The twenty-fourth album: #24 Joan Baez - Joan Baez
A simple folk album, Joan Baez creates a simple but very listenable album. The lyrics are meaningful and it sounds good, warmth coming through in the often sad-sounding vocals. Most of it is accompanied by guitar alone, which works incredibly well in creating the atmosphere of the album.
They are mostly from the standard song book, but adapted to her voice, Joan Baez makes them hers, fititing it to make it sound great. It's amaazing, in a way, how modern it sounds - you can still find singer-songwriters like it these days. I'ts nice, and is probably part of what makes it so easy to listen to these days.
The twenty-first book: #21 Oroonoko - Aphra Behn
It's interesting reading this not too long after watching Roots. Superficially, the main characters of both are similar - proud warriors stolen from Africa to be sold as slaves, both from time to time with a rebellious streak. The differences make this book weirder to our modern eyes. Oroonoko - or Caesar, a slave name that gets accepted the moment it's introduced - is the prince and future king of a people destroyed as the westeners come in. He gets tricked into boarding a slaver's galley and becomes a slave. Once he gets there, however, he quickly accepts his fate, only protesting when his owners become too cruel - leading to his death. It's all very accepting of something we find reprehensible nowadays, something at odds with the love story it tries to tell.
What doesn't help here is that the novel doesn't have many conflicts. There's the point where the main character (I hesitate to use the word hero, as he isn't really written to be one) becomes a slave, and the one that leads to his death at the end, but beyond that it feels superficial. It's an interesting insight to people's thoughts at the time, a contemporary look that gives some idea of what was going on, but in the end it feels a bit too distant from us to work as a 'slice of life' kind of thing.
The twentieth book: #20 The Princess of Cleves - Madame de Lafayette
This is a French courtly love story, set in the French courts of the day - and indeed written by someone who was there. Published anonymously, Madame de Lafayette became the credited writer, set in the courts she moved in herself. Indeed, apparently the details of court life are fairly accurate.
It's an interesting read - somewhat for the love stories, although that doesn't feel quite as accurate - but because of the way court life is described. Not romanticized, as we might do now, writing partially to what we'd expect it to be like - but nothing too ugly either. There are in fact some historical seeming details, concerning political maneuvering of which princes married which and what power they got. It's sort of interesting, but probably less so now as it was at the time.
Those get a bit tedious at times, but on the whole it makes for an interesting read, seeming fairly modern in set up and apparently set up the psychological novel for the future. I am looking forward to seeing where this will lead.
The twenty-seventh comic: #152 Shock and Suspenstories
This was an interesting set of stories. Each magazine contains a set of thrillers - set in various environments, although often contemporary US in some way - that led up to a shocking twist at the end. The twist often involves death or violence, sometimes in flashback form explaining how things happened, or challenging assumptions of the reader. Some are also clearly trying to be socially aware, for example challenging the common racism of the day.
The art is often fine, good for what you expect of the time, and the stories almost always interesting. Some twists are predictable, but on the whole tend to grab you often enough. Ultimately, 1950s censorship got it shut down. A sad fate, really, as there were enough interesting avenues to explore.
The twenty-third album: #23 Dave Brubeck Quartet - Time Out
More jazz. It's the music of the era - I think I can understand on some level how the rockier sounds coming up could be a reaction to this. The album sounds good, there is a lot of swing to it straight away, with a liveliness that I felt I was missing from earlier versions of the song. These were all recorded in unusual times - not something I would recognise that well, but an interesting change nonetheless, and it's probably one of the things that make the album sounds different, maybe slightly out there, certainly in a way that kept bringing me back to it.
It's an enjoyable album - more so than I expected. I might have the best ear for it, but so far it's been fine.
The twenty-second album: #22 Marty Robbins - Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs
Time to get into some country - we're overdue again and it feels like this is classic country, influenced by blues and early rock, something that comes across from the first song. It's a bit faster and guitar based and sounds good for it. It's also nice to listen to a singer-songwriter again, making for something more focused on his own voice.
There are also nice gems of story telling in here - whether it's about chasing a man sentenced to death or finding religion, the lyrics matter so much more and cover more than the love songs we usually heard. It allows for far more diversions from the standard theme.
I'm not sure it'll ever go in my top list, but earlier country songs (I'm not sure they quite were, but predecessors at least) didn't grab my quite as much as this did, making for something I've simply been enjoying a lot more.
The seventh classical recording: #6 Antoine Busnoys - Motets
The multi-voiced motets feel archaic, simple in the way they're voiced but complex as they build, coming (it feels) from a time where - well - you just never saw instruments. They're impressive, but their style make them a bit less easy to get into than what we expect now, made of vocals but layered in a way that makes it difficult to follow them. It's a growth from earlier works we've heard, valuing more and more some part of the structure over its contents. They're not dreary, but no longer quite as uplifting or emotional as music can (and should?) be.
The problem is that it all starts to sound samey. It's impressive at the start, but blurs together, which is unfortunate. One or two examples would be good, not the hourlong that this version came in.
The twenty-first album: #21 Miles Davis - Kind of Blue
I've had some mixed experiences with instrumental blues in the past. It's not always quite my kind of music. For this album, it worked a lot better - a better beat and more interesting sounds gave me a more interesting and appealing listening experience.
The downside is that it feels like it never quite goes anywhere. There isn't always a big difference between the tracks - I'm sure I could discern So What from Freddie Freeloader without giving it quite a bit more time. That luckily clears up a bit when the ballads come in - Blue In Green is incredibly touching and calming.
The twentieth album: #20 Ray Charles - The Genius of Ray Charles
That title sounds big headed, doesn't it? Then again, listening to the album, I can't say it's undeserved either. The mix of jazz, gospel and big band music works well, creating a swinging, varied combination of songs that is a joy to listen to. It's exciting and fun, getting your foot tapping along.
This changes once you get to the ballads of the B-side, but these sound good, softer and calmer, in a way that worked as slowly calming down after the rush from earlier. All of that worked pretty well for me. If anything, I wished they'd turned down the instruments and violins a bit during these, as they sometimes overpowered Ray Charles' performance. That's the one part that, to me, really maatered in these.
The thirty-second TV show: #854 The Great British Bake-Off
A bit of an unexpected pick perhaps, we're taking this one on because of societal pressure. So many colleagues and friends were watching that we didn't want to be left out of the conversation. Several more also started watching with this season, so that worked out, although we also went back a bit.
Bake-Off feels incredibly British. Unlike other reality shows, it's not flashy. There are no dramatic storylines. It's all about the bakers and their skills and it shows. Their personalities absolutely come through, and you get your favourite, but it's all positive. There is also a lot of mutual support, which the show likes to make visible. There are plenty of times where they end up helping each other out. It looks really nice that way, even if it's incredibly high pressure.
In the end, that also comes down to the presenters. Mel & Sue are a good double act, not just funny but incredibly supportive towards everyone in competition as well. You see them breaking the tension, calming down and sometimes acting as a school teacher to make sure people keep going. It's touching, it's fun, it's British, and it makes it such a great show to watch. As long as you're not hungry as you watch. That is deadly.
The nineteenth book: #19 The Adventurous Simplicissimus - Hans von Grimmelhausen
I'm not sure where to go with this book. It's another travelogue of sorts, a long meandering story of someone's life and travels, including a bunch of exaggerated happenings. Here, a decent part sounds plausible, but it all doesn't quite ring true. It's fine for fiction, but the minor note that this is partially biographical makes it feel a bit off.
For a large part it reads well, but there are sections that can drag a bit, when it gets too technical... or goes into another campaign. Yeah, he travels all over the map, and in a way that makes sense, but sometimes it can be a bit much. It's also a bit self righteous at times.
Still, those are relatively minor niggles. For the most part this is a good, fun read.
The thirty-first TV show: #307 Brideshead Revisited
I guess it was about time I did a historical drama - should have done more than one in fact. They're not my favourite genre, as the details can be a bit tedious and for some reason they feel like they have to be made slower - often to show how close they got to history. This show certainly had its moments of that, and we both had times when we figured we could get away with checking something else at the same time.
I (of course) haven't read the novel yet, so can't comment on the quality of it, but it doesn't feel like one. Sure, there's some voiceover, but it all flows together well. The adaptation is shot and written well in that sense.
It also helps that the actors seem to be in great form. They make it all feel natural - especially where the nobles can be nobles and students are students. It comes across that way. Jeremy Irons, as the lead, does this especially well, playing it slightly detached. He's the narrator and authorial insert, and plays it as if he really is that bit more disconnected, observing what goes on around him. It makes his Charles a slightly ambiguous character - it's never quite his fault - that works really well.
The characters' growth is interesting, becoming an interesting investigation into the family and those surrounding it. Executed well, and looking gorgeous.