather than horizontally – much easier to get close to the racks to remove hot treats.  Penelope got a chuckle out of the fact that the oven is made by the same company, Bosch, that manufactures most of her spare parts.  It’s nice to have this project behind us.  Well, one small update still required – a couple of the new floor boards pop when you hit them just right.  Apparently Jose will need to drill small holes and pump some glue in to fix that.

We managed to break Clorinda away from Olympics watching to work on a jigsaw puzzle for a while.  Maybe we shouldn’t have started with one of the super challenging Frenchy ones – but thought the fatter wood pieces would be easier to manage.

 

Outdoor exercise is having to happen earlier in the day as we enter the Texas summer.  We were out at 8am this morning for our walk/run and my shirt was still drenched by the end.  It does feel good to get that behind me so early in the day.  I now have my sights set on brunch at C.T. Provisions – yes, I’m having the voodoo shrimp Benedict again.

We lost one of our very favourite humans this week.  Stan Bassett passed away in Brisbane, Australia, after a lengthy battle with brain cancer.  He was able to accomplish some major life goals that seemed impossible after the initial diagnosis – he danced with his daughter at her wedding, met his new grandchild, and moved his daughter, son-in-law, and baby into a house across the street from his home.  That’s Stan at the back of this family photo.

I first met Stan in the lobby of a hotel in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and we hit it off right away.  He spent many nights at our home, enjoying making unique combinations from Diana’s meat and cheese platters.  So much kindness and positive energy radiated from Stan.  There was the evening when we discovered that he knew every word to every song on Meat Loaf’s “Bat out of Hell” album – a result of having just a couple of cassette tapes when driving across the Outback.  And the next morning (a Sunday) when he came downstairs to catch a flight to London – in full suit, tie, and military style spit-polished shoes.  “Why are you all dressed up to sit on a plane for 8 hours Stan?”  “It’s work time and this is how I dress for work.”  Thanks for all the wonderful memories Stan!

On Gypsy Hill in Pacifica, CA, the three musketeers headed out for a walk.  I love the way this picture captures Frankie happily leading the way, while Luciano is on the lookout for wildlife.

 

I finished “Dirt, Adventures in Lyon as a Chef in Training, Father, and Sleuth Looking for the Secret of French Cooking” by Bill Buford, and promised some quotes.  I enjoyed this book but found it a bit of a slog in the middle –  too much rambling about the tiny details of French cooking.

Buford attends a culinary school run by the famous Paul Bucose, and describes attempts to make the perfect, French style omelet.  Not something that I’ve come anywhere close to yet.

“A student presented his omelet.  The instructor poked it and shook his head.  He didn’t bother to taste it; he tipped it into the trash.  An omelet wants to be soft in the middle, pillowy to the touch.  It should have bounce.  This one was hard.

The next student’s omelet was too big: big in the sense of too much volume.  The instructor remonstrated him.  “Why did you use a whisk?  Un fouet.  “I told you a fork.”

The class was kitchen basics.  A whisk aerates the protein.  It is what you use to make a soufflé or a meringue.  An omelet gets it tenderness by being mixed, not whipped.  You want the egg whites quiet and small.”

I enjoyed this description of Buford’s wife responding to commentary from fellow diners in restaurants.  I’m with the first gentleman on laughing too loudly – I get really tired of groups of ladies who feel the need to cackle at the tops of their lungs to let everyone know how much fun they’re having.

“No civic official, I am confident, had ever seen an American like Jessica once crossed.  She had been emancipated by the French language.  There is a quality about French rudeness – a self-righteousness, probably – that provoked Jessica to the point of rage, especially if she was the target: as when a diner (again, a man) crossed the very small restaurant where we were eating dinner with friends to tell her that she laughed too loudly, or when a diner (a man, of course) at the next table at the Bouchon des Filles leaned over, after observing that she had filled my glass, and told her that, in France, it is the man, not the woman, who pours the wine.  Jessica expressed exaggerated surprise, given that the woman in question was a wine expert, that she also consulted on the wine list of the restaurant, which was pointedly called Bouchon des Filles, and was owned and run by women. (The man was witheringly silenced, and his wife spent the rest of the evening apologizing for the behavior of or her spouse.)”

A description of just how seriously the Lyonnaise take their food, even in public schools.

“The canteen menu was posted each week outside the school’s entrance: three courses, plus a produit laitier; a milk product – yogurt or cheese.  There were no repeats, a feature so radical that I am compelled to repeat it.  No menu was ever served twice during the entire school year.  (Jessica, who had become a member of a parent-teacher executive committee, discovered that, at strategic intervals, certain foods were repeated – turnips, kale, beets – to help children become familiar with them.”

The first course would be a salad – say, grated carrots with a vinaigrette, George’s current favorite (“Carrotes râpées!”), which he asked his mother to make for dinner.  The second, the plat principal, might be a poulet with a sauce grand-mère (made from broth that the chicken had been cooked in).  There was a cooked vegetable (maybe Swiss chard in a béchamel sauce), and a fruit or dessert.  The boys’ favorite had been moelleux au chocolat, hard on the outside, like a brownie, and soft in the middle, with a warm meltingness.

L’École Robert Doisneau was an underfunded, overcrowded public school.  It had roof leaks, an asphalt playground that was breaking up and weeds growing through the cracks.  In its confidence that eating could be taught, it wasn’t exceptional.  The food our boys ate made them different from their parents.”

I didn’t know that da Vinci finished out his years in France.  Buford has an ongoing theme in the book that most of French cooking actually has its roots in Italian cuisine from the Medici era.  He presents a lot of seemingly credible, and deeply researched information to support this theory.

“I had been to Vinci, where Leonardo comes from – da Vinci – in Tuscany.  Leonardo is the undisputed genius of the Florentine Renaissance.  Just about everyone knows this.  What I hadn’t known, even when I was visiting the village where he grew up, was that he would die, in 1519, effectively a Frenchman.  The detail is seldom mentioned in Italy.  It seems to be mentioned less in France, even though Leonardo’s most famous painting, the Mona Lisa, is hanging in the Louvre because it was one of the canvases he brought with him.  The other was Saint John the Baptist.”

This reminded me of the delicious zabaglione that my Mum makes.  Maybe I can have one if we make our visit in August.

“A sabayon is a foam sauce as much as it is an emulsion.  As Harold McGee points out:  Yolks will foam pretty well on their own, but they will foam spectacularly with water.  Mine had failed because they didn’t have enough water.  I had reduced it too much.  

Dictionaries describe the French word sabayon as having appeared in the French language in 1803, even though the technique was probably in place long before.  It comes from the Italian zabaglione (sweet wine, Marsala usually, the water element, plus egg yolks, whisked and cooked).”

Ahh, the French cheeses:

“Like the fact that there are so many different kind of cheese in France, more than anywhere else in the world, twelve hundred of the twenty-two hundred unique European varieties, according to Michel Bouvier, the former curator of food and drink at the Gallo-Roman museum near Vienna.  And now, my hands still smelling of milk, I find it miraculous that there would be so many.  The miracle isn’t because France has a varied landscape with varied food making practices arising out of it, although it does; it is implicit in the sheer antiquity of how long cheeses have been made here, each one originating out of a specificity of place that is probably pre-civilization, when the horizon was not much more than the perimeters of where you could walk in a day.”

Buford’s twins struggled on returning to New York after several years in Lyon:

“They had issues with the food.  At the school, the “chefs” didn’t wear toques, George complained at dinner.  Also, they didn’t cook, he said.

“They use a microwave,” Frederick explained.  The expressions of both boys conveyed utter astonishment that a microwaver would ever have the audacity to call him or herself a chef.”

I also read “Sorry for Your Trouble”, a collection of short stories and novellas by Richard Ford.  I loved his books “The Sportswriter” and “Independence Day” and had high hopes for this collection.  The two novellas (around 45 pages long) were quite good, but the short stories didn’t work as well.

It was clear from the stories that Ford has spent considerable time in New Orleans and Ireland – an internet search shows that he actually taught for a while at Trinity college in Dublin.

“They were at the Monteleone, the shadowed old afternoon redoubt with the bar that was a carousel.  It wasn’t crowded.  Outside the tall windows on Royal a parade was shoving past.  Boom-pa-pa, boom-pa-pa.  Then the trumpets not altogether on key.  St. Paddy’s was Tuesday.  Now was only Friday.”

This review from the New York Times sums the stories up quite well:

“Ford has a gift for nimble interior monologues and a superb ear for the varieties and vagaries of human speech. His prose can strike a Hemingwayesque cadence…One page later, a sparkling note of Fitzgerald…Ford is of the last generation of writers to have grown up directly under the Papa-and-Scott dispensation, and it’s gratifying to hear his sentences pay homage…Acutely described settings, pitch-perfect dialogue, inner lives vividly evoked, complex protagonists brought toward difficult recognitions: There’s a kind of narrative, often dismissed as the “well-crafted, writing-class story,” that deals in muted epiphanies and trains its gaze inward, to pangs and misgivings.”

I got on a bit of a Stevie Wonder kick this week, listening to most of the triple album “The Secret Life of Plants.”  What a superb collection of music in so many different styles.

One of my favourite Stevie Wonder creations from the “Hotter than July” album:

And finally, I’ve been revisiting some old (late 70s) Alan Parsons Project – the production and orchestration are so good:

Stay safe and kind (just like Stan)!

Week in Review – July 18, 2021

“A Guys Happy Hour and Dinner and a concert in the same week!”

I got some work done on Monday between coffee with Finn at Duino, and going to Clorinda’s appointment with the retina specialist in the afternoon.  Later, I went to my first Happy Hour with some guys in a while.  Robbie and Fred from work met me at Union Bear and we really enjoyed catching up for a couple of hours.

“Are you drinking your water?”

Nothing much to report from Tuesday through Thursday.  We shared duties taking Clorinda to appointments and were both pretty busy with work.  I have a quarterly Board of Directors meeting in a  couple of weeks, and it’s always busy getting everything ready for that.

Diana followed me down to Auto Hans early Friday to drop off Penelope for an oil change.  Now she has new tires, new oil  and is getting a full detail tomorrow – so spoiled and pampered.

On Friday evening, Finn cooked and hung out with Clorinda so that we could attend a concert at the Kessler.  Mike Zito and his Big Band with opener Indigenous.  We bought tickets at the last minute and so didn’t have a reserved table.  No worries, we got there early and claimed the prime high seats at the back beside the mixing desk.  That way Diana had a clear line of sight to the stage, and the sound is premium.

Seats claimed, we walked up to Nova for our typical light dinner before the show.  We sat at the bar and enjoyed three delicious appetizers – beets (my favourite), Brussel sprouts, and smoked salmon potato skins (McD’s favorite.)

We really enjoy the relaxed and welcoming feel of Nova.  The bar tender was convinced she knew me – thought she might have gone to high school with me – unlikely.  Upon investigation, we decided that the only place we could have met was at the Green Room in Deep Ellum, over 20 years ago.  Possible, but still unlikely.

I was looking forward to Indigenous.  They are a band formed of family members from the Sioux reservation in South Dakota.  Mato Nanji (Ma-TOE NON-gee) is the lead guitarist and singer.  I first listened to them in 2000, with the CD “Circle” one of my favourites that year.  I also saw them as part of the “Experience Hendrix” show at the Warfield in San Francisco, with Buddy Guy and Carlos Santana.  Here they are at the Kessler performing a John Lee Hooker cover, best known these days as the theme music for NCIS New Orleans:

And here’s a Hendrix cover that I enjoyed.  Isn’t that a beautiful looking guitar?

I wasn’t sure what to expect from Mike Zito.  He was in a band that I enjoyed, Royal Southern Brotherhood, with Cyril Neville.  His guitar playing was always great, but didn’t know if I would appreciate the vocals.  We were pleasantly surprised.  Here’s a Prince cover, not necessarily what you expect from a blues band:

Now a good example of Zito’s blues guitar:

That solo is from a new song, “Ressurection”, that I thought was a highlight of the set:

And I’ll finish up the concert sharing with a solo from the trumpet player (apparently a regular member of Jason Mraz’s band):

At Diana’s prompting, we had a nice chat with Jeff Liles, booking agent for the Kessler, about this appearance in the “Bring Music Home” book that raised money for “Save our Stages”, a fund raising effort to save independent music clubs that were closed at the height of the pandemic.  I really love that book and the thought and care that went into creating it.

Saturday started with a walk with McD – it didn’t seem too hot but we were both quite sweaty and tired when we finished – the humidity always gets you.  While limbered up, I finally was able to fix the aromatherapy unit for the steam shower – power reset required, and then took on the task of washing the big windows that look out to the pool from the family room.  My best job yet, with the secret being the drying technique with the squeegee.  Clorinda approved the work and is enjoying her clearer view of the pool, trees, and flowers.  Diana tackled the ever-returning weeds while I did that.  We both entered the afternoon with a feeling of accomplishment.

Amy spent the night, having had her fill of crashing on the couch at her kids’ apartment.  We ordered food from the Little Greek and enjoyed catching up – getting formal by eating our take out in the dining room.

Finn and I watched game 5 of the NBA Finals (Milwaukee Bucks vs. Phoenix Suns) with Clorinda after dinner.  It was a good game and she refused to go to bed after it finished at 10:30pm – thinking there was still something interesting to learn from the post game commentary.  We’ve created a sports fanatic.

On Sunday morning I watched the British Open golf while Diana and Amy went out for a run.  They both miss their running buddies.  Jordan Spieth tried hard but couldn’t keep up with the flawless final round play of Collin Morikawa.

I promised some quotes from “Saved by a Song” by Mary Gauthier – my book last week and my favourite of the year so far and by far:

From the introduction, or what Mary calls “Invitation”:

“I believe songs that heal come from a higher place.  They help us with the struggle of being human by letting us know we are not alone.  This is the greatest gift a song can give a songwriter and a songwriter can give the world.

Bruce Springsteen said, “Music is a repair shop, I’m basically a repair man.”  I love that.  Songs have the power to repair hearts and souls.

Saved by a song.”

From the chapter on the song “Drag Queens and Limousines”:

“Clarity comes from stories.  They help us make sense of our lives.  Witnessing other people’s lives through stories is a kind of medicine, and the magic is in getting the story emotionally honest.

Guy Clark once said, “We’re all pretty much living the same life just hitting the marks at different times.”  “Drag Queens in Limousines” showed me that I have no idea what’s going on inside a person’s heart, in that tender place that the poet Miller Williams, Lucinda’s father, described as, “Where the spirit meets the bone.”  Until I wrote this song and played it for people, I had no idea most everyone has felt like an outsider at some point in their life, but they have.

That outsider feeling is universal.”

On working on the amazing “Mercy Now”:

We hang in the balance

Dangle ‘tween hell and hallowed ground

Every single on of us could use some mercy now

Every single on of us could use some mercy now

I worked on it for the next three days, changing one word at a time, meditating on the meaning, letting the new words sit a while, and it was slow going.  I played it for a friend, a fellow songwriter, who encouraged me to be brave and play it on a side stage at a festival workshop we were going to share the next afternoon.  So, I wrote the words on a piece of hotel room stationery.  And in the afternoon on the last day of Canmore Folk Festival, August 2003, I taped those words onto the mic stand and played “Mercy Now” in front of an audience for the very first time.

I’ve played it on every stage at every show, every night, since.”

From the chapter on John Lennon’s “Mother”:

“St. Francis of Assisi said, “One who works with their hands is a laborer.  One who works with their hands and head is a craftsman.  One who works with their hands, their head and their heart is an artist.”

Finally, from the chapter on “Rifles and Rosary Beads” and writing about a songwriting camp that pairs songwriters with veterans to share their experiences:

“Our job as songwriters is to help turn the veterans’ stories into songs.  The songwriter brings decades of songwriting experience, the veteran brings their story.  Before I worked my first retreat, I assumed that asking a wounded soldier to open up to a songwriter would be a stretch.  I’d heard that silence is the soldier’s code; that those who have seen combat do not talk about it, those who talk about it have not seen it.  Coming out the other side is enough.”

“Before long, they start to tell me their story, little by slow.  I play a little music on my guitar, find a melody that matches what they’re saying.  The music helps open them up; a sympathetic melody is like a magnet that pulls their story out.  They feel seen and heard, which helps them feel safe.”

I’m about half way through “Dirt, Adventures in Lyon as a Chef in Training, Father, and Sleuth Looking for the Secret of French Cooking” by Bill Buford.

Here’s a summary review that captures the plot pretty well:

“What does it take to master French cooking? This is the question that drives Bill Buford to abandon his perfectly happy life in New York City and pack up and (with a wife and three-year-old twin sons in tow) move to Lyon, the so-called gastronomic capital of France. But what was meant to be six months in a new and very foreign city turns into a wild five-year digression from normal life, as Buford apprentices at Lyon’s best boulangerie, studies at a legendary culinary school, and cooks at a storied Michelin-starred restaurant, where he discovers the exacting (and incomprehensibly punishing) rigueur of the professional kitchen.

With his signature humor, sense of adventure, and masterful ability to bring an exotic and unknown world to life, Buford has written the definitive insider story of a city and its great culinary culture.”

Some samples of my favourite bits next week.

This has gone on for a while, and I’ve covered a lot of musical ground already, so I’ll share this excellent playlist that Amy Campagna sent me.  So many great songs on this – kudos to whoever created it.  Ahh, I see now that was Alex Harrouff.  I like the sound of that last name, picturing the pitch going up on the “ouff.”

Stay safe and kind to everyone!

Week in Review – July 11, 2021

“He’s Back”

Monday was a holiday since July 4th fell on Sunday.  I was relatively productive – started with a swim,  cleaned up a dead mouse, bled the aromatherapy shower unit (still not working quite right), and cut some dead branches from the Japanese maple, while McD trimmed up the maple so it doesn’t block the pathway as much.  We were also able to watch a bit of Wimbledon with Clorinda.

I’ve been watching a new movie, “Summer of Soul”, while doing my elliptical workouts.  This is a movie, directed by Questlove, about a music festival held in Harlem over several weekends in 1969.  The festival is known as the Black Woodstock, occurring within months of that well known event.  Nobody knows anything about it because the film was kept in a basement for 50 years as the recorder couldn’t find anybody to fund making it into a movie.  Enter Questlove and some financial backers.

The movie is excellent with amazing performances intermixed with interviews with the artists today.  Stevie Wonder, Sly and the Family Stone, Nina Simone, B.B. King, and Mavis Staples are among the long list of acts involved.  I read that Questlove owns over 200,000 albums and has a vast encyclopedic knowledge of all kinds of music.

Finn arrived back from Oregon on Wednesday night – he was tired from the travel and happy to get back in his spot on his couch.

I laughed when I read these lines in a story in the New Yorker this week:

“We were living on a farm, shared with a Noah’s ark of animals and birds.  The animals included Finn the Doug, a genial Irish wolf hound.”  This is included in a story called “Driving Lessons” by Margaret Atwood (Handmaid’s Tale author.)

Finn cooked salmon and Brussel sprouts for everyone on Thursday evening.  Then we watched the NBA Finals (Bucks vs Suns) with Clorinda.  She refused to go to bed until the game finished.

We enjoyed take out Thai food on Friday.  Yummy.

Penelope got new front tires on Saturday morning.  Finn and I went to the fancy iPic theater in the afternoon to watch the “Black Widow” movie – the latest in the Marvel franchise.  Scarlett Johanss0n starred as the Black Widow, so it wasn’t a total loss.

Clorinda enjoyed a trip to Market Street with Diana – a bit busier than Target so she had to be careful navigating around on the buggy.

This was move weekend for Alicia – from San Luis Obispo to San Jose to attend San Jose State University in the fall.  She did a great job of coordinating movers and getting everything organized by herself.  She seems quite happy with the new apartment, roommate, and the cats that come with the new roommate.  Furniture is starting to come together.

Sunday started with a walk with Diana, and continued with the Wimbledon Men’s Final, then the European soccer final.  Several members of the household were quite excited when Italy won the penalty shootout at the end of the tied game.

I received some funny pictures this week.  Amy sent these pictures of Massimo with a lizard on his back:

The text from Amy was great: “Mom!  There’s a lizard on my back!”

“Oh my!  How’d that happen?”

“I moved that log and it was under it and it crawled up my back.”

Equally entertaining is this picture of Pride, the Great Dane, on his 8th birthday, from Rachel:

I can’t believe she made the poor guy wear a Tutu.

I finished up “Babbitt” by Sinclair Lewis, and don’t have too much new to say about it.  A pleasant and easy read that didn’t really  seem to have as much to say as reviewers would have us believe.

On the other hand, “Saved by a Song” by Mary Gauthier, was a rare treat.  Each chapter covers what was going on in Gauthier’s life when a song was written and also shows the evolution of the song from first draft to recorded version.  The writing is supremely honest and I found it wonderful.  I’m almost finished and will include some quotes and examples next week.

 

Here’s my favourite of Mary’s songs:

Transitioning over to the music section, I was saddened to hear of the passing of Dale Triguero this week.  Here’s an article by the excellent music journalist Keith Spera, about Dale:

https://www.nola.com/entertainment_life/music/article_1e852302-dfec-11eb-bd03-a7ffc84f5f94.html

Dale owned and operated the Chickie Wah Wah music club in New Orleans.  Denny and I visited his club shortly after it opened many years ago, and Anne had her 50th birthday party there, with music from the Creole String Beans.  Dale was always kind and engaging, and really treated the musicians well.  The music was taken very seriously at the club, more like a true listening room.  One of our favourite shows there was the annual Anders Osborne, John Fohl, and Johnny Sansone performance that takes place over jazzfest.  Here’s a link to the blog from back in 2016 that has video of one of those amazing shows:

https://www.keithjrobertson.com/?p=155

Stay safe and kind!

Week in Review – July 4, 2021

“Long Live Rock”

Clorinda and I watched a great DVD (yes, we can still manage to play those) on Monday.  “Seymour: An Introduction” is about a concert pianist, who gives up a successful performance career to teach piano students.  The care Seymour shows for his students is really something.  Highly recommended watching.

Tuesday started with a pleasant swim.  I’m finding that swimming is significantly helping the pain where I had the screws put in my leg.  I had been considering having the screws removed, but if swimming is helping, then it’s likely scar tissue and not the screws causing the pain.  Going to have to start swimming a few times a week.

After my swim, I took Clorinda for coffee at Duino.  This is always a great time to enjoy her stories.  The repertoire this time included: “Bluebell” with the rumble seat, a car that folks she would babysit for gave her to get around in;  and Margie (Clorinda’s sister) teaching music in Orinda and putting on a choir performance that Clorinda loved.

Rachel joined us for dinner on Tuesday and regaled us with updates about her new boyfriend who lives in Nashville.  I had told Clorinda at coffee that she could expect updates about Rachel’s love life – and I was not wrong.

The four of us had a last meal together on Friday night, with Alicia flying to San Francisco on Saturday.  Everyone really enjoyed the meal at C.T. Provisions – our new favourite McKinney restaurant.  Clorinda opted for the duck special and I had the Cornish game hen – plenty of leftovers from both.

 

 

Anne was in Ohio, helping her parents to get their cabin ready for sale.  Guessing they’ll be living fulltime in Florida now.  Looks like both Anne and her Mum, Carolyn, had a good time at the Rock ‘N Roll Hall of Fame.

Clorinda has been enjoying sampling my library books.  This one is about a journalist for the New Yorker, who moves to Lyon in his fifties to learn all about French cooking.  She got pretty bored with the details of the French cuisine and moved on to something else.

On Sunday, Independence Day (and nobody asked me this year if we celebrate July 4th in Scotland), we took Clorinda to Filtered for coffee, quiche, and crossword with Keith.  Well – she declined to participate in the crossword competition.  We watched the celebration from the Capital Mall in Washington, D.C. and the fireworks from New York, which are always so spectacular.  R.E.O Speedwagon and Susannah Hoffs both performed songs from around 1980 – still going strong in their sixties with the same material from when I was in high school.

Will sent this picture of Ollie.  I was quite impressed and asked who was the artist.  Even more impressed to find it was Will, using Christine’s art pens.

I did receive a number of great July 4th pictures.  Here’s Campbell and Molly’s penguin enjoying a boat ride to the fireworks on a lake in Iowa:

Do you like his patriotic bowtie?  Our penguin got very puffed up when he saw these pictures.

Here is a picture from Tim’s vacation location in Colorado (Alta Lakes), and one from earlier in the week with his daughter, Imogene, posing at the high elevation pass that shares her name:

And finally, a lovely sunset from Blair’s boat in South Padre island:

I was making good progress on “Babbitt” by Sinclair Lewis, when I got an email from the library saying that I needed to return “The Final Revival of Opal and Nev” because another patron had a request for it.  So I switched over to that right away.

The story centers on a fictional interracial rock duo from the 1970s: Opal is a Black proto Afro-punk singer from Detroit, and Nev is a goofy white British singer-songwriter.

Opal and Nev become famous in 1971, when a riot occurs at one of their concerts during which their Black drummer is beaten to death by a white mob. The book is told in the form of a faux oral history that’s being written by Sunny, the first Black editor-in-chief of a music magazine — who also happens to be the daughter of the late drummer.

I enjoyed the faux oral history approach for a while, with each character having their say for a paragraph or so, before moving on to a different character’s view.  But I grew tired of the choppiness pretty quickly – I would have preferred lengthier sections from each, and more meat from the interviewer character (Sunny).

This book is on all the “Best of 2021 so far” lists, and it certainly provides some entertainment value, but not one I would recommend.  I hope the person who picks this up from the library after me appreciates it more.

“Another Ticket” by Eric Clapton has been on my turntable as I’ve been composing this post.  This is not one of the highly rated, popular Clapton disks, but it is one of my favourites and I believe the one that I’ve played most over the years.

The album is Clapton’s seventh solo studio record.  It was recorded by Tom Dowd at the Compass Point Studios in Nassau, Bahamas, and has that rich bass sound that seems to come from that venue.  It achieved modest commercial success peaking at number 18 in the UK charts.

Here’s the title track:

That’s Gary Brooker on keyboards.  He was the lead singer and keyboard player with Procul Harem of “Whiter Shade of Pale” fame.

Albert Lee plays the alternate lead guitar and I think he’s fantastic.  I was lucky enough to see him play with Clapton at the Edinburgh Playhouse around the time this record was released.  You can hear his contribution and the great bass of Dave Markee on this Sleepy John Estes cover:

Stay safe and kind.