Quote of the day: JOY

May 27, 2011

JOY

Every day, I see or hear something
that more or less kills me with delight,
that leaves me like a needle
in the haystack of light.
It was what I was born for –
to look, to listen,
to lose myself inside this soft world –
to instruct myself over and over in joy and acclamation.

— Mary Oliver


In this week’s New Yorker

May 22, 2011

Several long absorbing articles in this week’s New Yorker:

Jill Lepore reviews two biographies of Clarence Darrow, in the process delivering a capsule biography of the most famous lawyer in American history and his principled defense of labor unions and organizers. In 1903, representing the United Mine Workers in Pennsylvania, he wrote, “Five hundred dollars a year is a big price for taking your life and your limbs in your hand and going down into the earth to dig up coal to make somebody else rich.”

— Jane Mayer writes a detailed and complicated story about whistle-blowersinside the federal government, focusing on the case of Thomas Drake, a former senior executive at the National Security Agency who faces serious jail time for sharing unclassified documents with Congressional investigators about grotesque waste and mismanagement in his agency’s development of surveillance technology. “Even in an age in which computerized feats are commonplace, the N.S.A.’s capabilities are breathtaking. The agency reportedly has the capacity to intercept and download, every six hours, electronic communications equivalent to the contents of the Library of Congress. Three times the size of the C.I.A., and with a third of the U.S.’s entire intelligence budget, the N.S.A. has a five-thousand-acre campus at Fort Meade protected by iris scanners and facial-recognition devices. The electric bill there is said to surpass seventy million dollars a year.” A major point of the story is that the Obama administration has been just as severe in punishing whistle-blowers as the previous administration.

— Kelefa Sanneh’s “Where’s Earl?” is one of those stories that astonish me when they turn up in the New Yorker. It’s an introduction to a pop music phenomenon that I haven’t heard about — the loose affiliation of very young Los Angeles-based African-American rappers who make up the hip-hop crew Odd Future, centered on a performer who calls himself Tyler, the Creator. It’s also a piece of intense, in-depth investigative reporting on the evolution, identity, and whereabouts of a legendary figure in the O.F. domain known as Earl Sweatshirt, who turns out to be the son of South African poet Keorapetse Kgositsile, whose work inspired the group of Harlem-based proto-rappers The Last Poets.

Some smaller pleasures: Mark Singer’s Talk of the Town piece about playing the telephone game on the High Line with 200 people passing along a phrase from a Tibetan Buddhist sutra; Michael Schulman hanging out with Kathleen Marshall looking at kinescopes of old performances of Anything Goes to prepare for the Roundabout revival; Hilton Als’ review of By the Way, Meet Vera Stark, which made me reconsider how much fun it must be for the actresses to perform that show; and then of course, this Roz Chast cartoon:


Theater review: THE INTELLIGENT HOMOSEXUAL… (iHo, for short)

May 20, 2011

My review of Tony Kushner’s new play — (take a breath) The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide to Capitalism and Socialism with a Key to the Scriptures — at the Public Theater has just been posted on CultureVulture.net.  Check it out here and let me know what you think. I had a lot of mixed feelings about the play, but only admiration for the superior performances by Michael Cristofer and Linda Emond (below).

And by the way, if you’ve seen the play and are hungry to know more about it, the 16-page study guide that the Guthrie Theater produced as an audience education tool for the world premiere in 2009 is still available as a PDF online. It’s kind of a masterpiece of dramaturgy.


Playlist: iPod shuffle, 5/19/2011

May 20, 2011

5/19/11:

“Surgery,” Scott Matthew
“Just Like Always,” Jimmy Webb
“Behind Closed Doors,” Charlie Rich
“Not the Same,” Ben Folds Presents the Spartones
“Day to Day,” Eulogies
“I Heard Ramona Sing,” Frank Black
“Effington,” Ben Folds
“Night of the Iguana,” Joni Mitchell
“Crazy,” Gnarls Barkley
“Bina’s Radio,” Dudley Saunders
“Comfort Me,” Sparklehorse
“Forget About It,” Lissy Trulle
“Banking on a Myth,” Andrew Bird
“You, the Queen,” Tony Scherr
“Shelter From the Storm,” Cassandra Wilson
“Wait Another Day,” Uh Huh Her
“I See Monsters,” Ryan Adams

“Silver Bell,” Patty Griffin
“All Those Ashes,” David Berkeley
La Shou El Haki,” Natacha Atlas
“Hot Corner,” the B-52’s
“A Quick Trip to Alamut,” Iggy Pop/Paul Schutze
“Between Sheets,” Imogen Heap
“Back Broke,” the Swell Season
“Bone Jump,” Brian Eno
“I Am the Cosmos,” Pete Yorn & Scarlett Johnansson
“The Beginning of Memory,” Laurie Anderson
“Strike a Match,” Cassandra Wilson
“Don’t Talk Just Kiss,” Right Said Fred
“Come On,” Tiesto Vs. Diplo
“Everybody Gossip now,” King of Pants
“Ordinary World,” Duran Duran
“Already Gone,” Ferron
“Che gelida manina,” Vittorio Grigolo
“Rilke Songs 4. Wolle die Wandlung,” Lorraine Hunt Lieberson
“So Happy I Could Die,” Lady GaGa
“Another World,” the Chemical Brothers


Photo diary: a weekend at Easton Mountain

May 20, 2011

Eric, kitchen angel

a friendly inhabitant

Krispy Kai