The READIN Family Album
(April 19, 2002)

READIN

Jeremy's journal

Somehow, Cleveland has survived, with her gray banner unfurled -- the banner of Archangelsk and Detroit, of Kharkov and Liverpool -- the banner of men and women who would settle the most ignominious parts of the earth, and there, with the hubris born neither of faith nor ideology but biology and longing, bring into the world their whimpering replacements.

Gary Shteyngart


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Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

🦋 Set

Rehearsal tonight with Jerry went really well -- we played three songs and a meandering improvisation and we're going to do the three songs at the open mic tomorrow:

  • "Weary Day", with Jerry singing -- this is going to be awesome.
  • "Hard Times Come Again No More", with Jerry singing -- potentially great, if I can get the viola part straight. I think it will work.
  • "Louisville Burglar", with me singing -- this song works much better if I'm not trying to play during the vocal. Really fun to jam with Jerry on solos.

So friends and neighbors: here's your chance to hear us at our first appearance, before we get famous. It'll be at (the not long for this world) Here's to the Arts, 97 Baker St. in Maplewood; we'll probably play around 9:30.

Turns out "(not long for this world)" is not quite accurate. Art had been having some trouble negotiating a new lease and it looked like he might be evicted; but he has secured a month-to-month lease, so he's still there at least for the time being.

posted evening of December 26th, 2007: Respond
➳ More posts about Fiddling

🦋 Can you hear the music?

I'm hearing reports from a couple of people that when they click "Play" on the little MediaPlayer objects I am using for streaming my songs, they don't get any sound. If that is true for you, could you make a note of it here, along with what browser and operating system you are using? Here is a MediaPlayer for you to test with:

Here is another one to try:

OK, and one more:

posted evening of December 26th, 2007: 2 responses
➳ More posts about Songs

🦋 The Willow Garden

Doesn't get much more "folk" than this, folks:

I sort of think this might be a Childe Ballad, not sure though. Janis introduced me to it, we've been playing it together for a couple of years. Came out pretty well, though I'm not too confident with the lyric. Janis usually sings it.

posted evening of December 26th, 2007: Respond
➳ More posts about Music

🦋 Ocarina

Sylvia played "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star" on her new ocarina today! That was quick. Not quite right yet -- it sounds to me like the ocarina must be tonic, maybe in C, and Sylvia is trying to play in D (not in A, because "there isn't a E-1" -- she is referring to all the notes as string + finger). So a couple of notes are off -- I need to look more closely at it and show her what the key is. Still, quick progress!

Update: no, I'm wrong -- the instrument is diatonic. But Sylvia doesn't really get sharps and flats yet, she is probably playing all naturals, diagrams for which are grouped together at the top of the page. If she's interested I will explain that to her; but I expect she is going to want to figure it out on her own.

posted afternoon of December 26th, 2007: Respond
➳ More posts about Sylvia

🦋 Ballad of Hollis Brown, take 2

This is more like it:

Still not perfect -- there are some missed entrances, the fiddle solo lags in places, I still don't have any decent recording equipment -- but this is totally on track for what I want to sound like. Something I am really happy about is the variation in meter from verse to verse -- I was able to work out occasionally inserting an extra measure in key places and I think it came out really well. The drones are a little annoying without a fiddle on top of them but I just didn't want to try that right now. Maybe another day.

posted afternoon of December 26th, 2007: Respond

Tuesday, December 25th, 2007

The rather silly Pied Piper of Hamelin video, with rhyming dialogue, was made worthwhile by the lovely actors and by Sylvia's observation that "If this were a play, Emma [the stage rat from Moominsummer Madness] would say 'It's all wrong.'"

posted evening of December 25th, 2007: Respond
➳ More posts about Moomins

I'm loving Saramago's style of writing dialogue without yet totally getting it -- it draws me in and hypnotizes me, but I sometimes find myself struggling in mid-paragraph to track who is saying what. The characters are always threatening to sound like automata, I think in part because of this clipped, almost dismissive rendering of their speech; but in small ways their humanity comes through.

posted evening of December 25th, 2007: Respond
➳ More posts about Blindness

🦋 Hollis Brown in 2/4

This is much better sounding. ABC format or PDF. Check out the wicked cool syncopation.

posted evening of December 25th, 2007: Respond

🦋 Meter

Yes! I have figured out my rhythm problems in "Ballad of Hollis Brown". Turns out I've been trying to play it all this time in 4/4 time when the fiddle part I am trying to write is actually in 2/4. I've totally got it now, I am working on the transcription and will be posting it soon.

(Note: I play a very nice version on my guitar that is definitely a 4/4 song and sounds very dirgelike, which is pretty appropriate for this song. The fiddle version is going to be more rocking. But I guess there is room for that too.)

posted evening of December 25th, 2007: Respond

At the pedestrian crossing the sign of a green man lit up. The people who were waiting began to cross the road, stepping on the white stripes painted on the black surface of the asphalt, there is nothing less like a zebra, however, that is what it is called.

This is a promising start to Blindness -- the descriptive language, the comic timing. Also the final line of the first chapter is very nice: "That night the blind man dreamt he was blind."

It will take a little while to really get into the rhythm of the dialogue -- I'm reminded of how it takes some time to get into the groove reading Gaddis.

posted afternoon of December 25th, 2007: Respond
➳ More posts about José Saramago

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