Discourse Of Course
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Eliza Doolittle.
Great pop songs like "Skinny Jeans," about a guy who is desirable for one reason, and "Pack Up," a with more classic R&B aspects. Both of these made the it up into the top five of the charts in England. But it is only now we get to join in on the fun. Her full album is available in mid-April. But it is okay to beat the curve and begin with her singles. At least check her out on YouTube.
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Made in Colorado.
Products Made in Colorado is a website that reviews, yes you guessed it, products made in Colorado. Some of them are pretty interesting like Downslope Distilling makers of various spirits in Centennial, Knightweaver Games makers of games for children, Denver's Rockmount Ranchwear the original snap-button shirts, Flylow ski clothing another Denver company and Backcountry Magazine award winner, and many many others.
It is interesting to see how many different things are actually produced in Colorado, and this website doesn't feel like a paid ad though they do contact the companies they post on. Not an amazing website, but it is worth a look.
Friday, February 11, 2011
Wir Sind Helden
I never thought I could ever find German to be an attractive language, but the German band Wir Sind Helden (We Are Heroes) has definitely changed my mind. As Americans we might think of German popular music as David Hasslehoff, Polka, or the Scorpions. Wir Sind Helden is like none of the above.
Lead Singer Judith Holofernes has songs whose soaring vocals you wish you understood literally because the emotion always comes through. It may be the wishful longing for a kiss from someone who can't speak their feelings in Nur Ein Wort(translated-I see that you're thinking-I think that you're feeling-I feel that you're wanting/willing-but I don't hear you.). It may be chastising a French Girl having problems with the way German boys flirt in Aurelie (translated-Aurélie it's never going to work this way-You expect far too much-The Germans flirt pretty sublty...). Or the common rail against being told to have a good day in Guten Tag. Yeah you won't know the lyrics if you don't know German but once you have these wonderful pop songs going through your head, you might end up like me searching the internet for a translation of the songs you might find yourself singing.
With four albums out since their first in 2002 and the last in the fall of 2010. The first three are available on iTunes. The older ones are more bouncy and the newest is more thoughtful but there are many great songs among those albums. Maybe not everything, but most of it.
I personally would start with the songs above along with one of their more recent ones like Was Uns Bieden Gehort or Alles. If you want to hear a band that is really good, but you haven't heard of only because they don't sing in English Wir Sind Helden might be the Heroes your looking for. I give them four out of five umlauts.
Lead Singer Judith Holofernes has songs whose soaring vocals you wish you understood literally because the emotion always comes through. It may be the wishful longing for a kiss from someone who can't speak their feelings in Nur Ein Wort(translated-I see that you're thinking-I think that you're feeling-I feel that you're wanting/willing-but I don't hear you.). It may be chastising a French Girl having problems with the way German boys flirt in Aurelie (translated-Aurélie it's never going to work this way-You expect far too much-The Germans flirt pretty sublty...). Or the common rail against being told to have a good day in Guten Tag. Yeah you won't know the lyrics if you don't know German but once you have these wonderful pop songs going through your head, you might end up like me searching the internet for a translation of the songs you might find yourself singing.
With four albums out since their first in 2002 and the last in the fall of 2010. The first three are available on iTunes. The older ones are more bouncy and the newest is more thoughtful but there are many great songs among those albums. Maybe not everything, but most of it.
I personally would start with the songs above along with one of their more recent ones like Was Uns Bieden Gehort or Alles. If you want to hear a band that is really good, but you haven't heard of only because they don't sing in English Wir Sind Helden might be the Heroes your looking for. I give them four out of five umlauts.
Monday, February 7, 2011
The Collected Works of Steven Moffat
Okay, So Steven Moffat is best known currently as the showrunner and lead writer for Dr. Who. He has written some of the best episodes since the 2004 reboot of the series including The Empty Child, Blink, and The Girl in the Fireplace. He has also written many of the episodes of series five starring Matt Smith as the Doctor, while being hard at work on series six.
If this was all, I would recommend his works on this basis alone... but wait, there's more!
He also recently helped create and write the BBC series Sherlock starring Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as Dr Watson(best known to Americans as Arthur Dent in the adaptation of Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy). Set in Modern day London this take on Arthur Conan Doyle's Holmes is breezy, witty fun. In many ways better written and more fun than the movie starring Robert Downie Jr. , though if you liked one, you'd probably like the other.
But this is not the end, there is more.
Jekyll a mini series starring James Nesbitt as a modern day descendant of the notorious Dr. Jekyll with obvious implications. Fun, and scary with the Jekyll and Hyde switch done entirely through amazing acting. But wait there is more.
Steven Moffat also wrote all (as in every episode) of the BBC series Coupling which is some of the funniest TV anywhere in the past ten years. The Episode where one of the characters has one legs to many (that number being two legs), and the episode that has the rant about living room pillows being pets for couches are particularly among my favorites.
So many hours of witty British TV. With Coupling, Jekyll and many episodes of Dr. Who on Netflix Watch Now, or DVD and Sherlock available on DVD. Better start watching now because this man loves to work.
If this was all, I would recommend his works on this basis alone... but wait, there's more!
He also recently helped create and write the BBC series Sherlock starring Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as Dr Watson(best known to Americans as Arthur Dent in the adaptation of Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy). Set in Modern day London this take on Arthur Conan Doyle's Holmes is breezy, witty fun. In many ways better written and more fun than the movie starring Robert Downie Jr. , though if you liked one, you'd probably like the other.
But this is not the end, there is more.
Jekyll a mini series starring James Nesbitt as a modern day descendant of the notorious Dr. Jekyll with obvious implications. Fun, and scary with the Jekyll and Hyde switch done entirely through amazing acting. But wait there is more.
Steven Moffat also wrote all (as in every episode) of the BBC series Coupling which is some of the funniest TV anywhere in the past ten years. The Episode where one of the characters has one legs to many (that number being two legs), and the episode that has the rant about living room pillows being pets for couches are particularly among my favorites.
So many hours of witty British TV. With Coupling, Jekyll and many episodes of Dr. Who on Netflix Watch Now, or DVD and Sherlock available on DVD. Better start watching now because this man loves to work.
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Eureka: TV Series
Imagine if the United States had a town somewhere in the remote northwest where every resident was a genius scientist - sort of an Area 51 with good coffee. This is the town of Eureka.
This TV series originally shown on the SyFy (now lamely SciFi) network is currently my go-to-pick on Netflix. It's incredibly fun, but not exactly ground-breaking science fiction. The shows follows the many characters of the town through the viewpoint of it's recently relocated, non-genius, sheriff played by Colin Ferguson.
The quirky characters make this show. Sheriff Jack Carter, a former US Marshall, is transplanted to Eureka with his juvenile delinquent daughter, Zoe, when they accidentally get lost and end up in the town. The Sheriff works with his beautiful, but mercenary Deputy, Jo to solve crimes that are masterminded by the world's smartest people. He gets the help of Henry Deacon, a car mechanic and also nuclear physicist.
The show features capers that include time travel, realistic robotic dogs, 8 year olds doing quantum physics, cloned wives, alien artifacts and a SmartHouse called SARAH who nags the sheriff to eat right and parent better. If you enjoyed shows like Quantum Leap or Northern Exposure, you'll like Eureka too.
This TV series originally shown on the SyFy (now lamely SciFi) network is currently my go-to-pick on Netflix. It's incredibly fun, but not exactly ground-breaking science fiction. The shows follows the many characters of the town through the viewpoint of it's recently relocated, non-genius, sheriff played by Colin Ferguson.
The quirky characters make this show. Sheriff Jack Carter, a former US Marshall, is transplanted to Eureka with his juvenile delinquent daughter, Zoe, when they accidentally get lost and end up in the town. The Sheriff works with his beautiful, but mercenary Deputy, Jo to solve crimes that are masterminded by the world's smartest people. He gets the help of Henry Deacon, a car mechanic and also nuclear physicist.
The show features capers that include time travel, realistic robotic dogs, 8 year olds doing quantum physics, cloned wives, alien artifacts and a SmartHouse called SARAH who nags the sheriff to eat right and parent better. If you enjoyed shows like Quantum Leap or Northern Exposure, you'll like Eureka too.
Wallander- TV Series
Based on the mystery books by Henning Mankell, Wallander, stars Kenneth Branagh as Detective Kurt Wallander. The series set and filmed in the town of Ystad, Sweden. Beautifully shot and well acted it is the best the BBC has to offer. It is one of the few crime dramas where the violence of the world actually has an emotional impact on the characters. I would definitely say that this is in no way a light-hearted series. I would put it in my Dad's category of "well done but depressing".
The thing I love most about this series is how often it depends on the actors acting instead of spelling it all out through dialogue, the actors actually use looks, even basics like how they carry themselves to tell a story that both shows what the characters are putting forth to the world- the stories people tell themselves, and how that relates to others.
As with many mystery series, it still has the problem of how one could see and go through so much and still remain sane, but even that it addresses in many ways.
Available on Netflix, though you have to get the disks. It is two series each of only three episodes (six total) they run each about an hour and a half.
Because the series is produced in part by Yellow Bird which is owned by Henning Mankell series three will have six episodes, three based on the books and three which are new works entirely.
The thing I love most about this series is how often it depends on the actors acting instead of spelling it all out through dialogue, the actors actually use looks, even basics like how they carry themselves to tell a story that both shows what the characters are putting forth to the world- the stories people tell themselves, and how that relates to others.
As with many mystery series, it still has the problem of how one could see and go through so much and still remain sane, but even that it addresses in many ways.
Available on Netflix, though you have to get the disks. It is two series each of only three episodes (six total) they run each about an hour and a half.
Because the series is produced in part by Yellow Bird which is owned by Henning Mankell series three will have six episodes, three based on the books and three which are new works entirely.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
The Story of Crime- Mystery Series by Maj Sjowall & Per Wahloo
Sure one can read "The Girl Who"... books by Stieg Larrson, or the Wallander Series by Henning Mankell but the classic work that they both are definitely heirs to is The Story of Crime by Sjowall & Wahloo.
The series of ten books are basically police procedurals that follow detective Martin Beck and his co-workers at the Central Bureau of Investigation is Stockholm from mid sixities to early 1970's. The period during which the books were written.
Wahloo states that they were trying to "use the crime novel as a scalpel cutting open the belly of the ideological pauperized and morally debatable so-called welfare state of the bourgeois type." Even though the authors had a more socialist philosophy, this critique through story provides much more a view of society that shows that societies ills are fairly immune to well meaning half-baked solutions we frequently throw at them. Good people do good, but society not so much. Regardless, the politics lose out to the stories and the characters themselves. People with problems. People with ideals, fighting with the pragmatism that life forces on us all.
The First book is "Roseanna" and deals with a murdered of a young woman. Like many great mysteries, it is less about the mystery of the crime than the mystery of how we face life.
The Laughing Policeman is probably my favorite and won the Edgar Allen Poe award from the Mystery Writers of America in 1971. But you really need to read the first three to appreciate it.
Although they definitely take place in a given time, they still resonate today which really is the definition of a classic.
The series of ten books are basically police procedurals that follow detective Martin Beck and his co-workers at the Central Bureau of Investigation is Stockholm from mid sixities to early 1970's. The period during which the books were written.
Wahloo states that they were trying to "use the crime novel as a scalpel cutting open the belly of the ideological pauperized and morally debatable so-called welfare state of the bourgeois type." Even though the authors had a more socialist philosophy, this critique through story provides much more a view of society that shows that societies ills are fairly immune to well meaning half-baked solutions we frequently throw at them. Good people do good, but society not so much. Regardless, the politics lose out to the stories and the characters themselves. People with problems. People with ideals, fighting with the pragmatism that life forces on us all.
The First book is "Roseanna" and deals with a murdered of a young woman. Like many great mysteries, it is less about the mystery of the crime than the mystery of how we face life.
The Laughing Policeman is probably my favorite and won the Edgar Allen Poe award from the Mystery Writers of America in 1971. But you really need to read the first three to appreciate it.
Although they definitely take place in a given time, they still resonate today which really is the definition of a classic.
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