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2017 Individual Challenges > Christa's 2017 Reading Stuff Thread

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message 51: by HomeInMyShoes (last edited Feb 27, 2017 09:15AM) (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments It might be the lightest instrument in the world. :P

Maybe I should pick one up, although I think I'm more of a banjo kind of person. I really want an acoustic guitar. I've got an electric here and a JX-8P, a Fantom-X8 and a 1941 Heintzman upright piano. Damn I love playing piano. Love, love, love. Music has always been a part of my life and always will be. Even when my hands are decrepit and can't play anymore I'll probably hold the sheet music in my hands and play in my mind.

Awesome stuff you're playing.

I've been working on:
I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire
The Scientist
The Girl from Ipanema
My Foolish Heart
playing blues piano with a six-month old on my lap
some Mendelssohn Songs without Words
Schumann Opus 15
a few Chopin Mazurkas

I am all over the map in what I love playing.

From High Fidelity:
Dick: I'd guess it looks as if you're reorganizing your records. What is this though? Chronological?
Rob: No...
Dick: Not alphabetical...
Rob: Nope.
Dick: What?
Rob: Autobiographical.
Dick: No fuckin' way.



message 52: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments Yaaaaaaayyyyy!!!!!!

You have no clue how much this post made me grin like an idiot. :-D


message 53: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments HomeInMyShoes wrote: "It might be the lightest instrument in the world. :P

Maybe I should pick one up, although I think I'm more of a banjo kind of person. I really want an acoustic guitar. I've got an electric here an..."


Well... banjolele is a thing :D

That's a great list. Also, check this out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pY9av...

Last night I turned this song into a ballad because I couldn't play it fast enough. And I like it better as a ballad. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9p7I...

MrsJoseph wrote: "Yaaaaaaayyyyy!!!!!!

You have no clue how much this post made me grin like an idiot. :-D"


heehee! I've been smiling so much my face hurts. And, well, as you know about the crap that happened last month... I needed this in my life right now, more than ever. New beginnings and all that.

The uke forum I'm been lurking in has this thing called Seasons of the Ukulele, where they offer up a different theme every week and people post videos of themselves playing (and sometimes singing) songs in that theme. No one cares how good anyone is, it's about music discovery and community. I might start participating. Maybe.


message 54: by DoodlePanda (new)

DoodlePanda | 1226 comments I'm glad you're enjoying it! :D

And Homey, I now fully understand how awesome you are, you must be to be playing I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire :D


message 55: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments Christa wrote: heehee! I've been smiling so much my face hurts. And, well, as you know about the crap that happened last month... I needed this in my life right now, more than ever. New beginnings and all that."

YES!!!! *hugs*

So happy you're happy!!


message 56: by HomeInMyShoes (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments ^I was in one of those at pianoworld for a while. It is good times. I was also on one from harmonycentral for keyboard geeks which was entertaining because the variety was so ridiculous.

I went a long time without piano. Probably ten years which is stupid. But I picked up guitar in that absence and it made me understand piano better. So many wasted years as a youth. I probably could have been a pretty good piano player instead of the hack that I am. But I still love playing.


message 57: by Christa, The Renewed (last edited Feb 27, 2017 01:50PM) (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments HomeInMyShoes wrote: "So many wasted years as a youth. I probably could have been a pretty good piano player instead of the hack that I am. But I still love playing."

I sometimes wonder what kind of musician I'd be if I'd chosen my own path instead of having it forced on me. I'll be 42 years old this year. All those years of playing music and I'm only now feeling genuine joy from it.

But I have no regrets. I don't do regret. Onward and upward, uke-a-doo, uke-a-doo...

:)


message 58: by HomeInMyShoes (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments 42's a good number.

I'm 47 this year. I wonder what I could have done on guitar if I had picked it up when I was 10 instead of 30. Or if I had actually loved piano to start and practiced.

If you've got Netflix and its still around you should watch "It Might get Loud" which was worth the time just for the Jack White segments. The Edge and Jimmy Page parts were interesting, but Jack matches me more philosophically. Fighting with the instrument. Definitely.

Some day maybe I'll make a few youtube videos for the piano and keyboard. It'll be terrible.


message 59: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments I couldn't carry a tune in a bucket, so...


message 60: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments I saw this and thought of you.

 photo 4FD9E94C-C708-4270-AEC8-E9FBB1FF1175.jpeg


message 61: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments :D I see those on Amazon every time I'm browsing instruments. :)


message 62: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments :-D


message 63: by DoodlePanda (new)

DoodlePanda | 1226 comments LOL, is that an actual thing? :D


message 64: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments DoodlePanda wrote: "LOL, is that an actual thing? :D"

LOL Yeah, but "pocket guitar" is really a misnomer. It's just 6 metal strings on a board used for practicing chord positions, working on dexterity, etc. It's not an actual instrument.


message 65: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments Christa wrote: "DoodlePanda wrote: "LOL, is that an actual thing? :D"

LOL Yeah, but "pocket guitar" is really a misnomer. It's just 6 metal strings on a board used for practicing chord positions, working on dexte..."


huh. I thought it made music. :-(


message 66: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments Well, some of them are tunable to some degree and make a small amount of sound (think a "muted" guitar sound - the tones are there, but vewwy, vewwy quiet) and those could be helpful for working on chord progressions for learning / writing songs.


message 67: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments Christa wrote: "Well, some of them are tunable to some degree and make a small amount of sound (think a "muted" guitar sound - the tones are there, but vewwy, vewwy quiet) and those could be helpful for working on..."

That's better than nothing - but I was thinking it was a mini instrument that you could actually play.


message 68: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments Updated books read.


message 69: by HomeInMyShoes (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments Howdy stranger.


message 70: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments Howdy! :)


message 71: by Orlok (new)

Orlok | 555 comments ME: Andromeda keeping you busy?


message 72: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments Nah, I wrapped that up a couple weeks ago, I think? (I have no concept of time so I really don't know. LOL) Then it was time to wrap up the business taxes, so that kept me busy.

When I finished ME:A I started another playthrough but it wasn't over the first one yet. I can't describe how much I enjoyed playing it and just trying to do it again felt hollow, somehow. And nothing, NOTHING could fill the void. Until I pulled up Star Trek: Deep Space Nine on Netflix. It hit the spot. I needed character-focused scifi with interesting aliens. :D I love the show so much. So I've been watching 2 or 3 episodes a day, and right now I'm somewhere in the first few eps of season 4.

That also helped me get past not being able to muster excitement for any other games, and I'm now playing XCOM 2.

And reading again, finally.


message 73: by Orlok (new)

Orlok | 555 comments Good to see you've unblocked yourself, so to speak :)

I'm a few hours into ME:A but haven't quite settled into it somehow. I think I'm missing Shepard too much and can't stop thinking of Scott Ryder as a young upstart whippersnapper. I'll get there, I'm sure...


message 74: by HomeInMyShoes (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments XCOM!!!

I was totally addicted to the original one from 1994.


message 75: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments HomeInMyShoes wrote: "XCOM!!!

I was totally addicted to the original one from 1994."


I never played any of the originals. In fact, the rebooted XCOM from 2012 was already a few years old when I got interested. And I felt the pacing was horrible. XCOM 2 feels much better in terms of progression. Though I do have a couple of mods installed to make things a bit easier because my real goal is to complete the game with my original squad intact. :D

I'm just not good enough at these games to play them as intended, but I do enjoy them nonetheless. :)


message 76: by HomeInMyShoes (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments That's why the original XCOM was so good. Turn based, position your troops and decide what they are doing and see what happens. So many times I'd lose a guy because the alien was just around the corner. So hilrarious. Times were definitely different when I played it on my first PC. I totally loved that game.

Do you have any books involving music recommendations? I'm waffling back and forth on a few right now.


message 77: by Christa, The Renewed (last edited Apr 25, 2017 12:23PM) (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments HomeInMyShoes wrote: "Do you have any books involving music recommendations?"

It took me longer than it should have to parse that question. LOL

The AYBBTU challenge for that category allows for either fiction or non, right? Do you have a preference?


message 78: by HomeInMyShoes (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments It's a poorly written question.

Do you have any recommendations for books involving music?

No preference. Currently I'm thinking:

The Piano
or
Songs That Saved Your Life (Revised Edition): The Art of The Smiths 1982-87

The Smiths are one of those bands who I inevitably fall back on when I can't think of what to listen to. So I guess that makes sense to fall back on them for something to read too.

Hey Rosetta!. Billy Bragg. The Smiths. Oscar Peterson.


message 79: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments Do you like Jazz?

If yes, maybe Jazz: A History of America's Music? I borrowed it from the library and it looks pretty.


message 80: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments I've got That Old Black Magic: Louis Prima, Keely Smith, and the Golden Age of Las Vegas on my "upcoming" list.

At less than 250pgs, it's one of the few decently-rated music history / bio books that clocks in at a fairly low page count. Seriously, just about every other music bio in my collection is 600+ pages which is probably why I haven't gotten around to them yet.

Though they aren't technically about the music, the Rat Pack Mysteries by Robert Randisi were loads of fun to read. :)
https://www.goodreads.com/series/6193...


message 81: by HomeInMyShoes (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments Those might be a good options. I don't mind Jazz, but maybe I'm thinking Blues over Jazz right now. I'm going to do some more trawling for a foreign book. The Piano was quite enticing since it would hit New Zealand which I've read very little from. Morrisey's autobiography looks interesting too, but it's 500 pages of apparently random stream-of-consciousness.

Car crash that you can't look away from might be that one.


message 82: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments Christa wrote: "I've got That Old Black Magic: Louis Prima, Keely Smith, and the Golden Age of Las Vegas on my "upcoming" list.

At less than 250pgs, it's one of the few decently-rated music histor..."


600+ pages?? And I'm stalling with this one at 400+ pages.


message 83: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments HomeInMyShoes wrote: "Those might be a good options. I don't mind Jazz, but maybe I'm thinking Blues over Jazz right now. I'm going to do some more trawling for a foreign book. The Piano was quite enticing since it woul..."

Well, the Blues IS a form of Jazz...

(Couldn't help that, lol. I got kicked out of class once (college!) because I said Billy Holiday was a Jazz singer. Which she was - because Blues is a sub of Jazz. But the teacher was not aware and was mad at me and kicked me out.)


message 84: by HomeInMyShoes (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments I'm a heathen though. In my book there is only The Blues, everything else is just a different delivery with better or lesser results.

From my actual understanding, Jazz and Blues pretty much developed at the same time so the concept that one is rooted in the other is slightly problematic. But whatever. Until you start going into other cultures there's only twelve notes. So have at it because you are going to be repetitive. Your delivery is what you bring to the table when it comes to music.

Pfffftttt!


message 85: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments LOL! I have taken shit for putting Billie Holiday and Etta James and some others under "Jazz:Vocal" in my music collection. In my case, the reason is because a lot of the female vocalists usually categorized as Blues tend to fall on the spectrum closer to other types of Jazz vocalists over in the Vocal Standards and Big Band realm, where as my Blues subgenres tend to lean toward roots blues / traditional, Chicago, New Orleans and later, blues-rock music. (Okay, a lot of it comes down to the "socks and underwear" method of organization - Put shit where I can find it later.)

Billie Holiday is most definitely a jazz singer, though, not only because Blues is a subgenre of Jazz, but because her talent and scope of work runs the gamut of nearly the entire Jazz Vocal spectrum.

But then... the number of genre designations I use in my music collection usually leads to exploding heads anyway. :D


message 86: by Christa, The Renewed (last edited Apr 25, 2017 02:25PM) (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments HomeInMyShoes wrote: "I'm a heathen though. In my book there is only The Blues, everything else is just a different delivery with better or lesser results.

From my actual understanding, Jazz and Blues pretty much devel..."


Sort of. While they did develop as you describe, blues and jazz are categorized as related / derivatives. The main reason for blues often being seen as a sub is that jazz and blues both came into being before music marketing came into being. That changed the dialog because we needed to organize record stores, basically. So it's more about discussing things in terms of organization as opposed to talking about the historical relationship between them.


message 87: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments Either way, I should NOT have been kicked from class!

And the dang teacher referenced a MOVIE to prove me wrong. AS IF!


message 88: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments MrsJoseph wrote: "Either way, I should NOT have been kicked from class!

And the dang teacher referenced a MOVIE to prove me wrong. AS IF!"


OMG "Lady Sings the Blues" used to kick you out of class. That is sooooo wrong.


message 89: by HomeInMyShoes (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments Haha, I tend to categorize music into two piles:

1) stuff I listen to
2) CRAP

I categorize my music autobiographically.

Oscar Peterson is living on my own, Violent Femmes is first love, Sarah Harmer is my first son and driving arouund Newfoundland. Billy Bragg is everything: high school, first love, my wife, Newfoundland, folk festivals, best friends. Pixies is getting drunk playing D&D. Ella Fitzgerald is Los Angeles for a weekend to see a good friend get married. Tom Waits is shitty stores in Toronto and a lonely bus ride home across Northern Ontario.

I love music. It can make me cry with happiness at the mess of my life.


message 90: by Christa, The Renewed (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments HomeInMyShoes wrote: "Haha, I tend to categorize music into two piles:

1) stuff I listen to
2) CRAP

I categorize my music autobiographically."


My life would be a lot less complicated if I could do it that way. :D

My genres:
(view spoiler)


message 91: by Dazrin (new)

Dazrin | 216 comments Christa wrote: "My life would be a lot less complicated if I could do it that way. :D

My genres:"


Wow!

I might need to look up "RK: Hellboogie" though.


message 92: by Christa, The Renewed (last edited Apr 25, 2017 03:35PM) (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments Dazrin wrote: "Wow!

I might need to look up "RK: Hellboogie" though. "


That's sort of a made-up genre name that I stole from a reference that I've now forgotten, but imagine if Surf Rock and Italian rock music had a love child. That's basically it. :D Check this band out: https://ilmaniscalcomaldestro.bandcam...


message 93: by HomeInMyShoes (last edited Apr 26, 2017 06:50AM) (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments Nice. I do appreciate the Italian lyrics. They sound just so subversive. They could be singing about fluffy kitties and I'd never know.

I'd go for Horror Punk which I've heard used before. But then music tends to be even worse than books with respect to genre hairsplitting. :P

Silly me stuck listening to Forbidden Dimension. Yes I had to translate from a German Wikipedia page. They are from Calgary?!?

Related bands in my autobiographical system: Huevos Rancheros, Man or Astroman?, The Volcanos, The Blue Stingrays, Dick Dale, The Tiki Tones, etc.


message 94: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments Christa wrote: "MrsJoseph wrote: "Either way, I should NOT have been kicked from class!

And the dang teacher referenced a MOVIE to prove me wrong. AS IF!"

OMG "Lady Sings the Blues" used to kick you out of class..."




YES! I was shocked. As a reader I wanted to pop her, lol.

As a student...very discouraged.


message 95: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments HomeInMyShoes wrote: "Haha, I tend to categorize music into two piles:

1) stuff I listen to
2) CRAP

I categorize my music autobiographically.

Oscar Peterson is living on my own, Violent Femmes is first love, Sarah Ha..."


Oh my!

That's lovely.

You know, you may really want to try that Questlove book I'm reading. It's not MY thing because I'm much more books than music but you love music.

Questlove is...very much a musical nerd. And he thinks about music in the same way you mention: as firmly attached to memory.

I think you'd enjoy it.


message 96: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments Christa wrote: "HomeInMyShoes wrote: "Haha, I tend to categorize music into two piles:

1) stuff I listen to
2) CRAP

I categorize my music autobiographically."

My life would be a lot less complicated if I could ..."



O_O


message 97: by HomeInMyShoes (last edited Apr 26, 2017 08:20AM) (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments Added Questlove to the to read list. Might be the music winner.

Thanks.


message 98: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Resident Book Pusher (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 3289 comments Welcome!
I hope you like it.


message 99: by Christa, The Renewed (last edited Apr 27, 2017 12:03PM) (new)

Christa (christaw) | 1457 comments So I started reading The Handmaid's Tale, finally. Had it forever, but you know how it goes - there are always so many books waiting to be read. Anyway, since there was buzz about the TV show it kept ending up in front of my face so I pulled it out of the virtual pile and went to it.

Now, I hadn't paid much attention to details about the show, so I went into the book pretty "clean" of outside influence. But there I am reading last night, with the TV on as always, and Elizabeth Moss was on the Late Late Show and they showed a clip. So now here I am stuck with Elizabeth Moss in my head as the main character. I'm sure it will fade as I get back into reading it some more (I stopped seeing Harry Dresden as Paul Blackthorne easily enough while reading the Dresden Files) but for the moment, I am irked. LOL


message 100: by HomeInMyShoes (new)

HomeInMyShoes | 2759 comments So glad I don't have TV.

The Handmaid's Tale has been on my to read list forever. I might get to it this year. I really enjoyed the Maddaddam trilogy from Atwood.


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